The Gray Gooses Story

Amy Prentice
The Gray Goose's Story

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Title: The Gray Goose's Story
Author: Amy Prentice
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[Illustration: "Good Morning, Mr. Rabbit. Can you tell me where I'll
find two or three fat fish?"]
Aunt Amy's Animal Stories
THE GRAY GOOSE'S STORY
By AMY PRENTICE
[Illustration]
With Thirty-Two Illustrations and a Frontispiece in Colors By J.
WATSON DAVIS

[Illustration]
THE GRAY GOOSE'S STORY.
BY AMY PRENTICE.
On pleasant afternoons your Aunt Amy dearly loves to wander down
by the side of the pond, which lies just beyond the apple orchard, and
there meet her bird or animal friends, of whom she has many, and all of
them are ready to tell her stories.
[Illustration: The Gray Goose.]
There it is she sees Mr. Frisky Squirrel, old Mr. Plodding Turtle, Mr.
Bunny Rabbit, and many others; but never until yesterday did she make
the acquaintance of the gray goose, and then it was owing to Master
Teddy's mischief that she found a new friend among the dwellers on the
farm.
Your Aunt Amy was walking slowly along on the lookout for some
bird or animal who might be in the mood for story-telling, when she
heard an angry hissing, which caused her to start in alarm, thinking a
snake was in her path, and, to her surprise, she saw two geese who were
scolding violently in their own peculiar fashion.
One was the gray goose, who afterward became very friendly, and the

other, a white gander from the farm on the opposite side of the road.
[Illustration: An Angry Pair.]
"What is the matter?" your Aunt Amy asked, as the geese continued to
hiss angrily without giving any heed to her, and Mrs. Gray Goose
ceased her scolding sufficiently long to say sharply:
"It's that Mr. Man's boy Teddy; he never comes into the farm-yard
without raising a disturbance of some kind, and I for one am sick of so
much nonsense."
Your Aunt Amy looked quickly around; but without seeing any signs
of the boy who had tried Mrs. Goose's temper so sadly, and, quite
naturally, she asked:
"What has he been doing now, and where is he?"
"Down in the meadow, or, he was there when Mr. Gander and I were
driven out by his foolish actions," and Mrs. Goose continued to hiss at
the full strength of her lungs.
[Illustration: Mr. Crow.]
"If he is so far away your scolding will do no good, because he can't
hear it," your Aunt Amy said, finding it difficult to prevent herself from
actually laughing in the angry bird's face.
"Some of the other people on this farm can hear me, and thus know that
I do not approve of such actions," Mrs. Goose replied sharply. "Since
Mr. Crow began to write poetry about Young Teddy, the boy thinks he
can chase us around whenever he pleases. He'll kill Mrs. Cow's baby, if
he isn't careful."
"Do you know Mr. Crow?" your Aunt Amy asked in surprise, for every
bird or animal she had met seemed to be on friendly terms with the old
fellow who spent the greater portion of his time in the big oak tree near
the pond.
"Of course I know him," Mrs. Goose replied as she ceased scolding and
came nearer your Aunt Amy, while Mr. Gander sat down close at hand
as if listening to what was said. "Teddy has been trying for nearly a
week to use that poor calf as if the baby was a horse--that's what he's
doing now, and Mr. Crow wrote
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