<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_3_IV">CHAPTER FOUR<br/> <span class="cheaderfont">TOMMY LEARNS WHAT IT IS LIKE TO BE A BEAR</span></h2></div>
<p class="dropcap">Tommy’s thoughts were straying.
Somehow they were straying
most of the time these days.
They had been, ever since that day when
he had wished himself into a beaver.
He dreamed of the Great Woods where
rivers have their beginnings in gurgling
brooks, and great lakes reflect moss-gray
giants of the forest; where the beavers
still ply their many trades unharmed
by man, the deer follow paths of their
own making, the otters make merry on
their slippery-slides, the lynx pass
through the dark shadows, themselves<span class="pagenum">[92]</span>
but grayer shadows, and bears go fishing,
gather berries, and hunt the stored
sweets of the bees. In short, the spell
of the Great Woods, the wilderness unmarred
by the hand of man, was upon
Tommy.</p>
<p>Eagerly he read all that he could find
about the feathered and furred folk who
dwell there, and the longing to know
more about them and their ways, to
learn these things for himself, grew and
grew. He wanted to hear things with
his own ears and see things with his own
eyes.</p>
<p>Sometimes he went over to the Green
Forest near his home and played that it
was the Great Woods and that he was a
mighty hunter. Then Happy Jack the
Gray Squirrel became a fierce-eyed,
tufted-eared, bob-tailed lynx, saucy<span class="pagenum">[93]</span>
Chatterer the Red Squirrel became a
crafty fisher, the footprints of Reddy
Fox grew in size to those of a wolf, Peter
Rabbit was transformed into his cousin
of the north, Jumper the Hare, and a
certain old black stump was Buster
Bear.</p>
<p>But it was only once in a while that
Tommy played the hunter. Somehow,
since he had learned so many things
about the lives of the little feathered
and furred people about him, he cared
less and less about hunting them. So
most often, when the Green Forest became
the Great Woods, he was Buster
Bear. That was more fun than being a
hunter, much more fun. There was
only one drawback—he didn’t know as
much about Buster Bear and his ways
as he wished he did.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[94]</span></p>
<p>So now, as he trudged along towards
the pasture to drive home the cows for
the evening milking, his thoughts were
straying to the Great Woods and Buster
Bear. As he came to the old wishing-stone
he glanced up at the sun.
There was no need to hurry. He would
have plenty of time to sit down there a
while. So down he sat on the big gray
rock and his thoughts went straying,
straying deep into the Great Woods far
from cows and milking and the woodpile
just beyond the kitchen door. Bears
never had to chop wood.</p>
<p>“I wish,” said Tommy dreamily, “that
I were a bear.”</p>
<p>That was all, just a little spoken
wish, but Tommy was no longer a
dreamy boy with evening chores yet to
be done. He was a little black furry<span class="pagenum">[95]</span>
animal, not unlike an overgrown puppy,
following at the heels of a great gaunt
black bear. In short, Tommy was a
bear himself. All about him was the
beautiful wilderness, the Great Woods
of his boyish dreams. Just behind him
was another little bear, his twin sister,
and the big bear was their mother.</p>
<p>Presently they came to an opening
where there were no trees, but a tangle
of brush. Years before, fire had swept
through there, though Tommy knew
nothing about that. In fact, Tommy
knew little about anything as yet save
that it was good, oh, so good, to be alive.
On the edge of this opening Mother Bear
paused and sat up on her haunches while
she sniffed the air. The two little bears
did the same thing. They didn’t know
why, but they did it because Mother<span class="pagenum">[96]</span>
Bear did. Then she dropped to all fours
and told them to remain right where
they were until she called them. They
watched her disappear in the brush and
waited impatiently. It seemed to them
a very long time before they heard her
call and saw her head above the bushes
as she sat up, but really it was only a
few minutes. Then they scampered to
join her, each trying to be first.</p>
<p>When they reached her, such a glad
sight as greeted them! All about were
little bushes loaded with berries that
seemed to have stolen their color from
the sky. They were blueberries. With
funny little squeals and grunts they
stripped the berries from the bushes and
ate and ate until they could eat no more.
Then they wrestled with each other, and
stood up on their hind legs and boxed<span class="pagenum">[97]</span>
until they were out of breath and glad
to lie down for a rest while Mother Bear
continued to stuff herself with berries.</p>
<p>It was very beautiful there in the
Great Woods, and the two little bears
just bubbled over with high spirits.
They played hide-and-seek behind
stumps and trees. They played tag.
