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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventures of Jerry Muskrat
+by Thornton W. Burgess
+(#10 in our series by Thornton W. Burgess)
+
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Adventures of Jerry Muskrat
+
+Author: Thornton W. Burgess
+
+Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5110]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on April 29, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE ADVENTURES OF JERRY MUSKRAT ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was prepared by by Kent Fielden (fielden3@aol.com).
+
+
+THE ADVENTURES OF JERRY MUSKRAT
+
+BY THORNTON W. BURGESS
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I: Jerry Muskrat Has A Fright
+
+What was it Mother Muskrat had said about Farmer Brown's boy and his
+traps? Jerry Muskrat sat on the edge of the Big Rock and kicked his
+heels while he tried to remember. The fact is, Jerry had not half heeded.
+He had been thinking of other things. Besides, it seemed to him that
+Mother Muskrat was altogether foolish about a great many things.
+
+"Pooh!" said Jerry, throwing out his chest, "I guess I can take care
+of myself without being tied to my mother's apron strings! What if
+Farmer Brown's boy is setting traps around the Smiling Pool? I guess
+he can't fool your Uncle Jerry. He isn't so smart as he thinks he is;
+I can fool him any day." Jerry chuckled. He was thinking of how
+he had once fooled Farmer Brown's boy into thinking a big trout was
+on his hook.
+
+Slowly Jerry slid into the Smiling Pool and swam over towards his
+favorite log. Peter Rabbit stuck his head over the edge of the bank.
+"Hi, Jerry," he shouted, "last night I saw Farmer Brown's boy
+coming over this way with a lot of traps. Better watch out!"
+
+"Go chase yourself, Peter Rabbit. I guess I can look out for
+myself," replied Jerry, just a little crossly.
+
+Peter made a wry face and started for the sweet clover patch.
+Hardly was he out of sight when Billy Mink and Bobby Coon came
+down the Laughing Brook together. They seemed very much excited.
+When they saw Jerry Muskrat, they beckoned for him to come over
+where they were, and when he got there, they both talked at once,
+and it was all about Farmer Brown's boy and his traps.
+
+"You'd better watch out, Jerry," warned Billy Mink, who is a great
+traveler and has had wide experience.
+
+"Oh, I guess I'm able to take care of myself," said Jerry airily,
+and once more started for his favorite log. And what do you suppose
+he was thinking about as he swam along? He was wishing that he knew
+what a trap looked like, for despite his boasting he didn't even
+know what he was to look out for. As he drew near his favorite log,
+something tickled his nose. He stopped swimming to sniff and sniff.
+My, how good it did smell! And it seemed to come right straight from
+the old log. Jerry began to swim as fast as he could. In a few
+minutes he scrambled out on the old log. Then Jerry rubbed his eyes
+three times to be sure that he saw aright. There were luscious
+pieces of carrot lying right in front of him.
+
+Now there is nothing that Jerry Muskrat likes better than carrot.
+So he didn't stop to wonder how it got there. He just reached out
+for the nearest piece and ate it. Then he reached for the next piece
+and ate it. Then he did a funny little dance just for joy. When he
+was quite out of breath, he sat down to rest. Snap! Something had
+Jerry Muskrat by the tail! Jerry squealed with fright and pain. Oh,
+how it did hurt! He twisted and turned, but he was held fast and
+could not see what had him. Then he pulled and pulled, until it
+seemed as if his tail would pull off. But it didn't. So he kept
+pulling, and pretty soon the thing let go so suddenly that Jerry
+tumbled head first into the water.
+
+When he reached home, Mother Muskrat did his sore tail up for him.
+"What did I tell you about traps?" she asked severely.
+
+Jerry stopped crying. "Was that a trap?" he asked. Then he remembered
+that in his fright he didn't even see it. "Oh, dear," he moaned, "I
+wouldn't know one to-day if I met it."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II: The Convention At Ther Big Rock
+
+Jolly round, red Mr. Sun looked down on the Smiling Pool. He almost
+forgot to keep on climbing up in the blue sky, he was so interested
+in what he saw there. What do you think it was? Why, it was a
+convention at the Big Rock, the queerest convention he ever had seen.
+Your papa would say that it was a mass-meeting of angry citizens.
+Maybe it was, but that is a pretty long term. Anyway, Mother Muskrat
+said it was a convention, and she ought to know, for she is the one
+who had called it.
+
+Of course Jerry Muskrat was there, and his uncles and aunts and all
+his cousins. Billy Mink was there, and all his relations, even old
+Grandfather Mink, who has lost most of his teeth and is a little
+hard of hearing.
+
+Little Joe Otter was there, with his father and mother and all his
+relations even to his third cousins. Bobby Coon was there, and he
+had brought with him every Coon of his acquaintance who ever fished
+in the Smiling Pool or along the Laughing Brook. And everybody was
+looking very solemn, very solemn indeed.
+
+When the last one had arrived, Mother Muskrat climbed up on the Big
+Rock and called Jerry Muskrat up beside her, where all could see him.
+Then she made a speech. "Friends of the Smiling Pool and Laughing
+Brook," began Mrs. Muskrat, "I have called you together to show you
+what has happened to my son Jerry and to ask your advice." She stopped
+and pointed to Jerry's sore tail. "What do you think did that?" she
+demanded.
+
+"Probably Jerry's been in a fight and got whipped," said Bobby Coon
+to his neighbor, for Bobby Coon is a graceless young scamp and does
+not always show proper respect to his neighbors.
+
+Mrs. Muskrat glared at him, for she had overheard the remark. Then
+she held up one hand to command silence. "Friends, it was a trap --
+a trap set by Farmer Brown's boy! a trap to catch you and me and our
+children!" said she solemnly. "It is no longer safe for our little
+folks to play around the Smiling Pool or along the Laughing Brook.
+What are we going to do about it?"
+
+Everybody looked at everybody else in dismay. Then everybody began
+to talk at once, and if Farmer Brown's boy could have heard all the
+things said about him, his cheeks certainly would have burned.
+Indeed, I am afraid that they would have blistered. Such excitement!
+Everybody had a different idea, and nobody would listen to anybody
+else. Old Mr. Mink lost his temper and called Grandpa Otter a
+meddlesome know-nothing. It looked very much as if the convention
+was going to break up in a sad quarrel. Then Mr. Coon climbed up on
+the Big Rock and with a stick pounded for silence.
+
+"I move," said he, "that in as much as we cannot agree, we tell
+Great-Grandfather Frog all about the danger and ask his advice, for
+he is very old and very wise and remembers when the world was young.
+All in favor please raise their right hands."
+
+At once the air was full of hands, and everybody was good-natured
+once more. So it was agreed to call in Great-Grandfather Frog.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III: The Oracle Of The Smiling Pool
+
+Grandfather Frog sat on his big green lily-pad with his eyes half
+closed, for all the world as if he knew nothing about the meeting at
+the Big Rock. Of course he did know, for there isn't much going on
+around the Smiling Pool which he doesn't see or at least hear all
+about. The Merry Little Breezes, who are here, there, and everywhere,
+told him all that was going on, so that when he saw Jerry Muskrat
+and Little Joe Otter swimming towards him, he knew what they were
+coming for. But he pretended to be very much surprised when Jerry
+Muskrat very politely said: "Good morning, Grandfather Frog."
+
+"Good morning, Jerry Muskrat. You're out early this morning,"
+replied Grandfather Frog.
+
+"If you please, you are wanted over at the Big Rock," said Jerry.
+
+Grandfather Frog's eyes twinkled, but he made his voice very deep
+and gruff as he replied: "Chugarum! You're a scamp, Jerry Muskrat,
+and Little Joe Otter is another. What trick are you trying to play
+on me now?"
+
+Jerry Muskrat and Little Joe Otter looked a wee bit sheepish, for it
+was true that they were forever trying to play tricks on Grandfather
+Frog. "Really and truly, Grandfather Frog, there isn't any trick
+this time," said Jerry. "There is a meeting at the Big Rock to try
+to decide what to do to keep Farmer Brown's boy from setting traps
+around the Smiling Pool and along the Laughing Brook, and everybody
+wants your advice, because you are so old and so wise. Please come."
+
+Grandfather Frog smoothed down his white and yellow waistcoat and
+pretended to think the matter over very seriously, while Jerry and
+Little Joe fidgeted impatiently. Finally he spoke.
+
+"I am very old, as you have said, Jerry Muskrat, and it is a long way
+over to the Big Rock."
+
+"Get right on my back and I'll take you over there," said Jerry eagerly.
+
+"I'm afraid that you'll spill me off," replied Grandfather Frog.
+
+"No, I won't; just try me and see," begged Jerry.
+
+So Grandfather Frog climbed on Jerry Muskrat's back, and Jerry
+started for the Big Rock as fast as he could go. When all the Minks
+and the Otters and the Coons and the Muskrats saw them coming, they
+gave a great shout, for Grandfather Frog is sometimes called the oracle
+of the Smiling Pool. You know an oracle is one who is very wise.
+
+Bobby Coon helped Grandfather Frog up on the Big Rock, and when he
+had made himself comfortable, Mrs. Muskrat told him all about Farmer
+Brown's boy and his traps, and how Jerry had been caught in one by
+the tail, and she ended by asking for his advice, because they all
+knew that he was so wise.
+
+When she said this, Grandfather Frog puffed himself up until it seemed
+as if his white and yellow waistcoat would surely burst. He sat
+very still for a while and gazed straight at jolly, round, red
+Mr. Sun without blinking once. Then he spoke in a very deep voice.
+
+"To-morrow morning at sunrise I will tell you what to do," said he.
+And not another word could they get out of him.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV: Grandfather Frog's Plan
+
+Just as Old Mother West Wind and her Merry Little Breezes came down
+from the Purple Hills, and jolly, round, red Mr. Sun threw his
+nightcap off and began his daily climb up in the blue sky,
+Great-Grandfather Frog climbed up on the Big Rock in the Smiling
+Pool. Early as he was, all the little people who live along the
+Laughing Brook and around the Smiling Pool were waiting for him.
