The Cave Boy of the Age of Stone
M >> Margaret A. McIntyre >> The Cave Boy of the Age of Stone[Frontispiece: Making stone tools]
THE CAVE BOY
OF THE AGE OF STONE
BY
MARGARET A. McINTYRE
NEW YORK
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1907, BY
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
Dedicated to My Mother
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I. STRONGARM'S FAMILY
II. THE NEEDLE, THE CLUB, AND THE BOW
III. THE TAMING OF THE DOG
IV. HOW STRONGARM HUNTED A BEAR AND A LION
V. THE OLD AX MAKER VISITS HIS DAUGHTER
VI. THE COMING OF FIRE
VII. THE CAVE TIGER
VIII. THE MAKING OF STONE WEAPONS
IX. AT THE GRAVEL PIT
X. A SUMMER CAMP
XI. THORN MEETS THE CHILDREN OF THE SHELL MOUNDS
XII. AT THE HOME OF THE SHELL MOUND PEOPLE
XIII. THORN LEARNS TO SWIM
XIV. THE FEAST OF MAMMOTH'S MEAT
XV. THE RED MEN OF OUR OWN COUNTRY IN THE STONE AGE
XVI. HOW STONE WEAPONS OF THE CAVE MEN WERE FIRST FOUND
XVII. HOW THE EARTH LOOKED WHEN THE SHELL MEN AND THE CAVE MEN LIVED
XVIIII. HOW EARLY MEN BELIEVED THAT ALL THINGS THAT MOVE ARE ALIVE
XIX. THE PEOPLE OF OUR TIME WHO WERE MOST LIKE THE CAVE MEN
SUGGESTIONS TO TEACHERS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Making stone tools . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
All at once, the goat stood up on her hind legs
Strongarm
A big black bear came along
Then he sat down by the fire to make his picture of the bear
Ram horns
Sewing together skins of wild oxen
A little bone
Bone needle
Broken hunting club
The bees flew off humming angrily
The edge of the pond
And, for fun, set it against the string
Broken hunting club (2nd version)
Cattle horns
So they lay down on the ground and began to call
A nest full of young eagles
She scraped off all the meat and fat
Tiger's tooth and bear's claw
Lion
Lion's tooth
Stone tools
Stone axe
Woven basket
Little wild pigs were eating the acorns
The sparks came like a flame and caught the dry leaves
The boys listened in wonder
Shelter of branches
Acorns
Tiger
Tiger's tooth
He struck with his hammer stone
He held the pebble in his left hand and struck it a sharp blow
Deer antlers
Forest scene
Spear
The women and children went to pick berries
The women and children ate and ate the sweet fruit
Snowy owl in tree
Women with baskets
Skin bag with pull string
Herd of reindeer
They dived into the river and swam away, pulling the raft
Flock of white swans
The sea
Clam and oyster shells
Dug-out boat
They began to cook the fish
The people took the fish in their hands
Cutting down a tree
A flounder
Seaweed
Thorn learns to swim
Clay bowls
Mammoth trapped in swamp
Wolves
Throwing a spear
A North American Indian
A stone arrow head
A stone ax
Picture of reindeer, scratched on slate; found in a cave in France
Eskimo by their winter huts; drawn by an Eskimo
A bone awl; found in a cave in England
Drawing of a mammoth, on a piece of mammoth tusk;
found in a cave in France
A flint knife; found in Australia
THE CAVE BOY OF THE AGE OF STONE
CHAPTER I
STRONGARM'S FAMILY
It was spring, thousands of years ago. Little boys snatched the April
violets, and with them painted purple stripes upon their arms and
faces. Then they played that enemies came.
"Be afraid!" shouted one, frowning; and he stamped his foot and shook
his fist at the play enemies.
"I am fine!" called the other; and he held his head high, and took big
steps, and looked this way and that.
The little brothers were named Thorn and Pineknot. Their baby sister
had no name. The children looked rough and wild and strong and glad.
