So they all caught up stones to throw at the bad fox, to drive him away.
Jimmie had the largest stone, and he could throw the straightest, so it is no wonder he hit the tall, round, shining black thing by the hedge. But this is the funny part of it, that black thing wasn"t a fox at all. No, siree!
It was Grandfather Goosey-Gander"s new tall hat, and that wasn"t at all funny, I do a.s.sure you. And the worst part of it was that Grandfather Goosey-Gander was under that hat! For, you know, a tall hat couldn"t walk along by a hedge, all alone its own self, now, could it? Of course, I know it could if this were a fairy story, but it isn"t.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
Well, something dreadful happened. The stone which Jimmie threw hit grandfather"s tall hat, went inside, just grazing the top of the old gentleman duck"s head, and then, what do you think? Well, I don"t believe you could guess if you tried a week, so I"ll tell you.
That stone came out on the other side. It went right through the hat, making a hole where it went in, and another hole where it came out. Two holes; you could easily have counted them if you had been there.
Of course, as soon as Jimmie heard the noise, made by the stone which he threw, hitting the hat, he could tell by the plinkity-plunkity sound that there was going to be trouble. And there was.
Grandfather Goosey-Gander jumped up in the air. He uttered a loud quack, and then he took off his tall hat. He looked at the two ragged holes in it, and then he looked over at the boys in the field. He knew right away they had done it, but he didn"t know which one. Jimmie, however, was a good boy, and he wasn"t going to have any one else blamed for what _he_ had done. So he ran to where his grandfather stood, sorrowfully looking at his hat, and Jimmie said:
"I did it, grandpa. I cannot tell a story. I did it with my little stone."
"Ha! Hum! Did you; eh?" cried Grandfather Goosey-Gander. "Well, that"s a pretty bad thing to do, Jimmie. This is my best hat. I put it on to go down to the bank, to put money in. I mean to put money in the bank, not in the hat, of course. I always wear it when I go to the bank, so folks will know I am rich. Now I can"t wear it any more. It"s too bad!" And the old gentleman duck looked very sorrowful.
"Yes," agreed Jimmie, "it is too bad," for he couldn"t think of anything else to say.
"You will have to pay for a new hat for me," went on his grandfather.
"I haven"t any money," said Jimmie, and tears began to run down his broad, yellow bill, for the little boy duck felt pretty bad, I can tell you.
"You will have to save up all the pennies you get," decided Grandfather Goosey-Gander. "Boys should not be so careless."
"We thought you were a fox," said Billie Bushytail.
"And we all threw stones at you," added Sammie Littletail.
"But I"m the only one who hit your hat, though," admitted Jimmie.
"Do I look like a fox?" demanded the old duck. "That"s what I want to know. Do I look like a fox?" Well, of course, you know he didn"t, and the ball players had to admit it. "You will have to pay for my hat, Jimmie,"
grandpa continued, looking again at two ragged holes. "Have you any money now?"
"No," said Jimmie, and he was crying real hard by this time. Then all the other boys felt badly, too, and they were just looking in their pockets to see if they had any money, but they hadn"t. All they had was some marbles, and tops, and broken knives, and chewing gum, all sticky, and some strings.
Then it began to look as if Grandfather Goosey-Gander would never have a new hat, but, all at once, there was a buzzing sound in the air, and what should come flying along but a darning needle. You know what I mean: one of those funny, long bugs sometimes called a dragon fly, with beautiful wings, and long legs and body.
"What is the trouble?" asked the darning needle, and then the boys told him about the broken hat. "Ah," said the darning needle, careless-like, "do not distress yourself, Jimmie. I know you are a good boy. To fix that hat is a mere trifle for me, and I"ll do it."
And what did that dragon-fly-darning-needle do but buzz back and forth, all around the holes in Grandfather Goosey-Gander"s tall hat, right through the hat itself, until he had the holes all sewed up, and you could hardly tell where they were.
Then Mrs. Spider came along, and she spun some glossy silk web over the places where the seams were, and presto-chango! if that hat wasn"t as good as ever!
