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<h2> V </h2>
<h3> SAMMIE LITTLETAIL DIGS A BURROW </h3>
<p>Sammie Littletail found that his leg was quite well enough to walk on,
without the cornstalk crutch, so the day after his papa's picture had
been taken, the little rabbit boy started to leave the burrow.</p>
<p>"Come along, Susie," he called to his sister.</p>
<p>"I will also go with you," said Uncle Wiggily Longears. "I will give you
children a few lessons in digging burrows. It is time you learned, for
some day you will want an underground house of your own."</p>
<p>So he led them to a nice place in the big park on top of the mountain,
where the earth was soft, and showed Sammie and Susie how to hollow out
rooms and halls, how to make back and front doors, and many other things
a rabbit should know.</p>
<p>"I think that will be enough of a lesson to-day," said Uncle Wiggily
Longears, after a while. "We will go home, now."</p>
<p>"No," spoke Sammie, "I want to dig some more. It's lots of fun."</p>
<p>"You had better come with us," remarked Susie.</p>
<p>But Sammie would not, though he promised to be home before dark. So
while Uncle Wiggily Longears and Susie Littletail started off, Sammie
continued to dig. He dug and he dug and he dug, until he was a long
distance under ground, and had really made quite a fine burrow for a
little rabbit. All at once he felt a sharp pain in his left fore leg.</p>
<p>"Ouch!" he cried. "Who did that?"</p>
<p>"I did," answered a little, furry creature, all curled up in a hole in
the ground. "What do you mean by digging into my house? Can't you see
where you are going?"</p>
<p>"Of course," answered Sammie, as he looked at his sore leg. "But
couldn't you see me coming, and tell me to stop?"</p>
<p>"No, I couldn't see you," was the reply.</p>
<p>"Why not?"</p>
<p>"Why not? Because I'm blind. I'm a mole, and I can't see; but I get
along just as well as if I did. Now, I suppose I've got to go to work
and mend the hole you made in the side of my parlor. It's a very large
one." The mole, you see, lived underground, just as the rabbits did,
only in a smaller house.</p>
<p>"I'm very sorry," said Sammie.</p>
<p>"That doesn't do much good," spoke the mole, as she began to stop up
the hole Sammie had made. She really did very well for a blind animal,
but then she had been blind so long that she did not know what daylight
looked like. "You had better dig in some other place," the mole
concluded, as she finished stopping up the hole.</p>
<p>Sammie thought so himself, and did so. He went quite deep, and when he
thought he was far enough down, he began digging upward, so as to come
out and make a back door, as his uncle had taught him to do. He dug and
he dug and he dug. All at once his feet burst through the soft soil, and
he found that he had come out on top of the ground. But what a funny
place he was in! It was not at all like the part of the park near his
burrow, and he was a little frightened. There were many tall trees
about, and in one was a big gray squirrel, who sat up and chattered at
the sight of Sammie, as if he had never seen a rabbit before.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here?" asked the squirrel. "Don't you know rabbits
are not allowed here?"</p>
<p>"Why not?" asked Sammie.</p>
<p>"Because there are nice trees about, and the keepers of the park fear
you and your family will gnaw the bark off and spoil them."</p>
<p>"We never spoil trees," declared Sammie, though he just then remembered
that his Uncle, Wiggily Longears, had once said something about
apple-tree bark being very good to eat.</p>
<p>"There's another reason," went on the squirrel, chattering away.</p>
<p>"What is it?" asked Sammie.</p>
<p>"Look over there and you'll see," was the reply, and when Sammie looked,
with his little body half out of the hole he had made, he saw a great
animal, with long horns, coming straight at him. He tried to run back
down the hole, but he found he had not made it large enough to turn
around in.</p>
<p>So Sammie Littletail, frightened as he as at the dreadful animal, had to
jump out of the burrow to get ready to run down it again, and, just as
he did so, the big animal cried out to him:</p>
<p>"Hold on there!"</p>
<p>Sammie shook with fright, and did not dare move. But, after all, the big
animal did not intend to harm him. And what happened, and who the big
animal was I will tell you to-morrow night.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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