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                        AMONG THE MEADOW PEOPLE

                                   BY
                        CLARA DILLINGHAM PIERSON


                      Illustrated by F. C. GORDON

                        NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION

                             [Illustration]


                                NEW YORK
                         E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY
                      31 WEST TWENTY-THIRD STREET




                  [Illustration: HAYING IN THE MEADOW]




                               COPYRIGHT
                           E. P. DUTTON & CO.
                                  1899

                               COPYRIGHT
                        CLARA DILLINGHAM PIERSON
                                  1901


                   The Knickerbocker Press, New York




CONTENTS.


                                                        PAGE
  INTRODUCTION                                             5
  THE BUTTERFLY THAT WENT CALLING                          7
  THE ROBINS BUILD A NEST                                 14
  THE SELFISH TENT-CATERPILLAR                            22
  THE LAZY SNAIL                                          31
  AN ANT THAT WORE WINGS                                  37
  THE CHEERFUL HARVESTMEN                                 42
  THE LITTLE SPIDER'S FIRST WEB                           50
  THE BEETLE WHO DID NOT LIKE CATERPILLARS                56
  THE YOUNG ROBIN WHO WAS AFRAID TO FLY                   61
  THE CRICKETS' SCHOOL                                    71
  THE CONTENTED EARTHWORMS                                76
  THE MEASURING WORM'S JOKE                               81
  A PUZZLED CICADA                                        87
  THE TREE FROG'S STORY                                   93
  THE DAY WHEN THE GRASS WAS CUT                         101
  THE GRASSHOPPER AND THE MEASURING WORM RUN A RACE      109
  MR. GREEN FROG AND HIS VISITORS                        114
  THE DIGNIFIED WALKING-STICKS                           120
  THE DAY OF THE GREAT STORM                             128
  THE STORY OF LILY-PAD ISLAND                           134
  THE GRASSHOPPER WHO WOULDN'T BE SCARED                 142
  THE EARTHWORM HALF-BROTHERS                            151
  A GOSSIPING FLY                                        156
  THE FROG-HOPPERS GO OUT INTO THE WORLD                 161
  THE MOSQUITO TRIES TO TEACH HIS NEIGHBORS              171
  THE FROG WHO THOUGHT HERSELF SICK                      177
  THE KATYDID'S QUARREL                                  183
  THE LAST PARTY OF THE SEASON                           188




INTRODUCTION.


Many of these stories of field life were written for the little ones of
my kindergarten, and they gave so much pleasure, and aroused such a new
interest in "the meadow people," that it has seemed wise to collect and
add to the original number and send them out to a larger circle of boys
and girls.

All mothers and teachers hear the cry for "just one more," and find that
there are times when the bewitching tales of animals, fairies, and
"really truly" children are all exhausted, and tired imagination will
not supply another. In selecting the tiny creatures of field and garden
for the characters in this book, I have remembered with pleasure the way
in which my loyal pupils befriended stray crickets and grasshoppers,
their intense appreciation of the new realm of fancy and observation,
and the eagerness and attention with which they sought Mother Nature,
the most wonderful and tireless of all story-tellers.

                                           CLARA DILLINGHAM PIERSON.

  Stanton, Michigan,
    April 8th, 1897.




[Illustration]

THE BUTTERFLY THAT WENT CALLING


As the warm August days came, Mr. Yellow Butterfly wriggled and pushed
in his snug little green chrysalis and wished he could get out to see
the world. He remembered the days when he was a hairy little
Caterpillar, crawling slowly over grass and leaves, and he remembered
how beautiful the sky and all the flowers were. Then he thought of the
new wings which had been growing from his back, and he tried to move
them, just to see how it would feel. He had only six legs since his
wings grew, and he missed all the sticky feet which he had to give up
when he began to change into a Butterfly.

The more he thought about it the more he squirmed, until suddenly he
heard a faint little sound, too faint for larger people to hear, and
found a tiny slit in the wall of his chrysalis. It was such a dainty
green chrysalis with white wrinkles, that it seemed almost a pity to
have it break. Still it had held him for eight days already and that was
as long as any of his family ever hung in the chrysalis, so it was quite
time for it to be torn open and left empty. Mr. Yellow Butterfly
belonged to the second brood that had hatched that year and he wanted to
be out while the days were still fine and hot. Now he crawled out of the
newly-opened doorway to take his first flight.

Poor Mr. Butterfly! He found his wings so wet and crinkled that they
wouldn't work at all, so he had to sit quietly in the sunshine all day
drying them. And just as they got big, and smooth, and dry, it grew
dark, and Mr. Butterfly had to crawl under a leaf to sleep.

The next morning, bright and early, he flew away to visit the flowers.
First he stopped to see the Daisies by the roadside. They were all
dancing in the wind, and their bright faces looked as cheerful as anyone
could wish. They were glad to see Mr. Butterfly, and wished him to stay
all day with them. He said; "You are very kind, but I really couldn't
think of doing it. You must excuse my saying it, but I am surprised to
think you will grow here. It is very dusty and dry, and then there is no
shade. I am sure I could have chosen a better place."

The Daisies smiled and nodded to each other, saying, "This is the kind
of place we were made for, that's all."

Mr. Butterfly shook his head very doubtfully, and then bade them a
polite "Good-morning," and flew away to call on the Cardinals.

The Cardinals are a very stately family, as everybody knows. They hold
their heads very high, and never make deep bows, even to the wind, but
for all that they are a very pleasant family to meet. They gave Mr.
Butterfly a dainty lunch of honey, and seemed much pleased when he told
them how beautiful the river looked in the sunlight.

"It is a delightful place to grow," said they.

"Ye-es," said Mr. Butterfly, "it is very pretty, still I do not think it
can be healthful. I really cannot understand why you flowers choose such
strange homes. Now, there are the Daisies, where I just called. They are
in a dusty, dry place, where there is no shade at all. I spoke to them
about it, and they acted quite uppish."

"But the Daisies always do choose such places," said the Cardinals.

"And your family," said Mr. Butterfly, "have lived so long in wet places
that it is a wonder you are alive. Your color is good, but to stand with
one's roots in water all the time! It is shocking."

"Cardinals and Butterflies live differently," said the flowers.
"Good-morning."

Mr. Butterfly left the river and flew over to the woods. He was very
much out of patience. He was so angry that his feelers quivered, and now
you know how angry he must have been. He knew that the Violets were a
very agreeable family, who never put on airs, so he went at once to
them.

He had barely said "Good-morning" to them when he began to explain what
had displeased him.

"To think," he said, "what notions some flowers have! Now, you have a
pleasant home here in the edge of the woods. I have been telling the
Daisies and the Cardinals that they should grow in such a place, but
they wouldn't listen to me. The Daisies were quite uppish about it, and
the Cardinals were very stiff."

"My dear friend," answered a Violet, "they could never live if they
moved up into our neighborhood. Every flower has his own place in this
world, and is happiest in that place. Everything has its own place and
its own work, and every flower that is wise will stay in the place for
which it was intended. You were exceedingly kind to want to help the
flowers, but suppose they had been telling you what to do. Suppose the
Cardinals had told you that flying around was not good for your health,
and that to be truly well you ought to grow planted with your legs in
the mud and water."

"Oh!" said Mr. Butterfly, "Oh! I never thought of that. Perhaps
Butterflies don't know everything."

"No," said the Violet, "they don't know everything, and you haven't been
out of your chrysalis very long. But those who are ready to learn can
always find someone to tell them. Won't you eat some honey?"

And Mr. Butterfly sipped honey and was happy.




[Illustration]

THE ROBINS BUILD A NEST.


When Mr. and Mrs. Robin built in the spring, they were not quite agreed
as to where the nest should be. Mr. Robin was a very decided bird, and
had made up his mind that the lowest crotch of a maple tree would be the
best place. He even went so far as to take three billfuls of mud there,
and stick in two blades of dry grass. Mrs. Robin wanted it on the end of
the second rail from the top of the split-rail fence. She said it was
high enough from the ground to be safe and dry, and not so high that a
little bird falling out of it would hurt himself very much. Then, too,
the top rail was broad at the end and would keep the rain off so well.

"And the nest will be just the color of the rails," said she, "so that
even a Red Squirrel could hardly see it." She disliked Red Squirrels,
and she had reason to, for she had been married before, and if it had
not been for a Red Squirrel, she might already have had children as
large as she was.

"I say that the tree is the place for it," said Mr. Robin, "and I wear
the brightest breast feathers." He said this because in bird families
the one who wears the brightest breast feathers thinks he has the right
to decide things.

Mrs. Robin was wise enough not to answer back when he spoke in this way.
She only shook her feathers, took ten quick running steps, tilted her
body forward, looked hard at the ground, and pulled out something for
supper. After that she fluttered around the maple tree crotch as though
she had never thought of any other place. Mr. Robin wished he had not
been quite so decided, or reminded her of his breast feathers. "After
all," thought he, "I don't know but the fence-rail would have done." He
thought this, but he didn't say it. It is not always easy for a Robin to
give up and let one with dull breast feathers know that he thinks
himself wrong.

That night they perched in the maple-tree and slept with their heads
under their wings. Long before the sun was in sight, when the first
beams were just touching the tops of the forest trees, they awakened,
bright-eyed and rested, preened their feathers, sang their morning song,
"Cheerily, cheerily, cheer-up," and flew off to find food. After
breakfast they began to work on the nest. Mrs. Robin stopped often to
look and peck at the bark. "It will take a great deal of mud," said she,
"to fill in that deep crotch until we reach a place wide enough for the
nest."

At another time she said: "My dear, I am afraid that the dry grass you
are bringing is too light-colored. It shows very plainly against the
maple bark. Can't you find some that is darker?"

Mr. Robin hunted and hunted, but could find nothing which was darker. As
he flew past the fence, he noticed that it was almost the color of the
grass in his bill.

After a while, soft gray clouds began to cover the sky. "I wonder," said
Mrs. Robin, "if it will rain before we get this done. The mud is soft
enough now to work well, and this place is so open that the rain might
easily wash away all that we have done."

It did rain, however, and very soon. The great drops came down so hard
that one could only think of pebbles falling. Mr. and Mrs. Robin oiled
their feathers as quickly as they could, taking the oil from their back
pockets and putting it onto their feathers with their bills. This made
the finest kind of waterproof and was not at all heavy to wear. When the
rain was over they shook themselves and looked at their work.

"I believe," said Mrs. Robin to her husband, "that you are right in
saying that we might better give up this place and begin over again
somewhere else."

Now Mr. Robin could not remember having said that he thought anything of
the sort, and he looked very sharply at his wife, and cocked his black
head on one side until all the black and white streaks on his throat
showed. She did not seem to know that he was watching her as she hopped
around the partly built nest, poking it here and pushing it there, and
trying her hardest to make it look right. He thought she would say
something, but she didn't. Then he knew he must speak first. He flirted
his tail and tipped his head and drew some of his brown wing-feathers
through his bill. Then he held himself very straight and tall, and said,
"Well, if you do agree with me, I think you might much better stop
working here and begin in another place."

"It seems almost too bad," said she. "Of course there are other places,
but----"

By this time Mr. Robin knew exactly what to do. "Plenty of them," said
he. "Now don't fuss any longer with this. That place on the rail fence
is an excellent one. I wonder that no other birds have taken it." As he
spoke he flew ahead to the very spot which Mrs. Robin had first chosen.

She was a very wise bird, and knew far too much to say, "I told you so."
Saying that, you know, always makes things go wrong. She looked at the
rail fence, ran along the top of it, toeing in prettily as she ran,
looked around in a surprised way, and said, "Oh, _that_ place?"

"Yes, Mrs. Robin," said her husband, "_that_ place. Do you see anything
wrong about it?"

"No-o," she said. "I think I could make it do."

Before long another nest was half built, and Mrs. Robin was working away
in the happiest manner possible, stopping every little while to sing her
afternoon song: "Do you think what you do? Do you think what you do? Do
you thi-ink?"

Mr. Robin was also at work, and such billfuls of mud, such fine little
twigs, and such big wisps of dry grass as went into that home! Once Mr.
Robin was gone a long time, and when he came back he had a beautiful
piece of white cotton string dangling from his beak. That they put on
the outside. "Not that we care to show off," said they, "but somehow
that seemed to be the best place to put it."

Mr. Robin was very proud of his nest and of his wife. He never went far
away if he could help it. Once she heard him tell Mr. Goldfinch that,
"Mrs. Robin was very sweet about building where he chose, and that even
after he insisted on changing places from the tree to the fence she was
perfectly good-natured."

"Yes," said Mrs. Robin to Mrs. Goldfinch, "I was perfectly
good-natured." Then she gave a happy, chirpy little laugh, and Mrs.
Goldfinch laughed, too. They were perfectly contented birds, even if
they didn't wear the brightest breast feathers or insist on having
their own way. And Mrs. Robin had been married before.




[Illustration]

THE SELFISH TENT-CATERPILLAR.


One could hardly call the Tent-Caterpillars meadow people, for they did
not often leave their trees to crawl upon the ground. Yet the Apple-Tree
Tent-Caterpillars would not allow anybody to call them forest people.
"We live on apple and wild cherry trees," they said, "and you will
almost always find us in the orchards or on the roadside trees. There
are Forest Tent-Caterpillars, but please don't get us mixed with them.
We belong to another branch of the family, the Apple-Tree branch."

The Tree Frog said that he remembered perfectly well when the eggs were
laid on the wild cherry tree on the edge of the meadow. "It was early
last summer," he said, "and the Moth who laid them was a very agreeable
reddish-brown person, about as large as a common Yellow Butterfly. I
remember that she had two light yellow lines on each forewing. Another
Moth came with her, but did not stay. He was smaller than she, and had
the same markings. After he had gone, she asked me if we were ever
visited by the Yellow-Billed Cuckoos."

"Why did she ask that?" said the Garter Snake.

"Don't you know?" exclaimed the Tree Frog. And then he whispered
something to the Garter Snake.

The Garter Snake wriggled with surprise and cried, "Really?"

All through the fall and winter the many, many eggs which the
reddish-brown Moth had laid were kept snug and warm on the twig where
she had put them. They were placed in rows around the twig, and then
well covered to hold them together and keep them warm. The winter winds
had blown the twig to and fro, the cold rain had frozen over them, the
soft snowflakes had drifted down from the clouds and covered them, only
to melt and trickle away again in shining drops. One morning the whole
wild cherry tree was covered with beautiful long, glistening crystals of
hoar-frost; and still the ring of eggs stayed in its place around the
twig, and the life in them slept until spring sunbeams should shine down
and quicken it.

But when the spring sunbeams did come! Even before the leaf-buds were
open, tiny Larvæ, or Caterpillar babies, came crawling from the ring of
eggs and began feeding upon the buds. They took very, very small bites,
and that looked as though they were polite children. Still, you know,
their mouths were so small that they could not take big ones, and it
may not have been politeness after all which made them eat daintily.

When all the Tent-Caterpillars were hatched, and they had eaten every
leaf-bud near the egg-ring, they began to crawl down the tree toward the
trunk. Once they stopped by a good-sized crotch in the branches. "Let's
build here," said the leader; "this place is all right."

Then some of the Tent-Caterpillars said, "Let's!" and some of them said,
"Don't let's!" One young fellow said, "Aw, come on! There's a bigger
crotch farther down." Of course he should have said, "I think you will
like a larger crotch better," but he was young, and, you know, these
Larvæ had no father or mother to help them speak in the right way. They
were orphans, and it is wonderful how they ever learned to talk at all.

After this, some of the Tent-Caterpillars went on to the larger crotch
and some stayed behind. More went than stayed, and when they saw this,
those by the smaller crotch gave up and joined their brothers and
sisters, as they should have done. It was right to do that which pleased
most of them.

