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XVI
CHATTERER AND SAMMY JAY QUARREL When people lose their tempers Oh what a sorry sight! They call each other dreadful names, And sometimes scratch and bite. The Merry Little Breezes ran And hid themselves away When Chatterer his temper lost, And so did Sammy Jay. IT really
was too
dreadful! It quite spoiled the day for all the little people who were
within
sound of their voices. You see, when Sammy Jay discovered that it was
Chatterer
and not a trap set by Farmer Brown's boy that had given him such a
fright at
Farmer Brown's corn-crib, right away Sammy's temper just boiled right
over.
Chatterer had his mouth so full of corn that he couldn't say a word,
but he
could run; and run he did, scampering across Farmer Brown's dooryard to
the
shelter of the old stone wall at the edge of the Old Orchard with Sammy
after
him, screaming "Thief! thief! thief!" at the top of his lungs. "My
gracious,
what a racket!" exclaimed Farmer Brown's boy, as he opened the door.
"That Jay is making such a fuss that I should think there was a fox
about." He put his milk-pails down and stepped back into the house. In
a
minute he was out again, with his terrible gun in his hands. He went
straight
to the old stone wall where only a few minutes before Reddy Fox had
been
hiding, and it was well for Reddy that he had slipped away the minute
Sammy Jay
began to scream at Chatterer. Farmer Brown's boy looked disappointed
when he
saw no signs of Reddy. Then he went over to the little house of Bowser
the
Hound and unchained Bowser. Bowser
wagged his
tail and yelped with delight when he saw the gun, for he dearly loves
to hunt.
He ran ahead back to the Old Orchard, and almost at once his great,
deep voice
told all within hearing that his wonderful nose had found the tracks of
Reddy
Fox. "I thought
so," said Farmer Brown's boy. "I thought there had been a fox
here." Then he sighed, for he would have liked nothing better than to
go
hunt for Reddy. But there were the empty milk-pails, and Farmer Brown's
boy is
not the kind who run away for pleasure when there is work to be done. Sammy Jay
had flown
away as soon as he saw Farmer Brown's boy and his terrible gun.
Chatterer had
hidden in the old stone wall, where he safely stored away the corn with
which
his cheeks had been stuffed. As soon as Farmer Brown's boy had gone to
the barn
to milk the cows, Sammy Jay slipped back to the Old Orchard to look for
Chatterer, and his temper hadn't improved a bit. He soon saw Chatterer
running
along the old wall and once more began to scream "Thief! thief!" And
now that his mouth was empty, Chatterer could reply, and you know
Chatterer has
one of the worst tongues of all the little people of the Green Forest. "Thief
yourself!" he screamed back. "Thief yourself! You stole my
corn!" "It isn't
your
corn any more than it's mine!" screamed Sammy. "I told you about it
in the first place. Thief! thief! thief!" And from
that, they
fell to calling each other worse things. The Old Orchard never had
heard such a
quarrel, never. It was dreadful! All day long they kept it up. Twice
Farmer
Brown's boy came down to see if that fox had come back, and scratched
his head,
and wondered what all the fuss was about. At last Sammy Jay had a
thought. "I'm going
straight over to the Green Forest to tell Shadow the Weasel where you
are
living! "he cried suddenly. "When he finds you, you won't steal any
more corn or be so greedy that you won't let other people have a
share." |