+Bobby Coon had found two traps set by Farmer Brown's boy, and
+Billy Mink had almost stepped in a third. No one felt safe any more,
+yet no one knew what to do. So they all waited for the advice of
+Great-Grandfather Frog, who, you know, is accounted very, very wise.
+
+Grandfather Frog cleared his throat. "Chugarum!" said he. "You must
+find all the traps that Farmer Brown's boy has set."
+
+"How are we going to do it?" asked Bobby Coon.
+
+"By looking for them," replied Grandfather Frog tartly.
+
+Bobby Coon looked foolish and slipped out of sight behind his mother.
+
+"All the Coons and all the Minks must search along the banks of the
+Laughing Brook, and all the Muskrats and all the Otters must search
+along the banks of the Smiling Pool. You must use your eyes and your
+noses. When you find things good to eat where you have never found
+them before, watch out! When you get the first whiff of the man-smell,
+watch out! Billy Mink, you are small and quick, and your eyes are
+sharp. You sit here on the Big Rock until you see Farmer Brown's
+boy coming. Then go hide in the bulrushes where you can watch him,
+but where he cannot see you. Follow him everywhere he goes around
+the Smiling Pool or along the Laughing Brook. Without knowing it,
+he will show you where every trap is hidden.
+
+"When all the traps have been found, drop a stick or a stone in each.
+That will spring them, and then they will be harmless. Then you can
+bury them deep in the mud. But don't eat any of the food until you
+have sprung all of the traps, for just as likely as not you will get
+caught. When all the traps have been sprung, why not bring all the
+good things to eat which you find around them to the Big Rock and
+have a grand feast?"
+
+"Hurrah for Grandfather Frog! That's a great idea!" shouted Little
+Joe Otter, turning a somersault in the water.
+
+Every one agreed with Little Joe Otter, and immediately they began
+to plan a grand hunt for the traps of Farmer Brown's boy.
+The Muskrats and the Otters started to search the banks of the
+Smiling Pool, and the Coons and the Minks, all but Billy, started
+for the Laughing Brook. Billy climbed up on the Big Rock to watch,
+and Grandfather Frog slowly swam back to his big green lily-pad to
+wait for some foolish green flies for his breakfast.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V: A Busy Day At The Smiling Pool
+
+Everybody was excited. Yes, Sir. everybody in the Smiling Pool and
+along the Laughing Brook was just bubbling over with excitement.
+Even Spotty the Turtle, who usually takes everything so calmly that
+some people think him stupid, climbed up on the highest point of an
+old log where he could see what was going on. Only Grandfather
+Frog, sitting on his big green lily-pad and watching for foolish
+green flies for his breakfast, appeared not to know that something
+unusual was going on. Really, he was just as much excited as the
+rest, but because he is very old and accounted very, very wise, it
+would not do for him to show it.
+
+What was it all about? Why, all the Minks and the Coons and the
+Otters and the Muskrats, who live and play around the Smiling Pool
+and the Laughing Brook, were hunting for traps. Yes, Sir, they were
+hunting for traps set by Farmer Brown's boy, just as Grandfather
+Frog had advised them to.
+
+Jerry Muskrat and Little Joe Otter were hunting together. They
+were swimming along close to shore just where the Laughing Brook
+leaves the Smiling Pool, when Jerry wrinkled up his funny little
+nose and stopped swimming. Sniff, sniff, sniff, went Jerry Muskrat.
+Then little cold shivers ran down his backbone and way out to the
+tip of his tail.
+
+"What is it?" asked Little Joe Otter.
+
+"It's the man-smell," whispered Jerry.
+
+Just then Little Joe Otter gave a long sniff. "My, I smell fish!"
+he cried, his eyes sparkling, and started in the direction from
+which the smell came. He swam faster than Jerry, and in a minute he
+shouted in delight.
+
+"Hi, Jerry! Some one's left a fish on the edge of the bank: What a
+feast!"
+
+Jerry hurried as fast as he could swim, his eyes popping out with
+fright, for the nearer he got, the stronger grew that dreadful man-smell.
+"Don't touch it," he panted. "Don't touch it, Joe Otter!"
+
+Little Joe laughed. "What's the matter, Jerry? 'Fraid I'll eat it
+all up before you get here?" he asked, as he reached out for the fish.
+
+"Stop!" shrieked Jerry, and gave Little Joe a push, just as the
+latter touched the fish.
+
+Snap! A pair of wicked steel jaws flew together and caught Little
+Joe Otter by a claw of one toe. If it hadn't been for Jerry's push,
+he would have been caught by a foot.
+
+"Oh! Oh! Oh!" cried Little Joe Otter.
+
+"Next time I guess you'll remember what Grandfather Frog said about
+watching out when you find things to eat where they never were before,"
+said Jerry, as he helped Little Joe pull himself free from the trap.
+But he left the claw behind and had a dreadfully sore toe as a result.
+Then they buried the trap deep down in the mud and started to look
+for another.
+
+All around the Smiling Pool and along the Laughing Brook their
+cousins and uncles and aunts and friends were just as busy, and
+every once in a while some one would have just as narrow an escape
+as Little Joe Otter. And all the time up at the farmhouse Farmer
+Brown's boy was planning what he would do with the skins of the
+little animals he was sure he would catch in his traps.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI: Farmer Brown's Boy Is Puzzled
+
+Farmer Brown's boy was whistling merrily as he tramped down across
+the Green Meadows. The Merry Little Breezes saw him coming, and they
+raced over to the Smiling Pool to tell Billy Mink. Farmer Brown's
+boy was coming to visit his traps. He was very sure that he would
+find Billy Mink or Little Joe Otter, or Jerry Muskrat, or perhaps
+Bobby Coon.
+
+Billy Mink was sitting on top of the Big Rock. He saw the Merry
+Little Breezes racing across the Green Meadows, and behind them
+he saw Farmer Brown's boy. Billy Mink dived head first into the
+Smiling Pool. Then he swam over to Jerry Muskrat's house and warned
+Jerry. Together they hunted up Little Joe Otter, and then the three
+little scamps in brown hid in the bulrushes, where they could watch
+Farmer Brown's boy.
+
+The first place Farmer Brown's boy visited was Jerry Muskrat's
+old log. Very cautiously he peeped over the edge of the bank.
+The trap was gone!
+
+"Hurrah!" shouted Farmer Brown's boy. He was very much excited, as
+he caught hold of the end of the chain, which fastened it to the old
+log. He was sure that at last he had caught Jerry Muskrat. When he
+pulled the trap up, it was empty. Between the jaws were a few hairs
+and a little bit of skin, which Jerry Muskrat had left there when he
+sprung the trap with his tail.
+
+Farmer Brown's boy was disappointed. "Well, I'll get him to-morrow,
+anyway," said he to himself. Then he went on to his next trap;
+it was nowhere to be seen. When he pulled the chain he was so excited
+that he trembled. The trap did not come up at once. He pulled and
+pulled, and then suddenly up it came, all covered with mud. In it
+was one little claw from Little Joe Otter. Very carefully Farmer
+Brown's boy set the trap again. If he could have looked over in the
+bulrushes and have seen Little Joe Otter and Billy Mink and Jerry
+Muskrat watching him and tickling and laughing, he would not have
+been so sure that next time he would catch Little Joe Otter.
+
+All around the Smiling Pool and then up and down the Laughing Brook
+Farmer Brown's boy tramped, and each trap he found sprung and buried
+in the mud. He had stopped whistling by this time, and there was a
+puzzled frown on his freckled face. What did it mean? Could some
+other boy have found all his traps and played a trick by springing
+all of them? The more he thought about it, the more puzzled he
+became. You see, he did not know anything about the busy day the
+Minks and the Otters and the Muskrats and the Coons had spent the
+day before.
+
+Old Grandfather Frog, sitting on his big green lily-pad, smoothed
+down his white and yellow waistcoat and winked up at jolly, round,
+red Mr. Sun as Farmer Brown's boy tramped off across the Green Meadows.
+
+"Chugarum!" said Grandfather Frog, as he snapped up a foolish green fly.
+"Much good it will do you to set those traps again!"
+
+Then Grandfather Frog called to Billy Mink and sent him to tell all
+the other little people of the Smiling Pool and the Laughing Brook
+that they must hurry and spring all the traps again as they had before.
+
+This time it was easy, because they knew just where the traps were,
+so all day long they dropped sticks and stones into the traps and
+once more sprung them. Then they prepared for a grand feast of the
+good things to eat which Farmer Brown's boy had left, scattered
+around the traps.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII: Jerry Muskrat Makes A Discovery
+
+The beautiful springtime had brought a great deal of happiness to
+the Smiling Pool, as it had to the Green Meadows and to the Green
+Forest. Great-Grandfather Frog, who had slept the long winter away
+in his own special bed way down in the mud, had waked up with an
+appetite so great that for a while it seemed as if he could think of
+nothing but his stomach. Jerry Muskrat had felt the spring fever in
+his bones and had gone up and down the Laughing Brook, poking into
+all kinds of places just for the fun of seeing new things. Little
+Joe Otter had been more full of fun than ever, if that were possible.
+Mr. and Mrs. Redwing had come back to the bulrushes from their
+winter home way down in the warm Southland. Everybody was happy,
+just as happy as could be.
+
+One sunny morning Jerry Muskrat sat on the Big Rock in the middle of
+the Smiling Pool, just thinking of how happy everybody was and
+laughing at Little Joe Otter, who was cutting up all sorts of capers
+in the water. Suddenly Jerry's sharp eyes saw something that made
+him wrinkle his forehead in a puzzled frown and look and look at the
+opposite bank. Finally he called to Little Joe Otter.
+
+"Hi, Little Joe! Come over here!" shouted Jerry.
+
+"What for?" asked Little Joe, turning a somersault in the water.
+
+"I want you to see if there is anything wrong with my eyes,"
+replied Jerry.
+
+Little Joe Otter stopped swimming and stared up at Jerry Muskrat.
+"They look all right to me," said he, as he started to climb up on
+the Big Rock.
+
+"Of course they look all right," replied Jerry, "but what I want to
+know is if they see all right. Look over at that bank."
