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Fatty
and the Green Corn
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.
It
was mid-summer when Fatty Coon had what he then believed to be the
finest time in all his life. And later, when he was older, he still
thought that nothing had ever happened to him that was quite so
enjoyable as that surprise his mother gave him when he was a young
coon.
Of course it
was something to eat--the surprise. You must have guessed
that, knowing Fatty Coon as you do.
"Come,
children!" Mrs. Coon said. "Come with me! I'm going to
give you a treat--something
especially
nice."
"Is it
something to eat?" Fatty asked, as they started off in the
direction of Farmer
Green's fields.
"Yes--and
the best thing you ever tasted,"
Mrs. Coon said.
Fatty was greatly
excited.
His little bright eyes turned green in the moonlight. He wondered
what the surprise would be. And, as usual, he was very hungry. He
walked close beside his mother, for he wanted to be the first to
taste the surprise. You would think that he would have wanted his
two sisters to taste it first, and his brother Blackie, too. But
you must not forget that Fatty was greedy.
And greedy people are not thoughtful
of others.
When Mrs. Coon
turned out of the lane
and crawled
through the fence,
Fatty squeezed
between the
rails very nimbly,
for him.
"Here
we are!" said his mother.
Fatty looked
about him. They stood in a field grown high with tall stalks
of some sort, which turned to green,
ribbon-like leaves half way up from the ground. Fatty grunted.
He was very impolite,
you see.
"Well--what
is there to eat that's so fine?" he asked. "This stuff
isn't good. It's like eating reeds."
He had already bitten into one of the stalks.
"What
do you call that?" Mrs. Coon asked. She showed Fatty a long
roll
of green that grew out of one of the stalks.
"That's
something like a cattail,"
said Fatty. "It isn't good to eat."
"Have
you ever tried one?" asked his mother.
"N--no,"
Fatty said. "But Freddie Bluejay
told me they weren't
good."
"He did,
did he?" Mrs. Coon said nothing more. She stood up on her hind
legs and pulled one of the tall stalks down until she could reach
that long, green thing that grew there. In a jiffy
she had torn it from its stalk. And then she stripped
the green covering
off it. "Try that!" said Mrs. Coon with a smile.
Of course it
was Fatty who tasted it first. He took a good mouthful of the white
kernels,
and he was overjoyed.
Such sweetness! Such delicious,
milky juice! It was a moment that Fatty never forgot.
Fatty began
tearing down the stalks for himself and he never said another
word until at last he simply had to stop eating just to catch his
breath.
"What's
its name, Mother?" he inquired.
"Corn,
my child."
"Well,
why doesn't Freddie Bluejay like it?" Fatty asked.
"He's
probably very fond
of corn," said Mrs. Coon. "And I've
no doubt he was afraid that you would eat up this whole field,
once you started."
"I'd like
to," said Fatty, with a sigh.
"I'd like to eat all the corn in the world."
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(c) 2006 - 2007 Patricia Thornton-Houser |