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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64078 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64078)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Nibble Rabbit Makes More Friends, by John
-Breck
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Nibble Rabbit Makes More Friends
-
-Author: John Breck
-
-Illustrator: William T. Andrews
-
-Release Date: December 28, 2020 [eBook #64078]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Roger Frank
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE
-FRIENDS ***
-
-
-
-
- NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS
-
-
-
-
- Told at Twilight Stories
-
-
- By JOHN BRECK
-
- MOSTLY ABOUT NIBBLE THE BUNNY
- NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS
- THE SINS OF SILVERTIP THE FOX
- THE COON’S TRICKS
- THE WAVY TAILED WARRIOR
- TAD COON’S GREAT ADVENTURE
- THE BAD LITTLE OWLS
- THE JAY BIRD WHO WENT TAME
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Watch makes friends with Nibble]
-
-
-
-
- Told at Twilight Stories
-
- NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS
-
- by
- John Breck
-
- Illustrated by
- William T. Andrews
-
- Garden City—New York
- Doubleday, Page & Company
-
- 1923
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1923,
- BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT
- OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES
- INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY THE ASSOCIATED NEWSPAPERS
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
- AT
- THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
-
- First Edition
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- I. Why Nibble Bunny Was Puzzled
- II. How Nibble the Bunny Was Caught
- III. How Nibble Tricked a Foe—and Made a Friend
- IV. Why Dogs Love Babies
- V. Nibble Has His Doubts About Dogs
- VI. The Cleverness of Chirp Sparrow
- VII. How a Bunny Could Help a Boy
- VIII. How the Funny Bunny Smelled a Joke
- IX. The Great Woodchuck Fur Charm Against Owls
- X. What Doctor Muskrat Thought About Traps
- XI. The Singular Mishap of Doctor Muskrat
- XII. Tommy Peele’s Friends Stand Up For Him
- XIII. Wise Words from a Wise Beast
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- Watch makes friends with Nibble
-
- Nibble squirmed and flounced like a fish
-
- The White Cow makes friends with Nibble
-
- “Here he is. I’ve got him.”
-
- The old doctor was puffing
-
- Snoof Woodchuck comes out of his hole
-
- “Clang!” That ugly trap had Doctor Muskrat
-
- Tommy’s tall rubber boots spattered through the slush
-
-
-
-
- NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- WHY NIBBLE BUNNY WAS PUZZLED
-
-
-You remember all the funny things Nibble heard about Man from the
-guests who came to his Storm Party. That was the time the Big Hollow
-Oak blew down, and the brave little bunny who lived at Doctor
-Muskrat’s Pond rescued all the poor homeless folk who had been shaken
-out of it. He showed them the way to a fine little tent all made of
-cornstalks out in the Broad Field.
-
-It was so nice and snug and comfortable, the minute they tucked their
-tails inside it, and caught their breaths, and sleeked down their fur
-and their feathers, they forgot all about how the Terrible Storm was
-having a tantrum outside. They had plenty of room to dance, and plenty
-of corn for refreshments—why, the party was as big a success as if
-they’d held it in a hired hall with engraved invitations.
-
-But the most fun they had was talking about folks like you and me. And
-if you’d laid an ear to a crack before the wind tucked the snow
-blanket all around them, you wouldn’t have been very much flattered by
-what they said, either.
-
-You might have overheard the bats insisting that Man looked like a
-frog. (You might say that about some folks, of course, but certainly
-not about you or me.) You’d prob’ly have heard the partridge say that
-Man was brown and wrinkly, like Grandpop Snapping-Turtle. (The man
-they saw certainly must have worn some funny clothes.) Chatter
-Squirrel said Man was pink and tan. (His pink was sunburn—the kind the
-fellows get down at the swimming-hole.)
-
-Everyone just knew that everyone else was wrong. Then Gimlet
-Woodpecker insisted Man came as many shapes and sizes and colours as
-the flowers. And then they didn’t know what to think. There were just
-two things they all agreed on: he didn’t have a tail, and—he was
-dangerous. Nibble didn’t say anything, ’cause he’d never seen one.
-
-But the first time he set eyes on Tommy Peele, he made up his mind
-they were all wrong—excepting about the tail. The little boy looked to
-him like a red-wing blackbird. (That was ’cause Tommy had on his new
-red mittens and his dark blue sweater and his shiny rubber boots.) But
-dangerous? He certainly didn’t look it. Still—when Silvertip the Fox
-only caught a glimpse of him, he turned tail and ran.
-
-So Nibble made up his mind to copy the mouse motto: “Say nothing and
-stay cautious.” At least that’s what he thought he was—too cautious
-for anything. Wasn’t it perfectly safe and proper to dig into that
-queer lair where the mice were holding a party of their own? Wasn’t it
-nice and dark as his own hole? And nobody could possibly see him.
-
-How was a bunny to know it was a soapbox? Or that it was part of a
-“figger-four” trap? Or that Tommy had set it ’specially for him?
-
-You see he hadn’t been caught. He’d dug into it on purpose, because
-those nice little mice had invited him. And there the three of them
-were busy feasting when they heard the clump! clump! clump! of the
-clumsy hind paws of that little boy.
-
-“Mice,” he said, “it’s that Man!”
-
-Before he could twiddle a tail, Tommy’s red mitten was across the
-hole, and Tommy’s bare pink paw was closing on—the lady mouse. Then
-things began to fly!
-
-Nibble was among them. He flew to the next little cornstalk tent, his
-heart thumping faster than his paws. “They were all of them right!” he
-gasped. “That Man is dangerous—dangerous as Silvertip himself. Poor
-Satin-skin! I s’pose that’s the end of her.”
-
-He never thought of saying, “Poor Tommy Peele!” But Tommy was the
-right one to feel sorry for. Satin-skin had closed her little needle
-teeth on his finger. And before Nibble had taken a long breath he
-heard a voice squeaking, “Weeak! weeak! weeak!” which is mouse for,
-“I’m lost! Where are you?”
-
-“Here!” he thumped with both hind feet. And who should come scuttling
-in but Satin-skin herself? He could feel her tremble all over as she
-tried to squirm right under him.
-
-“My ears!” Nibble exclaimed. “I thought that Man had caught you!”
-
-“No, I caught him!” wept the little lady mouse. “But he shook me so
-hard I was scared to let go again. And when I did, he sent me tail
-over ears. I tell you, it was awful! wee-eeak!”
-
-“Shh! he’ll hear you,” Nibble warned. “There, your head will stop
-whirling pretty soon.” He knew just how she felt, ’cause he’d felt the
-same way himself—the time he tumbled off the back of that Red Cow he
-took for a log when Silvertip was chasing him.
-
-But Tommy wasn’t even thinking about Satin-skin, let alone listening
-for her. He stamped his tall rubber boots and sucked his poor nipped
-finger. “Funniest thing!” he wondered to himself. “I just know there
-was a rabbit in that trap. I saw him go in there. I don’t guess it’s
-very much good. I’ll try the pitcher-wire.”
-
-[Illustration: Nibble squirmed and flounced like a fish on the end of a
-line.]
-
-So he pulled on his red mitten and tramped off to the path in the
-bushes by the fence he’d seen Nibble slip through. This time he bent
-down a springy sapling and tied a loop of wire to the tip of it—the
-soft kind you use to hang pictures. And he pegged the lower edge of
-the loop across Nibble’s pathway.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- HOW NIBBLE THE BUNNY WAS CAUGHT
-
-
-Meanwhile, Nibble was busy comforting the lady mouse. “There, there!
-Don’t squeal any more. You’re not hurt a bit. But really, this gets
-more and more curiouser. Now Silvertip would certainly have eaten you.
-But I don’t see yet why folks are so scared of a Man, if that’s all he
-can do to you.”
-
-“You’d know if he sh-sh-shook you!” sobbed the lady mouse.
-
-But Nibble didn’t pay any attention. “I’m going to sneak up close to
-the Sparrows’ Tree and ask Chirp about it,” he announced.
-
-Off went he, so fast he didn’t notice where he was putting his foot
-own.
-
-He came to the fence—and the picture-wire. Zing! Now he knew what a
-trap was, for sure and certain. For the pegs let go, the sapling
-snapped back, and the wire caught him just behind his little fore legs
-and whipped him high up in the air.
-
-He squirmed and flounced like a fish on the end of a line. He kicked
-harder and harder; and the wire pulled tighter and tighter, until he
-screamed.
-
-From way up there in the air he could see Tommy Peele turn around and
-hurry toward him, swinging his red mittens as he ran. And he knew
-Tommy had something to do with it. “This,” thought he, “is why Man is
-dangerous. How awfully slow he flies. Now he’ll eat me!” And the wire
-was squeezing him so dreadful, he didn’t much care. But Tommy just cut
-that terrible loop, and took the rabbit gently into his arms.
-
-“Poor little bunny! I didn’t know that was going to hurt you,”
-whispered the little boy. And he put a very sorry finger on the place
-where the picture wire had been.
-
-But Nibble still kicked and struggled so hard that Tommy would have
-lost him if he hadn’t kept a tight hold of the bunny’s long ears. And
-Tommy did keep a tight hold, for the more he saw of Nibble the more he
-wanted him.
-
-In ten minutes Nibble was locked in a cage. It really was a very nice
-one—for a rabbit who had been born there. But for Nibble it was as
-cramped as Ouphe the Rat’s narrow black tunnels under the haystack. It
-was only half a leap long and three creeps across. There was one dark
-corner in it where he could hide behind some hay when the humans came
-to look at him—and they did come, all sizes and colours and noises,
-just as Gimlet the Woodpecker had said. When they went away again he
-snubbed his nose trying to take the kinks out of his legs where he had
-been sitting on them.
-
-And more than the humans came to call on him. For the minute they
-turned their backs a great big beast, much bigger than Silvertip, put
-his forepaws up on the front of the cage and sniffed at him. He was
-nearly the same colour as Silvertip, only his back was more grizzled
-and he had a white collar as well as a white shirtfront like most wild
-things wear. But this beast didn’t have a hungry look; he was only
-curious—like Nibble is himself when he isn’t scared. All the same,
-Nibble was afraid of him.
-
-Just about sundown all these visitors went away. This was the chance
-Chirp Sparrow was looking for. He flew down and perched on the cage.
-Then he cheeped very softly, to make Nibble look at him.
-
-Nibble pricked up an ear. Then he jumped so hard that he hit the front
-of the cage and bounced back again, but he picked himself up and
-thumped and wriggled his puffy tail trying to show Chirp how glad he
-was to see him. “Mr. Chirp, Mr. Chirp!” he exclaimed. “You’ll know how
-to help me. You know everything!”
-
-“Well, not everything,” answered Chirp. But he preened the feathers on
-his shoulders and cocked his head on one side the way birds do when
-they’re pleased about anything. For he was immensely flattered. “I
-don’t know everything,” he repeated, “but I’ll call a sparrow council,
-and we’ll see what can be done about it.” And something’s pretty apt
-to happen when the sparrows put their minds to anything.
-
-“Now you listen to me,” he went on. “You eat what they feed you and
-keep strong. You aren’t in any danger right away. And you try to make
-friends with that Dog.”
-
-“What Dog?” asked Nibble. He was puzzled.
-
-“He was here just a minute ago,” said Chirp. “That big foxy-looking
-beast. He’s a great friend of ours. He has a big dish by the back door
-that’s always full of delicious things. And he pretends to go to sleep
-while we pick up the crumbs. You be just as polite as you can to him.
-I’ll be back in the morning.” And Chirp flitted off to the sparrow
-roost, leaving Nibble almost cheerful again. He couldn’t help feeling
-that all this excitement was rather interesting.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- HOW NIBBLE TRICKED A FOE—AND MADE A FRIEND
-
-
-Tommy Peele had tried to make his cage a comfortable one for Nibble to
-sleep in. But he didn’t know that a proper rabbit hole has fresh air
-blowing into it from above. The cage had only one dark, stuffy corner
-to hide in, or the open part behind a wire front. And there Nibble
-crouched in the hay Tommy had given him. But he kept cheerful. Chirp
-had said, “We’ll see what can be done about it,” and Nibble knew the
-clever Sparrow. So he just made a little song of the words until he
-sang himself to sleep with them.
-
-Way ’long late toward the morning he woke up. His furry feet were
-tickling. So were his ears. And presently his shoulders tickled, too,
-where the fur stood straight up on them. Something was gnawing the
-floor of his cage.
-
-“Who’s there?” he called softly. And oh, how he did pray it might be
-the field-mouse who had shown him the way through Ouphe’s tunnels! He
-could see the haystack where the wicked Rat lived, but it was so dark
-that that was all he could see.
-
-“It’s I,” said the honey voice of Ouphe. “I’ve come to show you what
-can be done about it. I’m sorry to be late, but I had to attend to a
-little business with Chirp Sparrow.” The words were all right, but the
-way he said them was enough to make your skin crawl.
-
-“What are you going to do?” demanded Nibble.
-
-“I’m going to have breakfast with you,” said Ouphe. “I’m going to make
-a nice little door so I can come in and we’ll have a cozy time. I love
-little rabbits, I do.” And Nibble knew very well the way he loved
-them—like Slink the Weasel. For no wild beast needs to be warned
-against any one who has the horrid musky, flesh-eater’s smell about
-him. And Nibble smelled Ouphe.
-
-“I’ll fasten my teeth right in your nose,” said Nibble, “the minute
-you poke it through my floor.”
-
-“What good will that do?” sneered Ouphe. “You’ll hurt me almost as
-much as Chirp Sparrow. He pecked my ear, he did—the bold, bad bird!
-All the same, I ate him.”
-
-“You didn’t!” sobbed Nibble. He just couldn’t believe it.
-
-“Didn’t I just?” jeered Ouphe. “You can smell him on my whiskers when
-you bite me. Sparrow for supper and rabbit for breakfast. Mmn!” And he
-smacked his lips.
-
-But Nibble almost forgot to be scared, he was so angry. He thumped his
-feet.
-
-“Stop that!” snarled Ouphe. “Do you want the Dog to eat you?”
-
-“Thump, Thump, THUMP!” went Nibble. He was bound to do whatever Ouphe
-didn’t want him to.
-
-“Arrh!” cursed the bad Rat. Kerflip, kerflop, he jumped down and
-shuffled off to his haystack. Sure enough, there came the Dog,
-calling, “What’s the matter here?” And Nibble was too scared to
-answer.
-
-“What’s the matter here?” repeated the Dog. He was standing in front
-of the cage wagging his long, plumy tail. But all Nibble could look at
-was the great teeth he showed when he smiled.
-
-“Please,” said Nibble very faintly, “please, Mr. Dog, Ouphe the Rat
-ate Chirp Sparrow for supper to-night. I thought I ought to tell you
-because Chirp said you were friends.”
-
-“He did, did he?” laughed the Dog. And he ran out his pink tongue,
-which scared Nibble more than ever. “And who brought you the news?”
-
-“Ouphe did. He’s been trying to get into my cage.”
-
-“You don’t say?” The Dog sniffed carefully. “Great Bones, Bunny!” he
-exclaimed, “Why didn’t you call me an hour ago. I’ll hate to show that
-to Tommy. He’ll think I wasn’t watching.”
-
-“Ouphe said you’d eat me,” whispered Nibble.
-
-“Eat you?” repeated the Dog. “Lies! All lies! And Ouphe knew it. I’ll
-tell you, Bunny, don’t believe a word that creature says. He never
-tells the truth, even by accident. And he’s always up to some
-devilment.”
-
-Somehow Nibble knew he could believe the things the Dog said in his
-rough but friendly voice. All the same, he wanted to be pretty
-careful. “Why wouldn’t you want to eat me?” he asked.
-
-“Why, because you belong to my Tommy. I’m not saying what I might do
-if you didn’t,” answered the Dog, wagging his tail harder than ever
-because he was so amused at Nibble. “Though I guess I’m too old and
-fat to catch you. But as long as you live in my Man’s barns and have
-my Man’s smell about you I’ll never touch you. My job is to take care
-of my Man’s things and see that nobody hurts them.”
-
-Now it was queer, but just the way that nice, big, growl Dog said he
-might possibly try to catch him if he wasn’t Tommy Peele’s rabbit made
-Nibble feel better. He felt the Dog wasn’t pretending like Ouphe the
-Rat did after he’d been shouting horrid things at Chirp Sparrow. He
-gave a little laugh—a sniffly one, because he wasn’t quite over being
-afraid. “Please, Mr. Dog,” he murmured, “Chirp said I was to make
-friends with you.”
-
-“Well, then, my name is Watch,” the Dog continued; “it’s my job to
-watch this farm and see that things don’t go wrong on it. And that’s
-why you should have called me the minute Ouphe put his ugly teeth into
-this.” He sniffed the gnawed spot on Nibble’s cage.
-
-“Yes, sir.” Nibble apologized. “Chirp didn’t tell me that. He just
-said you were once a wolf, like Silvertip—only much more clever.”
-
-“Urr!” remarked Watch, cocking an ear. “So Chirp’s been going into my
-family history? He’s a gossipy bundle of feathers.”
-
-“No,” insisted Nibble honestly.
-
-“Just about how the Wolves ate the Cows in the very First-Off
-Beginning.”
-
-“All right,” answered Watch. “Then I’ll finish it for myself.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- WHY DOGS LOVE BABIES
-
-
-“You know how the wolves ate the cows in the First-Off Beginning,”
-said Watch, after he had taken a sniff to make sure Ouphe was still in
-the haystack. “It was because the Plants just wouldn’t be eaten. And
-they were too clever to starve.” He settled himself down by Nibble’s
-cage.
-
-“Yes,” answered Nibble, “and how the good stupid Cows did starve, so
-Mother Nature had to give them horns because they’d worn all their
-teeth off.” “Much good did that do them,” sniffed Watch. “Horns or no
-horns, you just ought to see me handle them.” He was very proud of his
-work, that nice dog.
-
-“Well,” he went on, “some of us were terribly ashamed over the way
-we’d acted. But Mother Nature wouldn’t forgive us. She said if we ever
-were trusted we’d have to earn it ourselves. She’d never trust us. Her
-good Beasts wouldn’t have anything to do with us, and we wouldn’t have
-anything to do with the bad ones because we knew we weren’t as bad as
-they were. And we got lonely and unhappy—so, of course, we got sulky
-and snappy, too.
-
-“Then the bad Beasts took to calling us ‘Dogs’—and that was a terrible
-insult in those days. And deep down inside we were very, very
-sorry—because we did so want to be trusted.
-
-“One day a dog was walking all alone in the Forest and he saw the
-funniest little Creature playing there. It was so funny he sat down on
-his tail to watch it play. It hadn’t any teeth to speak of, and it
-hadn’t any hair, but it walked like a little cub bear. Just like one.
-It would stagger along a little ways and then it would sit down—plump!
-And then it would laugh. So that made the dog prick up his ears.
-
-“He liked the sound it made when it laughed so much that he stayed
-there to listen to it. And pretty soon it saw him. But it didn’t run
-away. It just walked right up to him. And the queerest feeling came
-over that dog. He was happy, deep down inside him. Because it was
-trusting him.
-
-“So he sat very still. And the little thing walked right up and felt
-of his teeth, and tried to find out how he winked his eyes. And the
-more it hurt him the better he loved it because then he was sure it
-was trusting him. And it had the sweetest smell. He put out his tongue
-and tickled it; and, of course, it laughed again. So he found out how
-to make it laugh whenever he wanted to. And they played out there in
-the sun and were very happy.
-
-“By and by a Man came running up and behind him was a woman. So, of
-course, that dog knew that he had been playing with their Baby. And he
-got up and crept away because he knew that least of all they would
-have trusted him. But the Baby cried and held out its hands for him.
-
-“All that night the dog was lonely because he’d lost the little soft
-thing that laughed and trusted him. And he told the Moon about it.
-Dogs always tell things to the Moon. And he was the most unhappy dog
-in the Forest because he’d only learned half of the secret about being
-trusted.”
-
-Here Watch paused to rush at the haystack with a terrible bark because
-he thought Ouphe was sticking his nose out again. “Wurff!” he cleared
-his throat. “I’ll catch that fellow some day,” he remarked as he came
-back to Nibble Rabbit’s cage and sat down again.