It took a great deal of work to make the tent. All helped, spinning
hundreds and thousands of white silken threads, laying them side by
side, criss-crossing them, fastening the ends to branches and twigs, not
forgetting to leave places through which one could crawl in and out.
They never worked all day at this, because unless they stopped to eat
they would soon have been weak and unable to spin. There were nearly
always a few Caterpillars in the tent, but only in the early morning or
late afternoon or during the night were they all at home. The rest of
the time they were scattered around the tree feeding. Of course there
were some cold days when they stayed in. When the weather was chilly
they moved slowly and cared very little for food.

There was one young Tent-Caterpillar who happened to be the first
hatched, and who seemed to think that because he was a minute older than
any of the other children he had the right to his own way. Sometimes he
got it, because the others didn't want to have any trouble. Sometimes he
didn't get it, and then he was very sulky and disagreeable, even
refusing to answer when he was spoken to.

One cold day, when all the Caterpillars stayed in the tent, this oldest
brother wanted the warmest place, that in the very middle. It should
have belonged to the younger brothers and sisters, for they were not so
strong, but he pushed and wriggled his hairy black and brown and yellow
body into the very place he wanted, and then scolded everybody around
because he had to push to get there. It happened as it always does when
a Caterpillar begins to say mean things, and he went on until he was
saying some which were really untrue. Nobody answered back, so he
scolded and fussed and was exceedingly disagreeable.

All day long he thought how wretched he was, and how badly they treated
him, and how he guessed they'd be sorry enough if he went away. The next
morning he went. As long as the warm sunshine lasted he did very well.
When it began to grow cool, his brothers and sisters crawled past him on
their way to the tent. "Come on!" they cried. "It's time to go home."

"Uh-uh!" said the eldest brother (and that meant "No"), "I'm not going."

"Why not?" they asked.

"Oh, because," said he.

When the rest were all together in the tent they talked about him. "Do
you suppose he's angry?" said one.

"What should he be angry about?" said another.

"I just believe he is," said a third. "Did you notice the way his hairs
bristled?"

"Don't you think we ought to go to get him?" asked two or three of the
youngest Caterpillars.

"No," said the older ones. "We haven't done anything. Let him get over
it."

So the oldest brother, who had thought that every other Caterpillar in
the tent would crawl right out and beg and coax him to come back, waited
and waited and waited, but nobody came. The tent was there and the door
was open. All he had to do was to crawl in and be at home. He waited so
long that at last he had to leave the tree and spin his cocoon without
ever having gone back to his brothers and sisters in the tent. He spun
his cocoon and mixed the silk with a yellowish-white powder, then he
lay down in it to sleep twenty-one days and grow his wings. The last
thought he had before going to sleep was an unhappy and selfish one.
Probably he awakened an unhappy and selfish Moth.

His brothers and sisters were sad whenever they thought of him. But,
they said, "what could we do? It wasn't fair for him to have the best of
everything, and we never answered when he said mean things. He might
have come back at any time and we would have been kind to him."

And they were right. What could they have done? It was very sad, but
when a Caterpillar is so selfish and sulky that he cannot live happily
with other people, it is much better that he should live quite alone.




[Illustration]

THE LAZY SNAIL


In the lower part of the meadow, where the grass grew tall and tender,
there lived a fine and sturdy young Snail; that is to say, a
fine-looking Snail. His shell was a beautiful soft gray, and its curves
were regular and perfect. His body was soft and moist, and just what a
Snail's body should be. Of course, when it came to travelling, he could
not go fast, for none of his family are rapid travellers, still, if he
had been plucky and patient, he might have seen much of the meadow, and
perhaps some of the world outside. His friends and neighbors often told
him that he ought to start out on a little journey to see the sights,
but he would always answer, "Oh, it is too hard work!"

There was nobody who liked stories of meadow life better than this same
Snail, and he would often stop some friendly Cricket or Snake to ask for
the news. After they had told him, they would say, "Why, don't you ever
get out to see these things for yourself?" and he would give a little
sigh and answer, "It is too far to go."

"But you needn't go the whole distance in one day," his visitor would
say, "only a little at a time."

"Yes, and then I would have to keep starting on again every little
while," the Snail would reply. "What of that?" said the visitor; "you
would have plenty of resting spells, when you could lie in the shade of
a tall weed and enjoy yourself."

"Well, what is the use?" the Snail would say. "I can't enjoy resting if
I know I've got to go to work again," and he would sigh once more.

So there he lived, eating and sleeping, and wishing he could see the
world, and meet the people in the upper part of the meadow, but just so
lazy that he wouldn't start out to find them.

He never thought that the Butterflies and Beetles might not like it to
have him keep calling them to him and making them tell him the news. Oh,
no indeed! If he wanted them to do anything for him, he asked them
quickly enough, and they, being happy, good-natured people, would always
do as he asked them to.

There came a day, though, when he asked too much. The Grasshoppers had
been telling him about some very delicious new plants that grew a little
distance away, and the Snail wanted some very badly. "Can't you bring me
some?" he said. "There are so many of you, and you have such good,
strong legs. I should think you might each bring me a small piece in
your mouths, and then I should have a fine dinner of it."

The Grasshoppers didn't say anything then, but when they were so far
away that he could not hear them, they said to each other, "If the Snail
wants the food so much, he might better go for it. We have other things
to do," and they hopped off on their own business.

The Snail sat there, and wondered and wondered that they did not come.
He kept thinking how he would like some of the new food for dinner, but
there it ended. He didn't want it enough to get it for himself.

The Grasshoppers told all their friends about the Snail's request, and
everybody thought, "Such a lazy, good-for-nothing fellow deserves to be
left quite alone." So it happened that for a very long time nobody went
near the Snail.

The weather grew hotter and hotter. The clouds, which blew across the
sky, kept their rain until they were well past the meadow, and so it
happened that the river grew shallower and shallower, and the sunshine
dried the tiny pools and rivulets which kept the lower meadow damp. The
grass began to turn brown and dry, and, all in all, it was trying
weather for Snails.

One day, a Butterfly called some of her friends together, and told them
that she had seen the Snail lying in his old place, looking thin and
hungry. "The grass is all dried around him," she said; "I believe he is
starving, and too lazy to go nearer the river, where there is still good
food for him."

They all talked it over together, and some of them said it was of no use
to help a Snail who was too lazy to do anything for himself. Others
said, "Well, he is too weak to help himself now, at all events, and we
might help him this once." And that is exactly what they did. The
Butterflies and the Mosquitoes flew ahead to find the best place to put
the Snail, and all the Grasshoppers, and Beetles, and other strong
crawling creatures took turns in rolling the Snail down toward the
river.

They left him where the green things were fresh and tender, and he grew
strong and plump once more. It is even said that he was not so lazy
afterward, but one cannot tell whether to believe it or not, for
everybody knows that when people let themselves grow up lazy, as he did,
it is almost impossible for them to get over it when they want to. One
thing is sure: the meadow people who helped him were happier and better
for doing a kind thing, no matter what became of the Snail.




[Illustration]

THE ANT THE WORE WINGS


In one of the Ant-hills in the highest part of the meadow, were a lot of
young Ants talking together. "I," said one, "am going to be a soldier,
and drive away anybody who comes to make us trouble. I try biting hard
things every day to make my jaws strong, so that I can guard the home
better."

"I," said another and smaller Ant, "want to be a worker. I want to help
build and repair the home. I want to get the food for the family, and
feed the Ant babies, and clean them off when they crawl out of their
old coats. If I can do those things well, I shall be the happiest,
busiest Ant in the meadow."

"We don't want to live that kind of life," said a couple of larger Ants
with wings. "We don't mean to stay around the Ant-hill all the time and
work. We want to use our wings, and then you may be very sure that you
won't see us around home any more."

The little worker spoke up: "Home is a pleasant place. You may be very
glad to come back to it some day." But the Ants with the wings turned
their backs and wouldn't listen to another word.

A few days after this there were exciting times in the Ant-hill. All the
winged Ants said "Good-bye" to the soldiers and workers, and flew off
through the air, flew so far that the little ones at home could no
longer see them. All day long they were gone, but the next morning when
the little worker (whom we heard talking) went out to get breakfast, she
found the poor winged Ants lying on the ground near their home. Some of
them were dead, and the rest were looking for food.

The worker Ant ran up to the one who had said she didn't want to stay
around home, and asked her to come back to the Ant-hill. "No, I thank
you," she answered. "I have had my breakfast now, and am going to fly
off again." She raised her wings to go, but after she had given one
flutter, they dropped off, and she could never fly again.

The worker hurried back to the Ant-hill to call some of her sister
workers, and some of the soldiers, and they took the Ant who had lost
her wings and carried her to another part of the meadow. There they went
to work to build a new home and make her their queen.

First, they looked for a good, sandy place, on which the sun would shine
all day. Then the worker Ants began to dig in the ground and bring out
tiny round pieces of earth in their mouths. The soldiers helped them,
and before night they had a cosy little home in the earth, with several
rooms, and some food already stored. They took their queen in, and
brought her food to eat, and waited on her, and she was happy and
contented.

By and by the Ant eggs began to hatch, and the workers had all they
could do to take care of their queen and her little Ant babies, and the
soldier Ants had to help. The Ant babies were little worms or grubs when
they first came out of the eggs; after a while they curled up in tiny,
tiny cases, called pupa-cases, and after another while they came out of
these, and then they looked like the older Ants, with their six legs,
and their slender little waists. But whatever they were, whether eggs,
or grubs, or curled up in the pupa-cases, or lively little Ants, the
workers fed and took care of them, and the soldiers fought for them,
and the queen-mother loved them, and they all lived happily together
until the young Ants were ready to go out into the great world and learn
the lessons of life for themselves.




[Illustration]

THE CHEERFUL HARVESTMEN.


Some of the meadow people are gay and careless, and some are always
worrying. Some work hard every day, and some are exceedingly lazy.
There, as everywhere else, each has his own way of thinking about
things. It is too bad that they cannot all learn to think brave and
cheerful thoughts, for these make life happy. One may have a comfortable
home, kind neighbors, and plenty to eat, yet if he is in the habit of
thinking disagreeable thoughts, not even all these good things can make
him happy. Now there was the young Frog who thought herself sick--but
that is another story.

Perhaps the Harvestmen were the most cheerful of all the meadow people.
The old Tree Frog used to say that it made him feel better just to see
their knees coming toward him. Of course, when he saw their knees, he
knew that the whole insect was also coming. He spoke in that way because
the Harvestmen always walked or ran with their knees so much above the
rest of their bodies that one could see those first.

The Harvestmen were not particularly fine-looking, not nearly so
handsome as some of their Spider cousins. One never thought of that,
however. They had such an easy way of moving around on their eight legs,
each of which had a great many joints. It is the joints, or
bending-places, you know, which make legs useful. Besides being
graceful, they had very pleasant manners. When a Harvestman said
"Good-morning" to you on a rainy day, you always had a feeling that the
sun was shining. It might be that the drops were even then falling into
your face, but for a moment you were sure to feel that everything was
bright and warm and comfortable.

Sometimes the careless young Grasshoppers and Crickets called the
Harvestmen by their nicknames, "Daddy Long-Legs" or "Grandfather
Graybeard." Even then the Harvestmen were good-natured, and only said
with a smile that the young people had not yet learned the names of
their neighbors. The Grasshoppers never seemed to think how queer it was
to call a young Harvestman daughter "Grandfather Graybeard." When they
saw how good-natured they were, the Grasshoppers soon stopped trying to
tease the Harvestmen. People who are really good-natured are never
teased very long, you know.

The Walking-Sticks were exceedingly polite to the Harvestmen. They
thought them very slender and genteel-looking. Once the Five-Legged
Walking-Stick said to the largest Harvestman, "Why do you talk so much
with the common people in the meadow?"

The Harvestman knew exactly what the Walking-Stick meant, but he was not
going to let anybody make fun of his kind and friendly neighbors, so he
said: "I think we Harvestmen are rather common ourselves. There are a
great, great many of us here. It must be very lonely to be uncommon."

After that the Walking-Stick had nothing more to say. He never felt
quite sure whether the Harvestman was too stupid to understand or too
wise to gossip. Once he thought he saw the Harvestman's eyes twinkle.
The Harvestman didn't care if people thought him stupid. He knew that he
was not stupid, and he would rather seem dull than to listen while
unkind things were said about his neighbors.

Some people would have thought it very hard luck to be Harvestmen. The
Garter Snake said that if he were one, he should be worried all the time
about his legs. "I'm thankful I haven't any," he said, "for if I had I
should be forever thinking I should lose some of them. A Harvestman
without legs would be badly off. He could never in the world crawl
around on his belly as I do."

How the Harvestmen did laugh when they heard this! The biggest one said,
"Well, if that isn't just like some people! Never want to have anything
for fear they'll lose it. I wonder if he worries about his head? He
might lose that, you know, and then what would he do?"

It was only the next day that the largest Harvestman came home on seven
legs. His friends all cried out, "Oh, how did it ever happen?"

"Cows," said he.

"Did they step on you?" asked the Five-Legged Walking-Stick. He had not
lived long enough in the meadow to understand all that the Harvestman
meant. He was sorry for him, though, for he knew what it was to lose a
leg.

"Huh!" said a Grasshopper, interrupting in a very rude way, "aren't any
Cows in this meadow now!"

Then the other Harvestmen told the Walking-Stick all about it, how
sometimes a boy would come to the meadow, catch a Harvestman, hold him
up by one leg, and say to him, "Grandfather Graybeard, tell me where the
Cows are, or I'll kill you." Then the only thing a Harvestman could do
was to struggle and wriggle himself free, and he often broke off a leg
in doing so.

"How terrible!" said the three Walking-Sticks all together. "But why
don't you tell them?"

"We do," answered the Harvestmen. "We point with our seven other legs,
and we point every way there is. Sometimes we don't know where they
are, so we point everywhere, to be sure. But it doesn't make any
difference. Our legs drop off just the same."

"Isn't a boy clever enough to find Cows alone?" asked the
Walking-Sticks.

"Oh, it isn't that," cried all the meadow people together. "Even after
you tell, and sometimes when the Cows are right there, they walk off
home without them."

"I'd sting them," said a Wasp, waving his feelers fiercely and raising
and lowering his wings. "I'd sting them as hard as I could."

"You wouldn't if you had no sting," said the Tree Frog.

"N-no," stammered the Wasp, "I suppose I wouldn't."

"You poor creature!" said the biggest Katydid to the biggest Harvestman.
"What will you do? Only seven legs!"

"Do?" answered the biggest Harvestman, and it was then one could see
how truly brave and cheerful he was. "Do? I'll walk on those seven. If
I lose one of them I'll walk on six, and if I lose one of them I'll walk
on five. Haven't I my mouth and my stomach and my eyes and my two
feelers, and my two food-pincers? I may not be so good-looking, but I am
a Harvestman, and I shall enjoy the grass and the sunshine and my kind
neighbors as long as I live. I must leave you now. Good-day."

He walked off rather awkwardly, for he had not yet learned to manage
himself since his accident. The meadow people looked after him very
thoughtfully. They were not noticing his awkwardness, or thinking of his
high knees or of his little low body. Perhaps they thought what the
Cicada said, "Ah, that is the way to live!"




[Illustration]

THE LITTLE SPIDER'S FIRST WEB


The first thing our little Spider remembered was being crowded with a
lot of other little Spiders in a tiny brown house. This tiny house had
no windows, and was very warm and dark and stuffy. When the wind blew,
the little Spiders would hear it rushing through the forest near by, and
would feel their round brown house swinging like a cradle. It was
fastened to a bush by the edge of the forest, but they could not know
that, so they just wiggled and pushed and ate the food that they found
in the house, and wondered what it all meant. They didn't even guess
that a mother Spider had made the brown house and put the food in it for
her Spider babies to eat when they came out of their eggs. She had put
the eggs in, too, but the little Spiders didn't remember the time when
they lay curled up in the eggs. They didn't know what had been nor what
was to be--they thought that to eat and wiggle and sleep was all of
life. You see they had much to learn.

