CHAPTER
XII
LITTLE
RABBIT BOO-HOO
Next morning Grandpa
Grumbles heard a tap on his door.
"Too early to get
up," he grumbled. "Don't wake me up, don't wake me up!"
Little Bear heard a tap on
his door, and he cried:
"See the
sunshine!"
He dressed and hurried downstairs.
Little Bear never liked to be late
to breakfast.
Breakfast was on the table,
and Red Riding Hood said:
"We will sit down and
have breakfast, Little Bear."
Pretty soon a great
grumbling was heard and Grandpa Grumbles came down-stairs, one step at
a time.
He was talking to himself.
"Oh, dear! oh,
dear!" he said. "have to get breakfast for my visitors!"
When he came into the dining-room
he was so surprised to see breakfast on the table that he forgot to
grumble.
He sat down and drank his
coffee without saying a word. Suddenly a crash was heard, then another,
and
another.
"I am being
robbed!" cried Grandpa Grumbles.
"Wow! wow! I am
afraid!" cried Little Bear.
Red Riding Hood started for
the cellar. "Get a candle," she called.
Grandpa Grumbles said:
"I haven't any candle."
Little Bear said: "I am
afraid to carry a lamp!"
While they stood there
talking, Bushy Tail came bounding up the cellar stairs. He had a
bottle of
cider under each arm.
"I broke some," he
said. "It is too dark in your cellar!"
Grandpa Grumbles got a
switch and ran after Bushy Tail, but Bushy Tail jumped on a sofa and
shouted:
"Great news! great news!"
Of course they all stopped
to listen.
Little Bear said: "Tell
us the news! tell us the news!"
Bushy Tail said: "Susan
Cotton-Tail has lost her glasses."
Then Grandpa began to
grumble, and Little Bear rolled over on the floor, and laughed until he
cried.
"Have you any cookies
for me today?" asked Bushy Tail.
Red Riding Hood said:
"why do you want cookies?"
She had hardly gotten the
words out of her mouth before Bushy Tail had started into the pantry
and helped
himself.
Then, whisk! he was out
through the window, and away as fast as his long legs could carry him.
Just at that minute Little
Bear heard a sound, and he said: "Hush! listen! what is it?"
They heard a wee voice say:
"I am here. I am lost, boo-hoo!"
Grandpa Grumbles went to the
door, and there sat the funniest little rabbit you have ever seen.
"Too many visitors.
Don't come in," said Grandpa Grumbles.
The little rabbit said: "Boo-hoo,
please let me in."
Grandpa Grumbles looked over
his spectacles and said: "What is your name?"
The cry-baby rabbit said:
"Boo-hoo."
"That seems rather a
bad question to ask around, here," said Grandpa Grumbles. "Red Riding
Hood, are you sure you have a name?"
Red Riding Hood said:
"I know this little
rabbit. She is a good little rabbit, but she cries so much they call
her Boo-hoo."
"Too many visitors, too
many visitors," said Grandpa Grumbles again.
Little Bear went up to the
rabbit and said: "Don't cry any more. I haven't any name, either."
Then the little rabbit dried
her eyes on a pocket handkerchief and Grandpa Grumbles shouted:
"Give them all some
cookies can't you hear me? give them all some cookies!"
"Hush!" cried Red
Riding Hood. "Bushy Tail stole them all!"
Then they all shouted:
"Oh, ho! Bushy Tail stole all the cookies! Oh! ho! Bushy Tail is a sly
old
fellow!"
"Off to bed, every one
of you!" shouted Grandpa Grumbles, "and look under your pillows, be
sure to look under your pillows."
Then they all scampered off
to bed quickly, you may be sure, and each looked under his pillow.
Now what do you suppose was
under each pillow?
Red Riding Hood found a
cookie frosted with red sugar.
Little Bear found a cookie
frosted with blue sugar.
The rabbit found a cookie
frosted with white sugar, and they all cried: "Hurrah for Grandpa
Grumbles! three cheers for Grandpa Grumbles!"
"Too many
visitors," he answered with a chuckle. "Too many visitors. Go to bed,
every one of you."
Then they all went to bed
and had pleasant dreams.
Red Riding Hood dreamed that
her basket was full of frosted cookies. Little Bear dreamed that he had
a very
fine blue cookie as big as a fan. The little rabbit dreamed that she
saw
cookies growing in the farmer's field.
Grandpa Grumbles lay awake a
long time.
"I will surprise them
all, to-morrow," he said. "I have many surprises in my house."
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