+
+Little Joe Otter looked over at the bank. He stared and stared, but
+he didn't see anything unusual. It looked just as it always did.
+He told Jerry Muskrat so.
+
+"Then it must be my eyes," sighed Jerry. "It certainly must be my
+eyes. It looks to me as if the water does not come as high up on the
+bank as it did yesterday."
+
+Little Joe Otter looked again and his eyes opened wide. "You are
+right, Jerry Muskrat!" he cried. "There's nothing the matter with
+your eyes. The water is as low as it ever gets, even in the very
+middle of summer. What can it mean?"
+
+"I don't know," replied Jerry Muskrat. "It is queer! It certainly
+is very queer! Let's go ask Grandfather Frog. You know he is very
+old and very wise, so perhaps he can tell us what it means."
+
+Splash! Jerry Muskrat and Little Joe Otter dived into the Smiling
+Pool and started a race to see who could reach Grandfather Frog first.
+He was sitting among the bulrushes on the edge of the Smiling Pool,
+for the lily-pads were not yet big enough for him to sit on comfortably.
+
+"Oh, Grandfather Frog, what's the matter with the Smiling Pool?"
+they shouted, as they came up quite out of breath.
+
+"Chugarum! There's nothing the matter with the Smiling Pool; it's
+the best place in all the world," replied Grandfather Frog gruffly.
+
+"But there is something the matter," insisted Jerry Muskrat, and
+then he told what he had discovered.
+
+"I don't believe it," said Grandfather Frog. "I never heard of such
+a thing in the springtime."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII: Grandfather Frog Watches His Toes
+
+Grandfather Frog sat among the bulrushes on the edge of the Smiling
+Pool. Over his head Mr. Redwing was singing as if his heart would
+burst with the very joy of springtime.
+
+ "Tra-la-la-lee, see me! See me!
+ Happy am I as I can be!
+ Happy am I the whole day long
+ And so I sing my gladsome song."
+
+Of course Mr. Redwing was happy. Why shouldn't he be? Here it was
+the beautiful springtime, the gladdest time of all the year, the
+time when happiness creeps into everybody's heart. Grandfather Frog
+listened. He nodded his head. "Chugarum! I'm happy, too," said
+Grandfather Frog. But even as he said it, a little worried look
+crept into his big goggly eyes and then down to the corners of his
+big mouth, which had been stretched in a smile. Little by little the
+smile grew smaller and smaller, until there wasn't any smile. No,
+Sir, there wasn't any smile. Instead of looking happy, as he said he
+felt, Grandfather Frog actually looked unhappy.
+
+The fact is he couldn't forget what Jerry Muskrat and Little Joe
+Otter had told him -- that there was something the matter with the
+Smiling Pool. He didn't believe it, not a word of it. At least he
+tried to make himself think that he didn't believe it. They had said
+that the water in the Smiling Pool was growing lower and lower, just
+as it did in the middle of summer, in the very hottest weather.
+Now Grandfather Frog is very old and very wise, and he had never
+heard of such a thing happening in the springtime. So he wouldn't
+believe it now. And yet -- and yet Grandfather Frog had an
+uncomfortable feeling that something was wrong. Ha! he knew now
+what it was! He had been sitting up to his middle in water, and now
+he was sitting with only his toes in the water, and he couldn't
+remember having changed his position!
+
+"Of course, I moved without thinking what I was doing," muttered
+Grandfather Frog, but still the worried look didn't leave his face.
+You see he just couldn't make himself believe what he wanted to
+believe, try as he would.
+
+"Chugarum! I know what I'll do; I'll watch my toes!" exclaimed
+Grandfather Frog.
+
+So Grandfather Frog waded out into the water until it covered his feet,
+and then he sat down and began to watch his toes. Mr, Redwing
+looked down and saw him, and Grandfather Frog looked so funny gazing
+at his own toes that Mr. Redwing stopped singing long enough to ask:
+"What are you doing, Grandfather Frog?"
+
+"Watching my toes," replied Grandfather Frog gruffly.
+
+"Watching your toes! Ho, ho, ho! Watching your toes! Who ever heard
+of such a thing? Are you afraid that they will run away, Grandfather
+Frog?" shouted Mr. Redwing.
+
+Grandfather Frog didn't answer. He kept right on watching his toes.
+Mr. Redwing flew away to tell everybody he met how Grandfather Frog
+had become foolish and was watching his toes. The sun shone down
+warm and bright, and pretty soon Grandfather Frog's big goggly eyes
+began to blink. Then his head began to nod, and then -- why, then
+Grandfather Frog fell fast asleep.
+
+By and by Grandfather Frog awoke with a start. He looked down at his
+toes. They were not in the water at all! Indeed, the water was a
+good long jump away.
+
+"Chugarum! There is something wrong with the Smiling Pool!" cried
+Grandfather Frog, as he made a long jump into the water and started
+to swim out to the Big Rock.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX: The Laughing Brook Stops Laughing
+
+There was something wrong. Grandfather Frog knew it the very minute
+he got up that morning. At first he couldn't think what it was.
+He sat with just his head out of water and blinked his great goggly
+eyes, as he tried to think what it was that was wrong. Suddenly
+Grandfather Frog realized how still it was. It was a different kind
+of stillness from anything he could ever remember. He missed something,
+and he couldn't think what it was. It wasn't the song of Mr. Redwing.
+There were many times when he didn't hear that. It was --
+Grand-father Frog gave a startled jump out on to the shore.
+"Chugarum! It's the Laughing Brook! The Laughing Brook has stopped
+laughing!" cried Grandfather Frog.
+
+Could it be? Who ever heard of such a thing, excepting when Jack
+Frost bound the Laughing Brook with hard black ice? Why, in the
+spring and in the summer and in the fall the Laughing Brook had
+laughed -- such a merry, happy laugh -- ever since Grandfather Frog
+could remember, and you know he can remember way back in the long
+ago. for he is very old and very wise. Never once in all that time
+had the Laughing Brook failed to laugh. It couldn't be true now!
+Grandfather Frog put a hand behind one ear and listened and
+listened, but not a sound could he hear.
+
+"Chugarum! It must be me," said Grandfather Frog. "It must be that I
+am growing old and deaf. I'll go over and ask Jerry Muskrat."
+
+So Grandfather Frog dove into the water and swam out to the middle
+of the Smiling Pool, on his way to Jerry Muskrat's house. It was
+then that he first fully realized the truth of what Jerry Muskrat
+and Little Joe Otter had told him the day before -- that there was
+something very, very wrong with the Smiling Pool. He stopped
+swimming to look around, and it seemed as if his great goggly eyes
+would pop right out of his head. Yes, Sir, it seemed as if those
+great goggly eyes certainly would pop right out of Grandfather
+Frog's head. The Smiling Pool had grown so small that there wasn't
+enough of it left to smile!
+
+"Where are you going, Grandfather Frog?" asked a voice over his head.
+
+Grandfather Frog looked up. Looking down on him from over the edge
+of the Big Rock was Jerry Muskrat. The edge of the Big Rock was twice
+as high above the water as Grandfather Frog had ever seen it before.
+
+"I -- I -- was going to swim over to your house to see you," replied
+Grandfather Frog.
+
+"It's of no use," replied Jerry, "because I'm not there. Besides,
+you couldn't swim there, anyway."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Grandfather Frog in great surprise.
+
+"Because it isn't in the water any longer; it's way up on dry land,"
+said Jerry Muskrat in the most mournful voice.
+
+"What's that you say?" cried Grandfather Frog, as if he couldn't
+believe his own ears.
+
+"It's just as true as that I'm sitting here," replied Jerry sadly.
+
+"Listen, Jerry Muskrat, and tell me truly; is the Laughing Brook
+laughing?" cried Grandfather Frog sharply.
+
+"No," replied Jerry, "the Laughing Brook has stopped laughing, and
+the Smiling Pool has stopped smiling, and I think the world is
+upside down."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X: Why The World Seemed Upside Down To Jerry Muskrat
+
+Jerry Muskrat sat on the Big Rock in the Smiling Pool, which smiled
+no longer, and held his head in both hands, for his head ached. He
+had thought and thought and thought, until it seemed to him that his
+head would split; and with all his thinking, he didn't understand
+things any more now than he had in the beginning. You see, Jerry
+Muskrat's little world was topsy-turvy. Yes, Sir, Jerry's world was
+upside down! Anyway, it seemed so to him, and he couldn't
+understand it at all.
+
+The Smiling Pool, the Laughing Brook, and the Green Meadows are
+Jerry Muskrat's little world. Now, as he sat on the Big Rock and
+looked about him, the Green Meadows were as lovely as ever. He could
+see no change in them. But the Laughing Brook had stopped laughing,
+and the Smiling Pool had stopped smiling. The truth is there wasn't
+enough of the Laughing Brook left to laugh, and there wasn't enough
+of the Smiling Pool left to smile.
+
+It was dreadful! Jerry looked over to his house, of which he had
+once been so proud. He had built it with the doorway under water.
+He had felt perfectly safe there, because no one excepting Billy
+Mink or Little Joe Otter, who can swim under water, could reach him.
+Now the Smiling Pool had grown so small that Jerry's house wasn't
+in the water at all. Anybody who wanted to could get into it.
+There was the doorway plainly to be seen. Worse still, there was
+the secret entrance to the long tunnel leading to his castle under
+the roots of the Big Hickory-tree. That had been Jerry's most
+secret secret, and now there it was for all the world to see.
+And there were all the wonderful caves and holes and hiding-places
+under the bank which had been known only to Jerry Muskrat and Billy
+Mink and Little Joe Otter, because the openings had always been
+under water. Now anybody could find them, for they were plainly to
+be seen. And where had always been smiling, dimpling water, Jerry
+saw only mud. It was mud, mud, mud everywhere! The bulrushes,
+which had always grown with their feet in the water, now had them
+only in mud, and that was fast drying up. The lily-pads lay half
+curled up at the ends of their long stems, stretched out on the mud,
+and looked very, very sick. Jerry turned towards the Laughing
+Brook. There was just a little, teeny, weeny stream of water
+trickling down the middle of it, with here and there a tiny pool in
+which frightened trout and minnows were crowded. All the secrets of
+the Laughing Brook were exposed, just as were the secrets of the
+Smiling Pool. Jerry knew that if he wanted to find Billy Mink's
+hiding-places, all he need do would be to walk up the Laughing Brook
+and look.