One morning the little Spiders found that the food was all gone, and
they pushed and scrambled harder than ever, because they were hungry and
wanted more. Exactly what happened nobody knew, but suddenly it grew
light, and some of them fell out of the house. All the rest scrambled
after, and there they stood, winking and blinking in the bright
sunshine, and feeling a little bit dizzy, because they were on a shaky
web made of silvery ropes.

Just then the web began to shake even more, and a beautiful great mother
Spider ran out on it. She was dressed in black and yellow velvet, and
her eight eyes glistened and gleamed in the sunlight. They had never
dreamed of such a wonderful creature.

"Well, my children," she exclaimed, "I know you must be hungry, and I
have breakfast all ready for you." So they began eating at once, and the
mother Spider told them many things about the meadow and the forest, and
said they must amuse themselves while she worked to get food for them.
There was no father Spider to help her, and, as she said, "Growing
children must have plenty of good plain food."

You can just fancy what a good time the baby Spiders had. There were a
hundred and seventy of them, so they had no chance to grow lonely, even
when their mother was away. They lived in this way for quite a while,
and grew bigger and stronger every day. One morning the mother Spider
said to her biggest daughter, "You are quite old enough to work now, and
I will teach you to spin your web."

The little Spider soon learned to draw out the silvery ropes from the
pocket in her body where they were made and kept, and very soon she had
one fastened at both ends to branches of the bush. Then her mother made
her walk out to the middle of her rope bridge, and spin and fasten two
more, so that it looked like a shining cross. After that was done, the
mother showed her something like a comb, which is part of a Spider's
foot, and taught her how to measure, and put more ropes out from the
middle of the cross, until it looked like the spokes of a wheel.

The little Spider got much discouraged, and said, "Let me finish it
some other time; I am tired of working now."

The mother Spider answered, "No, I cannot have a lazy child."

The little one said, "I can't ever do it, I know I can't."

"Now," said the mother, "I shall have to give you a Spider scolding. You
have acted as lazy as the Tree Frog says boys and girls sometimes do. He
has been up near the farm-house, and says that he has seen there
children who do not like to work. The meadow people could hardly believe
such a thing at first. He says they were cross and unhappy children, and
no wonder! Lazy people are never happy. You try to finish the web, and
see if I am not right. You are not a baby now, and you must work and get
your own food."

So the little Spider spun the circles of rope in the web, and made these
ropes sticky, as all careful spiders do. She ate the loose ends and
pieces that were left over, to save them for another time, and when it
was done, it was so fine and perfect that her brothers and sisters
crowded around, saying, "Oh! oh! oh! how beautiful!" and asked the
mother to teach them. The little web-spinner was happier than she had
ever been before, and the mother began to teach her other children. But
it takes a long time to teach a hundred and seventy children.




[Illustration]

THE BEETLE WHO DID NOT LIKE CATERPILLARS


One morning early in June, a fat and shining May Beetle lay on his back
among the grasses, kicking his six legs in the air, and wriggling around
while he tried to catch hold of a grass-blade by which to pull himself
up. Now, Beetles do not like to lie on their backs in the sunshine, and
this one was hot and tired from his long struggle. Beside that, he was
very cross because he was late in getting his breakfast, so when he did
at last get right side up, and saw a brown and black Caterpillar
watching him, he grew very ill-mannered, and said some things of which
he should have been ashamed.

"Oh, yes," he said, "you are quick enough to laugh when you think
somebody else is in a fix. I often lie on my back and kick, just for
fun." (Which was not true, but when Beetles are cross they are not
always truthful.)

"Excuse me," said the Caterpillar, "I did not mean to hurt your
feelings. If I smiled, it was because I remembered being in the same
plight myself yesterday, and what a time I had smoothing my fur
afterwards. Now, you won't have to smooth your fur, will you?" she asked
pleasantly.

"No, I'm thankful to say I haven't any fur to smooth," snapped the
Beetle. "I am not one of the crawling, furry kind. My family wear dark
brown, glossy coats, and we always look trim and clean. When we want to
hurry, we fly; and when tired of flying, we walk or run. We have two
kinds of wings. We have a pair of dainty, soft ones, that carry us
through the air, and then we have a pair of stiff ones to cover over the
soft wings when we come down to the earth again. We are the finest
family in the meadow."

"I have often heard of you," said the Caterpillar, "and am very glad to
become acquainted."

"Well," answered the Beetle, "I am willing to speak to you, of course,
but we can never be at all friendly. A May Beetle, indeed, in company
with a Caterpillar! I choose my friends among the Moths, Butterflies,
and Dragon-flies,--in fact, _I_ move in the upper circles."

"Upper circles, indeed!" said a croaking voice beside him, which made
the Beetle jump, "I have hopped over your head for two or three years,
when you were nothing but a fat, white worm. _You'd_ better not put on
airs. The fine family of May Beetles were all worms once, and they had
to live in the earth and eat roots, while the Caterpillars were in the
sunshine over their heads, dining on tender green leaves and flower
buds."

The May Beetle began to look very uncomfortable, and squirmed as though
he wanted to get away, but the Tree Frog, for it was the Tree Frog, went
on: "As for your not liking Caterpillars, they don't stay Caterpillars.
Your new acquaintance up there will come out with wings one of these
days, and you will be glad enough to know him." And the Tree Frog hopped
away.

The May Beetle scraped his head with his right front leg, and then said
to the Caterpillar, who was nibbling away at the milkweed: "You know, I
wasn't really in earnest about our not being friends. I shall be very
glad to know you, and all your family."

"Thank you," answered the Caterpillar, "thank you very much, but I have
been thinking it over myself, and I feel that I really could not be
friendly with a May Beetle. Of course, I don't mind speaking to you once
in a while, when I am eating, and getting ready to spin my cocoon. After
that it will be different. You see, then I shall belong to one of the
finest families in the meadow, the Milkweed Butterflies. _We_ shall eat
nothing but honey, and dress in soft orange and black velvet. _We_ shall
not blunder and bump around when we fly. _We_ shall enjoy visiting with
the Dragon-flies and Moths. I shall not forget you altogether, I dare
say, but I shall feel it my duty to move in the upper circles, where I
belong. Good-morning."




[Illustration]

THE YOUNG ROBIN WHO WAS AFRAID TO FLY.


During the days when the four beautiful green-blue eggs lay in the nest,
Mrs. Robin stayed quite closely at home. She said it was a very good
place, for she could keep her eggs warm and still see all that was
happening. The rail-end on which they had built was on the meadow side
of the fence, over the tallest grasses and the graceful stalks of
golden-rod. Here the Garter Snake drew his shining body through the
tangled green, and here the Tree Frog often came for a quiet nap.

Just outside the fence the milkweeds grew, with every broad, pale green
leaf slanting upward in their spring style. Here the Milkweed
Caterpillars fed, and here, too, when the great balls of tiny dull pink
blossoms dangled from the stalks, the Milkweed Butterflies hung all day
long. All the teams from the farm-house passed along the quiet,
grass-grown road, and those which were going to the farm as well. When
Mrs. Robin saw a team coming, she always settled herself more deeply
into her nest, so that not one of her brick-red breast feathers showed.
Then she sat very still, only turning her head enough to watch the team
as it came near, passed, and went out of sight down the road. Sometimes
she did not even have to turn her head, for if she happened to be facing
the road, she could with one eye watch the team come near, and with the
other watch it go away. No bird, you know, ever has to look at anything
with both eyes at once.

After the young Robins had outgrown their shells and broken and thrown
them off, they were naked and red and blind. They lay in a heap in the
bottom of the nest, and became so tangled that nobody but a bird could
tell which was which. If they heard their father or their mother flying
toward them, they would stretch up their necks and open their mouths.
Then each would have some food poked down his throat, and would lie
still until another mouthful was brought to him.

When they got their eyes open and began to grow more down, they were
good little Robins and did exactly as they were told. It was easy to be
good then, for they were not strong enough to want to go elsewhere, and
they had all they wanted to eat. At night their mother sat in the nest
and covered them with her soft feathers. When it rained she also did
this. She was a kind and very hard-working mother. Mr. Robin worked
quite as hard as she, and was exceedingly proud of his family.

But when their feathers began to grow, and each young Robin's sharp
quills pricked his brothers and sisters if they pushed against him, then
it was not so easy to be good. Four growing children in one little round
bed sometimes found themselves rather crowded. One night Mrs. Robin said
to her husband: "I am all tired out. I work as long as daylight lasts
getting food for those children, and I cannot be here enough to teach
them anything."

"Then they must learn to work for themselves," said Mr. Robin decidedly.
"They are surely old enough."

"Why, they are just babies!" exclaimed his wife. "They have hardly any
tails yet."

"They don't need tails to eat with," said he, "and they may as well
begin now. I will not have you get so tired for this one brood."

Mrs. Robin said nothing more. Indeed, there was nothing more to be
said, for she knew perfectly well that her children would not eat with
their tails if they had them. She loved her babies so that she almost
disliked to see them grow up, yet she knew it was right for them to
leave the nest. They were so large that they spread out over the edges
of it already, and they must be taught to take care of themselves before
it was time for her to rear her second brood.

The next morning all four children were made to hop out on to the rail.
Their legs were not very strong and their toes sprawled weakly around.
Sometimes they lurched and almost fell. Before leaving the nest they had
felt big and very important; now they suddenly felt small and young and
helpless. Once in a while one of them would hop feebly along the rail
for a few steps. Then he would chirp in a frightened way, let his head
settle down over his speckled breast, slide his eyelids over his eyes,
and wait for more food to be brought to him.

Whenever a team went by, the oldest child shut his eyes. He thought they
couldn't see him if he did that. The other children kept theirs open and
watched to see what happened. Their father and mother had told them to
watch, but the timid young Robin always shut his eyes in spite of that.

"We shall have trouble with him," said Mrs. Robin, "but he must be made
to do as he is told, even if he is afraid." She shut her bill very
tightly as she spoke, and Mr. Robin knew that he could safely trust the
bringing-up of his timid son to her.

Mrs. Robin talked and talked to him, and still he shut his eyes every
time that he was frightened. "I can't keep them open," he would say,
"because when I am frightened I am always afraid, and I can't be brave
when I am afraid."

"That is just when you must be brave," said his mother. "There is no use
in being brave when there is nothing to fear, and it is a great deal
braver to be brave when you are frightened than to be brave when you are
not." You can see that she was a very wise Robin and a good mother. It
would have been dreadful for her to let him grow up a coward.

At last the time came when the young birds were to fly to the ground and
hop across the road. Both their father and their mother were there to
show them how. "You must let go of the rail," they said. "You will never
fly in the world unless you let go of the rail."

Three of the children fluttered and lurched and flew down. The timid
young Robin would not try it. His father ordered and his mother coaxed,
yet he only clung more closely to his rail and said, "I can't! I'm
afraid!"

At last his mother said: "Very well. You shall stay there as long as
you wish, but we cannot stay with you."

Then she chirped to her husband, and they and the three brave children
went across the road, talking as they went. "Careful!" she would say.
"Now another hop! That was fine! Now another!" And the father fluttered
around and said: "Good! Good! You'll be grown-up before you know it."
When they were across, the parents hunted food and fed their three brave
children, tucking the mouthfuls far into their wide-open bills.

The timid little Robin on the fence felt very, very lonely. He was
hungry, too. Whenever he saw his mother pick up a mouthful of food, he
chirped loudly: "Me! Me! Me!" for he wanted her to bring it to him. She
paid no attention to him for a long time. Then she called: "Do you think
you can fly? Do you think you can fly? Do you think?"

The timid little Robin hopped a few steps and chirped but never lifted
a wing. Then his mother gave each of the other children a big mouthful.

The Robin on the fence huddled down into a miserable little bunch, and
thought: "They don't care whether I ever have anything to eat. No, they
don't!" Then he heard a rush of wings, and his mother stood before him
with a bunch in her bill for him. He hopped toward her and she ran away.
Then he sat down and cried. She hopped back and looked lovingly at him,
but couldn't speak because her bill was so full. Across the road the
Robin father stayed with his brave children and called out, "Earn it, my
son, earn it!"

The young Robin stretched out his neck and opened his bill--but his
mother flew to the ground. He was so hungry--so very, very hungry,--that
for a minute he quite forgot to be afraid, and he leaned toward her and
toppled over. He fluttered his wings without thinking, and the first he
knew he had flown to the ground. He was hardly there before his mother
was feeding him and his father was singing: "Do you know what you did?
Do you know what you did? Do you know?"

Before his tail was grown the timid Robin had become as brave as any of
the children, for, you know, after you begin to be brave you always want
to go on. But the Garter Snake says that Mrs. Robin is the bravest of
the family.




[Illustration]

THE CRICKETS' SCHOOL


In one corner of the meadow lived a fat old Cricket, who thought a great
deal of himself. He had such a big, shining body, and a way of chirping
so very loudly, that nobody could ever forget where he lived. He was a
very good sort of Cricket, too, ready to say the most pleasant things to
everybody, yet, sad to relate, he had a dreadful habit of boasting. He
had not always lived in the meadow, and he liked to tell of the
wonderful things he had seen and done when he was younger and lived up
near the white farm-house.

When he told these stories of what he had done, the big Crickets around
him would not say much, but just sit and look at each other. The little
Crickets, however, loved to hear him talk, and would often come to the
door of his house (which was a hole in the ground), to beg him to tell
them more.

One evening he said he would teach them a few things that all little
Crickets should know. He had them stand in a row, and then began: "With
what part of your body do you eat?"

"With our mouths," all the little Crickets shouted.

"With what part of your body do you run and leap?"

"Our legs," they cried.

"Do you do anything else with your legs?"

"We clean ourselves with them," said one.

"We use them and our mouths to make our houses in the ground," said
another.

"Oh yes, and we hear with our two front legs," cried one bright little
fellow.

"That is right," answered the fat old Cricket. "Some creatures hear with
things called ears, that grow on the sides of their heads, but for my
part, I think it much nicer to hear with one's legs, as we do."

"Why, how funny it must be not to hear with one's legs, as we do," cried
all the little Crickets together.

"There are a great many queer things to be seen in the great world,"
said their teacher. "I have seen some terribly big creatures with only
two legs and no wings whatever."

"How dreadful!" all the little Crickets cried. "We wouldn't think they
could move about at all."

"It must be very hard to do so," said their teacher; "I was very sorry
for them," and he spread out his own wings and stretched his six legs to
show how he enjoyed them.

"But how can they sing if they have no wings?" asked the bright little
Cricket.

"They sing through their mouths, in much the same way that the birds
have to. I am sure it must be much easier to sing by rubbing one's wings
together, as we do," said the fat old teacher. "I could tell you many
queer things about these two-legged creatures, and the houses in which
they live, and perhaps some day I will. There are other large
four-legged creatures around their homes that are very terrible, but, my
children, I was never afraid of any of them. I am one of the truly brave
people who are never frightened, no matter how terrible the sight. I
hope, children, that you will always be brave, like me. If anything
should scare you, do not jump or run away. Stay right where you are,
and----"

But the little Crickets never heard the rest of what their teacher began
to say, for at that minute Brown Bess, the Cow, came through a broken
fence toward the spot where the Crickets were. The teacher gave one
shrill "chirp," and scrambled down his hole. The little Crickets fairly
tumbled over each other in their hurry to get away, and the fat old
Cricket, who had been out in the great world, never again talked to them
about being brave.




