Running over to the Old Orchard very
early in the morning for a little gossip with Jenny
Wren and his other friends there had become a regular
thing with Peter Rabbit. He was learning a great
many things, and some of them were most surprising.
Now two of Peter’s oldest and
best friends in the Old Orchard were Winsome Bluebird
and Welcome Robin. Every spring they arrived
pretty nearly together, though Winsome Bluebird usually
was a few days ahead of Welcome Robin. This year
Winsome had arrived while the snow still lingered
in patches. He was, as he always is, the herald
of sweet Mistress Spring. And when Peter had heard
for the first time Winsome’s soft, sweet whistle,
which seemed to come from nowhere in particular and
from everywhere in general, he had kicked up his long
hind legs from pure joy. Then, when a few days
later he had heard Welcome Robin’s joyous message
of “Cheer-up! Cheer-up! Cheer-up!
Cheer-up! Cheer!” from the tiptop of a tall
tree, he had known that Mistress Spring really had
arrived.
Peter loves Winsome Bluebird and Welcome
Robin, just as everybody else does, and he had known
them so long and so well that he thought he knew all
there was to know about them. He would have been
very indignant had anybody told him he didn’t.
“Those cousins don’t look
much alike, do they?” remarked Jenny Wren, as
she poked her head out of her house to gossip with
Peter.
“What cousins?” demanded
Peter, staring very hard in the direction in which
Jenny Wren was looking.
“Those two sitting on the fence
over there. Where are your eyes, Peter?”
replied Jenny rather sharply.
Peter stared harder than ever.
On one post sat Winsome Bluebird, and on another post
sat Welcome Robin. “I don’t see anybody
but Winsome and Welcome, and they are not even related,”
replied Peter with a little puzzled frown.
“Tut, tut, tut, tut, tut, Peter!”
exclaimed Jenny Wren. “Tut, tut, tut, tut,
tut! Who told you any such nonsense as that?
Of course they are related. They are cousins.
I thought everybody knew that. They belong to
the same family that Melody the Thrush and all the
other Thrushes belong to. That makes them all
cousins.”
“What?” exclaimed Peter,
looking as if he didn’t believe a word of what
Jenny Wren had said. Jenny repeated, and still
Peter looked doubtful.
Then Jenny lost her temper, a thing
she does very easily. “If you don’t
believe me, go ask one of them,” she snapped,
and disappeared inside her house, where Peter could
hear her scolding away to herself.
The more he thought of it, the more
this struck Peter as good advice. So he hopped
over to the foot of the fence post on which Winsome
Bluebird was sitting. “Jenny Wren says that
you and Welcome Robin are cousins. She doesn’t
know what she is talking about, does she?” asked
Peter.
Winsome chuckled. It was a soft,
gentle chuckle. “Yes,” said he, nodding
his head, “we are. You can trust that little
busybody to know what she is talking about, every
time. I sometimes think she knows more about
other people’s affairs than about her own.
Welcome and I may not look much alike, but we are cousins
just the same. Don’t you think Welcome
is looking unusually fine this spring?”
“Not a bit finer than you are
yourself, Winsome,” replied Peter politely.
“I just love that sky-blue coat of yours.
What is the reason that Mrs. Bluebird doesn’t
wear as bright a coat as you do?”
“Go ask Jenny Wren,” chuckled
Winsome Bluebird, and before Peter could say another
word he flew over to the roof of Farmer Brown’s
house.
Back scampered Peter to tell Jenny
Wren that he was sorry he had doubted her and that
he never would again. Then he begged Jenny to
tell him why it was that Mrs. Bluebird was not as brightly
dressed as was Winsome.
“Mrs. Bluebird, like most mothers,
is altogether too busy to spend much time taking care
of her clothes; and fine clothes need a lot of care,”
replied Jenny. “Besides, when Winsome is
about he attracts all the attention and that gives
her a chance to slip in and out of her nest without
being noticed. I don’t believe you know,
Peter Rabbit, where Winsome’s nest is.”