+
+"Yes, Sir, the world has turned upside down," said Jerry in a
+mournful voice.
+
+"I believe it has," replied Grandfather Frog, looking up from the
+little pool of water left at the foot of the Big Rock.
+
+"I know it has!" cried Jerry. "I wonder if it will ever turn upside
+up again."
+
+"If it doesn't, what are you going to do?" asked Grandfather Frog.
+
+"I don't know," replied Jerry Muskrat. "Here come Little Joe Otter
+and Billy Mink; let's find out what they are going to do."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI: Five Heads Together
+
+Something had to be done. Jerry Muskrat said so. Grandfather Frog
+said so. Billy Mink said so. Little Joe Otter said so. Even Spotty
+the Turtle said so. The Laughing Brook couldn't laugh, and the
+Smiling Pool couldn't smile. You see, there wasn't water enough in
+either of them to laugh or smile, and nobody knew if there ever
+would be again. Nobody had ever known anything like it before, and
+so nobody knew what to think or do. And yet they all felt that
+something must be done.
+
+"What do you think, Billy Mink?" asked Grandfather Frog.
+
+Billy Mink looked down from the top of the Big Rock into the little
+pool of water that was all there was left of the Smiling Pool.
+He could see a dozen fat trout in it, and he knew that he could
+catch them just as easily as not, because there was no place for
+them to swim away from him. But somehow he didn't want to catch
+them. He knew that they were frightened almost to death already by
+the running away of nearly all the water from the Laughing Brook and
+the Smiling Pool, and somehow he felt sorry for them.
+
+"I think that the best thing we can do is to move down to the Big River.
+I've been down there, and that's all right," said Billy Mink.
+
+"That's what I think, " said Little Joe Otter. "There's no danger
+that the Big River will go dry."
+
+"How do you know?" asked Jerry Muskrat. "The Laughing Brook and the
+Smiling Pool never went dry before."
+
+"It's a long, long way down to the Big River," broke in Spotty the
+Turtle, who travels very, very slowly and carries his house with him.
+
+"Chugarum! I, for one, don't want to leave the Smiling Pool without
+finding out what the trouble is.
+
+ "There's nothing happens, as you know,
+ But has a cause to make it so.
+
+"Now there must be some cause, some reason, for this terrible
+trouble with the Smiling Pool, and if we can find that out, perhaps
+we shall know better what to do," said Grandfather Frog.
+
+Jerry Muskrat nodded his head. "Grandfather Frog is right," said he.
+"Of course there must be a cause, but where are we to look for it?
+I've been all over the Smiling Pool, and I'm sure it isn't there."
+
+Grandfather Frog actually smiled. "Chugarum!" said he. "Of course
+the cause of all the trouble isn't in the Smiling Pool. Any one
+would know that!"
+
+"Well, if you know so much, tell us where it is then!" snapped Jerry
+Muskrat.
+
+"In the Laughing Brook, of course," replied Grandfather Frog.
+
+"No such thing!" said Billy Mink. "I've been all the way down the
+Laughing Brook to the Big River, and I didn't find a thing."
+
+"Have you been all the way up the Laughing Brook to the place it
+starts from?" asked Grandfather Frog.
+
+"No-o," replied Billy Mink.
+
+"Well, that's where the cause of all the trouble is," said
+Grandfather Frog, just as if he knew all about it. "It's the water
+that comes down the Laughing Brook that makes the Smiling Pool, and
+the Smiling Pool never could dry up if the Laughing Brook didn't
+first stop running."
+
+"That's so! I never had thought of that," cried Little Joe Otter.
+"I tell you what, Billy Mink and I will go way up the Laughing Brook
+and see what we can find."
+
+"Chugarum! Let us all go," said Grandfather Frog.
+
+Then the five put their heads together and decided that they would
+go up the Laughing Brook to hunt for the trouble.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII: A Hunt For Trouble
+
+Ol' Mistah Buzzard, sailing high in the blue, blue sky, looked down
+on a funny sight. Yes, Sir, it certainly was a funny sight. It was a
+little procession of five of his friends of the Smiling Pool. First
+was Billy Mink, who, because he is slim and nimble, moves so quickly
+it sometimes is hard to follow him. Behind him was Little Joe Otter,
+whose legs are so short that he almost looks as if he hadn't any.
+Behind Little Joe was Jerry Muskrat, who is a better traveler
+in the water than on land. Behind Jerry was Grandfather Frog, who
+neither walks nor runs but travels with great jumps. Last of all was
+Spotty the Turtle, who travels very, very slowly because, you know,
+he carries his house with him. And all five were headed up the
+Laughing Brook, which laughed no more, because there was not water
+enough in it.
+
+Now Ol' Mistah Buzzard hadn't been over near the Smiling Pool for
+some time, and he hadn't heard how the Smiling Pool had stopped
+smiling, and the Laughing Brook had stopped laughing. When he looked
+down and saw how the water was so nearly gone from them that the
+trout and the minnows had hardly enough in which to live, he was so
+surprised that he kept saying over and over to himself:
+
+"Fo' the lan's sake! Fo' the lan's sake!"
+
+Then, when he saw his five little friends marching up the Laughing
+Brook, he guessed right away that it must be something to do with
+the trouble in the Smiling Pool. Ol' Mistah Buzzard just turned his
+broad wings and slid down, down out of the blue, blue sky until he
+was right over Grandfather Frog.
+
+"Where are yo'alls going?" asked Ol' Mistah Buzzard.
+
+"Chugarum! To find out what is the trouble with the Laughing Brook,"
+replied Grandfather Frog.
+
+"I'll help you," said Ol' Mistah Buzzard, once more sailing up in
+the blue, blue sky.
+
+Grandfather Frog watched him until he was nothing but a speck. "I
+wish I had wings," sighed Grandfather Frog, and once more began to
+hop along up the bed of the Laughing Brook.
+
+The Laughing Brook came down from the Green Forest and wound through
+the Green Meadows for a little way before it reached the Smiling Pool.
+There the sun shone down into it, and Grandfather Frog didn't mind,
+although his legs were getting tired. But when they got into the
+Green Forest it was dark and gloomy. At least Grandfather Frog
+thought so, and so did Spotty the Turtle, for both dearly love the
+sunshine. But still they kept on, for they felt that they must find
+the trouble with the Laughing Brook. If they found this, they would
+also find the trouble with the Smiling Pool.
+
+So Billy Mink jumped and skipped far ahead; Little Joe Otter ran;
+Jerry Muskrat walked, for he soon gets tired on land; Grandfather
+Frog hopped; Spotty the Turtle crawled, and way, way up in the blue,
+blue sky, OF Mistah Buzzard flew, all looking for the trouble which
+had stopped the laughing of the Laughing Brook and the smiling of
+the Smiling Pool.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII: Ol' Mistah Buzzard Sees Something
+
+"Wait for me!" cried Little Joe Otter to Billy Mink, but Billy Mink
+was in too much of a hurry and just ran faster.
+
+"Wait for me!" cried Jerry Muskrat to Little Joe Otter, but Little
+Joe was in too much of a hurry and just ran faster.
+
+"Wait for me!" cried Grandfather Frog to Jerry Muskrat, but Jerry
+was in too much of a hurry and just walked faster.
+
+"Wait for me!" cried Spotty the Turtle to Grandfather Frog, but
+Grandfather Frog was in too much of a hurry and just jumped faster.
+
+So running and walking and jumping and crawling, Billy Mink, Little
+Joe Otter, Jerry Muskrat, Grandfather Frog, and Spotty the Turtle
+hurried up the Laughing Brook to try to find out why it laughed no more.
+And high overhead in the blue, blue sky sailed Ol' Mistah Buzzard,
+and he also was looking for the trouble that had taken away the
+laugh from the Laughing Brook and the smile from the Smiling Pool.
+
+Now Ol' Mistah Buzzard's eyes are very sharp, and looking down from
+way up in the blue, blue sky he can see a great deal. Indeed, Ol'
+Mistah Buzzard can see all that is going on below on the Green
+Meadows and in the Green Forest. His wings are very broad, and he
+can sail through the air very swiftly when he makes up his mind
+to. Now, as he looked down, he saw that Billy Mink was selfish and
+wouldn't wait for Little Joe Otter, and Little Joe Otter was selfish
+and wouldn't wait for Jerry Muskrat, and Jerry Muskrat was selfish
+and wouldn't wait for Grandfather Frog, and Grandfather Frog was
+selfish and wouldn't wait for Spotty the Turtle.
+
+"Ah reckon Ah will hurry up right smart and find out what the
+trouble is mahself, and then go back and tell Brer Turtle; it will
+save him a powerful lot of work, and it will serve Brer Mink right
+if Brer Turtle finds out first what is the trouble with the Laughing
+Brook," said Ol' Mistah Buzzard and shot far ahead over the Green
+Forest towards that part of it from which the Laughing Brook comes.
+In a few minutes he was as far ahead of Billy Mink as Billy was
+ahead of Spotty the Turtle.
+
+ For wings are swifter far than legs,
+ On whatsoever purpose bent,
+But doubly swift and tireless
+ Those wings on kindly deed intent.
+
+And this is how it happened that Ol' Mistah Buzzard was the first to
+find out what it was that had stopped the laughing of the Laughing
+Brook and the smiling of the Smiling Pool, but he was so surprised
+when he did find out, that he forgot all about going back to tell
+Spotty the Turtle. He forgot everything but his own great surprise,
+and he blinked his eyes a great many times to make sure that he
+wasn't dreaming. Then he sailed around and around in circles,
+looking down among the trees of the Green Forest and saying over and
+over to himself:
+
+"Did yo' ever? No, Ah never! Did yo' ever? No, Ah never!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV: Spotty The Turtle Keeps Right On Going
+
+ "One step, two steps, three steps, so!
