"Yes indeed," answered the Snow Bunting. "Wouldn"t they open their eyes, though? I"d like to have them see the rocks up there."

"And the animals," said the Junco.

"Yes! Wouldn"t they stare at the Bears, though!"

"Humph," said a Blue Jay. "I wouldn"t care very much about seeing Bears, would you?" And he turned to a Crow near by.

"No," said the Crow. "I don"t think very much of Bears anyway." He said this as though he had seen them all his life, but the Chickadees say that he never saw even a Cub.

"They haven"t any big animals here," said the Junco to the Snow Bunting.

"Haven"t we, though?" replied the Blue Jay. "Guess you wouldn"t say that if you saw the Ground Hog. Would he say that?" he asked, turning to the young Grouse, Quail, Woodp.e.c.k.e.rs, Goldfinches, Chickadees, Squirrels, and Rabbits who stood around listening.

"No indeed!" they answered, for they wanted their visitors to understand that the Forest was a most wonderful place, and they really thought the Ground Hog very large.

"I don"t believe he is as big as a Bear" said the Snow Bunting, with his bill in the air.

"How big is he?" asked the Junco.

Now the Blue Jay was afraid that the birds from the north were getting the better of him, and he felt very sure that they would leave before the Ground Hog had finished his winter sleep, so he did what no honest bird would have even thought of doing. He held his crested head very high and said, "He is bigger than that rock, _a great deal bigger_."

The Crow looked at the rock and gave a hoa.r.s.e chuckle, for it was a hundred times larger than the Ground Hog. The Grouse, Quail, Woodp.e.c.k.e.rs, Goldfinches, Chickadees, Squirrels, and Rabbits looked at each other without saying a word. They knew how the Blue Jay had lied, and it made them ashamed. The Grouse pretended to fix their snow-shoes.

They did not want to look at the birds from the north.

The Snow Buntings and Juncos felt that it would not do to talk about Bears to people who had such a great creature as the Ground Hog living among them. "He must be wonderful," they said. "Where does he sleep?"

"In the Bats" cave," answered the Blue Jay, who having told one lie, now had to tell another to cover it up. "He sleeps in the middle and there is just room left around the edges for the Bats."

Now at this very time the Ground Hog was awake in his burrow. He could feel that it was warmer and he wanted room to stretch. He thought it would seem good to have an early spring after such a cold winter, so he decided to take a walk and make the weather, as his grandfather had done. When he came out of his burrow he heard a great chattering and went to see what was the matter. That was how it happened that soon after the Blue Jay had told about the Bats" cave, one wide-awake young Junco saw a reddish-brown animal trotting over the gra.s.s toward them.

"Who is that?" he cried.

The Grouse, Quail, Woodp.e.c.k.e.rs, Goldfinches, Chickadees, Squirrels, and Rabbits gave one look. "Oh, there is the Ground Hog!" they cried. Then they remembered and were ashamed again because of what the Blue Jay had said.

"Oh!" said the Snow Buntings and the Juncos. "So that is the Ground Hog!

Big as that rock, is he? And you don"t think much of Bears?"

The Crow pointed one claw at the Blue Jay. "I never said he was as big as that rock. _He_ is the fellow that said it."

"I don"t care," said the Blue Jay; "I was only fooling. I meant to tell you after a while. It"s a good joke on you." But he had a sneaky look around the bill as he spoke, and n.o.body believed him. Before long, he and the Crow were glad enough to get away from the rest and go away together. Yet even then they were not happy, for each began to blame the other, and they had a most dreadful fight.

When the Ground Hog was told about it he said, "What foolishness it is to want to tell the biggest story! My grandfather told us once that a lie was always a lie, and that calling it a joke didn"t make it any better. I think he was right."

And the Snow Buntings and Juncos, who are bright and honest, nodded their dainty little heads and said, "n.o.body in our own dear north country ever spoke a truer word than that." So they became firm friends of the Ground Hog, even if he were not so large as the rock.

THE END.

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