Peter Rabbit likes winter. At
least he doesn’t mind it so very much, even
though he has to really work for a living. Perhaps
it is a good thing that he does, for he might grow
too fat to keep out of the way of Reddy Fox.
You see when the snow is deep Peter is forced to eat
whatever he can, and very often there isn’t
much of anything for him but the bark of young trees.
It is at such times that Peter gets into mischief,
for there is no bark he likes better than that of
young fruit trees. Now you know what happens
when the bark is taken off all the way around the trunk
of a tree. That tree dies. It dies for the
simple reason that it is up the inner layer of bark
that the life-giving sap travels in the spring and
summer. Of course, when a strip of bark has been
taken off all the way around near the base of a tree,
the sap cannot go up and the tree must die.
Now up near the Old Orchard Farmer
Brown had set out a young orchard. Peter knew
all about that young orchard, for he had visited it
many times in the summer. Then there had been
plenty of sweet clover and other green things to eat,
and Peter had never been so much as tempted to sample
the bark of those young trees. But now things
were very different, and it was very seldom that Peter
knew what it was to have a full stomach. He kept
thinking of that young orchard. He knew that if
he were wise he would keep away from there. But
the more he thought of it the more it seemed to him
that he just must have some of that tender young bark.
So just at dusk one evening, Peter started for the
young orchard.
Peter got there in safety and his
eyes sparkled as he hopped over to the nearest young
tree. But when he reached it, Peter had a dreadful
disappointment. All around the trunk of that young
tree was wire netting. Peter couldn’t get
even a nibble of that bark. He tried the next
tree with no better result. Then he hurried on
from tree to tree, always with the same result.
You see Farmer Brown knew all about Peter’s
liking for the bark of young fruit trees, and he had
been wise enough to protect his young orchard.
At last Peter gave up and hopped over
to the Old Orchard. As he passed a certain big
tree he was startled by a voice. “What’s
the matter, Peter?” said the voice. “You
don’t look happy.”
Peter stopped short and stared up
in the big apple-tree. Look as he would he couldn’t
see anybody. Of course there wasn’t a leaf
on that tree, and he could see all through it.
Peter blinked and felt foolish. He knew that
had there been any one sitting on any one of those
branches he couldn’t have helped seeing him.
“Don’t look so high, Peter;
don’t look so high,” said the voice with
a chuckle. This time it sounded as if it came
right out of the trunk of the tree. Peter stared
at the trunk and then suddenly laughed right out.
Just a few feet above the ground was a good sized
hole in the tree, and poking his head out of it was
a funny little fellow with big eyes and a hooked beak.
“You certainly did fool me that
time, Spooky,” cried Peter. “I ought
to have recognized your voice, but I didn’t.”
Spooky the Screech Owl, for that is
who it was, came out of the hole in the tree and without
a sound from his wings flew over and perched just
above Peter’s head. He was a little fellow,
not over eight inches high, but there was no mistaking
the family to which he belonged. In fact he looked
very much like a small copy of Hooty the Great Horned
Owl, so much so that Peter felt a little cold shiver
run over him, although he had nothing in the world
to fear from Spooky.
His head seemed to be almost as big
around as his body, and he seemed to leave no neck
at all. He was dressed in bright reddish-brown,
with little streaks and bars of black. Underneath
he was whitish, with little streaks and bars of black
and brown. On each side of his head was a tuft
of feathers. They looked like ears and some people
think they are ears, which is a mistake. His
eyes were round and yellow with a fierce hungry look
in them. His bill was small and almost hidden
among the feathers of his face, but it was hooked
just like the bill of Hooty. As he settled himself
he turned his head around until he could look squarely
behind him, then brought it back again so quickly that
to Peter it looked as if it had gone clear around.
You see Spooky’s eyes are fixed in their sockets
and he cannot move them from side to side. He
has to turn his whole head in order to see to one side
or the other.
“You haven’t told me yet
why you look so unhappy, Peter,” said Spooky.
“Isn’t an empty stomach
enough to make any fellow unhappy?” retorted
Peter rather shortly.
Spooky chuckled. “I’ve
got an empty stomach myself, Peter,” said he,
“but it isn’t making me unhappy. I
have a feeling that somewhere there is a fat Mouse
waiting for me.”
Just then Peter remembered what Jenny
Wren had told him early in the spring of how Spooky
the Screech Owl lives all the year around in a hollow
tree, and curiosity made him forget for the time being
that he was hungry. “Did you live in that
hole all summer, Spooky?” he asked.
Spooky nodded solemnly. “I’ve
lived in that hollow summer and winter for three years,”
said he.
Peter’s eyes opened very wide.
“And till now I never even guessed it,”
he exclaimed. “Did you raise a family there?”
“I certainly did,” replied
Spooky. “Mrs. Spooky and I raised a family
of four as fine looking youngsters as you ever have
seen. They’ve gone out into the Great World
to make their own living now. Two were dressed
just like me and two were gray.”
“What’s that?” exclaimed Peter.
“I said that two were dressed
just like me and two were gray,” replied Spooky
rather sharply.
“That’s funny,” Peter exclaimed.
“What’s funny?” snapped Spooky rather
crossly.
“Why that all four were not dressed alike,”
said Peter.
“There’s nothing funny
about it,” retorted Spooky, and snapped his
bill sharply with a little cracking sound. “We
Screech Owls believe in variety. Some of us are
gray and some of us are reddish-brown. It is
a case of where you cannot tell a person just by the
color of his clothes.”
Peter nodded as if he quite understood,
although he couldn’t understand at all.
“I’m ever so pleased to find you living
here,” said he politely. “You see,
in winter the Old Orchard is rather a lonely place.
I don’t see how you get enough to eat when there
are so few birds about.”
“Birds!” snapped Spooky.
“What have birds to do with it?”
“Why, don’t you live on
birds?” asked Peter innocently.
“I should say not. I guess
I would starve if I depended on birds for my daily
food,” retorted Spooky. “I catch a
Sparrow now and then, to be sure, but usually it is
an English Sparrow, and I consider that I am doing
the Old Orchard a good turn every time I am lucky
enough to catch one of the family of Bully the English
Sparrow. But I live mostly on Mice and Shrews
in winter and in summer I eat a lot of grasshoppers
and other insects. If it wasn’t for me
and my relatives I guess Mice would soon overrun the
Great World. Farmer Brown ought to be glad I’ve
come to live in the Old Orchard and I guess he is,
for Farmer Brown’s boy knows all about this
house of mine and never disturbs me. Now if you’ll
excuse me I think I’ll fly over to Farmer Brown’s
young orchard. I ought to find a fat Mouse or
two trying to get some of the bark from those young
trees.”
“Huh!” exclaimed Peter.
They can try all they want to, but they won’t
get any; I can tell you that.”
Spooky’s round yellow eyes twinkled.
“It must be you have been trying to get some
of that bark yourself,” said he.
Peter didn’t say anything but
he looked guilty, and Spooky once more chuckled as
he spread his wings and flew away so soundlessly that
he seemed more like a drifting shadow than a bird.
Then Peter started for a certain swamp he knew of
where he would be sure to find enough bark to stay
his appetite.