<h2>Grandfather Frog Jumps Just In Time</h2>
<p>Back and forth over the Green
Meadows sailed Whitetail the
Marsh Hawk. Like Longlegs the
Blue Heron, he was hungry. His sharp
eyes peered down among the grasses,
looking for something to eat, but some
good fairy seemed to have warned the
very little people who live there that
Whitetail was out hunting. Perhaps it
was one of Old Mother West Wind's
children, the Merry Little Breezes. You
know they are always flitting about trying
to do some one a good turn.</p>
<p class="l">They love to dance and romp and play</p>
<p class="l">From dawn to dusk the livelong day,</p>
<p class="l">But more than this they love to find</p>
<p class="l">A chance to do some favor kind.</p>
<p>Anyway, little Mr. Green Snake
seemed to know that Whitetail was out
hunting and managed to keep out of
sight. Danny Meadow Mouse wasn't to
be found. Only a few foolish grasshoppers
rewarded his patient search,
and these only served to make him feel
hungrier than ever. But old Whitetail
has a great deal of persistence, and in
spite of his bad luck, he kept at his
hunting, back and forth, back and forth,
until he had been all over the Green
Meadows. At last he made up his mind
that he was wasting time there.</p>
<p>"I'll just have a look over at the
Smiling Pool, and if there is nothing
there, I'll take a turn or two along the
Big River," thought he and straightway
started for the Smiling Pool. Long
before he reached it, his keen eyes saw
Longlegs the Blue Heron standing motionless
on the edge of it, and he knew
by the looks of Longlegs that he was
watching something which he hoped to
catch.</p>
<p>"If it's a fish," thought Whitetail,
"it will do me no good, for I am no
fisherman. But if it's a Frog—well,
Frogs are not as good eating as fat
Meadow Mice, but they are very filling."</p>
<p>With that he hurried a little faster,
and then he saw what Longlegs was
watching so intently. It was, as you
know, Grandfather Frog sitting on his
big green lily-pad. Old Whitetail gave
a great sigh of satisfaction. Grandfather
Frog certainly would be very
filling, very filling, indeed.</p>
<p>Now Longlegs the Blue Heron was so
intently watching Grandfather Frog that
he saw nothing else, and Grandfather
Frog was so busy watching Longlegs
that he quite forgot that there might be
other dangers. Besides, his back was
toward old Whitetail. Of course Whitetail
saw this, and it made him almost
chuckle aloud. Ever so many times he
had tried to catch Grandfather Frog,
but always Grandfather Frog had seen
him long before he could get near him.</p>
<p>Now, with all his keen sight, old
Whitetail had failed to see some one else
who was sitting right in plain sight. He
had failed because his mind was so full
of Grandfather Frog and Longlegs that
he forgot to look around, as he usually
does. Just skimming the tops of the bulrushes
he sailed swiftly out over the
Smiling Pool and reached down with
his great, cruel claws to clutch Grandfather
Frog, who sat there pretending to
be asleep, but all the time watching
Longlegs and deep down inside chuckling
to think how he was fooling Longlegs.</p>
<p>Slap! That was the tail of Jerry
Muskrat hitting the water. Grandfather
Frog knew what that meant—danger!
He didn't know what the danger was,
and he didn't wait to find out. There
would be time enough for that later.
When Jerry Muskrat slapped the water
with his tail that way, danger was very
near indeed. With a frightened "Chugarum!"
Grandfather Frog dived head
first into the Smiling Pool, and so close
was old Whitetail that the water was
splashed right in his face. He clutched
frantically with his great claws, but all
he got was a piece of the big green lily-pad
on which Grandfather Frog had
been sitting, and of course this was of
no use for an empty stomach.</p>
<p>With a scream of disappointment and
anger, he whirled in the air and made
straight for Jerry Muskrat. But Jerry
just laughed in the most provoking way
and ducked under water.</p>
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