They chased each other up tall trees.
One would climb to the top of a tall
stump, and the other would follow and
try to knock the first one off.</p>
<p>Sometimes both would tumble down
and land with a thump that would knock
the breath from their little bodies. The
bumps would hurt sometimes and make
them squeal. This would bring Mother
Bear in a hurry to see what had happened;
and when she would find that
no harm had come to them, she would<span class="pagenum">[98]</span>
growl a warning and sometimes spank
them for giving her a fright.</p>
<p>But best of all they loved to wrestle
and box, and, though they didn’t know
it, they were learning something. They
were learning to be quick in their movements.
They were learning how to
strike swiftly and how to dodge quite as
swiftly. Once in a while they would
stand and not try to dodge, but see who
could stand the hardest blow. And
once in a while, I am sorry to say, they
quarreled and fought. Then Mother
Bear would take a hand and cuff and
spank them until they squalled.</p>
<p>Very early they learned that Mother
Bear was to be minded. Once she sent
them up a tree and told them to stay
there until she returned. Then she
went off to investigate something which<span class="pagenum">[99]</span>
interested her. When she returned, the
two little cubs were nowhere to be seen.
They had grown tired of waiting for her
to return and had come down to do a
little investigating of their own. It
didn’t take her long to find them. Oh,
my, no! And when she did—well, all
the neighbors knew that two little cubs
had disobeyed, and two little cubs were
sure, very sure, that they never would do
so again. Tommy was one.</p>
<p>At first, during those lovely summer
days, Mother Bear never went far from
them. You see, when they were very
small, there were dangers. Oh, yes,
there are dangers even for little bears.
Tufty the Lynx would have liked nothing
better than a meal of tender young
bear, and Howler the Wolf would have
rejoiced in an opportunity to snatch one<span class="pagenum">[100]</span>
of them without the risk of an encounter
with Mother Bear.</p>
<p>But Tommy and his sister grew fast,
very fast. You see, there were so many
good things to eat. Their mother dug
for them the most delicious roots, tearing
them from the ground with her great
claws. It wasn’t long before they had
learned to find them for themselves and
to dig them where the earth was soft
enough. Then there were berries, raspberries
and blackberries and blueberries,
all they wanted, to be had for the gathering.
And by way of variety there were
occasional fish.</p>
<p>Tommy as a boy was very fond of
fishing. As a bear he was quite as fond
of it. On his first fishing-trip he got a
wetting, a spanking, and no fish. It
happened this way: Mother Bear had led<span class="pagenum">[101]</span>
them one moonlight night to a brook
they never had visited before. Up the
brook she led them until they reached
a place where it was broad and shallow,
the water gurgling and rippling over the
stones and singing merrily. They were
left in the brush on the edge of the brook
where they could see and were warned to
keep still and watch. Then Mother
Bear stationed herself at a point where
the water was just a wee bit deeper than
elsewhere and ran a wee bit faster, for
it had cut a little channel there. For a
long time she sat motionless, a big black
spot in the moonlight, which might have
been a stump to eyes which had not seen
her go there.</p>
<p>Tommy wondered what it all meant.
For a long time, at least it was a long
time to Tommy, nothing happened.<span class="pagenum">[102]</span>
The brook gurgled and sang and Mother
Bear sat as still as the very rocks.
Tommy began to get impatient. He
was bubbling over with high spirits and
sitting still was hard, very hard.</p>
<p>Little by little he stole nearer to the
water until he was on very edge right
behind Mother Bear. Then he caught
a splash down the brook. He looked
in that direction but could see nothing.
Then there was another splash.
He saw a silvery line and then made out
a moving form. There was something
alive coming up the brook. He edged
over a little farther to see better.
There it was, coming nearer and nearer.
Though he didn’t know it then, it was
a big trout working its way up the brook
to the spring-holes higher up where the
water was deep and cold.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[103]</span></p>
<p>In the shallowest places the fish was
sometimes half out of water. It was
making straight for the little channel
where Mother Bear sat. Nearer it came.
Suddenly Mother Bear moved. Like
lightning one of her big paws struck
down and under, scooping the trout
out and sending it flying towards the
shore.</p>
<p>Alas for Tommy! He was directly
in the way. The fish hit him full in the
face, fell back in the water, wriggled and
jumped frantically—and was gone.
Tommy was so startled that he gave a
frightened little whimper. And then a
big black paw descended and sent him
rolling over and over in the water.