-
-Nibble was waiting for him with his little feet pressed close to the
-wires. He wasn’t afraid of any one while that dog was there to talk to
-him. “Go on, please,” he demanded. “You said its Father and Mother
-took away the little soft cub who had trusted him. And the poor dog
-felt lonely.”
-
-“Cub? I didn’t say ‘cub,’ Bunny. It was a Baby. My, but you are a
-green little wild thing.” He smiled again, but this time Nibble wasn’t
-afraid of the long teeth he showed.
-
-“You said it was like a little bear,” Nibble insisted, and he wrinkled
-up his own nose.
-
-“Well, Cub or Puppy or Baby,” the dog went on. “That first dog wanted
-it the worst way. So he just trailed its people back to where they
-lived in a cave, and he hid up on top of the cave, where the gray
-smoke came creeping up through a crack. And sometimes he’d hear it
-laugh. And nobody thought of looking there for him.
-
-“The dog would see the Man go out to hunt, and the Woman go down for
-water, and he could hear the Baby pattering around inside the cave.
-And then it would sit down, ‘plump!’ the way it did in the Forest. And
-then it would laugh again. And the dog’s tongue would just itch to
-tickle the Baby.
-
-“So on the third day, when the Man went out to hunt and the Woman went
-down for water, he sneaked around to the cave door and first thing he
-knew he had his tickly tongue on the little soft thing. And his ears
-were so full of the noises it made that he didn’t hear its mother’s
-bare feet when she came back. And she threw the first thing that she
-had in her hand—which was the water—all over him.
-
-“Of course that didn’t hurt him. He didn’t exactly like it any more
-than he liked the Baby’s fingers when they pulled his whiskers, but he
-never imagined she was fighting. He thought she was playing with him.
-So he trusted her—which is the whole secret about being trusted.
-
-“And then wasn’t he glad. He just rolled around on the cave floor to
-dry himself—though the cave floor was never very clean. And he
-wriggled and giggled over it all. And he gave the Baby a lick with his
-tickly tongue so it laughed with him. But the Woman just stood there
-looking at him.
-
-“Now, it’s a queer thing, Bunny, but Humans can’t stay angry if they
-laugh. There was the dog, all sprawly legs and waggly tail, not
-looking like a wolf at all, and the Baby laughing at him. And the
-Woman began to laugh, too. ‘You look so funny,’ she said, ‘you’ve got
-leaves in your whiskers.’ And so they were friends.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- NIBBLE HAS HIS DOUBTS ABOUT DOGS
-
-
-“That was a lovely story.” Nibble chuckled, clear out to the tip of
-his tufty bunny tail. He chuckled so hard he forgot he was locked up
-in an uncomfortable cage, without a decent corner to snuggle in. “But
-you haven’t told me yet how the First Dog made friends with his Man.
-Go on. Please do.”
-
-“N-no.” Watch answered thoughtfully, scratching his shoulder. “I’d
-rather not. I’m afraid you mightn’t understand.”
-
-“Yes, I would,” teased Nibble. “Of course I would. In the very
-First-Off Beginning the dog made friends with the Baby and the Woman
-because he made them laugh. Did he make the Man laugh, too?”
-
-“Why—yes. I expect he did,”
-
-Watch answered. “You see, the Man wasn’t friendly when he came home.
-But the Woman and the Baby made him behave nicely. They always do.
-That is, they wouldn’t let him hit the dog with his stone hammer, or
-jab him with his spear. But he wouldn’t look at him. And the dog
-wanted that Man to trust him—wanted it most of all.
-
-“So he began following the Man when he went out to hunt. But the Man
-threw stones at him as soon as they got where the Woman couldn’t see
-him do it, and told him to keep out of the way. The dog just crept off
-and hid.
-
-“He saw the Man creep up on a band of wild cows that were grazing and
-sleeping in the sun. But just when he was almost close enough to kill
-one they all began to snort and run. And they ran right past where the
-dog was hiding from the Man.
-
-“Of course he knew what that Man wanted. So he just bounded out and
-pinned a cow by the throat and sent her head over heels. And that did
-make the Man laugh. My, but he was happy! So then he trusted the dog,
-too, and they were the best of friends for ever and ever.” And Watch
-smiled as though he were right proud of the memory.
-
-But Nibble was horrified. “Oh!” he gasped. “The poor cow! That was an
-awful thing to do. After the dogs pretended to be sorry that they had
-done it when they were starving. No wonder Mother Nature wouldn’t
-trust them.”
-
-“There,” said Watch. “I knew you wouldn’t understand. He didn’t do it
-for himself. He did it for his Man.”
-
-“The Wild Things warned me,” said Nibble. “Both of them are bad, Dog
-and Man.”
-
-“Look here, Bunny,” Watch explained patiently. “They don’t either of
-them do that now. They take care of the cows—because now the cows
-belong to Man and have his smell about them. Just the way I won’t
-touch you because you’re my Man’s rabbit and have the smell of my Man.
-I don’t like to kill things—except Ouphe the Rat, and that’s because
-he doesn’t belong to my Man and my Man told me to. Mother Nature
-wouldn’t trust the dog, so he won’t obey her. Man did trust him, so he
-just everlastingly does obey his Man.”
-
-“I’d believe that better if the cows told it to me,” said Nibble
-defiantly.
-
-“All right! I’ll bring them up and let you talk to them as soon as
-they are milked and let out of the barn.” Watch was perfectly
-good-natured about it. “I’m going my rounds now, but you just tell me
-if Ouphe troubles you again.” And off he trotted, waving his plumy
-tail.
-
-Nibble was terribly shocked. So any dog would do anything his Man told
-him to do, no matter what Mother Nature thought about it! Now just
-what did the cows think of that? Nibble wanted dreadfully to know,
-because he hadn’t the least chance in the world of asking Mother
-Nature or any of the wise Wild Things. How he did want good old Doctor
-Muskrat!
-
-It was getting lighter and lighter, less and less scary every minute.
-Everything would be much more cheerful when the Sun peeked out over
-his shoulder from down South where he was busy with the other half of
-the Earth. Suddenly a voice shouted from somewhere right behind him,
-
- “All Evil Spirits hark and hear
- The warning call of Chanticleer.
- Er-er-er-er-errh.”
-
-It was just the Rooster calling himself by a high-toned name—the way
-he always does. But Nibble had never seen one. He was so s’prised he
-jumped and snubbed his nose against the cage. So he huddled up in the
-middle of it again.
-
-Then all the voices of the farm-yard began calling, “Good morning!
-Good morning!” and he thought of course they were calling to the Sun.
-But pretty soon the pigs began their scary grunts and then one
-squealed, “Good morning. We want our breakfast.” Right off all the
-rest of them took it up. The horses whinnied and the cows mooed, and
-the sheep bleated, and the ducks and chickens and guinea-fowls and
-turkeys all shouted, “we want our breakfasts!”
-
-Suddenly a new voice cheeped, right beside him, “I want my breakfast,
-too!” It was Chirp Sparrow!
-
-“Oh, dear, I do wish they’d stop!” said Nibble. “Whoever are they
-calling? It isn’t the Sun!”
-
-“’Course not. It’s their Man and Tommy Peele. I can hear them coming.”
-
-Then Nibble remembered something. “Why, Chirp,” he said, in surprise,
-“Ouphe the Rat said he had eaten you! And he tried to eat me, too!”
-
-“Ouphe is a liar,” said Chirp decidedly. “I hope he hears me say it. I
-wish that dog could catch him.”
-
-“He never will,” Nibble answered sadly. “Silvertip could, but not that
-dog. He shouts every time and lets Ouphe know he’s coming. And when he
-does watch at one of Ouphe’s holes he keeps beating the haystack with
-his tail. That’s a tattle-tail for sure. Worse than the Mouse’s.”
-
-“I’ll tell you what.” Chirp cocked his head on one side and looked
-thoughtful. “We’ll all have to put in and help the dog catch Ouphe. If
-we don’t, there’ll be a young dog on this farm and he’s sure to be a
-foolish one.”
-
-“But how can I help while I’m in this cage?”
-
-“You’ll be out before long!” said Chirp cheerfully. And so he was,
-though even Chirp didn’t know how it was going to happen.
-
-And just then Tommy Peele came running up with some toothsome carrots
-and a whole armful of clover hay—for Nibble’s breakfast, though he
-hadn’t asked for it.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- THE CLEVERNESS OF CHIRP SPARROW
-
-
-Watch must have kept his word about sending the cows to talk to Nibble
-Rabbit. For the first thing they did when the barn door was opened was
-to come trooping up to his cage. And an old White Cow put her big
-starey eye right up close to it, because she’s very near-sighted, and
-sniffed. Nibble’s fur blew as hard as it did the time of the terrible
-storm. But her breath was all warm and sweet with clover, so he wasn’t
-afraid, though she was three times as big as the dog.
-
-The very first thing the White Cow said was: “Why don’t you eat your
-breakfast?”
-
-“I can’t. I’m all cramped up in this cage,” answered Nibble.
-
-[Illustration: The White Cow makes friends with Nibble.]
-
-“He’s too much afraid of being eaten,” laughed Chirp Sparrow, and he
-perched right on the White Cow’s horn.
-
-“Why, there’s no one going to hurt him,” drawled the Cow in a
-surprised tone.
-
-“There was Ouphe the Rat last night. Nibble felt pretty trembly about
-him.”
-
-“Ouphe! The disgusting thing. He came in and messed up our feed and
-danced over us with his pricky feet so we couldn’t sleep. I just
-called Watch,” mooed the White Cow in her nice fluty voice. It
-reminded Nibble of the South Wind.
-
-“Aren’t you afraid of Watch?” Nibble asked, for now he was truly going
-to find out whether Watch was bad. “He said he’d kill you if his Man
-told him to.”
-
-“Watch? Why, Watch couldn’t kill any one. He’s too fat and sleepy and
-good-natured. And no man would ever tell him to.”
-
-“Aren’t you afraid of Man?” Nibble asked next.
-
-“Man!” The White Cow snorted again, and most of the others snorted,
-too. “Why, Tommy Peele’s all the man that ever milks me. And he’s only
-a little boy. He snuggles right in beside me as though he were my own
-Calf. I love Tommy Peele.”
-
-“I don’t like Tommy Peele,” bellowed the Red Cow Nibble had taken for
-a log when Silvertip chased him. “I don’t like Tommy Peele. He threw
-stones at me when he drove me out of the cornfield.” She nudged the
-White Cow away and sniffed at Nibble’s carrot. “I’d like that,” said
-the greedy thing.
-
-“You’d quarrel with any one,” drawled the White Cow. “You’re always
-doing something you’ve no business to do.” And she moved off.
-
-Then Chirp Sparrow had a fine idea. “Look here,” he whispered in the
-Red Cow’s ear. “If you want to get even with Tommy Peele you just
-catch your horn in that wire and let out his rabbit.”
-
-“Um-m, I dunno——” mumbled the Red Cow. She didn’t like stones the way
-Tommy could throw them.
-
-“Then you can have the carrots—all the carrots. There are lots of them
-under the hay,” lied Chirp.
-
-The Red Cow lurched her head awkwardly. Her horn caught on the wire.
-Then she got scared and tried to break loose again. But what she broke
-loose was the whole door. She bounced off with it dangling against her
-face. “Moo-oo-oo!” she bawled as she plunged about the barnyard. “Take
-it off! Take it off! It hurts my no-o-se!”
-
-But Nibble didn’t care. He took a fine long jump that stretched his
-long legs. And then who ever said a rabbit couldn’t dance? He danced a
-proper hornpipe and he twiddled his puffy tail and flopped his
-ears—all at once—because it felt so good to be free. And Chirp Sparrow
-squawked and sat down on his tail feathers because he was laughing too
-hard to fly. Half at Nibble and half at the Red Cow.
-
-Of course all the other sparrows came cheeping and chirping, and
-Chanticleer the Rooster crowed, though he didn’t know what he was
-crowing about. And the noise brought Watch the Dog on the run—and
-after him came Tommy Peele, not nearly so fast, for he still had his
-tall rubber boots on.
-
-And Nibble took to the only hole he knew anything about—which was
-Ouphe’s—but he was so startled he didn’t stop to think of that. And
-the bad old rat woke up and started to come out of that very hole to
-see what all this noise was about.
-
-Then wasn’t Nibble in a nice fix? Just wasn’t he?
-
-In front of him Watch was sniffing and digging at the hay. Behind him
-Ouphe was murmuring in his sticky, trickly voice: “Come right in,
-little Friend Rabbit. Come right in.”
-
-Just then Watch barked to Tommy Peele: “Here he is. I’ve got him.” And
-Tommy said in a very severe voice: “Go ’way, Watch. Don’t you hurt my
-bunny.”
-
-“There,” barked Watch, “he says you’re still his bunny, even if you
-are wild again. Come along!” But Nibble didn’t move.
-
-“Go away!” said Tommy again. “Go on, Watch; he’ll never come out until
-you do.”
-
-But Watch didn’t move. He could hear Ouphe saying in a horrid voice:
-“Come in here, or I’ll take you by the tail and pull you in.” And he
-held his very breath—and his wagger with it!
-
-Of course Ouphe thought he had gone away. And he wasn’t very scared of
-Tommy Peele. So he caught hold of Nibble’s tail. And then Nibble was
-so frightened he began to squeal and pull. And Ouphe held back.
-
-“Come along, Nibble, come quick,” pleaded Chirp Sparrow. He meant that
-the dog was safer than the rat. But Ouphe thought he meant that the
-dog was gone. So he let Nibble pull him to the very edge of the hole.
-
-“Aurgh!” sang Watch, very joyfully indeed. For he never touched Nibble
-at all, but nipped Ouphe the Rat right through the heart with those
-very long teeth he shows when he laughs.
-
-Nibble sat right down there in the sunlight until he got his breath,
-and nobody tried to catch him.
-
-Watch couldn’t. He had his mouth all full of Ouphe. And he was walking
-around on the tips of his toes, looking so vain that all the sparrows
-laughed at him. Even Tommy Peele joined in. But Watch didn’t care a
-bit. He just smiled as wide as he could let his mouth go and not lose
-Ouphe out of it.
-
-And Nibble slipped over and ate his carrot. How good it tasted, now he
-was free!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- HOW A BUNNY COULD HELP A BOY
-
-
-Now don’t you forget that it was the greedy Red Cow who let Nibble out
-of his cage. She wanted his carrot so much that she pulled the wire
-door right off with her horn. And then she got scared and careered way
-down the Snowy Pasture with that door banging against her nose,
-getting madder and madder and madder.
-
-Well, she finally scratched it off on to a prickly thorn bush that
-held up its arms to help her. And then she came back to the barnyard
-as fast as she could run. For she’d lost her temper entirely. And you
-know what happens when things do that. It happened to the Storm and to
-Mrs. Hooter, and to Silvertip the Fox, and to Chatter Squirrel, and
-Slyfoot the Mink, and Nature only knows how many more. It’s always
-something unpleasant.
-
-[Illustration: Just then Watch barked to Tommy Peele, “Here he is. I’ve
-got him.”]
-
-But she hadn’t forgotten that carrot, because she was so terribly
-greedy. She galloped up and sclooped her tongue around beneath the
-pile of hay in Nibble’s cage. No, there weren’t any more carrots at
-all. So she rolled her eyes around and saw Nibble just finishing up
-the sweet inside of it. “Moo-oo-oo!” she roared. And it didn’t sound a
-bit like the White Cow’s fluty voice. Moo! She tried to catch Nibble
-on her sharp horns or trample him with her big hard toes. But he was
-too quick. He just made two jumps and ran under the haystack.
-
-Then she shook her horns at Chirp Sparrow, who was perched on a fence
-post. “You lied!” she roared. “You said there were lots of carrots
-here!” But Chirp just squawked rudely and flew into a tree, and she
-only banged her sore nose on the fence wire.
-
-So the next one she took after was Tommy Peele, who hadn’t done
-anything to her at all. And you remember Tommy had on his tall rubber
-boots, so he couldn’t run very fast. Not fast enough to run away from
-the Red Cow.
-
-And suddenly Nibble found he was dreadfully afraid of what might
-happen to Tommy Peele. Besides, it was all his own fault—excepting
-that Chirp really oughtn’t to have lied to her. So he bounced out
-under her very nose, calling: “I took the carrot! I took the carrot!”
-
-But the Red Cow wanted someone she could catch and hurt—because she
-had lost her temper. She wanted Tommy Peele. Only she never got him.
-
-Because right then things did begin to happen. Watch dropped that rat
-and clamped his teeth right on her sore nose. “There!” he growled in
-his throat. “I’ll teach you to hurt my little boy!”
-
-“I’ll hurt you!” bawled the Red Cow, trying to stamp in his ribs with
-her big horny feet.
-
-“You will?” It was the White Cow’s voice—but it wasn’t fluty now. She
-was galloping, tail up and head down. “Whang!” she hit the Red Cow’s
-ribs. “Blam!” she hit her so hard in the shoulder that Watch lost his
-hold. And the Red Cow was all through hurting any one. She turned and
-ran, limping and licking her sore nose.
-
-Maybe you think Nibble Rabbit wasn’t puzzled when he saw the Red Cow
-run bawling down the pasture with a limp that would keep her feeding
-in circles for a week. He had thought of course she was going to fight
-with Watch the Dog, and instead she had turned on Tommy Peele. Now
-that was wrong, so Watch had a perfect right to stop her. But, when
-the White Cow came charging up, Nibble never in the world expected to
-see her help Watch give the Bed Cow a terrible trouncing.
-
-And here was Watch, all smiles and waggly tail, saying, “Much obliged,
-I’m sure, Mother Snowflake. I was finding that heifer quite a
-mouthful.”
-
-And the White Cow was answering, “Oh, I’ve been waiting quite a while
-to drive a bit of sense into the wild little thing.” And she settled
-down to switching her tail and chewing her cud as calmly as ever.
-
-But that made Nibble indignant. “She’s not a Wild Thing,” he said.
-“Wild Things have better manners than any of you or they’d be fighting
-all the time. I’m a Wild Thing myself, so I know.”
-
-“Oh, it’s the Bunny,” drawled the White Cow, dragging her words the
-way she drags her toes, because she thinks as slowly as she walks.
-“Well, I didn’t mean to hurt your feelings. You’re perfectly right.
-Manners are to keep folks from fighting—to make them think before they
-pick a quarrel. That Red Cow just wouldn’t think until we made her.
-Now she’ll learn.”
-
-“’Nother thing,” Nibble insisted, “we don’t help any one against our
-own kind.”
-
-“That sort of talk is less use than a trampled cornstalk,” Mother
-Snowflake lowed sensibly. “All the kind we have here is Tommy Peele.
-His people take care of us, so we take care of him.”
-
-“Yes,” Watch put in; “you saw how he trusted us.” And he waved his
-tail quite grandly.
-
-“But he didn’t say ‘Thank you,’” Nibble looked about him in surprise,
-for Tommy had disappeared.
-
-“He doesn’t keep it in his pocket, but he won’t forget it,” promised
-the Cow. And she wet her nostrils with her slaty tongue to sniff what
-it was going to be.
-
-“He doesn’t talk our talk,” Watch explained, “but he does know the
-sign language of tails pretty well.”
-
-“I told you,” she mooed triumphantly. For there came Tommy with his
-cap full of meal. He poured a big pile before her and a little one
-close to Nibble. But he gave Watch a great big hug.
-
-“That little ‘thank you’ is for you,” smiled Watch over Tommy Peele’s
-shoulder. “Why, Bunny, do you think we didn’t see you trying to help
-us with the Red Cow?”
-
-Nibble certainly had tried his best, for deep down inside him he began
-to know why the tame beasts all loved Tommy.
-
-Still he hesitated. “I won’t come back to my cage,” he warned; “I’m
-wild, you know.”
-
-“That’s all right,” Watch promised, “but wild or tame, you’re Tommy
-Peele’s, and some day you’ll be glad to know it. So go ahead and
-accept that ‘thank you’ like a sensible beast or you’ll be hurting
-Tommy’s feelings.”
-
-Nibble really wanted to. My, but it smelled good! And the White Cow
-was heaving big sighs of happiness over her pile. But he didn’t want
-to be caught again, so he was very, very careful. Lip-it, lip-it, he
-tiptoed over and sniffed. Then he just couldn’t resist it. It WAS
-good! Quite as good as it smelled! Pretty soon he felt like sighing,
-too, because his little skin was tight.
