The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Hollow Tree Snowed-in Book
Title: The Hollow Tree Snowed-in Book
Author: Albert Bigelow Paine
Illustrator: J. M. Condé
Release date: February 16, 2012 [eBook #38896]
Most recently updated: January 8, 2021
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Suzanne Shell, Emmy and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Mr. Crow, Mr. Turtle, Mr. 'Coon, Mr. 'Possum, Mr. Robin, Mr. Squirrel, Mr. Dog, Mr. Rabbit
THEN MR. DOG SAID: "I KNOW ALL ABOUT MENAGERIES, FOR I HAVE BEEN TO ONE"
THE HOLLOW TREE
SNOWED-IN BOOK
THE HOLLOW TREE AND DEEP WOODS PEOPLE
BY
AUTHOR OF
"THE HOLLOW TREE AND DEEP WOODS BOOK"
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY J. M. CONDÉ
HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
M C M X
ALBERT BIGELOW PAINE
| The Hollow Tree Snowed-In Book. | ||
| Crown 8vo | $1.50 | |
| The Ship-Dwellers. Illustrated | 8vo | 1.50 |
| The Tent-Dwellers. Illustrated | Post 8vo | 1.50 |
| The Hollow Tree and Deep Woods Book. | ||
| Illustrated. Post 8vo | 1.50 | |
| From Van-Dweller to Commuter. Ill'd. | ||
| Post 8vo | 1.50 | |
| Life of Thomas Nast. Ill'd | 8vo net | 5.00 |
HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS, N. Y.
Copyright, 1910, by Harper & Brothers
———————
Published October, 1910
Printed in the United States of America
THE BIG DEEP WOODS OF DREAM
EXPLANATION OF MAP
The top of the map is South. This is always so with the Hollow Tree People. The cross on the shelf below the edge of the world (where the ladder is) is where Mr. Dog landed, and the ladder is the one brought by Mr. Man for him to climb back on. The tree that Mr. Man cut down shows too. The spot on the edge of the world is where the Hollow Tree People sometimes sit and hang their feet over, and talk. A good many paths show, but not all by a good deal. The bridge and plank near Mr. Turtle's house lead to the Wide Grass Lands and Big West Hills. The spots along the Foot Race show where Grandpaw Hare stopped, and the one across the fence shows where Mr. Turtle landed. Most of the other things tell what they are, and all the things are a good deal farther apart than they look. Of course there was not room on the map for everything.
TO FRIENDS OLD AND NEW
That was the way the first story began in a book which told about the Hollow Tree People and their friends of the Big Deep Woods who used to visit them, and how they all used to sit around the table, or by the fire, in the parlor-room down-stairs, where they kept most of their things, and ate and talked and had good times together, just like folk.[A]
And the stories were told to the Little Lady by the Story Teller, and there were pictures made for them by the Artist, and it was all a long time ago—so long ago that the Little Lady has grown to be almost a big lady now, able to read stories for herself, and to write them, too, sometimes.
But the Story Teller and the Artist did not grow any older. The years do not make any difference to them. Like the Hollow Tree People they remain always the same, for though to see them you might think by their faces and the silver glint in their hair that they are older, it would not be so, because these things are only a kind of enchantment, made to deceive, when all the time they are really with the Hollow Tree People in the Big Deep Woods, where years and enchantments do not count. It was only Mr. Dog, because he lived too much with Mr. Man, who grew old and went away to that Far Land of Evening which lies beyond the sunset, taking so many of the Hollow Tree stories with him. We thought these stories were lost for good when Mr. Dog left us, but that was not true, for there came another Mr. Dog—a nephew of our old friend—and he grew up brave and handsome, and learned the ways of the Hollow Tree People, and their stories, and all the old tales which the first Mr. Dog did not tell.
And now, too, there is another Little Lady—almost exactly like the first Little Lady—and it may be that it is this Little Lady, after all, who keeps the Artist and the Story Teller young, for when she thought they might be growing older, and forgetting, she went with them away from the House of Many Windows, in the city, to the House of Low Ceilings and Wide Fireplaces—a queer old house like Mr. Rabbit's—built within the very borders of the Big Deep Woods, where they could be always close to Mr. 'Coon and Mr. 'Possum and the Old Black Crow, and all the others, and so learn all the new tales of the Hollow Tree.
FOOTNOTE:
[A] The Hollow Tree and Deep Woods Book, by the same author and artist.
