"Why, my goodness me sakes
alive and a bunch of lilacs! Don't I play checkers almost every night
with Grandfather Goosey Gander?"
"That is not enough," said the doctor, "you must travel here and there,
and see things."
"Very well," said Uncle Wiggily, "then I will travel. I'll pack my valise
at once, and I'll go off and seek my fortune, and maybe, on the way, I
can lose this rheumatism."
So the next day Uncle Wiggily started out with his crutch, and his
valise packed full of clean clothes, and something in it to eat.
"Oh, we are very sorry to have you go, dear uncle," said Susie Littletail,
"but we hope you'll come back good and strong."
"Thank you," said Uncle Wiggily, as he kissed the two rabbit children
and their mamma, and shook hands with Papa Littletail. Then off the
old gentleman bunny hopped with his crutch.
Well, he went along for quite a distance, over the hills, and down the
road, and through the woods, and, as the sun got higher and warmer,
his rheumatism felt better.
"I do believe Dr. Possum was right!" said Uncle Wiggily. "Traveling is
just the thing for me," and he felt so very jolly that he whistled a little
tune about a peanut wagon, which roasted lemonade, and boiled and
frizzled Easter eggs that Mrs. Cluk-Cluk laid.
"Ha! Where are you going?" suddenly asked a voice, as Uncle Wiggily
finished the tune.
"I'm going to seek my fortune," replied Uncle Wiggily. "Who are you,
pray?"
"Oh, I'm a friend of yours," said the voice, and Uncle Wiggily looked
all around, but he couldn't discover any one.
"But where are you?" the puzzled old gentleman rabbit wanted to know.
"I can't see you."
"No, and for a very good reason," answered the voice. "You see I have
very weak eyes, and if I came out in the sun, without my smoked
glasses on, I might get blind. So I have to hide down in this hollow
stump."
"Then put on your glasses and come out where I can see you," invited
the old gentleman rabbit, and all the while he was trying to remember
where he had heard that voice before. At first he thought it might be
Grandfather Goosey Gander, or Uncle Butter, the goat, yet it didn't
sound like either of them.
"I have sent my glasses to the store to be fixed, so I can't wear them and
come out," went on the voice. "But if you are seeking your fortune I
know the very place where you can find it."
"Where?" asked Uncle Wiggily, eagerly.
"Right down in this hollow stump," was the reply. "There are all kinds
of fortunes here, and you may take any kind you like Mr. Longears."
"Ha! That is very nice," thought the rabbit. "I have not had to travel far
before finding my fortune. I wonder if there is a cure for rheumatism in
that stump, too?" So he asked about it.
"Of course, your rheumatism can be cured in here," came the quick
answer. "In fact, I guarantee to cure any disease--measles, chicken-pox,
mumps and even toothache. So if you have any friends you want cured
send them to me."
"I wish I could find out who you were," spoke the rabbit. "I seem to
know your voice, but I can't think of your name."
"Oh, you'll know me as soon as you see me," said the voice. "Just hop
down inside this hollow stump, and your fortune is as good as made,
and your rheumatism will soon be gone. Hop right down."
Well, Uncle Wiggily didn't like the looks of the black hole down inside
the stump, and he peered into it to see what he could see, but it was so
black that all he could make out was something like a lump of coal.
"Well, Dr. Possum said I needed to have a change of scene, and some
adventures," said the rabbit, "so I guess I'll chance it. I'll go down, and
perhaps I may find my fortune."
Then, carefully holding his crutch and his satchel, Uncle Wiggily
hopped down inside the stump. He felt something soft, and furry, and
fuzzy, pressing close to him, and at first he thought he had bumped into
Dottie or Willie Lambkin.
But then, all of a sudden, a harsh voice cried out:
"Ha! Now I have you! I was just wishing some one would come along
with my dinner, and you did! Get in there, and see if you can find your
fortune, Uncle Wiggily!" And with that what should happen but that
big, black bear, who had been hiding in the stump, pushed Uncle
Wiggily into a dark closet, and locked the door! And there the poor
rabbit was, and the
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