[Illustration]

THE CONTENTED EARTHWORMS


After a long and soaking rain, the Earthworms came out of their burrows,
or rather, they came part way out, for each Earthworm put out half of
his body, and, as there were many of them and they lived near to each
other, they could easily visit without leaving their own homes. Two of
these long, slimy people were talking, when a Potato Bug strolled by.
"You poor things," said he, "what a wretched life you must lead.
Spending one's days in the dark earth must be very dreary."

"Dreary!" exclaimed one of the Earthworms, "it is delightful. The earth
is a snug and soft home. It is warm in cold weather and cool in warm
weather. There are no winds to trouble us, and no sun to scorch us."

"But," said the Potato Bug, "it must be very dull. Now, out in the
grass, one finds beautiful flowers, and so many families of friends."

"And down here," answered the Worm, "we have the roots. Some are brown
and woody, like those of the trees, and some are white and slender and
soft. They creep and twine, until it is like passing through a forest to
go among them. And then, there are the seeds. Such busy times as there
are in the ground in spring-time! Each tiny seed awakens and begins to
grow. Its roots must strike downward, and its stalk upward toward the
light. Sometimes the seeds are buried in the earth with the root end up,
and then they have a great time getting twisted around and ready to
grow."

"Still, after the plants are all growing and have their heads in the
air, you must miss them."

"We have the roots always," said the Worm. "And then, when the summer is
over, the plants have done their work, helping to make the world
beautiful and raise their seed babies, and they wither and droop to the
earth again, and little by little the sun and the frost and the rain
help them to melt back into the earth. The earth is the beginning and
the end of plants."

"Do you ever meet the meadow people in it?" asked the Potato Bug.

"Many of them live here as babies," said the Worm. "The May Beetles, the
Grasshoppers, the great Humming-bird Moths, and many others spend their
babyhood here, all wrapped in eggs or cocoons. Then, when they are
strong enough, and their legs and wings are grown, they push their way
out and begin their work. It is their getting-ready time, down here in
the dark. And then, there are the stones, and they are so old and queer.
I am often glad that I am not a stone, for to have to lie still must be
hard to bear. Yet I have heard that they did not always lie so, and that
some of the very pebbles around us tossed and rolled and ground for
years in the bed of a river, and that some of them were rubbed and
broken off of great rocks. Perhaps they are glad now to just lie and
rest."

"Truly," said the Potato Bug, "you have a pleasant home, but give me the
sunshine and fresh air, my six legs, and my striped wings, and you are
welcome to it all."

"You are welcome to them all," answered the Worms. "We are contented
with smooth and shining bodies, with which we can bore and wriggle our
way through the soft, brown earth. We like our task of keeping the
earth right for the plants, and we will work and rest happily here."

The Potato Bug went his way, and said to his brothers, "What do you
think? I have been talking with Earthworms who would not be Potato Bugs
if they could." And they all shook their heads in wonder, for they
thought that to be Potato Bugs was the grandest and happiest thing in
the world.




[Illustration]

THE MEASURING WORM'S JOKE


One day there crawled over the meadow fence a jolly young Measuring
Worm. He came from a bush by the roadside, and although he was still a
young Worm he had kept his eyes open and had a very good idea how things
go in this world. "Now," thought he, as he rested on the top rail of the
fence, "I shall meet some new friends. I do hope they will be pleasant.
I will look about me and see if anyone is in sight." So he raised his
head high in the air and, sure enough, there were seven Caterpillars of
different kinds on a tall clump of weeds near by.

The Measuring Worm hurried over to where they were, and making his best
bow said: "I have just come from the roadside and think I shall live in
the meadow. May I feed with you?"

The Caterpillars were all glad to have him, and he joined their party.
He asked many questions about the meadow, and the people who lived
there, and the best place to find food. The Caterpillars said, "Oh, the
meadow is a good place, and the people are nice enough, but they are not
at all fashionable--not at all."

"Why," said the Measuring Worm, "if you have nice people and a pleasant
place in which to live, I don't see what more you need."

"That is all very well," said a black and yellow Caterpillar, "but what
we want is fashionable society. The meadow people always do things in
the same way, and one gets so tired of that. Now can you not tell us
something different, something that Worms do in the great world from
which you come?"

Just at this minute the Measuring Worm had a funny idea, and he wondered
if the Caterpillars would be foolish enough to copy him. He thought it
would be a good joke if they did, so he said very soberly, "I notice
that when you walk you keep your body quite close to the ground. I have
seen many Worms do the same thing, and it is all right if they wish to,
but none of my family ever do so. Did you notice how I walk?"

"Yes, yes," cried the Caterpillars, "show us again."

So the Measuring Worm walked back and forth for them, arching his body
as high as he could, and stopping every little while to raise his head
and look haughtily around.

"What grace!" exclaimed the Caterpillars. "What grace, and what style!"
and one black and brown one tried to walk in the same way.

The Measuring Worm wanted to laugh to see how awkward the black and
brown Caterpillar was, but he did not even smile, and soon every one of
the Caterpillars was trying the same thing, and saying "Look at me.
Don't I do well?" or, "How was that?"

You can just imagine how those seven Caterpillars looked when trying to
walk like the Measuring Worm. Every few minutes one of them would tumble
over, and they all got warm and tired. At last they thought they had
learned it very well, and took a long rest, in which they planned to
take a long walk and show the other meadow people the fashion they had
received from the outside world.

"We will walk in a line," they said, "as far as we can, and let them all
see us. Ah, it will be a great day for the meadow when we begin to set
the fashions!"

The mischievous young Measuring Worm said not a word, and off they
started. The big black and yellow Caterpillar went first, the black and
brown one next, and so on down to the smallest one at the end of the
line, all arching their bodies as high as they could. All the meadow
people stared at them, calling each other to come and look, and whenever
the Caterpillars reached a place where there were many watching them,
they would all raise their heads and look around exactly as the
Measuring Worm had done. When they got back to their clump of bushes,
they had the most dreadful backaches, but they said to each other,
"Well, we have been fashionable for once."

And, at the same time, out in the grass, the meadow people were saying,
"Did you ever see anything so ridiculous in your life?" All of which
goes to show how very silly people sometimes are when they think too
much of being fashionable.




[Illustration]

A PUZZLED CICADA


Seventeen years is a long, long time to be getting ready to fly; yet
that is what the Seventeen-year Locusts, or Cicadas, have to expect.
First, they lie for a long time in eggs, down in the earth. Then, when
they awaken, and crawl out of their shells, they must grow strong enough
to dig before they can make their way out to where the beautiful green
grass is growing and waving in the wind.

The Cicada who got so very much puzzled had not been long out of his
home in the warm, brown earth. He was the only Cicada anywhere around,
and it was very lonely for him. However, he did not mind that so much
when he was eating, or singing, or resting in the sunshine, and as he
was either eating, or singing, or resting in the sunshine most of the
time, he got along fairly well.

Because he was young and healthy he grew fast. He grew so very fast that
after a while he began to feel heavy and stiff, and more like sitting
still than like crawling around. Beside all this, his skin got tight,
and you can imagine how uncomfortable it must be to have one's skin too
tight. He was sitting on the branch of a bush one day, thinking about
the wonderful great world, when--pop!--his skin had cracked open right
down the middle of his back! The poor Cicada was badly frightened at
first, but then it seemed so good and roomy that he took a deep breath,
and--pop!--the crack was longer still!

The Cicada found that he had another whole skin under the outside one
which had cracked, so he thought, "How much cooler and more comfortable
I shall be if I crawl out of this broken covering," and out he crawled.

It wasn't very easy work, because he didn't have anybody to help him. He
had to hook the claws of his outer skin into the bark of the branch,
hook them in so hard that they couldn't pull out, and then he began to
wriggle out of the back of his own skin. It was exceedingly hard work,
and the hardest of all was the pulling his legs out of their cases. He
was so tired when he got free that he could hardly think, and his new
skin was so soft and tender that he felt limp and queer. He found that
he had wings of a pretty green, the same color as his legs. He knew
these wings must have been growing under his old skin, and he stretched
them slowly out to see how big they were. This was in the morning, and
after he had stretched his wings he went to sleep for a long time.

When he awakened, the sun was in the western sky, and he tried to think
who he was. He looked at himself, and instead of being green he was a
dull brown and black. Then he saw his old skin clinging to the branch
and staring him in the face. It was just the same shape as when he was
in it, and he thought for a minute that he was dreaming. He rubbed his
head hard with his front legs to make sure he was awake, and then he
began to wonder which one he was. Sometimes he thought that the old skin
which clung to the bush was the Cicada that had lain so long in the
ground, and sometimes he thought that the soft, fat, new-looking one
was the Cicada. Or were both of them the Cicada? If he were only one of
the two, what would he do with the other?

While he was wondering about this in a sleepy way, an old Cicada from
across the river flew down beside him. He thought he would ask her, so
he waved his feelers as politely as he knew how, and said, "Excuse me,
Madam Cicada, for I am much puzzled. It took me seventeen years to grow
into a strong, crawling Cicada, and then in one day I separated. The
thinking, moving part of me is here, but the outside shell of me is
there on that branch. Now, which part is the real Cicada?"

"Why, that is easy enough," said the Madam Cicada; "You are _you_, of
course. The part that you cast off and left clinging to the branch was
very useful once. It kept you warm on cold days and cool on warm days,
and you needed it while you were only a crawling creature. But when
your wings were ready to carry you off to a higher and happier life,
then the skin that had been a help was in your way, and you did right to
wriggle out of it. It is no longer useful to you. Leave it where it is
and fly off to enjoy your new life. You will never have trouble if you
remember that the thinking part is the real _you_."

And then Madam Cicada and her new friend flew away to her home over the
river, and he saw many strange sights before he returned to the meadow.




[Illustration]

THE TREE FROG'S STORY


In all the meadow there was nobody who could tell such interesting
stories as the old Tree Frog. Even the Garter Snake, who had been there
the longest, and the old Cricket, who had lived in the farm-yard, could
tell no such exciting tales as the Tree Frog. All the wonderful things
of which he told had happened before he came to the meadow, and while he
was still a young Frog. None of his friends had known him then, but he
was an honest fellow, and they were sure that everything he told was
true: besides, they must be true, for how could a body ever think out
such remarkable tales from his own head?

When he first came to his home by the elm tree he was very thin, and
looked as though he had been sick. The Katydids who stayed near said
that he croaked in his sleep, and that, you know, is not what well and
happy Frogs should do.

One day when many of the meadow people were gathered around him, he told
them his story. "When I was a little fellow," he said, "I was strong and
well, and could leap farther than any other Frog of my size. I was
hatched in the pond beyond the farm-house, and ate my way from the egg
to the water outside like any other Frog. Perhaps I ought to say, 'like
any other Tadpole,' for, of course, I began life as a Tadpole. I played
and ate with my brothers and sisters, and little dreamed what trouble
was in store for me when I grew up. We were all in a hurry to be Frogs,
and often talked of what we would do and how far we would travel when we
were grown.

"Oh, how happy we were then! I remember the day when my hind legs began
to grow, and how the other Tadpoles crowded around me in the water and
swam close to me to feel the two little bunches that were to be legs. My
fore legs did not grow until later, and these bunches came just in front
of my tail."

"Your tail!" cried a puzzled young Cricket; "why, you haven't any tail!"

"I did have when I was a Tadpole," said the Tree Frog. "I had a
beautiful, wiggly little tail with which to swim through the waters of
the pond; but as my legs grew larger and stronger, my tail grew littler
and weaker, until there wasn't any tail left. By the time my tail was
gone I had four good legs, and could breathe through both my nose and
my skin. The knobs on the ends of my toes were sticky, so that I could
climb a tree, and then I was ready to start on my travels. Some of the
other Frogs started with me, but they stopped along the way, and at last
I was alone.

"I was a bold young fellow, and when I saw a great white thing among the
trees up yonder, I made up my mind to see what it was. There was a great
red thing in the yard beside it, but I liked the white one better. I
hopped along as fast as I could, for I did not then know enough to be
afraid. I got close up to them both, and saw strange, big creatures
going in and out of the red thing--the barn, as I afterward found it was
called. The largest creatures had four legs, and some of them had horns.
The smaller creatures had only two legs on which to walk, and two other
limbs of some sort with which they lifted and carried things. The
queerest thing about it was, that the smaller creatures seemed to make
the larger ones do whatever they wanted them to. They even made some of
them help do their work. You may not believe me, but what I tell you is
true. I saw two of the larger ones tied to a great load of dried grass
and pulling it into the barn.

"As you may guess, I stayed there a long time, watching these strange
creatures work. Then I went over toward the white thing, and that, I
found out, was the farm-house. Here were more of the two-legged
creatures, but they were dressed differently from those in the barn.
There were some bright-colored flowers near the house, and I crawled in
among them. There I rested until sunset, and then began my evening song.
While I was singing, one of the people from the house came out and found
me. She picked me up and carried me inside. Oh, how frightened I was! My
heart thumped as though it would burst, and I tried my best to get away
from her. She didn't hurt me at all, but she would not let me go.

"She put me in a very queer prison. At first, when she put me down on a
stone in some water, I did not know that I was in prison. I tried to hop
away, and--bump! went my head against something. Yet when I drew back, I
could see no wall there. I tried it again and again, and every time I
hurt my head. I tell you the truth, my friends, those walls were made of
something which one could see through."

"Wonderful!" exclaimed all the meadow people; "wonderful, indeed!"

"And at the top," continued the Tree Frog, "was something white over the
doorway into my prison. In the bottom were water and a stone, and from
the bottom to the top was a ladder. There I had to live for most of the
summer. I had enough to eat; but anybody who has been free cannot be
happy shut in. I watched my chance, and three times I got out when the
little door was not quite closed. Twice I was caught and put back. In
the pleasant weather, of course, I went to the top of the ladder, and
when it was going to rain I would go down again. Every time that I went
up or down, those dreadful creatures would put their faces up close to
my prison, and I could hear a roaring sound which meant they were
talking and laughing.

"The last time I got out, I hid near the door of the house, and although
they hunted and hunted for me, they didn't find me. After they stopped
hunting, the wind blew the door open, and I hopped out."

"You don't say!" exclaimed a Grasshopper.

"Yes, I hopped out and scrambled away through the grass as fast as ever
I could. You people who have never been in prison cannot think how
happy I was. It seemed to me that just stretching my legs was enough to
make me wild with joy. Well, I came right here, and you were all kind to
me, but for a long time I could not sleep without dreaming that I was
back in prison, and I would croak in my sleep at the thought of it."

"I heard you," cried the Katydid, "and I wondered what was the matter."

"Matter enough," said the Tree Frog. "It makes my skin dry to think of
it now. And, friends, the best way I can ever repay your kindness to me,
is to tell you to never, never, never, never go near the farm-house."

And they all answered, "We never will."




[Illustration]

THE DAY WHEN THE GRASS WAS CUT.


There came a day when all the meadow people rushed back and forth,
waving their feelers and talking hurriedly to each other. The fat old
Cricket was nowhere to be seen. He said that one of his legs was lame
and he thought it best to stay quietly in his hole. The young Crickets
thought he was afraid. Perhaps he was, but he said that he was lame.

All the insects who had holes crawled into them carrying food. Everybody
was anxious and fussy, and some people were even cross. It was all
because the farmer and his men had come into the meadow to cut the
grass. They began to work on the side nearest the road, but every step
which the Horses took brought the mower nearer to the people who lived
in the middle of the meadow or down toward the river.

"I have seen this done before," said the Garter Snake. "I got away from
the big mower, and hid in the grass by the trees, or by the stumps where
the mower couldn't come. Then the men came and cut that grass with their
scythes, and I had to wriggle away over the short, sharp grass-stubble
to my hole. When they get near me this time, I shall go into my hole and
stay there."

