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قراءة كتاب The Burgess Animal Book for Children

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The Burgess Animal Book for Children

The Burgess Animal Book for Children

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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href="@public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@2441@[email protected]#link2HCH0021" class="pginternal" tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">CHAPTER XXI Flitter the Bat and His Family

CHAPTER XXII An Independent Family

CHAPTER XXIII Digger and His Cousin Glutton

CHAPTER XXIV Shadow and His Family

CHAPTER XXV Two Famous Swimmers

CHAPTER XXVI Spite the Marten and Pekan the Fisher

CHAPTER XXVII Reddy Fox Joins the School

CHAPTER XXVIII Old Man Coyote and Howler the Wolf

CHAPTER XXIX Yowler and His Cousin Tufty

CHAPTER XXX Some Big and Little Cat Cousins

CHAPTER XXXI Bobby Coon Arrives

CHAPTER XXXII Buster Bear Nearly Breaks Up School

CHAPTER XXXIII Buster Bear's Big Cousins

CHAPTER XXXIV Unc' Billy and Old Mrs. Possum

CHAPTER XXXV Lightfoot, Blacktail and Forkhorn

CHAPTER XXXVI Bugler, Flathorns and Wanderhoof

CHAPTER XXXVII Thunderfoot, Fleetfoot and Longcoat

CHAPTER XXXVIII Two Wonderful Mountain Climbers

CHAPTER XXXIX Piggy and Hardshell

CHAPTER XL The Mammals of the Sea










THE BURGESS ANIMAL BOOK FOR CHILDREN





CHAPTER I Jenny Wren Gives Peter Rabbit an Idea

"As sure as you're alive now, Peter Rabbit, some day I will catch you," snarled Reddy Fox, as he poked his black nose in the hole between the roots of the Big Hickory-tree which grows close to the Smiling Pool. "It is lucky for you that you were not one jump farther away from this hole."

Peter, safe inside that hole, didn't have a word to say, or, if he did, he didn't have breath enough to say it. It was quite true that if he had been one jump farther from that hole, Reddy Fox would have caught him. As it was, the hairs on Peter's funny white tail actually had tickled Reddy's back as Peter plunged frantically through the root-bound entrance to that hole. It had been the narrowest escape Peter had had for a long, long time. You see, Reddy Fox had surprised Peter nibbling sweet clover on the bank of the Smiling Pond, and it had been a lucky thing for Peter that that hole, dug long ago by Johnny Chuck's grandfather, had been right where it was. Also, it was a lucky thing that old Mr. Chuck had been wise enough to make the entrance between the roots of that tree in such a way that it could not be dug any larger.

Reddy Fox was too shrewd to waste any time trying to dig it larger. He knew there wasn't room enough for him to get between those roots. So, after trying to make Peter as uncomfortable as possible by telling him what he, Reddy, would do to him when he did catch him, Reddy trotted off across the Green Meadows. Peter remained where he was for a long time. When he was quite sure that it was safe to do so, he crept out and hurried, lipperty-lipperty-lip, up to the Old Orchard. He felt that that would be the safest place for him, because there were ever so many hiding places in the old stone wall along the edge of it.

When Peter reached the Old Orchard, who should he see but Jenny Wren. Jenny had arrived that very morning from the Sunny South where she had spent the winter. "Tut, tut, tut, tut, tut!" exclaimed Jenny as soon as she saw Peter. "If here isn't Peter Rabbit himself! How did you manage to keep out of the clutches of Reddy Fox all the long winter?"

Peter chuckled. "I didn't have much trouble with Reddy during the winter," said he, "but this very morning he so nearly caught me that it is a wonder that my hair is not snow white from fright." Then he told Jenny all about his narrow escape. "Had it not been for that handy hole of Grandfather Chuck, I couldn't possibly have escaped," concluded Peter.

Jenny Wren cocked her pert little head on one side, and her sharp little eyes snapped. "Why don't you learn to swim, Peter, like your cousin down in the Sunny South?" she demanded. "If he had been in your place, he would simply have plunged into the Smiling Pool and laughed at Reddy Fox."

Peter sat bolt upright with his eyes very wide open. In them was a funny look of surprise as he stared up at Jenny Wren. "What are you talking about, Jenny Wren?" he demanded. "Don't you know that none of the Rabbit family swim unless it is to cross the Laughing Brook when there is no other way of getting to the other side, or when actually driven into the water by an enemy from whom there is no other escape? I can swim a little if I have to, but you don't catch me in the water when I can stay on land. What is more, you won't find any other members of my family doing such a thing."

"Tut, tut, tut, tut, Peter!" exclaimed Jenny Wren in her sharp, scolding voice. "Tut, tut, tut, tut! For a fellow who has been so curious about the ways of his feathered neighbors, you know

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