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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Gray Goose's Story, by Amy Prentice
+
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+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Gray Goose's Story
+
+Author: Amy Prentice
+
+Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7897]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on May 31, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GRAY GOOSE'S STORY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Tonya Allen
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "Good Morning, Mr. Rabbit. Can you tell me where I'll
+find two or three fat fish?"]
+
+
+Aunt Amy's Animal Stories
+
+THE GRAY GOOSE'S STORY
+
+By AMY PRENTICE
+
+[Illustration]
+
+With Thirty-Two Illustrations and a Frontispiece in Colors
+By
+J. WATSON DAVIS
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+THE GRAY GOOSE'S STORY.
+
+BY AMY PRENTICE.
+
+
+On pleasant afternoons your Aunt Amy dearly loves to wander down by the
+side of the pond, which lies just beyond the apple orchard, and there
+meet her bird or animal friends, of whom she has many, and all of them
+are ready to tell her stories.
+
+[Illustration: The Gray Goose.]
+
+There it is she sees Mr. Frisky Squirrel, old Mr. Plodding Turtle, Mr.
+Bunny Rabbit, and many others; but never until yesterday did she make
+the acquaintance of the gray goose, and then it was owing to Master
+Teddy's mischief that she found a new friend among the dwellers on the
+farm.
+
+Your Aunt Amy was walking slowly along on the lookout for some bird or
+animal who might be in the mood for story-telling, when she heard an
+angry hissing, which caused her to start in alarm, thinking a snake was
+in her path, and, to her surprise, she saw two geese who were scolding
+violently in their own peculiar fashion.
+
+One was the gray goose, who afterward became very friendly, and the
+other, a white gander from the farm on the opposite side of the road.
+
+[Illustration: An Angry Pair.]
+
+"What is the matter?" your Aunt Amy asked, as the geese continued to
+hiss angrily without giving any heed to her, and Mrs. Gray Goose ceased
+her scolding sufficiently long to say sharply:
+
+"It's that Mr. Man's boy Teddy; he never comes into the farm-yard
+without raising a disturbance of some kind, and I for one am sick of so
+much nonsense."
+
+Your Aunt Amy looked quickly around; but without seeing any signs of the
+boy who had tried Mrs. Goose's temper so sadly, and, quite naturally,
+she asked:
+
+"What has he been doing now, and where is he?"
+
+"Down in the meadow, or, he was there when Mr. Gander and I were driven
+out by his foolish actions," and Mrs. Goose continued to hiss at the
+full strength of her lungs.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Crow.]
+
+"If he is so far away your scolding will do no good, because he can't
+hear it," your Aunt Amy said, finding it difficult to prevent herself
+from actually laughing in the angry bird's face.
+
+"Some of the other people on this farm can hear me, and thus know that I
+do not approve of such actions," Mrs. Goose replied sharply. "Since Mr.
+Crow began to write poetry about Young Teddy, the boy thinks he can
+chase us around whenever he pleases. He'll kill Mrs. Cow's baby, if he
+isn't careful."
+
+"Do you know Mr. Crow?" your Aunt Amy asked in surprise, for every bird
+or animal she had met seemed to be on friendly terms with the old fellow
+who spent the greater portion of his time in the big oak tree near the
+pond.
+
+"Of course I know him," Mrs. Goose replied as she ceased scolding and
+came nearer your Aunt Amy, while Mr. Gander sat down close at hand as if
+listening to what was said. "Teddy has been trying for nearly a week to
+use that poor calf as if the baby was a horse--that's what he's doing
+now, and Mr. Crow wrote some poetry about it. Of course old Mamma
+Speckle must run straight to Teddy Boy with it, and since then he has
+been carrying on worse than ever."
+
+
+
+
+TEDDY AND THE CALF.
+
+
+"Oh yes, I'll repeat it if you like; but I'd rather you didn't tell
+Teddy that you heard it, for he is already much too proud. This is the
+way it goes:
+
+ Young Ted was a rider bold,
+ Who never did things by half,
+ And so he hitched to his cart one day
+ A strong and frolicsome calf.
+
+ Away he went, and on behind
+ Came a troop of merry boys,
+ Who tossed their caps, and screamed aloud,
+ Till the woods rang with the noise.
+
+ But the steed was like his driver,--
+ He wouldn't do things by half,--
+ And never had Ted a drive like that
+ He had with his frolicsome calf.
+
+[Illustration: The Bold Bare-Back Rider.]
+
+ Then Ted tried another game,
+ And mounted his sturdy steed;
+ But the calf resolved he wouldn't bear that,
+ So he ran with all his speed.
+
+ Ted learned to his great dismay,
+ That it wouldn't do by half,
+ When he wanted fun, to tamper with
+ A strong and frolicsome calf.
+
+"That is exactly what he was doing with Mrs. Cow's baby when Mr. Gander
+and I were just the same as driven out of the meadow," Mrs. Goose said
+as she finished the verses. "What I'm hoping is, that Mr. Towser Dog
+will help young Calf out of his trouble."
+
+Mrs. Goose had hardly more than ceased speaking when Mrs. Cow's baby and
+Mr. Towser appeared in sight, walking slowly as if talking earnestly.
+
+Mr. Gander jumped up at once and went toward them, coming back a moment
+later as he said to Mrs. Goose:
+
+"Young Calf has given Teddy Boy a good tumble, and hopes he struck the
+little rascal with his left hind foot; but of that he can't be certain,
+because of being in such a hurry when he came away. Mamma Speckle has
+gone over to the pasture believing she may find Mr. Donkey there, and if
+she does, Teddy Boy and his friends will be glad to get away quickly."
+
+"I suppose Young Calf and Mr. Towser Dog are waiting to hear what Mr.
+Donkey has to say about it," Mrs. Goose added, as she nodded to the dog
+and the calf, who were standing with their noses very near together, as
+if talking the matter over.
+
+"Does Mr. Donkey often interfere when the animals of the farm get into
+trouble?" your Aunt Amy asked, and Mrs. Goose replied:
+
+[Illustration: Waiting to Hear from Mr. Donkey.]
+
+"Yes indeed; he's a very good friend to us all, but doesn't often have
+time to look after such matters, because Mr. Man seems to delight in
+finding work for him to do. He once actually killed a Mr. Weasel who was
+sneaking up to murder some of the chickens, and that proves him to be a
+very able fellow, for even Mr. Man himself believes it's a big thing to
+get the best of a weasel.
+
+"Mr. Towser Dog is another good friend to all of us. He thinks very much
+of Mr. Man and his boy Teddy; but at the same time he looks after all
+the animals and birds on the farm. I've got a piece of poetry about him
+that perhaps you'd like to hear?"
+
+"Who wrote it, Mrs. Goose?" your Aunt Amy asked, and Mr. Gander spoke up
+quickly:
+
+"That's what none of us know; but Mr. Crow said he had nothing whatever
+to do with it. He don't like Mr. Towser Dog, on account of some trouble
+the two of them had about Mr. Crow's digging up the corn just after Mr.
+Man had planted it. Hello! there comes Mr. Donkey, and now you may be
+sure Teddy Boy won't worry Mrs. Cow's baby for quite a while."
+
+As Mr. Gander spoke a small, friendly looking donkey trotted up to where
+the dog and the calf were talking together, and old Mr. Gander seemed to
+think it necessary he should waddle over to hear what might be said.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Donkey comes trotting up to give advice.]
+
+"They'll spend a good half hour talking matters over," Mrs. Goose said
+as if displeased because of what she evidently believed was a waste of
+time. "If you want to hear the verses about Mr. Towser, I may as well
+read them to you now," and she drew out from beneath her wing a much
+soiled piece of paper, on which was printed the following lines:
+
+ He was just a common dog, you see,
+ With no particular line
+ Of ancestry to mark him out
+ As a well-bred creature fine.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Towser Dog.]