+ Four steps, five steps, six steps go!
+ Keep right on and do your best;
+ Mayhap you'll win while others rest."
+
+Spotty the Turtle said this over to himself every time he felt a little
+down-hearted, as he plodded along the bed of the Laughing Brook.
+And every time he said it, he felt better. "One step, two steps,"
+he kept saying over and over, and each time he said it, he took a
+step and then another. They were very short steps, very short steps
+indeed, for Spotty's legs are very short. But each one carried him
+forward just so much, and he knew that he was just so much nearer
+the thing he was seeking. Anyway, he hoped he was.
+
+You see, if the Laughing Brook would never laugh any more, and the
+Smiling Pool would never smile any more, there was nothing to do but
+to go down to the Big River to live, and no one wanted to do that,
+especially Grandfather Frog and Spotty the Turtle.
+
+Now, because Billy Mink could go faster than Little Joe Otter, and
+Little Joe Otter could go faster than Jerry Muskrat, and Jerry could
+go faster than Grandfather Frog, and Grandfather Frog could go
+faster than Spotty the Turtle, and because each one wanted to be the
+first to find the trouble, no one would wait for the one behind him.
+So Spotty the Turtle, who has to carry his house with him, was
+a long, long way behind the others. But he kept right on going.
+
+ "One step, two steps, three steps, so!"
+
+and he didn't stop for anything. He crawled over sticks and around
+big stones and sometimes, when he found a little pool of water,
+he swam. He always felt better then, because he can swim faster
+than he can walk.
+
+After a long, long time, Spotty the Turtle came to a little pool
+where the sunshine lay warm and inviting. There, in the middle of it,
+on a mossy stone, sat Grandfather Frog fast asleep. He had thought
+that he was so far ahead of Spotty that he could safely rest his
+tired legs. Spotty wanted to climb right up beside him and take a
+nap too, but he didn't. He just grinned and kept right on going.
+
+ "One step, two steps, three steps, so!"
+
+while Grandfather Frog slept on.
+
+By and by, after a long, long time Spotty came to another little
+pool, and who should he see but Jerry Muskrat busily opening and
+eating some freshwater clams which he had found there. He was so
+busy enjoying himself that he didn't see Spotty, and Spotty didn't
+say a word, but kept right on going, although the sight of Jerry's
+feast had made him dreadfully hungry.
+
+By and by, after a long, long time, he came to a third little pool
+with a high, smooth bank, and who should he see there but Little
+Joe Otter, who had made a slippery slide down the smooth bank and
+was having a glorious time sliding down into the little pool.
+Spotty would have liked to take just one slide, but he didn't.
+He didn't even let Little Joe Otter see him, but kept right on going.
+
+ "One step, two steps, three steps, so!"
+
+By and by, after a long, long time, he came to a hollow log, and
+just happening to peep in, he saw some one curled up fast asleep.
+Who was it? Why, Billy Mink, to be sure! You see, Billy
+thought that he was so far ahead that he might just as well take it
+easy, and that was what he was doing. Spotty the Turtle didn't waken
+him. He just kept right on going the same slow way he had come all
+day, and so, just as jolly, round, red Mr. Sun was going to bed
+behind the Purple Hills, Spotty the Turtle found the cause of the
+trouble in the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV: What Spotty The Turtle Found
+
+Spotty the Turtle stared and stared and stared, until it seemed as
+if his eyes surely would pop out of his funny little head. Of course
+he could believe his own eyes, and yet -- and yet -- well, if anybody
+else had seen what he was looking at and had told him about it, he
+wouldn't have believed it. No, Sir, he wouldn't have believed it.
+You see, he couldn't have believed it because -- why, because it
+didn't seem as if it could be really and truly so.
+
+He wondered if the sun shining in his eyes made him think he saw
+more than he really did see, so he carefully changed his position.
+It made no difference. Then Spotty was sure that what he saw was real,
+and that he had found the cause of the trouble in the Laughing Brook,
+which had made it stop laughing and the Smiling Pool stop smiling.
+
+Spotty the Turtle was feeling pretty good. In fact, Spotty was
+feeling very good indeed, because he had been the first to find out
+what was the matter with the Laughing Brook. At least, he thought
+that he was the first, and he was of all the little people who live
+in the Smiling Pool. Only Ol' Mistah Buzzard had been before him,
+and he didn't count because his wings are broad, and all he had to
+do was to sail over the Green Forest and look down. The ones who
+really counted were Billy Mink and Little Joe Otter and Jerry
+Muskrat and Grandfather Frog. Billy Mink had stopped for a nap.
+Little Joe Otter had stopped to play. Jerry Muskrat had stopped
+to eat. Grandfather Frog had stopped for a sun-nap. But Spotty the
+Turtle had kept right on going, and now here he was, the first one
+to find the cause of the trouble in the Laughing Brook. Do you
+wonder that he felt proud and very happy?
+
+ Keeping at it, that's the way
+ Spotty won the race that day.
+
+But now Spotty was beginning to wish that some of the others would
+hurry up. He wanted to know what they thought. He wanted to talk it
+all over. It was such a surprising thing that he could make neither
+head nor tail of it himself, and he wondered what the others would say.
+And now the long black shadows were creeping through the Green
+Forest, and if they didn't get there pretty soon, they would have to
+wait until the next day.
+
+So Spotty the Turtle found a good place to spend the night, and then
+he sat down to watch and wait. Right before him was the thing which
+he had found and which puzzled him so. What was it? Why, it was
+a wall. Yes, Sir, that is just what it was -- a wall of logs and
+sticks and mud, and it was right across the Laughing Brook, where
+the banks were steep and narrow. Of course the Laughing Brook could
+laugh no longer; there couldn't enough water get through that wall
+of logs and sticks and mud to make even the beginning of a laugh.
+Spotty wondered what lay behind that wall, and who had built it, and
+what for, and a lot of other things. And he was still wondering
+when he fell asleep.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI: The Pond In The Green Forest
+
+SPOTTY THE TURTLE was awake by the time the first rays of the rising
+sun began to creep through the Green Forest. He was far, far up the
+Laughing Brook, very much farther than he had ever been before, and
+as he yawned and stretched, he wondered if after all he hadn't
+dreamed about the wall of logs and sticks and mud across the
+Laughing Brook. When he had rubbed the last sleepy-wink out of his
+eyes, he looked again. There it was, just as he had seen it the
+night before! Then Spotty knew that it was real, and he began to
+wonder what was on the other side of it.
+
+"I cannot climb it, for my legs were never made for climbing," said
+Spotty mournfully as he looked at his funny little black feet.
+"Oh, dear, I wish that I could climb like Happy Jack Squirrel!"
+Just then a thought popped into his head and chased away the little
+frown that had crept into Spotty's face. "Perhaps Happy Jack
+sometimes wishes that he could swim as I can, so I guess we are even.
+I can't climb, but he can't swim. How foolish it is to wish for
+things never meant for you!"
+
+And with that, all the discontent left Spotty the Turtle, and he
+began to study how he could make the most of his short legs and his
+perseverance, of which, as you already know, he had a great deal. He
+looked this way, and he looked that way, and he saw that if he could
+climb to the top of the bank on one side of the Laughing Brook, he
+would be able to walk right out on the strange wall of logs and
+sticks and mud, and then, of course, he could see just what was on
+the other side.
+
+So Spotty the Turtle wasted no more time wishing that he could do
+something it was never meant that he should do. Instead, he picked
+out what looked like the easiest place to climb the bank and started up.
+My, my, my, it was hard work! You see, he had to carry his house
+along with him, for he has to carry that wherever he goes, and it
+would have been hard enough to have climbed that bank without
+carrying anything. Every time he had climbed up three steps he
+slipped back two steps, but he kept at it, puffing and blowing,
+saying over and over to himself:
+
+ "I can if I will, and will if I can!
+ I'm sure to get there if I follow this plan."
+
+Half-way up the bank Spotty lost his balance, and the house he was
+carrying just tipped him right over backward, and down he rolled to
+the place he had started from.
+
+"I needed to cool off," said Spotty to himself and slid into a
+little pool of water. Then he tried the bank again, and just as
+before he slipped back two steps for every three he went up. But he
+shut his mouth tight and kept at it, and by and by he was up to the
+place from which he had tumbled. There he stopped to get his breath.
+
+ "I can if I will, and will if I can!
+ I'm sure to get there if I follow this plan,"
+
+said he and started on again. Twice more he tumbled clear down to
+the place he had started from, but each time he laughed at himself
+and tried again. And at last he reached the top of the bank.
+
+"I said I could if I would, and I would if I could, and I have!" he
+cried.
+
+Then he hurried to see what was behind the strange wall. What do you
+think it was? Why, a pond! Yes, Sir, there was a pond right in the
+middle of the Green Forest! Trees were coming up right out of the
+middle of it, but it was a sure enough pond. Spotty found it harder
+work to believe his own eyes now than when he had first seen the
+strange wall across the Laughing Brook.
+
+"Why, why, why, what does it mean?" exclaimed Spotty the Turtle.
+
+"That's what I want to know!" cried Billy Mink, who came hurrying up
+just then.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII: Who Had Made The Strange Pond?
+
+Who had made the strange pond? That is what Spotty the Turtle wanted
+to know. That is what Billy Mink wanted to know. So did Little
+Joe Otter and Jerry Muskrat and Grandfather Frog, when they arrived.
+So did Ol' Mistah Buzzard, looking down from the blue, blue sky. It
+was very strange, very strange indeed! Never had there been a pond
+in that part of the Green Forest before, not even in the days when
+Sister South Wind melted the snow so fast that the Laughing Brook ran
+over its banks and the Smiling Pool grew twice as large as it ought
+to be.
+
+Of course some one had made it. Spotty the Turtle had known that as
+soon as he had seen the strange pond. All in a flash he had
+understood what that wall of logs and brush and mud across the
+Laughing Brook was for. It was to stop the water from running down
+the Laughing Brook. And of course, if the water couldn't keep on
+running and laughing on its way to the Smiling Pool, it would just
+stand still and grow and grow into a pond. Of course! There was
+nothing else for it to do. Spotty felt very proud when he had
+thought that out all by himself.