-
-And Tommy Peele never tried to catch him at all. Because now he knew
-what it felt like to be chased. He only took off his red mitten and
-twiddled his pinky fingers.
-
-Nibble knew that those fingers were nice and gentle when they petted
-him, and that was all Tommy wanted to do. But he just couldn’t quite
-dare to let him. So he cleaned the last crumb off his whiskers with
-the little fur brushes he wears on his paws and said, “That was mighty
-nice, but I’m a Wild Thing still, and I’m going back to the woods,
-where I belong. Good-bye, Mr. Watch. Good-bye, Mother Snowflake” [for
-that’s what Watch had called the White Cow].
-
-“Good-bye,” barked Watch. “You’ll find us here any time you want us.”
-
-Mother Snowflake couldn’t stop to talk. She was too busy.
-
-So Nibble signalled a very polite “Good-bye” to Tommy Peele with his
-little tufty tail, though it was still rather stiff where Ouphe the
-Rat had bitten it. But Tommy didn’t understand Nibble—not yet. He only
-knew the talk of the tame beasts. So he felt quite sad when he saw the
-Bunny go skipping, lipity, lipity, down the long lane.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- HOW THE FUNNY BUNNY SMELLED A JOKE
-
-
-Lipity, lipity, lipity, Nibble Rabbit hopped down the long lane from
-Tommy Peele’s red barn. He was in a dreadful hurry to get home to the
-Woods and Fields.
-
-Out in the Snowy Pasture the wind blew cold. The Red Cow stood with
-her back to it, looking very sad and thoughtful, but she spoke to
-Nibble politely, for she’d found her temper again. Pretty soon he was
-passing the cornstalk tents in the Broad Field, but one of them
-smelled so foxy that he didn’t wait there for Silvertip to come back.
-Now he was in the Clover Patch. He stole past the oak that blew down
-in the Terrible Storm, and around the Brush Pile. Then he went
-straight for his own old hole.
-
-How he had dreamed of it when Tommy had him in that cage! No one had
-been there since the Terrible Storm, for the doorway was drifted shut.
-So in he popped. And then he almost popped right out again, for there
-was someone in it.
-
-Yes, someone was in his very own home, and he couldn’t tell who. But
-it was someone with a nice clovery breath, like White Cow’s, so Nibble
-thought he couldn’t be dangerous. “Here!” he called. “Whoever you are,
-wake up! This hole is mine!”
-
-But Someone never answered.
-
-He felt Someone’s warm fur, listened to Someone’s breathing. He
-touched Someone’s fat side with his paw. Then he tried to shake
-Someone by the scruff of his neck, but Someone was much too big for
-him. And Someone wouldn’t wake.
-
-Nibble cocked his head on one side and thought about it. Then he tried
-a few experiments. At last he said: “Very well. There’s plenty of room
-for both of us in here. I don’t know but we’ll both be more
-comfortable. But you just remember when you do wake up that this hole
-is really mine.” Someone just slept on. But Nibble didn’t care, for he
-made a perfectly lovely foot-warmer.
-
-The next morning Nibble brushed the sleep out of his eyes with his
-furry paws and nudged Someone. “Come along,” he urged. “We’ll hunt
-some breakfast.” For it was the dark of the moon when rabbits feed at
-early dawn and dusk. They prefer moonlight at other times. “I’ll get
-him out,” he thought, “and have a look at him.”
-
-Someone only made a little sucking noise as though he were eating
-something perfectly delicious in his dream, and went on sleeping.
-
-“You’re a funny beast,” said Nibble, right out loud. “I’m going to ask
-Doctor Muskrat about you.” Someone slept right on. So off Nibble set
-for the pond among the cattails. And all the breakfast he found along
-the way was some coarse grass, very dry and wind-whipped, and the dry
-brown seed heads of yarrow. And that wasn’t much after the wonderful
-breakfast Tommy had given him.
-
-Everything was all changed. The cattails were drifted waist deep in
-snow, and the pond was all ice, so he could walk right up to Doctor
-Muskrat’s house in the middle of it. He thumped No answer. He thumped
-again, and then he danced as hard as he could on top of it. He was
-having a very busy time, all by himself, when he heard Doctor
-Muskrat’s gruff voice calling, “Who’s that? What do you think you’re
-trying to do, anyway?”
-
-Nibble flashed about and saw the doctor’s tousled head poking from a
-hole among the cattails. “Good morning,” he said politely, “I was just
-looking for your front door.”
-
-“Well, you’ll find it here, over this warm spring—the one spot in the
-pond that doesn’t freeze shut, so I always have a place to come for a
-breath of fresh air.” The old doctor was puffing as he made his way
-through the crusty hillocks between the bulrush stems. “Duck me, but
-it’s Nibble! Dear, dear! What did you want? You aren’t ill?” And he
-was all ready to dive back after one of his famous roots.
-
-“No, indeed, but you know everything,” Nibble began confidently.
-“Won’t you please tell me who’s asleep in my home hole and won’t wake
-up?” And he told all about it.
-
-“Hm!” Doctor Muskrat wriggled his nose thoughtfully, much as any nice
-old gentleman will when his spectacles are pulled too far down on it.
-“It sounds to me—it most certainly sounds to me like that fat old
-bluffer, Snoof Woodchuck.”
-
-Nibble’s ears pricked. “Does he bite?” he asked anxiously.
-
-“Oh, no,” Doctor Muskrat reassured him. “He’s a harmless old crank,
-and a strict vegetarian, though the garter snakes say he’s a snappish
-fellow before he completely wakes up in the spring. Who wouldn’t be,
-with their perpetual whispering and squirming? He lets it out that
-he’s a kind of hermit, and sits meditating in his hole, with his eye
-on the weather, but I’ve always suspected he was snoozing. On the day
-after the first February moon casts her shadow, he pretends to come
-out and deliver his opinion. Though I never knew any one who really
-saw him.”
-
-Even People know the story. They call it Groundhog Day. And
-“Groundhog” is just a rude nickname for the woodchuck. Though how any
-one but the woodsfolk came to hear about it is a mystery.
-
-“I’ll bet you a sassafras root,” went on the doctor contemptuously,
-“that lazy old skeezicks never wakes up a day before Tad Coon.”
-
-“But if everybody thinks he does,” Nibble objected, “there must be
-something behind it.”
-
-“There is,” Doctor Muskrat agreed. “There’s a lot of talk, and he’s
-the one who starts it, too. It would make you sick to hear him
-straddling around after the frost is out of the ground saying ‘I told
-you so. I told you it would be bad weather, or good weather,’
-whichever it has happened to be. But I never saw any one who had heard
-him say it.”
-
-[Illustration: The old doctor was puffing as he made his way through the
-bulrush stems.]
-
-“Well,” Nibble insisted, “why doesn’t someone keep watch and tell on
-him?”
-
-Doctor Muskrat shook his head. “If you didn’t keep watch so that
-everyone would know they’d go right on believing him. And if you did
-that, and he did wake up, the joke would be on you. And that’s never
-any fun.”
-
-Well, that certainly kept Nibble quiet for a little while. He was
-thinking. Pretty soon his nose began to wrinkle and his eyes hid like
-little pinpoints, deep in his fur. He was trying so hard not to laugh.
-“Doctor Muskrat,” said he, “how soon is that February moon?”
-
-Doctor Muskrat waddled up the bank and took a nip of willow stem.
-“Grubs and clam shells!” he exclaimed in surprise. “Sap’s stirring.
-Why, it’s only the hatching of an egg away. [That’s two weeks as the
-woodsfolk count time.] Nibble,” he added curiously, “I believe you’re
-smelling something.”
-
-“I am,” Nibble chuckled. “I’m smelling a wonderful joke. Half of it
-will be on that old snoozer in my hole and the other half will
-be—who’ll the other half be on?”
-
-“There aren’t many folks out,” answered the doctor, telling them off
-on his paw. “There’s Chewee the Chickadee, Chaik the Jay, and Gimlet
-the Woodpecker—you couldn’t possibly fool him —and the fieldmice. The
-fieldmice! They do nothing but tattle and gossip and they’ll believe
-anything!”
-
-And Nibble was delighted. “Well, the other half of this joke will be
-on the fieldmice. Doctor Muskrat, did you ever hear that the fur of a
-woodchuck woven into a mouse’s nest is a sure charm against an owl’s
-catching them? But it’s got to be plucked the day after the first
-February moon.”
-
-Doctor Muskrat thought a minute, and then he laughed. He laughed so
-hard he slapped his tail on the ice, because he saw what Nibble Rabbit
-was thinking about.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE GREAT WOODCHUCK—FUR CHARM AGAINST OWLS
-
-
-Nibble Rabbit and Doctor Muskrat sat among the bulrushes on the Frozen
-Pond and laughed and chuckled over the joke they were planning on the
-old woodchuck in Nibble’s hole. He had everybody believing that he
-came out of his hole on the day we call Groundhog Day (though the
-woodsfolk never use a rude nickname like that even for a woodchuck)
-and predicted the weather. That is, everybody believed it except
-Nibble Rabbit and Doctor Muskrat.
-
-This was their plan. They would get every fieldmouse in the woods and
-fields looking for the woodchuck on that particular day. Then if he
-did wake up the joke would be on the fieldmice. And if he didn’t—well,
-you just listen!
-
-Nibble hopped all about, from the Frozen Pond to the little cornstalk
-tents in the Broad Field, looking for field-mice. And every time he
-found one he’d say, “What’s this story that’s going around? I hear
-that woodchuck fur plucked the day after the first February moon is a
-sure charm against owls. Just the littlest tuft woven into a nest will
-keep the young mice from being caught. Is there any truth in it?”
-
-The mouse wouldn’t let on that any one knew more about mouse secrets
-than he did, so he’d say “Oh, that used to be an old mouse custom, but
-of late years it’s been hard to find a woodchuck.” And then he’d
-scuttle off to the holes and tunnels where the mice live and fuss and
-gossip and chatter about it.
-
-Then they all ended up at the great hollow stump, where
-Great-grandfather Mouse has lived for so very many years that his ears
-are all crinkled, and set that agog. And poor old Great-grandfather
-Mouse got so bewildered that he dragged himself down to the Frozen
-Pond to talk with Doctor Muskrat. Which was exactly what Doctor
-Muskrat had been hoping for.
-
-The Doctor was very polite and pleased to see him. “Certainly,” he
-said, “I’ve heard the story. Fact is, I might have heard it from you
-yourself when we were both very young. But, dear, dear, my memory
-isn’t very good any more. Only I’m perfectly sure it was the day after
-the first February moon!” He didn’t want any mistake about that.
-
-“Yes, yes,” agreed Great-grandfather Mouse, “I remember. I remember it
-all, now you call it to mind. But where could I find a woodchuck?”
-
-“Well, seeing we’re such old friends,” whispered Doctor Muskrat, “I’ll
-let you know. But it’s a secret. He’s down in Nibble Rabbit’s hole. I
-expect that sly young bunny means to be married in the spring, and
-won’t his hole be nicely lined with woodchuck fur, just won’t it?”
-
-“Great grass seeds!” exploded Great-grandfather Mouse. “It’s a mouse
-charm. No rabbit has anything to do with it.” So he stumped off home,
-dragging his fat old tail and wagging his crinkled ears, and in half
-an hour more people knew about Doctor Muskrat’s secret than if Chatter
-Squirrel had shouted it from the treetops. They knew where the
-woodchuck was and they meant to get some fur off him, too.
-
-And Nibble Rabbit was all but turning somersaults on his little paddy
-feet out behind the bulrushes because he was so amused over it.
-
-The great day came at last—Groundhog Day—the day when the woodchuck
-ought to come out to foretell the weather for spring. And Nibble
-Rabbit and Doctor Muskrat weren’t the only ones who were watching for
-him.
-
-For all the snow around the mouth of Nibble’s hole was tunnelled by
-the mice, and they were scuffling and squeaking beneath it; so it’s a
-wonderful thing Silvertip the Fox didn’t hear them. And Nibble thought
-what a wonderful joke it would be if that woodchuck did come walking
-out of the hole. So he shook him and jounced him and pulled his round,
-mousy ears and his long spiky whiskers. But, no! That woodchuck just
-wouldn’t wake up. So finally Nibble gave it up and crawled out of
-doors. And there at the mouth of the hole he met old Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse, who was too fat and clumsy for any tunnel.
-
-“Good morning,” said Nibble. “I see you’ve come to greet my friend Mr.
-Woodchuck when he comes out to foretell the weather.”
-
-“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse very severely. “This is the day we come for our regular
-charm of woodchuck fur to keep our young safe from owls.” He spoke as
-solemnly as though he had done it every year of his life. “It’s
-strictly a mouse charm,” he went on, “and no rabbit is going to keep
-us from it!” He said that because Doctor Muskrat had given him the
-idea that Nibble meant to keep it all for himself. And Doctor Muskrat
-gave him that idea because he didn’t want Great-grandfather Mouse to
-suspect that Nibble had invented the whole story about the charm.
-Doctor Muskrat knew they’d never bother about coming after the
-woodchuck fur unless they thought that someone else wanted it as much
-as they did.
-
-“Very well,” Nibble answered meekly; “but please leave a little for
-me.”
-
-“We’ll see if there’s enough to go round,” replied the mouse. And with
-that he laid back his ears—he’s so old that they’re all crinkled—and
-marched down into Nibble’s own hole. And out he came with a mouthful
-of fur. And every fieldmouse from all the woods and fields solemnly
-marched in and did the very same thing as if they’d done it every year
-of their lives, too.
-
-And maybe you think Nibble Rabbit and Doctor Muskrat didn’t laugh
-until their sides were fit to split—maybe you think they didn’t.
-Because they knew they were going to be able to prove to every one of
-the woodsfolk just where Mr. Woodchuck was and what he was doing on
-the next day after the first February moon.
-
-After the last mouse had left his hole, Nibble went in to see what
-they had done. He came out again in a hurry. “Whew!” he said to Doctor
-Muskrat. “I’ll have to sleep in the Pickery Things to-night. It’s all
-mousy in there. But they’ve plucked that sleepy old woodchuck as bare
-as an egg.”
-
-And Doctor Muskrat chuckled. “Just you wait until he wakes up in the
-spring!”
-
-That wasn’t till a long way after St. Patrick’s Day, when the little
-gray pussies hung on all the willows. And he took three whole days to
-wake up in. For the first day he just grunted and groaned and made the
-noise that the woodsfolk take his name from. “Snoof, snoof!” he’d go
-as though he were trying to sneeze, but was too lazy to do it. And the
-minute he did that, Nibble hurried down to Doctor Muskrat in the marsh
-and told him about it.
-
-“Very good,” said Doctor Muskrat. “Tell me how he behaves to-morrow.”
-
-On the second day Snoof Woodchuck had turned over in the hole with his
-feet in the air and was acting as a dog does when he has a dream.
-Nibble told Doctor Muskrat.
-
-“Very well,” said the Doctor. “He’ll stand on them to-morrow, and
-we’ll all be there to greet him.” Then he waddled off to the hollow
-stump where Great-grandfather Fieldmouse lives. And Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse poked his head out.
-
-“Well, well?” he demanded in his crotchety voice, because he’s very
-old— so old that his ears are all crinkled. “What do you want now?”
-
-“I just wanted to let you know that to-morrow morning Snoof Woodchuck
-will take the air an hour after sun-up,” said Doctor Muskrat very
-politely.
-
-“Well, what’s that got to do with me?” demanded Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse.
-
-“I let you know because we’re such old friends,” said Doctor Muskrat.
-“Surely you remember that as long as the mice kept up the good old
-custom of gathering to thank the woodchuck, the woodchuck stayed here
-and you always had your charm.”
-
-“I suppose so, I suppose so,” grunted Great-grandfather Fieldmouse.
-
-So on the third day, when Snoof Woodchuck climbed out into the air,
-all the fieldmice were assembled. He was very much complimented. He
-bowed pompously, this way and that—and oh, how funny he looked, as
-though the moths had been at him! “Hmm, hmm!” he began importantly.
-“As I told you when I predicted the weather on the next day after the
-first February moon——”
-
-But he never got any further. For the mice simply squealed in
-surprise, “Why, that was the day we came for our charms of woodchuck
-fur. You were fast asleep!”
-
-“You old bluffer,” jeered Doctor Muskrat, “we caught you napping this
-time!”
-
-“Look at yourself!” squealed Nibble Rabbit, standing on his tallest
-toes to hop about. “See if you’re not mouse-eaten! You’re as naked as
-you were born—yah! I’m ashamed to look at you!” And the mice all
-echoed him.
-
-And that woodchuck scuttled back into the very bottom of the hole and
-hid there until midnight. And then he went so far away that no one
-ever saw him again or even heard of him.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- WHAT DOCTOR MUSKRAT THOUGHT ABOUT TRAPS
-
-
-Quite a long while ago I promised to tell what Tommy Peele was doing
-in the Broad Field when he let Nibble Rabbit’s storm party out of the
-little cornstalk tent. Well, to begin with, he was looking for the
-tracks of the woodsfolk. But as long as the snow lay deep on the
-ground he didn’t find many.
-
-For Doctor Muskrat and the fieldmice and Nibble Rabbit were about the
-only ones who stayed there. Doctor Muskrat was too clever to leave
-tracks where any one would see them. And the fieldmice had their
-tunnels far below the crust, so you never saw anything of them. And
-you’d have to creep around among the Pickery Things before you’d see
-many signs of Nibble Rabbit.
-
-But the birds called very often to get a drink from the warm spring
-hidden among the bulrushes that was Doctor Muskrat’s front door. It
-was Chewee the Chickadee who brought news of the quail. “They have to
-go a long way in the deep woods every day to find enough seeds for so
-large a flock,” he said. “And they told me that I must leave every
-last weed head that pricked up above the snow in their thicket for
-Nibble Rabbit.”
-
-Now that was very nice of the quail because there were very few seeds
-left, and Nibble was eating the dried grasses that the Pickery Things
-kept from him and the delicate bark from the sunny side of the
-willows.
-
-[Illustration: Snoof Woodchuck comes out of his hole.]
-
-Chaik, the Jay, perked his crest thoughtfully. “It must be horrid to
-live in big flocks like that where you can never find a full crop for
-everyone at once. The partridge are perching in some evergreens. They
-say it’s safer than sleeping in the snow where they might be frozen in
-again. Only they can’t find anything to eat but birch and poplar buds,
-and they’re awfully hungry. But not so hungry as Hooter the Owl and
-his wife. I wonder why they flew away right in the middle of the
-terrible storm.”
-
-“Silvertip the Fox left then, too,” said Gimlet the Woodpecker, who
-had been working in the orchard back of Tommy Peele’s barn. “There
-must be something in that.”
-
-“There is,” said Nibble. “I was the game Mrs. Hooter chased into the
-cornstalk tent, but Silvertip was the one who came out of it. He
-mussed their feathers and they tweaked his ears, and now they’re
-afraid to meet each other!”
-
-Chaik laughed. “The owls are still quarrelling,” he told Nibble.
-
-“Well, Silvertip has learned to get into the chicken-coop,” Gimlet
-reported, “and Chirp Sparrow says that’s climbing into a peck of
-trouble.”
-
-“Who cares?” Nibble rejoiced. “Now that Slyfoot’s gone to find a
-better hunting ground we have no one to look out for.”
-
-But Doctor Muskrat spoke up very thoughtfully. “Yes, Nibble. Sooner or
-later we’ll have to look out for Man.”
-
-“Shucks!” sniffed Nibble, carelessly flopping his ears. “No Man ever
-comes here unless it’s Tommy Peele. And he’s such a little one, who’s
-afraid of him?”
-
-“I am.” And Doctor Muskrat stroked his whiskers with his paw. “You
-can’t judge the size of his jaw by the size of his trail, nor know how
-far he’ll reach out to bite you!”
-
-But Nibble merely twiddled his tail to show how little he cared for a
-whole flock of Tommy Peeles. While Tommy had him in a cage up by the
-barn Tommy had been good to him. And none of the tame beasts were
-afraid of Tommy Peele. “He hasn’t any teeth to speak of,” Nibble
-protested, “and he hasn’t any claws. He couldn’t hurt any one. I’ve
-been right in his very paws, so I know.”