Squalling lustily, wet, frightened and
miserable, Tommy scrambled to his feet<span class="pagenum">[104]</span>
and bolted for the shore where he hid
in the brush.</p>
<p>“I didn’t mean to!” he kept whimpering
as he watched Mother Bear return
to her fishing. Presently another trout
came along and was sent flying up on
the shore. Then Tommy watched his
obedient sister enjoy a feast while he
got not so much as a taste.</p>
<p>After that they often went fishing on
moonlight nights. Tommy had learned
his lesson and knew that fish were the
reward of patience, and it was not long
before he was permitted to fish for himself.</p>
<p>Sometimes they went frogging along
the marshy shores of a little pond. This
was even more fun than fishing. It was
great sport to locate a big frog by the
sound of his deep bass voice and then<span class="pagenum">[105]</span>
softly steal up and cut a “chugarum”
short, right in the middle. Then when
he had eaten his fill, it was just as much
fun to keep on hunting them just to see
them plunge with long frightened leaps
into the water. It tickled Tommy immensely,
and he would hunt them by the
hour just for this.</p>
<p>One day Mother Bear led them to an
old dead tree half rotted away at the
bottom. While they sat and looked on
in round-eyed wonder, she tore at the rotten
wood with her great claws. Almost
at once the air about her was full of insects
humming angrily. Tommy drew
nearer. A sharp pain on the end of his
nose made him jump and squeal. <SPAN name="Ref_3_104a" href="#Ref_3_104">Another
shooting pain in one ear brought
another squeal</SPAN> and he slapped at the
side of his head. One of those humming<span class="pagenum">[106]</span>
insects dropped at his feet. It
must be that it had had something to
do with that pain.</p>
<div id="Ref_3_104" class="figcenter">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_3_104.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center"><SPAN href="#Ref_3_104a">ANOTHER SHOOTING PAIN IN ONE EAR BROUGHT
ANOTHER SQUEA</SPAN>L</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>Tommy beat a retreat into the brush.
But Mother Bear kept on clawing at the
tree, growling and whining and stopping
now and then to slap at the insects about
her. By and by the tree fell with a
crash. It partly split when it struck the
ground. Then Mother Bear put her great
claws into the crack and tore the tree
open, for you know she was very strong.
Tommy caught a whiff of something
that made his mouth water. Never in
all his short life had he smelled anything
so delicious. He forgot all about
the pain in his nose and his ear and came
out of his hiding-place. Mother Bear
thrust a great paw into the tree and tore
out a piece of something yellow and<span class="pagenum">[107]</span>
dripping and tossed it in Tommy’s direction.</p>
<p>There were a lot of those insects
crawling over it, but Tommy didn’t
mind. The smell of it told him that it
must be the best thing that ever was,
better than berries, or fish, or frogs, or
roots. And with the first taste he knew
that his nose had told the truth. It was
honey! It didn’t take Tommy a minute
to gobble up honey, comb, bees and
all. Then, heedless of stings, he joined
Mother Bear. What were a few stings
compared to such delicious sweets? So
he learned that hollow trees are sometimes
of interest to bears. They ate and
ate until Tommy’s little stomach was
swelled out like a little balloon. Then
they rolled on the ground to crush the
bees clinging to their fur, after which<span class="pagenum">[108]</span>
Mother Bear led them to a muddy place
on the shore of a little pond, and the cool
mud took out the fire of the stings.
Later, Tommy learned that not all bee-trees
could be pulled down in this way,
but that sometimes they must be climbed
and ripped open with the claws of one
paw while he held on with the other and
endured the stings of the bees as best
he could. But the honey was always
worth all it cost to get.</p>
<p>Next to feasting on honey Tommy
enjoyed most a meal of ants, particularly
red ants; and this seems queer, because
red ants are as sour as honey is sweet.
But it was so. Any kind of ants were
easier to find and to get than honey.
The latter he had only once in a while,
but ants he had every day. He found
them, thousands of them, under and in<span class="pagenum">[109]</span>
rotting old logs and in decayed old
stumps. He seldom passed an old log
without trying to roll it over. If he
succeeded, he was almost sure to find
a frightened colony of ants rushing
about frantically. A few sweeps of his
long tongue, a smacking of his lips and
he moved on.</p>
<p>Sometimes he found grubs of fat
beetles, and these, though not so good as
the ants, were always acceptable on his
bill of fare. And he dearly loved to
hunt wood-mice. It was almost as much
fun as fishing or frogging.</p>
<p>So the long summer passed happily,
and Tommy grew so fast that presently
he became aware that not even Tufty
the Lynx willingly crossed his path.
