<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br/> <small>FLOP EAR AND THE BOY</small></h2>
<p class="cap">Flop Ear awoke in the morning feeling
hungry. All he had to do was to reach
out and eat part of his hay-bed in which he
had slept. I think that was rather funny. It
isn’t every one who can get a breakfast as easily
as that.</p>
<p>How would you like to reach out in the morning,
when you wake up, and eat part of the pillow
case, a bit of the sheet and perhaps nibble off
one of the rosettes on the bedquilt? I guess it
would not taste as good as your breakfast orange
and oatmeal; would it? No indeed!</p>
<p>But a rabbit is different. They like hay, and
they can sleep in it as well as eat it. So Flop
Ear had no trouble getting his breakfast. And
he knew that in the woods and fields all around
him grew many other things he could eat.</p>
<p>“So, even though I am lost, I shall not go hungry,”
thought Flop Ear. “But still I don’t want
to be lost. I want to find my home, my father
and my mother, and Snuggle and Pink Nose. I
want to see my grandma, Lady Munch, too.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45"></SPAN>[45]</span>
Oh, how I wish that hunter man had never come
to our woods!”</p>
<p>But there was no use wishing that now. Flop
Ear was far away from home, and he must do
the best he could either to find his way back to
it, or to look for a new home.</p>
<p>“It is Summer now,” thought the little rabbit,
“and it will be all right to sleep out in the fields
or woods without going down into an underground
burrow. But if I do not find my home
before cold weather comes I shall have to dig
a new one for myself. I wonder if I have forgotten
how to dig, or burrow, as father calls it.
I guess I’ll go out and try it now.”</p>
<p>Out from the warm little nest he had made
for himself in the hay came Flop Ear. He
found a soft place in the field and began to dig
in the dirt, pawing it under him in a pile by
scratching with his fore paws, almost as your
dog does it when he feels like digging.</p>
<p>“I haven’t forgotten my digging lessons,” said
Flop Ear. “So I will be all right when Winter
comes. But it is a long way off yet. Now to
try again to find my home.”</p>
<p>He had just left the spot where he had dug
the little hole in the meadow, when, all at once,
he heard a dog barking.</p>
<p>“Ha! I wonder if that is Don or a hunter’s
dog,” thought Flop Ear. He looked quickly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46"></SPAN>[46]</span>
over his shoulder, and he saw a dog running
toward him. It was neither Don nor a hunter’s
dog, but a strange one.</p>
<p>“Get out of this field!” barked the dog.
“Run away or I’ll bite you!” and he spoke very
crossly.</p>
<p>“My! You are not as nice and polite as Don
was when he let me get the cabbage,” thought
Flop Ear as he bounded away. “I’m not hurting
your field. I only dug a little hole in it, and
ate some hay, and there is a whole mountain of
it left.” Flop Ear did not stop to say this to the
barking dog, but spoke as he ran on, for the dog
was coming after him very fast indeed.</p>
<p>“Bow wow! Bow wow!” barked the dog.
“I’ll catch you, rabbit!”</p>
<p>“Oh, ho! No, you won’t!” answered Flop
Ear. “You can’t catch me!”</p>
<p>Rabbits can run and hop very fast you know,
but of course Flop Ear was only a little fellow,
not fully grown, and the dog was a big chap.
So the rabbit, looking back, saw that the dog
was getting nearer and nearer.</p>
<p>“I must fool him,” said Flop Ear to himself.
“I must run in the woods where he can not see
me. Then he can only follow me by smelling,
and when I get a chance I’ll cross some water,
and then the dog can’t even smell my steps.”</p>
<p>When dogs can not see rabbits, or other animals<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47"></SPAN>[47]</span>
they are chasing, they have to go by smell.
They put their nose to the ground and sniff very
hard, and a dog’s nose is so good for smelling
that he can tell just which way a rabbit went,
that is if it is not too long after the rabbit has
passed by. Rabbits, and other animals when
they step on the ground, leave there a sort of
smell, called a scent, just as if you rubbed onion
on a dish. Though you did not see the onion
rubbed on the dish, if you smelled the dish, even
in the dark, you would know the onion had been
there.</p>
<p>That’s the way it is when a dog chases a rabbit.