-
-“Yes, you have,” agreed Doctor Muskrat. “And how did you get there?
-Didn’t he reach out and catch you when he was the whole length of the
-pasture away?”
-
-And this time Nibble didn’t feel like twiddling his tail. It was
-perfectly true. He knew that somehow Tommy had been the one who made
-that dreadful wire snatch him into the air. And he hadn’t quite
-forgotten how it all but squeezed the life right out of him when he
-swung there. It hadn’t felt in the least like the soft touch of
-Tommy’s hand. So he asked with a little shiver, “What are those jaws
-like, Doctor Muskrat?”
-
-“They’re harder than bone, and colder than stone. They never miss, and
-they never let go,” said the wise old Muskrat very earnestly. And
-that’s the truth about a muskrat trap. It’s just a pair of steel jaws,
-harder than bone and colder than stone, exactly as he said. And
-they’re worked by a terrible spring. They never miss because the
-spring won’t snap unless a beast steps right between them. And they
-won’t let go again until the Man opens the spring again. No beast can
-ever learn that. Because no beast has ever imagined that they weren’t
-a part of the Man.
-
-“And a Man can have a whole pack of those jaws,” the old doctor went
-on. “They’ll hide out in the leaves where you can’t see or hear them;
-sometimes you just sniff the faintest chilly smell on them. They’re
-worse than a whole pack of Silvertips because you can see and hear and
-SMELL him.”
-
-“How awful!” breathed Nibble. “It isn’t fair!”
-
-“Well, Mother Nature wasn’t fair to Man in the First-Off Beginning,”
-argued the wise old beast. “The cows complained and got their horns,
-and so did a lot of others, but Man wouldn’t complain. It’s a law that
-when a beast invents anything for himself he has a right to use it. So
-you can’t blame Man for using anything.”
-
-“Well,” said Nibble thankfully, “I’m glad Tommy Peele doesn’t use
-those jaws.”
-
-But up behind the barn Tommy Peele had his first pair of the awful
-things. He wouldn’t have dreamed of using them on the chickens or
-Watch the Dog, or even on Nibble Rabbit, because they were friends of
-his. But he didn’t think any more of using them on a muskrat, that he
-didn’t know, than the muskrat would have thought of using his sharp
-teeth on Tommy Peele. And he wanted the muskrat’s skin. Which was
-perfectly natural because every man has had to use some other
-creature’s fur since the First-Off Beginning of things—until he got to
-be friends with them.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- THE SINGULAR MISHAP OF DOCTOR MUSKRAT
-
-
-Don’t you ever believe that a small boy who grows up in the open air
-like Tommy Peele doesn’t know just as much about the ways of the wild
-things as any of the wild things know about the ways of men. Only he
-doesn’t know he knows it. Because he doesn’t have to hunt for every
-meal as he used to in the First-Off Beginning. And the only way you
-find out what you really do know, deep down inside you, is to use it.
-All the same, the very day Tommy Peele got out his trap was the day
-the muskrats began their spring running. He hadn’t seen their
-footprints, even yet, but that something deep down inside him told him
-it was time to expect them.
-
-That trap wasn’t a very good one. He got it from Louis Thomson, who
-had a lot that he set out all through other people’s woods where he
-thought the other people wouldn’t catch him, because he wasn’t quite
-satisfied to hunt just on his own. And he knew this particular trap
-was slow because it was all rusty, and it hadn’t a good spring. But he
-made Tommy give him a two-bladed knife and his big glass shooter and
-twenty cents to boot. For the Red Cow wasn’t the only one who was
-greedy.
-
-But Tommy oiled it and cleaned it and got it to work. And he specially
-showed it to Watch the Dog and told him to be very careful not to
-sniff around and get his nose in it. And Watch spread himself out
-beside Tommy while Tommy worked. Watch snoozed contentedly in the sun
-and flopped his tail whenever Tommy talked to him. For the weather was
-beginning to grow warmer. The thaw that the poor partridge had wanted
-so badly had come.
-
-Down by the pond the ice was getting so soft that Nibble didn’t dare
-thump on it to call Doctor Muskrat. And he wanted to call him a great
-deal of the time. For he knew the wise old doctor was very careful
-about making tracks near his warm spring. But all sorts of careless
-young muskrats were wandering up and down the stream. They said it was
-mating time, and they were trying to find some lady muskrat who would
-be foolish enough to start housekeeping then. They ran in and out
-among the willows, gnawing and digging and making the plainest sort of
-trail, and then they would flop with their muddy feet right into the
-drinking hole.
-
-I can tell you it made Nibble angry enough. He didn’t fancy drinking
-after them, but they didn’t pay any attention to him. And Chaik the
-Jay got into such a rage that he forgot he should have kept quiet
-there. He perched on the tallest bulrush and cursed and squalled at
-them. But when Doctor Muskrat heard the rumpus and lifted his head up
-through the ice, with his long teeth showing between his gray
-whiskers, they scuttled off as though Silvertip himself were after
-them.
-
-And then the old doctor would fume. “The Mink take them and their
-love-making, the silly young things! What’s the sense of disturbing
-the whole marsh just because they want everyone to know they’re old
-enough to dig a nursery? Eh?” He forgot that he’d done the very same
-thing in his own first spring.
-
-But Nibble thought they were having a mighty good time over it all.
-Only he wished they wouldn’t leave quite so many tracks for Tommy
-Peele to find.
-
-And the very next day there came Tommy, splashing through the big
-puddles in his tall rubber boots, sloshing through the last of the
-snowdrifts, and whistling a lively tune. And Nibble pricked up his
-ears to listen. Because he thought that maybe Tommy was on a spring
-wandering of his own, and this was his mating song. For he never
-dreamed that whole generations of bunnies and muskrats and piping
-birds would grow old and die before Tommy even thought of such a
-thing.
-
-Tommy had on his blue sweater, but he’d left his red mittens hanging
-back of the stove because he’d got them all wet snowballing. And Watch
-was dancing along in front of him singing “Aourgh! aorugh!” which is
-neither a mating song nor a proper hunting song. It was like Tommy’s
-whistle—it showed that he was perfectly happy.
-
-But Nibble wasn’t. He was awfully uncomfortable. For all the
-footprints of those foolish young beasts led straight to the warm
-spring, which was still the only open water, though the ice was soft
-and melting all over the pond. And you remember this was the wise old
-doctor’s front door.
-
-Of course Tommy followed them right there. And Nibble crouched into a
-clump of bulrushes close behind him—close enough to hear him working
-over something; close enough to hear Watch saying in an excited tone,
-“It’s all right! I can smell ’em—lots of ’em!”
-
-Nibble was so worried he nearly squirmed. He wanted to get out to the
-little round house in the middle of the pond and warn Doctor Muskrat.
-The minute Tommy’s back was turned he started to creep over the
-crumbly ice toward it. But Watch’s back wasn’t turned. He bounced out
-after Nibble. And he bounced right through the ice. And the minute
-Doctor Muskrat heard that splashing and thrashing right in his front
-pond, out he popped. “Clang!” That ugly trap had him by the paw!
-
-“Oh-h-h! Oow-w-w!” screamed the poor old doctor. But he didn’t lose
-his head entirely. “Quick, Nibble,” he begged, “bite off my toes
-before that dog gets here! I can’t reach them.” His own poor old teeth
-were chattering with fear and pain.
-
-And that’s exactly what Nibble was trying to do when Watch floundered
-out of the water. “Aourgh! I’ve got you!” he barked joyfully. Then he
-stopped short and wagged his tail in the friendliest way. “Why, you’re
-Tommy’s rabbit!” he said. And he tried to explain to Tommy Peele.
-
-But Tommy wouldn’t listen. He couldn’t think of anything but that poor
-old beast, squealing over his hurt paw. It made Tommy’s own throat
-hurt to hear him. He wanted to help, but the doctor couldn’t
-understand. He just gnashed his teeth and snapped at Tommy. Then Tommy
-managed to touch the spring of the trap with his toe. He stepped, and
-it yawned open—just for an instant. Away went Doctor Muskrat.
-
-But Nibble wasn’t looking. He had leaped back into his hiding place in
-the reeds and closed his eyes.
-
-He wished he could close his long ears as well. He expected to hear
-his good old friend squeal when Tommy killed him. But all he heard was
-a splash.
-
-Then Watch the Dog said, “I told you you’d be glad you were Tommy
-Peele’s rabbit!” He was standing close beside Nibble and he was
-looking over his shoulder to give an affectionate wag of his tail
-toward Tommy Peele. Nibble looked, too. And there was Tommy
-unfastening his trap from where he had tied it to a reed clump so it
-couldn’t be dragged away. But there was no sign of any muskrat.
-
-“He’s gone,” Watch explained. “Tommy let him go. I expect that was
-because he was a friend of yours.” Of course there was still too much
-wolf in Watch for him to understand that Tommy had just been sorry for
-hunting the doctor. But Watch was sure anything that small boy did was
-wonderful, and reflected forever to his credit.
-
-“But why did he bite him if he didn’t mean to eat him?” Nibble asked
-in a trembly voice. That was something he never did understand. And
-Watch didn’t try to. He was cocking his ears to see what next Tommy
-was going to do.
-
-Tommy yanked the trap loose from the reed clump. And he wasn’t proud
-of owning it any more. He hated it— quite as much as Nibble or even
-Doctor Muskrat did. He swung it about his head and threw it splash
-into the hole Watch had made when he fell through the ice chasing
-Nibble.
-
-Then he looked at a hole the doctor’s long teeth had slashed in his
-tall rubber boot. “I don’t care,” he said defiantly. “I don’t care a
-bit! I hurt him awfully. He had a perfect right to hurt me if he
-wanted to.”
-
-The teeth hadn’t gone in deep enough really to bite Tommy’s toe, but
-of course neither Nibble nor Doctor Muskrat ever guessed that. Their
-hides belong to them and they couldn’t ever imagine that his tall
-rubber boots weren’t any more a part of Tommy than those steel jaws of
-his traps were. Watch could, because he sometimes wore a collar, and
-on very cold nights Tommy covered him up with a blanket, but he never
-thought of explaining it.
-
-[Illustration: “Clang!” That ugly trap had Dr. Muskrat by the paw.]
-
-Then Tommy marched all the way up to the house and got his cap full of
-the same delicious meal he had given Nibble and the White Cow the day
-the Red Cow chased him. It was “Thank you” to them for helping him get
-away from her. He set out two little piles. Then he called: “Here
-Bunny, Bunny, Bunny!” And that showed Nibble that one of those piles
-was for him. So Watch was right. It was nice to be Tommy’s rabbit.
-
-And Watch explained: “The other is for your friend the Muskrat. Don’t
-you eat it.”
-
-As though Nibble would!
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- TOMMY PEELE’S FRIENDS STAND UP FOR HIM
-
-
-Of course Nibble Rabbit wouldn’t eat the pile of meal Tommy Peele left
-for Doctor Muskrat.
-
-But he thought he was going to have a terrible time to keep all those
-foolish young muskrats, who were scuttling round in the marsh trying
-to start their spring love affairs, from doing it. He forgot that
-everything around the place where Tommy had set it still smelled of
-the little boy and his dog. So not another beast dared come near it.
-
-Chaik the Jay and Chewee the Chickadee stole a few beakfuls, but
-Nibble knew Doctor Muskrat wouldn’t mind that. And he wanted company.
-So he told them all about how Tommy had caught the doctor and let him
-go again. And how Tommy had thrown away the trap.
-
-Chaik raised and lowered his crest, just as we sometimes do our
-eyebrows, when we’re puzzled about anything. “He was lucky,” Chaik
-said. “I’ve seen beasts suffer in a trap for whole days before they
-died. And I never heard of any before that got out of one alive. I
-believe that human is queer. Sometimes I think he’s trying to think
-the way we woods folk do.”
-
-“I know it,” chimed in Chewee. “When it was so terribly cold I was
-having an awful time. The ice had frozen over the cones so I couldn’t
-even pick a living among the pine trees. And do you know what he did?
-He tied a big lump of fat pork away out on the end of a springy
-branch, so that fat house cat couldn’t reach it. Just for me! Wasn’t
-that clever” And he began hopping about in the excited way he has
-whenever he gets to talking.
-
-“Well, he most certainly is trying to make friends with us,” Nibble
-observed. “Only catching us in traps isn’t a very comfortable way of
-doing it. You fellows will have to help me convince Doctor Muskrat.”
-
-Help! He needed it. It was two whole days before the doctor poked his
-head out of the hole where Watch had smashed the crumbly ice. The wise
-old beast wasn’t using his front door any more.
-
-“Come on,” called Nibble cheerfully. “See what Tommy Peele left you to
-say he was sorry he bit you.”
-
-“Not I,” growled the doctor. “I’ve had enough of his jaws.” He spread
-out his paddle paw. The good roots he stores in his medicine chest had
-nearly healed it, but his little toe was gone. “I’m going to move away
-as soon as I can travel.”
-
-“Don’t do that,” pleaded Nibble. “If he bit your foot you certainly
-bit his. Now he doesn’t mean ever to use those jaws again. He threw
-them into that very hole.”
-
-Pop! Down went the doctor to have a look. And his face was mighty
-surprised when it popped up again. “It’s the truth!” he said. “Those
-jaws are biting the mud. We needn’t worry so long as we can keep an
-eye on them. Nibble, I’ll just dip a whisker into that present Tommy
-Peele left for me!”
-
-And he liked the meal quite as well as Nibble had—better, in fact. “I
-tell you what, Nibble,” he said as he stopped for breath, “this was
-mighty thoughtful of that Man. Now I wonder if he knew that I couldn’t
-dig or swim with my paw hurting me, because his paw was hurting him? I
-hope not.”
-
-And that was very nice of him, because it was all Tommy’s fault in the
-beginning. Tommy had deliberately set that trap.
-
-Chaik the Jay swallowed such a big beakful of meal that he had to
-crane his neck over it; then he blinked very seriously because Nibble
-was giggling at him. “Do you s’pose we could all trust Tommy the way
-Nibble can if we all were friends with him?” he demanded.
-
-“Of course, of course!” chirped the enthusiastic Chickadee.
-
-“Hm!” sniffed old Doctor Muskrat a bit gruffly, “that sounds very well
-from you birds. You have wings so you can fly away from him.”
-
-“Certainly,” Chaik retorted, “but I’ve never seen him swim.”
-
-“Hmm, hmm!” the doctor snorted again. And he hitched himself on his
-three sound legs over to a big stone that had grown warm in the sun
-and spread himself out flat like a small furry rug. He meant to think
-it over. But he felt so comfortable and full that he fell into a
-snooze.
-
-Nibble was snoozing, too, snuggled up beside him, but he awoke when he
-heard Tommy’s tall rubber boots splattering through the slush. His
-father had put a patch on the hole, when he was mending an automobile
-tire, so it was as good as ever. Nibble nudged the doctor and then
-hurried over to greet Tommy, jumping the splashiest puddles and
-pattering right through the little ones because he didn’t want his
-friend to think Chaik and Chewee were the only ones who’d take the
-trouble. And Tommy took an ear of corn out of his pocket and shared it
-between them.
-
-Then Tommy ordered Watch to stay back while he tried to speak to
-Doctor Muskrat. And the old doctor didn’t flash right into the
-water—as he really meant to. He sat up, holding his poor paw in front
-of him, and squinted his eyes to get a good look at the little boy. He
-didn’t even jump when Tommy laid down the other ear of corn, nor when
-Watch came sneaking disobediently up behind him because he wanted to
-poke his nose into what was going on. For Tommy caught him by the fur
-and pointed that inquisitive nose straight at the doctor. “There,” he
-ordered, “take a good smell so you’ll know him again. That’s my
-muskrat!”
-
-And Nibble was so pleased he took a leap and kicked his furry heels so
-high that Tommy laughed at him. “You’re safe! You’re safe!” he
-rejoiced. “Isn’t it almost worth being caught for?”
-
-[Illustration: Tommy’s tall rubber boots spattered through the slush.]
-
-And Doctor Muskrat considered his sore paw and then he considered the
-little boy. And he looked very thoughtful.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- WISE WORDS FROM A WISE BEAST
-
-
-Neither Nibble Rabbit, nor Chaik Jay, nor Chewee the Chickadee, nor
-all of them together could make Doctor Muskrat say what he thought of
-Tommy Peele.
-
-“No,” he insisted, “I haven’t made up my mind. It’s a safe rule for
-any beast to do as his kind have done before him, and I never knew any
-muskrats who made friends with a man.”
-
-“Nor any man who wanted to be friends with a muskrat, either,” pleaded
-Nibble. “Tommy Peele’s different.”
-
-“That’s the way with men,” said the doctor. “They’re always changing.
-Only the wild things stay the same.”
-
-“What is Man, anyway?” Nibble asked. “He isn’t a bird and he isn’t a
-fish, and of course he isn’t a snake. But the bats, who came to my
-storm party in the cornstalk tent, said he couldn’t be a beast because
-he hadn’t any tail.”
-
-“Nonsense!” snorted the doctor. “Tad Coon’s cousin, the bear, hasn’t
-any more tail than that. What did the bats think he was?”
-
-“A kind of a frog,” said Nibble promptly. “But Chatter Squirrel didn’t
-agree with them.”
-
-“A frog! A frog! Had those bats ever seen a man, then? Or a frog,
-either? Eh?” And the doctor made such a face of disdain that his
-whiskers bristled up like a lot of long darning needles on Granny’s
-fat pin cushion. “Why, a frog is less than a beast and a man—well,
-there used to be a tale going around when I wasn’t much bigger than
-Chewee there that Man was kin to Mother Nature herself in the very
-First-Off Beginning.” The old muskrat sank his head back between his
-shoulders and half closed his eyes.
-
-“Go on,” said Nibble breathlessly.
-
-“Eh? What?” The doctor came back with a start as though the shadow of
-an owl had passed near him. “I was just thinking about that winter.
-There was a big family of us the year I was born, for food was very
-plentiful. So were minks. And when my mother thought she heard one
-sniffing close by she’d tell us stories to keep us quiet. Otherwise we
-wriggled around in that dark old house like a lot of tadpoles, popping
-in and out of the water until you could almost swim on the very floor,
-it was so wet from our dripping. And when we got to romping we’d
-squeal more than a whole stump full of fieldmice.” Nibble couldn’t
-imagine the dignified, portly old fellow scuttling and squeaking. A
-rabbit hole is always very quiet. Because it’s on the ground and so
-many hunters might hear it if it weren’t.
-
-“I just remember,” finished the doctor, “that one of our favourite
-tales was about how Man quarrelled with Mother Nature in the First-Off
-Beginning. She was used to the wild things. And most of them,
-excepting the ones who came up from under the earth, are very
-obedient. But Man just wouldn’t obey her. And she wouldn’t stand that,
-because it would be unfair to the rest of us, and because he was kin
-to her. So she said he could try getting along without her help and
-see how he liked that. And he certainly surprised her. He——”
-
-But that’s as far as the wise old fellow ever got. For right then
-there came a most startling interruption. And so many brand-new
-happenings began that I’ll have to write a whole brand-new book to
-tell about them all.
