OLD MAN COYOTE PLAYS A TRICK
Of people who play tricks
beware,
Lest they may get you in a
snare.
You cannot trust them, so
watch out
Whenever one may be about.
Bowser the Hound.
There is such a thing as being too
much interested in the thing you are doing. That
is the way accidents very often happen. A person
will get so interested in something that he will be
blind and deaf to everything else, and so will walk
straight into danger or trouble of some kind.
Now just take the case of Bowser the
Hound. Bowser was so interested in the chase
of Old Man Coyote that he paid no attention whatever
to anything but the warm scent of Old Man Coyote which
the latter was taking pains to leave. Bowser
ran with his nose in Old Man Coyote’s tracks
and never looked either to left or right. He would
lift his head only to look straight ahead in the hope
of seeing Old Man Coyote. Then down would go
his nose again to follow that scent.
So Bowser didn’t notice that
Old Man Coyote was leading him far, far away from
home into country with which he was quite unacquainted.
Bowser has a great, deep, wonderful voice which can
be heard a very long distance when he bays on the
tracks of some one he is hunting. It can be heard
a very long distance indeed. But far as it can
be heard, Bowser was far, far beyond hearing distance
from Farmer Brown’s house before Old Man Coyote
began to even think of playing one of his clever tricks
in order to make Bowser lose his scent. You see,
Old Man Coyote intended to lead Bowser into strange
country and there lose him, hoping that he would not
be able to find the way home.
Old Man Coyote is himself a tireless
runner. He is not so heavy as is Bowser, so does
not tire as easily. Then, too, he had not wasted
his breath as had Bowser with his steady baying.
Old Man Coyote could tell by the sound of Bowser’s
voice when the latter was beginning to grow tired,
and he could tell by the fact that he often had a moment
or two to sit down and rest before Bowser got dangerously
near.
So at last Old Man Coyote decided
that the time had come to play a trick. By and
by he came to a river. At that point there was
a high, overhanging bank. On the very edge of
this bank Old Man Coyote made a long leap to one side.
Then he made another long leap to the big trunk of
a fallen tree. He ran along this and from the
end of it made still another long leap, as long a
leap as he could. Then he hid in a little thicket
to see what would happen.