He smells the tracks on the ground when
he can not see the bunny running along.</p>
<p>Pretty soon Flop Ear came to the woods. In
among the bushes he jumped, and now he was
hidden from the dog.</p>
<p>“Oh, but I’ll get you anyhow,” barked the
dog. “I’ll smell you out with my sharp nose.”</p>
<p>“No, you won’t,” thought Flop Ear, for he
did not want to talk to the dog now, or the cross
animal might find the little white rabbit.</p>
<p>On and on ran Flop Ear, as fast as he could
go. The dog still came after him, for every
time Flop Ear’s feet touched the ground they
left a smell there which the dog could follow.</p>
<p>But, pretty soon, Flop Ear came to a brook
running through the woods.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48"></SPAN>[48]</span></p>
<p>“Now here’s where I fool that dog,” thought
the rabbit. So Flop Ear went close to the edge
of the water, jumped in where it was not very
deep, and waded down stream, going as fast as
he could, splashing drops all over. But he did
not mind that, as the day was warm.</p>
<p>Besides it was better to be wet than to have a
dog bite him.</p>
<p>After going down the brook quite a distance
Flop Ear went all the way across it, to the other
side, and then he felt that he need not hurry so.</p>
<p>“The dog can not smell where I am now,” he
said to himself.</p>
<p>And this was true. Barking and growling,
the dog came to the edge of the brook where
Flop Ear had waded into the water, but the rabbit
was out of sight. Then the dog had to stop
for a minute.</p>
<p>“Now which way did that rabbit go?” he
asked himself, for you see the smell of rabbits’
feet, or those of other animals, will not stay on
the water. That was where the dog was puzzled.</p>
<p>“I guess the rabbit jumped across the brook,
and is in the woods on the other side,” said the
dog. “I’ll go over there myself.”</p>
<p>So across the water went the dog, but when he
got on the other side he could neither see Flop
Ear nor smell where he was. For the rabbit<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49"></SPAN>[49]</span>
was quite a way down the stream you see. The
dog ran all around, trying to get track of the
rabbit smell, but he could not.</p>
<p>“He got away from me after all!” said the
dog. “I call that a mean trick!”</p>
<p>But for Flop Ear it was a good trick. He did
not want to be bitten, any more than that dog
would like to get a nip. So Flop Ear got himself
out of one danger.</p>
<p>“My! That was a long run!” said Flop Ear,
as he came to a rest on a bed of soft moss. “I
thought that dog would surely get me.” He listened
very hard, but he could not hear the dog
barking now. The dog had gone back to his
home in the farmhouse, near the big pile of hay.</p>
<p>Flop Ear was hungry again now; so, after
resting, he looked about and found some sweet
bark from a tree. He ate as much of this as he
wanted, taking a little sassafras bark as a sort of
dessert—as you take pudding or pie—and then
he hopped on again, still looking for his lost
home.</p>
<p>All that day Flop Ear wandered about in the
woods. Then, as night was coming on, he
looked for a place to sleep. He was wondering
if he had better not go back to the pile of hay,
when, all at once he saw another rabbit just
ahead of him.</p>
<p>“Oh, if that is only one of my folks!” thought<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50"></SPAN>[50]</span>
Flop Ear, his heart beating very fast, “how
happy I shall be! Hello there!” he called to
the other bunny.</p>
<p>“Hello!” came back the answer, and then
Flop Ear’s heart was sad, for the voice was not
that of any of his relatives—not Lady Munch’s,
his father’s, mother’s, Pink Nose’s, or Snuggle’s.</p>
<p>“Do you live around here?” asked Flop Ear
of the strange rabbit.</p>
<p>“Yes,” was the answer. “My burrow is right
under the place where you are sitting, and my
front door is near this rock where I am.”</p>
<p>“Oh dear! I wish I were as near <em>my</em> home as
you are to <em>yours</em>,” said Flop Ear.</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” asked the other rabbit,
whose name was Fluffo.</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m lost!” Flop Ear said. “A hunter
