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Written by: Arthur Scott Bailey,
1915
Recorded by: Patricia Thornton-Houser

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player.
Click on green words to read a simple definition in English. All
other words are from the first 1000 words on the Nation frequency
word list. If you would like to take a test on the first 1000 English
words, go here.
Fatty
Coon was very fond
of squirrels..
And you may think
it strange when I tell you that not one of the squirrels anywhere
around Blue Mountain was the least bit
fond of Fatty Coon. But when I say that Fatty Coon was fond of squirrels,
I mean that he liked to eat them. So of course you will understand
now why the squirrels did not care for Fatty at all. In fact, they
usually kept just as far away from him as they could.
It was easy,
in the daytime,
for the squirrels to keep out of Fatty's way, when he wandered
through the tree-tops, for the squirrels were much sprier
than Fatty. But at night--ah!
that was a very different matter. For Fatty Coon's eyes were even
sharper
in the dark than they were in the daylight; but the poor squirrels
were just as blind
as you are when you are safely tucked
in bed and the light is put out.
Yes--when the
squirrels were in bed at night, up in their nests
in the trees, they could see very little. And you couldn't say they
were SAFE in bed, because they never knew when Fatty Coon, or his
mother, or his brother, or one of his sisters, or some cousin
of his, might come along and catch them before they knew it.
Fatty thought
it great sport
to hunt
squirrels at night. Whenever he tried it he usually managed
to get a good meal.
And after he had almost forgotten about the fright
the goshawk
had given him, he began to roam
through the tree-tops every night in
search of squirrels and sleeping birds.
But a night
came at last when Fatty was well punished
for hunting
squirrels. He had climbed
half-way to the top of a big chestnut
tree, when he spied
a hole
in the trunk.
He rather thought that some squirrels lived inside
that hole. And as he listened for a few seconds he could hear something
moving about inside. Yes! Fatty was sure that there was a squirrel
in there--probably
several squirrels.
Fatty Coon's
eyes turned green. It was a way they had, whenever he was about
to eat anything, or whenever he played with his brother Blackie,
or Fluffy and Cutey, his sisters; or whenever he was frightened.
And now Fatty was so sure that he was going to have a fine lunch
that his eyes turned as green as a cat's. He reached a paw
inside the hole and felt all around.
WOW! Fatty
gave a cry; and he pulled his paw out much faster than he had put
it in. Something had given him a cruel
jab.
And in a jiffy
Fatty saw what that "something" was. It was a grumpy
old tramp
coon, whom Fatty had never seen before.
"What
do you mean, you young rascal,
by disturbing
me like this?" the ragged
stranger
cried.
"Please,
sir, I never knew it was you," Fatty stammered.
"Never
knew it was me! Who did you think it was?"
"A--a
squirrel!" Fatty said faintly.
And he whimpered
a little, because
his paw hurt
him.
"Ho,
ho! That's a good one! That's a good
joke!" The tramp coon laughed heartily.
And then he scowled
so
fiercely that poor Fatty nearly tumbled
out of the tree. "You go home," he said to Fatty. "And
don't you let me catch you around here again. You hear?"
"Yes,
sir!" Fatty said. And home he went. And you may be sure that
he didn't look inside THAT tree after that. He never went near it
again.
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(c) 2006 - 2007 Patricia Thornton-Houser |