Well, you can just imagine how glad Jimmie was that he didn"t have to pay for it. And his grandpa was pleased, too, and so were the boys. Then the darning needle flew away, Mrs. Spider crawled off, Grandfather Goosey-Gander went to the bank, the boys played ball some more and everything was lovely.
Now, if the window curtain doesn"t fly up lickety-split and come off the roller, I"ll tell you to-morrow night about Jimmie flying a kite.
STORY x.x.x
JIMMIE WIBBLEWOBBLE"S KITE
Jimmie Wibblewobble was out flying his kite. He had made it all himself, out of sticks, and paste, and paper and strings, and it was a very fine kite indeed. It was nearly as large as the little boy duck, and it was the kind of a kite that doesn"t need a tail. That was good, because a tail gets all tangled up in the weeds.
Well, Jimmie was flying his kite, and the wind was pretty strong, and the kite was pulling real hard, just like a little dog pulls, when you tie a rope to his collar, and he wants to get away. Pretty soon along came Bully, the frog.
"Does your kite pull much?" he asked.
"Does it?" replied Jimmie. "Well, I should say it did!"
"Let me hold it a minute, will you?" asked Bully, and Jimmie very kindly let him. Then along came Billie and Johnnie Bushytail, and Sammie Littletail, and they all took turns holding the kite.
Well now, in a few minutes, something dreadful is going to happen to Jimmie. I tell you in advance so you won"t be frightened, and, really, there is no need to be, for I"ll see to it that, after the thing happens, Jimmie will be all right again. Now if you watch, and listen closely, you can tell the moment the thing happens. It"s almost time.
The wind kept growing stronger and stronger, and it blew the dust up in a cloud, and it blew bits of paper and sticks along with the dust, and raised a dreadful commotion.
Then long came Alice and Lulu Wibblewobble. They had been to the store for their mamma, and had just come back. They felt the strong wind blowing on their feathers, and Alice said to her brother:
"You had better take down your kite, Jimmie. The wind may blow it away, and you with it."
"Oh, I guess I can hold it," answered the little boy duck, as he let out some more cord. The kite was now almost out of sight, and it was pulling harder than ever.
Then, all at once, if Jackie and Peetie Bow Wow, the two puppy dogs, didn"t come along. Jackie had his white spot on his nose, and Peetie had his black spot on his nose, so that you could tell them apart. And those two doggies felt so full of fun that they ran right up and made believe bite Jimmie"s yellow heels.
Now you know it feels queer to have two puppy dogs biting your heels, even if it is only in fun, and as soon as Jimmie felt Jackie and Peetie nipping him, he turned around quickly and cried out:
"Oh, don"t do that!"
But the minute he looked around, if the kite string didn"t get tangled in his legs, and then if the wind didn"t blow a regular strong blast, the kind that howls down the chimney on a cold night; and oh, dear me, suz-dud! if Jimmie wasn"t carried right up in the air by his kite! There, I told you something would happen, and it did! Maybe you"ll believe me next time.
Well, up and up and up went Jimmie, pulled by the kite, until he was quite high in the air, hanging dingling, dangling down--O! by his yellow heels.
Oh, it was a perfectly dreadful position to be in! really it was, and I"m not fooling a bit, honestly.
"Oh, oh! Save him!" cried Lulu.
"Yes, somebody get him down; please do!" added Alice, flapping her wings.
Billie Bushytail tried to jump up in the air, and grab hold of poor Jimmie, but he couldn"t reach him, and then Sammie Littletail, he tried, but he couldn"t reach him, and all the while poor Jimmie was being carried higher and higher by the kite.
"Save me! Oh, save me!" he cried, but there didn"t seem to be any way of getting him down, and it began to look as if he would go right up to the sky.
On the ground Lulu and Alice were running here and there, flapping their wings and quacking, and Billie and Johnnie Bushytail were chattering, and as for Sammie Littletail, he made a noise just like a rabbit. Oh, there was great excitement, I can tell you!