The sun had made them brown, the wind had tangled their hair. Their
clothes were only bits of fox skin. Their home was the safe rock cave
in the side of the hill.
Near the children a little goat was eating the sweet new grass. She
was tied with a string made of skin. Thorn stroked her and, laughing,
said,
"Let us put the baby on the goat's back and see her run."
"Oh, that would be fun!" cried Pineknot, and he ran and untied the goat.
Laughing, Thorn put the baby on the goat's back. The little fingers
clung to the goat's hair.
Then Thorn struck the goat and shouted, "Run!"
The goat ran; the baby laughed; Pineknot danced and clapped his hands.
All at once, the goat stood up on her hind legs. The baby fell off,
and rolled over and over on the ground. She cried out, though she was
not hurt. And the boys laughed and shouted till the woods rang.
[Illustration: All at once, the goat stood up on her hind legs]
After a while Pineknot thought of the goat; he had not tied her.
"Where is the little goat? Oh, there she is up among the rocks. She
did not run away, Thorn."
"No," said Thorn, "she will not run away now, for we pet her and give
her things to eat. Mother feeds her, too."
"Oh, but she was a wild one when father brought her home," said
Pineknot. "Father killed the mother goat and caught the young one
alive. He said that he would keep her at the cave. Then some day when
he had killed nothing on the hunt, and we were hungry, he would kill
the goat."
"We will ask father not to kill her, but let us keep her for a pet,"
said Thorn.
As the boys were talking, from far away through the forest came a big,
merry song:
"The wild horse ran very fast,
But I ran faster!
The wild horse ran very fast,
But I ran faster!"
"It is father coming from the hunt," said Thorn, jumping to his feet.
"He is bringing wild horse meat. Good, good!" cried Pineknot.
Thorn threw the baby on his back, and together the boys ran into the
forest to meet their father.
The forest--oh, it was beautiful! The trunks of the old trees were big
and rough and mossy. And there were tall ferns and gray rocks and
little brooks, and there was a sweet smell of rotting leaves.
"The wild horse ran very fast,
But I ran faster!"
still sang the young hunter, shaking his red hair gaily. He was not
tall, but his legs were big, for he ran after the wild horse and deer
and ox. And his arms were big, because he threw a great spear and a
stone ax. His name was Strongarm.
[Illustration: Strongarm]
The boys came running up to their father. They pointed to the meat on
his shoulder, and laughed and shouted and clapped their hands.
"We shall not go hungry to-day!
We shall not go hungry to-day!"
they sang as they danced along.
"Ho, ho, ho!" sang Strongarm to his wife, as he went into the cave. He
threw the horse meat upon the floor with a loud laugh, and lay down on
a bear skin to rest.
The cave was a big room with a high roof. The floor was of dirt and
very hard. The walls were limestone rock in beautiful rough layers,
one upon another. From the roof the limestone hung in long pointed
shapes, like icicles.
A fire burned brightly on the floor, while the smoke rose slowly and
went out at a hole in the roof. The walls and the roof were blackened
by smoke.
Strongarm's young wife was named Burr. She was glad when she saw the
meat. She took her stone knife quickly and cut up the meat, and threw
the pieces on the hot coals. While the fire blazed and snapped and
cooked the meat, the boys looked on with hungry eyes.
When the meat was done, Burr pulled it from the fire with a long stick.
The boys and Strongarm snatched it up and tore it to pieces with their
white teeth.
"Um-m! how good and tender and juicy!" said the boys, grinning, and
smacking their lips.
When the meat was all gone, the bones were broken and the sweet marrow
scraped out and eaten; for that was good, too.
While the family was still eating, a big black bear came along. He
smelled the meat, and put his great rough head in at the door and
sniffed.
[Illustration: A big black bear came along]
"Bear!" shouted Strongarm, jumping to his feet.