CONTENTS
| PAGE | |
| To Friends Old and New | 7 |
| The First Snowed-In Story | 15 |
| Mr. Dog at the Circus | 21 |
| The Second Snowed-In Story | 39 |
| The Widow Crow's Boarding-House | 57 |
| The Finding of the Hollow Tree | 71 |
| The Third Snowed-In Story | 87 |
| The Fourth Snowed-In Story | 103 |
| The "Snowed-In" Literary Club | 119 |
| The "Snowed-In" Literary Club—Part II | 143 |
| The Discontented Fox | 155 |
| Mr. 'Possum's Great Story | 173 |
| The Bark of Old Hungry-Wolf | 191 |
| An Early Spring Call on Mr. Bear | 219 |
| Mr. Crow's Garden | 239 |
| When Jack Rabbit Was a Little Boy | 261 |
| A Hollow Tree Picnic | 273 |
ILLUSTRATIONS
| PAGE | |
THE HOLLOW TREE AND DEEP WOODS PEOPLE | Frontispiece |
MAP OF THE HOLLOW TREE AND DEEP WOODS COUNTRY | 4 |
GATHERING NICE PIECES OF WOOD | 17 |
THE PANTRY IN THE HOLLOW TREE | 24 |
"SLIPPED IN BEHIND HIM WHEN HE WENT INTO THE TENT" | 29 |
"HE LOOKED SMILING AND GOOD-NATURED, AND I WENT OVER TO ASK HIM SOME QUESTIONS" | 31 |
"GAVE ME AN EXTRA BIG SWING AND CRACK" | 35 |
ALL AT ONCE HE HEARD A FIERCE BARK CLOSE BEHIND HIM | 43 |
"THEN I SUDDENLY FELT LIKE A SHOOTING-STAR" | 47 |
"THEN MR. DOG SAID, 'TELL ME ANOTHER'" | 49 |
"AND DID ROLL OFF THE EDGE OF THE WORLD, SURE ENOUGH" | 53 |
"I SET OUT FOR HOME WITHOUT WAITING TO SAY GOOD-BYE" | 55 |
CAME CLATTERING DOWN RIGHT IN FRONT OF MR. DOG | 61 |
SO THEN MR. DOG TRIED TO GET MR. 'POSSUM ON HIS SHOULDER | 64 |
HE WAS AN OLD BACHELOR AND LIKED TO HAVE HIS OWN WAY | 67 |
THEY SAW MR. CROW OUT IN THE YARD CUTTING WOOD FOR HIS MOTHER-IN-LAW | 69 |
HAD TO STAY AT HOME AND PEEL POTATOES | 75 |
LISTENED NOW AND THEN AT WIDOW CROW'S DOOR TO BE SURE SHE WAS ASLEEP | 79 |
MR. 'POSSUM SAID HE'D JUST GET ON AND HOLD THE THINGS | 81 |
| 83 | |
MR. FOX SAID HE DIDN'T HAVE MUCH TO DO FOR A FEW MINUTES AND HE'D ACT AS JUDGE | 93 |
SAILING ALONG, JUST TOUCHING THE HIGHEST POINTS | 97 |
AWAY WENT MR. TORTOISE, CLEAR OVER THE TOP RAIL | 99 |
SET OUT FOR HOME BY A BACK WAY | 101 |
TRIED TO SPLICE HIS PROPERTY BACK IN PLACE | 107 |
GRANDFATHER WOULD LIGHT HIS PIPE AND THINK IT OVER | 109 |
SET UP HIS EARS AND WENT BY, LICKETY-SPLIT | 111 |
"'GLAD TO SEE YOU,' SAID KING LION; 'I WAS JUST THINKING ABOUT HAVING A NICE RABBIT FOR BREAKFAST'" | 113 |
GOT AROUND THE TABLE AND BEGAN TO WORK | 125 |
MR. 'POSSUM WANTED TO KNOW WHAT MR. RABBIT MEANT BY SPINNING THEIR TAILS | 129 |
MR. DOG SAID HE HAD MADE A FEW SKETCHES | 133 |
MR. 'POSSUM SAID IT MIGHT BE A GOOD ENOUGH STORY, BUT IT COULDN'T BE TRUE | 137 |
SO THEN MR. RABBIT SAID THEY MUST CHOOSE WHO WOULD BE "IT" | 147 |
MR. 'POSSUM HAD TO PUT ON THE HANDKERCHIEF AND DO MORE EXERCISING THAN ANY OF THEM | 149 |
WOULD FIND IT ON THE MANTEL-SHELF OR PERHAPS ON MR. CROW'S BALD HEAD | 152 |
MR. 'POSSUM SAID HE HADN'T MEANT ANYTHING AT ALL BY WHAT HE HAD SAID ABOUT THE STORY | 162 |
AND SO THIS CAT GREW RICH AND FAT | 164 |
HIS CLERKS | 167 |
A SOLEMN LOOK WAS IN HIS FACE | 168 |
| 171 | |
AUNT MELISSY HAD ARRANGED A BUNDLE FOR UNCLE SILAS, AND SHE HAD FIXED UP THE HIRED MAN TOO | 179 |
DIDN'T LOOK AS IF SHE BELONGED TO THE REST OF OUR CROWD | 181 |
