Web
and Book design, |
Click
Here to return to |
WHEN Cuffy Bear reached
home, after his adventure with the bees, he found that his father and mother
and his sister Silkie were just sitting down to their evening meal. Cuffy didn't
speak to them as he came into the room where they were. He felt too miserable
to say a word, with his face aching and burning, and a terrible smarting in his
eyes. So he just stumbled inside the room and tried to make himself as small as
he could, so he wouldn't be noticed.
Cuffy's parents and his
little sister all looked at the little bear who had come into their house
without even a knock. And his father said, in a cross voice —
"Go away, little bear.
Where are your manners?"
Cuffy didn't know what to
make of that. He didn't know what his father meant. So he just stood there and
stared.
"What do you
want?" his father asked him. "Whose little bear are you? And — whatever
is the matter with your face?"
Actually, Cuffy's own father
didn't know him. And neither did his mother or his sister. You see, Cuffy's face
was so swollen from the bees' stings that his face did not look like a little
bear's face at all. His nose, instead of being smooth and pointed, was one
great lump. And he hadn't a sign of an eye — just two slits.
"What's the matter with
you?" Mr. Bear asked again. "Are you ill? Have you the black
measles?"
At that, Mrs. Bear rose
hastily from the table and snatched Silkie up from her high-chair and took her
right out of the room. The thought of black measles frightened Mrs. Bear. You
know, they are ever so much worse than plain measles. And she was afraid Silkie
would catch them.
Well, poor Cuffy felt more
miserable than ever. He saw that his own family didn't know him. And he
wondered what was going to become of him. Then, when his father told him very
sternly to leave his house at once, Cuffy began to cry.
"Oh! oh! oh!" he
sobbed. "It's me — it's only me!" he cried. That very morning, at
breakfast, his father had told him to say "It is I," instead of
"It is me." But Cuffy forgot all about that, now.
"What! Are you my Cuffy?"
his father exclaimed. For he knew Cuffy at last. You see, the bees hadn't stung
Cuffy's voice. And in no time at all Cuffy was tucked into his little bed and
his mother was gently licking his poor, aching face with her tongue. Among
bears that is thought to be the very best thing to do for bee-stings.
After a while Cuffy stopped
crying. And it was not long before he had fallen asleep.
But it was two days before Cuffy
Bear felt really himself again. And then his father went off into the forest
with him and Cuffy led the way to the bee-tree; for Mr. Bear knew enough about
bees so that he could take their honey away from them without getting stung
badly. He didn't mind just a few stings, you know.
Well — what do you think
happened? When they came to the old tree Mr. Bear took just one look at the
nest into which Cuffy had thrust his paw. And then he began to laugh, though he
was somewhat disappointed, as you will see.
"Those aren't
bees!" he told Cuffy. "That's a hornets' nest! . . . We'd get no
honey there."