Burr and the boys cried out and quickly ran away to hide. Strongarm
snatched a blazing log and struck the bear. He was burned and hurt,
and he grew angry. He stood up on his hind legs and growled and showed
his sharp teeth.
Strongarm snatched his ax and made for the bear, but he had gone. His
growls sounded farther and farther away. Still Strongarm stood with
his ax ready, his heart thumping and his eyes big. When he saw that
the bear was not coming back, he dropped his ax with a gruff laugh.
Then Burr and the boys came creeping out of their holes. And they all
laughed and talked at once, telling how scared they had been.
The growls of the bear still sounded through the woods, so the boys ran
to the door to see him.
"There he goes!" cried Pineknot with wide eyes, pointing.
"How big he is!" cried Thorn; "I shall make his picture."
Thorn ran back into the cave and quickly threw a pineknot on the fire.
It blazed up and made all the cave light. He broke a piece of
limestone from the wall and picked up a sharp stone from the floor.
Then he sat down by the fire to make his picture of the bear. After a
while he held up the piece of limestone with the picture scratched on
it.
[Illustration: Then he sat down by the fire to make his picture of the
bear]
"O mother," said Pineknot, laughing hard, "see Thorn's picture of the
bear. It shows his big body and his long head and his little ears."
"That is the very bear that made us run," said Burr, laughing.
All this time Strongarm had been making a picture of wild horses. He
now held up the picture, scratched on a piece of deer antler.
"See, this horse has his ears up," he said. "He heard me coming. Here
I am with my spear."
Burr and the boys crowded round and said, "Oh!"
While Strongarm and the boys were making pictures, the baby had been
tumbling about on the floor. She crept around or pulled herself to her
feet by holding to the rough places in the wall. After a while she
grew sleepy; then her mother took her in her arms and sang this song:
"Little child!
Little sweet one!
Little girl!
Though a baby,
Soon a-hunting after berries
Will be going.
Little girl!
Little sweet one!
Little child!"
The baby went to sleep, and Burr laid her on a bear skin on the floor.
Soon afterwards Pineknot fell asleep on another skin, and in a little
while Thorn lay beside him. Then Burr put ashes over the coals, while
Strongarm threw burning logs before the door. Soon all was quiet in
the cave. The cave folks had gone to sleep.
[Illustration: Ram horns]
CHAPTER II
THE NEEDLE, THE CLUB, AND THE BOW
Nearly every day Strongarm went out to hunt. But he did not always
bring back meat to the cave, for he could not always kill an animal.
But sometimes he brought home the meat of deer or bison, and then again
it was that of mammoth or ox.
Burr always took the meat when Strongarm brought it home, and sometimes
she cut tendons from it. A tendon is a strong white cord that fastens
a muscle to a bone. There are long tendons in the backs of big
animals. Burr cut these out sometimes and hung them in the sun to dry.
When they were dry, she broke the thin outside skin and tore the tendon
apart with her fingers. It came to pieces in many little threads.
Burr took some of the little threads and twisted them together and made
a good strong thread for sewing.
One day she sat before the door of her cave sewing together skins of
wild oxen.
[Illustration: Sewing together skins of wild oxen]
"What is the big skin for, mother?" asked Pineknot, who ran up.
"To lay on sticks above our door," said Burr. "Then, even when it
rains, we can sit outside."
"Oh, that will be fine!" said the boy.
Burr went on with her sewing. She made holes along the edge of the
skins with a sharp stone. Then she threaded her needle. She put it
through a hole in each of the skins and pulled it tight. She worked on
in this way and sewed the skins together.
"Where did you get the needle, mother?" Pineknot asked next, looking at
it closely.
"I made it," said Burr. "When your father brings birds or deer from
the hunt, I sometimes take a little bone from the leg of a deer or the
wing of a bird. This I put in the cave to dry. When it is dry, I rub
it smooth with sandstone. Then I must have a hole in one end to carry
the thread. I take a sharp stone and turn it round and round on the
little bone, pressing down. It is not hard work. In that way I make a
smooth hole in my needle."