THE BALLOON WENT OVER THE WIDE BLUE WATER JUST AFTER IT GOT OUR FAMILY | 184 |
MR. TURTLE SAID THAT WHAT MR. 'POSSUM HAD TOLD THEM WAS TRUE | 189 |
ONE DAY MR. CROW FOUND HE WAS AT THE BOTTOM OF THE BARREL OF EVERYTHING | 195 |
THEN MR. 'COON SLAMMED HIS DOOR | 199 |
MR. 'POSSUM SAID NOT TO MOVE, THAT HE WOULD GO AFTER A PIECE OF WOOD | 201 |
HE WOULD SMOKE IN THE SUN WHEN THE MORNINGS WERE FAIR | 203 |
WITH A LOOK AND A SIGH THEY WOULD STAND AND BEHOLD | 204 |
THE TASTIEST PASTRY THAT EVER WAS KNOWN | 205 |
THEN TO STIR AND TO BAKE HE BEGAN RIGHT AWAY | 206 |
THE GREEDY OLD RAVEN, BUT GREEDY NO MORE | 208 |
LOOKED STRAIGHT AT MR. 'POSSUM AND SAID, "WHAT WAS THAT YOU WERE CHEWING JUST NOW?" | 211 |
THEY WENT ALONG, SAYING WHAT A NICE MAN THEY THOUGHT MR. BEAR WAS | 224 |
MR. BEAR MUST HAVE BEEN VERY TIRED AND GONE TO SLEEP RIGHT WHERE HE WAS | 226 |
MR. 'COON SCRATCHED HIS BACK AGAINST A LITTLE BUSH | 234 |
MR. RABBIT THANKED HIM FROM ACROSS THE RIVER | 237 |
ONE SAID IT WAS ONE WAY AND THE OTHER THE OTHER WAY | 247 |
| 251 | |
MR. CROW WAS ALMOST AFRAID TO BRING ON THE SALAD | 255 |
JACK RABBIT CAPERED AND LAUGHED ALL THE WAY HOME | 259 |
TOOK HER PARASOL AND HER RETICULE AND A CAN OF BERRIES, AND STARTED | 265 |
AND HE MADE SOME STRIPES, TOO—MOSTLY ON TOP OF THE STOVE | 267 |
LITTLE JACK KNEW PERFECTLY WELL THAT SHE WASN'T AT ALL PLEASED | 269 |
PROMISED NEVER TO DISOBEY HIS MOTHER AGAIN | 271 |
AND HE TASTED OF THAT A LITTLE, TOO | 278 |
MR. 'POSSUM LEANED HIS BACK AGAINST A TREE AND READ HIMSELF TO SLEEP | 280 |
SO MR. 'POSSUM PROMISED, AND MR. 'COON UNTIED HIM | 282 |
"AND WHAT DO YOU THINK THEY SAW?" | 284 |
THE FIRST SNOWED-IN STORY
It is at the end of New-Year's Day, and the Little Lady has been enjoying her holidays, for Santa Claus found his way down the big stone chimney and left a number of things she wanted. Now, when the night is coming down outside, and when inside there is a heap of blazing logs and a rocking-chair, it is time for the Story Teller. The Story Teller generally smokes and looks into the fire when he tells a Hollow Tree story, because the Hollow Tree People always smoke and look into the fire when they tell their stories, and the Little Lady likes everything to be "just the same," and the stories must be always told just the same, too. If they are not, she stops the Story Teller and sets him right. So while the Little Woman passes to and fro, putting away the tea-things, the Story Teller lights his pipe, and rocks, and looks into the fire, and holds the Little Lady close, and begins the Tales of the Hollow Tree.
"Once upon a time," he begins—
"Once upon a time," murmurs the Little Lady, settling herself.
"Yes, once upon a time, in the old days of the Hollow Tree, when Mr. Dog had become friends with the 'Coon and the 'Possum and the Old Black Crow who lived in the three hollow branches of the Big Hollow Tree, and used to meet together in their parlor-room down-stairs and invite all their friends, and have good times together, just like folk—"
"But they live there now, don't they?" interrupts the Little Lady, suddenly sitting up, "and still have their friends, just the same?"
