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ALL day long Timothy Turtle
stayed on the Beaver dam. And when the Beavers returned in the evening,
to resume
their work, they found Timothy still clinging to the box elder stick.
To Timothy Turtle's deep
disgust the plump workers gathered round him and laughed. He could
never bear
to hear people laugh – laughing was so silly, he always said. And
now Brownie
Beaver laughed louder than all the rest.
"Look!" Brownie
cried, pointing straight at Timothy Turtle. "Isn't he kind? He has
stopped
up that big hole for us all day.... And now" – Brownie added,
turning to
Timothy Turtle – "now if you'll kindly stop working
for us and move aside we'll fill that hole that's right
under you, with mud."
Timothy Turtle never felt
more ashamed in all his long life. There he had been working all day
long,
helping the Beaver family by plugging a hole in their dam –with
his flat body –
and he had never guessed what he was doing!
He let go of the stick and
sank hastily in the pond, where the water was deepest, to bury himself
in the
soft bottom. And there he stayed and sulked for the rest of the week,
until his
visit was done. If he stuck his head out of the water now and then for
a breath
of air, he was careful to let no one see him.
He did not even bid the
Beaver family good-by at the end of his visit, but left in the middle
of the
day, when everybody was sound asleep.
Grandaddy Beaver said it was
no more than one could expect of a person so rude as Timothy Turtle.
"He was just like that
in my great-grandfather's time," the old gentleman explained.
And all the rest of the
villagers remarked that Timothy Turtle was old enough to have
better manners.
Certainly, they said, the youngest Beaver child knew better than to
treat
people in such a rude fashion.
Brownie Beaver's mother
especially announced that she had never in all. her life met a
gentleman who
had treated her so disrespectfully as old Mr. Turtle. And she grew red
and pale
by turns as she recalled how he had seized her by the tail and
held her fast
for a whole day.
"I hope," she
said, "that by the time he comes here again he will have learned how to
behave himself."
But Grandaddy Beaver shook
his head. "Timothy Turtle," he declared, "will be no different
even if he lives to be a thousand years old."
And everybody said that it
was a great pity.