-
- THE END
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Nibble Rabbit Makes More Friends, by John Breck</div>
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-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Nibble Rabbit Makes More Friends</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John Breck</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: William T. Andrews</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 28, 2020 [eBook #64078]</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Roger Frank</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS ***</div>
-<h1>NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS</h1>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
-<div>Told at Twilight Stories</div>
-<div>By JOHN BRECK</div>
-</div>
-<div style='text-align:center; margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto'>
-<div style='display:inline-block; text-align:left;'>
-<div class='cbline'>MOSTLY ABOUT NIBBLE THE BUNNY</div>
-<div class='cbline'>NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS</div>
-<div class='cbline'>THE SINS OF SILVERTIP THE FOX</div>
-<div class='cbline'>THE COON’S TRICKS</div>
-<div class='cbline'>THE WAVY TAILED WARRIOR</div>
-<div class='cbline'>TAD COON’S GREAT ADVENTURE</div>
-<div class='cbline'>THE BAD LITTLE OWLS</div>
-<div class='cbline'>THE JAY BIRD WHO WENT TAME</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-<div id='i001' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i001.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>Watch makes friends with Nibble</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
-<div style='font-size:0.9em;margin-bottom:1em;'>Told at Twilight Stories</div>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;margin-bottom:0.7em;'>NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS</div>
-<div>by</div>
-<div style='font-size:1.2em;margin-bottom:0.7em;'>John Breck</div>
-<div>Illustrated by</div>
-<div style='font-size:1.1em;margin-bottom:0.7em;'>William T. Andrews</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.82em;'>Garden City—New York</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>Doubleday, Page &amp; Company</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.82em;'>1923</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-<div style='font-size:smaller;'>
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
-<div>COPYRIGHT, 1923,</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>BY DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY</div>
-<div>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT</div>
-<div>OF TRANSLATION INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>COPYRIGHT, 1920, BY THE ASSOCIATED NEWSPAPERS</div>
-<div>PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES</div>
-<div>AT</div>
-<div style='margin-bottom:0.7em;'>THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.</div>
-<div>First Edition</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-<div style='text-align:center'>CONTENTS</div>
-<table class='toc tcenter' summary="" style='margin-bottom:3em'>
-<tbody>
- <tr><td class='c1'>I.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chI'>Why Nibble Bunny Was Puzzled</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>II.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chII'>How Nibble the Bunny Was Caught</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>III.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIII'>How Nibble Tricked a Foe—and Made a Friend</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>IV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIV'>Why Dogs Love Babies</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>V.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chV'>Nibble Has His Doubts About Dogs</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>VI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVI'>The Cleverness of Chirp Sparrow</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>VII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVII'>How a Bunny Could Help a Boy</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>VIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVIII'>How the Funny Bunny Smelled a Joke</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>IX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIX'>The Great Woodchuck Fur Charm Against Owls</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>X.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chX'>What Doctor Muskrat Thought About Traps</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXI'>The Singular Mishap of Doctor Muskrat</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXII'>Tommy Peele’s Friends Stand Up For Him</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIII'>Wise Words from a Wise Beast</a></td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
-<div>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</div>
-</div>
-<ul class='loi' style='list-style-type:none; display:table; margin-top:1em;;'>
- <li><a href='#i001'>Watch makes friends with Nibble</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i002'>Nibble squirmed and flounced like a fish</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i003'>The White Cow makes friends with Nibble</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i004'>“Here he is. I’ve got him.”</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i005'>The old doctor was puffing</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i006'>Snoof Woodchuck comes out of his hole</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i007'>“Clang!” That ugly trap had Doctor Muskrat</a></li>
- <li><a href='#i008'>Tommy’s tall rubber boots spattered through the slush</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
-<div style='font-size:1.4em;margin-top:4em;'>NIBBLE RABBIT MAKES MORE FRIENDS</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chI' title='I: WHY NIBBLE BUNNY WAS PUZZLED'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER I</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>WHY NIBBLE BUNNY WAS PUZZLED</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>You remember all the funny things Nibble heard about Man from the guests
-who came to his Storm Party. That was the time the Big Hollow Oak blew
-down, and the brave little bunny who lived at Doctor Muskrat’s Pond
-rescued all the poor homeless folk who had been shaken out of it. He
-showed them the way to a fine little tent all made of cornstalks out in
-the Broad Field.</p>
-
-<p>It was so nice and snug and comfortable, the minute they tucked their
-tails inside it, and caught their breaths, and sleeked down their fur
-and their feathers, they forgot all about how the Terrible Storm was
-having a tantrum outside. They had plenty of room to dance, and plenty
-of corn for refreshments—why, the party was as big a success as if
-they’d held it in a hired hall with engraved invitations.</p>
-
-<p>But the most fun they had was talking about folks like you and me. And
-if you’d laid an ear to a crack before the wind tucked the snow blanket
-all around them, you wouldn’t have been very much flattered by what they
-said, either.</p>
-
-<p>You might have overheard the bats insisting that Man looked like a frog.
-(You might say that about some folks, of course, but certainly not about
-you or me.) You’d prob’ly have heard the partridge say that Man was
-brown and wrinkly, like Grandpop Snapping-Turtle. (The man they saw
-certainly must have worn some funny clothes.) Chatter Squirrel said Man
-was pink and tan. (His pink was sunburn—the kind the fellows get down at
-the swimming-hole.)</p>
-
-<p>Everyone just knew that everyone else was wrong. Then Gimlet Woodpecker
-insisted Man came as many shapes and sizes and colours as the flowers.
-And then they didn’t know what to think. There were just two things they
-all agreed on: he didn’t have a tail, and—he was dangerous. Nibble
-didn’t say anything, ’cause he’d never seen one.</p>
-
-<p>But the first time he set eyes on Tommy Peele, he made up his mind they
-were all wrong—excepting about the tail. The little boy looked to him
-like a red-wing blackbird. (That was ’cause Tommy had on his new red
-mittens and his dark blue sweater and his shiny rubber boots.) But
-dangerous? He certainly didn’t look it. Still—when Silvertip the Fox
-only caught a glimpse of him, he turned tail and ran.</p>
-
-<p>So Nibble made up his mind to copy the mouse motto: “Say nothing and
-stay cautious.” At least that’s what he thought he was—too cautious for
-anything. Wasn’t it perfectly safe and proper to dig into that queer
-lair where the mice were holding a party of their own? Wasn’t it nice
-and dark as his own hole? And nobody could possibly see him.</p>
-
-<p>How was a bunny to know it was a soapbox? Or that it was part of a
-“figger-four” trap? Or that Tommy had set it ’specially for him?</p>
-
-<p>You see he hadn’t been caught. He’d dug into it on purpose, because
-those nice little mice had invited him. And there the three of them were
-busy feasting when they heard the clump! clump! clump! of the clumsy
-hind paws of that little boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Mice,” he said, “it’s that Man!”</p>
-
-<p>Before he could twiddle a tail, Tommy’s red mitten was across the hole,
-and Tommy’s bare pink paw was closing on—the lady mouse. Then things
-began to fly!</p>
-
-<p>Nibble was among them. He flew to the next little cornstalk tent, his
-heart thumping faster than his paws. “They were all of them right!” he
-gasped. “That Man is dangerous—dangerous as Silvertip himself. Poor
-Satin-skin! I s’pose that’s the end of her.”</p>
-
-<p>He never thought of saying, “Poor Tommy Peele!” But Tommy was the right
-one to feel sorry for. Satin-skin had closed her little needle teeth on
-his finger. And before Nibble had taken a long breath he heard a voice
-squeaking, “Weeak! weeak! weeak!” which is mouse for, “I’m lost! Where
-are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Here!” he thumped with both hind feet. And who should come scuttling in
-but Satin-skin herself? He could feel her tremble all over as she tried
-to squirm right under him.</p>
-
-<p>“My ears!” Nibble exclaimed. “I thought that Man had caught you!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I caught him!” wept the little lady mouse. “But he shook me so hard
-I was scared to let go again. And when I did, he sent me tail over ears.
-I tell you, it was awful! wee-eeak!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shh! he’ll hear you,” Nibble warned. “There, your head will stop
-whirling pretty soon.” He knew just how she felt, ’cause he’d felt the
-same way himself—the time he tumbled off the back of that Red Cow he
-took for a log when Silvertip was chasing him.</p>
-
-<p>But Tommy wasn’t even thinking about Satin-skin, let alone listening for
-her. He stamped his tall rubber boots and sucked his poor nipped finger.
-“Funniest thing!” he wondered to himself. “I just know there was a
-rabbit in that trap. I saw him go in there. I don’t guess it’s very much
-good. I’ll try the pitcher-wire.”</p>
-
-<div id='i002' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i002.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>Nibble squirmed and flounced like a fish on the end of a line.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So he pulled on his red mitten and tramped off to the path in the bushes
-by the fence he’d seen Nibble slip through. This time he bent down a
-springy sapling and tied a loop of wire to the tip of it—the soft kind
-you use to hang pictures. And he pegged the lower edge of the loop
-across Nibble’s pathway.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chII' title='II: HOW NIBBLE THE BUNNY WAS CAUGHT'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER II</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>HOW NIBBLE THE BUNNY WAS CAUGHT</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Nibble was busy comforting the lady mouse. “There, there!
-Don’t squeal any more. You’re not hurt a bit. But really, this gets more
-and more curiouser. Now Silvertip would certainly have eaten you. But I
-don’t see yet why folks are so scared of a Man, if that’s all he can do
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d know if he sh-sh-shook you!” sobbed the lady mouse.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble didn’t pay any attention. “I’m going to sneak up close to the
-Sparrows’ Tree and ask Chirp about it,” he announced.</p>
-
-<p>Off went he, so fast he didn’t notice where he was putting his foot
-own.</p>
-
-<p>He came to the fence—and the picture-wire. Zing! Now he knew what a trap
-was, for sure and certain. For the pegs let go, the sapling snapped
-back, and the wire caught him just behind his little fore legs and
-whipped him high up in the air.</p>
-
-<p>He squirmed and flounced like a fish on the end of a line. He kicked
-harder and harder; and the wire pulled tighter and tighter, until he
-screamed.</p>
-
-<p>From way up there in the air he could see Tommy Peele turn around and
-hurry toward him, swinging his red mittens as he ran. And he knew Tommy
-had something to do with it. “This,” thought he, “is why Man is
-dangerous. How awfully slow he flies. Now he’ll eat me!” And the wire
-was squeezing him so dreadful, he didn’t much care. But Tommy just cut
-that terrible loop, and took the rabbit gently into his arms.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little bunny! I didn’t know that was going to hurt you,” whispered
-the little boy. And he put a very sorry finger on the place where the
-picture wire had been.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble still kicked and struggled so hard that Tommy would have lost
-him if he hadn’t kept a tight hold of the bunny’s long ears. And Tommy
-did keep a tight hold, for the more he saw of Nibble the more he wanted
-him.</p>
-
-<p>In ten minutes Nibble was locked in a cage. It really was a very nice
-one—for a rabbit who had been born there. But for Nibble it was as
-cramped as Ouphe the Rat’s narrow black tunnels under the haystack. It
-was only half a leap long and three creeps across. There was one dark
-corner in it where he could hide behind some hay when the humans came to
-look at him—and they did come, all sizes and colours and noises, just as
-Gimlet the Woodpecker had said. When they went away again he snubbed his
-nose trying to take the kinks out of his legs where he had been sitting
-on them.</p>
-
-<p>And more than the humans came to call on him. For the minute they turned
-their backs a great big beast, much bigger than Silvertip, put his
-forepaws up on the front of the cage and sniffed at him. He was nearly
-the same colour as Silvertip, only his back was more grizzled and he had
-a white collar as well as a white shirtfront like most wild things wear.
-But this beast didn’t have a hungry look; he was only curious—like
-Nibble is himself when he isn’t scared. All the same, Nibble was afraid
-of him.</p>
-
-<p>Just about sundown all these visitors went away. This was the chance
-Chirp Sparrow was looking for. He flew down and perched on the cage.
-Then he cheeped very softly, to make Nibble look at him.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble pricked up an ear. Then he jumped so hard that he hit the front
-of the cage and bounced back again, but he picked himself up and thumped
-and wriggled his puffy tail trying to show Chirp how glad he was to see
-him. “Mr. Chirp, Mr. Chirp!” he exclaimed. “You’ll know how to help me.
-You know everything!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, not everything,” answered Chirp. But he preened the feathers on
-his shoulders and cocked his head on one side the way birds do when
-they’re pleased about anything. For he was immensely flattered. “I don’t
-know everything,” he repeated, “but I’ll call a sparrow council, and
-we’ll see what can be done about it.” And something’s pretty apt to
-happen when the sparrows put their minds to anything.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you listen to me,” he went on. “You eat what they feed you and keep
-strong. You aren’t in any danger right away. And you try to make friends
-with that Dog.”</p>
-
-<p>“What Dog?” asked Nibble. He was puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“He was here just a minute ago,” said Chirp. “That big foxy-looking
-beast. He’s a great friend of ours. He has a big dish by the back door
-that’s always full of delicious things. And he pretends to go to sleep
-while we pick up the crumbs. You be just as polite as you can to him.
-I’ll be back in the morning.” And Chirp flitted off to the sparrow
-roost, leaving Nibble almost cheerful again. He couldn’t help feeling
-that all this excitement was rather interesting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chIII' title='III: HOW NIBBLE TRICKED A FOE—AND MADE A FRIEND'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER III</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>HOW NIBBLE TRICKED A FOE—AND MADE A FRIEND</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Tommy Peele had tried to make his cage a comfortable one for Nibble to
-sleep in. But he didn’t know that a proper rabbit hole has fresh air
-blowing into it from above. The cage had only one dark, stuffy corner to
-hide in, or the open part behind a wire front. And there Nibble crouched
-in the hay Tommy had given him. But he kept cheerful. Chirp had said,
-“We’ll see what can be done about it,” and Nibble knew the clever
-Sparrow. So he just made a little song of the words until he sang
-himself to sleep with them.</p>
-
-<p>Way ’long late toward the morning he woke up. His furry feet were
-tickling. So were his ears. And presently his shoulders tickled, too,
-where the fur stood straight up on them. Something was gnawing the floor
-of his cage.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s there?” he called softly. And oh, how he did pray it might be the
-field-mouse who had shown him the way through Ouphe’s tunnels! He could
-see the haystack where the wicked Rat lived, but it was so dark that
-that was all he could see.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s I,” said the honey voice of Ouphe. “I’ve come to show you what can
-be done about it. I’m sorry to be late, but I had to attend to a little
-business with Chirp Sparrow.” The words were all right, but the way he
-said them was enough to make your skin crawl.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do?” demanded Nibble.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to have breakfast with you,” said Ouphe. “I’m going to make a
-nice little door so I can come in and we’ll have a cozy time. I love
-little rabbits, I do.” And Nibble knew very well the way he loved
-them—like Slink the Weasel. For no wild beast needs to be warned against
-any one who has the horrid musky, flesh-eater’s smell about him. And
-Nibble smelled Ouphe.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fasten my teeth right in your nose,” said Nibble, “the minute you
-poke it through my floor.”</p>
-
-<p>“What good will that do?” sneered Ouphe. “You’ll hurt me almost as much
-as Chirp Sparrow. He pecked my ear, he did—the bold, bad bird! All the
-same, I ate him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t!” sobbed Nibble. He just couldn’t believe it.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I just?” jeered Ouphe. “You can smell him on my whiskers when
-you bite me. Sparrow for supper and rabbit for breakfast. Mmn!” And he
-smacked his lips.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble almost forgot to be scared, he was so angry. He thumped his
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop that!” snarled Ouphe. “Do you want the Dog to eat you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thump, Thump, THUMP!” went Nibble. He was bound to do whatever Ouphe
-didn’t want him to.</p>
-
-<p>“Arrh!” cursed the bad Rat. Kerflip, kerflop, he jumped down and
-shuffled off to his haystack. Sure enough, there came the Dog, calling,
-“What’s the matter here?” And Nibble was too scared to answer.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter here?” repeated the Dog. He was standing in front of
-the cage wagging his long, plumy tail. But all Nibble could look at was
-the great teeth he showed when he smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Please,” said Nibble very faintly, “please, Mr. Dog, Ouphe the Rat ate
-Chirp Sparrow for supper to-night. I thought I ought to tell you because
-Chirp said you were friends.”</p>
-
-<p>“He did, did he?” laughed the Dog. And he ran out his pink tongue, which
-scared Nibble more than ever. “And who brought you the news?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ouphe did. He’s been trying to get into my cage.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say?” The Dog sniffed carefully. “Great Bones, Bunny!” he
-exclaimed, “Why didn’t you call me an hour ago. I’ll hate to show that
-to Tommy. He’ll think I wasn’t watching.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ouphe said you’d eat me,” whispered Nibble.</p>
-
-<p>“Eat you?” repeated the Dog. “Lies! All lies! And Ouphe knew it. I’ll
-tell you, Bunny, don’t believe a word that creature says. He never tells
-the truth, even by accident. And he’s always up to some devilment.”</p>
-
-<p>Somehow Nibble knew he could believe the things the Dog said in his
-rough but friendly voice. All the same, he wanted to be pretty careful.
-“Why wouldn’t you want to eat me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, because you belong to my Tommy. I’m not saying what I might do if
-you didn’t,” answered the Dog, wagging his tail harder than ever because
-he was so amused at Nibble. “Though I guess I’m too old and fat to catch
-you. But as long as you live in my Man’s barns and have my Man’s smell
-about you I’ll never touch you. My job is to take care of my Man’s
-things and see that nobody hurts them.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it was queer, but just the way that nice, big, growl Dog said he
-might possibly try to catch him if he wasn’t Tommy Peele’s rabbit made
-Nibble feel better. He felt the Dog wasn’t pretending like Ouphe the Rat
-did after he’d been shouting horrid things at Chirp Sparrow. He gave a
-little laugh—a sniffly one, because he wasn’t quite over being afraid.
-“Please, Mr. Dog,” he murmured, “Chirp said I was to make friends with
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, my name is Watch,” the Dog continued; “it’s my job to watch
-this farm and see that things don’t go wrong on it. And that’s why you
-should have called me the minute Ouphe put his ugly teeth into this.” He
-sniffed the gnawed spot on Nibble’s cage.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” Nibble apologized. “Chirp didn’t tell me that. He just said
-you were once a wolf, like Silvertip—only much more clever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Urr!” remarked Watch, cocking an ear. “So Chirp’s been going into my
-family history? He’s a gossipy bundle of feathers.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” insisted Nibble honestly.</p>
-
-<p>“Just about how the Wolves ate the Cows in the very First-Off
-Beginning.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” answered Watch. “Then I’ll finish it for myself.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chIV' title='IV: WHY DOGS LOVE BABIES'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IV</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>WHY DOGS LOVE BABIES</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>“You know how the wolves ate the cows in the First-Off Beginning,” said
-Watch, after he had taken a sniff to make sure Ouphe was still in the
-haystack. “It was because the Plants just wouldn’t be eaten. And they
-were too clever to starve.” He settled himself down by Nibble’s cage.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” answered Nibble, “and how the good stupid Cows did starve, so
-Mother Nature had to give them horns because they’d worn all their teeth
-off.” “Much good did that do them,” sniffed Watch. “Horns or no horns,
-you just ought to see me handle them.” He was very proud of his work,
-that nice dog.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he went on, “some of us were terribly ashamed over the way we’d
-acted. But Mother Nature wouldn’t forgive us. She said if we ever were
-trusted we’d have to earn it ourselves. She’d never trust us. Her good
-Beasts wouldn’t have anything to do with us, and we wouldn’t have
-anything to do with the bad ones because we knew we weren’t as bad as
-they were. And we got lonely and unhappy—so, of course, we got sulky and
-snappy, too.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the bad Beasts took to calling us ‘Dogs’—and that was a terrible
-insult in those days. And deep down inside we were very, very
-sorry—because we did so want to be trusted.</p>
-
-<p>“One day a dog was walking all alone in the Forest and he saw the
-funniest little Creature playing there. It was so funny he sat down on
-his tail to watch it play. It hadn’t any teeth to speak of, and it
-hadn’t any hair, but it walked like a little cub bear. Just like one. It
-would stagger along a little ways and then it would sit down—plump! And
-then it would laugh. So that made the dog prick up his ears.</p>
-
-<p>“He liked the sound it made when it laughed so much that he stayed there
-to listen to it. And pretty soon it saw him. But it didn’t run away. It
-just walked right up to him. And the queerest feeling came over that
-dog. He was happy, deep down inside him. Because it was trusting him.</p>
-
-<p>“So he sat very still. And the little thing walked right up and felt of
-his teeth, and tried to find out how he winked his eyes. And the more it
-hurt him the better he loved it because then he was sure it was trusting
-him. And it had the sweetest smell. He put out his tongue and tickled
-it; and, of course, it laughed again. So he found out how to make it
-laugh whenever he wanted to. And they played out there in the sun and
-were very happy.</p>
-
-<p>“By and by a Man came running up and behind him was a woman. So, of
-course, that dog knew that he had been playing with their Baby. And he
-got up and crept away because he knew that least of all they would have
-trusted him. But the Baby cried and held out its hands for him.</p>
-
-<p>“All that night the dog was lonely because he’d lost the little soft
-thing that laughed and trusted him. And he told the Moon about it. Dogs
-always tell things to the Moon. And he was the most unhappy dog in the
-Forest because he’d only learned half of the secret about being
-trusted.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Watch paused to rush at the haystack with a terrible bark because
-he thought Ouphe was sticking his nose out again. “Wurff!” he cleared
-his throat. “I’ll catch that fellow some day,” he remarked as he came
-back to Nibble Rabbit’s cage and sat down again.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble was waiting for him with his little feet pressed close to the
-wires. He wasn’t afraid of any one while that dog was there to talk to
-him. “Go on, please,” he demanded. “You said its Father and Mother took
-away the little soft cub who had trusted him. And the poor dog felt
-lonely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cub? I didn’t say ‘cub,’ Bunny. It was a Baby. My, but you are a green
-little wild thing.” He smiled again, but this time Nibble wasn’t afraid
-of the long teeth he showed.</p>
-
-<p>“You said it was like a little bear,” Nibble insisted, and he wrinkled
-up his own nose.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Cub or Puppy or Baby,” the dog went on. “That first dog wanted it
-the worst way. So he just trailed its people back to where they lived in
-a cave, and he hid up on top of the cave, where the gray smoke came
-creeping up through a crack. And sometimes he’d hear it laugh. And
-nobody thought of looking there for him.</p>
-
-<p>“The dog would see the Man go out to hunt, and the Woman go down for
-water, and he could hear the Baby pattering around inside the cave. And
-then it would sit down, ‘plump!’ the way it did in the Forest. And then
-it would laugh again. And the dog’s tongue would just itch to tickle the
-Baby.</p>
-
-<p>“So on the third day, when the Man went out to hunt and the Woman went
-down for water, he sneaked around to the cave door and first thing he
-knew he had his tickly tongue on the little soft thing. And his ears
-were so full of the noises it made that he didn’t hear its mother’s bare
-feet when she came back. And she threw the first thing that she had in
-her hand—which was the water—all over him.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course that didn’t hurt him. He didn’t exactly like it any more than
-he liked the Baby’s fingers when they pulled his whiskers, but he never
-imagined she was fighting. He thought she was playing with him. So he
-trusted her—which is the whole secret about being trusted.</p>
-
-<p>“And then wasn’t he glad. He just rolled around on the cave floor to dry
-himself—though the cave floor was never very clean. And he wriggled and
-giggled over it all. And he gave the Baby a lick with his tickly tongue
-so it laughed with him. But the Woman just stood there looking at him.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, it’s a queer thing, Bunny, but Humans can’t stay angry if they
-laugh. There was the dog, all sprawly legs and waggly tail, not looking
-like a wolf at all, and the Baby laughing at him. And the Woman began to
-laugh, too. ‘You look so funny,’ she said, ‘you’ve got leaves in your
-whiskers.’ And so they were friends.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chV' title='V: NIBBLE HAS HIS DOUBTS ABOUT DOGS'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER V</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>NIBBLE HAS HIS DOUBTS ABOUT DOGS</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>“That was a lovely story.” Nibble chuckled, clear out to the tip of his
-tufty bunny tail. He chuckled so hard he forgot he was locked up in an
-uncomfortable cage, without a decent corner to snuggle in. “But you
-haven’t told me yet how the First Dog made friends with his Man. Go on.
