HAPPY JACK DOES SOME THINKING
To call another a thief doesn’t make him one.
Happy Jack.
Happy Jack sat up in a chestnut tree,
and his face was very sober. The fact is, Happy
Jack was doing some very hard thinking. This is
so very unusual for him that Sammy Jay stopped to
ask if he was sick. You see he is naturally a
happy-go-lucky little scamp, and that is one reason
that he is called Happy Jack. But this morning
he was thinking and thinking hard, so hard, in fact,
that he almost lost his temper when Sammy Jay interrupted
his thoughts with such a foolish question.
What was he thinking about? Can
you not guess? Why, he was thinking about those
big, fat hickory nuts that Striped Chipmunk had had
for his Thanksgiving dinner, and how Striped Chipmunk
had given him some of them to bring home. He
was very sure that they were the very same nuts that
he had watched grow big and fat in the top of the tall
hickory tree and then had knocked down while chasing
his cousin, Chatterer. When they had reached
the ground and found the nuts gone, Happy Jack had
at once suspected that Striped Chipmunk had taken
them, and now he felt sure about it.
But all at once things looked very
different to Happy Jack, and the more he thought about
how he had acted, the more ashamed of himself he grew.
“There certainly must have been
enough of those nuts for all of us, and if I hadn’t
been so greedy we might all have had a share.
As it is, I’ve got only those that Striped Chipmunk
gave me, and Chatterer has only those that Striped
Chipmunk gave him. It must be that that sharp
little cousin of mine with the striped coat has got
the rest, and I guess he deserves them.”
Then all of a sudden Happy Jack realized
how Striped Chipmunk had fooled him into thinking
that the storehouse of Chatterer was his storehouse,
and Happy Jack began to laugh. The more he thought
of it, the harder he laughed.
“The joke certainly is on me!”
he exclaimed. “The joke certainly is on
me, and it served me right. Hereafter I’ll
mind my own business. If I had spent half as
much time looking for hickory nuts as I did looking
for Striped Chipmunk’s storehouse, I would be
ready for winter now, and Chatterer couldn’t
call me a thief.”
Then he laughed again as he thought
how Striped Chipmunk must have enjoyed seeing him
pulled out of Chatterer’s storehouse by the tail.
“What’s the joke?”
asked Bobby Coon, who happened along just then.
“I’ve just learned a lesson,” replied
Happy Jack.
“What is it?” asked Bobby.
Happy Jack grinned as he answered:
“I’ve found that
greed will never, never pay.
It makes one cross and ugly,
and it drives one’s friends away.
And being always selfish and
always wanting more,
One’s very apt to lose
the things that one has had before.”
“Pooh!” said Bobby Coon.
“Have you just found that out? I learned
that a long time ago.”