"They are not so bad after all," said the Tree Frog. "I like them better
out-of-doors than I did in the house. They saw me out here once and
didn't try to catch me."

A Meadow Mouse came hurrying along. "I must get home to my babies," she
said. "They will be frightened if I am not there."

"Much good you can do when you are there!" growled a voice down under
her feet. She was standing over the hole where the fat old Cricket was
with his lame leg.

The mother Meadow Mouse looked rather angry for a minute, and then she
answered: "I'm not so very large and strong, but I can squeak and let
the Horses know where the nest is. Then they won't step on it. Last year
I had ten or twelve babies there, and one of the men picked them up and
looked at them and then put them back. I was so frightened that my fur
stood on end and I shook like June grass in the wind."

"Humph! Too scared to run away," said the voice under her feet.

"Mothers don't run away and leave their children in danger," answered
the Meadow Mouse. "I think it is a great deal braver to be brave when
you are afraid than it is to be brave when you're not afraid." She
whisked her long tail and scampered off through the grass. She did not
go the nearest way to her nest because she thought the Garter Snake
might be watching. She didn't wish him to know where she lived. She knew
he was fond of young Mice, and didn't want him to come to see her babies
while she was away. She said he was not a good friend for young
children.

"We don't mind it at all," said the Mosquitoes from the lower part of
the meadow. "We are unusually hungry today anyway, and we shall enjoy
having the men come."

"Nothing to make such a fuss over," said a Milkweed Butterfly. "Just
crawl into your holes or fly away."

"Sometimes they step on the holes and close them," said an Ant. "What
would you do if you were in a hole and it stopped being a hole and was
just earth?"

"Crawl out, I suppose," answered the Milkweed Butterfly with a careless
flutter.

"Yes," said the Ant, "but I don't see what there would be to crawl out
through."

The Milkweed Butterfly was already gone. Butterflies never worry about
anything very long, you know.

"Has anybody seen the Measuring Worm?" asked the Katydid. "Where is he?"

"Oh, I'm up a tree," answered a pleasant voice above their heads, "but I
sha'n't be up a tree very long. I shall come down when the grass is
cut."

"Oh, dear, dear, dear!" cried the Ants, hurrying around. "We can't think
what we want to do. We don't know what we ought to do. We can't think
and we don't know, and we don't think that we ought to!"

"Click!" said a Grasshopper, springing into the air. "We must hurry,
hurry, hurry!" He jumped from a stalk of pepper-grass to a plantain.
"We _must_ hurry," he said, and he jumped from the plantain back to the
pepper-grass.

Up in the tree where the Measuring Worm was, some Katydids were sitting
on a branch and singing shrilly: "Did you ever? Did you ever? Ever?
Ever? Ever? Did you ever?" And this shows how much excited they were,
for they usually sang only at night.

Then the mower came sweeping down the field, drawn by the Blind Horse
and the Dappled Gray, and guided by the farmer himself. The dust rose in
clouds as they passed, the Grasshoppers gave mighty springs which took
them out of the way, and all the singing and shrilling stopped until the
mower had passed. The nodding grasses swayed and fell as the sharp
knives slid over the ground. "We are going to be hay," they said, "and
live in the big barn."

"Now we shall grow some more tender green blades," said the grass roots.

"Fine weather for haying," snorted the Dappled Gray. "We'll cut all the
grass in this field before noon."

"Good feeling ground to walk on," said the Blind Horse, tossing his head
until the harness jingled.

Then the Horses and the farmer and the mower passed far away, and the
meadow people came together again.

"Well," said the Tree Frog. "That's over for a while."

The Ants and the Grasshoppers came back to their old places. "We did
just the right thing," they cried joyfully. "We got out of the way."

The Measuring Worm and the Katydids came down from their tree as the
Milkweed Butterfly fluttered past. "The men left the grass standing
around the Meadow Mouse's nest," said the Milkweed Butterfly, "and the
Cows up by the barn are telling how glad they will be to have the hay
when the cold weather comes."

"Grass must grow and hay be cut," said the wise old Tree Frog, "and when
the time comes we always know what to do. Puk-rup! Puk-r-r-rup!"

"I think," said the fat old Cricket, as he crawled out of his hole,
"that my lame leg is well enough to use. There is nothing like rest for
a lame leg."




[Illustration]

The GRASSHOPPER and the MEASURING WORM RUN a RACE


A few days after the Measuring Worm came to the meadow he met the
Grasshoppers. Everybody had heard of the Caterpillars' wish to be
fashionable, and some of the young Grasshoppers, who did not know that
it was all a joke, said they would like to teach the Measuring Worm a
few things. So when they met him the young Grasshoppers began to make
fun of him, and asked him what he did if he wanted to run, and whether
he didn't wish his head grew on the middle of his back so that he could
see better when walking.

The Measuring Worm was good-natured, and only said that he found his
head useful where it was. Soon one fine-looking Grasshopper asked him to
race. "That will show," said the Grasshopper, "which is the better
traveller."

The Measuring Worm said: "Certainly, I will race with you to-morrow, and
we will ask all our friends to look on." Then he began talking about
something else. He was a wise young fellow, as well as a jolly one, and
he knew the Grasshoppers felt sure that he would be beaten. "If I cannot
win the race by swift running," thought he, "I must try to win it by
good planning." So he got the Grasshoppers to go with him to a place
where the sweet young grass grew, and they all fed together.

The Measuring Worm nibbled only a little here and there, but he talked a
great deal about the sweetness of the grass, and how they would not get
any more for a long time because the hot weather would spoil it. And the
Grasshoppers said to each other: "He is right, and we must eat all we
can while we have it." So they ate, and ate, and ate, and ate, until
sunset, and in the morning they awakened and began eating again. When
the time for the race came, they were all heavy and stupid from so much
eating,--which was exactly what the Measuring Worm wanted.

The Tree Frog, the fat, old Cricket, and a Caterpillar were chosen to be
the judges, and the race was to be a long one,--from the edge of the
woods to the fence. When the meadow people were all gathered around to
see the race, the Cricket gave a shrill chirp, which meant "Go!" and off
they started. That is to say, the Measuring Worm started. The
Grasshopper felt so sure he could beat that he wanted to give the
Measuring Worm a little the start, because then, you see, he could say
he had won without half trying.

The Measuring Worm started off at a good, steady rate, and when he had
gone a few feet the Grasshopper gave a couple of great leaps, which
landed him far ahead of the Worm. Then he stopped to nibble a blade of
grass and visit with some Katydids who were looking on. By and by he
took a few more leaps and passed the Measuring Worm again. This time he
began to show off by jumping up straight into the air, and when he came
down he would call out to those who stood near to see how strong he was
and how easy it would be for him to win the race. And everybody said,
"How strong he is, to be sure!" "What wonderful legs he has!" and "He
could beat the Measuring Worm with his eyes shut!" which made the
Grasshopper so exceedingly vain that he stopped more and more often to
show his strength and daring.

That was the way it went, until they were only a short distance from the
end of the race course. The Grasshopper was more and more pleased to
think how easily he was winning, and stopped for a last time to nibble
grass and make fun of the Worm. He gave a great leap into the air, and
when he came down there was the Worm on the fence! All the meadow people
croaked, and shrilled, and chirped to see the way in which the race
ended, and the Grasshopper was very much vexed. "You shouldn't call him
the winner," he said; "I can travel ten times as fast as he, if I try."

"Yes," answered the judges, "we all know that, yet the winning of the
race is not decided by what you might do, but by what you did do." And
the meadow people all cried: "Long live the Measuring Worm! Long live
the Measuring Worm!"




[Illustration]

MR GREEN FROG AND HIS VISITORS


One day a young Frog who lived down by the river, came hopping up
through the meadow. He was a fine-looking fellow, all brown and green,
with a white vest, and he came to see the sights. The oldest Frog on the
river bank had told him that he ought to travel and learn to know the
world, so he had started at once.

Young Mr. Green Frog had very big eyes, and they stuck out from his head
more than ever when he saw all the strange sights and heard all the
strange sounds of the meadow. Yet he made one great mistake, just as
bigger and better people sometimes do when they go on a journey; he
didn't try to learn from the things he saw, but only to show off to the
meadow people how much he already knew, and he boasted a great deal of
the fine way in which he lived when at home.

Mr. Green Frog told those whom he met that the meadow was dreadfully
dry, and that he really could not see how they lived there. He said they
ought to see the lovely soft mud that there was in the marsh, and that
there the people could sit all day with their feet in water in among the
rushes where the sunshine never came. "And then," he said, "to eat grass
as the Grasshoppers did! If they would go home with him, he would show
them how to live."

The older Grasshoppers and Crickets and Locusts only looked at each
other and opened their funny mouths in a smile, but the young ones
thought Mr. Green Frog must be right, and they wanted to go back with
him. The old Hoppers told them that they wouldn't like it down there,
and that they would be sorry that they had gone; still the young ones
teased and teased and teased and teased until everybody said: "Well, let
them go, and then perhaps they will be contented when they return."

At last they all set off together,--Mr. Green Frog and the young meadow
people. Mr. Green Frog took little jumps all the way and bragged and
bragged. The Grasshoppers went in long leaps, the Crickets scampered
most of the way, and the Locusts fluttered. It was a very gay little
party, and they kept saying to each other, "What a fine time we shall
have!"

When they got to the marsh, Mr. Green Frog went in first with a soft
"plunk" in the mud. The rest all followed and tried to make believe that
they liked it, but they didn't--they didn't at all. The Grasshoppers
kept bumping against the tough, hard rushes when they jumped, and then
that would tumble them over on their backs in the mud, and there they
would lie, kicking their legs in the air, until some friendly Cricket
pushed them over on their feet again. The Locusts couldn't fly at all
there, and the Crickets got their shiny black coats all grimy and
horrid.

They all got cold and wet and tired--yes, and hungry too, for there were
no tender green things growing in among the rushes. Still they pretended
to have a good time, even while they were thinking how they would like
to be in their dear old home.

After the sun went down in the west it grew colder still, and all the
Frogs in the marsh began to croak to the moon, croaking so loudly that
the tired little travellers could not sleep at all. When the Frogs
stopped croaking and went to sleep in the mud, one tired Cricket said:
"If you like this, _stay_. I am going home as fast as my six little legs
will carry me." And all the rest of the travellers said: "So am I," "So
am I," "So am I."

Mr. Green Frog was sleeping soundly, and they crept away as quietly as
they could out into the silvery moonlight and up the bank towards home.
Such a tired little party as they were, and so hungry that they had to
stop and eat every little while. The dew was on the grass and they could
not get warm.

The sun was just rising behind the eastern forest when they got home.
They did not want to tell about their trip at all, but just ate a lot
of pepper-grass to make them warm, and then rolled themselves in between
the woolly mullein leaves to rest all day long. And that was the last
time any of them ever went away with a stranger.




[Illustration]

THE DIGNIFIED WALKING-STICKS.


Three Walking-Sticks from the forest had come to live in the big maple
tree near the middle of the meadow. Nobody knew exactly why they had
left the forest, where all their sisters and cousins and aunts lived.
Perhaps they were not happy with their relatives. But then, if one is a
Walking-Stick, you know, one does not care so very much about one's
family.

These Walking-Sticks had grown up the best way they could, with no
father or mother to care for them. They had never been taught to do
anything useful, or to think much about other people. When they were
hungry they ate some leaves, and never thought what they should eat the
next time that they happened to be hungry. When they were tired they
went to sleep, and when they had slept enough they awakened. They had
nothing to do but to eat and sleep, and they did not often take the
trouble to think. They felt that they were a little better than those
meadow people who rushed and scrambled and worked from morning until
night, and they showed very plainly how they felt. They said it was not
genteel to hurry, no matter what happened.

One day the Tree Frog was under the tree when the large Brown
Walking-Stick decided to lay some eggs. He saw her dropping them
carelessly around on the ground, and asked, "Do you never fix a place
for your eggs?"

"A place?" said the Brown Walking-Stick, waving her long and slender
feelers to and fro. "A place? Oh, no! I think they will hatch where they
are. It is too much trouble to find a place."

"Puk-r-r-rup!" said the Tree Frog. "Some mothers do not think it too
much trouble to be careful where they lay eggs."

"That may be," said the Brown Walking-Stick, "but they do not belong to
our family." She spoke as if those who did not belong to her family
might be good but could never be genteel. She had once told her brother,
the Five-Legged Walking-Stick, that she would not want to live if she
could not be genteel. She thought the meadow people very common.

The Five-Legged Walking-Stick looked much like his sister. He had the
same long, slender body, the same long feelers, and the same sort of
long, slender legs. If you had passed them in a hay-field, you would
surely have thought each a stem of hay, unless you happened to see them
move. The other Walking-Stick, their friend, was younger and green. You
would have thought her a blade of grass.

It is true that the brother had the same kind of legs as his sister,
but he did not have the same number. When he was young and green he had
six, then came a dreadful day when a hungry Nuthatch saw him, flew down,
caught him, and carried him up a tree. He knew just what to expect, so
when the Nuthatch set him down on the bark to look at him, he unhooked
his feet from the bark and tumbled to the ground. The Nuthatch tried to
catch him and broke off one of his legs, but she never found him again,
although she looked and looked and looked and looked. That was because
he crawled into a clump of ferns and kept very still.

His sister came and looked at him and said, "Now if you were only a
Spider it would not be long before you would have six legs again."

Her brother waved first one feeler and then the other, and said: "Do you
think I would be a Spider for the sake of growing legs? I would rather
be a Walking-Stick without any legs than to be a Spider with a
hundred." Of course, you know, Spiders never do have a hundred, and a
Walking-Stick wouldn't be walking without any, but that was just his way
of speaking, and it showed what kind of insect he was. His relatives all
waved their feelers, one at a time, and said, "Ah, he has the true
Walking-Stick spirit!" Then they paid no more attention to him, and
after a while he and his sister and their green little friend left the
forest for the meadow.

On the day when the grass was cut, they had sat quietly in their trees
and looked genteel. Their feelers were held quite close together, and
they did not move their feet at all, only swayed their bodies gracefully
from side to side. Now they were on the ground, hunting through the flat
piles of cut grass for some fresh and juicy bits to eat. The Tree Frog
was also out, sitting in a cool, damp corner of the grass rows. The
young Grasshoppers were kicking up their feet, the Ants were scrambling
around as busy as ever, and life went on quite as though neither men nor
Horses had ever entered the meadow.

"See!" cried a Spider who was busily looking after her web, "there comes
a Horse drawing something, and the farmer sitting on it and driving."

When the Horse was well into the meadow, the farmer moved a bar, and the
queer-looking machine began to kick the grass this way and that with its
many stiff and shining legs. A frisky young Grasshopper kicked in the
same way, and happened--just happened, of course--to knock over two of
his friends. Then there was a great scrambling and the Crickets
frolicked with them. The young Walking-Stick thought it looked like
great fun and almost wished herself some other kind of insect, so that
she could tumble around in the same way. She did not quite wish it, you
understand, and would never have thought of it if she had turned brown.

"Ah," said the Five-Legged Walking-Stick, "what scrambling! How very
common!"

"Yes, indeed!" said his sister. "Why can't they learn to move slowly and
gracefully? Perhaps they can't help being fat, but they might at least
act genteel."

"What is it to be genteel?" asked a Grasshopper suddenly. He had heard
every word that the Walking-Stick said.

"Why," said the Five-Legged Walking-Stick, "it is just to be genteel. To
act as you see us act, and to----"

Just here the hay-tedder passed over them, and every one of the
Walking-Sticks was sent flying through the air and landed on his back.
The Grasshoppers declare that the Walking-Sticks tumbled and kicked and
flopped around in a dreadfully common way until they were right side
up. "Why," said the Measuring Worm, "you act like anybody else when the
hay-tedder comes along!"