Peter had to admit that he didn’t,
although he had tried his best to find out by watching
Winsome. “I think it’s over in that
little house put up by Farmer Brown’s boy,”
he ventured. “I saw both Mr. and Mrs. Bluebird
go in it when they first came, and I’ve seen
Winsome around it a great deal since, so I guess it
is there.”
“So you guess it is there!”
mimicked Jenny Wren. “Well, your guess
is quite wrong, Peter; quite wrong. As a matter
of fact, it is in one of those old fence posts.
But just which one I am not going to tell you.
I will leave that for you to find out. Mrs. Bluebird
certainly shows good sense. She knows a good house
when she sees it. The hole in that post is one
of the best holes anywhere around here. If I
had arrived here early enough I would have taken it
myself. But Mrs. Bluebird already had her nest
built in it and four eggs there, so there was nothing
for me to do but come here. Just between you
and me, Peter, I think the Bluebirds show more sense
in nest building than do their cousins the Robins.
There is nothing like a house with stout walls and
a doorway just big enough to get in and out of comfortably.”
Peter nodded quite as if he understood
all about the advantages of a house with walls.
“That reminds me,” said he. “The
other day I saw Welcome Robin getting mud and carrying
it away. Pretty soon he was joined by Mrs. Robin,
and she did the same thing. They kept it up till
I got tired of watching them. What were they
doing with that mud?”
“Building their nest, of course,
stupid,” retorted Jenny. “Welcome
Robin, with that black head, beautiful russet breast,
black and white throat and yellow bill, not to mention
the proud way in which he carries himself, certainly
is a handsome fellow, and Mrs. Robin is only a little
less handsome. How they can be content to build
the kind of a home they do is more than I can understand.
People think that Mr. Wren and I use a lot of trash
in our nest. Perhaps we do, but I can tell you
one thing, and that is it is clean trash. It
is just sticks and clean straws, and before I lay
my eggs I see to it that my nest is lined with feathers.
More than this, there isn’t any cleaner housekeeper
than I am, if I do say it.
“Welcome Robin is a fine looker
and a fine singer, and everybody loves him. But
when it comes to housekeeping, he and Mrs. Robin are
just plain dirty. They make the foundation of
their nest of mud,—plain, common, ordinary
mud. They cover this with dead grass, and sometimes
there is mighty little of this over the inside walls
of mud. I know because I’ve seen the inside
of their nest often. Anybody with any eyes at
all can find their nest. More than once I’ve
known them to have their nest washed away in a heavy
rain, or have it blown down in a high wind. Nothing
like that ever happens to Winsome Bluebird or to me.”
Jenny disappeared inside her house,
and Peter waited for her to come out again. Welcome
Robin flew down on the ground, ran a few steps, and
then stood still with his head on one side as if listening.
Then he reached down and tugged at something, and
presently out of the ground came a long, wriggling
angleworm. Welcome gulped it down and ran on
a few steps, then once more paused to listen.
This time he turned and ran three or four steps to
the right, where he pulled another worm out of the
ground.
“He acts as if he heard those
worms in the ground,” said Peter, speaking aloud
without thinking.
“He does,” said Jenny
Wren, poking her head out of her doorway just as Peter
spoke. “How do you suppose he would find
them when they are in the ground if he didn’t
hear them?”
“Can you hear them?” asked Peter.
“I’ve never tried, and
I don’t intend to waste my time trying,”
retorted Jenny. “Welcome Robin may enjoy
eating them, but for my part I want something smaller
and daintier, young grasshoppers, tender young beetles,
small caterpillars, bugs and spiders.”
Peter had to turn his head aside to
hide the wry face he just had to make at the mention
of such things as food. “Is that all Welcome
Robin eats?” he asked innocently.
“I should say not,” laughed
Jenny. “He eats a lot of other kinds of
worms, and he just dearly loves fruit like strawberries
and cherries and all sorts of small berries.
Well, I can’t stop here talking any longer.
I’m going to tell you a secret, Peter, if you’ll
promise not to tell.”
Of course Peter promised, and Jenny
leaned so far down that Peter wondered how she could
keep from falling as she whispered, “I’ve
got seven eggs in my nest, so if you don’t see
much of me for the next week or more, you’ll
know why. I’ve just got to sit on those
eggs and keep them warm.”