[Illustration: A little bone]
[Illustration: Bone needle]
"But when my mother sewed," Burr went on, "she used a little bone to
push the thread through the skins. One day she found a little bone
with a hole in it and took it home. She put her thread through the
hole, wondering how it would do, and began to sew. Soon there was a
crowd of women round her, pointing and saying, 'Oh, oh!' while the
little bone carried the thread."
"It must be fun to sew with a needle," said Pineknot.
Thorn was nearby making bone whistles and marrow scrapers, and soon
Strongarm came up dragging a little tree. He threw down his old
hunting club and said, "It is broken. I will make a new one."
[Illustration: Broken hunting club]
With his stone ax he hacked off the top and roots of the tree; then he
stripped the bark from the small end, and rubbed it with sandstone.
"It must be smooth or it will hurt my hand," he said to the boys who
stood watching him.
"In the old days," he said, rubbing away, "the cave men had nothing to
fight with but a club. Before they had even that," he went on,
grinning, "they fought with nails and teeth, or with a stick or a stone
snatched from the ground." Then laughing loud, he added, "No wonder
that in the old days people lived in trees, and ran if they saw a
wildcat."
"I should be sorry if you had nothing to hunt with but a club, father,"
said Pineknot, making a long face. "We should go hungry oftener than
we do now."
After they had gone into the cave, the boys began to play with the
baby. In fun they pushed her into the room behind the one they lived
in. She cried out, because she was scared at the darkness.
"How loud her voice sounds in there," said Thorn.
"What is the rest of the cave like, father?" asked Pineknot. "Is it
very big?"
"Yes, it goes far back into the hill," said Strongarm. "I have never
been to the end of it, myself."
"Show it to us, father," said Thorn; and he ran to get a burning knot.
Strongarm took the torch and led the way into the next room. He held
the torch up high. The light looked small and dim in the darkness of
the big room. They went on and came to room after room and to long
halls. Some places were narrow and low, so that they had to crawl on
hands and knees to get through; and all the walls and floors were wet
and slippery.
Everywhere in the cave the limestone showed beautiful rough layers. In
all the rooms long pointed rocks hung from the roof or stood up from
the floor. Water dripped from each pointed rock above, and fell on the
pointed rock just beneath. In many places two pointed rocks touched
each other and formed a great, rough, beautiful pillar. In some of the
rooms the walls and pillars were lovely and white, glistening in the
torch light.
The boys looked at all these things in wonder.
When at last they had come back to their own room, Pineknot asked,
"Father, what is the water that we heard trickling in the cave?"
"It is a stream. It used to come down through that hole," said
Strongarm, pointing to the smoke-hole. "But afterwards it went down
another way."
He sat thinking for a while. Then he said, "When I fought with the
other young hunters and carried off your mother, I wanted a cave to
bring her to. I came to look at this one. Bears were living here
then. But one evening while they were all away, I came in and made a
fire at the door."
Strongarm laughed long and loud, and the rest laughed to hear him.
"Since then the cave has been mine," he went on. "Well, you should
have seen the floor! It was covered with old bones that the bears had
brought in to gnaw. I threw them all out and broke off the rocks that
stood up from the floor. That gave more room. Then I brought your
mother here."
"It has made us a good safe home," said Burr, nodding her head.
After a while Thorn jumped up and said, "I want some honey."
He took a burning stick from the fire and ran out. He walked through
the forest and looked and listened. At last he saw bees go into a hole
in a hollow tree.
"Here is my bee tree!" he cried, waving his torch.
Bees were in a crowd about the hole, crawling over each other, and
going in and coming out. Thorn could hear them humming from where he
stood. He swung his torch from his arm; then, hand over hand, up the
tree he went.