-Please do.”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no.” Watch answered thoughtfully, scratching his shoulder. “I’d
-rather not. I’m afraid you mightn’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I would,” teased Nibble. “Of course I would. In the very First-Off
-Beginning the dog made friends with the Baby and the Woman because he
-made them laugh. Did he make the Man laugh, too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—yes. I expect he did,”</p>
-
-<p>Watch answered. “You see, the Man wasn’t friendly when he came home. But
-the Woman and the Baby made him behave nicely. They always do. That is,
-they wouldn’t let him hit the dog with his stone hammer, or jab him with
-his spear. But he wouldn’t look at him. And the dog wanted that Man to
-trust him—wanted it most of all.</p>
-
-<p>“So he began following the Man when he went out to hunt. But the Man
-threw stones at him as soon as they got where the Woman couldn’t see him
-do it, and told him to keep out of the way. The dog just crept off and
-hid.</p>
-
-<p>“He saw the Man creep up on a band of wild cows that were grazing and
-sleeping in the sun. But just when he was almost close enough to kill
-one they all began to snort and run. And they ran right past where the
-dog was hiding from the Man.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course he knew what that Man wanted. So he just bounded out and
-pinned a cow by the throat and sent her head over heels. And that did
-make the Man laugh. My, but he was happy! So then he trusted the dog,
-too, and they were the best of friends for ever and ever.” And Watch
-smiled as though he were right proud of the memory.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble was horrified. “Oh!” he gasped. “The poor cow! That was an
-awful thing to do. After the dogs pretended to be sorry that they had
-done it when they were starving. No wonder Mother Nature wouldn’t trust
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“There,” said Watch. “I knew you wouldn’t understand. He didn’t do it
-for himself. He did it for his Man.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Wild Things warned me,” said Nibble. “Both of them are bad, Dog and
-Man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Bunny,” Watch explained patiently. “They don’t either of
-them do that now. They take care of the cows—because now the cows belong
-to Man and have his smell about them. Just the way I won’t touch you
-because you’re my Man’s rabbit and have the smell of my Man. I don’t
-like to kill things—except Ouphe the Rat, and that’s because he doesn’t
-belong to my Man and my Man told me to. Mother Nature wouldn’t trust the
-dog, so he won’t obey her. Man did trust him, so he just everlastingly
-does obey his Man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d believe that better if the cows told it to me,” said Nibble
-defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>“All right! I’ll bring them up and let you talk to them as soon as they
-are milked and let out of the barn.” Watch was perfectly good-natured
-about it. “I’m going my rounds now, but you just tell me if Ouphe
-troubles you again.” And off he trotted, waving his plumy tail.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble was terribly shocked. So any dog would do anything his Man told
-him to do, no matter what Mother Nature thought about it! Now just what
-did the cows think of that? Nibble wanted dreadfully to know, because he
-hadn’t the least chance in the world of asking Mother Nature or any of
-the wise Wild Things. How he did want good old Doctor Muskrat!</p>
-
-<p>It was getting lighter and lighter, less and less scary every minute.
-Everything would be much more cheerful when the Sun peeked out over his
-shoulder from down South where he was busy with the other half of the
-Earth. Suddenly a voice shouted from somewhere right behind him,</p>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto'>
-<div style='display:inline-block; text-align:left;'>
-<div class='cbline'>“All Evil Spirits hark and hear</div>
-<div class='cbline'>The warning call of Chanticleer.</div>
-<div class='cbline'>Er-er-er-er-errh.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was just the Rooster calling himself by a high-toned name—the way he
-always does. But Nibble had never seen one. He was so s’prised he jumped
-and snubbed his nose against the cage. So he huddled up in the middle of
-it again.</p>
-
-<p>Then all the voices of the farm-yard began calling, “Good morning! Good
-morning!” and he thought of course they were calling to the Sun. But
-pretty soon the pigs began their scary grunts and then one squealed,
-“Good morning. We want our breakfast.” Right off all the rest of them
-took it up. The horses whinnied and the cows mooed, and the sheep
-bleated, and the ducks and chickens and guinea-fowls and turkeys all
-shouted, “we want our breakfasts!”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a new voice cheeped, right beside him, “I want my breakfast,
-too!” It was Chirp Sparrow!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, I do wish they’d stop!” said Nibble. “Whoever are they
-calling? It isn’t the Sun!”</p>
-
-<p>“’Course not. It’s their Man and Tommy Peele. I can hear them coming.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Nibble remembered something. “Why, Chirp,” he said, in surprise,
-“Ouphe the Rat said he had eaten you! And he tried to eat me, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ouphe is a liar,” said Chirp decidedly. “I hope he hears me say it. I
-wish that dog could catch him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He never will,” Nibble answered sadly. “Silvertip could, but not that
-dog. He shouts every time and lets Ouphe know he’s coming. And when he
-does watch at one of Ouphe’s holes he keeps beating the haystack with
-his tail. That’s a tattle-tail for sure. Worse than the Mouse’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you what.” Chirp cocked his head on one side and looked
-thoughtful. “We’ll all have to put in and help the dog catch Ouphe. If
-we don’t, there’ll be a young dog on this farm and he’s sure to be a
-foolish one.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how can I help while I’m in this cage?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be out before long!” said Chirp cheerfully. And so he was,
-though even Chirp didn’t know how it was going to happen.</p>
-
-<p>And just then Tommy Peele came running up with some toothsome carrots
-and a whole armful of clover hay—for Nibble’s breakfast, though he
-hadn’t asked for it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chVI' title='VI: THE CLEVERNESS OF CHIRP SPARROW'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VI</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE CLEVERNESS OF CHIRP SPARROW</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Watch must have kept his word about sending the cows to talk to Nibble
-Rabbit. For the first thing they did when the barn door was opened was
-to come trooping up to his cage. And an old White Cow put her big starey
-eye right up close to it, because she’s very near-sighted, and sniffed.
-Nibble’s fur blew as hard as it did the time of the terrible storm. But
-her breath was all warm and sweet with clover, so he wasn’t afraid,
-though she was three times as big as the dog.</p>
-
-<p>The very first thing the White Cow said was: “Why don’t you eat your
-breakfast?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t. I’m all cramped up in this cage,” answered Nibble.</p>
-
-<div id='i003' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i003.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>The White Cow makes friends with Nibble.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“He’s too much afraid of being eaten,” laughed Chirp Sparrow, and he
-perched right on the White Cow’s horn.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there’s no one going to hurt him,” drawled the Cow in a surprised
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>“There was Ouphe the Rat last night. Nibble felt pretty trembly about
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ouphe! The disgusting thing. He came in and messed up our feed and
-danced over us with his pricky feet so we couldn’t sleep. I just called
-Watch,” mooed the White Cow in her nice fluty voice. It reminded Nibble
-of the South Wind.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you afraid of Watch?” Nibble asked, for now he was truly going
-to find out whether Watch was bad. “He said he’d kill you if his Man
-told him to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Watch? Why, Watch couldn’t kill any one. He’s too fat and sleepy and
-good-natured. And no man would ever tell him to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you afraid of Man?” Nibble asked next.</p>
-
-<p>“Man!” The White Cow snorted again, and most of the others snorted, too.
-“Why, Tommy Peele’s all the man that ever milks me. And he’s only a
-little boy. He snuggles right in beside me as though he were my own
-Calf. I love Tommy Peele.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like Tommy Peele,” bellowed the Red Cow Nibble had taken for a
-log when Silvertip chased him. “I don’t like Tommy Peele. He threw
-stones at me when he drove me out of the cornfield.” She nudged the
-White Cow away and sniffed at Nibble’s carrot. “I’d like that,” said the
-greedy thing.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d quarrel with any one,” drawled the White Cow. “You’re always
-doing something you’ve no business to do.” And she moved off.</p>
-
-<p>Then Chirp Sparrow had a fine idea. “Look here,” he whispered in the Red
-Cow’s ear. “If you want to get even with Tommy Peele you just catch your
-horn in that wire and let out his rabbit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Um-m, I dunno——” mumbled the Red Cow. She didn’t like stones the way
-Tommy could throw them.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you can have the carrots—all the carrots. There are lots of them
-under the hay,” lied Chirp.</p>
-
-<p>The Red Cow lurched her head awkwardly. Her horn caught on the wire.
-Then she got scared and tried to break loose again. But what she broke
-loose was the whole door. She bounced off with it dangling against her
-face. “Moo-oo-oo!” she bawled as she plunged about the barnyard. “Take
-it off! Take it off! It hurts my no-o-se!”</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble didn’t care. He took a fine long jump that stretched his long
-legs. And then who ever said a rabbit couldn’t dance? He danced a proper
-hornpipe and he twiddled his puffy tail and flopped his ears—all at
-once—because it felt so good to be free. And Chirp Sparrow squawked and
-sat down on his tail feathers because he was laughing too hard to fly.
-Half at Nibble and half at the Red Cow.</p>
-
-<p>Of course all the other sparrows came cheeping and chirping, and
-Chanticleer the Rooster crowed, though he didn’t know what he was
-crowing about. And the noise brought Watch the Dog on the run—and after
-him came Tommy Peele, not nearly so fast, for he still had his tall
-rubber boots on.</p>
-
-<p>And Nibble took to the only hole he knew anything about—which was
-Ouphe’s—but he was so startled he didn’t stop to think of that. And the
-bad old rat woke up and started to come out of that very hole to see
-what all this noise was about.</p>
-
-<p>Then wasn’t Nibble in a nice fix? Just wasn’t he?</p>
-
-<p>In front of him Watch was sniffing and digging at the hay. Behind him
-Ouphe was murmuring in his sticky, trickly voice: “Come right in, little
-Friend Rabbit. Come right in.”</p>
-
-<p>Just then Watch barked to Tommy Peele: “Here he is. I’ve got him.” And
-Tommy said in a very severe voice: “Go ’way, Watch. Don’t you hurt my
-bunny.”</p>
-
-<p>“There,” barked Watch, “he says you’re still his bunny, even if you are
-wild again. Come along!” But Nibble didn’t move.</p>
-
-<p>“Go away!” said Tommy again. “Go on, Watch; he’ll never come out until
-you do.”</p>
-
-<p>But Watch didn’t move. He could hear Ouphe saying in a horrid voice:
-“Come in here, or I’ll take you by the tail and pull you in.” And he
-held his very breath—and his wagger with it!</p>
-
-<p>Of course Ouphe thought he had gone away. And he wasn’t very scared of
-Tommy Peele. So he caught hold of Nibble’s tail. And then Nibble was so
-frightened he began to squeal and pull. And Ouphe held back.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along, Nibble, come quick,” pleaded Chirp Sparrow. He meant that
-the dog was safer than the rat. But Ouphe thought he meant that the dog
-was gone. So he let Nibble pull him to the very edge of the hole.</p>
-
-<p>“Aurgh!” sang Watch, very joyfully indeed. For he never touched Nibble
-at all, but nipped Ouphe the Rat right through the heart with those very
-long teeth he shows when he laughs.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble sat right down there in the sunlight until he got his breath, and
-nobody tried to catch him.</p>
-
-<p>Watch couldn’t. He had his mouth all full of Ouphe. And he was walking
-around on the tips of his toes, looking so vain that all the sparrows
-laughed at him. Even Tommy Peele joined in. But Watch didn’t care a bit.
-He just smiled as wide as he could let his mouth go and not lose Ouphe
-out of it.</p>
-
-<p>And Nibble slipped over and ate his carrot. How good it tasted, now he
-was free!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chVII' title='VII: HOW A BUNNY COULD HELP A BOY'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VII</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>HOW A BUNNY COULD HELP A BOY</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Now don’t you forget that it was the greedy Red Cow who let Nibble out
-of his cage. She wanted his carrot so much that she pulled the wire door
-right off with her horn. And then she got scared and careered way down
-the Snowy Pasture with that door banging against her nose, getting
-madder and madder and madder.</p>
-
-<p>Well, she finally scratched it off on to a prickly thorn bush that held
-up its arms to help her. And then she came back to the barnyard as fast
-as she could run. For she’d lost her temper entirely. And you know what
-happens when things do that. It happened to the Storm and to Mrs.
-Hooter, and to Silvertip the Fox, and to Chatter Squirrel, and Slyfoot
-the Mink, and Nature only knows how many more. It’s always something
-unpleasant.</p>
-
-<div id='i004' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i004.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>Just then Watch barked to Tommy Peele, “Here he is. I’ve got him.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But she hadn’t forgotten that carrot, because she was so terribly
-greedy. She galloped up and sclooped her tongue around beneath the pile
-of hay in Nibble’s cage. No, there weren’t any more carrots at all. So
-she rolled her eyes around and saw Nibble just finishing up the sweet
-inside of it. “Moo-oo-oo!” she roared. And it didn’t sound a bit like
-the White Cow’s fluty voice. Moo! She tried to catch Nibble on her sharp
-horns or trample him with her big hard toes. But he was too quick. He
-just made two jumps and ran under the haystack.</p>
-
-<p>Then she shook her horns at Chirp Sparrow, who was perched on a fence
-post. “You lied!” she roared. “You said there were lots of carrots
-here!” But Chirp just squawked rudely and flew into a tree, and she only
-banged her sore nose on the fence wire.</p>
-
-<p>So the next one she took after was Tommy Peele, who hadn’t done anything
-to her at all. And you remember Tommy had on his tall rubber boots, so
-he couldn’t run very fast. Not fast enough to run away from the Red Cow.</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly Nibble found he was dreadfully afraid of what might happen
-to Tommy Peele. Besides, it was all his own fault—excepting that Chirp
-really oughtn’t to have lied to her. So he bounced out under her very
-nose, calling: “I took the carrot! I took the carrot!”</p>
-
-<p>But the Red Cow wanted someone she could catch and hurt—because she had
-lost her temper. She wanted Tommy Peele. Only she never got him.</p>
-
-<p>Because right then things did begin to happen. Watch dropped that rat
-and clamped his teeth right on her sore nose. “There!” he growled in his
-throat. “I’ll teach you to hurt my little boy!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll hurt you!” bawled the Red Cow, trying to stamp in his ribs with
-her big horny feet.</p>
-
-<p>“You will?” It was the White Cow’s voice—but it wasn’t fluty now. She
-was galloping, tail up and head down. “Whang!” she hit the Red Cow’s
-ribs. “Blam!” she hit her so hard in the shoulder that Watch lost his
-hold. And the Red Cow was all through hurting any one. She turned and
-ran, limping and licking her sore nose.</p>
-
-<p>Maybe you think Nibble Rabbit wasn’t puzzled when he saw the Red Cow run
-bawling down the pasture with a limp that would keep her feeding in
-circles for a week. He had thought of course she was going to fight with
-Watch the Dog, and instead she had turned on Tommy Peele. Now that was
-wrong, so Watch had a perfect right to stop her. But, when the White Cow
-came charging up, Nibble never in the world expected to see her help
-Watch give the Bed Cow a terrible trouncing.</p>
-
-<p>And here was Watch, all smiles and waggly tail, saying, “Much obliged,
-I’m sure, Mother Snowflake. I was finding that heifer quite a mouthful.”</p>
-
-<p>And the White Cow was answering, “Oh, I’ve been waiting quite a while to
-drive a bit of sense into the wild little thing.” And she settled down
-to switching her tail and chewing her cud as calmly as ever.</p>
-
-<p>But that made Nibble indignant. “She’s not a Wild Thing,” he said. “Wild
-Things have better manners than any of you or they’d be fighting all the
-time. I’m a Wild Thing myself, so I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s the Bunny,” drawled the White Cow, dragging her words the way
-she drags her toes, because she thinks as slowly as she walks. “Well, I
-didn’t mean to hurt your feelings. You’re perfectly right. Manners are
-to keep folks from fighting—to make them think before they pick a
-quarrel. That Red Cow just wouldn’t think until we made her. Now she’ll
-learn.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Nother thing,” Nibble insisted, “we don’t help any one against our own
-kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sort of talk is less use than a trampled cornstalk,” Mother
-Snowflake lowed sensibly. “All the kind we have here is Tommy Peele. His
-people take care of us, so we take care of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Watch put in; “you saw how he trusted us.” And he waved his tail
-quite grandly.</p>
-
-<p>“But he didn’t say ‘Thank you,’” Nibble looked about him in surprise,
-for Tommy had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t keep it in his pocket, but he won’t forget it,” promised the
-Cow. And she wet her nostrils with her slaty tongue to sniff what it was
-going to be.</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t talk our talk,” Watch explained, “but he does know the sign
-language of tails pretty well.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you,” she mooed triumphantly. For there came Tommy with his cap
-full of meal. He poured a big pile before her and a little one close to
-Nibble. But he gave Watch a great big hug.</p>
-
-<p>“That little ‘thank you’ is for you,” smiled Watch over Tommy Peele’s
-shoulder. “Why, Bunny, do you think we didn’t see you trying to help us
-with the Red Cow?”</p>
-
-<p>Nibble certainly had tried his best, for deep down inside him he began
-to know why the tame beasts all loved Tommy.</p>
-
-<p>Still he hesitated. “I won’t come back to my cage,” he warned; “I’m
-wild, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” Watch promised, “but wild or tame, you’re Tommy
-Peele’s, and some day you’ll be glad to know it. So go ahead and accept
-that ‘thank you’ like a sensible beast or you’ll be hurting Tommy’s
-feelings.”</p>
-
-<p>Nibble really wanted to. My, but it smelled good! And the White Cow was
-heaving big sighs of happiness over her pile. But he didn’t want to be
-caught again, so he was very, very careful. Lip-it, lip-it, he tiptoed
-over and sniffed. Then he just couldn’t resist it. It WAS good! Quite as
-good as it smelled! Pretty soon he felt like sighing, too, because his
-little skin was tight.</p>
-
-<p>And Tommy Peele never tried to catch him at all. Because now he knew
-what it felt like to be chased. He only took off his red mitten and
-twiddled his pinky fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble knew that those fingers were nice and gentle when they petted
-him, and that was all Tommy wanted to do. But he just couldn’t quite
-dare to let him. So he cleaned the last crumb off his whiskers with the
-little fur brushes he wears on his paws and said, “That was mighty nice,
-but I’m a Wild Thing still, and I’m going back to the woods, where I
-belong. Good-bye, Mr. Watch. Good-bye, Mother Snowflake” [for that’s
-what Watch had called the White Cow].</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye,” barked Watch. “You’ll find us here any time you want us.”</p>
-
-<p>Mother Snowflake couldn’t stop to talk. She was too busy.</p>
-
-<p>So Nibble signalled a very polite “Good-bye” to Tommy Peele with his
-little tufty tail, though it was still rather stiff where Ouphe the Rat
-had bitten it. But Tommy didn’t understand Nibble—not yet. He only knew
-the talk of the tame beasts. So he felt quite sad when he saw the Bunny
-go skipping, lipity, lipity, down the long lane.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chVIII' title='VIII: HOW THE FUNNY BUNNY SMELLED A JOKE'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VIII</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>HOW THE FUNNY BUNNY SMELLED A JOKE</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Lipity, lipity, lipity, Nibble Rabbit hopped down the long lane from
-Tommy Peele’s red barn. He was in a dreadful hurry to get home to the
-Woods and Fields.</p>
-
-<p>Out in the Snowy Pasture the wind blew cold. The Red Cow stood with her
-back to it, looking very sad and thoughtful, but she spoke to Nibble
-politely, for she’d found her temper again. Pretty soon he was passing
-the cornstalk tents in the Broad Field, but one of them smelled so foxy
-that he didn’t wait there for Silvertip to come back. Now he was in the
-Clover Patch. He stole past the oak that blew down in the Terrible
-Storm, and around the Brush Pile. Then he went straight for his own old
-hole.</p>
-
-<p>How he had dreamed of it when Tommy had him in that cage! No one had
-been there since the Terrible Storm, for the doorway was drifted shut.