+
+ He bayed at the moon as dogs do,
+ And vented his gruff bow-wows,
+ As he tagged my heels in the good old times
+ When we went after the cows.
+
+ He'd roll in the grass with the babies,
+ Or carry them on his back;
+ He'd catch the ball the youngsters tossed,
+ And follow the rabbit's track.
+ A boy's own dog, and a friendly
+ Companion in peace or rows,
+ As he tagged my heels in the good old times
+ When we went after the cows.
+
+ He could talk with a doggish lingo
+ In his own peculiar way,
+ And I could understand it all--
+ Whatever he had to say.
+ He'd jump to my call at the moment,
+ And utter his gruff bow-wows,
+ As he tagged my heels in the good old times
+ When we went after the cows.
+
+ I told him all of my secrets,
+ And he kept them without fail,
+ With never a sign that he knew them
+ But a wag of his short, stump tail.
+ Long years have passed since I heard them.--
+ The sound of his gruff bow-wows,
+ As he tagged my heels in the good old days
+ When we went after the cows.
+
+"Those are very good verses, Mrs. Goose," your Aunt Amy said when the
+last line had been read, and she replied as she plumed her feathers:
+
+"So I think, although Mr. Crow says they are foolish; but that's because
+he doesn't like Mr. Towser Dog. What I admire about them is that they
+show what a good friend to a boy an animal can be. Now if Sammy Boy had
+made friends with the calf, he wouldn't be in the house this very minute
+waiting for his broken arm to get mended."
+
+
+
+
+WHEN SAMMY TEASED THE CALF.
+
+
+"How was that, Mrs. Goose?" your Aunt Amy asked.
+
+"It was something that began a long time ago on the next farm; but
+wasn't finished till last week. You see a little boy calf was born over
+there once upon a time, and no sooner did the poor little thing come
+into this world than Sammy Boy thought it great fun to drive him from
+his mother, beat him with a stick, pull his tail, and do all kinds of
+mean things.
+
+"'You're a mean, selfish, cruel boy,' the calf said to himself, when he
+was forced to put up with whatever Sammy felt like doing to him. 'I'll
+get even with you if it takes me years to do it--You think I can't
+remember, because I don't talk the same way you do; but just wait and
+see!'
+
+"Of course Sammy didn't understand what the calf said, and he poked him
+all the harder with a big stick, laughing as if he thought it great fun.
+Well, the years went on, and Mr. Calf grew to be big and strong. Sammy
+also grew, but not as fast as the calf did, and the time came when he
+didn't dare pull his tail, or poke him with a stick.
+
+"One day when Mr. Calf was three years old, and the folks called him Mr.
+Bull, Sammy went out to look at his pigeons, which he wickedly keeps
+shut up in a little box, and some one had left the pasture bars down.
+
+"Mr. Bull was standing near-by, and when he saw Sammy he said to
+himself, as he lowered his head and stuck his tail straight up in the
+air:
+
+"'Now's my chance! I'll show that boy how good it is to have those who
+are stronger try to be cruel.'
+
+"Sammy had forgotten all about tormenting the calf; but I'm thinking he
+remembered it when he picked himself up on the other side of the
+farmyard fence, where Mr. Bull had tossed him. His arm was broken, and
+his clothes torn; but with all that he wasn't hurt any worse than the
+poor little calf was when Sammy poked him with a stick, or pulled his
+tail."
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Bull Pays Off Old Scores.]
+
+Just at this time Mr. Gander came back to say that Mr. Donkey had
+promised to teach the boys, who had been riding Mrs. Cow's baby as if it
+was a horse, such a lesson that they wouldn't forget it very quickly.
+
+"He's going down into the meadow," Mr. Gander said, "and if those little
+rascals are yet there, he'll chase them from one end to the other,
+flinging up his heels, and making believe he is trying to kick them. By
+the time he gets through, I'll promise you they won't be so eager to
+pick upon a poor little youngster who isn't large enough to take care of
+himself."
+
+
+
+
+WHERE MR. CROW HID HIS APPLES.
+
+
+"They'll soon find out what a mistake they made, same as Mr. Crow did
+when he put his apples away for the winter," Mrs. Gray Goose said in a
+tone of satisfaction, and it seemed only natural that your Aunt Amy
+should ask for an explanation.
+
+"Mr. Crow is a good deal like Mr. Fox," Mrs. Goose said in reply. "He
+thinks he's the wisest bird in this neighborhood, and that he can do
+whatever he pleases, just because he makes poetry. Now this is one of
+Mamma Speckle's stories, and although she does dearly love to talk about
+other people, I have no doubt but it is true.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Crow picked up the best looking apples and dropped
+them in the pitcher.]
+
+"It seems that last fall, when the apples on the tree that stands near
+the well were ripening, Mr. Crow made up his mind that the best thing he
+could do would be to lay in a supply for the winter, as Mr. Bunny Rabbit
+and Mr. Frisky Squirrel were doing. He went over to the well early in
+the morning, before Mr. Man was out of bed, and saw the squirrels and
+rabbits carrying away one at a time.
+
+"'That's no way to do your harvesting,' he said, as if he knew just how
+everything should be done. 'Before you've taken two apples to your nest
+Mr. Man will be out here, and pick up all that are on the ground.'
+
+"'More will fall to-night, and to-morrow morning we can get another
+lot,' Mr. Bunny Rabbit said, as he hopped off with a juicy apple in his
+mouth, and Mr. Frisky Squirrel added with a laugh:
+
+"'It's better to make sure of two, than run the chances of not getting
+any.'
+
+"'Watch me, and you'll see how to do the work in proper shape,' Mr. Crow
+said as if there was no one in all the world as wise as he.
+
+"One of the children had left a pitcher on the ground near the well, and
+Mr. Crow hopped around wonderfully lively, picking up the best looking
+apples and dropping them into the pitcher.
+
+"'Why are you doing that?' Mr. Squirrel asked.
+
+"I'm going to pick up all the best apples, and put them in this pitcher.
+Then I can come back at any time, when Mr. Man's family are not around,
+and carry them off. That will be much better than waiting a whole night
+just for two.'
+
+"Well, Mr. Crow kept on picking up apples and dropping them in the
+pitcher as fast as ever he could, while Mr. Rabbit and Mr. Squirrel were
+well satisfied at getting safely off with two or three, and when Mr. Man
+came out to the well, the pitcher was almost full of the best looking
+apples, while Mr. Crow was all tired out with working so fast.
+
+"'Hello!" Mr. Man said as he spied the pitcher of apples, and of course
+Mr. Crow had hidden himself when he saw the farmer coming. "Some of my
+family have been busy this morning, and I thought I was the first one
+out of doors. This will save me a lot of work,' and he carried the
+pitcher into the house.
+
+"'I'm almost afraid I was too greedy,' Mr. Crow said with a flirt of his
+tail as Mr. Man walked away. 'Perhaps it would have been wiser if I had
+been content to carry away a few at a time, as Mr. Rabbit and Mr.
+Squirrel did,' and away he flew to the oak tree without so much as a
+taste of apple after picking up so many."
+
+
+
+
+THE SECOND TRAGEDY IN THE FROG FAMILY.
+
+
+[Illustration: Old Mr. Frog's Grandson.]
+
+"There goes that dandified young Frog again, and this time I believe it
+is my duty to teach him that the wisest course any one can pursue, is to
+stay at home and attend to his own business, rather than roaming around
+to show his good clothes," Mr. Gander said, starting off as rapidly as
+his short legs would carry him, and, looking up, your Aunt Amy saw young
+Mr. Frog, dressed in his best, just coming out of his house.
+
+"Well, did you ever?" Mrs. Goose exclaimed as Mr. Gander hurried away in
+pursuit of the frog. "Wouldn't it be strange if Mr. Gander caught him?"
