The Tale of Frisky Squirrel
E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/)
Copyright, 1915, by A. S. BAILEY
“Tails and Ears”
Frisky Squirrel was a lively little chap. And he was very bold, too. You see, he was so nimble that he felt he could always jump right out of danger—no matter whether it was a hawk chasing him, or a fox springing at him, or a boy throwing stones at him. He would chatter and scold at his enemies from some tree-top. And it was seldom that he was so frightened that he ran home and hid inside his mother’s house.
Mrs. Squirrel’s house was in a hollow limb of a hickory tree. It was a very convenient place to live; for although the tree was old, it still bore nuts. And it is very pleasant to be able to step out of your house and find your dinner all ready for you—simply waiting to be picked.
Of course, Frisky Squirrel and his mother couldn’t find their dinner on the tree the whole year ’round—because it was only in the fall that there were nuts on it. But luckily there were other things to eat—such as seeds, of which there were many kinds in the woods. And then there was Farmer Green’s wheat—and his corn, too, which Frisky liked most of all.
The woods where Mrs. Squirrel and her son lived were full of the finest trees to climb that anybody could wish for. And Frisky loved to go leaping from branch to branch, and from tree to tree. He was so fearless that he would scamper far out on the ends of the smallest limbs. But no matter how much they bent and swayed beneath his weight, he was never afraid; in fact, that was part of the fun.
As she watched Frisky whisking about among the trees, now swinging on this branch, now leaping far out to that one, Mrs. Squirrel sometimes wondered how he could keep dashing about so madly. Though the old lady was pretty spry, herself, she was content to sit still some of the time. But Frisky Squirrel was almost never still except when he was asleep. There was so much to do! Frisky wished that the days were longer, for though he tried his hardest, he couldn’t climb all the trees in the forest. Each night he had to give up his task, only to begin all over again the next morning. If there had been nothing to do but climb the trees Frisky would have been able to climb more of them. But there were other things that took time.
Arthur Scott Bailey
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THE TALE OF FRISKY SQUIRREL
I
Frisky Squirrel Finds Much To Do
II
Frisky Squirrel has a Fall
III
The Stone that Walked
IV
The Picnic
V
Some Lively Dodging
VI
Mr. Hawk Returns
VII
A Brave Little Bird
VIII
Uncle Sammy Coon
IX
A Bag of Corn
X
Tails and Ears
XI
Jimmy Rabbit is too Late
XII
Frisky Visits the Gristmill
XIII
Fun on the Milldam
XIV
Mrs. Squirrel Has a Visitor
XV
Helpful Mr. Crow
XVI
Caught in the Attic
XVII
Farmer Green’s Cat
XVIII
The Threshing-machine
XIX
Frisky’s Prison
XX
Johnnie Green Forgets Something
XXI
That Disagreeable Freddie Weasel
XXII
Catching Freddie Weasel Asleep
Transcriber’s Notes