-So in he popped. And then he almost popped right out again, for there
-was someone in it.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, someone was in his very own home, and he couldn’t tell who. But it
-was someone with a nice clovery breath, like White Cow’s, so Nibble
-thought he couldn’t be dangerous. “Here!” he called. “Whoever you are,
-wake up! This hole is mine!”</p>
-
-<p>But Someone never answered.</p>
-
-<p>He felt Someone’s warm fur, listened to Someone’s breathing. He touched
-Someone’s fat side with his paw. Then he tried to shake Someone by the
-scruff of his neck, but Someone was much too big for him. And Someone
-wouldn’t wake.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble cocked his head on one side and thought about it. Then he tried a
-few experiments. At last he said: “Very well. There’s plenty of room for
-both of us in here. I don’t know but we’ll both be more comfortable. But
-you just remember when you do wake up that this hole is really mine.”
-Someone just slept on. But Nibble didn’t care, for he made a perfectly
-lovely foot-warmer.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Nibble brushed the sleep out of his eyes with his furry
-paws and nudged Someone. “Come along,” he urged. “We’ll hunt some
-breakfast.” For it was the dark of the moon when rabbits feed at early
-dawn and dusk. They prefer moonlight at other times. “I’ll get him out,”
-he thought, “and have a look at him.”</p>
-
-<p>Someone only made a little sucking noise as though he were eating
-something perfectly delicious in his dream, and went on sleeping.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a funny beast,” said Nibble, right out loud. “I’m going to ask
-Doctor Muskrat about you.” Someone slept right on. So off Nibble set for
-the pond among the cattails. And all the breakfast he found along the
-way was some coarse grass, very dry and wind-whipped, and the dry brown
-seed heads of yarrow. And that wasn’t much after the wonderful breakfast
-Tommy had given him.</p>
-
-<p>Everything was all changed. The cattails were drifted waist deep in
-snow, and the pond was all ice, so he could walk right up to Doctor
-Muskrat’s house in the middle of it. He thumped No answer. He thumped
-again, and then he danced as hard as he could on top of it. He was
-having a very busy time, all by himself, when he heard Doctor Muskrat’s
-gruff voice calling, “Who’s that? What do you think you’re trying to do,
-anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>Nibble flashed about and saw the doctor’s tousled head poking from a
-hole among the cattails. “Good morning,” he said politely, “I was just
-looking for your front door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ll find it here, over this warm spring—the one spot in the
-pond that doesn’t freeze shut, so I always have a place to come for a
-breath of fresh air.” The old doctor was puffing as he made his way
-through the crusty hillocks between the bulrush stems. “Duck me, but
-it’s Nibble! Dear, dear! What did you want? You aren’t ill?” And he was
-all ready to dive back after one of his famous roots.</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed, but you know everything,” Nibble began confidently. “Won’t
-you please tell me who’s asleep in my home hole and won’t wake up?” And
-he told all about it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hm!” Doctor Muskrat wriggled his nose thoughtfully, much as any nice
-old gentleman will when his spectacles are pulled too far down on it.
-“It sounds to me—it most certainly sounds to me like that fat old
-bluffer, Snoof Woodchuck.”</p>
-
-<p>Nibble’s ears pricked. “Does he bite?” he asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no,” Doctor Muskrat reassured him. “He’s a harmless old crank, and
-a strict vegetarian, though the garter snakes say he’s a snappish fellow
-before he completely wakes up in the spring. Who wouldn’t be, with their
-perpetual whispering and squirming? He lets it out that he’s a kind of
-hermit, and sits meditating in his hole, with his eye on the weather,
-but I’ve always suspected he was snoozing. On the day after the first
-February moon casts her shadow, he pretends to come out and deliver his
-opinion. Though I never knew any one who really saw him.”</p>
-
-<p>Even People know the story. They call it Groundhog Day. And “Groundhog”
-is just a rude nickname for the woodchuck. Though how any one but the
-woodsfolk came to hear about it is a mystery.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet you a sassafras root,” went on the doctor contemptuously,
-“that lazy old skeezicks never wakes up a day before Tad Coon.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if everybody thinks he does,” Nibble objected, “there must be
-something behind it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is,” Doctor Muskrat agreed. “There’s a lot of talk, and he’s the
-one who starts it, too. It would make you sick to hear him straddling
-around after the frost is out of the ground saying ‘I told you so. I
-told you it would be bad weather, or good weather,’ whichever it has
-happened to be. But I never saw any one who had heard him say it.”</p>
-
-<div id='i005' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i005.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>The old doctor was puffing as he made his way through the bulrush stems.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Well,” Nibble insisted, “why doesn’t someone keep watch and tell on
-him?”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Muskrat shook his head. “If you didn’t keep watch so that
-everyone would know they’d go right on believing him. And if you did
-that, and he did wake up, the joke would be on you. And that’s never any
-fun.”</p>
-
-<p>Well, that certainly kept Nibble quiet for a little while. He was
-thinking. Pretty soon his nose began to wrinkle and his eyes hid like
-little pinpoints, deep in his fur. He was trying so hard not to laugh.
-“Doctor Muskrat,” said he, “how soon is that February moon?”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Muskrat waddled up the bank and took a nip of willow stem. “Grubs
-and clam shells!” he exclaimed in surprise. “Sap’s stirring. Why, it’s
-only the hatching of an egg away. [That’s two weeks as the woodsfolk
-count time.] Nibble,” he added curiously, “I believe you’re smelling
-something.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am,” Nibble chuckled. “I’m smelling a wonderful joke. Half of it will
-be on that old snoozer in my hole and the other half will be—who’ll the
-other half be on?”</p>
-
-<p>“There aren’t many folks out,” answered the doctor, telling them off on
-his paw. “There’s Chewee the Chickadee, Chaik the Jay, and Gimlet the
-Woodpecker—you couldn’t possibly fool him —and the fieldmice. The
-fieldmice! They do nothing but tattle and gossip and they’ll believe
-anything!”</p>
-
-<p>And Nibble was delighted. “Well, the other half of this joke will be on
-the fieldmice. Doctor Muskrat, did you ever hear that the fur of a
-woodchuck woven into a mouse’s nest is a sure charm against an owl’s
-catching them? But it’s got to be plucked the day after the first
-February moon.”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Muskrat thought a minute, and then he laughed. He laughed so hard
-he slapped his tail on the ice, because he saw what Nibble Rabbit was
-thinking about.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chIX' title='IX: THE GREAT WOODCHUCK—FUR CHARM AGAINST OWLS'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IX</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE GREAT WOODCHUCK—FUR CHARM AGAINST OWLS</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Nibble Rabbit and Doctor Muskrat sat among the bulrushes on the Frozen
-Pond and laughed and chuckled over the joke they were planning on the
-old woodchuck in Nibble’s hole. He had everybody believing that he came
-out of his hole on the day we call Groundhog Day (though the woodsfolk
-never use a rude nickname like that even for a woodchuck) and predicted
-the weather. That is, everybody believed it except Nibble Rabbit and
-Doctor Muskrat.</p>
-
-<p>This was their plan. They would get every fieldmouse in the woods and
-fields looking for the woodchuck on that particular day. Then if he did
-wake up the joke would be on the fieldmice. And if he didn’t—well, you
-just listen!</p>
-
-<p>Nibble hopped all about, from the Frozen Pond to the little cornstalk
-tents in the Broad Field, looking for field-mice. And every time he
-found one he’d say, “What’s this story that’s going around? I hear that
-woodchuck fur plucked the day after the first February moon is a sure
-charm against owls. Just the littlest tuft woven into a nest will keep
-the young mice from being caught. Is there any truth in it?”</p>
-
-<p>The mouse wouldn’t let on that any one knew more about mouse secrets
-than he did, so he’d say “Oh, that used to be an old mouse custom, but
-of late years it’s been hard to find a woodchuck.” And then he’d scuttle
-off to the holes and tunnels where the mice live and fuss and gossip and
-chatter about it.</p>
-
-<p>Then they all ended up at the great hollow stump, where
-Great-grandfather Mouse has lived for so very many years that his ears
-are all crinkled, and set that agog. And poor old Great-grandfather
-Mouse got so bewildered that he dragged himself down to the Frozen Pond
-to talk with Doctor Muskrat. Which was exactly what Doctor Muskrat had
-been hoping for.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was very polite and pleased to see him. “Certainly,” he said,
-“I’ve heard the story. Fact is, I might have heard it from you yourself
-when we were both very young. But, dear, dear, my memory isn’t very good
-any more. Only I’m perfectly sure it was the day after the first
-February moon!” He didn’t want any mistake about that.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” agreed Great-grandfather Mouse, “I remember. I remember it
-all, now you call it to mind. But where could I find a woodchuck?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, seeing we’re such old friends,” whispered Doctor Muskrat, “I’ll
-let you know. But it’s a secret. He’s down in Nibble Rabbit’s hole. I
-expect that sly young bunny means to be married in the spring, and won’t
-his hole be nicely lined with woodchuck fur, just won’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Great grass seeds!” exploded Great-grandfather Mouse. “It’s a mouse
-charm. No rabbit has anything to do with it.” So he stumped off home,
-dragging his fat old tail and wagging his crinkled ears, and in half an
-hour more people knew about Doctor Muskrat’s secret than if Chatter
-Squirrel had shouted it from the treetops. They knew where the woodchuck
-was and they meant to get some fur off him, too.</p>
-
-<p>And Nibble Rabbit was all but turning somersaults on his little paddy
-feet out behind the bulrushes because he was so amused over it.</p>
-
-<p>The great day came at last—Groundhog Day—the day when the woodchuck
-ought to come out to foretell the weather for spring. And Nibble Rabbit
-and Doctor Muskrat weren’t the only ones who were watching for him.</p>
-
-<p>For all the snow around the mouth of Nibble’s hole was tunnelled by the
-mice, and they were scuffling and squeaking beneath it; so it’s a
-wonderful thing Silvertip the Fox didn’t hear them. And Nibble thought
-what a wonderful joke it would be if that woodchuck did come walking out
-of the hole. So he shook him and jounced him and pulled his round, mousy
-ears and his long spiky whiskers. But, no! That woodchuck just wouldn’t
-wake up. So finally Nibble gave it up and crawled out of doors. And
-there at the mouth of the hole he met old Great-grandfather Fieldmouse,
-who was too fat and clumsy for any tunnel.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning,” said Nibble. “I see you’ve come to greet my friend Mr.
-Woodchuck when he comes out to foretell the weather.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse very severely. “This is the day we come for our regular charm
-of woodchuck fur to keep our young safe from owls.” He spoke as solemnly
-as though he had done it every year of his life. “It’s strictly a mouse
-charm,” he went on, “and no rabbit is going to keep us from it!” He said
-that because Doctor Muskrat had given him the idea that Nibble meant to
-keep it all for himself. And Doctor Muskrat gave him that idea because
-he didn’t want Great-grandfather Mouse to suspect that Nibble had
-invented the whole story about the charm. Doctor Muskrat knew they’d
-never bother about coming after the woodchuck fur unless they thought
-that someone else wanted it as much as they did.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” Nibble answered meekly; “but please leave a little for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll see if there’s enough to go round,” replied the mouse. And with
-that he laid back his ears—he’s so old that they’re all crinkled—and
-marched down into Nibble’s own hole. And out he came with a mouthful of
-fur. And every fieldmouse from all the woods and fields solemnly marched
-in and did the very same thing as if they’d done it every year of their
-lives, too.</p>
-
-<p>And maybe you think Nibble Rabbit and Doctor Muskrat didn’t laugh until
-their sides were fit to split—maybe you think they didn’t. Because they
-knew they were going to be able to prove to every one of the woodsfolk
-just where Mr. Woodchuck was and what he was doing on the next day after
-the first February moon.</p>
-
-<p>After the last mouse had left his hole, Nibble went in to see what they
-had done. He came out again in a hurry. “Whew!” he said to Doctor
-Muskrat. “I’ll have to sleep in the Pickery Things to-night. It’s all
-mousy in there. But they’ve plucked that sleepy old woodchuck as bare as
-an egg.”</p>
-
-<p>And Doctor Muskrat chuckled. “Just you wait until he wakes up in the
-spring!”</p>
-
-<p>That wasn’t till a long way after St. Patrick’s Day, when the little
-gray pussies hung on all the willows. And he took three whole days to
-wake up in. For the first day he just grunted and groaned and made the
-noise that the woodsfolk take his name from. “Snoof, snoof!” he’d go as
-though he were trying to sneeze, but was too lazy to do it. And the
-minute he did that, Nibble hurried down to Doctor Muskrat in the marsh
-and told him about it.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” said Doctor Muskrat. “Tell me how he behaves to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>On the second day Snoof Woodchuck had turned over in the hole with his
-feet in the air and was acting as a dog does when he has a dream. Nibble
-told Doctor Muskrat.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said the Doctor. “He’ll stand on them to-morrow, and we’ll
-all be there to greet him.” Then he waddled off to the hollow stump
-where Great-grandfather Fieldmouse lives. And Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse poked his head out.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well?” he demanded in his crotchety voice, because he’s very old—
-so old that his ears are all crinkled. “What do you want now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I just wanted to let you know that to-morrow morning Snoof Woodchuck
-will take the air an hour after sun-up,” said Doctor Muskrat very
-politely.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s that got to do with me?” demanded Great-grandfather
-Fieldmouse.</p>
-
-<p>“I let you know because we’re such old friends,” said Doctor Muskrat.
-“Surely you remember that as long as the mice kept up the good old
-custom of gathering to thank the woodchuck, the woodchuck stayed here
-and you always had your charm.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so, I suppose so,” grunted Great-grandfather Fieldmouse.</p>
-
-<p>So on the third day, when Snoof Woodchuck climbed out into the air, all
-the fieldmice were assembled. He was very much complimented. He bowed
-pompously, this way and that—and oh, how funny he looked, as though the
-moths had been at him! “Hmm, hmm!” he began importantly. “As I told you
-when I predicted the weather on the next day after the first February
-moon——”</p>
-
-<p>But he never got any further. For the mice simply squealed in surprise,
-“Why, that was the day we came for our charms of woodchuck fur. You were
-fast asleep!”</p>
-
-<p>“You old bluffer,” jeered Doctor Muskrat, “we caught you napping this
-time!”</p>
-
-<p>“Look at yourself!” squealed Nibble Rabbit, standing on his tallest toes
-to hop about. “See if you’re not mouse-eaten! You’re as naked as you
-were born—yah! I’m ashamed to look at you!” And the mice all echoed him.</p>
-
-<p>And that woodchuck scuttled back into the very bottom of the hole and
-hid there until midnight. And then he went so far away that no one ever
-saw him again or even heard of him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chX' title='X: WHAT DOCTOR MUSKRAT THOUGHT ABOUT TRAPS'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER X</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>WHAT DOCTOR MUSKRAT THOUGHT ABOUT TRAPS</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Quite a long while ago I promised to tell what Tommy Peele was doing in
-the Broad Field when he let Nibble Rabbit’s storm party out of the
-little cornstalk tent. Well, to begin with, he was looking for the
-tracks of the woodsfolk. But as long as the snow lay deep on the ground
-he didn’t find many.</p>
-
-<p>For Doctor Muskrat and the fieldmice and Nibble Rabbit were about the
-only ones who stayed there. Doctor Muskrat was too clever to leave
-tracks where any one would see them. And the fieldmice had their tunnels
-far below the crust, so you never saw anything of them. And you’d have
-to creep around among the Pickery Things before you’d see many signs of
-Nibble Rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>But the birds called very often to get a drink from the warm spring
-hidden among the bulrushes that was Doctor Muskrat’s front door. It was
-Chewee the Chickadee who brought news of the quail. “They have to go a
-long way in the deep woods every day to find enough seeds for so large a
-flock,” he said. “And they told me that I must leave every last weed
-head that pricked up above the snow in their thicket for Nibble Rabbit.”</p>
-
-<p>Now that was very nice of the quail because there were very few seeds
-left, and Nibble was eating the dried grasses that the Pickery Things
-kept from him and the delicate bark from the sunny side of the willows.</p>
-
-<div id='i006' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i006.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>Snoof Woodchuck comes out of his hole.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Chaik, the Jay, perked his crest thoughtfully. “It must be horrid to
-live in big flocks like that where you can never find a full crop for
-everyone at once. The partridge are perching in some evergreens. They
-say it’s safer than sleeping in the snow where they might be frozen in
-again. Only they can’t find anything to eat but birch and poplar buds,
-and they’re awfully hungry. But not so hungry as Hooter the Owl and his
-wife. I wonder why they flew away right in the middle of the terrible
-storm.”</p>
-
-<p>“Silvertip the Fox left then, too,” said Gimlet the Woodpecker, who had
-been working in the orchard back of Tommy Peele’s barn. “There must be
-something in that.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is,” said Nibble. “I was the game Mrs. Hooter chased into the
-cornstalk tent, but Silvertip was the one who came out of it. He mussed
-their feathers and they tweaked his ears, and now they’re afraid to meet
-each other!”</p>
-
-<p>Chaik laughed. “The owls are still quarrelling,” he told Nibble.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Silvertip has learned to get into the chicken-coop,” Gimlet
-reported, “and Chirp Sparrow says that’s climbing into a peck of
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who cares?” Nibble rejoiced. “Now that Slyfoot’s gone to find a better
-hunting ground we have no one to look out for.”</p>
-
-<p>But Doctor Muskrat spoke up very thoughtfully. “Yes, Nibble. Sooner or
-later we’ll have to look out for Man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shucks!” sniffed Nibble, carelessly flopping his ears. “No Man ever
-comes here unless it’s Tommy Peele. And he’s such a little one, who’s
-afraid of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am.” And Doctor Muskrat stroked his whiskers with his paw. “You can’t
-judge the size of his jaw by the size of his trail, nor know how far
-he’ll reach out to bite you!”</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble merely twiddled his tail to show how little he cared for a
-whole flock of Tommy Peeles. While Tommy had him in a cage up by the
-barn Tommy had been good to him. And none of the tame beasts were afraid
-of Tommy Peele. “He hasn’t any teeth to speak of,” Nibble protested,
-“and he hasn’t any claws. He couldn’t hurt any one. I’ve been right in
-his very paws, so I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you have,” agreed Doctor Muskrat. “And how did you get there?