+
+"This wall we are sitting on has made the pond," said Spotty the
+Turtle, after a long time in which no one had spoken.
+
+"You don't say so!" said Billy Mink. "How ever, ever, did you guess it?
+Are you sure, quite sure that the pond didn't make the wall?"
+
+Spotty knew that Billy Mink was making fun of him, but he is too
+good-natured to lose his temper over a little thing like that.
+He tried to think of something smart to say in reply, but Spotty is
+a slow thinker as well as a slow walker, and before he could think
+of anything, Billy was talking once more.
+
+"This wall is what Farmer Brown's boy calls a dam," said Billy Mink,
+who is a great traveler. "Dams are usually built to keep water from
+running where it isn't wanted or to make it go where it is wanted.
+Now, what I want to know is, who under the sun wants a pond way back
+here in the Green Forest, and what is it for? Who do you think
+built this dam, Grandfather Frog?"
+
+Grandfather Frog shook his head. His big goggly eyes seemed more
+goggly than ever, as he stared at the new pond in the Green Forest.
+
+"I don't know," said Grandfather Frog. "I don't know what to think."
+
+"Why, it must be Farmer Brown's boy or Farmer Brown himself," said
+Jerry Muskrat.
+
+"Of course," said Little Joe Otter, just as if he knew all about it.
+
+Still Grandfather Frog shook his head, as if he didn't agree. "I
+don't know," said Grandfather Frog, "I don't know. It doesn't look
+so to me."
+
+Billy Mink ran along the top of the dam and down the back side.
+He looked it all over with those sharp little eyes of his.
+
+"Grandfather Frog is right," said he, when he came back. "It doesn't
+look like the work of Farmer Brown or Farmer Brown's boy. But if
+they didn't do it, who did? Who could have done it?"
+
+"I don't know," said Grandfather Frog again, in a dreamy sort of voice.
+
+Spotty the Turtle looked at him, and saw that Grandfather Frog's
+face wore the far-away look that it always does when he tells a
+story of the days when the world was young. "I don't know," he
+repeated, "but it looks to me very much like the work of --"
+Grandfather Frog stopped short off and turned to Jerry Muskrat.
+"Jerry Muskrat," said he, so sharply that Jerry nearly lost his balance
+in his surprise, "has your big cousin come down from the North?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII: Jerry Muskrat's Big Cousin
+
+ Fiddle, faddle, feedle, fuddle!
+ Was there ever such a muddle?
+ Fuddle, feedle, faddle, fiddle!
+ Who is there will solve the riddle?
+
+Here was the Laughing Brook laughing no longer. Here was the Smiling
+Pool smiling no longer. Here was a brand new pond deep in the Green
+Forest. Here was a wall of logs and bushes and mud called a dam,
+built by some one whom nobody had seen. And here was Grandfather
+Frog asking Jerry Muskrat if his big cousin had come down from the
+North, when Jerry didn't even know that he had a big cousin.
+
+"I -- I haven't any big cousin," said Jerry, when he had quite
+recovered from his surprise at Grandfather Frog's question.
+
+"Chugarum!" exclaimed Grandfather Frog, and the scornful way in
+which he said it made Jerry Muskrat feel very small. "Chugarum!
+Of course you've got a big cousin in the North. Do you mean to
+tell me that you don't know that, Jerry Muskrat?"
+
+Jerry had to admit that it was true that he didn't know anything
+about that big cousin. If Grandfather Frog said that he had one,
+it must be so, for Grandfather Frog is very old and very wise, and
+he knows a great deal. Still, it was very hard for Jerry to believe
+that he had a big cousin of whom he had never heard.
+
+"Did -- did you ever see him, Grandfather Frog?" Jerry asked.
+
+"No!" snapped Grandfather Frog. "I never did, but I know all
+about him. He is a great worker, is this big cousin of yours,
+and he builds dams like this one we are sitting on."
+
+"I don't believe it!" cried Billy Mink. "I don't believe any cousin
+of Jerry Muskrat's ever built such a dam as this. Why, just look at
+that great tree trunk at the bottom! No one but Farmer Brown or
+Farmer Brown's boy could ever have dragged that there. You're crazy,
+Grandfather Frog, just plain crazy." Billy Mink sometimes is very
+disrespectful to Grandfather Frog.
+
+"Chugarum!" replied Grandfather Frog. "I'm pretty old, but I'm not
+too old to learn as some folks seem to be," and he looked very hard
+at Billy Mink. "Did I say that that tree trunk was dragged here?"
+
+"No," replied Billy Mink, "but if it wasn't dragged here, how did
+it get here? You are so smart, Grandfather Frog, tell me that!"
+
+Grandfather Frog blinked his great goggly eyes at Billy Mink as he
+said, just as if he was very, very sorry for Billy, "Your eyes are
+very bright and very sharp, Billy Mink, and it is a great pity that
+you have never learned how to use them. That tree wasn't dragged
+here; it was cut so that it fell right where it lies." As he spoke,
+Grandfather Frog pointed to the stump of the tree, and Billy Mink
+saw that he was right.
+
+But Billy Mink is like a great many other people; he dearly loves to
+have the last word. Now he suddenly began to laugh.
+
+"Ha, ha, ha! Ho, ho, ho!" laughed Billy Mink. "Ho, ho, ho!
+Ha, ha, ha!"
+
+"What is it that is so funny?" snapped Grandfather Frog, for nothing
+makes him so angry as to be laughed at.
+
+"Do you mean to say that anybody but Farmer Brown or Farmer Brown's
+boy could have cut down such a big tree as that?" asked Billy.
+"Why, that would be as hard as to drag the tree here."
+
+"Jerry Muskrat's big cousin from the North could do it, and I
+believe he did," replied Grandfather Frog. "Now that we have found
+the cause of the trouble in the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool,
+what are we going to do about it?"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX: Jerry Muskrat Has A Busy Day
+
+There was the strange pond in the Green Forest, and there was the
+dam of logs and sticks and mud which had made the strange pond, but
+look as they would, Billy Mink and Little Joe Otter and Jerry
+Muskrat and Grandfather Frog and Spotty the Turtle could see nothing
+of the one who had built the dam. It was very queer. The more they
+thought about it, the queerer it seemed. They looked this way, and
+they looked that way.
+
+"There is one thing very sure, and that is that whoever built this
+dam had no thought for those who live in the Laughing Brook and the
+Smiling Pool," said Grandfather Frog. "They are selfish, just
+plain, every-day selfish; that's what they are! Now the Laughing
+Brook cannot laugh, and the Smiling Pool cannot smile, while this
+dam stops the water from running, and so --" Grandfather Frog
+stopped and looked around at his four friends.
+
+"And so what?" cried Billy Mink impatiently.
+
+"And so we must spoil this dam. We must make a place for the water
+to run through," said Grandfather Frog very gravely.
+
+"Of course! That's the very thing!" cried Little Joe Otter and Billy
+Mink and Jerry Muskrat and Spotty the Turtle. Then Little Joe Otter
+looked at Billy Mink, and Billy Mink looked at Jerry Muskrat, and
+Jerry Muskrat looked at Spotty the Turtle, and after that they all
+looked very hard at Grandfather Frog, and all together they asked:
+"How are we going to do it?"
+
+Grandfather Frog scratched his head thoughtfully and looked a long
+time at the dam of logs and sticks and mud. Then his big mouth
+widened in a big smile.
+
+"Why, that is very simple," said he, "Jerry Muskrat will make a big
+hole through the dam near the bottom, because he knows how, and the
+rest of us will keep watch to see that no harm comes near."
+
+"The very thing!" cried Little Joe Otter and Billy Mink and Spotty
+the Turtle, but Jerry Muskrat thought it wasn't fair. You see, it
+gave him all of the real work to do. However, Jerry thought of his
+dear Smiling Pool, and how terrible it would be if it should smile
+no more, and so without another word he set to work.
+
+Now Jerry Muskrat is a great worker, and he had made many long
+tunnels into the bank around the Smiling Pool, so he had no doubt
+but that he could soon make a hole through this dam. But almost
+right away he found trouble. Yes, Sir, Jerry had hardly begun before
+he found real trouble. You see, that dam was made mostly of sticks
+instead of mud, and so, instead of digging his way in as he would
+have done into the bank of the Smiling Pool, he had to stop every
+few minutes to gnaw off sticks that were in the way.
+
+It was hard work, the hardest kind of hard work. But Jerry Muskrat
+is the kind that is the more determined to do the work the harder
+the work is to be done. And so, while Grandfather Frog sat on one
+end of the dam and pretended to keep watch, but really took a nap in
+the warm sunshine, and while Spotty the Turtle sat on the other end
+of the dam doing the same thing, and while Billy Mink and Little Joe
+Otter swam around in the strange pond and enjoyed themselves, Jerry
+Muskrat worked and worked and worked. And just as jolly, round, red
+Mr. Sun started down behind the Purple Hills, Jerry broke through
+into the strange pond, and the water began to run in the Laughing
+Brook once more.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX: Jerry Has A Dreadful Disappointment
+
+ There's nothing in this world that's sure,
+ No matter how we scheme and plan.
+ We simply have to be content
+ With doing just the best we can.
+
+Jerry Muskrat had curled himself up for the night, so tired that he
+could hardly keep his eyes open long enough to find a comfortable
+place to sleep. But he was happy. Yes, indeed, Jerry was happy. He
+could hear the Laughing Brook beginning to laugh again. It was just
+a little low, gurgling laugh, but Jerry knew that in a little while
+it would grow into the full laugh that makes music through the Green
+Forest and puts happiness into the hearts of all who hear it.
+
+So Jerry was happy, for was it not because of him that the Laughing
+Brook was beginning to laugh? He had worked all the long day to make
+a hole through the dam which some one had built across the Laughing
+Brook and so stopped its laughter. Now the water was running again,
+and soon the new, strange pond behind the dam there in the Green
+Forest would be gone, and the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool
+would be their own beautiful selves once more. It was because he had
+worked so hard all day that he was going to sleep now. Usually he
+would rather sleep a part of the day and be abroad at night.
