"Maybe it"s a dog, or a bad rat, or a fox," objected Lulu.
"No," said her brother, "they would never call for help. Come on."
[Ill.u.s.tration:]
So they walked on, looking this way and that, to see what they could see; on and on through the woods, until, just as they came from behind a big oak tree, what should they catch sight of, but poor, Grandfather Goosey-Gander, caught fast in the middle of a pile of brush.
"Oh dear me! Oh my goodness me sakes alive! Oh, floppy! floppy! floppy!
Oh, a bag of salt and some corn meal!" cried the poor old gentleman duck.
"I am in a terrible state! Help me!"
Then Lulu and Jimmie ran right up to him, and asked him what was the matter.
"Oh dear," he said, "I really can"t say. I"ve lost my gla.s.ses, and I can"t see very well. All I know is that I was walking in the woods, thinking what a nice day it was, when, all of a sudden, in about a quack and a half, I found myself caught fast. And the worst part of it is that I can"t get loose!"
"Let me take a look," said Jimmie.
So he went quite close and looked, and he saw that Grandfather Goosey-Gander"s right leg was held in between two sticks. The old gentleman duck was in great pain.
"Is my leg broken?" he asked Jimmie.
"No," answered the little boy duck, "but some of the skin is sc.r.a.ped off."
"I knew it!" cried Grandfather Goosey-Gander. "Now I won"t be able to go fishing next week. Oh, I do seem to have the worst luck; don"t I?"
"We will get you out," Lulu said to him, and then she and her brother went to the aid of the poor old duck. They pushed this way and that way, and they pulled that way and this way, and they lifted up on the pieces of sticks, and they pushed down on them, but it was no use. Poor Grandfather Goosey-Gander was stuck fast there, and I think it was a shame, but it couldn"t be helped. Oh my no, and a bit of peppermint candy besides!
"Well, I guess I will have to stay here and die," said the discouraged old duck, and he felt so badly that he wept. Lulu and Jimmie cried also, they felt so sorry. The three of them cried, and their tears were so many that if they had cried long enough there would have been quite a pond there, and they could have gone in swimming. That is, of course, all but Grandfather Goosey-Gander, and he couldn"t swim for he was held fast. But they didn"t weep long enough.
"Let"s try once more," said Lulu, after a while, and then she and Jimmie tried harder than ever to get grandfather"s leg out. But they couldn"t.
"If I only had a saw!" cried Jimmie, "I could get him loose."
"Ha! perhaps I can help you!" suddenly exclaimed a voice.
Then, as quickly as you can break an egg by dropping it on the floor (only of course you must not do it without permission), who should appear but Nurse Jane Fuzzy-Wuzzy, the muskrat. She was out walking with Sammie and Susie Littletail.
"Oh, somebody do please help me!" cried Grandfather Goosey-Gander. "I"ve lost my gla.s.ses, my leg is caught, and I have a pain in my back. Oh, oh, oh!"
"I"ll gnaw through those sticks in a jiffy!" cried Jane Fuzzy-Wuzzy, for a jiffy is very quick time indeed. Oh, yes, and a broken down couch besides!
So, telling Sammie and Susie Littletail to stand back, and calling to Jimmie and Lulu to remain with them, the muskrat nurse set to work to free Grandfather Goosey-Gander. Her teeth were like the chisels the carpenter uses and in a few seconds the old duck"s leg was free. Oh, how glad he was, and how thankful to Nurse Jane Fuzzy-Wuzzy! Of course the duck and rabbit children also were glad.
Then Jane gnawed out a little crutch for grandfather to walk with, as he was a trifle lame, and what do you think? Why, Susie Littletail found his gla.s.ses for him; and Sammie and Jimmie rubbed his back so nicely that the pain all went out of that. Now I call that doing something don"t you?
Well, Grandfather Goosey-Gander started for home, and Jimmie and Lulu asked Sammie and Susie to come and play with them. Nurse Jane Fuzzy-Wuzzy said they might, and they had a fine time under the trees in the woods, playing tag of all kinds; cross-tag, wood-tag, dirt-tag, leaf-tag, stump-tag, and a new kind, called acorn-tag, which I will explain about later. Then the bunny children went home with their nurse and Jimmie and Lulu also went home and about two days after that a very funny thing happened.
