Peter Rabbit’s eyes twinkled
when Jenny Wren said that she must look her old house
over to see if it was fit to live in. “I
can save you that trouble,” said he.
“What do you mean?” Jenny’s voice
was very sharp.
“Only that our old house is
already occupied,” replied Peter. “Bully
the English Sparrow has been living in it for the last
two months. In fact, he already has a good-sized
family there.”
“What?” screamed Jenny
and Mr. Wren together. Then without even saying
good-by to Peter, they flew in a great rage to see
if he had told them the truth. Presently he heard
them scolding as fast as their tongues could go, and
this is very fast indeed.
“Much good that will do them,”
chuckled Peter. “They will have to find
a new house this year. All the sharp tongues in
the world couldn’t budge Bully the English sparrow.
My, my, my, my, just hear that racket! I think
I’ll go over and see what is going on.”
So Peter hopped to a place where he
could get a good view of Jenny Wren’s old home
and still not be too far from the safety of the old
stone wall. Jenny Wren’s old home had been
in a hole in one of the old apple-trees. Looking
over to it, Peter could see Mrs. Bully sitting in
the little round doorway and quite filling it.
She was shrieking excitedly. Hopping and flitting
from twig to twig close by were Jenny and Mr. Wren,
their tails pointing almost straight up to the sky,
and scolding as fast as they could make their tongues
go. Flying savagely at one and then at the other,
and almost drowning their voices with his own harsh
cries, was Bully himself. He was perhaps one
fourth larger than Mr. Wren, although he looked half
again as big. But for the fact that his new spring
suit was very dirty, due to his fondness for taking
dust baths and the fact that he cares nothing about
his personal appearance and takes no care of himself,
he would have been a fairly good-looking fellow.
His back was more or less of an ashy color with black
and chestnut stripes. His wings were brown with
a white bar on each. His throat and breast were
black, and below that he was of a dirty white.
The sides of his throat were white and the back of
his neck chestnut.
By ruffling up his feathers and raising
his wings slightly as he hopped about, he managed
to make himself appear much bigger than he really
was. He looked like a regular little fighting
savage. The noise had brought all the other birds
in the Old Orchard to see what was going on, and every
one of them was screaming and urging Jenny and Mr.
Wren to stand up for their rights. Not one of
them had a good word for Bully and his wife. It
certainly was a disgraceful neighborhood squabble.
Bully the English Sparrow is a born
fighter. He never is happier than when he is
in the midst of a fight or a fuss of some kind.
The fact that all his neighbors were against him didn’t
bother Bully in the least.
Jenny and Mr. Wren are no cowards,
but the two together were no match for Bully.
In fact, Bully did not hesitate to fly fiercely at
any of the onlookers who came near enough, not even
when they were twice his own size. They could
have driven him from the Old Orchard had they set
out to, but just by his boldness and appearance he
made them afraid to try.
All the time Mrs. Bully sat in the
little round doorway, encouraging him. She knew
that as long as she sat there it would be impossible
for either Jenny or Mr. Wren to get in. Truth
to tell, she was enjoying it all, for she is as quarrelsome
and as fond of fighting as is Bully himself.
“You’re a sneak!
You’re a robber! That’s my house,
and the sooner you get out of it the better!”
shrieked Jenny Wren, jerking her tail with every word
as she hopped about just out of reach of Bully.
“It may have been your house
once, but it is mine now, you little snip-of-nothing!”
cried Bully, rushing at her like a little fury.
“Just try to put us out if you dare! You
didn’t make this house in the first place, and
you deserted it when you went south last fall.
It’s mine now, and there isn’t anybody
in the Old Orchard who can put me out.”
Peter Rabbit nodded. “He’s
right there,” muttered Peter. “I don’t
like him and never will, but it is true that he has
a perfect right to that house. People who go
off and leave things for half a year shouldn’t
expect to find them just as they left them. My,
my, my what a dreadful noise! Why don’t
they all get together and drive Bully and Mrs. Bully
out of the Old Orchard? If they don’t I’m
afraid he will drive them out. No one likes to
live with such quarrelsome neighbors. They don’t
belong over in this country, anyway, and we would
be a lot better off if they were not here. But
I must say I do have to admire their spunk.”
All the time Bully was darting savagely
at this one and that one and having a thoroughly good
time, which is more than could be said of any one
else, except Mrs. Bully.
“I’ll teach you folks
to know that I am in the Old Orchard to stay!”
shrieked Bully. “If you don’t like
it, why don’t you fight? I am not afraid
of any of you or all of you together.”
This was boasting, plain boasting, but it was effective.
He actually made the other birds believe it.
Not one of them dared stand up to him and fight.
They were content to call him a bully and all the
bad names they could think of, but that did nothing
to help Jenny and Mr. Wren recover their house.
Calling another bad names never hurts him. Brave
deeds and not brave words are what count.
How long that disgraceful squabble
in the Old Orchard would have lasted had it not been
for something which happened, no one knows. Right
in the midst of it some one discovered Black Pussy,
the cat who lives in Farmer Brown’s house, stealing
up through the Old Orchard, her tail twitching and
her yellow eyes glaring eagerly. She had heard
that dreadful racket and suspected that in the midst
of such excitement she might have a chance to catch
one of the feathered folks. You can always trust
Black Pussy to be on hand at a time like that.
No sooner was she discovered than
everything else was forgotten. With Bully in
the lead, and Jenny and Mr. Wren close behind him,
all the birds turned their attention to Black Pussy.
She was the enemy of all, and they straightway forgot
their own quarrel. Only Mrs. Bully remained where
she was, in the little round doorway of her house.
She intended to take no chances, but she added her
voice to the general racket. How those birds did
shriek and scream! They darted down almost into
the face of Black Pussy, and none went nearer than
Bully the English Sparrow and Jenny Wren.
Now Black Pussy hates to be the center
of so much attention. She knew that, now she
had been discovered, there wasn’t a chance in
the world for her to catch one of those Old Orchard
folks. So, with tail still twitching angrily,
she turned and, with such dignity as she could, left
the Old Orchard. Clear to the edge of it the
birds followed, shrieking, screaming, calling her bad
names, and threatening to do all sorts of dreadful
things to her, quite as if they really could.
When finally she disappeared towards
Farmer Brown’s barn, those angry voices changed.
It was such a funny change that Peter Rabbit laughed
right out. Instead of anger there was triumph
in every note as everybody returned to attend to his
own affairs. Jenny and Mr. Wren seemed to have
forgotten all about Bully and his wife in their old
house. They flew to another part of the Old Orchard,
there to talk it all over and rest and get their breath.
Peter Rabbit waited to see if they would not come over
near enough to him for a little more gossip.
But they didn’t, and finally Peter started for
his home in the dear Old Briar-patch. All the
way there he chuckled as he thought of the spunky way
in which Jenny and Mr. Wren had stood up for their
rights.