First it was calf-deep—then knee-deep—then nearly waist-deep.
The cold water made his teeth chatter, but he didn't care about that. All he thought of was the precious gun. That was his chief treasure, and his first joy in life.
Deeper he went, and nearer he got—the gun now held in both hands high over his head, as he floundered along.
And just then a dreadful thing happened.
He stepped into a hole, and it suddenly let him down so that the water was over his head, and his up reached arms, and the precious gun too!
In the shock and the surprise, he let go of the weapon, and it sank out of sight. He had no fear of drowning, and he struck out manfully when he found himself in the deep water.
But he had to give up the idea of finding the gun, and the birds were left where they lay on the farther side of the treacherous channel.
It was a long, hard run home, over those five wet and freezing miles, and the boy's heart was heavy because of the loss of that pet gun.
All the while he was learning everything that outdoors could teach him, and he owes to that breezy, sun-shot, storm-swept gipsying during the summer vacations the beginning of the stock of good health that has made him such a strong, useful, happy man, able to do no end of hard work without getting tired, and always finding it fun to live.