They
browse around on the bottom of Florida rivers, and sea inlets, as cows do
on shore, eating grass. We'll probably see some down here."
"Are they dangerous?" asked Miss Dixon.
"Not as a rule," answered the grouchy actor, who seemed to have taken a
sudden interest in this matter. "They might upset a small boat if they
accidently bumped into it, for often they grow to be fourteen feet long,
and are like a whale in shape."
"I hope we won't meet with any," observed Ruth. "I can't bear wild
animals."
"Manatees are not especially wild," laughed Mr. Sneed, it being one of
the few occasions when he did indulge in mirth. "In fact, the earlier
forms of manatee were called _Sirenia_, and were considered to be the
origin of the belief in mermaids. For they carried their little ones in
their fore-flippers, almost as a human mother might do in her arms, and
when swimming along would raise their heads out of water, so that they
had a faint resemblance to a swimming woman."
"How very odd!" cried Alice. "And are there manatees down here?"
"Many in Florida? Yes," was the answer. "I suppose we'll see some if we
stay long enough. But I'm going to serve notice on Mr. Pertell now that I
refuse to drive any of the sea cows to pasture."
"I don't blame you!" laughed Ruth. "Oh, look at Mr. Towne! He's fallen
again!"
And so the unfortunate actor had, but this time into a clump of rough
bushes that tore his now nearly ruined white flannels.
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