-Didn’t he reach out and catch you when he was the whole length of the
-pasture away?”</p>
-
-<p>And this time Nibble didn’t feel like twiddling his tail. It was
-perfectly true. He knew that somehow Tommy had been the one who made
-that dreadful wire snatch him into the air. And he hadn’t quite
-forgotten how it all but squeezed the life right out of him when he
-swung there. It hadn’t felt in the least like the soft touch of Tommy’s
-hand. So he asked with a little shiver, “What are those jaws like,
-Doctor Muskrat?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re harder than bone, and colder than stone. They never miss, and
-they never let go,” said the wise old Muskrat very earnestly. And that’s
-the truth about a muskrat trap. It’s just a pair of steel jaws, harder
-than bone and colder than stone, exactly as he said. And they’re worked
-by a terrible spring. They never miss because the spring won’t snap
-unless a beast steps right between them. And they won’t let go again
-until the Man opens the spring again. No beast can ever learn that.
-Because no beast has ever imagined that they weren’t a part of the Man.</p>
-
-<p>“And a Man can have a whole pack of those jaws,” the old doctor went on.
-“They’ll hide out in the leaves where you can’t see or hear them;
-sometimes you just sniff the faintest chilly smell on them. They’re
-worse than a whole pack of Silvertips because you can see and hear and
-SMELL him.”</p>
-
-<p>“How awful!” breathed Nibble. “It isn’t fair!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mother Nature wasn’t fair to Man in the First-Off Beginning,”
-argued the wise old beast. “The cows complained and got their horns, and
-so did a lot of others, but Man wouldn’t complain. It’s a law that when
-a beast invents anything for himself he has a right to use it. So you
-can’t blame Man for using anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Nibble thankfully, “I’m glad Tommy Peele doesn’t use those
-jaws.”</p>
-
-<p>But up behind the barn Tommy Peele had his first pair of the awful
-things. He wouldn’t have dreamed of using them on the chickens or Watch
-the Dog, or even on Nibble Rabbit, because they were friends of his. But
-he didn’t think any more of using them on a muskrat, that he didn’t
-know, than the muskrat would have thought of using his sharp teeth on
-Tommy Peele. And he wanted the muskrat’s skin. Which was perfectly
-natural because every man has had to use some other creature’s fur since
-the First-Off Beginning of things—until he got to be friends with them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chXI' title='XI: THE SINGULAR MISHAP OF DOCTOR MUSKRAT'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XI</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE SINGULAR MISHAP OF DOCTOR MUSKRAT</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Don’t you ever believe that a small boy who grows up in the open air
-like Tommy Peele doesn’t know just as much about the ways of the wild
-things as any of the wild things know about the ways of men. Only he
-doesn’t know he knows it. Because he doesn’t have to hunt for every meal
-as he used to in the First-Off Beginning. And the only way you find out
-what you really do know, deep down inside you, is to use it. All the
-same, the very day Tommy Peele got out his trap was the day the muskrats
-began their spring running. He hadn’t seen their footprints, even yet,
-but that something deep down inside him told him it was time to expect
-them.</p>
-
-<p>That trap wasn’t a very good one. He got it from Louis Thomson, who had
-a lot that he set out all through other people’s woods where he thought
-the other people wouldn’t catch him, because he wasn’t quite satisfied
-to hunt just on his own. And he knew this particular trap was slow
-because it was all rusty, and it hadn’t a good spring. But he made Tommy
-give him a two-bladed knife and his big glass shooter and twenty cents
-to boot. For the Red Cow wasn’t the only one who was greedy.</p>
-
-<p>But Tommy oiled it and cleaned it and got it to work. And he specially
-showed it to Watch the Dog and told him to be very careful not to sniff
-around and get his nose in it. And Watch spread himself out beside Tommy
-while Tommy worked. Watch snoozed contentedly in the sun and flopped his
-tail whenever Tommy talked to him. For the weather was beginning to grow
-warmer. The thaw that the poor partridge had wanted so badly had come.</p>
-
-<p>Down by the pond the ice was getting so soft that Nibble didn’t dare
-thump on it to call Doctor Muskrat. And he wanted to call him a great
-deal of the time. For he knew the wise old doctor was very careful about
-making tracks near his warm spring. But all sorts of careless young
-muskrats were wandering up and down the stream. They said it was mating
-time, and they were trying to find some lady muskrat who would be
-foolish enough to start housekeeping then. They ran in and out among the
-willows, gnawing and digging and making the plainest sort of trail, and
-then they would flop with their muddy feet right into the drinking hole.</p>
-
-<p>I can tell you it made Nibble angry enough. He didn’t fancy drinking
-after them, but they didn’t pay any attention to him. And Chaik the Jay
-got into such a rage that he forgot he should have kept quiet there. He
-perched on the tallest bulrush and cursed and squalled at them. But when
-Doctor Muskrat heard the rumpus and lifted his head up through the ice,
-with his long teeth showing between his gray whiskers, they scuttled off
-as though Silvertip himself were after them.</p>
-
-<p>And then the old doctor would fume. “The Mink take them and their
-love-making, the silly young things! What’s the sense of disturbing the
-whole marsh just because they want everyone to know they’re old enough
-to dig a nursery? Eh?” He forgot that he’d done the very same thing in
-his own first spring.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble thought they were having a mighty good time over it all. Only
-he wished they wouldn’t leave quite so many tracks for Tommy Peele to
-find.</p>
-
-<p>And the very next day there came Tommy, splashing through the big
-puddles in his tall rubber boots, sloshing through the last of the
-snowdrifts, and whistling a lively tune. And Nibble pricked up his ears
-to listen. Because he thought that maybe Tommy was on a spring wandering
-of his own, and this was his mating song. For he never dreamed that
-whole generations of bunnies and muskrats and piping birds would grow
-old and die before Tommy even thought of such a thing.</p>
-
-<p>Tommy had on his blue sweater, but he’d left his red mittens hanging
-back of the stove because he’d got them all wet snowballing. And Watch
-was dancing along in front of him singing “Aourgh! aorugh!” which is
-neither a mating song nor a proper hunting song. It was like Tommy’s
-whistle—it showed that he was perfectly happy.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble wasn’t. He was awfully uncomfortable. For all the footprints
-of those foolish young beasts led straight to the warm spring, which was
-still the only open water, though the ice was soft and melting all over
-the pond. And you remember this was the wise old doctor’s front door.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Tommy followed them right there. And Nibble crouched into a
-clump of bulrushes close behind him—close enough to hear him working
-over something; close enough to hear Watch saying in an excited tone,
-“It’s all right! I can smell ’em—lots of ’em!”</p>
-
-<p>Nibble was so worried he nearly squirmed. He wanted to get out to the
-little round house in the middle of the pond and warn Doctor Muskrat.
-The minute Tommy’s back was turned he started to creep over the crumbly
-ice toward it. But Watch’s back wasn’t turned. He bounced out after
-Nibble. And he bounced right through the ice. And the minute Doctor
-Muskrat heard that splashing and thrashing right in his front pond, out
-he popped. “Clang!” That ugly trap had him by the paw!</p>
-
-<p>“Oh-h-h! Oow-w-w!” screamed the poor old doctor. But he didn’t lose his
-head entirely. “Quick, Nibble,” he begged, “bite off my toes before that
-dog gets here! I can’t reach them.” His own poor old teeth were
-chattering with fear and pain.</p>
-
-<p>And that’s exactly what Nibble was trying to do when Watch floundered
-out of the water. “Aourgh! I’ve got you!” he barked joyfully. Then he
-stopped short and wagged his tail in the friendliest way. “Why, you’re
-Tommy’s rabbit!” he said. And he tried to explain to Tommy Peele.</p>
-
-<p>But Tommy wouldn’t listen. He couldn’t think of anything but that poor
-old beast, squealing over his hurt paw. It made Tommy’s own throat hurt
-to hear him. He wanted to help, but the doctor couldn’t understand. He
-just gnashed his teeth and snapped at Tommy. Then Tommy managed to touch
-the spring of the trap with his toe. He stepped, and it yawned open—just
-for an instant. Away went Doctor Muskrat.</p>
-
-<p>But Nibble wasn’t looking. He had leaped back into his hiding place in
-the reeds and closed his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He wished he could close his long ears as well. He expected to hear his
-good old friend squeal when Tommy killed him. But all he heard was a
-splash.</p>
-
-<p>Then Watch the Dog said, “I told you you’d be glad you were Tommy
-Peele’s rabbit!” He was standing close beside Nibble and he was looking
-over his shoulder to give an affectionate wag of his tail toward Tommy
-Peele. Nibble looked, too. And there was Tommy unfastening his trap from
-where he had tied it to a reed clump so it couldn’t be dragged away. But
-there was no sign of any muskrat.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone,” Watch explained. “Tommy let him go. I expect that was
-because he was a friend of yours.” Of course there was still too much
-wolf in Watch for him to understand that Tommy had just been sorry for
-hunting the doctor. But Watch was sure anything that small boy did was
-wonderful, and reflected forever to his credit.</p>
-
-<p>“But why did he bite him if he didn’t mean to eat him?” Nibble asked in
-a trembly voice. That was something he never did understand. And Watch
-didn’t try to. He was cocking his ears to see what next Tommy was going
-to do.</p>
-
-<p>Tommy yanked the trap loose from the reed clump. And he wasn’t proud of
-owning it any more. He hated it— quite as much as Nibble or even Doctor
-Muskrat did. He swung it about his head and threw it splash into the
-hole Watch had made when he fell through the ice chasing Nibble.</p>
-
-<p>Then he looked at a hole the doctor’s long teeth had slashed in his tall
-rubber boot. “I don’t care,” he said defiantly. “I don’t care a bit! I
-hurt him awfully. He had a perfect right to hurt me if he wanted to.”</p>
-
-<p>The teeth hadn’t gone in deep enough really to bite Tommy’s toe, but of
-course neither Nibble nor Doctor Muskrat ever guessed that. Their hides
-belong to them and they couldn’t ever imagine that his tall rubber boots
-weren’t any more a part of Tommy than those steel jaws of his traps
-were. Watch could, because he sometimes wore a collar, and on very cold
-nights Tommy covered him up with a blanket, but he never thought of
-explaining it.</p>
-
-<div id='i007' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i007.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>“Clang!” That ugly trap had Dr. Muskrat by the paw.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then Tommy marched all the way up to the house and got his cap full of
-the same delicious meal he had given Nibble and the White Cow the day
-the Red Cow chased him. It was “Thank you” to them for helping him get
-away from her. He set out two little piles. Then he called: “Here Bunny,
-Bunny, Bunny!” And that showed Nibble that one of those piles was for
-him. So Watch was right. It was nice to be Tommy’s rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>And Watch explained: “The other is for your friend the Muskrat. Don’t
-you eat it.”</p>
-
-<p>As though Nibble would!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chXII' title='XII: TOMMY PEELE’S FRIENDS STAND UP FOR HIM'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XII</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>TOMMY PEELE’S FRIENDS STAND UP FOR HIM</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Of course Nibble Rabbit wouldn’t eat the pile of meal Tommy Peele left
-for Doctor Muskrat.</p>
-
-<p>But he thought he was going to have a terrible time to keep all those
-foolish young muskrats, who were scuttling round in the marsh trying to
-start their spring love affairs, from doing it. He forgot that
-everything around the place where Tommy had set it still smelled of the
-little boy and his dog. So not another beast dared come near it.</p>
-
-<p>Chaik the Jay and Chewee the Chickadee stole a few beakfuls, but Nibble
-knew Doctor Muskrat wouldn’t mind that. And he wanted company. So he
-told them all about how Tommy had caught the doctor and let him go
-again. And how Tommy had thrown away the trap.</p>
-
-<p>Chaik raised and lowered his crest, just as we sometimes do our
-eyebrows, when we’re puzzled about anything. “He was lucky,” Chaik said.
-“I’ve seen beasts suffer in a trap for whole days before they died. And
-I never heard of any before that got out of one alive. I believe that
-human is queer. Sometimes I think he’s trying to think the way we woods
-folk do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it,” chimed in Chewee. “When it was so terribly cold I was
-having an awful time. The ice had frozen over the cones so I couldn’t
-even pick a living among the pine trees. And do you know what he did? He
-tied a big lump of fat pork away out on the end of a springy branch, so
-that fat house cat couldn’t reach it. Just for me! Wasn’t that clever”
-And he began hopping about in the excited way he has whenever he gets to
-talking.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he most certainly is trying to make friends with us,” Nibble
-observed. “Only catching us in traps isn’t a very comfortable way of
-doing it. You fellows will have to help me convince Doctor Muskrat.”</p>
-
-<p>Help! He needed it. It was two whole days before the doctor poked his
-head out of the hole where Watch had smashed the crumbly ice. The wise
-old beast wasn’t using his front door any more.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” called Nibble cheerfully. “See what Tommy Peele left you to
-say he was sorry he bit you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I,” growled the doctor. “I’ve had enough of his jaws.” He spread
-out his paddle paw. The good roots he stores in his medicine chest had
-nearly healed it, but his little toe was gone. “I’m going to move away
-as soon as I can travel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t do that,” pleaded Nibble. “If he bit your foot you certainly bit
-his. Now he doesn’t mean ever to use those jaws again. He threw them
-into that very hole.”</p>
-
-<p>Pop! Down went the doctor to have a look. And his face was mighty
-surprised when it popped up again. “It’s the truth!” he said. “Those
-jaws are biting the mud. We needn’t worry so long as we can keep an eye
-on them. Nibble, I’ll just dip a whisker into that present Tommy Peele
-left for me!”</p>
-
-<p>And he liked the meal quite as well as Nibble had—better, in fact. “I
-tell you what, Nibble,” he said as he stopped for breath, “this was
-mighty thoughtful of that Man. Now I wonder if he knew that I couldn’t
-dig or swim with my paw hurting me, because his paw was hurting him? I
-hope not.”</p>
-
-<p>And that was very nice of him, because it was all Tommy’s fault in the
-beginning. Tommy had deliberately set that trap.</p>
-
-<p>Chaik the Jay swallowed such a big beakful of meal that he had to crane
-his neck over it; then he blinked very seriously because Nibble was
-giggling at him. “Do you s’pose we could all trust Tommy the way Nibble
-can if we all were friends with him?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, of course!” chirped the enthusiastic Chickadee.</p>
-
-<p>“Hm!” sniffed old Doctor Muskrat a bit gruffly, “that sounds very well
-from you birds. You have wings so you can fly away from him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” Chaik retorted, “but I’ve never seen him swim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hmm, hmm!” the doctor snorted again. And he hitched himself on his
-three sound legs over to a big stone that had grown warm in the sun and
-spread himself out flat like a small furry rug. He meant to think it
-over. But he felt so comfortable and full that he fell into a snooze.</p>
-
-<p>Nibble was snoozing, too, snuggled up beside him, but he awoke when he
-heard Tommy’s tall rubber boots splattering through the slush. His
-father had put a patch on the hole, when he was mending an automobile
-tire, so it was as good as ever. Nibble nudged the doctor and then
-hurried over to greet Tommy, jumping the splashiest puddles and
-pattering right through the little ones because he didn’t want his
-friend to think Chaik and Chewee were the only ones who’d take the
-trouble. And Tommy took an ear of corn out of his pocket and shared it
-between them.</p>
-
-<p>Then Tommy ordered Watch to stay back while he tried to speak to Doctor
-Muskrat. And the old doctor didn’t flash right into the water—as he
-really meant to. He sat up, holding his poor paw in front of him, and
-squinted his eyes to get a good look at the little boy. He didn’t even
-jump when Tommy laid down the other ear of corn, nor when Watch came
-sneaking disobediently up behind him because he wanted to poke his nose
-into what was going on. For Tommy caught him by the fur and pointed that
-inquisitive nose straight at the doctor. “There,” he ordered, “take a
-good smell so you’ll know him again. That’s my muskrat!”</p>
-
-<p>And Nibble was so pleased he took a leap and kicked his furry heels so
-high that Tommy laughed at him. “You’re safe! You’re safe!” he rejoiced.
-“Isn’t it almost worth being caught for?”</p>
-
-<div id='i008' style='margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:10.0%; width:80%;'>
- <img src='images/i008.jpg' alt='' style='width:100%' />
-<p class='caption'>Tommy’s tall rubber boots spattered through the slush.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And Doctor Muskrat considered his sore paw and then he considered the
-little boy. And he looked very thoughtful.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chXIII' title='XIII: WISE WORDS FROM A WISE BEAST'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIII</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>WISE WORDS FROM A WISE BEAST</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p>Neither Nibble Rabbit, nor Chaik Jay, nor Chewee the Chickadee, nor all
-of them together could make Doctor Muskrat say what he thought of Tommy
-Peele.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he insisted, “I haven’t made up my mind. It’s a safe rule for any
-beast to do as his kind have done before him, and I never knew any
-muskrats who made friends with a man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor any man who wanted to be friends with a muskrat, either,” pleaded
-Nibble. “Tommy Peele’s different.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way with men,” said the doctor. “They’re always changing.
-Only the wild things stay the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is Man, anyway?” Nibble asked. “He isn’t a bird and he isn’t a
-fish, and of course he isn’t a snake. But the bats, who came to my storm
-party in the cornstalk tent, said he couldn’t be a beast because he
-hadn’t any tail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” snorted the doctor. “Tad Coon’s cousin, the bear, hasn’t any
-more tail than that. What did the bats think he was?”</p>
-
-<p>“A kind of a frog,” said Nibble promptly. “But Chatter Squirrel didn’t
-agree with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“A frog! A frog! Had those bats ever seen a man, then? Or a frog,
-either? Eh?” And the doctor made such a face of disdain that his
-whiskers bristled up like a lot of long darning needles on Granny’s fat
-pin cushion. “Why, a frog is less than a beast and a man—well, there
-used to be a tale going around when I wasn’t much bigger than Chewee
-there that Man was kin to Mother Nature herself in the very First-Off
-Beginning.” The old muskrat sank his head back between his shoulders and
-half closed his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Go on,” said Nibble breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? What?” The doctor came back with a start as though the shadow of an
-owl had passed near him. “I was just thinking about that winter. There
-was a big family of us the year I was born, for food was very plentiful.
-So were minks. And when my mother thought she heard one sniffing close
-by she’d tell us stories to keep us quiet. Otherwise we wriggled around
-in that dark old house like a lot of tadpoles, popping in and out of the
-water until you could almost swim on the very floor, it was so wet from
-our dripping. And when we got to romping we’d squeal more than a whole
-stump full of fieldmice.” Nibble couldn’t imagine the dignified, portly
-old fellow scuttling and squeaking. A rabbit hole is always very quiet.
-Because it’s on the ground and so many hunters might hear it if it
-weren’t.</p>
-
-<p>“I just remember,” finished the doctor, “that one of our favourite tales
-was about how Man quarrelled with Mother Nature in the First-Off
-Beginning. She was used to the wild things. And most of them, excepting
-the ones who came up from under the earth, are very obedient. But Man
-just wouldn’t obey her. And she wouldn’t stand that, because it would be
-unfair to the rest of us, and because he was kin to her. So she said he
-could try getting along without her help and see how he liked that. And
-he certainly surprised her. He——”</p>
-
-<p>But that’s as far as the wise old fellow ever got. For right then there
-came a most startling interruption. And so many brand-new happenings
-began that I’ll have to write a whole brand-new book to tell about them
-all.</p>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
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