<h3><SPAN name="XII" id="XII"></SPAN>XII</h3>
<h3>CUFFY BEAR GOES TO MARKET</h3>
<p>"Mother! When is my birthday?" Cuffy asked, a few days after
his father had brought home the little pig.</p>
<p>"Why, your birthday comes on the day the wild geese begin to
fly south," Mrs. Bear said.</p>
<p>"Is that soon?" Cuffy asked.</p>
<p>"Bless you, no! Not for months and months!" his mother
said.</p>
<p>"And when is Silkie's?" he continued.</p>
<p>"The day of the first snow," she told him.</p>
<p>Cuffy knew that that was a long way off—not until
summer had come and gone.</p>
<p>"And Father's?" he inquired once more.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bear shook her head.</p>
<p>"Your father hasn't many birthdays," she said. "He was born
on the day of the great forest fire. It may be a long time
before he has another birthday. I hope so, anyhow," she added,
"for a great forest fire is a dreadful thing."</p>
<p>Now you see, having a birthday like that is a good deal like
being born on the twenty-ninth of February, when you have a
birthday only once in four years. Yes—it's a good deal
like that, only worse. For you may have to wait years and years
before another great fire comes. You understand, of course,
that having no clocks or calendars or anything like that, the
wild animals can keep track of birthdays only by remembering
things that happen.</p>
<p>All this made Cuffy Bear feel very sad. He had been hoping
that some member of the family would have a birthday soon, and
then perhaps his father would bring home another little pig for
another nice feast. But now he saw that there was no chance of
that happening for a long, long time.</p>
<SPAN name="image003" id="image003"></SPAN>
<div class="figcenter"
style="width: 471px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/image003.jpg" width-obs="471" height-obs="640" alt="Mrs. Eagle Rose Higher and Higher" />
<span class="caption">Mrs. Eagle Rose Higher and
Higher</span></div>
<p>Cuffy went out of doors then and thought and thought and
thought. I'm almost ashamed to have to say it—he was
planning to go down to Farmer Green's and get another fat,
tender, little pig like the one his father had brought
home.</p>
<p>Now, when a very young bear starts out to steal a pig there
are many things to think of. In the first place, there was
Farmer Green, and Farmer Green's boy Johnnie, and Farmer
Green's hired man. Cuffy knew that he must be very, very
careful not to meet them.</p>
<p>To his great relief, when he had gone down into Pleasant
Valley Cuffy saw all three ploughing in a field. They did not
see him at all. And so he felt very brave as he went on toward
the farm buildings.</p>
<p>Farmer Green's pig-pen was in a little, low building next
the cow-barn. Cuffy had no trouble in finding it. And he walked
inside quite boldly and before you could have winked, almost,
he had seized a little, white pig in his mouth and was loping
off across the barnyard.</p>
<p>The pig had looked very small to Cuffy when he first saw and
seized it. But now it seemed to be as many as twenty times
bigger than Cuffy was himself. That was because the pig made
the most frightful noise Cuffy had ever heard in all his life.
Cuffy felt as if he had a hundred pigs in his mouth, with their
hundred snouts squealing right in his ears. Though Farmer Green
was at least a mile away, Cuffy was sure he could hear. Indeed,
Cuffy thought that all the world must hear that dreadful
racket. And he was so frightened that he let go of the little
pig and ran away towards home as fast as he could jump.</p>
<p>That squealing rang in his ears for a long time. And if
Cuffy's father had brought home a pig that night Cuffy couldn't
have eaten a mouthful of it. He never wanted to see or taste of
a pig again. And you may be sure he never wanted to <i>hear</i>
one, either.</p>
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