Sammie and Susie Littletail
e knew about all a rabbit can know. Of course, that may not be so very much, but it was a good deal for Uncle Wiggily Longears. So the day
fall in," he said. "You come with me, and I will show you. I
t them drown," cautio
rrow, followed by the two bunny children. But, just as their uncle go
he cried three tim
e matter?"
y bad. I don't believe I would dare go in the water with you children to-day. We will have to wait. Yet I don't l
er if you could come into the
" and poor Uncle Wiggily Longears wrinkled his nose and made it twinkle like a star on a frosty night, and he wiggled his ea
o had just finished peeling the potatoes for dinner. She could peel them very nicely
s he rubbed his leg softly. "You are a much better swimmer
ittletail family, but, as she was a very good muskrat, she was
the stove, and Mr. Littletail will not be home to lunch. I wi
rs, "I wish you would. I must go a
age leaf," said Jane Fuzzy-Wuz
k down into the burrow, while Susie and Sammie, w
cross; she swam on her side, and in the ordinary way. In fact, she swam in a number of ways that you and I could not. At length she swam entirely under water for some distance, and the bun
them, as they learned quickly. She was just showing them how to float along with only the tip
en they went to take a lesson. But it was a number of boys with a dog, who were making the noise. As
and a muskrat! Let's catch
, who was very much frighte
nose out, and I will save you." The boys ran along the bank, throwing stones at the little creatures, and the dog barked, and to-morrow nig