Grandfather Frog sat among the bulrushes
on the edge of the Smiling Pool. Over his head
Mr. Redwing was singing as if his heart would burst
with the very joy of springtime.
“Tra-la-la-lee, see me! See me!
Happy am I as I can be!
Happy am I the whole day long
And so I sing my gladsome song.”
Of course Mr. Redwing was happy.
Why shouldn’t he be? Here it was the
beautiful springtime, the gladdest time of all the
year, the time when happiness creeps into everybody’s
heart. Grandfather Frog listened. He nodded
his head. “Chugarum! I’m happy,
too,” said Grandfather Frog. But even
as he said it, a little worried look crept into his
big goggly eyes and then down to the corners of his
big mouth, which had been stretched in a smile.
Little by little the smile grew smaller and smaller,
until there wasn’t any smile. No, Sir,
there wasn’t any smile. Instead of looking
happy, as he said he felt, Grandfather Frog actually
looked unhappy.
The fact is he couldn’t forget
what Jerry Muskrat and Little Joe Otter had told him
— that there was something the matter with
the Smiling Pool. He didn’t believe it,
not a word of it. At least he tried to make
himself think that he didn’t believe it.
They had said that the water in the Smiling Pool
was growing lower and lower, just as it did in the
middle of summer, in the very hottest weather.
Now Grandfather Frog is very old and very wise, and
he had never heard of such a thing happening in the
springtime. So he wouldn’t believe it
now. And yet — and yet Grandfather
Frog had an uncomfortable feeling that something was
wrong. Ha! he knew now what it was! He
had been sitting up to his middle in water, and now
he was sitting with only his toes in the water, and
he couldn’t remember having changed his position!
“Of course, I moved without
thinking what I was doing,” muttered Grandfather
Frog, but still the worried look didn’t leave
his face. You see he just couldn’t make
himself believe what he wanted to believe, try as
he would.
“Chugarum! I know what
I’ll do; I’ll watch my toes!” exclaimed
Grandfather Frog.
So Grandfather Frog waded out into
the water until it covered his feet, and then he sat
down and began to watch his toes. Mr, Redwing
looked down and saw him, and Grandfather Frog looked
so funny gazing at his own toes that Mr. Redwing stopped
singing long enough to ask: “What are you
doing, Grandfather Frog?”
“Watching my toes,” replied Grandfather
Frog gruffly.
“Watching your toes! Ho,
ho, ho! Watching your toes! Who ever heard
of such a thing? Are you afraid that they will
run away, Grandfather Frog?” shouted Mr. Redwing.
Grandfather Frog didn’t answer.
He kept right on watching his toes. Mr. Redwing
flew away to tell everybody he met how Grandfather
Frog had become foolish and was watching his toes.
The sun shone down warm and bright, and pretty soon
Grandfather Frog’s big goggly eyes began to
blink. Then his head began to nod, and then —
why, then Grandfather Frog fell fast asleep.
By and by Grandfather Frog awoke with
a start. He looked down at his toes. They
were not in the water at all! Indeed, the water
was a good long jump away.
“Chugarum! There is something
wrong with the Smiling Pool!” cried Grandfather
Frog, as he made a long jump into the water and started
to swim out to the Big Rock.