chased me away from my nice home.”</p>
<p>“Then come and stay with me,” suggested
Fluffo. “I have plenty of room, and there are
some nice carrots and cabbages in my burrow.”</p>
<p>“How good that sounds,” Flop Ear said. “I
will come in and stay with you.”</p>
<p>So down into the other bunny’s burrow he
went, and had a good supper, staying there all
night. He had a good breakfast, too, and then
he started off through the woods again.</p>
<p>“Why don’t you stay longer with me?” asked
Fluffo. “I have plenty of room for both of us.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51"></SPAN>[51]</span></p>
<p>“Oh, I would like to stay,” Flop Ear said,
“but I feel that I must try to get back to my
own dear home. My father and mother may be
looking for me.”</p>
<p>“Well, go on then,” said Fluffo. “I hope you
will find your burrow soon.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” returned Flop Ear, “I hope I
do.”</p>
<p>Away he hopped, over the fields and through
the woods, and pretty soon he saw that the woods
were coming to an end again. A large field
was in front of Flop Ear, and in the field was a
farmhouse, with barns and sheds.</p>
<p>“I wonder if I could get anything to eat over
there,” thought Flop Ear, for he had not had
anything since leaving Fluffo’s burrow, early
that morning. “I guess I’ll hop over and see,”
went on the rabbit. “I hope there are no dogs
to chase me.”</p>
<p>Flop Ear hopped across the field toward the
farmhouse. Back of it was a little shed, and the
door of this shed was open. In went Flop Ear,
not knowing quite where he was going. He saw
piles of wood in the shed, for this was the place
where the farmer’s wife kept her wood for making
fires. There were pieces of trees that had
once grown in the forest.</p>
<p>“Well, here is some bark I can gnaw,”
thought Flop Ear, “but it is not as nice and fresh<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52"></SPAN>[52]</span>
as that which grows on the trees in the woods.
I guess I’ll—”</p>
<p>And then Flop Ear stopped suddenly, for he
heard some one coming into the woodshed.</p>
<p>“Oh, I hope that isn’t the hunter man!”
thought the rabbit. “I’d better hide.”</p>
<p>In front of him was a basket filled with wood.
There was room down in among the sticks of
wood for Flop Ear to hide. Into the basket he
jumped, and cuddled down out of sight. Then
Flop Ear heard a woman calling:</p>
<p>“Jimmie! Jimmie! Bring me in a basket of
wood, please!”</p>
<p>“I will, Mother,” answered a boy.</p>
<p>Flop Ear could understand some of our kind
of talk, you know, though he could not speak it
himself.</p>
<p>The rabbit heard some one walking around the
shed, and then, all at once, Flop Ear felt himself
being lifted up in the basket of wood, and being
carried along.</p>
<p>“Oh, I wonder what is going to happen to me
now?” thought the rabbit, whose heart was beating
very fast, as he was much frightened.</p>
<p>“Are you bringing the wood, Jimmie?” the
boy’s mother called.</p>
<p>“Yes’m, I’m coming with it.”</p>
<p>There was something else in the basket besides
the wood, had the boy only known it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53"></SPAN>[53]</span></p>
<p>Flop Ear felt himself bouncing along, up and
down, as the boy carried him in the wood basket,
and then he felt the basket being set down.</p>
<p>“Take out the wood, Jimmie dear, and put it
in the wood-box behind the stove,” said the
woman, and the boy did so. Stick after stick
he lifted out, and Flop Ear, who was down in
the very bottom, was wondering what would
happen when the basket was empty.</p>
<p>“They’ll see me, surely, then,” said the rabbit.
“I wonder what they will do to me? Oh, I
seem to be getting in more and more trouble all
the while.”</p>
<p>The boy who was lifting the wood out of the
basket suddenly cried:</p>
<p>“Oh, Mother! Look here! A rabbit!”</p>
<p>“A rabbit! Where?”</p>
<p>“In the wood basket!” And before Flop Ear
could hop out of the way the boy had lifted him
up in his arms, holding him closely.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54"></SPAN>[54]</span></p>
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