|
|
|
An animal of several different species. The name was originally given by French settlers to many burrowing animals, from their honeycombing the earth. In Canada and Illinois, the name was given to a gray burrowing squirrel (Spermaphilus Franklin); west of the Mississippi to S. Richardsonii; and in Wisconsin to a striped squirrel. In Missouri, a common species is a pouched rat of a reddish or chestnut-brown color, with broad, mole-like fore feet, the Geomys bursarius. In Georgia, a snake (Colber coupen) is called by the name; and in Florida, a turtle (the Testudo polyphemus. (Webster, 1882)
The Striped Prairie Squirrel (Spermophilus tridecim lineatus) is one kind of pocket gopher. It has brownish-red stripes on a yellowish ground. It burrows, and carries seeds in cheek pouches. This is the animal famous for robbing a planted cornfield of seed! Even though this animal is typically not called a picket-pin gopher, notice how it does stand on its hind legs and resemble a piece of wood in the old drawing at left.
"Gopher my way to the stable..." During the Hard Winter of 1880-1881, the snow fall was so deep at one point that Charles Ingalls was able to dig a tunnel from the back door to the stable; he called it gophering because digging through the snow reminded him of gophers digging tunnels in the earth. One for a gopher, Two for a gopher, Three for a gopher, Four don't go fur.
Here, the joke is Charles Ingalls' play on words: using go fur (meaning to go far, or to last a long time, which the corn doesn't!) as a rhyme for gopher. The poem is a play on his planting rhyme of planting four kernels of corn in each hill. Two would be eaten by animals, leaving two to mature.
gopher (LHP 4, 22; TLW 1; LTP 3, 23; THGY 15, 18)
|
|
|
Copyright © 2009 by Nancy Cleaveland - All Rights Reserved. |
|
|