Buster Bear - Buster Bear Has a Fine Time
by: Thorton Burgess
Rank: N/A
Buster Bear was having the finest
time he had had since he came down from the Great Woods to live in
the Green Forest. To be sure, he wasn't in the Green Forest now, but
he wasn't far from it. He was in the Old Pasture, one edge of which
touches one edge of the Green Forest. And where do you think he was,
in the Old Pasture? Why, right in the middle of the biggest patch of
the biggest blueberries he ever had seen in all his life! Now if
there is any one thing that Buster Bear had rather have above
another, it is all the berries he can eat, unless it be honey.
Nothing can quite equal honey in Buster's mind. But next to honey
give him berries. He isn't particular what kind of berries.
Raspberries, blackberries, or blueberries, either kind, will make
him perfectly happy.
"Um-m-m, my, my, but these are good!" he mumbled in his deep
grumbly-rumbly voice, as he sat on his haunches stripping off the
berries greedily. His little eyes twinkled with enjoyment, and he
didn't mind at all if now and then he got leaves, and some green
berries in his mouth with the big ripe berries. He didn't try to get
them out. Oh, my, no! He just chomped them all up together and
patted his stomach from sheer delight. Now Buster had reached the
Old Pasture just as jolly, round, red Mr. Sun had crept out of bed,
and he had fully made up his mind that he would be back in the Green
Forest before Mr. Sun had climbed very far up in the blue, blue sky.
You see, big as he is and strong as he is, Buster Bear is very shy
and bashful, and he has no desire to meet Farmer Brown, or Farmer
Brown's boy, or any other of those two-legged creatures called men.
It seems funny but he actually is afraid of them. And he had a
feeling that he was a great deal more likely to meet one of them in
the Old Pasture than deep in the Green Forest.
So when he started to look for berries, he made up his mind that he
would eat what he could in a great hurry and get back to the Green
Forest before Farmer Brown's boy was more than out of bed. But when
he found those berries he was so hungry that he forgot his fears and
everything else. They tasted so good that he just had to eat and eat
and eat. Now you know that Buster is a very big fellow, and it takes
a lot to fill him up. He kept eating and eating and eating, and the
more he ate the more he wanted. You know how it is. So he wandered
from one patch of berries to another in the Old Pasture, and never
once thought of the time. Somehow, time is the hardest thing in the
world to remember, when you are having a good time.
Jolly, round, red Mr. Sun climbed higher and higher in the blue,
blue sky. He looked down on all the Great World and saw all that was
going on. He saw Buster Bear in the Old Pasture, and smiled as he
saw what a perfectly glorious time Buster was having. And he saw
something else in the Old Pasture that made his smile still broader.
He saw Farmer Brown's boy filling a great tin pail with blueberries,
and he knew that Farmer Brown's boy didn't know that Buster Bear was
anywhere about, and he knew that Buster Bear didn't know that Farmer
Brown's boy was anywhere about, and somehow he felt very sure that
he would see something funny happen if they should chance to meet.
"Um-m-m, um-m-m," mumbled Buster Bear with his mouth full, as he
moved along to another patch of berries. And then he gave a little
gasp of surprise and delight. Right in front of him was a shiny
thing just full of the finest, biggest, bluest berries! There were
no leaves or green ones there. Buster blinked his greedy little eyes
rapidly and looked again. No, he wasn't dreaming. They were real
berries, and all he had got to do was to help himself. Buster looked
sharply at the shiny thing that held the berries. It seemed
perfectly harmless. He reached out a big paw and pushed it gently.
It tipped over and spilled out a lot of the berries. Yes, it was
perfectly harmless. Buster gave a little sigh of pure happiness. He
would eat those berries to the last one, and then he would go home
to the Green Forest.