The Tale of Buster Bumblebee 
 
Project Gutenberg's The Tale of Buster Bumblebee, by Arthur Scott 
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Title: The Tale of Buster Bumblebee 
Author: Arthur Scott Bailey 
Illustrator: Harry L. Smith 
Release Date: June 23, 2006 [EBook #18662] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TALE 
OF BUSTER BUMBLEBEE *** 
 
Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
SLUMBER-TOWN TALES (Trademark Registered) 
THE TALE OF BUSTER BUMBLEBEE
BY ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY 
Author of "SLEEPY-TIME TALES" 
(Trademark Registered) ILLUSTRATED BY HARRY L. SMITH 
NEW YORK GROSSET & DUNLAP PUBLISHERS 
Made in the United States of America 
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Copyright, 1918, by GROSSET & DUNLAP 
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TUCK-ME-IN TALES (Trademark Registered) 
by ARTHUR SCOTT BAILEY 
author of SLEEPY-TIME TALES (Trademark Registered) 
The Tale of Jolly Robin The Tale of Old Mr. Crow The Tale of 
Solomon Owl The Tale of Jasper Jay The Tale of Rusty Wren The Tale 
of Daddy Longlegs The Tale of Kiddie Katydid The Tale of Buster 
Bumblebee The Tale of Freddie Firefly The Tale of Betsy Butterfly 
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[Illustration: Buster Bumblebee and Chirpy Cricket Have A Chat. 
Frontispiece--(Page 9)] 
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CONTENTS 
I THE BIG FAMILY 1 II CHIRPY CRICKET'S ADVICE 6 III THE 
RUDE TRUMPETER 11 IV BUSTER FINDS A SISTER 16 V MR. 
CROW TO THE RESCUE 21 VI JOHNNIE GREEN IS STUNG 27
VII A JUGFUL OF BUMBLEBEES 32 VIII BUSTER THE 
BOASTER 37 IX THE ROBBER FLY AT LAST 41 X BUSTER 
MAKES A SPEECH 45 XI THE DRONE 52 XII THE CARPENTER 
BEE 56 XIII THE CARPENTER'S PROMISE 61 XIV BAD NEWS 64 
XV THE PRISONER 69 XVI THE TWINS IN THE CLOVER 
PATCH 74 XVII BUSTER LEARNS OF THE RAISING BEE 81 
XVIII FOLLOWING THE CROWD 86 XIX THE FEAST AT 
FARMER GREEN'S 91 XX BUSTER AND THE FIDDLERS 96 XXI 
THE BUMBLEBEE IN THE PUMPKIN 101 XXII SOMEONE'S 
MISTAKE 106 XXIII MAKING GAME OF OLD DOG SPOT 111 
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ILLUSTRATIONS 
Buster Bumblebee and Chirpy Cricket Have A Chat. Frontispiece 
Frontispiece--(Page 9) Buster Thanks Old Mr. Crow For His Advice. 
(Page 25) 23 Buster Shouted For Everybody to Keep Quiet. (Page 48) 
47 Buster Listened to Mrs. Ladybug's Suggestion. (Page 56) 56 
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THE TALE OF BUSTER BUMBLEBEE 
I 
THE BIG FAMILY 
When Mrs. Field Mouse moved from her home in Farmer Green's 
meadow to the more fashionable neighborhood near the gristmill, she 
had no idea that anyone would care to live in the little old house that 
she had left. 
So she was much surprised, the following summer, when she heard that 
a new family was occupying her former home. 
"If it's a small family they'll get along well enough," she remarked to
Aunt Polly Woodchuck, who had told her the news. 
"Small!" Aunt Polly exclaimed, lifting both her hands (with the black 
mitts on them) high in the air. "They say it's a dreadful big family--at 
least two hundred of 'em, so I've been told." 
Well, for a moment Mrs. Field Mouse couldn't say a word, she was so 
astonished. Then she managed to gasp: 
"What's their name?" 
"I declare, I can't just remember," said Aunt Polly Woodchuck. "But it's 
a name that rhymes with apple tree--though that's not quite it.... They're 
a very musical family, I understand. My nephew, Billy Woodchuck, 
passed right by their door only yesterday; and he says he heard music 
and the sound of dancing from inside the house." 
"Two hundred of them dancing in that little house!" cried Mrs. Field 
Mouse. "Why, it's positively dangerous! I should think they'd trample 
one another." 
And Aunt Polly Woodchuck agreed, before she went off towards her 
home under the hill, that there were queer goings-on over there in the 
meadow. 
Later she sent her nephew Billy to tell Mrs. Field Mouse that on her 
way home she had remembered the name of the big family. It was 
Bumblebee. 
"They must be an odd lot," Mrs. Field Mouse remarked to her husband. 
"Farmer Green's meadow is becoming more unfashionable than ever. 
And I shall never regret having moved away from there." 
So that was Buster Bumblebee's first home--the old house in the 
meadow. It was true that the Bumblebee family numbered at least two 
hundred souls. Nobody knew what the exact count might have been; for 
in the daytime all the members of the family were bustling about, never 
staying in one place long enough to be counted. And at night they were
all too drowsy to bother their heads over anything but sleep. 
It was    
    
		
	
	
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