<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN>VII<br/>SWIMMING</h2>
<p>Old dog Spot liked boys. Somehow they
always managed to have a lively time; and
usually they seemed glad to have him join
them in their sports.</p>
<p>He never could understand why Johnnie
Green and the neighbors' boys didn't
want him to play baseball with them.
Spot loved to chase a ball. And sometimes
when he was watching a game and
somebody hit a slow grounder he would
rush out and grab the ball and run
with it.</p>
<p>Then all the boys would run after him
and try to catch him. That always
pleased Spot mightily. And the longer
the chase lasted the happier he was. But
it was different with the boys. The
harder they had to run after Spot before
they got the ball away from him the more
out of patience they became.</p>
<p>Whenever Spot took part in a ball game
like that Johnnie Green usually put an
end to his fun, for the time being, by tying
him to something or other—perhaps a
fence or a tree. But even that was better—so
Spot thought—than being sent
home in disgrace.</p>
<p>Luckily there were other sports in
which Spot could romp with the boys as
much as he pleased, without anybody's
objecting. Nutting in the woods in the
fall; skating on the mill pond or coasting
down the long hill past Farmer Green's
house in the winter; berrying in the summer—and
swimming! Those were only a
few of the jolly times that Spot and the
boys enjoyed together.</p>
<p>Perhaps, of them all, both Spot and the
boys liked swimming the most. As for
Spot, he didn't care <i>where</i> he swam, so
long as the water was wet. Broad Brook,
Swift River, Black Creek, or the mill
pond—any one of those places suited him
as well as another. The boys, however,
preferred the mill pond. It was deep
enough, by the dam, to suit the best swimmers;
and it was shallow enough at the
upper end for those that were just
learning.</p>
<p>All the boys thought it great fun when
a wagon clattered over the bridge, which
crossed right above the dam. Then they
ducked into the water, with only their
heads out, and shouted more or less politely
at whoever was passing.</p>
<p>At such times Spot barked, because that
seemed to him the gentlemanly thing to
do. But he never could see any sense in
jumping into the water if he happened to
be out on the bank when a wagon came
along.</p>
<p>The boys threw sticks about the pond
for Spot to fetch back to them. They
raced with him. They upset him when he
was sunning himself on the big rock near
the dam, and they laughed to see the
splash he made when he struck the water.</p>
<p>No matter what tricks the boys played
on him, Spot never lost his temper. He
took everything good-naturedly. And
one day, when Johnnie Green and his
friends were swimming in the mill pond
he even took a bundle of clothes from
beneath a big hickory on the bank. Yes!
Spot caught up somebody's clothes in his
mouth and started along the road with
them.</p>
<p>He was surprised to hear a terrible outcry
from the water.</p>
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