The Adventures of Bobby Coon. Thornton W. Burgess
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THE ADVENTURES OF
BOBBY COON
By THORNTON W. BURGESS
The Adventures of Bobby Coon
By Thornton W. Burgess
Illustrated by Harrison Cady
Print ISBN 13: 978-1-4209-7121-7
eBook ISBN 13: 978-1-4209-7122-4
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
IV. Browser Finds Someone at Home
VI. Something Is Wrong With Bobby Coon
VII. Bobby Has a Strange Journey
VIII. Farmer Brown’s Boy Plays Doctor
X. Bobby Longs For the Green Forest
XII. Bobby Tries the Wrong House
XIII. Bobby Makes Another Mistake
XIV. Bobby Finds Out His Mistake
XV. Once More Bobby Tries to Sleep
XVI. Blacky the Crow Discovers Bobby
XVI. The Surprise of Two Cousins
XVIII. Buster Bear’s Short Temper
XIX. Bobby Coon Gets a Terrible Shaking
XX. Peter Rabbit Saves Bobby Coon
XXI. Bobby Finds a Home At Last
XXII. Bobby Finds He Has a Neighbor
XXIII. Buster Bear Finds Bobby Coon
I. Bobby Coon Has a Bad Dream
Some dreams are good and some are bad;
Some dreams are light and airy;
Some dreams I think are woven by
The worst bind of a fairy.
Dreams are such queer things, so very real when all the time they are unreal, that sometimes I think they must be the work of fairies,—happy dreams the work of good fairies and bad dreams the work of bad fairies. I guess you’ve had both kinds. I know I have many times. However, Bobby Coon says that fairies have nothing to do with dreams. Bobby ought to know, for be spends most of the winter asleep, and it is only when you are asleep that you have real dreams.
Bobby had kept awake as long as there was anything to eat, but when Jack Frost froze everything bard, and rough Brother North Wind brought the storm-clouds that covered the Green Forest with snow, Bobby climbed into his warm bed inside the big hollow chestnut tree which he called his, curled up comfortably, and went to sleep. He didn’t care a hair of his ringed tail how cold it was or how Brother North Wind howled and shrieked and blustered. He was so fat that it made him wheeze and puff whenever he tried to hurry during the last few days he was abroad, and this fat helped to keep him warm while he slept, and also kept him from waking from hunger.
Bobby didn’t sleep right straight through the winter as does Johnny Chuck. Once in a great while he would wake up, especially if the weather had turned rather warm. He would yawn a few times and then crawl up to his doorway and peep out to see how things were looking outside. Sometimes he would climb down from his home and take a little walk for exercise. But he never went far, and soon returned for another long nap.
As it began to get towards the end of winter his naps were shorter. He was no longer fat. In fact, his stomach complained a great deal of being empty. Perhaps you know what it is like to have a stomach complain that way. It is very disturbing. It gave Bobby no peace while he was awake, and when he was asleep it gave him bad dreams. Bobby knew very well that no fairies had anything to do with those dreams; they came from a bothersome, empty, complaining stomach and nothing else.
One day Bobby had the worst dream of all. He had prowled around a little the night before but had found nothing wherewith to satisfy his bothersome stomach. So he had gone back to bed very much out of sorts and almost as soon as he was asleep he had begun to dream. At first the dreams were not