Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 140 pages of information about Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg.

Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 140 pages of information about Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg.

“Yes, but how can we carry it?” asked her brother.  “I don’t believe we can lift it.”

He went up to the big, round turnip, and tried and tried, with all his might, to lift it, but it wouldn’t come up as high even as a pin head from the ground.

“Perhaps I can lift it,” suggested Brighteyes, so she tried, but she couldn’t.

“Maybe if you both try together you can,” said the June bug.

Well, they both pulled and hauled, but it was of no use.  There that turnip was, just as if it was stuck fast in the ground.

“I’m not very strong myself,” went on the June bug, “but I’ll do my best.  Come on, now, all together.”

So he took hold, with Buddy and Brighteyes, and he buzzed his wings as hard as they would buzz, and he cracked his legs, and he strained and he tugged and pulled, but, no sir, that turnip wouldn’t move the least bit.

“I guess we’ll have to leave it here,” said Buddy sorrowful-like, “but I did so want to take it home to mamma and papa.”

And he looked at the big vegetable as if it would, somehow, move itself.

“I know a way,” said the June bug, at length.

“How?” asked Brighteyes.

“Why you and your brother must eat as much of it as you can, and then it will be lighter, and easier to lift, you see.  Just gnaw a lot off the turnip, and you can carry it, then.”

“Oh, but that would spoil the turnip,” objected Buddy.  “We want to take it home all in one piece, so papa and mamma can see it.”  Now wasn’t that good of him?  Especially when he and his sister were just as hungry as they could be, and would have loved to have had some?  But they wanted to have their folks see it first, without a bite being taken from it.

“Well,” said the June bug, “maybe you can roll it along, if you can’t lift it.”

“The very thing!” cried Buddy.  “If we can just get it started it will roll along easily, for it is down hill to our pen, and it will bounce along just as the cabbage did, that I was once in.  That’s a good plan.”

Well, by hard work the three of them did manage to get the turnip started, and it rolled along, first slowly and then more quickly, and then with a rush, and land sake! if all at once it didn’t roll down into a big hole.

“Oh, now we’ll never get it up!” cried Buddy, much disappointed, and he and his sister felt very sorrowful.  But not for long, for in a little while along hopped Uncle Wiggily Longears, with his crutch.  It didn’t take him any time, with the aid of the June bug, and Buddy and Brighteyes, to pry that turnip up out of the hole.

“Now I’ll show you how to get the turnip home,” said Uncle Wiggily.  “You need some way to steer it, so it won’t run away from you and get into a hole again.”

Then he took his crutch and punched a hole through that turnip, and put a stick through the hole, so the turnip was just like the wheel of a wheelbarrow.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.