"Oh yes, of course, but this was one of the old times, you know."
The Little Lady settles back, satisfied.
"Go on telling, now," she says.
"Well, then, this was one of the times when all the Deep Woods People had been invited to the Hollow Tree for Christmas Day, and were snowed in. Of course they didn't expect to be snowed in. Nobody ever expects to be snowed in till it happens, and then it's too late."
"Was that the Christmas that Mr. Dog played Santa Claus and brought all the presents, and Mr. Squirrel and Mr. Robin and Mr. Turtle and Jack Rabbit came over, and they all sat around the fire and ate things and told nice stories? You said you would tell about that, and you never did."
"I am going to tell it now, as soon as a Little Lady gets real still," says the Story Teller. So then the Little Lady is "real still," and he tells the first snowed-in story, which is called:
MR. DOG AT THE CIRCUS
Then, when they were all through and were standing around, smoking their new pipes and looking at each other's new neckties and other Christmas things, Mr. Crow said that he and Mr. Squirrel would clear off the table if the others would get in some wood and stir up the fire and set the room to rights, so they could gather round and be comfortable by-and-by; and then, he said, it might snow as much as it liked as long as they had plenty of wood and things to eat inside.
So then they all skurried around getting on their things to go out after wood—all except Mr. Crow and Mr. Squirrel, who set about clearing off the table and doing up the dishes. And pretty soon Mr. Dog and Mr. 'Coon and the rest were hopping about where the snow was falling so soft and silent among the big, leafless trees, gathering nice pieces of wood and brushing the snow off of them and piling them into the first down-stairs of the Hollow Tree, which the 'Coon and 'Possum and Old Black Crow use for their wood-house and general store-room. It was great fun, and they didn't feel the least bit cold after their warm dinner and with all that brisk exercise.
Mr. Robin didn't help carry the wood in. He was hardly strong enough for that, but he hopped about and looked for good pieces, and when he found one he would call to Mr. 'Coon or Mr. 'Possum, or maybe to one of the others, to throw it on his shoulder and carry it in, and then he would tell whoever it happened to be how strong he was and how fine he looked with that great chunk on his shoulder, and would say that he didn't suppose there was another 'Coon, or 'Possum, or Turtle, or Rabbit, or Dog that could begin to stand up straight under such a chunk as that anywhere outside of a menagerie. Mr. Robin likes to say pleasant things to his friends, and is always popular. And each one tried to carry the biggest load of wood to show how strong he was, and pretty soon they had the lower room of the Hollow Tree piled up high with the finest chunks and kindling pieces to be found anywhere. Then they all hurried up-stairs, stamping the snow off their feet, and gathered around the nice warm fire in the big parlor which was just below the three big hollow branches where the 'Coon and 'Possum and the Old Black Crow had their rooms.
Mr. Crow and Mr. Squirrel were through with the table by this time, and all hands lit their pipes, and looked into the fire, and smoked, and rested, and thought a little before they began talking—thinking, of course, of what a good time they were having, and how comfortable and nice it was to be inside and warm when such a big snow was falling outside.
Mr. 'Possum was the first one to say anything. He said he had been thinking of what Mr. Robin had said about them being outside of a menagerie, and that, come to think about it, he believed he didn't know what a menagerie was, unless it was a new name for a big dinner, as that was the only thing he could think of now that they were outside of, and he said if that was so, and if he could get outside of two menageries, he thought he could carry in a bigger chunk than any two chunks there were down-stairs.
Then all the others laughed a good deal, and Mr. 'Coon said he had thought that perhaps a menagerie was something to wear that would make anybody who had it on very strong, and able to stand up under a big load, and to eat as much as Mr. 'Possum could, or even more.
But Mr. Robin said that it didn't mean either of those things. He said he didn't really know what it did mean himself, but that it must be some kind of a place that had a great many large creatures in it, for he had heard his grandmother quite often call his grandfather the biggest goose outside of a menagerie, though, being very young then, Mr. Robin couldn't remember just what she had meant by it.
Mr. Rabbit said he thought that the word "menagerie" sounded like some kind of a picnic, with swings and nice lively games, and Mr. Crow said that once when he was flying he passed over a place where there was a big sign that said "Menagerie" on it, and that there were some tents and a crowd of people and a great noise, but that he hadn't seen anything that he could carry off without being noticed, so he didn't stop.
