Bowser the Hound 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Bowser The Hound, by Thornton W. 
Burgess This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
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Title: Bowser The Hound 
Author: Thornton W. Burgess 
Release Date: February 25, 2005 [EBook #15168] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BOWSER 
THE HOUND *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Cori Samuel and the PG Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team. 
 
[Illustration: "AS I LIVE," HE MUTTERED, "THAT IS BOWSER 
THE HOUND!" _Page 29._] 
 
BOWSER THE HOUND 
BY 
THORNTON W. BURGESS
With Illustrations by HARRISON CADY 
This book, while produced under wartime conditions, in full 
compliance with government regulations for the conservation of paper 
and other essential materials, is COMPLETE AND UNABRIDGED 
GROSSET & DUNLAP 
Publishers New York 
_Printed by arrangement with Little, Brown, and Company_ 
_Copyright, 1920,_ BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. All 
rights reserved 
 
=Dedication= 
TO THE CHILD'S LOVING PLAYMATE, LOYAL PROTECTOR 
AND STAUNCH ALLY --THE DOG, THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED 
 
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I OLD MAN COYOTE LEADS BOWSER AWAY 1 
II OLD MAN COYOTE PLAYS A TRICK 6 
III WHAT HAPPENED TO BOWSER 10 
IV POOR BOWSER 15 
V BOWSER SPENDS A BAD NIGHT 20 
VI THE SURPRISE OF BLACKY THE CROW 25
VII BLACKY THE CROW TAKES PITY ON BOWSER 30 
VIII HOW BLACKY THE CROW HELPED BOWSER 34 
IX OLD MAN COYOTE GIVES OUT DARK HINTS 39 
X HOW REDDY FOX INVESTIGATED 44 
XI A LITTLE UNPLEASANTNESS 49 
XII THE CLEVERNESS OF OLD MAN COYOTE 54 
XIII THE MISCHIEVOUS LITTLE NIGHT BREEZE 59 
XIV THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BEING INSIDE AND 
OUTSIDE 64 
XV REDDY'S FORLORN CHANCE 69 
XVI WHY REDDY WENT WITHOUT A CHICKEN DINNER 74 
XVII FARMER BROWN'S BOY DROPS A PAN OF CORN 79 
XVIII MUTUAL RELIEF 84 
XIX WHERE WAS BOWSER THE HOUND? 89 
XX WHERE BOWSER WAS 93 
XXI BOWSER BECOMES A PRISONER 98 
XXII FARMER BROWN'S BOY LOOKS IN VAIN 103 
XXIII BOWSER'S GREAT VOICE 107 
XXIV BLACKY TRIES TO GET HELP 112 
XXV BLACKY CALLS ON REDDY FOX 117 
XXVI RED WITS AND BLACK WITS 122
XXVII THE ARTFULNESS OF BLACKY 127 
XXVIII REDDY FOX DREAMS OF CHICKENS 131 
XXIX REDDY TRIES TO AROUSE BLACKY'S PITY 136 
XXX BLACKY THE CROW IS ALL PITY 141 
XXXI BLACKY IS MUCH PLEASED WITH HIMSELF 146 
XXXII BLACKY WAITS FOR REDDY 151 
XXXIII REDDY WATCHES THE FAT HENS 156 
XXXIV PATIENCE AND IMPATIENCE 161 
XXXV THINGS HAPPEN ALL AT ONCE 166 
XXXVI REDDY HIDES THE FAT HEN 171 
XXXVII FARMER BROWN'S BOY HAS A GLAD SURPRISE 176 
XXXVIII REDDY GOES BACK FOR HIS FAT HEN 181 
XXXIX A VANISHED DINNER 186 
XL WHERE WAS REDDY'S DINNER? 191 
XLI WHAT BLACKY THE CROW SAW 196 
XLII ALL IS WELL THAT ENDS WELL 201 
 
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 
"As I live," he muttered, "that is Bowser the Hound!" Frontispiece 
Over at the gate of Farmer Brown's henyard he could see a dark form 
53
Somewhere not very far ahead of him was a house 96 
On broad wings it sailed over to that hollow stump 199 
CHAPTER I 
OLD MAN COYOTE LEADS BOWSER AWAY 
Though great or small the matter prove Be faithful in whate'er you do. 
'Tis thus and only thus you may To others and yourself be true. 
_Bowser the Hound._ 
Old Man Coyote is full of tricks. People with such clever wits as his 
usually are full of tricks. On the other hand Bowser the Hound isn't 
tricky at all. He just goes straight ahead with the thing he has to do and 
does it in the most earnest way. Not being tricky himself, he sometimes 
forgets to watch out for tricks in others. 
One day he found the fresh trail of Old Man Coyote and made up his 
mind that he would run down Old Man Coyote if he had to run his legs 
off to do it. He always makes up his mind like that whenever he starts 
out to hunt. You know there is nothing in the world Bowser enjoys 
quite so much as to hunt some one who will give him a long, hard run. 
Any time he will go without eating for the pleasure of chasing Reddy 
or Granny Fox, or Old Man Coyote. 
Now Old Man Coyote was annoyed. He was and he wasn't afraid of 
Bowser the Hound. That is to say he was afraid to fight Bowser, but he 
wasn't afraid to be hunted by Bowser, because he was so sure that he 
was smart enough to get away from Bowser. If Bowser had appeared at 
almost    
    
		
	
	
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