+
+"Why would it be strange?" your Aunt Amy asked, knowing full well that
+geese often ate frogs, and Mrs. Goose replied:
+
+"It would be at least odd, because it was his own grandfather who was
+swallowed up by the lily-white duck, just after the cat and her kittens
+came tumbling into Mrs. Mouse's hall, although Mr. Crow says, in some
+poetry I've got of his, that one animal is always like others of his
+kind. If old Mr. Frog went down the throat of a duck, I don't know why
+his grandson shouldn't feel proud of being taken in by one of the goose
+family."
+
+While Mrs. Gray Goose was talking, Mr. Gander had been running at full
+speed in pursuit of Mr. Frog, who was so busy trying to keep his hat on
+that he didn't pay any attention to what was happening behind him.
+
+A moment later Mr. Gander had overtaken the foppish young Frog, and your
+Aunt Amy did not have time to call Mrs. Goose's attention to what was
+going on, before Mr. Frog disappeared down Mr. Gander's throat.
+
+[Illustration: How Young Mr. Frog Disappeared.]
+
+"Well, I never before believed that Mr. Gander would be so piggish!"
+Mrs. Goose exclaimed as her friend's bill closed upon the end of Mr.
+Frog. "To think that he hadn't the politeness to offer me a taste!"
+
+"He really didn't have the time," your Aunt Amy said laughingly, and
+then, to take Mrs. Goose's attention from what was really a greedy act,
+she asked about Mr. Crow's poetry concerning the likeness of one animal
+to another of its kind.
+
+
+
+
+SEARCHING FOR THE IMPOSSIBLE.
+
+
+"It's only a nonsense rhyme," Mrs. Goose replied with a sigh as she
+turned her eyes from Mr. Gander, who was twisting and squirming as if he
+had something inside of him which caused considerable pain. "I'll repeat
+it if you wish, and it wouldn't make me feel badly if old Mr. Gander
+came within an inch of dying. A whole frog is far too big a mouthful for
+a goose of his age."
+
+"It's certain he is being punished for his greediness," your Aunt Amy
+replied; "but it isn't well to rejoice while others are in trouble, even
+when they brought it upon themselves, as did Mr. Gander. Suppose you
+repeat Mr. Crow's poetry?"
+
+Mrs. Goose snapped her bill together sharply as she turned her back on
+the suffering gander, and recited the following jingle:
+
+ I'd love a goose that wears a shawl,
+ Or a gander in coat and hat;
+ I'd just adore a tamed giraffe,
+ Or a literary cat.
+ I'd like a goat with graceful curves,
+ Or a bear with manners neat;
+ A chimpanzee in a cutaway,
+ I think would be just sweet.
+
+[Illustration: What Would be Hard to Find.]
+
+ I'd appreciate a gentle snake,
+ Or a dove whose ways were wild.
+ A bluefish draped in petticoats,
+ Or a tiger nice and mild.
+ A mackintosh upon an owl
+ To me would be just fine.
+ I'd like to know a kangaroo
+ Who'd ask me out to dine.
+
+ An elk dressed up in uniform,
+ I'd love beyond compare.
+ I'd even like a flying lynx,
+ Or an educated hare.
+ There's many more I'd love to have,
+ But never can I find
+ An animal but what he's like
+ The others of his kind.
+
+"There's a deal of truth in the last three lines of that poetry," Mrs.
+Goose said with a sigh, casting one more reproachful glance at the
+suffering Mr. Gander. "I was up near Mr. Man's barn the other day, and
+there I saw two kittens making a most disgraceful spectacle of
+themselves; but yet they were exactly like all other cats I have ever
+seen.
+
+"It seems that their mother had caught a nice fat rat, and instead of
+eating it all herself, as Mr. Gander did the frog, she brought it to her
+kittens. Now there was plenty of meat for both, and neither could have
+devoured the whole of it, yet those two youngsters stood there and
+snarled, and spit, and scratched at each other, instead of enjoying
+themselves in a friendly manner.
+
+"They made a most dreadful noise, therefore, of course, everybody oil
+the farm knew what was being done, and then the foolish things began to
+fight. Just then, Mr. Brown Owl, who spends a good deal of his time on
+our shed watching for mice, flew down and picked up the rat.
+
+[Illustration: The Selfish Kittens.]
+
+"When the kittens made up their minds that it might be better to eat
+dinner than tear each other to pieces, Mr. Owl was eating the rat, and
+they were obliged to go hungry for that day at least. If a person is not
+only a glutton, but has beside a bad temper, he is very likely to miss
+many good things which he might enjoy without much labor. Yet I don't
+like to see people too soft, and smiling too sweetly, for then I always
+think of the time when Mr. Wolf called on Mrs. Hog, professing to be
+such a great friend."
+
+
+
+
+A SUSPICIOUS-LOOKING VISITOR.
+
+
+"That is a story I have never heard," your Aunt Amy said, and Mrs. Goose
+looked up in surprise, as she replied:
+
+"Why, it's as old as the hills, almost; I'll tell it because it may do
+you some good. Once upon a time Mrs. Hog had seven of the dearest little
+babies you ever saw, and they were as fat as butter, for Mr. Man gave
+them all they wanted to eat. The family lived over on the north side of
+the farm, a long distance from the house, and the fence to Mrs. Hog's
+yard wasn't what it should have been when she had so many little ones to
+look after. Every one, even Mr. Man himself said it ought to be mended;
+but it seems that what's everybody's business is nobody's business,
+therefore nothing was done.
+
+"One afternoon, when supper had been eaten and Mrs. Hog was clearing up
+the sty, Mr. Wolf poked his nose between the boards of the fence, and
+said sweet as honey:
+
+"'I am surprised, Mrs. Hog, to see that Mr. Man doesn't look after you
+better. The first thing you know some bad person will come along, and
+then one of the babies will be missing.'
+
+"'There's little fear of that, Mr. Wolf, while I'm around,' and Mrs. Hog
+showed her teeth.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Wolf wants to live with Mrs. Hog.]
+
+"'Oh yes, I understand what you mean,' Mr. Wolf said, smiling all over
+his face as if he was the best friend Mrs. Hog ever had. 'What I'm
+afraid of is that the little ones may get into trouble while you are out
+calling, and that would come near to breaking my heart, for I am very
+fond of them. Now suppose I come here to live with you until they are
+large enough to take care of themselves?'
+
+"Mrs. Hog knew that if Mr. Wolf should try real hard to make trouble for
+her, he might be able to do it, so she didn't dare tell him just what
+she thought; but, going a little nearer him, to where one of the boards
+had been slipped aside at the top, she said:
+
+"'I'm afraid we haven't got room enough for you, Mr. Wolf. You can't
+even get your head between these boards.'
+
+"'Indeed I can,' Mr. Wolf said, laughing to think how easily he was
+fooling Mrs. Hog, and he stuck his head through where the board was
+loose.
+
+"That was just what Mrs. Hog wanted him to do, and before he knew what
+had happened, she jammed the two boards together with her nose, holding
+Mr. Wolf by the neck in such a way that he couldn't do anything but
+howl, till one of the babies ran and told Mr. Towser Dog to come and
+look after the visitor.
+
+"The next time you want to fool anybody you'd better find a foolish
+little pig, instead of an old hog like me, who knows that there's some
+mischief in the air when the wolves get to acting like one's best
+friends,' Mrs. Hog said, as Mr. Towser took Mr. Wolf by the throat to
+teach him better manners.
+
+"I think myself that it is better to be suspicious, as was the colored
+minister's rooster, than believe everything you are told, and make
+friends with the first one who holds out his hand."
+
+"Tell me the story about the rooster," your Aunt Amy said as Mrs. Goose
+ceased speaking and turned to look at Mr. Gander, who still appeared to
+be in pain.
+
+
+
+
+WHEN MR. BOOSTER WAS SUSPICIOUS.
+
+
+"It is one of Mr. Crow's stories," Mrs. Gray Goose said after another
+long look at the suffering gander; "but it agrees with what I said about
+the wisdom of being suspicious now and then.
