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Reddy Fox Thinks He Sees a Ghost
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Unc' Billy Possum Sends for His Family
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Bobby Coon Enters the Wrong House
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Bobby Coon Is Waked Up
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Sammy Jay Learns Peter Rabbit's Secret
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Four Little Scamps Plan Mischief
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Peter Rabbit Sends Out Word
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Mr. Toad and Prickly Porky Put Heads Together
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The Runaway Cabbage
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Reddy Fox Goes Hungry
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Prickly Porky Makes Himself at Home
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Unc' Billy Possum Grows Hungry
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Old Mrs. Possum Grows Worried
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The Foolishness of Unc' Billy Possum
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Why Unc' Billy Possum Didn't Go Home
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Unc' Billy Possum Lies Low
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Unc' Billy Possum Is a Prisoner
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What the Snow Did
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Unc' Billy Possum Wishes He Had Snowshoes
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Farmer Brown's Boy Chops Down a Tree
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Where Unc' Billy Possum Was
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Happy Jack Squirrel Makes an Unexpected Call
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Happy Jack Squirrel Helps Unc' Billy Possum
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Happy Jack Squirrel's Bright Idea
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Reddy Fox Thinks He Sees a Ghost
R
EDDY FOX came down the Lone Little Path through the Green Forest on
his way to the Green Meadows. He had brushed his red coat until it
shone. His white waistcoat was spotless, and he carried his big tail
high in the air, that it might not become soiled. Reddy was feeling as
fine as he looked. He would have liked to sing, but every time he
tried his voice cracked, and he was afraid that some one would hear
him and laugh at him. If there is one thing that Reddy Fox dislikes
more than another, it is being laughed at.
Reddy chuckled at his thoughts, and what do you think he was thinking
about?
Why, about how he had seen Farmer Brown's boy carrying off
Unc' Billy Possum by the tail the afternoon before. He knew how Farmer
Brown's boy had caught Unc' Billy in the hen-house, and with his own
eyes he had seen Unc' Billy carried off. Of course Unc' Billy was
dead. There could be no doubt about it. And Reddy was glad of it. Yes,
Sir, Reddy was glad of it. Unc' Billy Possum had made altogether too
many friends in the Green Forest and on the Green Meadows, and he had
made Reddy the laughing-stock of them all by the way he had dared
Reddy to meet Bowser the Hound, and actually had waited for Bowser
while Reddy ran away.
Reddy remembered that Unc' Billy's hollow tree was not far away. He
would go over that way, just to have another look at it. So over he
went. There stood the old hollow tree, and
half way up was the door
out of which Unc' Billy used to look down on him and grin. It was
Reddy's turn to grin now. Presently he sat down with his back against
the foot of the tree, crossed his legs, looked this way and that way
to make sure that no one was about, and then in a dreadfully cracked
voice he began to sing:
"Ol' Bill Possum, he's gone before!
Ol' Bill Possum, he is no more!
Bill was a scamp, Sir;
Bill was a thief!
Bill stole an egg, Sir;
Bill came to grief.
Ol' Bill Possum, it served him right;
And he is no more, for he died last night."
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"Very good, Sah, very good. Ah cert'nly am obliged to yo'all for yo'
serenade," said a voice that seemed to come out of the tree at Reddy's
back.
Reddy Fox sprang up as if some one
had stuck a pin into him. Every
hair stood on end, as he looked up at Unc' Billy's doorway. Then his
teeth began to chatter with fright.
Reddy Fox sprang up as if some one
had stuck a pin into him.
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Looking out of Unc' Billy's
doorway and grinning down at him was something that looked for all the
world like Unc' Billy himself.
"It must be his ghost!" said Reddy, and tucking his tail between his
legs, he started up the Crooked Little Path as fast as his legs could
take him.
Reddy never once looked back. If he had, he might have seen Unc' Billy
Possum climb down from the hollow tree and shake hands with Jimmy
Skunk, who had just come along.
"How did Ah do it? Why, Ah just pretended Ah was daid, when Farmer
Brown's boy caught me," explained Unc' Billy.
"Of course he wouldn't
kill a daid Possum. So when he tossed me down on the chopping-block
and turned
his back, Ah just naturally came to life again, and here
Ah am."
Unc' Billy Possum grinned broader than ever, and Jimmy Skunk grinned,
too.
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