Peter Rabbit sat in a thicket of young
trees on the edge of the Green Forest. It was
warm and Peter was feeling lazy. He had nothing
in particular to do, and as he knew of no cooler place
he had squatted there to doze a bit and dream a bit.
So far as he knew, Peter was all alone. He hadn’t
seen anybody when he entered that little thicket,
and though he had listened he hadn’t heard a
sound to indicate that he didn’t have that thicket
quite to himself. It was very quiet there, and
though when he first entered he hadn’t the least
intention in the world of going to sleep, it wasn’t
long before he was dozing.
Now Peter is a light sleeper, as all
little people who never know when they may have to
run for their lives must be. By and by he awoke
with a start, and he was very wide awake indeed.
Something had wakened him, though just what it was
he couldn’t say. His long ears stood straight
up as he listened with all his might for some little
sound which might mean danger. His wobbly little
nose wobbled very fast indeed as it tested the air
for the scent of a possible enemy. Very alert
was Peter as he waited.
For a few minutes he heard nothing
and saw nothing. Then, near the outer edge of
the thicket, he heard a great rustling of dry leaves.
It must have been this that had wakened him. For
just an instant Peter was startled, but only for an
instant. His long ears told him at once that
that noise was made by some one scratching among the
leaves, and he knew that no one who did not wear feathers
could scratch like that.
“Now who can that be?”
thought Peter, and stole forward very softly towards
the place from which the sound came. Presently,
as he peeped between the stems of the young trees,
he saw the brown leaves which carpeted the ground
fly this way and that, and in the midst of them was
an exceedingly busy person, a little smaller than
Welcome Robin, scratching away for dear life.
Every now and then he picked up something.
His head, throat, back and breast
were black. Beneath he was white. His sides
were reddish-brown. His tail was black and white,
and the longer feathers of his wings were edged with
white. It was Chewink the Towhee, sometimes called
Ground Robin.
Peter chuckled, but it was a noiseless
chuckle. He kept perfectly still, for it was
fun to watch some one who hadn’t the least idea
that he was being watched. It was quite clear
that Chewink was hungry and that under those dry leaves
he was finding a good meal. His feet were made
for scratching and he certainly knew how to use them.
For some time Peter sat there watching. He had
just about made up his mind that he would make his
presence known and have a bit of morning gossip when,
happening to look out beyond the edge of the little
thicket, he saw something red. It was something
alive, for it was moving very slowly and cautiously
towards the place where Chewink was so busy and forgetful
of everything but his breakfast. Peter knew that
there was only one person with a coat of that color.
It was Reddy Fox, and quite plainly Reddy was hoping
to catch Chewink.
For a second or two Peter was quite
undecided what to do. He couldn’t warn
Chewink without making his own presence known to Reddy
Fox. Of course he could sit perfectly still and
let Chewink be caught, but that was such a dreadful
thought that Peter didn’t consider it for more
than a second or two. He suddenly thumped the
ground with his feet. It was his danger signal
which all his friends know. Then he turned and
scampered lipperty-lipperty-lip to a thick bramble-tangle
not far behind him.
At the sound of that thump Chewink
instantly flew up in a little tree. Then he saw
Reddy Fox and began to scold. As for Reddy, he
looked over towards the bramble-tangle and snarled.
“I’ll get you one of these days, Peter
Rabbit,” said he. “I’ll get
you one of these days and pay you up for cheating
me out of a breakfast.” Without so much
as a glance at Chewink, Reddy turned and trotted off,
trying his best to look dignified and as if he had
never entertained such a thought as trying to catch
Chewink.
>From his perch Chewink watched until
he was sure that Reddy Fox had gone away for good.
Then he called softly, “Towhee! Towhee!
Chewink! Chewink! All is safe now, Peter
Rabbit. Come out and talk with me and let me
tell you how grateful to you I am for saving my life.”
Chewink flew down to the ground and
Peter crept out of the bramble-tangle. “It
wasn’t anything,” declared Peter.
