<h2><SPAN name="XX" id="XX"></SPAN>XX</h2><h3>UNC' BILLY POSSUM WISHES HE HAD SNOWSHOES</h3>
<p>UNC' BILLY POSSUM didn't know whether he liked the snow more
than he hated it or hated it more than he liked it, just now.
Usually he dislikes the snow very much, and doesn't go out in
it any more than he has to. But this time the snow had done
Unc' Billy a good turn, a very good turn, indeed. Once out of
the hen-house, Unc' Billy lost no time in starting for the
Green Forest. But it was slow, hard work. You see, the snow was
newly fallen and very soft. Of course Unc' Billy sank into it
almost up to his middle at every step. He huffed and he puffed
and he grunted and groaned. You see Unc' Billy had slept so
much through the winter that he was not at all used to hard
work of any kind, and he wasn't half way to the Green Forest
before he was so tired it seemed to him that he could hardly
move, and so out of breath that he could only gasp. It was then
that he was sure that he hated the snow more than he liked it,
even if it had set him free from the hen-house of Farmer
Brown.</p>
<p>Now it never does to let one's wits go to sleep. Some folks
call it forgetting, but forgetting is nothing but sleepy wits.
And sleepy wits get more people into trouble than anything else
in the world. Unc' Billy Possum's wits were asleep when he left
Farmer Brown's hen-house. If they hadn't been, he would have
remembered this little saying:</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>The wits that live within my head</p>
<p class="i2">Must never, never go to sleep,</p>
<p>For if they should I might forget</p>
<p class="i2">And Trouble on me swiftly leap.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>But Unc' Billy's wits certainly were asleep. He was so
tickled over the idea that he could get out of the hen-house,
that he couldn't think of anything else, and so he forgot. Yes,
Sir, Unc' Billy forgot! What did he forget? Why, he forgot that
that nice, soft snow, which so kindly buried the dreadful traps
so that they could do no harm, couldn't be waded through
without leaving tracks. Unc' Billy forgot all about that, until
he was half way to the Green Forest, and then, as he sat down
to rest and get his breath, he remembered.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/004-lg.png" name="fig04" id="fig04"><ANTIMG src="images/004-sm.png" alt="There all the way from Farmer Brown's hen-house was a broad trail in the smooth white snow." /></SPAN> <h4>There all the way from Farmer Brown's hen-house was a
broad trail in the smooth white snow.</h4></div>
<p>Unc' Billy looked behind him, and he turned pale. Yes, Sir,
Unc' Billy Possum turned pale! There, all the way from Farmer
Brown's hen-house, was a broad trail in the smooth white snow,
where he had plowed his way through. If Farmer Brown's boy
should come out to look at his traps, he would see that track
at once, and all he would have to do would be to follow it
until it led him to Unc' Billy.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear! Oh, dear! Whatever did Ah leave the hen-house
for?" wailed Unc' Billy.</p>
<p>His wits were all wide awake now. It wouldn't do to go back.
Farmer Brown's boy would see that he had gone back, and then he
would hunt that hen-house through until he found Unc' Billy.
No, there was nothing to do but to go on, and trust that Farmer
Brown's boy was so snowed in and would be kept so busy
shovelling out paths, that he would forget all about looking at
his traps. Unc' Billy drew a long breath and began to wade
ahead toward the Green Forest.</p>
<p>"If Ah only had snowshoes!" he panted. "If Ah only had
snowshoes like Mrs. Grouse."</p>
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