When he came to the bees' nest, he threw his leg over a branch. He
swung the smoking stick back and forth. The bees flew off humming
angrily. Thorn quickly broke off the yellow honeycombs and put them
into his bag. Then down the tree he slid, followed by the angry bees.
[Illustration: The bees flew off humming angrily]
"Oh, oh, oh!" he cried, as he ran like a deer. When he went into the
cave with the wild honey, the baby held out her little hands. He gave
her some and said, "You are sweet. You are honey."
So the baby came to be called Honey.
At sundown, the boys went out into the woods to set the traps. A
beautiful mother deer and her fawn were drinking at a brook. Crickets
sang under old bark, and frogs on the edge of the pond. And birds were
singing their low sweet evening songs.
[Illustration: The edge of the pond]
The little hunters went straight on from trap to trap. But they found
no fox or wolf or wildcat in any of them. They were sorry. One trap
was sprung.
"Something has been here, and the meat is gone," said Pineknot. "We
must set the trap again."
Thorn quickly bent down a little hickory, and tied a string to the top.
Then he raised one end of a big rock and put a loop of the string
around it.
Pineknot was busy setting a trigger under the rock. All this time,
Thorn stood by, playing with the string, pulling it and letting it go,
pulling and letting go.
"Listen," he said, "it sings like the wind." Pineknot had a stick in
his hand and, for fun, set it against the string. When Thorn let the
string go, the stick was shot out of Pineknot's hand, and against his
bare body. He yelled, and Thorn opened his eyes in wonder.
[Illustration: And, for fun, set it against the string]
Pineknot rubbed the place, but picked up the stick, stood aside, and
set it as before. Then he said, "Do that again."
Thorn did it again, and the stick flew among the trees. Over and over
again they tried it, and every time the flying string threw the stick.
"Now," said Thorn, "I shall bend a little branch as that tree was bent,
and I shall tie a string to the ends."
He did so; and all the way home he kept shooting with his little bow,
and wondering about it.
[Illustration: Broken hunting club (2nd version)]
CHAPTER III
THE TAMING OF THE DOG
[Illustration: Cattle horns]
Early one morning Strongarm went out to hunt. Cattle with wild eyes
were eating grass on the edge of the wood. Strongarm dropped to his
knees and slowly, carefully, crawled through the bushes toward them.
"Just a little nearer, and I will throw my spear!" he thought.
A dry branch snapped beneath him! The wild cattle threw up their
heads, and with a hurry of feet were soon lost to sight.
Frowning, the hunter got up from his knees and walked on. He saw a
herd of mammoths, but he could not kill one of the big hairy elephants
alone, so he turned away. He hunted all day long. He saw plenty of
wild animals, but he could not get near enough to kill one. He saw
wild ducks and grouse, but he had not brought his sling.
"Must I go hungry to-day?" he growled, frowning.
From far off came the yelping of dogs.
"The pack is hunting!" he shouted, with a roaring laugh. "I will
follow the wild dogs and take some of the meat they leave!"
Led by the sounds, he found the dogs running down a bison. They
followed it until it was too tired to fight, and then pulled it down
and killed it. They ate all the meat they wanted and went away. Then
Strongarm cut meat from the bison.
On his way home he saw a nest of wild puppies in a hollow tree.
"Um," he grunted, "the little wild goat that the children play with is
quiet and tame. If a wild puppy grew up with them, would it be tame?
Would it help me to hunt?"
He picked up a puppy. When he got home, he dropped the little ball of
soft black wool between the two boys lying on a bear skin.
Then there were merry eyes, laughs, and soft calls:
"Here little pet!" and "Oh, the little sharp teeth!"
At last a tired little ball fell asleep in brown arms.
The puppy grew fast and was full of play. He followed the boys
everywhere, and they called him "Wow wow."
One day they were playing by the high rock, when the puppy saw
something in the woods and ran after it.
Pineknot called to him, "Come here, Wow wow!"
