<h2><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>VI<br/> Solomon Needs a Change</h2>
<p>For some time Solomon Owl had known that a queer feeling was coming over him.
And he could not think what it meant. He noticed, too, that his appetite was
leaving him. Nothing seemed to taste good any more.</p>
<p>So at last, one fine fall evening he went to see Aunt Polly Woodchuck, who was
an herb doctor; for he had begun to worry about his health.</p>
<p>“It’s lucky you came to-day,” said Aunt Polly. “Because
to-night I’m going to begin my winter’s nap. And you couldn’t
have seen me again till spring—unless you happened to come here on
ground-hog day, next February.... What appears to be your trouble?” she
inquired.</p>
<p>“It’s my appetite, partly,” Solomon Owl said. “Nothing
tastes as it did when I was a youngster. And I keep longing for something,
though what it is I can’t just tell.”</p>
<p>Aunt Polly Woodchuck nodded her head wisely.</p>
<p>“What have you been eating lately?” she asked.</p>
<p>Solomon Owl replied that he hadn’t eaten anything but mice since the
leaves began to turn.</p>
<p>“H-m—the leaves are nearly all off the trees now,” the old
lady remarked. “How many mice have you eaten in that time?”</p>
<p>Solomon said that as nearly as he could remember he had eaten
twenty-seven—or a hundred and twenty-seven. He couldn’t say
which—but one of those numbers was correct.</p>
<p>Aunt Polly Woodchuck threw up her hands.</p>
<p>“Sakes alive!” she cried. “It’s no wonder you
don’t feel well! What you need is a change of food. And it’s lucky
you came to me now. If you’d gone on like that much longer I’d hate
to say what might have happened to you. You’d have had dyspepsia, or some
other sort of misery in your stomach.”</p>
<p>“What shall I do?” asked Solomon Owl. “Insects are scarce at
this season of the year. Of course, there are frogs—but I don’t
seem to care for them. And there are fish—but they’re not easy to
get, for they don’t come out of the water and sit on the bank, as the
frogs do.”</p>
<p>“How about pullets?” Aunt Polly inquired.</p>
<p>At that Solomon Owl let out a long row of hoots, because he was pleased.</p>
<p>“The very thing!” he cried. “That’s what I’ve
been wanting all this time. And I never guessed it.... I’ll pay you for
your advice the next time I see you,” he told Aunt Polly. And Solomon Owl
hurried away before she could stop him. Since he had no intention of visiting
her on ground-hog day, he knew it would be spring before he saw Aunt Polly
Woodchuck again.</p>
<p>The old lady scolded a bit. And it did not make her feel any pleasanter to hear
Solomon’s mocking laughter, which grew fainter and fainter as he left the
pasture behind him. Then she went inside her house, for she was fast growing
sleepy. And she wanted to set things to rights before she began her long
winter’s nap.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Solomon Owl roamed restlessly through the woods. There was only one
place in the neighborhood where he could get a pullet. That was at Farmer
Green’s chicken house. And for some reason he did not care to visit the
farm buildings until it grew darker.</p>
<p>So he amused himself by making the woods echo with his strange cry,
“<i>Whoo-whoo-whoo, whoo-whoo, to-whoo-ah!</i>” And now and then he
threw in a few “<i>wha-whas</i>,” just for extra measure.</p>
<p>Many of the forest folk who heard him remarked that Solomon Owl seemed to be in
extra fine spirits.</p>
<p>“Probably it’s the hunter’s moon that pleases him!”
Jimmy Rabbit remarked to a friend of his. “I’ve always noticed that
old Solomon makes more noise on moonlight nights than at any other time.”</p>
<p>The hunter’s moon, big and yellow and round, was just rising over Blue
Mountain. But for once it was not the moon that made Solomon Owl so talkative.
He was in fine feather, so to speak, because he was hoping to have a fat pullet
for his supper. And as for the moon, he would have been just as pleased had
there been none at all that night. For Solomon Owl never cared to be seen when
he visited Farmer Green’s chicken house.</p>
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