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IT was pleasant for Timothy
Turtle that he lived in Black Creek, for he was very fond of fishing.
If he had
happened to make his home among the rocks on the top of Blue Mountain
he would
have had to travel a long way to find even a trout stream. But in Black
Creek
there were fish right in his dooryard, one may say.
It was lucky for him, too,
that he liked fish to eat. And whenever he wanted a change of food the
creek
was a good place in which to find a frog, or perhaps a foolish
duckling who
had not learned to be careful.
It was no wonder that all
the mother birds in the neighborhood used to warn their children to
beware of
Timothy Turtle. Did not Long Bill Wren, who lived among the
reeds on the bank
of Black Creek, have a narrow escape when he was only a few weeks old?
He had just learned to fly.
And although his mother had told him not to leave the bank, he
disobeyed her.
When she was not watching him he sailed over the water for the first
time in
his life and alighted on a flat object on top of a rock.
Bill supposed it was a stone
that he was sitting on. And he felt so proud of what he had done that
he cried,
"Look! Oh, look!"
His poor mother was
dreadfully frightened when she saw him.
"Come back!" she
shrieked. "You're in great danger!"
So Bill flew back to the
bank as fast as he could go.
"What have I told you
about Timothy Turtle?" his mother asked him sharply.
"You've said to keep
away from him, or he might eat me," young Bill faltered.
"Exactly!" his
mother cried. "And the moment I glance away, here you go and sit right
on
his back! It's a wonder you're alive."
Her son hung his head. And
never again did he pick out a perch until he was sure it wasn't old Mr.
Turtle.
When
he was older, and had children of his own, Long
Bill often remarked that it was too bad Mr. Turtle didn't live in some
other
place. "He makes my wife so nervous!" he used to exclaim.
"With
a new brood of at least a half-dozen youngsters to take care of every
summer
one has to watch sharp for Mr. Turtle whenever the children play near
the
water." And Long Bill always took pains to tell his children of his own
adventure with Timothy Turtle and warn them not to make such a
mistake.
"Luckily I sat exactly
in the center of Mr. Turtle's shell, so he couldn't reach me," Long
Bill
was explaining to his family one day. "But if I had happened
to perch on
his head I certainly wouldn't be here now."
"Oh, Mr. Turtle is too
slow to catch me," one of the youngsters boasted. "I saw him on the
bank to-day; and he only crawled."
"Ah ! You don't know
him," Long Bill Wren replied. "When he wants to, he can stand up on
his hind legs as quick as a wink. And he can dart his head out just
like a
snake."
"Ugh!" Long Pill's
small son shivered as he spoke. "I wish Mr. Turtle would go away from
our
creek."
"He
thinks it's his
creek," Long Bill Wren observed. "He has lived in it years and years
and years. We'll have to get on with him as best we can, for there's no
doubt
that Timothy Turtle is here to stay."