GRANDFATHER FROG STARTS OUT TO SEE THE GREAT WORLD
Grandfather Frog looked very solemn
as he sat on his big green lily-pad in the Smiling
Pool. He looked very much as if he had something
on his mind. A foolish green fly actually brushed
Grandfather Frog’s nose and he didn’t
even notice it. The fact is he did have something
on his mind. It had been there ever since his
cousin, old Mr. Toad, had called the day before and
they had quarreled as usual over the question whether
it was best never to leave home or to go out into
the Great World.
Right in the midst of their quarrel
along had come Farmer Brown’s boy. Now
Grandfather Frog is afraid of Farmer Brown’s
boy, so when he appeared, Grandfather Frog stopped
arguing with old Mr. Toad and with a great splash
dived into the Smiling Pool and hid under a lily-pad.
There he stayed and watched his cousin, old Mr. Toad,
grinning in the most provoking way, for he wasn’t
afraid of Farmer Brown’s boy. In fact, he
had boasted that they were friends. Grandfather
Frog had thought that this was just an idle boast,
but when he saw Farmer Brown’s boy tickle old
Mr. Toad under his chin with a straw, while Mr. Toad
sat perfectly still and seemed to enjoy it, he knew
that it was true.
Grandfather Frog had not come out
of his hiding-place until after old Mr. Toad had gone
back across the Green Meadows and Farmer Brown’s
boy had gone home for his supper. Then Grandfather
Frog had climbed back on his big green lily-pad and
had sat there half the night without once leading
the chorus of the Smiling Pool with his great deep
bass voice as he usually did. He was thinking,
thinking very hard. And now, this bright, sunshiny
morning, he was still thinking.
The fact is Grandfather Frog was beginning
to wonder if perhaps, after all, Mr. Toad was right.
If the Great World had taught him how to make friends
with Farmer Brown’s boy, there really must be
some things worth learning there. Not for the
world would Grandfather Frog have admitted to old
Mr. Toad or to any one else that there was anything
for him to learn, for you know he is very old and
by his friends is accounted very wise. But right
down in his heart he was beginning to think that perhaps
there were some things which he couldn’t learn
in the Smiling Pool. So he sat and thought and
thought. Suddenly he made up his mind.
“Chugarum!” said he. “I’ll
do it!”
“Do what?” asked Jerry Muskrat, who happened
to be swimming past.
“I’ll go out and see for
myself what this Great World my cousin, old Mr. Toad,
is so fond of talking about is like,” replied
Grandfather Frog.
“Don’t you do it,”
advised Jerry Muskrat. “Don’t you
do anything so foolish as that. You’re
too old, much too old, Grandfather Frog, to go out
into the Great World.”
Now few old people like to be told
that they are too old to do what they please, and
Grandfather Frog is no different from others.
“You just mind your own affairs, Jerry Muskrat,”
he retorted sharply. “I guess I know what
is best for me without being told. If my cousin,
old Mr. Toad, can take care of himself out in the
Great World, I can. He isn’t half so spry
as I am. I’m going, and that is all there
is about it!”
With that Grandfather Frog dived into
the Smiling Pool, swam across to a place where the
bank was low, and without once looking back started
across the Green Meadows to see the Great World.