+
+"It seems that once upon a time a colored man raised a nice flock of
+fowls; but his neighbors, who dearly loved stewed chickens or roasted
+turkey, came to dinner so often, that very soon one thin turkey and an
+old rooster, were all he had left.
+
+"Just then two friends of the man's wife came to dinner, and, because he
+hadn't any meat in the house, there was nothing to do but catch and cook
+one of the lonesome looking pair.
+
+"Mr. Turkey Gobbler saw the man coming, and flew up on the top of the
+barn, as he cried:
+
+"'I've got other business, and can't go to dinner with you, no matter
+how much you want me.'
+
+"'Now he's after me!' Mr. Rooster cried, growing suspicious when the
+man caught him by the end of the tail and pulled nearly half the
+feathers out.
+
+"'Get under the barn! Get under the barn!' Mr. Turkey screamed, and Mr.
+Rooster shouted while he went across the yard as fast as his legs could
+carry him:
+
+"'Give me a little time, and I'll win the race; but he's dangerously
+near.'
+
+"Well, Mr. Rooster got under the barn nearly a minute before the man
+did, and there he stayed, paying no attention to the coaxing or threats,
+and, finally, discouraged and with his coat torn in two places, the man
+went into the house to tell his visitors that he couldn't have company
+to dinner that day.
+
+[Illustration: A Race for Life.]
+
+"When he had got inside the house Mr. Rooster crept out from under the
+barn, and crowed up to Mr. Turkey: 'Do you-think-he's-gone-for
+goo-o-o-d?'
+
+"And the suspicious Mr. Turkey gobbled back:
+
+"'Doubtful! Doubtful! Doubtful! Doubtful!'
+
+"That Mr. Rooster had a good deal more sense than our Mr. Dorking, who
+made such a fool of himself last summer. It isn't much of a story; but
+it shows how silly some people are," and once more Mrs. Goose looked at
+Mr. Gander.
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE ROOSTER FOUND THE MOON.
+
+
+"I would like very much to hear the story," your Aunt Amy said, and she
+spoke the truth, for thus far Mrs. Goose had been most entertaining.
+
+"It's kind of you to say so," Mrs. Goose replied with a smirk. "If I
+keep on at this rate you'll think I like to talk as well as Mamma
+Speckle does; but I've heard of you so often from our people around
+here, that it seemed as if I must have a whole lot of stories to tell,
+else you'd say I wasn't much of anybody after all. But about Mr. Dorking
+Rooster: it seems that one night he couldn't sleep, on account of having
+eaten too much, and for the first time in his life he saw the moon and
+the stars.
+
+"The next day, when he was going across the front yard, he saw one of
+those large rubber balls, painted in bright colors, such as Mr. Man's
+children use to play with in the house, and after looking it over
+carefully he decided that he knew what it was.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Dorking Finds the Moon.]
+
+"'This must be the moon I saw last night,' he said to himself; 'but it
+don't seem to shine as it did then. Perhaps it doesn't give out any
+light till after sunset, so I'll wait till then to see it.'
+
+"So Mr. Dorking sat down and waited. The sun set, and black clouds
+covered the sky, but, yet the ball did not shine. All the other chickens
+had gone to roost hours before; but Mr. Dorking kept on watching. It
+began to rain; the lightning flashed and the thunder rolled. The rooster
+was wet to the skin, and terribly frightened.
+
+"'I'll save the moon,' he cried, and picking up the ball in his beak,
+which wasn't an easy task, he ran as fast as he could to the hen-house;
+but when he got there the storm had cleared away. Looking up, Mr.
+Dorking saw the moon in the sky, and throwing the ball into the house,
+he cried out to his wife:
+
+"'What kind of a thing is this, anyway? I've been lugging it around for
+an hour or more, and now there's another moon come to take its place.'
+
+"'Come straight up here to your roost, you foolish old thing.' Mrs.
+Dorking said angrily. 'If you had half as much sense as Mr. Monkey, you
+could have taken the children and me on a picnic, instead of fooling
+your time away with a rubber ball.'
+
+"What did she mean by 'having as much sense as Mr. Monkey,'" your Aunt
+Amy asked, and Mrs. Goose replied:
+
+
+
+
+WHEN MRS. MONKEY WAS DISSATISFIED.
+
+
+"Oh, it was an idea she got from some of Mr. Crow's poetry. All the
+fowls on our farm have laughed at it time and time again. This is the
+way it goes:
+
+ Said old Mrs. Monk one morning, "Look at me.
+ I am tired of living in this cocoa tree,
+ You have got to go to work and rent a flat,
+ For I'll not live in this manner, mind you that."
+
+ Then when Mister Monkey heard all that she said,
+ He thought of many trades, and scratched his head
+ What on earth could monkeys do to bring in gold
+ So a loving monkey wifey wouldn't scold?
+
+ Now what do you suppose the Monkey did?
+ Do you think he climbed the cocoa tree and hid?
+ No; upon a jungle trolley he is there
+ Hanging by his legs and tail collecting fare."
+
+Mrs. Goose would have been blind if she had not seen that your Aunt Amy
+thought the jingle was very foolish, and she hastened to say:
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Monkey listening to his Wife.]
+
+
+
+
+HOW BUNNY RABBIT FOOLED GRANDFATHER STORK.
+
+
+"I guess you think the same as does Grandfather Stork about some of Mr.
+Crow's verses. He says that nobody but foolish geese would listen to
+them, and yet there isn't anybody around here who doesn't like them.
+Grandfather Stork don't know everything there is to be learned in this
+world, else Mr. Bunny Rabbit couldn't have fooled him the way he did."
+
+"I have never heard that Mr. Bunny Rabbit fooled Grandfather Stork," your
+Aunt Amy said, and Mrs. Goose almost laughed when she replied:
+
+"Then you haven't seen the old fellow lately, for he spends all his time
+running around the neighborhood telling of it. He thinks he was very
+smart, and I'm not saying but that it was more than one would have
+expected of him, for Mr. Bunny Rabbit isn't the wisest animal living
+near the pond, by a good deal. Poor old Grandfather Stork was the most
+harmless bird that ever lived. He had carried babies from one place to
+another till he was all worn out, and hadn't more than six feathers left
+on his head.
+
+"He hadn't a tooth to his bill, and seemed to have forgotten how to hunt
+for his dinner, so one day when he met Bunny Rabbit, he said to him as
+polite as could be:
+
+"'Good morning, Mr. Rabbit. Can you tell me where I'll find two or three
+fat fish near about here?'
+
+[Illustration: Grandfather Stork waiting for his dinner.]
+
+"Bunny scratched his nose as if he was doing a terrible lot of thinking,
+and then said, solemn as ever was Squire Owl:
+
+"'Why, of course, Mr. Stork, and I always like to help a neighbor along.
+But times have changed since you were a young fellow. Then you had to
+catch your own fish, or go without; but now the law is that after a bird
+has stood on one foot half an hour, two fish jump down his throat, and
+three more go the same way at the end of an hour. Mr. Robin Red-Breast
+forgot all about the new law the other day, and, because his left foot
+was sore, he stood on the right one till two big pickerel made a leap
+for his mouth. Either of them was seven times as big as he is, and it's
+a wonder he wasn't killed.'
+
+"'Dear me, is that so, Mr. Rabbit? Now I really can't catch fish as I
+used to; but it comes quite natural for me to stand on one foot. I'll
+try to do you a favor some day, Mr. Rabbit.'
+
+"Then Grandfather Stork stood up in the sun waiting for the fish to jump
+down his throat, and Bunny Rabbit ran off into the bushes, laughing till
+there was danger of splitting his sides; but he didn't keep it up very
+long, for just then down swooped Mr. Hawk, and Bunny Rabbit came very
+near taking an excursion in the air.
