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Fatty
Coon Goes Fishing
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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One
day Fatty Coon was strolling
along the brook
which flowed not far from his home. He stopped now and then, to
crouch
close to the water's edge,
in the hope of catching a fish. And one time, when he lay quite
still among the rocks, at the side of a deep pool,
with his eyes searching
the clear water, Fatty Coon suddenly
saw something bright, all yellow and red, that landed
on the water right before him. It was a bug,
or a huge
fly. And Fatty was very fond
of bugs--to eat, you know. So he lost no time. The bright thing
had scarcely
landed on the water when Fatty reached out and seized
it. He put it into his mouth, when the strangest thing happened.
Fatty felt himself pulled right over into the water.
He was surprised,
for he never knew a bug or a fly to be so strong as that. Something
pricked
his cheek
and Fatty thought that the bright thing had stung
him. He tried to take it out of his mouth, and he was surprised
again. Whatever the thing was, it seemed to be stuck
fast in his mouth. And all the time Fatty was being dragged
along through the water. He began to be frightened.
And for the first time he noticed that there was a slender
line which stretched
from his mouth straight
across the pool.
As he looked along the line Fatty saw a man at the other end of
it--a man, standing on the other side of the brook!
And he was pulling Fatty toward him as fast as he could.
Do you wonder
that Fatty Coon was frightened? He jumped back--as well as he could,
in the water--and tried to swim away. His mouth hurt;
but he plunged
and pulled just the same, and jerked
his head and squirmed
and wriggled
and twisted.
And just as Fatty had almost given up hope of getting free, the
brightly
colored bug, or fly, or whatever it was, flew out of his mouth and
took the line with it. At least, that was what Fatty Coon thought.
And he swam quickly
to the bank and scampered
into the bushes.
Now, this was
what really happened. Farmer Green had come up the brook
to catch trout.
On the end of his fish-line he had tied a make-believe
fly, with a hook
hidden
under its red and yellow wings. He had stolen
along the brook very quietly,
so that he wouldn't frighten the fish. And he had made so little
noise
that Fatty Coon never heard him at all. Farmer Green had not seen
Fatty, crouched
as he was among the stones. And when Fatty reached out and grabbed
the make-believe fly Farmer Green was even more surprised at what
happened than Fatty himself. If the fish-hook hadn't worked
loose from Fatty's mouth Farmer Green would have caught the
strangest
fish anybody ever caught, almost.
Something seemed
to amuse
Farmer Green, as he watched Fatty dive
into the bushes; and he laughed loud
and long. But Fatty Coon didn't laugh at all. His mouth was
too sore;
and he was too frightened. But he was very, very glad that the strange
bug had flown away.
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(c) 2006 - 2007 Patricia Thornton-Houser |