<h2>Grandfather Frog's Troubles Grow</h2>
<p class="l">Head first in; no way out;</p>
<p class="l">It's best to know what you're about!</p>
<p>Grandfather Frog had had
plenty of time to realize how very
true this is. As he sat on the old
shingle which the Merry Little Breezes
had blown into the spring where he was
a prisoner, he thought a great deal about
that little word "if." <em>If</em> he hadn't left
the Smiling Pool, <em>if</em> he hadn't been stubborn
and set in his ways, <em>if</em> he hadn't
been in such a hurry, <em>if</em> he had looked to
see where he was leaping—well, any one
of these <em>ifs</em> would have kept him out of
his present trouble.</p>
<p>It really wasn't so bad in the spring.
That is, it wouldn't have been so bad
but for the fear that Farmer Brown's
boy might come for a drink and find him
there. That was Grandfather Frog's
one great fear, and it gave him bad
dreams whenever he tried to take a nap.
He grew cold all over at the very thought
of being caught again by Farmer Brown's
boy, and when at last one of the Merry
Little Breezes hurried up to tell him that
Farmer Brown's boy actually was coming,
poor old Grandfather Frog was so
frightened that the Merry Little Breeze
had to tell him twice to hide under the
old shingle as it floated on the water.</p>
<p>At last he got it through his head, and
drawing a very long breath, he dived
into the water and swam under the old
shingle. He was just in time. Yes, Sir,
he was just in time. If Farmer Brown's
boy hadn't been thinking of something
else, he certainly would have noticed the
little rings on the water made by Grandfather
Frog when he dived in. But he
was thinking of something else, and it
wasn't until he dipped a cup in for the
second time that he even saw the old
shingle.</p>
<p>"Hello!" he exclaimed. "That must
have blown in since I was here yesterday.
We can't have anything like that in our
nice spring."</p>
<p>With that he reached out for the old
shingle, and Grandfather Frog, hiding
under it, gave himself up for lost. But
the anxious Little Breeze had been
watching sharply and the instant he saw
what Farmer Brown's boy was going to
do, he played the old, old trick of snatching
his hat from his head. The truth is,
he couldn't think of anything else to do.
Farmer Brown's boy grabbed at his
hat, and then, because he was in a hurry
and had other things to do, he started off
without once thinking of the old shingle
again.</p>
<p>"Chugarum!" cried Grandfather
Frog, as he swam out from under the
shingle and climbed up on it, "That
certainly was a close call. If I have
many more like it, I certainly shall die
of fright."</p>
<p>Nothing more happened for a long
time, and Grandfather Frog was wondering
if it wouldn't be safe to take a nap
when he saw peeping over the edge above
him two eyes. They were greenish
yellow eyes, and they stared and stared.
Grandfather Frog stared and stared back.
He just couldn't help it. He didn't
know who they belonged to. He couldn't
remember ever having seen them before.
He was afraid, and yet somehow he
couldn't make up his mind to jump. He
stared so hard at the eyes that he didn't
notice a long furry paw slowly, very
slowly, reaching down towards him.
Nearer it crept and nearer. Then suddenly
it moved like a flash. Grandfather
Frog felt sharp claws in his white and
yellow waistcoat, and before he could
even open his mouth to cry "Chugarum,"
he was sent flying through the
air and landed on his back in the grass.
Pounce! Two paws pinned him down,
and the greenish yellow eyes were not
an inch from his own. They belonged to
Black Pussy, Farmer Brown's cat.</p>
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