He could go and come unafraid of any
of the wilderness dwellers and forgot<span class="pagenum">[110]</span>
what fear was until a never-forgotten
day in the early fall.</p>
<p>He had followed Mother Bear to a
certain place where late blueberries still
clung to the bushes. As she reached the
edge of the opening, she stopped short
and lifted her nose, wrinkling the skin
of it as she tested the air. Tommy did
the same. He had great faith in what
his nose could tell him. The wind
brought to him now a strange smell unlike
any he had known, an unpleasant
smell. Somehow, he didn’t know why,
it gave him a queer prickly feeling all
over.</p>
<p>He looked at Mother Bear. She was
staring out into the blueberry patch, and
her lips were drawn back in an ugly
way, showing her great teeth. Tommy
looked out in the berry-patch. There<span class="pagenum">[111]</span>
were two strange two-legged creatures,
gathering berries. They were not
nearly as big as Mother Bear and they
didn’t look dangerous. He stared at
them curiously. Then he turned to look
at Mother Bear. She was stealing away
so silently that not even a leaf rustled.
She was afraid!</p>
<p>Tommy followed her, taking care not
to make the least sound. When they
were at a safe distance, he asked what
it meant. “Those were men,” growled
Mother Bear deep down in her throat,
“and that was the man-smell. Whenever
you smell that, steal away. Men
are the only creatures you have to fear;
but whatever you do, keep away from
them. They are dangerous.”</p>
<p>After that, Tommy continually tested
the air for the dreaded man-smell. Several<span class="pagenum">[112]</span>
times he caught it. Once from a
safe hiding-place he watched a fisherman
and another time a party of campers, but
he took care that they should not suspect
that he was near. By late fall he was
so big that he began to feel independent
and to wander off by himself. Almost
every day he would stand up to a tree,
reach as far up as he could, and dig his
claws into the bark to see how tall he
was.</p>
<p>With the falling of the beechnuts
Tommy found a new and delicious food
and stuffed himself. These days he
roamed far and wide and explored all
the country for miles around. He grew
fat and, as the weather grew colder, his
coat grew thicker. He learned much
about his neighbors and their ways, and
his sense of humor led him often to give<span class="pagenum">[113]</span>
them scares just for the fun of seeing
them jump and run.</p>
<p>With the coming of the first snow a
strange desire to sleep stole over him.
He found a great tree which had been
torn up by the roots in some wind storm
and about which smaller trees had
fallen, making a great tangle. Under
the upturned roots of the great tree was
a hollow, and into this he scraped leaves
and the branches of young balsams
which he broke off. Thus he made a
comfortable bed and with a sigh of contentment
lay down to sleep.</p>
<p>The snow fell and drifted over his
bedroom, but he knew nothing of that.
The cold winds, the bitter winds, swept
through the wilderness, and the trees
cracked with the cold, but Tommy slept
on. Days slipped into weeks and weeks<span class="pagenum">[114]</span>
into months and still he slept. He
would not waken until gentle spring
melted the snow unless—</p>
<p>“Moo-oo!”</p>
<p>Tommy’s eyes flew wide open. For
a full minute he stared blinkeringly out
over the Green Meadows. Then with a
jump he came to his feet. “My gracious,
it’s getting late, and those cows
are wondering what has become of me!”
he exclaimed. He hurried toward the
pasture, breaking into a run, for it was
milking-time. But his thoughts were
far away. They were in the Great
Woods. “I’ve been a bear!” he exclaimed
triumphantly, “and I know just
how he lives and feels, and why he loves
the Great Woods so. Of all the creatures
I’ve been since I found out about
the old wishing-stone, I’d rather be Buster<span class="pagenum">[115]</span>
Bear than any one, next to being
just what I am. He has more fun than
any one I know of and nothing and nobody
to fear but man.”</p>
<p>Tommy’s brow clouded for an instant.
“It’s a shame,” he blurted out, “that
every living thing is afraid of man!
And—and I guess it’s his own fault.
They needn’t ever be afraid of me. I
can tell them that! That old wishing-stone
has taught me a lot, and I am never
going to forget how it feels to be hunted
and afraid all the time.”</p>
<p>And Tommy never has.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p> </p>
<div class="transnote">
<h2 class="nobreak" style="margin-top: 0em">Transcriber’s Note:</h2>
<p>Illustrations have been moved to paragraph breaks near where they are
mentioned.</p>
<p>Punctuation has been made consistent.</p>
<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors
have been corrected.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p> </p>
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