The Walking-Sticks looked very uncomfortable, and the brother and sister
could not think of anything to say. It was the young green one who spoke
at last. "I think," said she, "that it is much easier to act genteel
when one is right side up."




[Illustration]

THE DAY OF THE GREAT STORM


Everything in the meadow was dry and dusty. The leaves on the milkweeds
were turning yellow with thirst, the field blossoms drooped their dainty
heads in the sunshine, and the grass seemed to fairly rattle in the
wind, it was so brown and dry.

All of the meadow people when they met each other would say, "Well, this
_is_ hot," and the Garter Snake, who had lived there longer than anyone
else, declared that it was the hottest and driest time that he had ever
known. "Really," he said, "it is so hot that I cannot eat, and such a
thing never happened before."

The Grasshoppers and Locusts were very happy, for such weather was
exactly what they liked. They didn't see how people could complain of
such delightful scorching days. But that, you know, is always the way,
for everybody cannot be suited at once, and all kinds of weather are
needed to make a good year.

The poor Tree Frog crawled into the coolest place he could find--hollow
trees, shady nooks under the ferns, or even beneath the corner of a
great stone. "Oh," said he, "I wish I were a Tadpole again, swimming in
a shady pool. It is such a long, hot journey to the marsh that I cannot
go. Last night I dreamed that I was a Tadpole, splashing in the water,
and it was hard to awaken and find myself only an uncomfortable old Tree
Frog."

Over his head the Katydids were singing, "Lovely weather! Lovely
weather!" and the Tree Frog, who was a good-natured old fellow after
all, winked his eye at them and said: "Sing away. This won't last
always, and then it will be my turn to sing."

Sure enough, the very next day a tiny cloud drifted across the sky, and
the Tree Frog, who always knew when the weather was about to change,
began his rain-song. "Pukr-r-rup!" sang he, "Pukr-r-rup! It will rain!
It will rain! R-r-r-rain!"

The little white cloud, grew bigger and blacker, and another came
following after, then another, and another, and another, until the sky
was quite covered with rushing black clouds. Then came a long, low
rumble of thunder, and all the meadow people hurried to find shelter.
The Moths and Butterflies hung on the under sides of great leaves. The
Grasshoppers and their cousins crawled under burdock and mullein plants.
The Ants scurried around to find their own homes. The Bees and Wasps,
who had been gathering honey for their nests, flew swiftly back.
Everyone was hurrying to be ready for the shower, and above all the
rustle and stir could be heard the voice of the old Frog, "Pukr-r-rup!
Pukr-r-rup! It will rain! It will rain! R-r-r-rain!"

The wind blew harder and harder, the branches swayed and tossed, the
leaves danced, and some even blew off of their mother trees; the
hundreds of little clinging creatures clung more and more tightly to the
leaves that sheltered them, and then the rain came, and such a rain!
Great drops hurrying down from the sky, crowding each other, beating
down the grass, flooding the homes of the Ants and Digger Wasps until
they were half choked with water, knocking over the Grasshoppers and
tumbling them about like leaves. The lightning flashed, and the thunder
pealed, and often a tree would crash down in the forest near by when the
wind blew a great blast.

When everybody was wet, and little rivulets of water were trickling
through the grass and running into great puddles in the hollows, the
rain stopped, stopped suddenly. One by one the meadow people crawled or
swam into sight.

The Digger Wasp was floating on a leaf in a big puddle. He was too tired
and wet to fly, and the whirling of the leaf made him feel sick and
dizzy, but he stood firmly on his tiny boat and tried to look as though
he enjoyed it.

The Ants were rushing around to put their homes in shape, the Spiders
were busily eating their old webs, which had been broken and torn in the
storm, and some were already beginning new ones. A large family of Bees,
whose tree-home had been blown down, passed over the meadow in search
for a new dwelling, and everybody seemed busy and happy in the cool air
that followed the storm.

The Snake went gliding through the wet grass, as hungry as ever, the
Tree Frog was as happy as when he was a Tadpole, and only the
Grasshoppers and their cousins, the Locusts and Katydids, were cross.
"Such a horrid rain!" they grumbled, "it spoiled all our fun. And after
such lovely hot weather too."

"Now don't be silly," said the Tree Frog, who could be really severe
when he thought best, "the Bees and the Ants are not complaining, and
they had a good deal harder time than you. Can't you make the best of
anything? A nice, hungry, cross lot you would be if it didn't rain,
because then you would have no good, juicy food. It's better for you in
the end as it is, but even if it were not, you might make the best of it
as I did of the hot weather. When you have lived as long as I have, you
will know that neither Grasshoppers nor Tree Frogs can have their way
all the time, but that it always comes out all right in the end without
their fretting about it."




[Illustration]

THE STORY OF LILY PAD ISLAND


This is the story of a venturesome young Spider, who left his home in
the meadow to seek his fortune in the great world.

He was a beautiful Spider, and belonged to one of the best families in
the country around. He was a worker, too, for, as he had often said,
there wasn't a lazy leg on his body, and he could spin the biggest,
strongest, and shiniest web in the meadow. All the young people in the
meadow liked him, and he was invited to every party, or dance, or
picnic that they planned. If he had been content to stay at home, as his
brothers and sisters were, he would in time have become as important and
well known as the Tree Frog, or the fat, old Cricket, or even as the
Garter Snake.

But that would not satisfy him at all, and one morning he said "Good-by"
to all his friends and relatives, and set sail for unknown lands. He set
sail, but not on water. He crawled up a tree, and out to the end of one
of its branches. There he began spinning a long silken rope, and letting
the wind blow it away from the tree. He held fast to one end, and when
the wind was quite strong, he let go of the branch and sailed off
through the air, carried by his rope balloon, and blown along by the
wind.

The meadow people, on the ground below, watched him until he got so far
away that he looked about as large as a Fly, and then he looked no
bigger than an Ant, and then no bigger than a clover seed, and then no
bigger than the tiniest egg that was ever laid, and then--well, then you
could see nothing but sky, and the Spider was truly gone. The other
young Spiders all wished that they had gone, and the old Spiders said,
"They might much better stay at home, as their fathers and mothers had
done." There was no use talking about it when they disagreed so, and
very little more was said.

Meanwhile, the young traveller was having a very fine time. He was
carried past trees and over fences, down toward the river. Under him
were all the bright flowers of the meadow, and the bushes which used to
tower above his head. After a while, he saw the rushes of the marsh
below him, and wondered if the Frogs there would see him as he passed
over them.

Next, he saw a beautiful, shining river, and in the quiet water by the
shore were great white water-lilies growing, with their green leaves,
or pads, floating beside them. "Ah," thought he, "I shall pass over the
river, and land on the farther side," and he began to think of eating
his rope balloon, so that he might sink slowly to the ground, when--the
wind suddenly stopped blowing, and he began falling slowly down, down,
down, down.

How he longed for a branch to cling to! How he shivered at the thought
of plunging into the cold water! How he wished that he had always stayed
at home! How he thought of all the naughty things that he had ever done,
and was sorry that he had done them! But it was of no use, for still he
went down, down, down. He gave up all hope and tried to be brave, and at
that very minute he felt himself alight on a great green lily-pad.

This was indeed an adventure, and he was very joyful for a little while.
But he got hungry, and there was no food near. He walked all over the
leaf, Lily-Pad Island he named it, and ran around its edges as many as
forty times. It was just a flat, green island, and at one side was a
perfect white lily, which had grown, so pure and beautiful, out of the
darkness and slime of the river bottom. The lily was so near that he
jumped over to it. There he nestled in its sweet, yellow centre, and
went to sleep.

When he fell asleep it was late in the afternoon, and, as the sun sank
lower and lower in the west, the lily began to close her petals and get
ready for the night. She was just drawing under the water when the
Spider awakened. It was dark and close, and he felt himself shut in and
going down. He scrambled and pushed, and got out just in time to give a
great leap and alight on Lily Pad-Island once more. And then he was in a
sad plight. He was hungry and cold, and night was coming on, and, what
was worst of all, in his great struggle to free himself from the lily
he had pulled off two of his legs, so he had only six left.

He never liked to think of that night afterward, it was so dreadful. In
the morning he saw a leaf come floating down the stream; he watched it;
it touched Lily-Pad Island for just an instant and he jumped on. He did
not know where it would take him, but anything was better than staying
where he was and starving. It might float to the shore, or against one
of the rushes that grew in the shallower parts of the river. If it did
that, he would jump off and run up to the top and set sail again, but
the island, where he had been, was too low to give him a start.

He went straight down-stream for a while, then the leaf drifted into a
little eddy, and whirled around and around, until the Spider was almost
too dizzy to stand on it. After that, it floated slowly, very slowly,
toward the shore, and at last came the joyful minute when the Spider
could jump to some of the plants that grew in the shallow water, and, by
making rope bridges from one to another, get on solid ground.

After a few days' rest he started back to the meadow, asking his way of
every insect that he met. When he got home they did not know him, he was
so changed, but thought him only a tramp Spider, and not one of their
own people. His mother was the first one to find out who he was, and
when her friends said, "Just what I expected! He might have known
better," she hushed them, and answered: "The poor child has had a hard
time, and I won't scold him for going. He has learned that home is the
best place, and that home friends are the dearest. I shall keep him
quiet while his new legs are growing, and then, I think, he will spin
his webs near the old place."

And so he did, and is now one of the steadiest of all the meadow
people. When anybody asks him his age, he refuses to tell, "For," he
says, "most of me is middle-aged, but these two new legs of mine are
still very young."




[Illustration]

THE GRASSHOPPER WHO WOULDN'T BE SCARED.


There were more Ants in the meadow than there were of any other kind of
insects. In their family there were not only Ants, but great-aunts,
cousins, nephews, and nieces, until it made one sleepy to think how many
relatives each Ant had. Yet they were small people and never noisy, so
perhaps the Grasshoppers seemed to be the largest family there.

There were many different families of Grasshoppers, but they were all
related. Some had short horns, or feelers, and red legs; and some had
long horns. Some lived in the lower part of the meadow where it was
damp, and some in the upper part. The Katydids, who really belong to
this family, you know, stayed in trees and did not often sing in the
daytime. Then there were the great Road Grasshoppers who lived only in
places where the ground was bare and dusty, and whom you could hardly
see unless they were flying. When they lay in the dust their wide wings
were hidden and they showed only that part of their bodies which was
dust-color. Let the farmer drive along, however, and they rose into the
air with a gentle, whirring sound and fluttered to a safe place. Then
one could see them plainly, for their large under wings were black with
yellow edges.

Perhaps those Grasshoppers who were best known in the meadow were the
Clouded Grasshoppers, large dirty-brown ones with dark spots, who seemed
to be everywhere during the autumn. The fathers and brothers in this
family always crackled their wings loudly when they flew anywhere, so
one could never forget that they were around.

It was queer that they were always spoken of as Grasshoppers. Their
great-great-great-grandparents were called Locusts, and that was the
family name, but the Cicadas liked that name and wanted it for
themselves, and made such a fuss about it that people began to call them
Seventeen-Year-Locusts; and then because they had to call the real
Locusts something else, they called them Grasshoppers. The Grasshoppers
didn't mind this. They were jolly and noisy, and as they grew older were
sometimes very pompous. And you know what it is to be pompous.

When the farmer was drawing the last loads of hay to his barn and
putting them away in the great mows there, three young Clouded
Grasshopper brothers were frolicking near the wagon. They had tried to
see who could run the fastest, crackle the loudest, spring the highest,
flutter the farthest, and eat the most. There seemed to be nothing more
to do. They couldn't eat another mouthful, the other fellows wouldn't
play with them, they wouldn't play with their sisters, and they were not
having any fun at all.

They were sitting on a hay-cock, watching the wagon as it came nearer
and nearer. The farmer was on top and one of his men was walking beside
it. Whenever they came to a hay-cock the farmer would stop the Horses,
the man would run a long-handled, shining pitch-fork into the hay on the
ground and throw it up to the farmer. Then it would be trampled down on
to the load, the farmer's wife would rake up the scattering hay which
was left on the ground, and that would be thrown up also.

The biggest Clouded Grasshopper said to his brothers, "You dare not sit
still while they put this hay on the load!"

The smallest Clouded Grasshopper said, "I do too!"

The second brother said, "Huh! Guess I dare do anything you do!" He said
it in a rather mean way, and that may have been because he had eaten too
much. Overeating will make any insect cross.

Now every one of them was afraid, but each waited for the others to back
out. While they were waiting, the wagon stopped beside them, the shining
fork was run into the hay, and they were shaken and stood on their heads
and lifted through the air on to the wagon. There they found themselves
all tangled up with hay in the middle of the load. It was dark and they
could hardly breathe. There were a few stems of nettles in the hay, and
they had to crawl away from them. It was no fun at all, and they didn't
talk very much.

When the wagon reached the barn, they were pitched into the mow with
the hay, and then they hopped and fluttered around until they were on
the floor over the Horses' stalls. They sat together on the floor and
wondered how they could ever get back to the meadow. Because they had
come in the middle of the load, they did not know the way.

"Oh!" said they. "Who are those four-legged people over there?"

"Kittens!" sang a Swallow over their heads. "Oh, tittle-ittle-ittle-ee!"

The Clouded Grasshoppers had never seen Kittens. It is true that the old
Cat often went hunting in the meadow, but that was at night, when
Grasshoppers were asleep.

"Meouw!" said the Yellow Kitten. "Look at those queer little brown
people on the floor. Let's each catch one."

So the Kittens began crawling slowly over the floor, keeping their
bodies and tails low, and taking very short steps. Not one of them took
his eyes off the Clouded Grasshopper whom he meant to catch. Sometimes
they stopped and crouched and watched, then they went on, nearer,
nearer, nearer, still, while the Clouded Grasshoppers were more and more
scared and wished they had never left the meadow where they had been so
safe and happy.

At last the Kittens jumped, coming down with their sharp little claws
just where the Clouded Grasshoppers--had been. The Clouded Grasshoppers
had jumped too, but they could not stay long in the air, and when they
came down the Kittens jumped again. So it went until the poor Clouded
Grasshoppers were very, very tired and could not jump half so far as
they had done at first. Sometimes the Kittens even tried to catch them
while they were fluttering, and each time they came a little nearer than
before. They were so tired that they never thought of leaping up on the
wall of the barn where the Kittens couldn't reach them.

At last the smallest Clouded Grasshopper called to his brothers, "Let us
chase the Kittens."

The brothers answered, "They're too big."

The smallest Clouded Grasshopper, who had always been the brightest one
in the family, called back, "We may scare them if they are big."

Then all the Clouded Grasshoppers leaped toward the Kittens and crackled
their wings and looked very, very fierce. And the Kittens ran away as
fast as they could. They were in such a hurry to get away that the
Yellow Kitten tumbled over the White Kitten and they rolled on the floor
in a furry little heap. The Clouded Grasshoppers leaped again, and the
Kittens scrambled away to their nest in the hay, and stood against the
wall and raised their backs and their pointed little tails, and opened
their pink mouths and spat at them, and said, "Ha-ah-h-h!"

"There!" said the smallest Clouded Grasshopper to them, "we won't do
anything to you this time, because you are young and don't know very
much, but don't you ever bother one of us again. We might have hopped
right on to you, and then what could you have done to help yourselves?"

The Clouded Grasshoppers started off to find their way back to the
meadow, and the frightened Kittens looked at each other and whispered:
"Just supposing they had hopped on to us! What _could_ we have done!"




[Illustration]

THE EARTHWORM HALF-BROTHERS


Early one wet morning, a long Earthworm came out of his burrow. He did
not really leave it, but he dragged most of his body out, and let just
the tip-end of it stay in the earth. Not having any eyes, he could not
see the heavy, gray clouds that filled the sky, nor the milkweed stalks,
so heavy with rain-drops that they drooped their pink heads. He could
not see these things, but he could feel the soft, damp grass, and the
cool, clear air, and as for seeing, why, Earthworms never do have eyes,
and never think of wanting them, any more than you would want six legs,
or feelers on your head.

