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YES! It was an eagle's nest
that Cuffy Bear had found. And Mrs. Eagle had caught him eating her eggs. It
was no wonder that she was wild with rage. And it was no wonder that Cuffy ran
for his life.
He landed in a heap at the foot
of the first cliff, jumped up like a flash and in a twinkling he was rolling
heels over head down another cliff.
Again Cuffy fell in a heap
at the bottom. Again he jumped up. And again he started to run. But this time,
alas! Mrs. Eagle seized him. She pounced down upon his back; and she sunk her
claws right into Cuffy's neck. Then Mrs. Eagle flapped her wings as hard as she
could flap them. And Cuffy felt himself rising. Soon the earth was far, far
beneath Cuffy. And he was the most frightened little bear you could imagine. He
was afraid Mrs. Eagle would drop him, and that he would fall down, down, down
onto the rocks below. And he was afraid that Mrs. Eagle wouldn't drop him, too.
Because if she didn't Cuffy felt only too sure that she would take him home
and that she and Mr. Eagle would eat him for their dinner.
You see, Cuffy Bear was in a
sad fix. And for my part, when I first heard of his plight I did not see how he
was ever going to get out of it alive.
Well — this was what
happened. Mrs. Eagle did intend to take Cuffy home with her and serve him up
for dinner that very night. At first, after she had seized Cuffy, she mounted
higher and higher into the air, so that she could at last swoop down on the top
of the mountain, right beside her nest. But Cuffy was a very fat little bear. And
soon Mrs. Eagle found that she had a heavy load. And it was only a few minutes
before she discovered that she couldn't fly up any higher with Cuffy. In fact,
she began to sink, little by little. Yes, Cuffy was so heavy that as Mrs. Eagle
grew tired his weight dragged her down toward the earth again.
Mrs. Eagle saw what was
happening. But she didn't want to let Cuffy go. So she flew far out from the
side of the mountain, hoping that she would soon feel stronger. But all the
time she kept growing weaker and weaker. And all the time she kept falling
faster and faster, until all at once Mrs. Eagle was afraid that she would lose
her balance and go tumbling down onto the ground herself. She was still very
angry. And she hated to lose the fine dinner she had been counting on. But she
saw nothing else to do but let go of Cuffy Bear. So she gave one last scream of
rage; and the next instant Cuffy felt himself dropping through the air like a
stone.
Now, Cuffy had shut his eyes
tight, just as he did when he was drifting down the river on the cake of ice;
so he did not see what was happening. But as luck had it, when Mrs. Eagle let
him go she was flying right over the top of a big fir-tree. And as Cuffy fell,
he dropped plump! into the branches, and down he went, crashing through the
soft, springing boughs.
Cuffy clutched wildly at the
branches. And though he tumbled through them one after another, at last he
managed to hold tight to a big limb. And then, after he had caught his breath
again, he crept carefully down to the ground.
He wondered where he was.
The place had a strangely familiar look. It seemed to Cuffy that he must have
been there before. And then, as he peered cautiously around, what should he
see but the door of his father's house, right in front of him! Yes! Mrs. Eagle
had dropped Cuffy right in his father's door-yard! And Cuffy wasn't even late
for dinner.
As he grew older Cuffy often
went to the top of Blue Mountain. But never, so long as he lived, did he get
home again so quickly.