<div><h1 id='ch9'>CHAPTER IX<br/> <span class='sub-head'>A FAMILY FISHING PARTY</span></h1></div>
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<p class='line0'>’Tis vain to sit and wish and wish</p>
<p class='line0'>When fishing where there are no fish.</p>
<p class='line0'>                 <span class='it'>Little Joe Otter.</span></p>
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<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Farmer Brown’s</span> boy hadn’t had
one bite, not one teeny, weeny nibble,
and he really didn’t know
what to make of it. Many times
had he fished in the Laughing
Brook but never before with quite
such bad luck as this.</p>
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<p class='line0'>“Fishy, fishy, here’s a worm!</p>
<p class='line0'>Watch how he will twist and squirm!</p>
<p class='line0'>Bite him first before you look</p>
<p class='line0'>To see if he is on a hook.”</p>
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<p class='pindent'>Farmer Brown’s boy said this
over twice as he tossed his bait
into the second little pool. Then
he waited. He waited and waited
and waited! All good fishermen
wait and wait and wait. To catch
fish patience is as necessary as bait.
So Farmer Brown’s boy waited.
Nothing happened; nothing at all.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I wonder if some one has been
here before me and caught all the
trout,” thought he. “I didn’t get
a nibble at the first pool and I
haven’t had a nibble at this pool.
Guess I’ll have to move on.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>So he moved on towards the
third pool a little farther down the
Laughing Brook. He had almost
reached it when he heard a splash
and then another splash. He put
down his rod and crept forward
very, very carefully, so as to make
no sound. When he could see the
little pool clearly he caught his
breath. Other fishermen <span class='it'>were</span>
ahead of him. In fact, a family
fishing party was right in that
very pool and having better luck,
much better luck, than he had had.
The members of that party were
catching fish, the very trout he
had been so sure of catching when
he started out. These were the
ones who had spoiled his fishing.
Have you guessed who they were?
They were Little Joe Otter, Mrs.
Joe and the little Otters.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Farmer Brown’s boy kept perfectly
still and held his breath.
He forgot all about his own fishing.
He had seen Little Joe only once or
twice before, and then had caught
only a glimpse of his brown head
in the Smiling Pool. Of course he
had never seen Mrs. Joe or the two
children.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Little Joe dived. He was gone
so long that Farmer Brown’s boy
began to wonder what had become
of him. Suddenly his brown head
popped up and in his mouth was a
beautiful, speckled trout, a trout
that Farmer Brown’s boy would
have been delighted to have
caught.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Gee!” exclaimed Farmer
Brown’s boy under his breath.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Little Joe swam with the trout
straight over to where the two
little Otters were waiting on a big
flat stone at the edge of the water,
fairly dancing with excitement.
Just before he reached them,
Little Joe dropped that fish. It
could still swim, though not very
fast.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Splash! The two young Otters
were in the water after it, each
eager to be the one to catch it.
They were clumsy and overeager,
and you know overeagerness often
is quite as bad as being too slow.
Each got in the way of the other.
The fish twisted and turned and
they tried to follow. At last, one
of them made a lucky dash and
proudly turned towards the bank
with the fish in his mouth. Very
proud he looked. The other
swam after and tried to take the
fish away from him. It looked
very much as if there might be a
fight right there in that little
pool in the Laughing Brook. But
just then Mrs. Joe interfered. She
swam in between the two and
pushed the unsuccessful one away.
He went off by himself and sulked
while the other dragged his prize
out on a rock and began to eat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>A few minutes later Mrs. Joe
caught another trout and this she
carried to the little Otter who had
none. When she let the fish go,
it could swim only a little and so
the young Otter had no trouble in
catching it. Farmer Brown’s boy
wondered if it was just chance that
those fish were alive, or if they had
been kept so purposely to give the
young Otters a lesson in fishing.
I wonder too. Don’t you?</p>
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