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I PRETTY AS A PICTURE
 There was something about Ferdinand Frog that made everybody smile. It may have been his amazingly wide mouth and his queer, bulging1 eyes, or perhaps it was his sprightly2 manner—for one never could tell when Mr. Frog would leap into the air, or turn a somersault backward. Indeed, some of his neighbors claimed that he himself didn't know what he was going to do next—he was so jumpy.  
Anyhow, all the wild folk in Pleasant Valley agreed that Ferdinand Frog was an agreeable person to have around. No matter what happened, he was always cheerful. Nobody ever heard of his losing his temper, though to be sure he was sometimes the means of other peoples losing theirs. But let a body be as angry as he pleased with Mr. Frog, Mr. Frog would continue to smile and smirk3.
 
Of course, such extreme cheerfulness often made angry folk only the more furious, especially when the whole trouble was Ferdinand Frog's own fault. But it made no difference to him what blunder he had made. He was always ready to make another—and smile at the same time.
 
Really, he was so good-natured that nobody could feel peevish4 towards him for long. In fact, he was a great favorite—especially among the ladies. When[11]ever he met one of them—it might be the youngest of the Rabbit sisters, or old Aunt Polly Woodchuck—he never failed to make the lowest of bows, smile the broadest of smiles, and inquire after her health.
 
That was Ferdinand Frog—known far and wide for his elegant manners. Every young lady declared that he wore exquisite5 clothes, too; and many of them secretly thought him quite good-looking.
 
But people as old as Aunt Polly Woodchuck seldom take heed6 of what a person wears. As for Mr. Frog's looks, since Aunt Polly believed that "handsome is as handsome does," she admitted that Ferdinand Frog was—as she put it—"purty as a picter."
 
When Ferdinand Frog heard that, he was so delighted that he hurried straight home and put on his best suit. And then he spent most of a whole afternoon smiling at his reflection in the surface of the Beaver7 pond, where he was living at the time.
 
So it is easy to see that Ferdinand Frog was a vain and silly fellow. He was even foolish enough to repeat Aunt Polly's remark to everybody he chanced to meet that night, and the following day as well.
 
There was no one who could help grinning at Ferdinand Frog's news—he looked so comical. And old Mr. Crow, who was noted8 for his rudeness, even burst out with a hoarse9 haw-haw.
 
"You're pretty as a picture, eh?" he chuckled10. "I suppose Aunt Polly means that you're as pretty as one of the pictures that the circus men have pasted on Farmer Green's barn. . . . I believe——" he added, as he stared at Ferdinand Frog——"I believe I know which one Aunt Polly means."
 
"Is that so?" cried Mr. Frog, swelling11 himself up—through pride—until it seemed that he must burst. "Oh, which picture is it?"
 
"It's the one in the upper left-hand corner," old Mr. Crow informed him solemnly. "And if you haven't yet seen it, you should take a good look at it soon."
 
"I will!" Ferdinand Frog declared. "I'll visit Farmer Green's place this very night!"
 
And he opened his mouth and smiled so widely that old Mr. Crow couldn't help shuddering—though he knew well enough that Ferdinand Frog could never swallow anyone as big as he was.


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