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Bowser The Hound
Chapter V. Bowser Spends a Bad Night
Thornton W.Burgess
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       There's nothing like just sticking to The thing you undertake to do. There'll be no cause then, though you fail, To hang your head or drop your tail. Bowser the Hound.
       Bowser was lost, utterly lost. He hadn't the least idea in which direction Farmer Brown's house was. In fact he hadn't the least idea which way to turn to find any house. It was the most lonely kind of a lonely place to which Old Man Coyote had led him and there played the trick on him which had caused him to tumble into the strange river.
       But Bowser couldn't stand still for long. Already jolly, round, red Mr. Sun was going to bed behind the Purple Hills, and Bowser knew that cold as had been the day, the night would be still colder. He must keep moving until he found a shelter. If he didn't he would freeze. So whimpering and whining, Bowser limped along.
       Bowser was not afraid to be out at night as some folks are. Goodness, no! In fact, on many a moonlight night Bowser had hunted Reddy Fox or Granny Fox all night long. Never once had he felt lonesome then. But now it was very, very different. You see, on those nights when he had hunted he always had known where he was. He had known that at any time he could go straight home if he wanted to. That made all the difference in the world.
       It would have been bad enough, being lost this way, had he been feeling at his best. Being lost always makes one feel terribly lonesome. Lonesomeness is one of the worst parts of the feeling of being lost. But added to this was the fact that Bowser was really not in fit condition to be out at all. He was wet, tired, lame and hungry. Do you wonder that he whimpered and whined as he limped along over the hard snow, and hadn't the least idea whether he was headed towards home or deeper into the great woods?
       For a long time he kept on until it seemed to him he couldn't drag one foot after another. Then quite suddenly something big and dark loomed up in front of him. It really wasn't as big as it seemed. It was a little house, a sugar camp, just such a one as Farmer Brown has near his home. Bowser crept to the door. It was closed. Bowser sniffed and sniffed and his heart sank, for there was no scent of human beings. Then he knew that that little house was deserted and empty. Still he whined and scratched at the door. By and by the door opened ever so little, for it had not been locked.
       Bowser crept in. In one corner he found some hay, and in this he curled up. It was cold, very cold, but not nearly as cold as outside that little house. So Bowser curled up in the hay and shivered and shook and slept a little and wished with all his might that he never had found the tracks of Old Man Coyote.
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本书目录

Chapter I. Old Man Coyote Leads Bowser Away
Chapter II. Old Man Coyote Plays a Trick
Chapter III. What Happened to Bowser
Chapter IV. Poor Bowser
Chapter V. Bowser Spends a Bad Night
Chapter VI. The Surprise of Blacky the Crow
Chapter VII. Blacky the Crow Takes Pity on Bowser
Chapter VIII. How Blacky the Crow Helped Bowser
Chapter IX. Old Man Coyote Gives Out Dark Hints
Chapter X. How Reddy Fox Investigated
Chapter XI. A Little Unpleasantness
Chapter XII. The Cleverness of Old Man Coyote
Chapter XIII. The Mischievous Little Night Breeze
Chapter XIV. The Difference Between Being Inside and Outside
Chapter XV. Reddy's Forlorn Chance
Chapter XVI. Why Reddy Went Without a Chicken Dinner
Chapter XVII. Farmer Brown's Boy Drops a Pan of Corn
Chapter XVIII. Mutual Relief
Chapter XIX. Where Was Bowser the Hound?
Chapter XX. Where Bowser Was
Chapter XXI. Bowser Becomes a Prisoner
Chapter XXII. Farmer Brown's Boy Looks in Vain
Chapter XXIII. Bowser's Great Voice
Chapter XXIV. Blacky Tries to Get Help
Chapter XXV. Blacky Calls on Reddy Fox
Chapter XXVI. Red Wits and Black Wits
Chapter XXVII. The Artfulness of Blacky
Chapter XXVIII. Reddy Fox Dreams of Chickens
Chapter XXIX. Reddy Tries to Arouse Blacky's Pity
Chapter XXX. Blacky the Crow is All Pity
Chapter XXXI. Blacky is Much Pleased with Himself
Chapter XXXII. Blacky Waits for Reddy
Chapter XXXIII. Reddy Watches the Fat Hens
Chapter XXXIV. Patience and Impatience
Chapter XXXV. Things Happen All at Once
Chapter XXXVI. Reddy Hides the Fat Hen
Chapter XXXVII. Farmer Brown's Boy Has a Glad Surprise
Chapter XXXVIII. Reddy Goes Back for His Fat Hen
Chapter XXXIX. A Vanished Dinner
Chapter XL. Where was Reddy's Dinner?
Chapter XLI. What Blacky the Crow Saw
Chapter XLII. All is Well That Ends Well