"Then we"ll postpone it until to-morrow night," the company told him hopefully.
"What does your rule say?" Ferdinand Frog rolled his eyes as he put the question to them.
"It says that the banquet must take place the first night the new member is present," a fat gentleman replied.
"Then I can"t give you any food to-morrow night," Mr. Frog informed them, "because it would be against the rule."
"Then you can"t be a member!" a hundred voices croaked.
"I _am_ one now," Ferdinand Frog replied happily. "And what"s more, I don"t see how you can keep me out of your singing-parties."
There was silence for a time.
"We"ve been sold," some one said at last. "We"ve no rule to prevent this fellow from coming here. And the worst of it is, as everybody knows, his voice is so loud it will spoil all our songs."
Oddly enough, the speaker was the very one who had always objected to inviting Ferdinand Frog to join the singing parties. His own voice had always been the loudest in the whole company. And naturally he did not want anybody with a louder one to come and drown his best notes.
But now he couldn"t help himself. And thereafter when the singers met in Cedar Swamp he always turned greener in the face than ever and looked as if he were about to burst, when Ferdinand Frog opened his mouth its widest and let his voice rumble forth into the night.
IX
THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER
When Ferdinand Frog first came to the Beaver pond to live no one knew anything about him.
He appeared suddenly--no one knew whence--and at once made himself very much at home. It was no time at all before he could call every one of the big Beaver family by name. And he acted exactly as if the pond belonged to him, instead of to the Beavers, whose great-grandfathers had dammed the stream many years before.
But the newcomer was so polite that n.o.body cared to send him away. At the same time, people couldn"t help wondering who the stranger was and where he had come from and what his plans for the future were. Whenever two or three Beavers stopped working long enough to enjoy a pleasant chat, they were sure to talk of the mysterious Mr. Frog and tell one another what they thought of him. Many were the tales told about the nimble fellow.
Some said that he had moved all the way from Farmer Green"s duck pond, because Johnnie Green had tried to catch him; while others declared that Ferdinand Frog was a famous singer, who had come to that quiet spot in order to rest his voice, which had become harsh from too much use.
Indeed, there were so many stories about the stranger that it was hard to know which to believe--especially after old Mr. Crow informed Brownie Beaver that in his opinion Ferdinand Frog was a slippery fellow.
"I shouldn"t be surprised----" Mr. Crow had said with a wise wag of his head----"I shouldn"t be surprised if his real name was Ferdinand Fraud."
Anyhow, there was one thing that almost all the Beaver colony agreed upon. They were of one opinion as to Mr. Frog"s clothes, which they thought must be very fashionable, because they were like no others that had ever been seen before in those parts.
There was one young gentleman, however--the beau of the village--who disputed everybody, saying that he believed that Ferdinand Frog must be wearing old clothes that were many years behind the times.
Now, there was one lazy Beaver known as Tired Tim who had nothing better to do than to go straight to Mr. Frog and repeat what he heard.
To Tired Tim"s surprise--for he had expected Mr. Frog to lose his temper--to his surprise that gentleman appeared much amused by the bit of gossip. He shook with silent laughter for a time, quite as if he were saving his voice to use that evening. And then he said:
"So your young friend thinks I"m not in style, eh? . . . Well, I"ll tell you something: he"s right, in a way. And in another way he isn"t. The reason why I"m not in style is because I always aim to keep five years ahead of everybody else.
"Five years from now and your neighbors will all be wearing clothes like mine."
"Can"t we ever catch up with you?" Tired Tim asked him.
"There"s only one way you can do that," was Mr. Frog"s mysterious answer.
And he would say no more.
X
CATCHING UP WITH MR. FROG
Tired Tim Beaver asked Mr. Frog point-blank how a person might catch up with him in the matter of clothes.
"If you manage to dress in a style that"s five years ahead of the times, I should like to know the way to be just as fashionable," Tired Tim said.
But he got no help--then--from Mr. Frog. All Ferdinand Frog would say was that he"d be glad to oblige a friend, but he couldn"t--and wouldn"t--be hurried.
And though the unhappy, eager Tim teased and begged him to tell his secret, Mr. Frog only smiled the more cheerfully and said nothing.
It was maddening--for Tired Tim--though Mr. Frog seemed to be enjoying himself hugely. And the result was that Tired Tim Beaver returned to the village in the pond in a terrible state of mind. Since he told everyone else what he had learned about Ferdinand Frog and his clothes, it was only a short time before the whole Beaver family was so stirred up that they couldn"t do a stroke of work. Ferdinand Frog was in everybody"s mouth, so to speak. And at last old Grandaddy Beaver hit upon a plan.
"Why don"t you get somebody to make you a suit exactly like Mr. Frog"s?"
he asked Tired Tim.
So Tired Tim took Grandaddy"s advice. That very night he disappeared, to swagger back in a few days in a costume that made him appear almost like Mr. Frog"s twin brother--if one didn"t look at his face. And there were some among the villagers who even declared that Tired Tim"s mouth seemed wider than it had been, and more like Mr. Frog"s.
When they asked Tired Tim if his tailor hadn"t stretched his mouth for him he replied no, that he had been smiling a good deal for a day or two, and perhaps that was what made his mouth look different.
Well, the whole Beaver village was delighted with Tired Tim"s new suit.
"Wait till Mr. Frog sees you!" people cried. "He"ll be _so_ surprised!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: Mr. Frog Liked to Hear Himself Sing]
And somebody swam away in great haste to find Mr. Frog and ask him to come to the lower end of the pond, where all the houses were. But when Ferdinand Frog arrived, everybody was disappointed, and especially Tired Tim, who had felt very proud in his gorgeous new clothes. For he saw at once that Mr. Frog was arrayed from head to foot in an entirely new outfit. He looked almost like a rainbow, so brilliant were the colors of his costume.
At the same time Tired Tim put on as brave a front as he could. And drawing near to Mr. Frog, he said:
"What do you think of my new suit?"
Ferdinand Frog looked at him as if he hadn"t noticed him before.
"Your suit"s all right," he replied, "for one who isn"t particular. But it"s not far enough ahead of the times for me. . . . I"d hate to be caught wearing it."
It was a bitter blow for Tired Tim Beaver. In fact, he felt more tired than ever; and he sank to the bottom of the pond to rest, where his friends couldn"t see him.
As for the other members of the Beaver family, they all went home with a great longing inside them. There wasn"t a single one of them that wasn"t eager to wear clothes exactly as far ahead of the times as were those of the elegant stranger, Ferdinand Frog.