The morning after the fight between
Jenny and Mr. Wren and Bully the English Sparrow found
Peter Rabbit in the Old Orchard again. He was
so curious to know what Jenny Wren would do for a house
that nothing but some very great danger could have
kept him away from there. Truth to tell, Peter
was afraid that not being able to have their old house,
Jenny and Mr. Wren would decide to leave the Old Orchard
altogether. So it was with a great deal of relief
that as he hopped over a low place in the old stone
wall he heard Mr. Wren singing with all his might.
The song was coming from quite the
other side of the Old Orchard from where Bully and
Mrs. Bully had set up housekeeping. Peter hurried
over. He found Mr. Wren right away, but at first
saw nothing of Jenny. He was just about to ask
after her when he caught sight of her with a tiny
stick in her bill. She snapped her sharp little
eyes at him, but for once her tongue was still.
You see, she couldn’t talk and carry that stick
at the same time. Peter watched her and saw her
disappear in a little hole in a big branch of one
of the old apple-trees. Hardly had she popped
in than she popped out again. This time her mouth
was free, and so was her tongue.
“You’d better stop singing
and help me,” she said to Mr. Wren sharply.
Mr. Wren obediently stopped singing and began to hunt
for a tiny little twig such as Jenny had taken into
that hole.
“Well!” exclaimed Peter.
“It didn’t take you long to find a new
house, did it?”
“Certainly not,” snapped
Jenny “We can’t afford to sit around wasting
time like some folk I know.”
Peter grinned and looked a little
foolish, but he didn’t resent it. You see
he was quite used to that sort of thing. “Aren’t
you afraid that Bully will try to drive you out of
that house?” he ventured.
Jenny Wren’s sharp little eyes
snapped more than ever. “I’d like
to see him try!” said she. “That doorway’s
too small for him to get more than his head in.
And if he tries putting his head in while I’m
inside, I’ll peck his eyes out! She said
this so fiercely that Peter laughed right out.
“I really believe you would,” said he.
“I certainly would,” she
retorted. “Now I can’t stop to talk
to you, Peter Rabbit, because I’m too busy.
Mr. Wren, you ought to know that that stick is too
big.” Jenny snatched it out of Mr. Wren’s
mouth and dropped it on the ground, while Mr. Wren
meekly went to hunt for another. Jenny joined
him, and as Peter watched them he understood why Jenny
is so often spoken of as a feathered busybody.
For some time Peter Rabbit watched
Jenny and Mr. Wren carry sticks and straws into that
little hole until it seemed to him they were trying
to fill the whole inside of the tree. Just watching
them made Peter positively tired. Mr. Wren would
stop every now and then to sing, but Jenny didn’t
waste a minute. In spite of that she managed
to talk just the same.
“I suppose Little Friend the
Song Sparrow got here some time ago,” said she.
Peter nodded. “Yes,”
said he. “I saw him only a day or two ago
over by the Laughing Brook, and although he wouldn’t
say so, I’m sure that he has a nest and eggs
already.”
Jenny Wren jerked her tail and nodded
her head vigorously. “I suppose so,”
said she. “He doesn’t have to make
as long a journey as we do, so he gets here sooner.
Did you ever in your life see such a difference as
there is between Little Friend and his cousin, Bully?
Everybody loves Little Friend.”
Once more Peter nodded. “That’s
right,” said he. “Everybody does
love Little Friend. It makes me feel sort of all
glad inside just to hear him sing. I guess it
makes everybody feel that way. I wonder why we
so seldom see him up here in the Old Orchard.”
“Because he likes damp places
with plenty of bushes better,” replied Jenny
Wren. “It wouldn’t do for everybody
to like the same kind of a place. He isn’t
a tree bird, anyway. He likes to be on or near
the ground. You will never find his nest much
above the ground, not more than a foot or two.
Quite often it is on the ground. Of course I
prefer Mr. Wren’s song, but I must admit that
Little Friend has one of the happiest songs of any
one I know. Then, too, he is so modest, just
like us Wrens.”
Peter turned his head aside to hide
a smile, for if there is anybody who delights in being
both seen and heard it is Jenny Wren, while Little
Friend the Song Sparrow is shy and retiring, content
to make all the world glad with his song, but preferring
to keep out of sight as much as possible.
Jenny chattered on as she hunted for
some more material for her nest. “I suppose
you’ve noticed, said she, “that he and
his wife dress very much alike. They don’t
go in for bright colors any more than we Wrens do.
They show good taste. I like the little brown
caps they wear, and the way their breasts and sides
are streaked with brown. Then, too, they are
such useful folks. It is a pity that that nuisance
of a Bully doesn’t learn something from them.
I suppose they stay rather later than we do in the
fall.”
“Yes,” replied Peter.
“They don’t go until Jack Frost makes them.
I don’t know of any one that we miss more than
we do them.”
“Speaking of the sparrow family,
did you see anything of Whitethroat?” asked
Jenny Wren, as she rested for a moment in the doorway
of her new house and looked down at Peter Rabbit.
Peter’s face brightened.
“I should say I did!” he exclaimed.
“He stopped for a few days on his way north.
I only wish he would stay here all the time.
But he seems to think there is no place like the Great
Woods of the North. I could listen all day to
his song. Do you know what he always seems to
be saying?”
“What?” demanded Jenny.
“I live happ-i-ly, happ-i-ly,
happ-i-ly,” replied Peter. “I guess
he must too, because he makes other people so happy.”
Jenny nodded in her usual emphatic
way. “I don’t know him as well as
I do some of the others,” said she, “but
when I have seen him down in the South he always has
appeared to me to be a perfect gentleman. He
is social, too; he likes to travel with others.”
“I’ve noticed that,”
said Peter. “He almost always has company
when he passes through here. Some of those Sparrows
are so much alike that it is hard for me to tell them
apart, but I can always tell Whitethroat because he
is one of the largest of the tribe and has such a
lovely white throat. He really is handsome with
his black and white cap and that bright yellow spot
before each eye. I am told that he is very dearly
loved up in the north where he makes his home.
They say he sings all the time.”
“I suppose Scratcher the Fox
Sparrow has been along too,” said Jenny.
“He also started sometime before we did.”
“Yes,” replied Peter.
“He spent one night in the dear Old Briar-patch.
He is fine looking too, the biggest of all the Sparrow
tribe, and how he can sing. The only thing
I’ve got against him is the color of his coat.
It always reminds me of Reddy Fox, and I don’t
like anything that reminds me of that fellow.
When he visited us I discovered something about Scratcher
which I don’t believe you know.”
“What?” demanded Jenny rather sharply.
“That when he scratches among
the leaves he uses both feet at once,” cried
Peter triumphantly. “It’s funny to
watch him.”
“Pooh! I knew that,”
retorted Jenny Wren. “What do you suppose
my eyes are make for? I thought you were going
to tell me something I didn’t know.”
Peter looked disappointed.