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Fatty Learns
Something About Eggs
Written by: Arthur Scott Bailey,
1915
Recorded by: Patricia Thornton-Houser

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Click on green words to read a simple definition in English. All
other words are from the first 1000 words on the Nation frequency
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words, go here.
When Fatty
Coon
started off alone to find something more to eat, after finishing
the fish that his mother had brought home for him, he did not know
that he was going to have an adventure. He nosed
about among the bushes
and the tall
grasses
and caught a few bugs
and a frog
or two. But he didn't think that THAT was much. He didn't seem to
have much
luck, down on the ground. So he climbed
a tall hemlock,
to see if he could find a squirrel's
nest,
or some bird's eggs.
Fatty loved to climb trees. Up in the big hemlock he forgot, for
a time, that he was still hungry.
It was delightful
to feel the branches swaying
under him, and the bright sunshine was warm
upon his back. He climbed almost to the very tip
of the tree and wound
himself around the straight
stem.
The thick,
springy
branches held him safely,
and soon Fatty was fast
asleep. Next to eating, Fatty loved sleeping. And now he had
a good nap.
Fatty Coon woke
up at
last, yawned,
and slowly unwound
himself from the stem of the tree. He was terribly
hungry now. And he felt that he simply MUST find something to eat
at once.Without going down to the ground, Fatty climbed over into
the top of another big tree and his little beady,
bright eyes began searching
all the branches carefully. Pretty soon Fatty smiled. He smiled
because he was pleased. And he was pleased because he saw exactly
what he had been looking for. Not far below him was a big nest,
built of sticks
and lined
with bark
and moss.
It was a crow's
nest, Fatty decided, and he lost no time in slipping
down to the trunk
of the tree where the nest was perched.
There were four white eggs in the nest--the biggest crow's eggs
Fatty had ever seen. And he began to eat them hungrily. His nose
became smeared
with egg, but he didn't mind
that at all. He kept thinking how good the eggs tasted--and
how he wished there were more of them.
There was a sudden
rush
through the branches of the tall tree. And Fatty Coon caught a hard
blow
on his head. He felt something sharp
sink
into his back, too. And he clutched
at the edge of the nest to keep from falling.
Fatty was surprised, to say the least, for he had never known crows
to fight like that. And he was frightened,
because his back hurt. He couldn't fight, because he was afraid
he would fall if he let go of the nest.
There was nothing to do but run home as fast as he
could. Fatty tried to hurry;
but there was that bird, beating
and clawing
his back, and pulling him first one way and then another. He began
to think he would never reach home. But at last he came to the old
poplar
where his mother lived. And soon, to his great joy, he reached the
hole
in the big branch; and you may well believe that Fatty was glad
to slip
down into the darkness where his mother, and his brother Blackie,
and Fluffy and Cutey his sisters, were all fast asleep. He was glad,
because he knew that no crow could follow him down there.
Mrs. Coon waked
up. She saw that Fatty's back was sadly
torn (for coons, you know, can see in the dark just as well
as you can see in the daylight).
"What on earth is the
matter?" she exclaimed.
Poor Fatty told her. He cried a little, because his back hurt him,
and because he was so glad to be safe
at home once more.
"What color were those eggs?" Mrs. Coon inquired.
"White!" said Fatty.
"Ah, ha!" Mrs. Coon said. "Don't you remember that
crows' eggs are a blueish green? That must have been a goshawk's
nest. And a goshawk is the
fiercest of all the hawks there are. It's no
wonder your back is clawed. Come here and let me look at it."
Fatty Coon felt quite
proud,
as his mother examined
the marks of the goshawk's cruel
claws. And he didn't feel half as sorry for himself as you might
think, for he remembered how good the eggs had tasted. He only wished
there had been a dozen
of them.
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(c) 2006 - 2007 Patricia Thornton-Houser |