"
For a moment the Babe looked abashed. Then his face brightened.
"But then, it _is_ summer, for _them_, isn't it?" said he sweetly.
Uncle Andy gave him a suspicious look, to see if he realized the
success of his retort. "Had me there!" he thought to himself. But the
Babe's face betrayed no sign of triumph, nothing but that eager
appetite for information of which Uncle Andy so highly approved.
"So it depends on what kind of a bird, eh, what?" said he, deftly
turning the point. Then he scratched a sputtering sulphur match on the
long-suffering leg of his trousers.
"Yes," said the Babe, with more decision now. "I'd like to be a crow."
Uncle Andy smoked meditatively for several minutes before replying,
till the Babe began to grow less confident as to the wisdom of his
choice. But as he gazed up at those green pine-tops, so clear against
the blue, all astir with black wings and gay, excited _ca_-ings, he
took courage again. Certainly _those_ crows, at least, were enjoying
themselves immensely.
And he had always had a longing to be able to play in the tops of the
trees.
"Well," said Uncle Andy at last, "perhaps you're not so _very_ far off,
this time. If I couldn't be an eagle, or a hawk, or a wild goose, or
one of those big-horned owls that we hear every night, or a
humming-bird, then I'd rather be a crow than most.
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