What it was you shall hear to-morrow night if the trolley car doesn"t get off the track, but I"ll let you know this much--it"s going to be about the rooster trying to swim.
STORY X
THE ROOSTER TRIES TO SWIM
Grandfather Goosey-Gander was quite lame the next day from having been caught in the brush pile, and could not go very far away from the duck pen. He did manage to hobble around on the crutch which Nurse Jane Fuzzy-Wuzzy made for him, and he sat in a sunny corner, reading the newspaper with his gla.s.ses which Susie Littletail found. He was reading away as Alice, Lulu and Jimmie Wibblewobble were playing about on the edge of the pond, and the little duck children made so much noise that the old grandfather could not understand what was in the papers.
"Can"t you children play something quiet?" he asked for Papa and Mamma Wibblewobble had gone visiting, and Grandfather Goosey-Gander was left to mind the house. "Play some nice, easy game," he suggested.
"Let"s play acorn tag," said Lulu.
"All right, you"re it," answered Jimmie. So they each took an acorn which they found in the woods and put it in their bills. Then Lulu had to chase after Jimmie and Alice, and when she touched either one of them with her wing she had to call out: "You can"t run a little bit, I"ve tagged you, and now you"re it." Yes, that"s what she had to call, and she had to do it without letting the acorn fall out of her bill. Now, if you think that"s a very easy thing to do, just you try it, that"s all.
Lulu didn"t have much trouble putting her wing on Jimmie or Alice, but, every time she tried to call out the little verse the acorn would roll out of her bill and she"d have to start all over again, or it wouldn"t have been fair. So it was some time before she got over being "it," and then it was Jimmie"s turn.
Well, they played acorn tag for quite a while, and, when they got tired of that they all went in swimming. They swam around in circles, and criss-crossed and went in squares, and in triangles and all sorts of queer figures, including eight, nine, ten, which are very difficult figures, indeed, for little ducks.
While they were swimming away, having lots of fun, and far enough off so that Grandfather Goosey-Gander could read his paper in peace, who should come down to the edge of the pond but the rooster. His name was Mr. c.o.c.k A. Doodle, and he was very proud. He walked right down to the edge of the water, and looked at the ducks. Then he crowed as loud as he could, and flapped his wings, just as if he were saying:
"There! I"d like to see any of you do that! Ha! Hum! Oh my, yes, indeed!"
"How do you do, Mr. c.o.c.k A. Doodle?" asked Jimmie.
"Ahem! I am pretty well, my young friend," replied the rooster. "And how may you happen to be to-day? And how are your sisters, Lulu and Alice Wibblewobble?"
"We are very well," answered Lulu and Alice, and Lulu went on: "Don"t you wish you could swim, Mr. Doodle?"
"I can," said the rooster, and he strutted back and forth at the edge of the pond. "Certainly I can swim. What put the notion into your heads that I can"t?"
"We never saw you," spoke Jimmie.
"Ahem! Perhaps not. You never saw me stand on one foot and jump over a barrel, but that doesn"t prove that I can"t do it," replied Mr. Doodle. "I can swim if I choose. I have never cared to, that"s all."
"Try now," suggested Lulu, for she didn"t believe that rooster could swim, no matter what he said.
"Oh, the water is too cold to go swimming now," said Mr. Doodle. "I never swim in cold water."
"Why, it"s as warm as warm can be," declared Alice, and she splashed a few drops upon the rooster, so he could feel it.
"Well, er--ahem! The wind is blowing too much," said the rooster, when he felt the nice, warm water.
"Why, it doesn"t blow at all," answered Jimmie.
"Well, I haven"t my swimming shoes on," objected Mr. c.o.c.k A. Doodle. "I can"t swim without them. You ducks have pieces of skin between your toes, so the water won"t slip through, but I haven"t my webbed feet on."
"Oh, that is very easily fixed," said Lulu. "We will take some pieces of cloth, and tie them over your claws to make them like ours. Do you think you could swim then?"