This Earthworm had been out of his burrow only a little while, when
there was a flutter and a rush, and Something flew down from the sky and
bit his poor body in two. Oh, how it hurt! Both halves of him wriggled
and twisted with pain, and there is no telling what might have become of
them if another and bigger Something had not come rushing down to drive
the first Something away. So there the poor Earthworm lay, in two
aching, wriggling pieces, and although it had been easy enough to bite
him in two, nothing in the world could ever bite him into one.

After a while the aching stopped, and he had time to think. It was very
hard to decide what he ought to do. You can see just how puzzling it
must have been, for, if you should suddenly find yourself two people
instead of one, you would not know which one was which. At this very
minute, who should come along but the Cicada, and one of the Earthworm
pieces asked his advice. The Cicada thought that he was the very person
to advise in such a case, because he had had such a puzzling time
himself. So he said in a very knowing way: "Pooh! That is a simple
matter. I thought I was two Cicadas once, but I wasn't. The thinking,
moving part is the real one, whatever happens, so that part of the Worm
which thinks and moves is the real Worm."

"I am the thinking part," cried each of the pieces.

The Cicada rubbed his head with his front legs, he was so surprised.

"And I am the moving part," cried each of the pieces, giving a little
wriggle to prove it.

"Well, well, well, well!" exclaimed the Cicada, "I believe I don't know
how to settle this. I will call the Garter Snake," and he flew off to
get him.

A very queer couple they made, the Garter Snake and the Cicada, as they
came hurrying back from the Snake's home. The Garter Snake was quite
excited. "Such a thing has not happened in our meadow for a long time,"
he said, "and it is a good thing there is somebody here to explain it to
you, or you would be dreadfully frightened. My family is related to the
Worms, and I know. Both of you pieces are Worms now. The bitten ends
will soon be well, and you can keep house side by side, if you don't
want to live together."

"Well," said the Earthworms, "if we are no longer the same Worm, but two
Worms, are we related to each other? Are we brothers, or what?"

"Why," answered the Garter Snake, with a funny little smile, "I think
you might call yourselves half-brothers." And to this day they are known
as "the Earthworm half-brothers." They are very fond of each other and
are always seen together.

A jolly young Grasshopper, who is a great eater and thinks rather too
much about food, said he wouldn't mind being bitten into two
Grasshoppers, if it would give him two stomachs and let him eat twice as
much.

The Cicada told the Garter Snake this one day, and the Garter Snake
said: "Tell him not to try it. The Earthworms are the only meadow people
who can live after being bitten in two that way. The rest of us have to
be one, or nothing. And as for having two stomachs, he is just as well
off with one, for if he had two, he would get twice as hungry."




[Illustration]

A GOSSIPING FLY


Of all the people who lived and worked in the meadow by the river, there
was not one who gave so much thought to other people's business as a
certain Blue-bottle Fly. Why this should be so, nobody could say;
perhaps it was because he had nothing to do but eat and sleep, for that
is often the way with those who do little work.

Truly his cares were light. To be sure, he ate much, but then, with
nearly sixty teeth for nibbling and a wonderful long tongue for sucking,
he could eat a great deal in a very short time. And as for
sleeping--well, sleeping was as easy for him as for anyone else.

However it was, he saw nearly everything that happened, and thought it
over in his queer little three-cornered head until he was sure that he
ought to go to talk about it with somebody else. It was no wonder that
he saw so much, for he had a great bunch of eyes on each side of his
head, and three bright, shining ones on the very top of it. That let him
see almost everything at once, and beside this his neck was so
exceedingly slender that he could turn his head very far around.

This particular Fly, like all other Flies, was very fond of the sunshine
and kept closely at home in dark or wet weather. He had no house, but
stayed in a certain elder bush on cloudy days and called that his home.
He had spent all of one stormy day there, hanging on the under side of a
leaf, with nothing to do but think. Of course, his head was down and his
feet were up, but Blue-bottle Flies think in that position as well as
in any other, and the two sticky pads on each side of his six feet held
him there very comfortably.

He thought so much that day, that when the next morning dawned sunshiny
and clear, he had any number of things to tell people, and he started
out at once.

First he went to the Tree Frog. "What do you suppose," said he, "that
the Garter Snake is saying about you? It is very absurd, yet I feel that
you ought to know. He says that your tongue is fastened at the wrong
end, and that the tip of it points down your throat. Of course, I knew
it couldn't be true, still I thought I would tell you what he said, and
then you could see him and put a stop to it."

For an answer to this the Tree Frog ran out his tongue, and, sure
enough, it was fastened at the front end. "The Snake is quite right," he
said pleasantly, "and my tongue suits me perfectly. It is just what I
need for the kind of food I eat, and the best of all is that it never
makes mischief between friends."

After that, the Fly could say nothing more there, so he flew away in his
noisiest manner to find the Grasshopper who lost the race. "It was a
shame," said the Fly to him, "that the judges did not give the race to
you. The idea of that little green Measuring Worm coming in here, almost
a stranger, and making so much trouble! I would have him driven out of
the meadow, if I were you."

"Oh, that is all right," answered the Grasshopper, who was really a good
fellow at heart; "I was very foolish about that race for a time, but the
Measuring Worm and I are firm friends now. Are we not?" And he turned to
a leaf just back of him, and there, peeping around the edge, was the
Measuring Worm himself.

The Blue-bottle Fly left in a hurry, for where people were so
good-natured he could do nothing at all. He went this time to the
Crickets, whom he found all together by the fat, old Cricket's hole.

"I came," he said, "to find out if it were true, as the meadow people
say, that you were all dreadfully frightened when the Cow came?"

The Crickets answered never a word, but they looked at each other and
began asking him questions.

"Is it true," said one, "that you do nothing but eat and sleep?"

"Is it true," said another, "that your eyes are used most of the time
for seeing other people's faults?"

"And is it true," said another, "that with all the fuss you make, you do
little but mischief?"

The Blue-bottle Fly answered nothing, but started at once for his home
in the elder bush, and they say that his three-cornered head was filled
with very different thoughts from any that had been there before.




[Illustration]

THE FROG-HOPPERS GO OUT INTO THE WORLD.


Along the upper edge of the meadow and in the corners of the rail fence
there grew golden-rod. During the spring and early summer you could
hardly tell that it was there, unless you walked close to it and saw the
slender and graceful stalks pushing upward through the tall grass and
pointing in many different ways with their dainty leaves. The Horses and
Cows knew it, and although they might eat all around it they never
pulled at it with their lips or ate it. In the autumn, each stalk was
crowned with sprays of tiny bright yellow blossoms, which nodded in the
wind and scattered their golden pollen all around. Then it sometimes
happened that people who were driving past would stop, climb over the
fence, and pluck some of it to carry away. Even then there was so much
left that one could hardly miss the stalks that were gone.

It may have been because the golden-rod was such a safe home that most
of the Frog-Hoppers laid their eggs there. Some laid eggs in other
plants and bushes, but most of them chose the golden-rod. After they had
laid their eggs they wandered around on the grass, the bushes, and the
few trees which grew in the meadow, hopping from one place to another
and eating a little here and a little there.

Nobody knows why they should have been called Frog-Hoppers, unless it
was because when you look them in the face they seem a very little like
tiny Frogs. To be sure, they have six legs, and teeth on the front pair,
as no real Frog ever thought of having. Perhaps it was only a nickname
because their own name was so long and hard to speak.

The golden-rod was beginning to show small yellow-green buds on the tips
of its stalks, and the little Frog-Hoppers were now old enough to talk
and wonder about the great world. On one stalk four Frog-Hopper brothers
and sisters lived close together. That was much pleasanter than having
to grow up all alone, as most young Frog-Hoppers do, never seeing their
fathers and mothers or knowing whether they ever would.

These four little Frog-Hoppers did not know how lucky they were, and
that, you know, happens very often when people have not seen others
lonely or unhappy. They supposed that every Frog-Hopper family had two
brothers and two sisters living together on a golden-rod stalk. They fed
on the juice or sap of the golden-rod, pumping it out of the stalk with
their stout little beaks and eating or drinking it. After they had eaten
it, they made white foam out of it, and this foam was all around them on
the stalk. Any one passing by could tell at once by the foam just where
the Frog-Hoppers lived.

One morning the oldest Frog-Hopper brother thought that the sap pumped
very hard. It may be that it did pump hard, and it may be that he was
tired or lazy. Anyway, he began to grumble and find fault. "This is the
worst stalk of golden-rod I ever saw in my life," he said. "It doesn't
pay to try to pump any more sap, and I just won't try, so there!"

He was quite right in saying that it was the worst stalk he had ever
seen, because he had never seen any other, but he was much mistaken in
saying that it didn't pay to pump sap, and as for saying that "it didn't
pay, so there!" we all know that when insects begin to talk in that way
the best thing to do is to leave them quite alone until they are
better-natured.

The other Frog-Hopper children couldn't leave him alone, because they
hadn't changed their skins for the last time. They had to stay in their
foam until that was done. After the big brother spoke in this way, they
all began to wonder if the sap didn't pump hard. Before long the big
sister wiggled impatiently and said, "My beak is dreadfully tired."

Then they all stopped eating and began to talk. They called their home
stuffy, and said there wasn't room to turn around in it without hitting
the foam. They didn't say why they should mind hitting the foam. It was
soft and clean, and always opened up a way when they pushed against it.

"I tell you what!" said the big brother, "after I've changed my skin
once more and gone out into the great world, you won't catch me hanging
around this old golden-rod."

"Nor me!" "Nor me!" "Nor me!" said the other young Frog-Hoppers.

"I wonder what the world is like," said the little sister. "Is it just
bigger foam and bigger golden-rod and more Frog-Hoppers?"

"Huh!" exclaimed her big brother. "What lots you know! If I didn't know
any more than that about it, I'd keep still and not tell anybody." That
made her feel badly, and she didn't speak again for a long time.

Then the little brother spoke. "I didn't know you had ever been out into
the world," he said.

"No," said the big brother, "I suppose you didn't. There are lots of
things you don't know." That made him feel badly, and he went off into
the farthest corner of the foam and stuck his head in between a
golden-rod leaf and the stalk. You see the big brother was very cross.
Indeed, he was exceedingly cross.

For a long time nobody spoke, and then the big sister said, "I wish you
would tell us what the world is like."

The big brother knew no more about the world than the other children,
but after he had been cross and put on airs he didn't like to tell the
truth. He might have known that he would be found out, yet he held up
his head and answered: "I don't suppose that I can tell you so that you
will understand, because you have never seen it. There are lots of
things there--whole lots of them--and it is very big. Some of the things
are like golden-rod and some of them are not. Some of them are not even
like foam. And there are a great many people there. They all have six
legs, but they are not so clever as we are. We shall have to tell them
things."

This was very interesting and made the little sister forget to pout and
the little brother come out of his foam-corner. He even looked as
though he might ask a few questions, so the big brother added, "Now
don't talk to me, for I must think about something."

It was not long after this that the young Frog-Hoppers changed their
skins for the last time. The outside part of the foam hardened and made
a little roof over them while they did this. Then they were ready to go
out into the meadow. The big brother felt rather uncomfortable, and it
was not his new skin which made him so. It was remembering what he had
said about the world outside.

When they had left their foam and their golden-rod, they had much to see
and ask about. Every little while one of the smaller Frog-Hoppers would
exclaim, "Why, you never told us about this!" or, "Why didn't you tell
us about that?"

Then the big brother would answer: "Yes, I did. That is one of the
things which I said were not like either golden-rod or foam."

For a while they met only Crickets, Ants, Grasshoppers, and other
six-legged people, and although they looked at each other they did not
have much to say. At last they hopped near to the Tree Frog, who was
sitting by the mossy trunk of a beech tree and looked so much like the
bark that they did not notice him at first. The big brother was very
near the Tree Frog's head.

"Oh, see!" cried the others. "There is somebody with only four legs, and
he doesn't look as though he ever had any more. Why, Brother, what does
this mean? You said everybody had six."

At this moment the Tree Frog opened his eyes a little and his mouth a
great deal, and shot out his quick tongue. When he shut his mouth again,
the big brother of the Frog-Hoppers was nowhere to be seen. They never
had a chance to ask him that question again. If they had but known it,
the Tree Frog at that minute had ten legs, for six and four are ten. But
then, they couldn't know it, for six were on the inside.




[Illustration]

THE MOSQUITO TRIES TO TEACH HIS NEIGHBORS


In this meadow, as in every other meadow since the world began, there
were some people who were always tired of the way things were, and
thought that, if the world were only different, they would be perfectly
happy. One of these discontented ones was a certain Mosquito, a fellow
with a whining voice and disagreeable manners. He had very little
patience with people who were not like him, and thought that the world
would be a much pleasanter place if all the insects had been made
Mosquitoes.

"What is the use of Spiders, and Dragon-flies, and Beetles, and
Butterflies?" he would say, fretfully; "a Mosquito is worth more than
any of them."

You can just see how unreasonable he was. Of course, Mosquitoes and
Flies do help keep the air pure and sweet, but that is no reason why
they should set themselves up above the other insects. Do not the Bees
carry pollen from one flower to another, and so help the plants raise
their Seed Babies? And who would not miss the bright, happy Butterflies,
with their work of making the world beautiful?

But this Mosquito never thought of those things, and he said to himself:
"Well, if they cannot all be Mosquitoes, they can at least try to live
like them, and I think I will call them together and talk it over." So
he sent word all around, and his friends and neighbors gathered to hear
what he had to say.

"In the first place," he remarked, "it is unfortunate that you are not
Mosquitoes, but, since you are not, one must make the best of it. There
are some things, however, which you might learn from us fortunate
creatures who are. For instance, notice the excellent habit of the
Mosquitoes in the matter of laying eggs. Three or four hundred of the
eggs are fastened together and left floating on a pond in such a way
that, when the babies break their shells, they go head first into the
water. Then they----"

"Do you think I would do that if I could?" interrupted a motherly old
Grasshopper. "Fix it so my children would drown the minute they came out
of the egg? No, indeed!" and she hurried angrily away, followed by
several other loving mothers.

"But they don't drown," exclaimed the Mosquito, in surprise.

"They don't if they're Mosquitoes," replied the Ant, "but I am thankful
to say my children are land babies and not water babies."

"Well, I won't say anything more about that, but I must speak of your
voices, which are certainly too heavy and loud to be pleasant. I should
think you might speak and sing more softly, even if you have no pockets
under your wings like mine. I flutter my wings, and the air strikes
these pockets and makes my sweet voice."

"Humph!" exclaimed a Bee, "it is a very poor place for pockets, and a
very poor use to make of them. Every Bee knows that pockets are handiest
on the hind legs, and should be used for carrying pollen to the babies
at home."

"My pocket is behind," said a Spider, "and my web silk is kept there. I
couldn't live without a pocket."

Some of the meadow people were getting angry, so the Garter Snake, who
would always rather laugh than quarrel, glided forward and said: "My
friends and neighbors; our speaker here has been so kind as to tell us
how the Mosquitoes do a great many things, and to try to teach us their
way. It seems to me that we might repay some of his kindness by showing
him our ways, and seeing that he learns by practice. I would ask the
Spiders to take him with them and show him how to spin a web. Then the
Bees could teach him how to build comb, and the Tree Frog how to croak,
and the Earthworms how to burrow, and the Caterpillars how to spin a
cocoon. Each of us will do something for him. Perhaps the Measuring Worm
will teach him to walk as the Worms of his family do. I understand he
does that very well." Here everybody laughed, remembering the joke
played on the Caterpillars, and the Snake stopped speaking.

