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The Adventures Of Paddy The Beaver
by
“You said I had warned Paddy that you were trying to catch him and that was why you failed to find him at work at night, and all the time you had warned him yourself!” screamed Sammy. “I used to think that you were smart, but I know better now. Paddy is twice as smart as you are.
“Mr. Coyote is every so sly;
Mr. Coyote is clever and spry;
If you believe all you hear.
Mr. Coyote is naught of the kind;
Mr. Coyote is stupid and blind;
He can’t catch a flea on his ear.”
Paddy the Beaver laughed till the tears came at Sammy’s foolish verse, but it made Old Man Coyote angrier than ever. He was angry with Paddy for escaping from him, and he was angry with Sammy, terribly angry, and the worst of it was he couldn’t catch either one, for one was at home in the water and the other was at home in the air and he couldn’t follow in either place. Finally he saw it was of no use to stay there to be laughed at, so, muttering and grumbling, he started for the Green Meadows.
As soon as he was out of sight Paddy turned to Sammy Jay.
“Mr. Jay,” said he, knowing how it pleased Sammy to be called mister. “Mr. Jay, you have done me a mighty good turn today, and I am not going to forget it. You can call me what you please and scream at me all you please, but you won’t get any satisfaction out of it, because I simply won’t get angry. I will say to myself, ‘Mr. Jay saved my life the other day,’ and then I won’t mind your tongue.”
Now this made Sammy feel very proud and very happy. You know it is very seldom that he hears anything nice said of him. He flew down on the stump of one of the trees Paddy had cut. “Let’s be friends,” said he.
“With all my heart!” replied Paddy.
CHAPTER XX. Sammy Jay Offers To Help Paddy.
Paddy sat looking thoughtfully at the aspen trees he would have to cut to complete his store of food for the winter. All those near the edge of his pond had been cut. The others were scattered about some little distance away. “I don’t know,” said Paddy out loud. “I don’t know.”
“What don’t you know?” asked Sammy Jay, who, now that he and Paddy had become friends, was very much interested in what Paddy was doing.
“Why,” replied Paddy, “I don’t know just how I am going to get those trees. Now that Old Man Coyote is watching for me, it isn’t safe for me to go very far from my pond. I suppose I could dig a canal up to some of the nearest trees and then float them down to the pond, but it is hard to work and keep watch for enemies at the same time. I guess I’ll have to be content with some of these alders growing close to the water, but he bark of aspens is so much better that I–I wish I could get them.”
“What’s a canal?” asked Sammy abruptly.
“A canal? Why a canal is a kind of ditch in which water can run,” replied Paddy.
Sammy nodded. “I’ve seen Farmer Brown dig one over on the Green Meadows, but it looked like a great deal of work. I didn’t suppose that anyone else could do it. Do you really mean that you can dig a canal, Paddy?”
“Of course I mean it,” replied Paddy, in a surprised tone of voice. “I have helped dig lots of canals. You ought to see some of them back where I came from.”
“I’d like to,” replied Sammy. “I think it is perfectly wonderful. I don’t see how you do it.”
“It’s easy enough when you know how,” replied Paddy. “If I dared to, I’d show you.”