The Wise Mamma Goose by Charlotte B. Herr
page 6 of 7 (85%)
page 6 of 7 (85%)
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Then one night when the sun was sinking low, the big white cock flew up
to the top of the fence and crowed. All the chickens listened then, while he told them that they were every one to go into old Fido's house that night with Mamma Goose; for that was the only way to keep the fox from carrying them all away. Now when the big cock said that they were to do anything, it was always done, and no words about it! So that night all the chickens went into Fido's house. It was all they could do to get in, for the house was not large; and some of them were not polite and pushed against the others to make more room. But the big cock did all he could to keep them in order, and at last all the little chicks went to sleep. But the next morning when the farmer's boy came to scatter the corn for breakfast, he looked at the empty roost and did not know what to think! By and by, however, he found them and at first he only laughed, but after he had seen that no little chick was missing, he looked as if he were thinking, too. And that evening, when the sun had gone down behind the hill, the farmer's boy came back, and who do you think was with him?--old Fido, wagging his tail, and looking as if he were very glad to get back! The big white cock and all the chickens were just as glad as he was, for now they knew that the fox would never come any more. Mamma Goose, too, was just as glad as the rest, for now she knew that she would never need to bother herself to think about the goslings again. But she didn't dream that anything more could happen, and she was too much surprised to think about anything at all, when old Fido came |
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