GRANDFATHER FROG IS STUBBORN
“Fee, fi, fe, fum!
Chug, chug, chugarum!”
Grandfather actually had started out
to see the Great World. Yes, Sir, he had turned
his back on the Smiling Pool, and nothing that Jerry
Muskrat could say made the least bit of difference.
Grandfather Frog had made up his mind, and when he
does that, it is just a waste of time and breath for
any one to try to make him change it. You see
Grandfather Frog is stubborn. Yes, that is just
the word—stubborn. He would see for
himself what this Great World was that his cousin,
old Mr. Toad, talked so much about and said was so
much better than the Smiling Pool where Grandfather
Frog had spent his whole life.
“If old Mr. Toad can take care
of himself, I can take care of myself out in the Great
World,” said Grandfather Frog, to himself as,
with great jumps, he started out on to the Green Meadows.
“I guess he isn’t any smarter than I am!
He isn’t half so spry as I am, and I can jump
three times as far as he can. I’ll see
for myself what this Great World is like, and then
I’ll go back to the Smiling Pool and stay there
the rest of my life. Chugarum, how warm it is!”
It was warm. Jolly, round, bright
Mr. Sun was smiling his broadest and pouring his warmest
rays down on the Green Meadows. The Merry Little
Breezes of Old Mother West Wind were taking a nap.
You see, they had played so hard early in the morning
that they were tired. So there was nobody and
nothing to cool Grandfather Frog, and he just grew
warmer and warmer with every jump. He began to
grow thirsty, and how he did long for a plunge in
the dear, cool Smiling Pool! But he was stubborn.
He wouldn’t turn back, no matter how uncomfortable
he felt. He would see the Great World
if it killed him. So he kept right on, jump, jump,
jump, jump.
Grandfather Frog had been up the Laughing
Brook and down the Laughing Brook, where he could
swim when he grew tired of traveling on the bank,
and where he could cool off whenever he became too
warm, but never before had he been very far away from
water, and he found this a very different matter.
At first he had made great jumps, for that is what
his long legs were given him for; but the long grass
bothered him, and after a little the jumps grew shorter
and shorter and shorter, and with every jump he puffed
and puffed and presently began to grunt. You see
he never before had made more than a few jumps at
a time without resting, and his legs grew tired in
a very little while.
Now if Grandfather Frog had known
as much about the Green Meadows as the little people
who live there all the time do, he would have taken
the Lone Little Path, where the going was easy.
But he didn’t. He just started right out
without knowing where he was going, and of course the
way was hard, very hard indeed. The grass was
so tall that he couldn’t see over it, and the
ground was so rough that it hurt his tender feet,
which were used to the soft, mossy bank of the Smiling
Pool. He had gone only a little way before he
wished with all his might that he had never thought
of seeing the Great World. But he had said that
he was going to and he would, so he kept right on—jump,
jump, rest, jump, jump, jump, rest, jump, and then
a long rest.
It was during one of these rests that
he heard footsteps, and then a dreadful sound that
made cold chills run all over him. Sniff, sniff,
sniff! It was coming nearer. Grandfather
Frog flattened himself down as close to the ground
as he could get. But it was of no use, no use
at all. The sniffing came nearer and nearer,
and then right over him stood Bowser the Hound!
Bowser looked just as surprised as he felt. He
put out one paw and turned Grandfather Frog over on
his back. Grandfather Frog struggled to his feet
and made two frightened jumps.
“Bow, wow!” cried Bowser
and rolled him over again. Bowser thought it
great fun, but Grandfather Frog thought that his last
day had come.