+
+Very pleasant dreams had Jerry Muskrat that night, dreams of the
+dear Smiling Pool, smiling just as it had as long as Jerry could
+remember, before this trouble had come. He was still dreaming when
+Spotty the Turtle found him and waked him, for it was broad daylight.
+Jerry yawned and stretched, and then he lay still for a minute to
+listen to the pleasant murmur of the Laughing Brook. But there
+wasn't any pleasant murmur. There wasn't any sound at all. Jerry
+began to wonder if he really was awake after all. He looked at
+Spotty the Turtle, and he knew then that he was, for Spotty's face
+had such a worried look.
+
+"Get up, Jerry Muskrat, and come look at the hole you made yesterday
+in the dam. You couldn't have done your work very well, for the hole
+has filled up so that the water does not run any more," said Spotty.
+
+"I did do it well!" snapped Jerry crossly. "I did it just as well as
+I know how. You lazy folks who just sit and take sun-naps while you
+pretend to keep watch had better get busy and do a little work
+yourselves, if you don't like the way I work."
+
+"I -- I beg your pardon, Jerry Muskrat. I didn't mean to say just
+that," replied Spotty. "You see, we are all worried. We thought last
+night that by this morning the Laughing Brook would be full of water
+again, and we could go back to the Smiling Pool as soon as we felt
+like it, and here it is as bad as ever."
+
+"Perhaps the trouble is just that some sticks and grass drifted down
+in the water and filled up the hole I made; that must be the
+trouble," said Jerry hopefully, as he hurried towards the dam.
+
+First he carefully examined it from the Laughing Brook side. Then he
+dived down under water on the other side. He was gone a long time,
+and Billy Mink was just getting ready to dive to see what had become
+of him when he came up again.
+
+"What is the trouble?" cried Spotty the Turtle and Grandfather Frog
+and Billy Mink and Little Joe Otter together. "Is the hole filled up
+with stuff that has drifted in?"
+
+Jerry shook his head, as he slowly climbed out of the water. "No,"
+said he. "No, it isn't filled with drift stuff brought down by
+the water. It is filled with sticks and mud that somebody has put there.
+Somebody has filled up the hole that I worked so hard to make
+yesterday, and it will take me all day to open it up again."
+
+Then Grandfather Frog and Spotty the Turtle and Billy Mink and
+Little Joe Otter and Jerry Muskrat stared at one mother, and for a
+long time no one said a word.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI: Jerry Muskrat Keeps Watch
+
+ "The way in which to find things out,
+ And what goes on all round about,
+ Is just to keep my two eyes peeled
+ And two ears all the time unsealed."
+
+So said Jerry Muskrat, as he settled himself comfortably on one end
+of the new dam across the Laughing Brook deep in the Green Forest
+and watched the dark shadows creep farther and farther out into the
+strange pond made by the new dam.
+
+"I'm going to find out who it is that built this dam, and who it is
+that filled the hole I made in it! I'm going to find out if I have
+to move up here and live all summer!" The way in which Jerry said
+this and snapped his teeth together showed that he meant just what
+he said.
+
+You see Jerry had spent another long, weary day opening the hole
+in the dam once more, only to have it closed again while he slept.
+That had been enough for Jerry. He hadn't tried again. Instead he
+had made up his mind that he would find out who was playing such a
+trick on him. He would just watch until they came, and then if they
+were not bigger than he, or there were not too many of them, he
+would -- well, the way Jerry gritted and clashed those sharp teeth
+of his sounded as if he meant to do something pretty bad.
+
+Billy Mink and Little Joe Otter had given up in disgust and started
+for the Big River. They are great travelers, anyway, and so didn't
+mind so much because there was no longer water enough in the
+Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool. Grandfather Frog and Spotty the
+Turtle, who are such very, very slow travelers, had decided that the
+Big River was too far away, and so they would stay and live in the
+strange pond for a while, though it wasn't nearly so nice as their
+dear Smiling Pool. They bad gone to sleep now, each in his own
+secret place where he would be safe for the night.
+
+So Jerry Muskrat sat alone and watched. The black shadows crept
+farther and farther across the pond and grew blacker and blacker.
+Jerry didn't mind this, because, as you know, his eyes are made for
+seeing in the dark, and he dearly loves the night. Jerry had sat
+there a long time without moving. He was listening and watching.
+By and by he saw something that made him draw in his breath and
+anger leap into his eyes. It was a little silver line on the water,
+and it was coming straight towards the dam where he sat. Jerry knew
+that it was made by some one swimming.
+
+"Ha!" said Jerry. "Now we shall see!"
+
+Nearer and nearer came the silver line. Then Jerry made out the head
+of the swimmer. Suddenly all the anger left Jerry. He didn't have
+room for anger; a great fear had crowded it out. The head was bigger
+than that of any Muskrat Jerry had ever seen. It was bigger than
+the head of any of Billy Mink's relatives. It was the head of a
+stranger, a stranger so big that Jerry felt very, very small and
+hoped with all his might that the stranger would not see him.
+
+Jerry held his breath as the stranger swam past and then climbed out
+on the dam. He looked very much like Jerry himself, only ever and
+ever so much bigger. And his tail! Jerry had never seen such a tail.
+It was very broad and flat. Suddenly the big stranger turned and
+looked straight at Jerry.
+
+"Hello, Jerry Muskrat!" said he. "Don't you know me?"
+
+Jerry was too frightened to speak.
+
+"I'm your big cousin from the North; I'm Paddy the Beaver, and if
+you leave my dam alone, I think we'll be good friends," continued
+the stranger.
+
+"I -- I -- I hope so," said Jerry in a very faint voice, trying to
+be polite, but with his teeth chattering with fear.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII: Jerry Loses His Fear
+
+ "Oh, tell me, you and you and you,
+ If it may hap you've ever heard
+ Of all that wond'rous is and great
+ The greatest is the spoken word?"
+
+It's true. It'sthe truest thing that ever was. If you don't believe
+it, you just go ask Jerry Muskrat. He'll tell you it's true, and
+Jerry knows. You see, it's this way: Words are more than just
+sounds. Oh, my, yes! They are little messengers, and once they have
+been sent out, you can't call them back. No, Sir, you can't call
+them back, and sometimes that is a very sad thing, because -- well,
+you see these little messengers always carry something to some one
+else, and that something may be anger or hate or fear or an untruth,
+and it is these things which make most of the trouble in this world.
+Or that something may be love or sympathy or helpfulness or kindness,
+and it is these things which put an end to most of the troubles
+in this world.
+
+Just take the ease of Jerry Muskrat. There he sat on the new dam,
+which had made the strange pond in the Green Forest, shaking with
+fear until his teeth chattered, as he watched a stranger very, very
+much bigger than he climb up on the dam. Jerry was afraid, because
+he had seen that the stranger could swim as well as he could, and as
+Jerry had no secret burrows there, he knew that he couldn't get away
+from the stranger if he wanted to. Somehow, Jerry knew without being
+told that the stranger had built the dam, and you know Jerry had
+twice made a hole in the dam to let the water out of the strange
+pond into the Laughing Brook. Jerry knew right down in his heart
+that if he had built that dam, he would be very, very angry with any
+one who tried to spoil it, and that is just what he had tried to do.
+So he sat with chattering teeth, too frightened to even try to run.
+
+"I wish I had let some one else keep watch," said Jerry to himself.
+
+Then the big stranger had spoken. He had said: "Hello, Jerry
+Muskrat! Don't you know me?" and his voice hadn't sounded the least
+bit angry. Then he had told Jerry that he was his big cousin, Paddy
+the Beaver, and he hoped that they would be friends.
+
+Now everything was just as it had been before -- the strange pond,
+the dam, Jerry himself and the big stranger, and the black shadows
+of the night -- and yet somehow, everything was different, all
+because a few pleasant words had been spoken. A great fear had
+fallen away from Jerry's heart, and in its place was a great hope
+that after all there wasn't to be any trouble. So he replied to
+Paddy the Beaver as politely as he knew how. Paddy was just as polite,
+and the first thing Jerry knew, instead of being enemies, as Jerry
+had all along made up his mind would be the case when he found the
+builder of the dam, here they were becoming the best of friends, all
+because Paddy the Beaver had said the right thing in the right way.
+
+"But you haven't told me yet what you made those holes in my dam for,
+Cousin Jerry," said Paddy the Beaver finally.
+
+Jerry didn't know just what to say. He was so pleased with his big
+new cousin that he didn't want to hurt his feelings by telling him
+that he didn't think that dam had any business to be across the
+Laughing Brook, and at the same time he wanted Paddy to know how he
+had spoiled the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool. At last he made
+up his mind to tell the whole story.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII: Paddy The Beaver Does A Kind Deed
+
+Paddy the Beaver listened to all that his small cousin, Jerry Muskrat,
+had to tell him about the trouble which Paddy's dam had
+caused in the Laughing Brook and the Smiling Pool.
+
+"You see, we who live in the Smiling Pool love it dearly, and we
+don't want to have to leave it, but if the water cannot run down the
+Laughing Brook, there can be no Smiling Pool, and so we will have to
+move off to the Big River," concluded Jerry Muskrat. "That is why I
+tried to spoil your dam."
+
+There was a twinkle in the eyes of Paddy the Beaver as he replied:
+"Well, now that you have found out that you can't do that, because I
+am bigger than you and can stop you, what are you going to do about it?"
+
+"I don't know," said Jerry Muskrat sadly. "I don't see what we can
+do about it. Of course you are big and strong and can do just as you
+please, but it doesn't seem right that we who have lived here so
+long should have to move and go away from all that we love so just
+because you, a stranger, happen to want to live here. I tell you
+what!" Jerry's eyes sparkled as a brand new thought came to him.
+"Couldn't you come down and live in the Smiling Pool with us?
+I'm sure there is room enough!"
+
+Paddy the Beaver shook his head. "No," said he, and Jerry's heart sank.