+
+"As it was, Mr. Hawk dug a great hole in his back, and nipped off a
+piece of his tail, before Bunny could get under a wild-rose bush where
+he was safe. It was Mr. Crow who told Grandfather Stork that he had been
+fooled, and the poor old fellow looked so sorrowful when he hobbled away
+without having had any dinner, that I made up my mind I never would try
+to play such kind of jokes."
+
+"And you are right, Mrs. Goose," your Aunt Amy said decidedly. "It is a
+very foolish practice, and often causes much trouble. Now Bunny Rabbit
+really told Mr. Stork a lie, even if it was in sport, and we all know
+how wrong that is."
+
+At this moment Mr. Grander came up, and when Mrs. Goose asked how he
+felt, he said:
+
+"I'm better, thank you. That frog was tough, and, to make matters worse,
+I accidentally swallowed his hat."
+
+"You were in too much of a hurry, Mr. Gander," Mrs. Goose said sharply.
+"Perhaps you was afraid you might be asked to share him with some other
+goose."
+
+"Well, there! I never stopped to think that you might like a piece," Mr.
+Gander said, as if he felt terribly sorry because of having been so
+selfish. "I'll spend all day to-morrow hunting for Mr. Frog's brother,
+and if I catch the fellow, you shall have the whole of him."
+
+"I'll hunt for my own frogs, thank you," Mrs. Goose replied as she
+straightened herself up angrily. "I never yet have asked others to find
+food for me, and I hope I don't live simply for the sake of eating, as
+does Mrs. Wild Goose, who visited us not long ago."
+
+Mr. Gander gazed at Mrs. Gray Goose sadly; but she refused even to look
+at him, and after a time he waddled slowly away, stopping now and then
+to snap at a grasshopper that jumped over his head.
+
+[Illustration: Mrs. Gray Goose is Angry.]
+
+
+
+
+MRS. WILD GOOSE'S VISIT.
+
+
+"What about Mrs. Wild Goose making you a visit?" Aunt Amy asked, when
+she and the gray goose were alone once more.
+
+"It isn't what you might really call a story," Mrs. Goose replied. "I
+only spoke of it to remind Mr. Gander how he himself talked about those
+who think only of what can be eaten. Not more than a month ago Mrs. Wild
+Goose flew down into our yard, and one would have thought that she owned
+the entire farm, to hear her talk.
+
+"'This seems to be quite a comfortable place,' she said, walking around
+and poking her bill into every corner before she had spoken to any of
+us. 'I have seen better yards, of course; but a goose who has traveled
+as much as I have, learns to make the best of everything. It looks as if
+Mr. Man gave you all you wanted to eat.'
+
+"'So he does,' Mr. Dorking Rooster said, and we have nothing to do but
+enjoy ourselves.'
+
+"'Indeed!' Mrs. Wild Goose cried. 'Then I'll stay right here. The doctor
+says I mustn't move around very much, and the climate seems to agree
+with me.'
+
+"Well, she was the greediest goose I ever saw. She would gobble up fully
+half of all the food that was brought into the yard, before one of us
+had time to swallow a single mouthful, and it did seem as if she
+couldn't get enough. Even Mr. Gander, who has just shown how greedy he
+can be, said that it really made him feel faint to see her show of
+gluttony.
+
+"When Mrs. Wild Goose had been with us about two weeks, Betty, the
+housemaid, came into the yard with a cloth over her head, and a big
+apron on. All of us who lived there knew what it meant, and ran for dear
+life, with Mrs. Wild Goose at our heels, as she shrieked:
+
+"'What is she going to do?'
+
+"'She's going to pull out our feathers with which to stuff pillows and
+beds for Mr. Man to sleep on,' Mr. Gander said.
+
+[Illustration: Mrs. Wild Goose Goes Away in a Hurry.]
+
+"Dear me, dear me, I never will put up with such treatment as that! I
+only came here for a change of air and food, and couldn't think of
+parting with my feathers!'
+
+"Then, without stopping to thank us for the pleasant visit, off she flew
+to find another place where she could make a glutton of herself without
+having to pay or work. Some birds seem to think, as did Mrs. Pea-Hen,
+that they have nothing to do in this world but enjoy themselves; but
+I've lived long enough to know that we must do our full share of the
+work, if we want to take part in the play."
+
+"What did Mrs. Pea-Hen believe," your Aunt Amy asked, and Mrs. Gray
+Goose replied:
+
+
+
+
+WHEN MRS. PEA-HEN ABANDONED THE ORPHANS.
+
+
+"She always has looked, and always will look first after her own comfort
+or pleasure, no matter how much others may suffer. Any other bird on
+this farm would have been so ashamed, after doing what Mrs. Pea-Hen has,
+that she'd never hold up her head again, and what I'm going to tell you
+isn't the first selfish thing she has done.
+
+"About four weeks ago Mrs. Pea-Hen made a great fuss over wanting to
+bring up a family, and began to set on anything and everything she could
+find that looked like an egg. Well, Mr. Man made a nice nest for her,
+and put in it thirteen white eggs. No hen could have asked for a better
+place in which to show what she was able to do, and whenever any of us
+went to call on her, Mrs. Pea-Hen had a great deal to say about what she
+would do when her family came out of the shells.
+
+"I can't deny but that she sat there faithfully, and took proper care of
+the eggs, and, of course, out came thirteen as pretty little chickens as
+you could want to see. Mrs. Pea-Hen seemed to be real proud because she
+had so many babies, and after the last one was hatched she called all of
+them out for a walk.
+
+"They came from the nest with considerable noise, such as all youngsters
+make, and no sooner did she hear the first peep than Mrs. Pea-Hen turned
+around like a flash, looking at first one and then another until she had
+seen the whole brood.
+
+"'Why, they are nothing but ordinary chickens!' she cried, and off she
+walked, paying no heed to the poor little things when they called after
+her for something to eat.
+
+"'Are you going away and leave those dear little babies with no one to
+care for them?' Mamma Speckle asked angrily, and Mrs. Pea-Hen replied,
+as if to say she didn't allow any one to meddle with her family affairs:
+
+"'Of course I am! Do you suppose a fowl of my standing in society would
+spend her time looking after a lot of common chickens?'
+
+[Illustration: The Hard-Hearted Mrs. Pea-Hen.]
+
+"'But they'll starve to death!' Mamma Speckle cried, as if she was
+almost heart-broken.
+
+"'That's no concern of mine. Mr. Man made me believe they were my own
+eggs, else I'd never sat on them a single hour,' Mrs. Pea-Hen said, as
+she kept on walking away with never a look at the poor little babies,
+and Mamma Speckle called after her:
+
+"'You was so crazy to set that you would have tried to hatch out a nest
+full of stones, if you couldn't have found anything better!'
+
+"Mrs. Pea-Hen tried to act as if she didn't hear what Mamma Speckle
+said; but she couldn't help it, for you know how loud the speckled hen
+talks. She never paid any attention to the babies, though, and the other
+fowls took care of them as best they could with babies of their own."
+
+
+
+
+ALICE QUESTIONS MR. TURTLE.
+
+
+"Say, of course you know a good deal more than any bird or animal on
+this farm, and I do wish you would tell me how long Mr. Turtle has
+lived?"
+
+That was a question which your Aunt Amy could not answer, and when she
+said as much, Mrs. Goose continued:
+
+"He claims to be very, very old, and to hear the stories he tells you'd
+think he had lived in every part of the world. He started a kind of a
+show last week, and calls it a 'zoo,' whatever that may be. A lot of
+birds and animals sit around to show themselves, and say it is a
+'wonderful exhibition.' Mr. Man's little girl Alice was out walking with
+her doll yesterday, and saw Mr. Turtle near the old maple tree selling
+tickets for the 'zoo.' This is what Mr. Crow declares she said to the
+old fellow:
+
+ "They tell me, Mr. Turtle, you
+ Were born long years ago--
+ Five hundred years, the doctor says,
+ And doctors ought to know.
