CHAPTER XV - HUNTING FOR A BEE-TREE
It was a very hot summer’s day.
Even up on Blue Mountain Cuffy Bear felt the heat.
And he wished that he might get rid of his thick coat.
But though Cuffy was beginning to believe himself
a very wise little bear, he could think of no way
to slip off his heavy black fur. So he sat down
in the shade of a big tree, where the breeze blew upon
him, and tried to be as cool as he could.
Except when he was asleep it was not
often that Cuffy was still for so long. But now
he sat motionless for some time, with his bright red
tongue hanging out of his mouth like a dog’s.
Yes, he was quite still all but his little,
beady, bright eyes. They kept moving about
all the time. And they saw many things, for something
or other is always happening in the forest.
Cuffy saw a gray squirrel stick its
head up from the crotch of a tree nearby and peep
at him. And he watched a wary old crow as he rested
high in a tree-top and cawed a greeting to some of
his friends who were flying past on their way to Farmer
Green’s cornfield. And Cuffy noticed a
bee as it lighted on a wild-flower right in front of
him and sucked the sweetness out of it. But Cuffy
didn’t pay much attention to that. And
since he soon began to feel cooler he was just wondering
what he would do next when it occurred to him that
several bees had lighted upon the flowers near him,
and that they had all flown off in the same direction.
All at once Cuffy forgot how hot and
uncomfortable he had been; for now he was wondering
if those bees weren’t all of them flying home
to make honey out of the sweet juices they had drawn
from the flowers. And if they were and
if he could only follow them then he would
find the tree where they lived and he could have all
the honey he wanted to eat.
So Cuffy followed on a little way
in the direction in which the bees had disappeared.
And then he sat down again and waited and watched very
carefully.
For a long time nothing happened.
And Cuffy was just about to give up his plan when
a bee came buzzing past him and lighted on a mulberry
blossom right above his head. And when the bee
flew away, Cuffy followed him until he lost sight
of him. And then Cuffy sat down once more.
Again he waited and watched. And again, just
as he was getting discouraged, another bee flew past
him and Cuffy jumped up and followed him just
as fast as he could.
Cuffy Bear must have spent as much
as two hours doing that same thing over and over again.
But he didn’t mind that. In fact, it didn’t
seem long to him, at all, because he kept thinking
of honey all the time, and it made a sort of
game of what he was doing. If he won the
game, you know, it meant that he was going to have
something very nice for a prize.
And sure enough, finally one of the
bees Cuffy was following lighted on an old tree, and
Cuffy saw him crawl into a hole in a queer nest which
hung from a limb, and vanish. And as Cuffy stood
there, looking up at the nest, he saw as many as seven
bees come out of that hole and fly away.
Then Cuffy smiled all over his face,
he felt so happy. At last he had found a bee-tree.
There was no doubt about it. The time he had always
wished for had come. He was going to have all
the honey he could eat.