The Mosquito did not dare refuse to be taught, and so he was taken from
one place to another, and told exactly how to do everything that he
could not possibly do, until he felt so very meek and humble that he was
willing the meadow people should be busy and happy in their own way.




[Illustration]

THE FROG WHO THOUGHT HERSELF SICK


By the edge of the marsh lived a young Frog, who thought a great deal
about herself and much less about other people. Not that it was wrong to
think so much of herself, but it certainly was unfortunate that she
should have so little time left in which to think of others and of the
beautiful world.

Early in the morning this Frog would awaken and lean far over the edge
of a pool to see how she looked after her night's rest. Then she would
give a spring, and come down with a splash in the cool water for her
morning bath. For a while she would swim as fast as her dainty webbed
feet would push her, then she would rest, sitting in the soft mud with
just her head above the water.

When her bath was taken, she had her breakfast, and that was the way in
which she began her day. She did nothing but bathe and eat and rest,
from sunrise to sunset. She had a fine, strong body, and had never an
ache or a pain, but one day she got to thinking, "What if sometime I
should be sick?" And then, because she thought about nothing but her own
self, she was soon saying, "I am afraid I shall be sick." In a little
while longer it was, "I certainly am sick."

She crawled under a big toadstool, and sat there looking very glum
indeed, until a Cicada came along. She told the Cicada how sick she
felt, and he told his cousins, the Locusts, and they told their cousins,
the Grasshoppers, and they told their cousins, the Katydids, and then
everybody told somebody else, and started for the toadstool where the
young Frog sat. The more she had thought of it, the worse she felt,
until, by the time the meadow people came crowding around, she was
feeling very sick indeed.

"Where do you feel badly?" they cried, and, "How long have you been
sick?" and one Cricket stared with big eyes, and said, "How
dr-r-readfully she looks!" The young Frog felt weaker and weaker, and
answered in a faint little voice that she had felt perfectly well until
after breakfast, but that now she was quite sure her skin was getting
dry, and "Oh dear!" and "Oh dear!"

Now everybody knows that Frogs breathe through their skins as well as
through their noses, and for a Frog's skin to get dry is very serious,
for then he cannot breathe through it; so, as soon as she said that,
everybody was frightened and wanted to do something for her at once.
Some of the timid ones began to weep, and the others bustled around,
getting in each other's way and all trying to do something different.
One wanted to wrap her in mullein leaves, another wanted her to nibble a
bit of the peppermint which grew near, a third thought she should be
kept moving, and that was the way it went.

Just when everybody was at his wits' end, the old Tree Frog came along.
"Pukr-r-rup! What is the matter with you?" he said.

"Oh!" gasped the young Frog, weakly, "I am sure my skin is getting dry,
and I feel as though I had something in my head."

"Umph!" grunted the Tree Frog to himself, "I guess there isn't enough in
her head to ever make her sick; and, as for her skin, it isn't dry yet,
and nobody knows that it ever will be."

But as he was a wise old fellow and had learned much about life, he knew
he must not say such things aloud. What he did say was, "I heard there
was to be a great race in the pool this morning."

The young Frog lifted her head quite quickly, saying: "You did? Who are
the racers?"

"Why, all the young Frogs who live around here. It is too bad that you
cannot go."

"I don't believe it would hurt me any," she said.

"You might take cold," the Tree Frog said; "besides, the exercise would
tire you."

"Oh, but I am feeling much better," the young Frog said, "and I am
certain it will do me good."

"You ought not to go," insisted all the older meadow people. "You really
ought not."

"I don't care," she answered, "I am going anyway, and I am just as well
as anybody."

And she did go, and it did seem that she was as strong as ever. The
people all wondered at it, but the Tree Frog winked his eyes at them and
said, "I knew that it would cure her." And then he, and the Garter
Snake, and the fat, old Cricket laughed together, and all the younger
meadow people wondered at what they were laughing.




[Illustration]

THE KATYDIDS' QUARREL


The warm summer days were past, and the Katydids came again to the
meadow. Everybody was glad to see them, and the Grasshoppers, who are
cousins of the Katydids, gave a party in their honor.

Such a time as the meadow people had getting ready for that party! They
did not have to change their dresses, but they scraped and cleaned
themselves, and all the young Grasshoppers went off by the woods to
practise jumping and get their knees well limbered, because there might
be games and dancing at the party, and then how dreadful it would be if
any young Grasshopper should find that two or three of his legs wouldn't
bend easily!

The Grasshoppers did not know at just what time they ought to have the
party. Some of the meadow people whom they wanted to invite were used to
sleeping all day, and some were used to sleeping all night, so it really
was hard to find an hour at which all would be wide-awake and ready for
fun. At last the Tree Frog said: "Pukr-r-rup! Pukr-r-rup! Have it at
sunset!" And at sunset it was.

Everyone came on time, and they hopped and chattered and danced and ate
a party supper of tender green leaves. Some of the little Grasshoppers
grew sleepy and crawled among the plantains for a nap. Just then a big
Katydid said he would sing a song--which was a very kind thing for him
to do, because he really did it to make the others happy, and not to
show what a fine musician he was. All the guests said, "How charming!"
or, "We should be delighted!" and he seated himself on a low swinging
branch. You know Katydids sing with the covers of their wings, and so
when he alighted on the branch he smoothed down his pale green suit and
rubbed his wing-cases a little to make sure that they were in tune. Then
he began loud and clear, "Katy did! Katy did!! Katy did!!!"

Of course he didn't mean any real Katy, but was just singing his song.
However, there was another Katydid there who had a habit of
contradicting, and he had eaten too much supper, and that made him feel
crosser than ever; so when the singer said "Katy did!" this cross fellow
jumped up and said, "Katy didn't! Katy didn't!! Katy didn't!!!" and they
kept at it, one saying that she did and the other that she didn't,
until everybody was ashamed and uncomfortable, and some of the little
Grasshoppers awakened and wanted to know what was the matter.

Both of the singers got more and more vexed until at last neither one
knew just what he was saying--and that, you know, is what almost always
happens when people grow angry. They just kept saying something as loud
and fast as possible and thought all the while that they were very
bright--which was all they knew about it.

Suddenly somebody noticed that the one who began to say "Katy did!" was
screaming "Katy didn't!" and the one who had said "Katy didn't!" was
roaring "Katy did!" Then they all laughed, and the two on the branch
looked at each other in a very shamefaced way.

The Tree Frog always knew the right thing to do, and he said
"Pukr-r-rup!" so loudly that all stopped talking at once. When they
were quiet he said: "We will now listen to a duet, 'Katy,' by the two
singers who are up the tree. All please join in the chorus." So it was
begun again, and both the leaders were good-natured, and all the
Katydids below joined in with "did or didn't, did or didn't, did or
didn't." And that was the end of the quarrel.




[Illustration]

THE LAST PARTY OF THE SEASON


Summer had been a joyful time in the meadow. It had been a busy time,
too, and from morning till night the chirping and humming of the happy
people there had mingled with the rustle of the leaves, and the soft
"swish, swish," of the tall grass, as the wind passed over it.

True, there had been a few quarrels, and some unpleasant things to
remember, but these little people were wise enough to throw away all
the sad memories and keep only the glad ones. And now the summer was
over. The leaves of the forest trees were turning from green to scarlet,
orange, and brown. The beech and hickory nuts were only waiting for a
friendly frost to open their outer shells, and loosen their stems, so
that they could fall to the earth.

The wind was cold now, and the meadow people knew that the time had come
to get ready for winter. One chilly Caterpillar said to another,
"Boo-oo! How cold it is! I must find a place for my cocoon. Suppose we
sleep side by side this winter, swinging on the same bush?"

And his friend replied: "We must hurry then, or we shall be too old and
stiff to spin good ones."

The Garter Snake felt sleepy all the time, and declared that in a few
days he would doze off until spring.

The Tree Frog had chosen his winter home already, and the Bees were
making the most of their time in visiting the last fall flowers, and
gathering every bit of honey they could find for their cold-weather
stock.

The last eggs had been laid, and the food had been placed beside many of
them for the babies that would hatch out in the spring. Nothing was left
but to say "Good-by," and fall asleep. So a message was sent around the
meadow for all to come to a farewell party under the elm tree.

Everybody came, and all who could sing did so, and the Crickets and
Mosquitoes made music for the rest to dance by.

The Tree Frog led off with a black and yellow Spider, the Garter Snake
followed with a Potato Bug, and all the other crawling people joined in
the dance on the grass, while over their heads the Butterflies and other
light-winged ones fluttered to and fro with airy grace.

The Snail and the fat, old Cricket had meant to look on, and really did
so, for a time, from a warm corner by the tree, but the Cricket couldn't
stand it to not join in the fun. First, his eyes gleamed, his feelers
waved, and his feet kept time to the music, and, when a frisky young Ant
beckoned to him, he gave a great leap and danced with the rest,
balancing, jumping, and circling around in a most surprising way.

When it grew dark, the Fireflies' lights shone like tiny stars, and the
dancing went on until all were tired and ready to sing together the last
song of the summer, for on the morrow they would go to rest. And this
was their song:

  The autumn leaves lying
    So thick on the ground,
  The summer Birds flying
    The meadow around,
          Say, "Good-by."

  The Seed Babies dropping
    Down out of our sight,
  The Dragon-flies stopping
    A moment in flight,
          Say, "Good-by."

  The red Squirrels bearing
    Their nuts to the tree,
  The wild Rabbits caring
    For babies so wee,
          Say, "Good-by."

  The sunbeams now showing
    Are hazy and pale,
  The warm breezes blowing
    Have changed to a gale,
          So, "Good-by."

  The season for working
    Is passing away.
  Both playing and shirking
    Are ended to day,
          So, "Good-by."

  The Garter Snake creeping
    So softly to rest,
  The fuzzy Worms sleeping
    Within their warm nest,
          Say, "Good-by."

  The Honey Bees crawling
    Around the full comb,
  The tiny Ants calling
    Each one to the home,
          Say, "Good-by."

  We've ended our singing,
    Our dancing, and play,
  And Nature's voice ringing
    Now tells us to say
          Our "Good-by."




THE END.




"_Many a mother and teacher will accord a vote of thanks to the
author._"

[Illustration]



Among the Meadow People.

  STORIES OF FIELD LIFE, WRITTEN FOR THE LITTLE ONES.
  By CLARA D. PIERSON.

  Illustrated by F. C. GORDON.
  New Edition, 12mo, 194 pages, cloth, gilt top, $1.25

    "One of the daintiest and in many ways most attractive of the
    many books of nature study which the past year has brought
    forth."--_Boston Advertiser._

    "They are like Mrs. Gatty's well-known 'Parables from Nature,'
    written in the best of English, as fascinating as fairy tales,
    and yet 'really true,' a quality which we all know appeals to
    the childish mind."--_N. Y. Evangelist._

    "We have seen nothing better for its purpose, and hope many a
    teacher of kindergartens and many a mother may avail herself of
    the privilege of using these little tales."--_N. Y. Christian
    Advocate._

    "It will be a great advance in the work of education in the
    school and the home when such books are more generally
    utilized."--_Zion's Herald._

    "These charming stories of field life will delight many a child
    of kindergarten age; and it is safe to say that older brothers
    and sisters will also want to claim a share in
    them."--_Christian Register._



Among the Forest People

  By CLARA D. PIERSON

  Illustrated by F. C. GORDON
  12mo, 220 pages, cloth, gilt top $1.25

    "A thoroughly charming book for the little people, which grown
    folks can read, also, with many a satisfied chuckle at its slily
    insinuated 'morals,' and inimitable mingling of human sentiments
    and affairs in the wild life of 'the Forest People.' The
    illustrations have really artistic value; thoroughly well done,
    with a pleasing combination of the conventional in form and
    light and shade, they are also clever and accurate in
    drawing."--_Living Church._

    "A most charming series of stories for children--yes, and for
    children of all ages, both young and old--is given us in the
    volume before us. No one can read these realistic conversations
    of the little creatures of the wood without being most tenderly
    drawn toward them, and each story teaches many entertaining
    facts regarding the lives and habits of these little people.
    Mothers and teachers must welcome this book most cordially. One
    cannot speak too strongly in praise of it."--_Boston
    Transcript._

    "I declare I really feel tempted to adopt or borrow a nice
    little girl of six or seven, just for the pleasure of reading
    this perfect book to her while she snuggles down in my
    lap."--KATE SANBORN.

    "The telling is conceived with decided originality."--_Outlook._

    "There has not been such a book for many a year, and it makes
    the old folks long to be young again."--_N. Y. Observer._

    "Is an utterly delightful book for the little folk."--_Interior._



Among the Farmyard People

  By CLARA D. PIERSON

  Illustrated by F. C. GORDON
  12mo, 256 pages, cloth, gilt top, $1.25

    "The very pretty stories of animal life, 'Among the Forest
    People,' and 'Among the Meadow People,' are continued in Clara
    D. Pierson's 'Among the Farmyard People.' To those who know the
    earlier volumes, this needs no introduction or praise. To those
    who may still have that pleasure in store, we can commend
    heartily these tenderly realistic conversations, which show a
    sympathetic knowledge at once of animals and of children, who
    will be amused and taught and edified by these dainty little
    tales that never obtrude the always healthy moral of this
    genuine Child's Book of Nature."--_Churchman._

    "They will be found valuable for use by mothers and kindergarten
    teachers. The beautiful illustrations furnished by F. C. Gordon
    are distinctively instructive. Altogether the book is one of the
    most desirable works that can be found to train the child's
    imagination, affection, and powers of observation."--_Boston
    Beacon._

    "We heartily recommend the book for its thoroughly healthy tone,
    far better adapted to a sweet and simple childhood than much of
    the rather stimulating juvenile literature of the day."--_N. Y.
    Commercial Advertiser._

    "A helpful book for young readers, teaching first lessons in
    natural history, and inculcating principles of love for
    animals."--_Philadelphia Evening Telegram._

    "A charming and pretty book for young children. It will help
    them to observe, and it will also help them to think. Nearly
    every story ends with something unsaid, which the nursery people
    are to think out for themselves."--_Church Standard._



Among the Pond People

  By CLARA D. PIERSON

  With 12 full-page illustrations by F. C. GORDON
  12mo, 222 pages, cloth, gilt top $1.25

    This last book of Mrs. Pierson's has all the charm of the
    earlier volumes. The adventures of Mother Eel, the Playful
    Muskrat, the Snappy Snapping Turtle, and the other Pond People,
    will be eagerly followed by children, whether they are
    naturalists or ordinary readers. The fact that one does not
    continually feel that she is writing for the purpose of
    instructing the young, gives Mrs. Pierson her hold on so many
    boys and girls. The books teach a great many lessons, but one
    does not feel that the author is lying in wait to enlighten the
    unwary youngster.

    "In it, as in the old Greek comedies, the frogs have a voice and
    speak their little orations and crack their jokes and play their
    pranks. The 'science' is elementary but the entertainment
    genuine, and the little people to whom it is read will ever
    cherish a kindly interest in the denizens of the ponds and their
    floral homes and environments."--_Interior._

    "One lays down the book with quickened sympathy for everything
    that crawls and creeps and swims."--_Critic._

    "The Pond People are quite as real and as fascinating as were
    the Meadow People and the Barnyard People of previous books.
    They are genuine stories, full of a humor that will appeal to
    boys and girls, yet cleverly conveying information about the
    frogs, turtles, minnows, etc., and often suggesting a moral in a
    delicate manner which no child could
    resent."--_Congregationalist._

    "In its way the work is very daintily done."--_Churchman._



              Sent by mail, post-paid, on receipt of price

                     E. P. DUTTON & CO., Publishers
                   31 West 23d Street        New York