WHERE SEEK-SEEK GOT HIS PRETTY COAT
Peter Rabbit never will forget the
first time he saw Seek-Seek the Ground Squirrel, often
wrongly called Gopher or Gopher Squirrel, but whose
real name is Spermophile, which means seed eater.
Peter won’t forget that meeting, because of
the funny mistake he made and the foolish feeling
he had as a result of it. You see, Peter didn’t
know that there was such a person as Seek-Seek.
He was hopping along across the Green Meadows in his
usual happy-go-lucky way when, right in front of him,
he saw what at first he took to be a stake, a small
stake, driven in the ground. But as he drew nearer,
it suddenly moved. It wasn’t a stake at
all, but a very lively small person in a striped coat
who had been sitting up very straight and motionless.
“Hello, Striped Chipmunk!
What are you doing way out here so far from the old
stone wall?” exclaimed Peter.
The small person in the striped coat
whirled and faced Peter with snapping eyes. “Don’t
call me Striped Chipmunk, and don’t call me
Gopher!” said he very fiercely for so small a
person. “I am neither one. I am Seek-Seek
the Ground Squirrel, and I’ll thank you to call
me by my own name. I am getting everlastingly
tired of being called the names of other people.”
Peter looked very foolish. “I
beg your pardon,” said he. “I do indeed.
I’m sorry. Perhaps you don’t know
it, but you look very much like Striped Chipmunk,
who is one of my best friends. You look so much
like him that I thought you must be him. I wonder
if you are related to him.”
“Certainly I’m related
to him, or he is related to me, whichever way you
please to put it,” snapped Seek-Seek. “We
are cousins. But he is a Rock Squirrel, and I
am a Ground Squirrel which is altogether different.
You don’t find me where there are rocks and
stones in the way if I know it. Besides, if you
used your eyes, you would see that we are not dressed
alike either. Just because we both happen to wear
stripes is no reason why we should be mistaken for
each other.”
Peter looked at Seek-Seek more closely
than he had, and at once he made a discovery.
“Why!” he exclaimed, “your coat has
more stripes than Striped Chipmunk’s has, hasn’t
it?”
“I should hope so,” retorted Seek-Seek.
“And it has little rows of spots,
too!” cried Peter. “If I had noticed
those spots at first, I wouldn’t have made such
a foolish mistake. I do believe that your coat
is prettier than Striped Chipmunk’s, and I had
thought his as pretty as a coat can be.”
Seek-Seek looked rather pleased, though
he tried not to. “Huh!” he sniffed.
“Of course it’s prettier. It took
you a long time to find it out. I wouldn’t
trade coats with Striped Chipmunk or anybody else of
my acquaintance.”
“Neither would I if I were in
your place,” declared Peter. “I wish
Old Mother Nature had given me a coat like that.”
He said this so wistfully that Seek-Seek, who had
started to laugh, turned his head so that Peter might
not know it. “I’m afraid it wouldn’t
look so well on one as big as you,” he replied.
“Anyway, you wouldn’t be able to hide from
your enemies as you can now.”
“That’s so,” said
Peter thoughtfully. “I would be easily seen
in a coat like that, for a fact. I hadn’t
thought of that. I guess Old Mother Nature knows
best. I—I wonder how she ever happened
to think of a coat like yours.”
Seek-Seek chuckled. He had quite
forgotten that he had felt offended because Peter
had mistaken him for his cousin, Striped Chipmunk.
He enjoyed Peter’s admiration of his coat.
He is naturally rather talkative, and like most folks
he enjoyed talking about himself.
“This coat,” said he,
“has been in the family a very great while.
Of course, I don’t mean this particular coat
that I am wearing,” he hastened to add, as he
saw Peter beginning to grin. “I mean this
style of coat has been in the family a very long time.
My father was dressed just as I am. So was his
father and—”
“I know,” interrupted
Peter. “You were going to say that so were
all your grandfathers way back to the days when the
world was young, and Old Mother Nature made the very
first one of your family. It’s funny to
me that all the interesting things happened such a
long time ago. Now wasn’t that what you
were going to say?”
Seek-Seek admitted that it was, and
looked a little disappointed that Peter had guessed
it. But a second later he felt better when Peter
asked him very politely but very earnestly for the
story of how the first Ground Squirrel got such a
pretty coat. “There is a story. I know
there is a story,” declared Peter. “Won’t
you tell it to me please, Seek-Seek?”