+
+ "He says that every year you live
+ A scientist can tell
+ Because each birthday leaves a mark
+ Upon your rusty shell.
+
+ "I've lots and lots of questions, then,
+ To ask if you're so old,
+ And if you will not answer them,
+ Please do not think me bold.
+
+ "In fourteen ninety-two, when Chris
+ Columbus westward sailed,
+ When he discovered Yankeeland,
+ Was he, then, later jailed?
+
+ "Did Shakespeare write those dramas old,
+ Or did Lord Bacon's pen?
+ When Joan rambled in Lorraine,
+ Were you out crawling then?
+
+ "You must have known the virgin queen,
+ And known Sir Walter, too;
+ You've heard that story of the ring,
+ What really did she do?
+
+[Illustration: Alice and Mr. Turtle.]
+
+ "Did Pocahontas save the life
+ Of Captain Smith that day?
+ Did Cromwell take the reins of State,
+ As all the school-books say?
+
+ "Did Washington cut down the tree
+ That time in early May,
+ And say 'I cannot tell a lie?'
+ Now answer me I pray."
+
+ The Turtle only looked around,
+ And winked a lazy wink;
+ He seemed to say, "Don't bother me;
+ It hurts my brain to think."
+
+"Why is it that all of you who live near here, like Mr. Crow's poetry so
+well?" your Aunt Amy asked, when Mrs. Goose had come to an end of the
+lines, and she replied thoughtfully:
+
+"Well, really now, I can't say. Perhaps it's because he tells us it is
+the best ever written. Why, I've even heard old Mr. Turtle repeating the
+verses, and if he has lived five hundred years, surely he ought to know
+whether they are good or bad. There's one thing I do know, though, which
+is, that there's no person within two miles of this pond that can tell
+as many good stories as Mr. Crow. He's got one about a lazy Mr. Horse
+that means a good deal, if you take the trouble to think it over. Don't
+you want to hear it?"
+
+Your Aunt Amy really enjoys hearing Mr. Crow's stories, and when she
+made such a statement, Mrs. Goose began the tale without delay.
+
+
+
+
+THE LAZY MR. HORSE.
+
+
+"'I don't see why I should work all the time, and others have nothing
+whatever to do,' said lazy Mr. Horse, one day. 'I would like to live a
+life of idleness as well as they.'
+
+"Then he began to think it over, and decided to find some way to get rid
+of hauling the farm wagon day after day. It wasn't easy to do this, but
+after a time he hit upon a plan which seemed to be a good one. "'I'll
+make believe that I am sick,' he said, 'and then my master won't call on
+me for work.'
+
+"So he hung his head, leaned against the side of the stall, and tried to
+look as if it hurt him to breathe. When his master came into the stable,
+he said:
+
+"'Hello, what can be the matter with this horse? He was well when I fed
+him yesterday; but now he seems to be nearly dead.'
+
+"Then the master went out of the stable, and Mr. Horse said to himself
+with a grin:
+
+"'He has gone to get some medicine for me! The plan seems to be working
+well.'
+
+"Soon the master came back, and with him was a great big black man, who
+carried an axe over his shoulder.
+
+"'That horse is very sick,' said the master.
+
+"'He certainly is,' replied the man with the axe.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Horse is Well Pleased.]
+
+"'And there's only one thing to be done,' said the master.
+
+"'Only one thing,' added the man with the axe.
+
+"'Well, Jim,' said the master, 'hit him squarely between the eyes, and
+as hard as you can, for I don't want him flopping all around the place
+before he dies.'
+
+"'All right, sir,' answered the man, as he raised the axe.
+
+"By that time Mr. Horse began to suspect that his plan wasn't working as
+he thought it would, so he pricked up his ears, kicked up his heels, and
+tried to look as if there never had been anything the matter with him.
+
+"'That horse has gone crazy,' the master cried.
+
+"'He has indeed,' replied the man with the axe.
+
+"'We'll have to kill him anyway,' said the master. 'Hit him quick before
+he tears down the stable!'
+
+"The man with the axe hit Mr. Horse one blow, and that settled the
+question, of his ever hauling the farm-wagon again. Surely he made a
+fool of himself while trying to deceive others, and if the Goose family
+had been punished as hard, there wouldn't be one of us alive to-day."
+
+"What do you mean by that?" your Aunt Amy asked in surprise, and Mrs.
+Gray Goose replied softly, as if afraid others might hear her words:
+
+
+
+
+WHEN THE GEESE CLAIMED TO BE CRANES.
+
+
+"This is a story we geese don't often tell, and if Mr. Crow should get
+hold of it everybody around here would know how foolish some of our
+grandparents were. Our family prides itself on having saved Rome once
+upon a time, and it would never do to let people know how silly a few of
+us have been since then. Of course you won't whisper it to Bunny Rabbit,
+or old Mr. Turtle!
+
+"One day a flock of geese, who had never seen a crane, were feeding in
+the meadow when two strangers came up, and asked the way to the nearest
+pond. They were fine-looking birds, and acted like strangers in our part
+of the country; besides, they didn't speak exactly as we do.
+
+"The leader of the flock was an old, bald-headed gander, who believed he
+knew more than all the rest of the world put together, so when the
+strangers asked the question, some of the geese wanted to know how they
+should answer.
+
+[Illustration: The Cranes asking the way to the nearest pond.]
+
+"'They look to be birds of importance,' Mr. Gander said, 'and may think
+we are of little account if we show ourselves willing to talk with
+strangers, so the best way is to hold our tongues. When the proper time
+comes I will show them that we are no fools.'
+
+"So all the geese held their tongues, while Mr. Gander stood back a
+little and looked wise. Then the strangers asked the question again,
+without paying any attention to the inquisitive geese who were staring
+at them from head to foot. This time Mr. Gander thought he might venture
+to speak, and he said, talking way down in his throat as he had heard
+Mr. Man:
+
+"'The nearest pond is our private property, and we do not care to have
+strangers there until we know if they are birds of quality.'
+
+"'Indeed, sir,' one of the strangers said. 'May I ask whether you are
+any one in particular?'
+
+"'We are Cranes,' Mr. Gander replied, 'and when I tell you so you will
+understand that we like to be by ourselves.'
+
+"The strangers looked at each other in surprise a moment, and stepped
+back as if not knowing what to do, which made old Mr. Gander think he
+was wise in claiming to be something better than a common goose. Finally
+one of the visitors asked:
+
+"'Are all the cranes in this country like you?'
+
+"'Why shouldn't they be?' Mr. Gander said gruffly.
+
+"'There is no reason that we know of, being strangers here; but the fact
+is that we also are cranes, who have just come over from Africa, as you
+can tell by our black faces, and it surprises us to find such a
+different looking family here.'
+
+"Just then two real cranes, who had been feeding on the shore of the
+pond, rose in the air, and, seeing the strangers, one of them cried:
+
+"'Hello, brothers, why are you spending your time with those silly
+geese? Come over to the pond where you'll find decent company!'
+
+"The cranes from Africa didn't stay with the geese any longer, and, of
+course, they told what old Mr. Gander had said. Since that time the
+cranes and the swans won't let one of our family come anywhere near
+them, even though the swans are our cousins, and all because that
+foolish old Mr. Gander was willing to tell a lie in order to make it
+appear that he was more important in the world than a common goose. I
+have no patience with a bird who is always trying to make himself out a
+little better than he really is. It's behavior that counts in this
+world, and whether you come from one family or another, you'll be
+treated well if you deserve it."
+
+"You are right, Mrs. Goose," your Aunt Amy said decidedly. "Be contented
+in this world, and you are well off indeed."
+
+"So Mr. Pig thought," Mrs. Goose replied with a laugh. "If Mr. Man had
+been satisfied with a little, Mr. Pig would most likely have been
+killed."
+
+
+
+
+WHEN MR. PIG DIDN'T GO TO MARKET.
