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He smoked and whistled all the time he was working, and he talked to me in such a jolly way that I sat perfectly still and allowed him to measure my ears and my legs so that he could cut the fur into the proper form. "'Why, I 've got your nose too long, Bunny, he said once; and so he snipped a little off the fur he was cutting, so that the toy rabbit's nose should be like mine.

He was still swinging to and fro, and on this first swing Bunny had knocked to one side the pile of boxes and the barrel with which he had made himself a sort of ladder so he could reach Mart's trapeze, which was several feet above the barn floor. So, now that the boxes by which he had climbed up were out of reach, Bunny could not get down by using them. And he wanted, very much, to get down.

But the time will come, friend, when there will be neither Emu nor Kangaroo for Australia's Arms; no creature will be left to represent the land but the Bunny Rabbit and the Sheep." "I hate sheep!" said the Kangaroo, "they eat all our grass." "You have not studied them as we have," answered the Emu. "They are most entertaining.

And as Bunny was a sturdy chap he had no trouble about this part. The auto-van kept on moving and Bunny noticed that it was going up a little hill in the driveway that went all the way around the house. "I don't see what makes it go uphill all by itself," said Bunny to himself, giving the steering wheel a little turn, as there was a curve in the pathway just ahead of him.

"Is is it?" asked Sue herself, stopping her sobs long enough to find out if anything more than a bump had taken place. "No, it isn't bleeding," said Mrs. Brown. "Now be good children. You can't go out in the rain, so don't ask it. Play something else, can't you?" "Could we play store?" asked Bunny, with a sudden idea.

"Since you won't let me carry him home, and I won't let you, let's both carry him together. You take hold of him on one side, and I'll take the other." "Good!" cried the second alligator. "Oh, ho! I guess not!" cried the bunny uncle suddenly. "I guess you won't either, or both of you take me off to your den. No, indeed!"

"Well, I'll just make him spotted white then. I've got some talcum powder of my own, and it smells awful good. I guess a horse would like it; don't you, Bunny?" "I guess so, Sue. But come out to the barn." Grandpa Brown had two barns on his farm. One was where the horses and cows were kept, and the other held wagons, carriages and machinery.

She said you weren't to climb up high." "I I'm not going very high, Sue." Bunny was half way up the ladder. And, just as he spoke to Sue, his foot slipped, and down he fell, in between two rounds of the ladder. "Oh! oh!" cried Sue. "Oh, Bunny! You're going to fall!" But Bunny did not fall all the way.

Now all those ants together could carry lots of sand, you see, and soon the rabbit was completely buried from sight, all but the tip of his nose, so he could breathe, and when the giant came rumbling, stumbling by, he couldn't see the bunny, and so he didn't eat him. And, of course, the giant didn't eat the ants, either for he didn't like them. "Hum!

Tell him we love him, think he's a nice dog and all that, but we believe it isn't best for him to come with us now." "All right, I will," said Bunny, and he hopped down from the automobile, which had a little set of steps at the back to make getting in and out easy. Though Bunny, it is true, generally jumped out, not using the steps at all.