Now Peter didn’t want to hear
it any more than Seek-Seek wanted to tell it, so while
Peter squatted down comfortably, Seek-Seek sat up very
straight and began the story.
“First of all, you must know
that Seek-Seek is an old family name which has been
handed down just as the pattern of my coat has been.
The very first of all my great-great-grandfathers
was called Seek-Seek. When Old Mother Nature
made Seek-Seek she must have had two families in mind
at one time, the Marmot family and the Squirrel family,
for she made him a little like each, so that in his
looks he sort of fitted in between the two. Mother
Nature told him that he was a member of the Squirrel
family and set him free to find a place for himself
in the Great World.
“Now it didn’t take Grandfather
Seek-Seek long to find out that though he might be
a member of the Squirrel family, Old Mother Nature
had failed to furnish him with the right kind of claws
for climbing trees, as most of his cousins did.
True, he could climb a little, but it was not easy,
and he felt anything but comfortable off the ground.
But if those claws were of little use for climbing
they were splendid tools for digging, just as are
the claws of the Marmot family. So Old Mother
Nature must have been thinking of the Marmots when
she fashioned those claws.
“At first Seek-Seek wandered
about trying to find a place for himself in the Great
World. Being a Squirrel, he tried to live as did
his cousins, Mr. Red Squirrel and Mr. Gray Squirrel,
but on account of those claws he didn’t make
much of a success of it. Then one day he met Mr.
Chipmunk. They stopped and stared at each other
in surprise because, you know, their coats were so
much alike. At that time Seek-Seek was wearing
plain stripes, just as Striped Chipmunk does to this
day.
“‘What do you mean by
stealing my coat?’ demanded Mr. Chipmunk angrily.
“‘I was just about to
ask you the same question,’ retorted Seek-Seek.
“Mr. Chipmunk had a sharp reply
right on the tip of his tongue, but he checked it
just in time. ’What’s the use of quarreling
over something neither of us had anything to do with?’
said he. ’It must be that we are cousins.
Where do you live?’
“Seek-Seek explained that he
didn’t live anywhere in particular but was trying
to find his place in the Great World. He told
how he had tried to live like the other Squirrels
and failed. ‘I know! I know all about
it,’ interrupted Mr. Chipmunk. ’I’ve
been all through it. The place for us is on the
ground or at least close to it. Come see how I
live.’
“So Seek-Seek went with Mr.
Chipmunk and saw how he lived among the rocks and
stones. For a time he tried living there too,
but he didn’t like the rocks and stones much
better than he did the trees. Besides, all the
neighbors were forever mistaking him for Mr. Chipmunk
because they looked so much alike, and he didn’t
like this. One day he wandered out on the Green
Meadows. It was very lovely out there among the
grasses and flowers. He wandered farther and
farther, and the farther he wandered the better he
liked it. By and by he came to the home of Yap-Yap
the Prairie Dog, who is one of the Marmot family, as
you know.
“‘A home like that would
suit me,’ thought Grandfather Seek-Seek wistfully,
as he journeyed on. ’I wonder if I could
dig one. I believe I’ll try.’
“So when he found a place to
suit him he began to dig. There were no stones
to hurt his feet and dull his nails, and he actually
enjoyed digging. So he dug and dug until he had
a wonderful underground home. All about were
plenty of seeds and tender grasses to eat, and he was
happy. He had found his place in the Great World.
Then one day along came Old Mother Nature. ‘Hello,
Mr. Chipmunk,’ she exclaimed, as she caught
sight of his striped coat, ‘what are you doing
way out here?’
“Then she discovered her mistake.
‘Dear me,’ said she, ’this will never
do at all. If I can’t tell my own children
apart, how can I expect others to? Your coat
is altogether too much like that of Mr. Chipmunk.
I must change it. I certainly must change it.’
“She leaned over and lightly
tapped Seek-Seek right down the length of the broadest
brown stripe of his coat. Wherever her finger
touched a little spot of yellow was left. Then
she did the same thing to each of the other brown
stripes. When she had finished Grandfather Seek-Seek
had a coat exactly like the one I am now wearing,
and his cup of happiness was filled to the brim.
From that day on he never was mistaken for Mr. Chipmunk
or any one else. That’s the story of my
coat, and now I must get busy collecting seeds for
my storehouse,” concluded Seek-Seek. “Come
and see me again, Peter Rabbit.”
“I will,” replied Peter,
as he started for the dear Old Briar-patch to tell
Mrs. Peter all about Seek-Seek and his pretty coat.