Do you remember about the giant, of
whom I told you a little while ago, and how he couldn’t
find Uncle Wiggily, because the rabbit was covered
with sand that the ants carried? Yes, I guess
you do remember. Well, now I’m going to
tell you what that giant did.
At first he was real surprised, because
he couldn’t find the bunny-rabbit, and he tramped
around, making the ground shake with his heavy steps,
and growling in his rumbling voice until you would
have thought that it was thundering.
“My, my!” growled the
giant. “To think that I can’t have
a rabbit supper after all. Oh, I’m so hungry
that I could eat fourteen thousand, seven hundred
and eighty-seven rabbits, and part of another one.
But I guess I’ll have to take a barrel of milk
and a wagon load of crackers for my supper.”
So that’s what he did, and my how much he ate!
Well, after the giant had gone away,
Uncle Wiggily crawled out from under the sand, and
he said to the ants:
“I guess I’d better not
stay around here, for it is too dangerous. I’ll
never find my fortune here, and if that giant were
to see me he’d step on me, and make me as flat
as a sheet of paper. I’m going.”
“But wait,” said the biggest
ant of all. “You know there are two giants
around here. One is a good one, and one is bad.
Now if you go to the good giant I’m sure he
will help you find your fortune.”
“I’ll try it,” said
the rabbit. “Where does the good giant live?”
“Just up the hill, in that house
where you see the flag,” said the big ant, as
she ate two crumbs of bread and jam. “That’s
where the good giant lives. You must go where
you see the fluttering flag, and you may find your
fortune.”
“I will,” said Uncle Wiggily,
“I’ll go in the morning, the first thing
after breakfast.”
So the next morning he started off.
But in the night something had happened and the rabbit
didn’t know a thing about it. After dark
the bad giant got up, and he went over, and took the
flag from the pole in front of the house of the good
giant, and hoisted it up over his own house.
“I haven’t any flag of
my own,” said the bad giant, “so I will
take his.” For you see, the two giants
lived not far apart. In fact they were neighbors,
but they were very different, one from the other, for
one was kind and the other was cruel.
So it happened, that when Uncle Wiggily
started to go to the giant’s house he looked
for the fluttering flag, and when he saw it on the
bad giant’s house he didn’t know any better,
but he thought it was the home of the good giant.
Well, the old gentleman rabbit walked
on and on, having said good-by to the ants, and pretty
soon he was right close to the bad giant’s house.
But, all the while, he thought it was the good giant’s
place — so don’t forget that.
“I wonder what sort of a fortune
he’ll give me,” thought the rabbit.
“I hope I soon get rich, so I can stop traveling,
for I am tired.”
Well, as he came near the place where
the bad giant lived he heard a voice singing.
And the song, which was sung in a deep, gruff, grumbling,
growling voice, went something like this:
“Oh, bing bang, bung!
Look out of the way for me.
For I’m
so mad,
I feel so bad,
I could eat a hickory tree!
Oh, snip, snap, snoop!
Get off my big front stoop,
Or I’ll
tear my hair
In wild despair,
And burn you with hot soup!”
“My, that’s a queer song
for a good giant to sing,” thought Uncle Wiggily.
“But perhaps he just sings that for fun.
I’m sure I’ll find him a jolly enough
fellow, when I get to know him.”
Well, he went on a little farther,
and pretty soon he came to the gate of the castle
where the bad giant lived. The rabbit looked about,
and saw no one there, so he kept right on, until,
all of a sudden, he felt as if a big balloon had swooped
down out of the sky, and had lifted him up. Higher
and higher he went, until he found himself away up
toward the roof of the castle, and then he looked
and he saw two big fingers, about as big as a trolley
car, holding him just as you would hold a bug.
“Oh, who has me?” cried
Uncle Wiggily, very much frightened. “Let
me go, please. Who are you?”
“I am the bad giant,”
was the answer, “and if I let you go now you’d
fall to the ground and be killed. So I’ll
hold on to you.”
“Are you the bad giant?”
asked the rabbit. “Why, I thought I was
coming to the good giant’s house. Oh, please
let me go!”
“No, I’m going to keep
you,” said the giant. “I just took
the good giant’s flag to fool you. Now,
let me see, I think I’ll just sprinkle sugar
on you and eat you all up — no, I’ll
use salt — no, I think pepper would be better;
I feel like pepper to-day.”
So the bad giant started toward the
cupboard to get the pepper caster, and poor Uncle
Wiggily thought it was all up with him.
“Oh, I wish I’d never
thought of coming to see any giant, good or bad,”
the rabbit gentleman said. “Now good-by
to all my friends!”
“Hum! Let me see,”
spoke the bad giant, standing still. “Pepper — no,
I think I’ll put some mustard on you — no,
I’ll try ketchup — no, I mean horseradish.
Oh, dear, I can’t seem to make up my mind what
to flavor you with,” and he held Uncle Wiggily
there in his fingers, away up about a hundred feet
high in the air, and wondered what he’d do with
the old gentleman rabbit.
And it’s a good thing he didn’t
eat him right away, for that was the means of saving
Uncle Wiggily’s life. Right after breakfast
the good giant found out that his bad neighbor had
taken his flag, so he went and told the ants all about
it.
“Oh, then Uncle Wiggily must
have been mixed up about the flag, and he has gone
to the wrong place, and he’ll be eaten,”
said the big ant. “We must save him.
Come on, everybody!”
So all the ants hurried along together,
and crawled to the castle of the bad giant, and they
got there just as he was putting some molasses on
Uncle Wiggily to eat him. And those ants crawled
all over the giant, on his legs and arms, and nose
and ears and toes, and they tickled him so that he
squiggled and wiggled and squirreled and whirled, and
finally he let Uncle Wiggily fall on a feather bed,
not hurting him a bit, and the rabbit gentleman hopped
safely away and the ants crawled with him far from
the castle of the bad giant.
So Uncle Wiggily was saved by the
ants, and in case the trolley car doesn’t run
over my stick of peppermint candy, and make it look
like a lolly-pop, I’ll tell you soon about Uncle
Wiggily and the good giant.