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The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk. Thornton W. Burgess
Читать онлайн.Название The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781420971286
Автор произведения Thornton W. Burgess
Жанр Зарубежная классика
Издательство Ingram
THE ADVENTURES OF JIMMY SKUNK
By THORNTON W. BURGESS
The Adventures of Jimmy Skunk
By Thornton W. Burgess
Illustrated by Harrison Cady
Print ISBN 13: 978-1-4209-7127-9
eBook ISBN 13: 978-1-4209-7128-6
This edition copyright © 2020. Digireads.com Publishing.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Cover Image: a detail of an illustration by Harrison Cady, published by Little, Brown and Company, Boston, c. 1918.
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CONTENTS
III. What Happened at the Old Barrel
IV. Jimmy Skunk Is Very Mad Indeed
VI. Peter Rabbit Doesn’t Enjoy His Joke
VII. Sammy Jay Does Some Guessing
VIII. Jimmy Skunk Looks For Peter
IX. Jimmy Visits Johnny Chuck’s Old House
X. Peter Rabbit Is Most Uncomfortable
XI. Jimmy Skunk Keeps His Word
XII. Jimmy Skunk and Unc’ Billy Possum Meet
XIV. A Little Something About Eggs
XIX. Jimmy Skunk Is True to His Word
XX. Farmer Brown’s Boy Arrives
XXI. The Nest-Egg Gives Unc’ Billy Away
XXII. Unc’ Billy Possum Tries His Old Trick
XXIII. Unc’ Billy Gives Himself Away
I. Peter Rabbit Plans a Joke
The Imp of Mischief, woe is me,
Is always busy as a bee
That is why so many people are forever getting into trouble. He won’t keep still. No, Sir, he won’t keep still unless he is made to. Once let him get started there is no knowing where he will stop. Peter Rabbit had just seen Jimmy Skunk disappear inside an old barrel, lying on its side at the top of the hill, and at once the Imp of Mischief began to whisper to Peter. Of course Peter shouldn’t have listened. Certainly not. But he did. You know Peter dearly loves a joke when it is on some one else. He sat right where he was and watched to see if Jimmy would come out of the barrel. Jimmy didn’t come out, and after a little Peter stole over to the barrel and peeped inside. There was Jimmy Skunk curled up for a nap.
Peter tiptoed away very softly. All the time the Imp of Mischief was whispering to him that this was a splendid chance to play a joke on Jimmy. You know it is very easy to play a joke on any one who is asleep. Peter doesn’t often have a chance to play a joke on Jimmy Skunk. It isn’t a very safe thing to do, not if Jimmy is awake. No one knows that better than Peter. He sat down some distance from the barrel but where he could keep an eye on it. Then he went into a brown study, which is one way of saying that he thought very hard. He wanted to play a joke on Jimmy, but like most jokers he didn’t want the joke to come back on himself. In fact, he felt that it would be a great deal better for him if Jimmy shouldn’t know that he had anything to do with the joke.
As he sat there in a brown study, he happened to glance over on the Green Meadows and there he saw something red. He looked very hard, and in a minute he saw that it was Reddy Fox. Right away, Peter’s nimble wits began to plan how he could use Reddy Fox to play a joke on Jimmy. All in a flash an idea came to him, an idea that made him laugh right out. You see, the Imp of Mischief was very, very busy whispering to Peter.
“If Reddy were only up here, I believe I could do it, and it would be a joke on Reddy as well as on Jimmy,” thought Peter, and laughed right out again.
“What are you laughing at?” asked a voice. It was the voice of Sammy Jay.
Right away a plan for getting Reddy up there flashed into Peter’s head. He would get Sammy angry, and that would make Sammy scream. Reddy would be sure to come up there to see what Sammy Jay was making such a fuss about. Sammy, you know, is very quick-tempered. No one knows this better than Peter. So instead of replying politely to Sammy, as he should have done, Peter spoke crossly:
“Fly away, Sammy, fly away! It is no business of yours what I am laughing at,” said he.
Right away Sammy’s quick temper flared up. He began to call Peter names, and Peter answered back. This angered Sammy still more, and as he always screams when he is angry, he was soon making such a racket that Reddy Fox down on the Green Meadows couldn’t help but hear it. Peter saw him lift his head to listen. In a few minutes he began to trot that way. He was coming to find out what that fuss was about. Peter knew that Reddy wouldn’t come straight up there. That isn’t Reddy’s way. He would steal around back of the old stone wall on the edge of the Old Orchard, which was back of Peter, and would try to see what was going on without being seen himself.
“As soon as he sees me he will think that at last he has a chance to catch me,” thought Peter. “I shall