+"No, I can't do that because down there there isn't any of the
+kind of food I eat. Besides, I wouldn't feel at all safe in the
+Smiling Pool. You see, I always live in the woods. No, I couldn't
+possibly come down to live in the Smiling Pool. But I'm truly sorry
+that I have made you so much worry, Cousin Jerry, and I'm going to
+prove it to you. Now you sit right here until I come back."
+
+Before Jerry realized what he was going to do, Paddy the Beaver
+dived into the pond, and as he disappeared, his broad tail hit the
+water such a slap that it made Jerry jump. Then there began a great
+disturbance down under water. In a few minutes up bobbed a stick,
+and then another and another, and the water grew so muddy that Jerry
+couldn't see what was going on. Paddy was gone a long time. Jerry
+wondered how he could stay under water so long without air. All the
+time Paddy was just fooling him. He would come up to the surface,
+stick his nose out, nothing more, fill his lungs with fresh air, and
+go down again.
+
+Suddenly Jerry Muskrat heard a sound that made him prick up his
+funny little short ears and whirl about so that he could look over
+the other side of the dam into the Laughing Brook. What do you think
+that sound was? Why, it was the sound of rushing water, the sweetest
+sound Jerry had listened to for a long time. There was a great hole
+in the dam, and already the brook was beginning to laugh as the
+water rushed down it.
+
+"How do you like that, Cousin Jerry?" said a voice right in his ear.
+Paddy the Beaver had climbed up beside him, and his eyes were twinkling.
+
+"It -- it's splendid!" cried Jerry. "But -- but you've spoiled your
+dam!"
+
+"Oh, that's all right," replied Paddy. "I didn't really want it now,
+anyway. I don't usually build dams at this time of year, and I
+built this one just for fun because it seemed such a nice place to
+build one. You see, I was traveling through here, and it seemed such
+a nice place, that I thought I would stay a while. I didn't know
+anything about the Smiling Pool, you know. Now, I guess I'll have to
+move on and find a place where I can make a pond in the fall that
+will not trouble other people. You see, I don't like to be troubled
+myself, and so I don't want to trouble other people. This Green
+Forest is a very nice place."
+
+"The very nicest place in all the world excepting the Green Meadows
+and the Smiling Pool!" replied Jerry promptly. "Won't you stay,
+Cousin Paddy? I'm sure we would all like to have you."
+
+"Of course we would," said a gruff voice right beside them. It was
+Grandfather Frog.
+
+Paddy the Beaver looked thoughtful. "Perhaps I will," said he, "if I
+can find some good hiding-places in the Laughing Brook."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV: A Merry Home-Going
+
+ "The Laughing Brook is merry
+ And so am I," cried Jerry.
+ Grandfather Frog said he was too.
+ And Spotty was, the others knew.
+
+The trees stood with wet feet where just a little while before had
+been the strange pond in the Green Forest, the pond made by the dam
+of Paddy the Beaver. In the dam was a great hole made by Paddy himself.
+
+Through the Green Forest rang the laughter of the Laughing Brook,
+for once more the water ran deep between its banks. And in the
+hearts of Grandfather Frog and Jerry Muskrat and Spotty the Turtle
+was laughter also, for now the Smiling Pool would smile once more,
+and they could go home in peace and happiness. And there was one
+more who laughed. Who was it? Why, Paddy the Beaver to be sure,
+and his was the best laugh of all, for it was because he had brought
+happiness to others.
+
+"You beat me up here to the dam, but you won't beat me back to the
+Smiling Pool," cried Jerry Muskrat to Spotty the Turtle.
+
+Spotty laughed good-naturedly. "You'd better not stop to eat or play
+or sleep on the way then," said he, "for I shall keep right on going
+all the time. I've found that is the only way to get anywhere."
+
+"Let us all go down together" said Grandfather Frog. "We can help
+each other over the bad places."
+
+Jerry Muskrat laughed until he had to hold his sides at the very
+thought of Grandfather Frog or Spotty the Turtle being able to help
+him, but he is very good-natured, and so he agreed that they should
+all go down together. Paddy the Beaver said that he would go, too,
+so off the four started, Jerry Muskrat and Paddy the Beaver swimming
+side by side, and behind them Grandfather Frog and Spotty the
+Turtle.
+
+Now Spotty the Turtle is a very slow traveler on land, but in the
+water Spotty is not so slow. In fact, it was not long before
+Grandfather Frog found that he was the one who could not keep up.
+You see, while he is a great diver and can swim fast for a short
+distance, he is soon tired out. Pretty soon he was puffing and
+blowing and dropping farther and farther behind. By and by, Spotty
+the Turtle looked back. There was Grandfather Frog just tumbling
+head first over a little waterfall. He came up choking and gasping
+and kicking his long legs very feebly. Spotty climbed out on a rock
+and waited. He helped Grandfather Frog out beside him, and when
+Grandfather Frog had once more gotten his breath, what do you think
+Spotty did? Why, he took Grandfather Frog right on his back and
+started on again.
+
+Now Jerry Muskrat and Paddy the Beaver, being great swimmers, were
+soon out of sight. All at once Jerry remembered that they had agreed
+to go back together, and down in his heart he felt a little bit mean
+when he looked for Grandfather Frog and Spotty the Turtle and could
+see nothing of them. So he and Paddy sat down to wait. After what
+seemed a long time, they saw something queer bobbing along in the
+water.
+
+"It's Grandfather Frog," cried Paddy the Beaver.
+
+"No, it's Spotty the Turtle," said Jerry Muskrat.
+
+"It's both," replied Paddy, beginning to laugh.
+
+Just then Spotty tumbled over another waterfall which he hadn't seen,
+and of course Grandfather Frog went with him and lost his hold
+on Spotty's back.
+
+"I have an idea!" cried Paddy.
+
+"What is it?" asked Jerry.
+
+"Why, Grandfather Frog can ride on my flat tail," replied Paddy,
+"and then we'll go slow enough for Spotty to keep up with us."
+
+And so it was that just as the first moonbeams kissed the Smiling
+Pool, out of the Laughing Brook swam the merriest party that ever
+was seen.
+
+"Chugarum!" said Grandfather Frog. "It is good to be home, but I
+think I would travel often, if I could have the tail of Paddy the
+Beaver for a boat."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV: Paddy The Beaver Decides To Stay
+
+ "The fair Green Meadows spreading wide,
+ The Smiling Pool and Laughing Brook --
+ They fill our hearts with joy and pride;
+ We love their every hidden nook."
+
+So said Jerry Muskrat, as he climbed up on the Big Rock in the
+middle of the Smiling Pool, with Paddy the Beaver beside him, and
+watched the dear Smiling Pool dimpling and smiling in the moonlight,
+as he had so often seen it before the great trouble had come.
+
+"Chugarum!" said Grandfather Frog in his great deep voice from the
+bulrushes. "One never knows how great their blessings are until they
+have been lost and found again."
+
+The bulrushes nodded, as if they too were thinking of this. You see
+their feet were once more in the cool water. Paddy the Beaver seemed
+to understand just how every one felt, and he smiled to himself as
+he saw how happy these new friends of his were.
+
+"It surely is a very nice place here, and I don't wonder that you
+couldn't bear to leave it," said he. "I'm sorry that I made you all
+that trouble and worry, but you see I didn't know."
+
+"Oh, that's all right," replied Jerry Muskrat, who was now very
+proud of his big cousin. "I hope that now you see how nice it is,
+you will stay and make your home here."
+
+Paddy the Beaver looked back at the great black shadow which he knew
+was the Green Forest. Way over in the middle of it he heard the
+hunting-call of Hooty the Owl. Then he looked out over the Green
+Meadows, and from way over on the far side of them sounded the bark
+of Reddy Fox, and it was answered by the deep voice of Bowser the
+Hound up in Farmer Brown's dooryard. For some reason that last sound
+made Paddy the Beaver shiver a little, just as the voice of Hooty
+the Owl made the smaller people of the Green Forest and the Green
+Meadows shiver when they heard it. Paddy wasn't afraid of Hooty or
+of Reddy Fox, but Bowser's great voice was new to him, and somehow
+the very sound of it made him afraid. You see, the Green Meadows
+were so strange and open that he didn't feel at all at home, for he
+dearly loves the deepest part of the Green Forest.
+
+"No," said Paddy the Beaver, "I can't possibly live here in the
+Smiling Pool. It is a very nice pool, but it wouldn't do at all for
+me, Cousin Jerry. I wouldn't feel safe here a minute. Besides,
+there is nothing to eat here."
+
+"Oh, yes, there is," Jerry Muskrat interrupted. "There are
+lily-roots and the nicest fresh-water clams and --"
+
+"But there are no trees," said Paddy the Beaver, "and you know I
+have to have trees."
+
+Jerry stared at Paddy as if he didn't understand. "Do -- do you eat
+trees?" he asked finally.
+
+Paddy laughed. "Just the bark," said he, "and I have to have a great
+deal of it."
+
+Jerry looked as disappointed as he felt. "Of course you can't stay
+then," said he, "and -- and I had thought that we would have such
+good times together."
+
+Paddy's eyes twinkled. "Perhaps we may yet," said he. "You see I
+have about made up my mind that I will stay a while along the
+Laughing Brook in the Green Forest, and you can come to see me
+there. On our way down I saw a very nice hole in the bank that I
+think will make me a good house for the present, and you can come up
+there to see me. But if I do stay, you and Grandfather Frog and
+Spotty the Turtle must keep my secret. No one must know that I am
+there. Will you?"
+
+"Of course we will!" cried Jerry Muskrat and Grandfather Frog and
+Spotty the Turtle together.
+
+"Then I'll stay," said Paddy the Beaver, diving into the Smiling
+Pool with a great splash.
+
+And so one of Jerry Muskrat's greatest adventures ended in the
+finding of his biggest cousin, Paddy the Beaver. Now Jerry has a lot
+of cousins, and one of them lives on the Green Meadows not far from
+the Smiling Pool. His name is Danny Meadow Mouse, and Danny is forever
+having adventures too. He has them every day. In the next book you
+will be told about some of these, if you care to read about them.
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of The Adventures Of Jerry Muskrat
+
+
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