11 JULY 1952, Page 23

Death Out of Doors

There was no doubt that the hedgehog was dead. He lay on his back among the leaves and grass, and his helplessness made him a sorry sight. He was old. His claws were horny, and the hair on his under- parts was grizzled. Perhaps a dog had killed him, or some internal parasite had become too much for his system. I turned him with my foot, and found the burying beetle. Grubs were working on the under- taker's business. The casualties of the wild are quickly put out of sight. No sooner has a field-mouse died that the eggs of the blowfly begin to hatch. In a few days the little corpse has shrunk. Among other scavengers, the magpie may help the funeral along. Before a month has passed the shrivelled skin is lost in the grass, and in less than a season the bones have crumbled and fertilised the earth. Some- times one comes across the skull of a rabbit in the undergrowth, but most creatures crawl a_way to die in holed. There are many badgers and foxes in my locality, and I have never come across the body of one that appeared to have died from natural causes.