And the call came back from the rock, "Wow wow!"
"Oh, hear my talking shadow, brother," said Pineknot.
"Yes," said Thorn, laughing, "let us talk a while with our talking
shadows."
So they lay down on the ground and began to call.
[Illustration: So they lay down on the ground and began to call.]
"Ho, there!" called Thorn.
"Ho, there!" came back from the rock.
"Come here, talking shadow."
"Shadow," was the answer.
"We want to see you," called the boys.
"See you," said the echo.
"Ho, ho, ho!" laughed the boys.
"Ho, ho!" laughed the talking shadow.
That evening Pineknot came running to the cave, calling, "O Thorn, I
was coming along on the high rock, and I heard little cries. I crawled
through the bushes and looked over and saw a nest full of young eagles.
They were skinny and had no feathers on their bodies. The nest was
made of sticks; and oh, it was big, and there was a lot of feathers in
it!"
[Illustration: A nest full of young eagles]
Pineknot stopped for breath.
"Go on, go on," said Thorn, "tell more."
"As I looked, a shadow bird went over the rock," said Pineknot; "and
then down dropped the mother eagle with a snake in her claws."
"Oh," cried Thorn, "I wish I had seen it."
"The young eagles held their mouths open," Pineknot went on, "and their
mother fed them with the snake, a little bit at a time. When the snake
was all gone, the mother eagle waved her big wings and flew away. Then
the young ones' heads fell down. They were asleep."
A day or two after that, Thorn came into the cave with an eagle's
feather in his hand. And there were long red cuts and scratches on his
body.
His father looked at him with a scowl.
"Men bring meat from the hunt, not feathers," he said roughly.
The boy looked pitiful; his mother felt sorry for him. She said to
herself, "He has been to see the young eagles. The mother eagle saw
him. He fought her alone with his little stone ax. He will be a great
hunter!"
She looked at him proudly, and put cold water on the little torn body.
"Gr-r-r," growled Strongarm, scowling. "Would you make a baby of the
boy? A fight is good for him. He will learn to make his way."
CHAPTER IV
HOW STRONGARM HUNTED A BEAR AND A LION
In those days Strongarm was busily digging a big hole away out in the
forest. He cut the dirt up with his stone ax, and threw it out with a
clam shell. He had worked now for days, and at last the hole was large
enough. He laid branches over it, and over the branches he hung the
leg of a wild goat.
That night the wild things of the woods came out to hunt for food. A
cave bear came by and smelled the meat. He went to get it and fell
through the branches into the hole beneath.
The next day when Strongarm went to the hole, he found the great cave
bear in it. He killed the bear and carried the meat home to eat, and
the skin to sleep on.
Burr took the bear skin from him and laid it out on the ground. She
drove sticks down through the edges, all the while pulling the skin
tight. Then with her stone scraper, she scraped off all the meat and
fat. She left the skin stretched on the ground, and thought, "It will
dry there, and another day I will scrape it again. Then it will be
good and soft to sleep on."
[Illustration: She scraped off all the meat and fat]
She looked up as a man came running toward the cave.
"Oho, Hickory!" called Strongarm, "what is it?"
"A lion hunt!" shouted Hickory, and shook his spear.
Strongarm's bold face lighted up.
"Tell about it," he said.
"A lion has come among the caves by the river. He kills the people and
carries off the children. The women dare not go to the river for
water. The men are afraid to go alone to hunt. So they want help to
kill the lion. They want all the strong men and the good hunters.
They have sent for you."
Strongarm quickly took his club and spear and went off with old
Hickory. The men went over two hills and across a stream, and came to
Hickory's cave. There other men joined them. All the men had clubs
and spears and stone axes. They went together toward the river caves.
They found the lion and killed it.
Strongarm came home after some days, bringing lion's meat. Burr cooked
it, and Strongarm said to the boys, "Eat, it will make you brave."