Mr. Squirrel thought that from what Mr. Crow said it must be a place where there would be a lot of fine things to see, and Mr. Turtle said that he was a good deal over three hundred years old and had often heard of a menagerie, but that he had never seen one. He said he had always supposed that it was a nice pond of clear water, with a lot of happy turtles and fish and wild geese and duck and such things, in it, and maybe some animals around it, all living happily together, and taken care of by Mr. Man, who brought them a great many good things to eat. He had always thought he would like to live in a menagerie, he said, but that nobody had ever invited him, and he had never happened to come across one in his travels.
Mr. Dog hadn't been saying anything all this time, but he knocked the ashes out of his pipe now, and filled it up fresh and lit it, and cleared his throat, and began to talk. It made him smile, he said, to hear the different ways people thought of a thing they had never seen. He said that Mr. Turtle was the only one who came anywhere near to what a menagerie really was, though of course Mr. Crow had seen one on the outside. Then Mr. Dog said:
"I know all about menageries, on the outside and the inside too, for I have been to one. I went once with Mr. Man, though I wasn't really invited to go. In fact, Mr. Man invited me to stay at home, and tried to slip off from me; but I watched which way he went, and took long roundin's on him, and slipped in behind him when he went into the tent. He didn't know for a while that I was there, and I wasn't there so very long. But it was plenty long enough—a good deal longer than I'd ever stay again, unless I was tied.
"I never saw so many wild, fierce-looking creatures in my life as there were in that menagerie, and they were just as wild and fierce as they looked. They had a lot of cages full of them and they had some outside of cages, though I don't know why they should leave any of those dangerous animals around where they could damage folks that happened to come in reach, as I did. Those animals outside didn't look as wild and fierce as those in the cages, but they were.
"I kept in the crowd, close behind Mr. Man at first, and nobody knew I was there, but by-and-by he climbed up into a seat to watch some people all dressed up in fancy clothes ride around a ring on horses, which I didn't care much about, so I slipped away, and went over to where there were some things that I wanted to take my time to and see quietly.
"There was an animal about my size and style tied over in one corner of the tent, behind a rope, with a sign in front of him which said, 'The Only Tame Hyena in the World.' He looked smiling and good-natured, and I went over to ask him some questions.
"But that sign wasn't true. He wasn't the least bit tame, and I'm sure now that he wasn't smiling. He grabbed me before I had a chance to say a word, and when I jerked loose, which I did right away, for I didn't want to stir up any fuss there, I left quite a piece of my ear with the tame hyena, and tripped backward over the rope and rolled right in front of a creature called an elephant, about as big as a house and not as useful.
"I suppose they thought he was tame, too, but he must have been tamed by the same man, for he grabbed me with a kind of a tail that grew on the end of his nose—a thing a good deal like Mr. 'Possum's tail, only about a million times as big—and I could hear my ribs crack as he waved me up and down.
"Of course, as I say, I didn't want to stir up any fuss, but I couldn't keep still under such treatment as that, and I called right out to Mr. Man, where he sat looking at the fancy people riding, and told him that I had had enough of the show, and if he wanted to take any of me home he ought not to wait very long, but come over that way and see if he couldn't get the tame elephant to practise that performance on the hyena or the next dog, because I had had plenty, and was willing to go home just as I was, all in one piece, even if not very lively.
"Mr. Man came, too, and so did a lot of the others. They seemed to think that I was more to look at than those riding people; and some of them laughed, though what there was happening that was funny I have never been able to guess to this day. I kept right on telling Mr. Man what I wanted him to do, and mebbe I made a good deal of noise about it, for it seemed to stir up those other animals. There was a cage full of lions that started the most awful roaring you can think of, and a cage of crazy-looking things they called monkeys that screeched and howled and swung back and forth in rings and held on to the bars, and all the other things joined in, until I couldn't tell whether I was still saying anything or not. I suppose they were all jealous of the elephant because of the fun he was having, and howling to be let out so they could get hold of me too.
"Well, you never heard of such a time. It nearly broke up the show. Everybody ran over to look, and even the riding people stopped their horses to enjoy it, too. If it only hadn't been so dangerous and unpleasant I should have been proud of the way they came to see me perform.
"But Mr. Man didn't seem to like it much. I heard him tell somebody, as loud as he could, that I would be killed, and that I was the best dog he ever had, and that if I was killed he'd sue the show.
"That made me proud, too, but I wished he wouldn't wait to sue the show, but would do something right away, and just then a man with a fancy dress on and a stick with a sharp iron hook on it came running up and said something I didn't understand and hit the elephant with the hook end of the stick, and he gave me an extra big swing and crack and flung me half-way across the tent, where I landed on a bunch of hay right in front of a long-necked thing called a camel—another terrible tame creature, I suppose—who had me about half eaten up with his old long under lip, before Mr. Man could get over there.