The frog wriggled out of the pocket deep as the boy who put him there lay fast asleep. Dried out and badly in need of a drink, he hopped through the straw, found a place he could think. Far below him from the loft so high, he could see out the door to his pond and the sky. He leapt without thinking-- 'twas a long way to fall-- landed, plop in a bucket still not safe at all. It was full of milk, not the water he craved and its sides were too slippery-- would he ever be saved? He swam and he wriggled, he finned and he frogged, he was getting quite tired and very milk-logged. Still he kept on swimming back and forth and around in hopes that there somewhere was a wee patch of ground. All night he swam and flipped his webbed feet, though his legs were weary and he was beat. For if he rested for too long at a stretch he'd start to sink so more energy he'd fetch. He could hear the cows chewing and the dog by the house and just imagined the thoughts in the mind of his spouse! He had to get out. There just must be a way. So he breast-stroked and paddled Until the next day. He refused to give up, not Phineas T Frog as he sucked in some air and floated like a log. Course that only lasted a moment or so and he was back to swimming to and fro. So what is the point of my story you cry, Did he ever get out or give up and die. There must be something-- I hear you mutter. Yes, he greeted the day on a fat pad of butter. ** Image ID #1735170 Unavailable ** |