| This is the story of the hare who lost his spectacles. |
| Owl loved to rest quietly whilst no one was watching. Sitting on a fence one day, he was surprised when suddenly a kangaroo ran close |
| by. |
| Now this may not seem strange, but when Owl overheard Kangaroo whisper |
| to no one in particular, ``The hare has lost his spectacles,'' well, he began to wonder. |
| Presently, the moon appeared from behind a cloud and there, lying on the grass was hare. In the stream that flowed by the grass -- a newt. And sitting astride a twig of a bush -- a bee. |
| Ostensibly motionless, the hare was trembling with excitement, for |
| without his spectacles he was completely helpless. Where were his |
| spectacles? Could someone have stolen them? Had he mislaid them? What |
| was he to do? |
| Bee wanted to help, and thinking he had the answer began: ``You |
| probably ate them thinking they were a carrot.'' |
| ``No!'' interrupted Owl, who was wise. ``I have good eye-sight, insight, |
| and foresight. How could an intelligent hare make such a silly |
| mistake?'' But all this time, Owl had been sitting on the fence, |
| scowling! |
| Kangaroo were hopping mad at this sort of talk. She thought herself |
| far superior in intelligence to the others. She was their leader; |
| their guru. She had the answer: ``Hare, you must go in search of the |
| optician.'' |
| But then she realized that Hare was completely helpless without his |
| spectacles. And so, Kangaroo loudly proclaimed, ``I can’t send Hare in search of anything!'' |
| ``You can guru, you can!'' shouted Newt. ``You can send him with Owl.'' |
| But Owl had gone to sleep. Newt knew too much to be stopped by so small a problem -- ``You can take him in your pouch.'' But alas, Hare |
| was much too big to fit into Kangaroo’s pouch. |
| All this time, it had been quite plain to hare that the others knew |
| nothing about spectacles. |
| As for all their tempting ideas, well Hare didn’t care. |
| The lost spectacles were his own affair. |
| And after all, Hare did have a spare a-pair. |