Sunny Boy and His Playmates eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Sunny Boy and His Playmates.

Sunny Boy and His Playmates eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 124 pages of information about Sunny Boy and His Playmates.

“Sunny Boy at the Seashore” tells about the fun a small boy can find in the sand and of Sunny Boy’s experiences in sailing boats, and especially about the time he drifted out to sea in a rowboat all by himself.  His mother and daddy, in another boat, found him, though, and Sunny Boy thought he would like to be a sea captain like the kind Captain Franklin who ran the motor-boat which caught up with him just as he was beginning to be very much afraid he was lost.

Sunny Boy knew that he could not be a sea captain before he was grown up, and long before that, the very next month, in fact, Daddy and Mother Horton took him to New York City, and, dear me, didn’t he find adventures there!  He was lost twice and he took his mother shopping and he visited Central Park and the Statue of Liberty and he saw so many things that he kept remembering them long after he was home again.  “Sunny Boy in the Big City” is the title of this third book, and the traffic policemen interested him so much that he thought he would put off being a sea captain till he had tried to be a policeman.

In fact the traffic policemen interested Sunny Boy so much that he taught the children on his street to play a game called “City” when he came home from New York, and in this game Sunny Boy was always a policeman.  You may have read of how he played “City” in the fourth book about him called “Sunny Boy In School and Out.”  It was in this book, too, that Sunny Boy made the acquaintance of the big policeman whom he had seen at the skating pond.

Sunny Boy thought of this big policeman as soon as he was safely on shore and as soon as he said perhaps his grandpa was drowned and the big boy had told him no one was drowned—­“some of ’em may have been walked on a little, but no one is drowned, I tell you,” he said earnestly.  Sunny Boy wished he could find this kind man in the blue uniform who might be able to help him find his grandfather.

“Where’s the policeman?” he asked, pulling at the big boy’s ragged sleeve.

“What you want the police for?” asked the boy, looking at Sunny Boy queerly.  “Do you want them to chase you?”

“This policeman won’t chase me,” said Sunny Boy sturdily.  “He is a friend of mine and I like him.  Come on and let’s hunt for him.”

He started to walk higher up the bank and almost fell down.

“Why, I have my skates on!” he cried, in surprise, for he had forgotten them.  “I guess I’d better take them off.”

He turned to ask the big boy to help him, and he wasn’t there!  He wasn’t anywhere, for Sunny Boy looked all around.  The other boy had disappeared as though he had tumbled into the lake, though Sunny Boy was sure he hadn’t done that.

“Oh, dear, I wish he had waited,” mourned Sunny Boy, sitting down to take off his skates.  “I wanted to tell Grandpa about him, and now he’s gone.”

The skate straps were swollen with water and stiff and cold.  Sunny Boy worked at them till his poor little fingers were blue, but he could not unfasten them.  So Sunny Boy was ready to cry with cold and disappointment and loneliness when a man spoke to him.  It is not strange that a little boy should feel like crying when he has lost his grandpa and his feet are wet and his hands are so cold they ache.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Sunny Boy and His Playmates from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.