+
+
+"Tell me the story," your Aunt Amy said, knowing very well that Mrs.
+Goose had one in mind, as indeed she had, for she told it as follows:
+
+"One day Mr. Man was taking Mr. Pig to market, when they came to a tree
+on which hung hundreds and hundreds of apples.
+
+"'I'd like to have an apple,' Mr. Pig said, as he looked up wistfully.
+
+"'I'd like to have a whole barrel,' Mr. Man cried greedily.
+
+"A little further down the road they saw a pear tree.
+
+"'I'd like to have a pear,' said the hungry Mr. Pig.
+
+"'I'd like to have a wagon-load of pears,' Mr. Man added.
+
+"Presently they saw a grape-vine, and Mr. Pig sighed:
+
+"'I'd like to have a bunch of grapes.'
+
+[Illustration: The Two Pigs.]
+
+"'I'd like to have a wine-press full of them,' Mr. Man said.
+
+"The two walked on until they came to a field filled with ripe melons.
+
+"'Oh, how I wish I had one of those,' Mr. Pig whispered, and Mr. Man
+growled:
+
+"'I'd like to have a car-load.'
+
+"'Look here, Mr. Man,' Mr. Pig cried, 'you're more of a hog than I am,
+and I think we're at the wrong ends of this rope.'
+
+"Then Mr. Pig jumped suddenly, pulling the rope out of Mr. Man's hands,
+and, dashing between his legs, threw him to the ground. Mr. Pig ran
+right into the field, picked out a nice ripe melon and ate it, while Mr.
+Man got up, brushed his clothes, and went home."
+
+Mrs. Goose ceased speaking, as if she was at an end of her
+story-telling, and your Aunt Amy, unwilling to part with her new friend
+so soon, was trying to think of some word which would provoke such a
+remark as would give new life to the conversation, when she was really
+startled by a loud hissing, as if an angry goose was near at hand.
+
+Much to her surprise, she saw that it was Mrs. Gray Goose herself who
+was making the outcry, as she looked angrily toward the shore of the
+pond, where could be seen a goose and a gander dressed in clothing of
+the latest style.
+
+"What do you think of that?" Mrs. Gray Goose cried. "Isn't it really
+very foolish?"
+
+"Indeed it is," your Aunt Amy replied emphatically. "When birds,
+animals, or human beings appear dressed in anything likely to attract
+attention, they show very poor taste, to speak mildly."
+
+[Illustration: A Foolish Pair.]
+
+"That foolish goose would willingly go hungry in order to get something
+which would cause the ganders to look at her. Instead of raising
+feathers and laying eggs, as is her work in this world, she goes
+rambling all over the neighborhood in some ridiculous fashion, and, I am
+sorry to say, she finds plenty of ganders who are ready to follow her.
+
+"She'll come to some such end as did young Mr. Rat, before many years
+have gone by, else I'm very much mistaken. How strange it is that some
+birds are never contented to do what nature intended should be their
+duty!"
+
+"I know of a number of human beings who act just as silly," your Aunt
+Amy replied. "Will you tell me what happened to Mr. Rat of whom you
+spoke?"
+
+
+
+
+THE DISOBEDIENT RAT.
+
+
+"Surely I will," Mrs. Gray Goose replied promptly, "for the story is one
+that teaches a lesson, even if it does come from Mr. Crow. It seems that
+once upon a time a young Mr. Rat said to his father, speaking as if he
+knew the ways of the world better than did those who had lived in it
+many years before he was born:
+
+"Now that I'm of age, I'm going to take a partner, and go into business
+for myself.'
+
+"'Very well,' his father replied mildly, for he was a wise old Rat. 'I
+hope you will get an honest partner, and prosper in whatever you
+undertake.'
+
+"'I suppose you think I am going into business with some common rat,'
+the young fellow said with a sneer. 'I'm not going to choose my friends
+from among such people. I intend to take a kitten as a partner, and in
+such way get into the best society.'
+
+[Illustration: The Two Partners.]
+
+"Old Mr. Rat stroked his whiskers mournfully, as he looked tearfully at
+his son, and said:
+
+"'Oh my son, my son! Kittens grow to be cats, and cats eat rats; it
+would be much better for you to stay among your own kind.'
+
+"But the wilful young rat ran off with a flirt of his tail to a dear
+little, fluffy kitten, who was not much larger than himself, and asked
+if she would be his partner.
+
+"'I am willing,' little Miss Kitten said. 'What are we to do after we go
+into business?'
+
+"'Why, when your mother takes you into the pantry to-night to teach you
+rat-catching, you are to warn me. As soon as your mother has gone out,
+you must call me with three mews, and I will come.'
+
+"Well, all this was done as young Mr. Rat planned, and when old Mrs. Cat
+had gone out of the pantry, leaving Miss Kitten alone, young Mr. Rat
+scampered from his hole. Without paying any attention to his partner, he
+pulled a big piece of cheese down from the shelf, and began eating it
+greedily.
+
+"'Where do I come in on this business?' Miss Kitten asked. 'I'm your
+partner; but I don't like cheese.'
+
+"'Get what you want then,' young Mr. Rat said sharply. 'You can't expect
+me to hunt around for things that I don't eat. Have anything you
+please.'
+
+"'My mother once gave me a rat-tail to eat,' Miss Kitten replied
+thoughtfully. 'I believe I would rather have that than anything else,'
+and she looked longingly at young Mr. Rat's tail.
+
+"'Oh, no indeed, you can't have that! Perhaps I spoke too sharply about
+the cheese; but you can't have my tail.'
+
+"'Yes, she can,' growled old Mrs. Cat from the door, where she had been
+listening. Then she pounced upon young Mr. Rat and ate him, giving the
+tail to her kitten. There is a good lesson in that story, old Mr. Turtle
+says."
+
+"So there is, Mrs. Goose, and one needn't look long in order to find
+it," your Aunt Amy replied, and then she asked that question which had
+been in her mind ever since the bird began to talk. "Have you ever heard
+about the Mrs. Goose who laid golden eggs?"
+
+
+
+
+THE TRUE STORY OF THE GOLDEN EGGS.
+
+
+"Indeed I have," Mrs. Goose replied quickly. "Surely I ought to know all
+about her, for she was a great-great-grandmother of mine, and if I'm not
+mistaken, some of our family have her picture which Mr. Ape painted,
+when he set himself up as an artist. That is another case where
+discontent, when matters were going on as well as ever could have been
+expected, brought its punishment."
+
+"How can that be?" your Aunt Amy asked quickly. "The man killed the
+goose which was bringing in so much gold, and it surely seems as if she
+received the most severe punishment."
+
+"That would be right if the story, as Mr. Man tells it, was true," Mrs.
+Goose said sharply; "but it is not, and however it got so twisted I
+can't for the life of me understand. Now if that goose was my
+great-great-grandmother, I ought to know all about it, and I do, for
+I've heard Grandfather White Goose tell it more times than I've got
+feathers in my left wing.
+
+"Would you like to know how it all really happened? Well, I'll tell you,
+and remember that I'm the one among all others on this farm who should
+know the exact truth. She was a gray goose, the one who laid the eggs,
+and looked very much like me, so grandfather says. The Mr. Man where she
+lived was very kind, and actually gave her a bedroom in his own house.
+No matter what she wanted to eat, he bought it for her, and all the eggs
+she laid he spread out on a kind of desk or table which had been built
+especially for them.
+
+"Every morning when she had laid the egg, Mr. Man took her into the room
+where they were all spread out, and let her see him put it safely away.
+
+"Now, so grandfather says, Mrs. Goose was petted so much, and had so
+many good things to eat, that she began to believe she was something
+wonderful, and I really suppose she was, being the only bird that ever
+laid golden eggs. But she got all puffed up with pride, and thought she
+ought to live without doing any kind of work, so one day while she was
+watching Mr. Man take care of the eggs, she saw a big knife hanging up,
+and asked why it was kept there.
