Month: November 2023

Benjamin Franklin’s Ode to Squirrels

This bit of ironic American History was brought to my attention from a friend that owns a surf shop https://www.surfcapeann.com .

It seems back in the 1700-1800’s squirrels as pets were quite the rage, especially among the elites…In fact Benjamin Franklin penned a letter with poem as an ode to squirrel that met its untimely demise at the jaws of a dog named Ranger….the letter is all the more humorous to me seeing as how I currently have a Dog name Ranger!

https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-19-02-0202

From Benjamin Franklin to Georgiana Shipley, 26 September 1772

To Georgiana Shipley

als (draft): Yale University Library

London, Sept. 26. 1773 [17724]

Dear Miss,

I lament with you most sincerely the unfortunate End of poor Mungo: Few Squirrels were better accomplish’d; for he had had a good Education, had travell’d far, and seen much of the World. As he had the Honour of being for his Virtues your Favourite, he should not go like common Skuggs5 without an Elegy or an Epitaph. Let us give him one in the monumental Stile and Measure, which being neither Prose nor Verse, is perhaps the properest for Grief; since to use common Language would look as if we were not affected, and to make Rhimes would seem Trifling in Sorrow.

Alas! poor Mungo!

Happy wert thou, hadst thou known

Thy own Felicity!

Remote from the fierce Bald-Eagle,

Tyrant of thy native Woods,

Thou hadst nought to fear from his piercing Talons;

Nor from the murdering Gun

Of the thoughtless Sportsman.

Safe in thy wired Castle,

Grimalkin never could annoy thee.

Daily wert thou fed with the choicest Viands

By the fair Hand

Of an indulgent Mistress.

But, discontented, thou wouldst have more Freedom.

Too soon, alas! didst thou obtain it,

And, wandering,

Fell by the merciless Fangs,

Of wanton, cruel Ranger.6

Learn hence, ye who blindly wish more Liberty,

Whether Subjects, Sons, Squirrels or Daughters,

That apparent Restraint may be real Protection,

Yielding Peace, Plenty, and Security.

You see how much more decent and proper this broken Stile, interrupted as it were with Sighs, is for the Occasion, than if one were to say, by way of Epitaph,

Here Skugg

Lies snug

As a Bug

In a Rug.

And yet perhaps there are People in the World of so little Feeling as to think, that would be a good-enough Epitaph for our poor Mungo!

If you wish it, I shall procure another to succeed him.7 But perhaps you will now chuse some other Amusement. Remember me respectfully to all the [torn] good Family; and believe me ever, Your affectionate Friend

B Franklin

[Note numbering follows the Franklin Papers source.]

4. bf misdated the draft by a year. He wrote on the inside of the four-page sheet that Georgiana used for the preceding document, to which he was clearly replying; five months later he sent the correspondence to df: below, Feb. 14, 1773.

5. The “Name by which all Squirrels are called here, as all Cats are called Puss”: ibid.

6. bf has christened the dog that Georgiana mentioned as the culprit.

7. bf did so, and the successor apparently lived to a ripe old age. See df to bfbelow, Oct. 29, 1773Georgiana to bf, May 1, 1779, APS.PERMANENT LINK What’s this?https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Franklin/01-19-02-0202

Note: The annotations to this document, and any other modern editorial content, are copyright © the American Philosophical Society and Yale University. All rights reserved.Back to top

How Long Did it Take?

I have received quite a few questions on “how long did it take to write the Screech Owl book?” The quick answer is almost 3 years….However, for some behind the scenes insight on the actual time it took to gather the information, insight and our best understanding of Screech Owls to present in book form, I present a 2009 email between Jim and myself.

> > On Mon, May 4, 2009 at 2:08 PM, Scott Weston
> > wrote:
> >
> > > good to hear, I was hoping it was something like that
> > >
> > > I am testing a squirrel resistant design for an owl house, that isn’t
> an
> > > eye sore.  I replaced the normal house that I gave my sister in D.C
> > > (maryland) that was successful last spring, but  there was a roost of 3
> > > squirrels evicted in Nov. on one visit and again another 3 squirrels in
> > > early march and then replaced the normal style with the resistant
> style,
> > > with in 2 weeks an owl sighting in box was reported to me, with
> > consistent
> > > sightings since late march in the box (no camera though).  the true
> test
> > > will be fall when squirrels seem to get first dibs.  as her
> neighborhood
> > has
> > > a huge population of squirrels.
> > >
> > > Scott

> > >
> > > >>> Jim Wright <celeryfarm@gmail.com> 4/30/2009 8:58 AM >>>
> > > The answer is 3 — waiting till end of season…
> > >
> > > My owl has five babies, and briught in a snake the other night to feed
> > > them…
> > >
> > > I hope to have some great videos later…

This is the Maryland Box, one of the original prototypes, reclaimed the cedar wood front from a normal type box I built and integrated it into vinyl covered white pine with sloped roof.