“I saw Reddy and I knew you didn’t, so
of course I gave the alarm. You would have done
the same thing for me. Do you know, Chewink, I’ve
wondered a great deal about you.”
“What have you wondered about me?” asked
Chewink.
“I’ve wondered what family you belong
to,” replied Peter.
Chewink chuckled. “I belong
to a big family,” said he. “I belong
to the biggest family among the birds. It is the
Finch and Sparrow family. There are a lot of
us and a good many of us don’t look much alike,
but still we belong to the same family. I suppose
you know that Rosebreast the Grosbeak and Glory the
Cardinal are members of my family.”
“I didn’t know it,”
replied Peter, “but if you say it is so I suppose
it must be so. It is easier to believe than it
is to believe that you are related to the Sparrows.”
“Nevertheless I am,” retorted Chewink.
“What were you scratching for when I first saw
you?” asked Peter.
“Oh, worms and bugs that hide
under the leaves,” replied Chewink carelessly.
“You have no idea how many of them hide under
dead leaves.”
“Do you eat anything else?” asked Peter.
“Berries and wild fruits in
season,” replied Chewink. “I’m
very fond of them. They make a variety in the
bill of fare.”
“I’ve noticed that I seldom
see you up in the tree tops,” remarked Peter.
“I like the ground better,”
replied Chewink. “I spend more of my time
on the ground than anywhere else.”
“I suppose that means that you
nest on the ground,” ventured Peter.
Chewink nodded. “Of course,”
said he. “As a matter of fact, I’ve
got a nest in this very thicket. Mrs. Towhee is
on it right now, and I suspect she’s worrying
and anxious to know what happened over here when you
warned me about Reddy Fox. I think I must go
over and set her mind at rest.”
Peter was just about to ask if he
might go along and see that nest when a new voice
broke in.
“What are you fellows talking
about?” it demanded, and there flitted just
in front of Peter a little bird the size of a Sparrow
but lovelier than any Sparrow of Peter’s acquaintance.
At first glance he seemed to be all blue, and such
a lovely bright blue. But as he paused for an
instant Peter saw that his wings and tail were mostly
black and that the lovely blue was brightest on his
head and back. It was Indigo the Bunting.
“We were talking about our family,”
replied Chewink. “I was telling Peter that
we belong to the largest family among the birds.”
“But you didn’t say anything
about Indigo,” interrupted Peter. “Do
you mean to say that he belongs to the same family?”
“I surely do,” replied
Indigo. “I’m rather closely related
to the Sparrow branch. Don’t I look like
a Sparrow?”
Peter looked at Indigo closely.
“In size and shape you do,” he confessed,
“but just the same I should never in the world
have thought of connecting you with the Sparrows.”
“How about me?” asked
another voice, and a little brown bird flew up beside
Indigo, twitching her tail nervously. She looked
very Sparrow-like indeed, so much so, that if Peter
had not seen her with her handsome mate, for she was
Mrs. Indigo, he certainly would have taken her for
a Sparrow.
Only on her wings and tail was there
any of the blue which made Indigo’s coat so
beautiful, and this was only a faint tinge.
“I’ll have to confess
that so far as you are concerned it isn’t hard
to think of you as related to the Sparrows,”
declared Peter. “Don’t you sometimes
wish you were as handsomely dressed as Indigo?”
Mrs. Indigo shook her head in a most
decided way. “Never!” she declared.
“I have worries enough raising a family as it
is, but if I had a coat like his I wouldn’t
have a moment of peace. You have no idea how
I worry about him sometimes. You ought to be
thankful, Peter Rabbit, that you haven’t a coat
like his. It attracts altogether too much attention.”
Peter tried to picture himself in
a bright blue coat and laughed right out at the mere
thought, and the others joined with him. Then
Indigo flew up to the top of a tall tree not far away
and began to sing. It was a lively song and Peter
enjoyed it thoroughly. Mrs. Indigo took this
opportunity to slip away unobserved, and when Peter
looked around for Chewink, he too had disappeared.
He had gone to tell Mrs. Cbewink that he was quite
safe and that she bad nothing to worry about.