+
+"'I did have it to kill geese with; but now, since you're the only goose
+I want, it isn't used.' Mr. Man said, and Mrs. Goose asked:
+
+"'Is it sharp?'
+
+"'Oh dear, yes, just like a razor,' Mr. Man said, still looking at the
+eggs.
+
+"'Well, do you know I'm tired of doing so much work,' foolish Mrs. Goose
+said, 'and I've been thinking that you might fix things so I wouldn't be
+tied down to this egg-laying every day. Surely _I_ ought to live in
+comfort.'
+
+[Illustration: Mrs. Goose watches Mr. Man as he takes the golden eggs
+out of the basket.]
+
+"'That is what I intend you shall be able to do,' Mr. Man answered, for
+he wanted to keep her contented. 'Is there anything more you need, Mrs.
+Goose?'
+
+"'I want to live without doing any kind of work,' Mrs. Goose said, as if
+she was the most abused bird in the world.
+
+"'But then how could we get these beautiful eggs?' Mr. Man cried.
+'Surely you take as much pleasure in them as I do!
+
+"'All that may be; but it is a great exertion to lay one every day, and
+no sooner is the work finished than I think of the same task to be done
+on the morrow, until I'm on the verge of nervous prostration,' and Mrs.
+Goose waddled up and down the room as if she was a living skeleton,
+instead of the fattest bird that ever walked.
+
+"'But what can I do, my dear creature?' Mr. Man cried in real distress,
+for he was afraid she might refuse to lay any more golden eggs, and that
+would have nearly broken his heart.
+
+"'Why not take that knife and cut through my feathers till you find an
+egg. I am quite fat on my stomach, and it wouldn't do me the least
+little bit of harm. Then all I'd have to do would be to come in here,
+and let you take the egg out.'
+
+"Well, Mr. Man said everything he could think of to persuade the foolish
+goose that it was best to let well enough alone; but she coaxed and
+scolded, and finally declared flatly that unless he did as she wanted,
+she'd go out of the egg business entirely.
+
+"Of course, after that, Mr. Man couldn't do any less than what she asked
+for, and although he used the knife very carefully, Mrs. Goose died
+before he found a single egg. Now that is the truth of the story, as my
+grandfather tells it," Mrs. Gray Goose continued, "and there is no
+question in my mind but that it is as true as the one you have heard so
+many times."
+
+"It surely seems more reasonable," your Aunt Amy said thoughtfully, "for
+nobody but a goose could have even dreamed that it would be best to cut
+a bird open to get at the eggs more quickly."
+
+"That is very true," Mrs. Gray Goose replied; "but you must bear in mind
+that we who wear feathers are not the only geese in the world. I could
+point out a good many who would feel insulted if we claimed relationship
+with them. Mr. Man's boy Johnny makes a bigger goose of himself than I
+am, many a time, and it's no longer ago than yesterday, when Mr. Fido
+Dog showed how near he came to being my cousin."
+
+"Tell me the story," your Aunt Amy suggested, and Mrs. Goose began
+without delay:
+
+
+
+
+THE RACE BETWEEN MR. FIDO AND MR. SHANGHAI.
+
+
+"For a good many weeks the birds and animals on this farm have been
+trying to decide whether the two-footed or the four-footed were the
+swiftest, and last week, while we were talking the matter over, foolish
+Mr. Fido Dog said, as he swelled his chest way out:
+
+"'It stands to reason that I could beat Mr. Shanghai in a race. I've got
+four good feet with spring soles, and he has only two poor scratchers
+that are all bones and claws. Why, I could easily run from here to the
+pond, take a drink there, and be home again before he got as far as the
+fence.'
+
+"'My, how big you talk, just because you're allowed to sleep in the
+house!' Mr. Shanghai said. 'You forget my wings, Mr. Fido. Perhaps they
+are worth just a little.'
+
+"'Nonsense!' Mr. Fido said, turning up his lip till he showed a fine set
+of white teeth, and tilting his puggy nose. 'What good are your wings?
+Why, I heard Mr. Man tell his boy Tommy last night that wings were of no
+use to chickens, except to fly over the fence with.'
+
+"'Well,' said Mr. Shanghai, scratching his topknot with his left claw,
+and looking wise, 'you see there are times when it's better to be on one
+side of the fence than the other.'
+
+"'That's a wise remark, Mr. Shanghai,' Mr. Fido snapped. 'You must have
+a great head; but what good will it do you in a race to the pond? Come
+on! I'll show you what can be done. Here's where four feet beats two
+feet--yes, and wings thrown in, if you want them.'
+
+"'What is the course?' Mr. Shanghai asked.
+
+"'A straight line to the pond. Are you ready?'
+
+"'All ready!' said Mr. Shanghai, and off they went.
+
+"It was a close race to the barn-yard fence. Mr. Shanghai ran hard with
+his neck stretched out; but Mr. Fido went on easily, laughing to think
+how easy it would be to win.
+
+"But when he came to the fence Mr. Fido stopped. He couldn't get over,
+and it took quite a while to creep through. He wiggled and pushed
+anxiously; but Mr. Shanghai, spreading his big wings, flew over, and was
+at the pond a full minute before Mr. Fido got on the other side of the
+fence.
+
+[Illustration: Mr. Shanghai Wins the Race]
+
+"When he went back Mr. Shanghai couldn't help laughing at Mr. Fido, and
+saying: 'Now you can see that there are times when it is better to be
+on one side of a fence than another. You're as much out of place in a
+race with me, as the gosling was in the stork's nest.'"
+
+
+
+
+WHEN MRS. GOOSE'S BABY WASN'T WELCOME.
+
+
+"What did he mean by that?" your Aunt Amy asked, and Mrs. Goose really
+laughed as she replied:
+
+"It was a silly trick Mr. Man's boy Tommy played on Mr. and Mrs. Stork,
+who had built a nest on the top of the farm-house chimney. I had nine
+babies, while the Storks only hatched out one, and they were all exactly
+the same age.
+
+"Tommy Boy, who never has work enough to keep him out of mischief,
+thought it would be very funny to put one of my babies in the Storks'
+nest, and leave their little one with me, so he got a ladder, and came
+very near breaking his bones in order to make the change while Mrs.
+Stork was away looking for food.
+
+"When she came back, there was my dear little gosling sitting up on his
+tail as if he expected to have his picture taken, trying to tell what
+Tommy had done.
+
+"Of course Mrs. Stork couldn't understand a word my dear little gosling
+said, because he didn't talk plain owing to having no teeth, and she
+sent in a hurry for her husband to come and find out what had happened
+to their baby.
+
+[Illustration: Baby Gosling Tries to Explain.]
+
+"I got so nervous while the Storks were trying to decide whether to kill
+my poor little gosling by pecking him, or throwing him out of the nest,
+that I nearly had a fit, and suppose I must have made a terrible noise,
+for Mr. Man came running up to learn what the matter was. It didn't take
+him many minutes to understand it all, when Johnny was forced to undo
+the mischief, and take a sound whipping afterward, much to my delight
+and satisfaction."
+
+At this moment Mr. Gander came into view, evidently very much excited,
+and said something which your Aunt Amy could not understand.
+
+"I must go over to the oak tree, and you had better come too," Mrs. Gray
+Goose said hurriedly. "Mr. Crow has just made up some new poetry, and is
+going to read it. Can't you go with me?"
+
+Your Aunt Amy was not in the mood for hearing any more of Mr. Crow's
+verses, after Mrs. Goose had recited so many, and she went slowly
+homeward, while Mrs. Gray Goose followed Mr. Gander, hissing complaints
+as she waddled along, because he had not invited her to have a portion
+of the frog he swallowed whole.
+
+[Illustration: Mrs. Gray Goose Complains.]
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Gray Goose's Story, by Amy Prentice
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GRAY GOOSE'S STORY ***
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+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
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