WHERE OLD MR. BOB-CAT LEFT HIS HONOR
Of all those who are forever trying
to catch Peter Rabbit, he fears none more than Yowler
the Bob-cat. And from that fear has grown hate.
You will find it true all through life that hate often
springs from great fear. Peter isn’t much
given to hate, but he does hate Yowler the Bob-cat.
It is partly because of his fear of Yowler, but it
is still more because he feels that Yowler is not
fair in his hunting. He has no honor. There
are many others whom Peter fears,—Reddy
Fox, Old Man Coyote, Hooty the Owl,—and
with very good reason. But Peter considers that
these hunt him fairly. He knows when and where
to be on the watch for them.
But with Yowler it is altogether different.
Yowler hides beside one of Peter’s favorite
little paths, and there he waits patiently for unsuspecting
Peter to come along. He waits and watches much
as Black Pussy, who is a cousin of Yowler, waits and
watches at a mousehole. Peter feels that it doesn’t
give him a chance, and everybody is entitled to at
least a chance to live.
“I hate him! hate him! hate
him!” exclaimed Peter fiercely, as he crawled
under the very middle of a great pile of brush after
the narrowest of narrow escapes. He had been
hopping along one of his favorite little paths without
a thought of danger. Presently he came to a little
branch path. There he hesitated. He had intended
to keep on along the main path, but suddenly he had
a feeling that it would be better to take the branch
path. He knew no reason why he shouldn’t
keep on as he had planned. It was just a feeling
that it would be better to take the other path, a
feeling without any real reason. So he hesitated
and finally turned down the little branch path.
As he did so he caught a glimpse of a brown form moving
stealthily from behind a log farther up the main little
path. It was moving swiftly in the direction of
the little branch path. That glimpse was enough
for Peter. That stealthy form could be but one
person—Yowler the Bob-cat. He turned
and darted back the way he had come and then off to
one side to the great pile of brush under which he
had crawled.
“Who is it you hate?” asked a voice.
For just a second Peter was startled,
then he recognized the voice of Mrs. Grouse, one of
his very best friends. “Yowler the Bob-cat,”
said he as fiercely as before.
“I don’t love him myself,”
replied Mrs. Grouse. “I suspected that he
was somewhere about, and that is why I am here.
Did you see him?”
“Yes,” said Peter, “I
saw him. He was hiding beside my favorite little
path, and it is a wonder I didn’t hop straight
into his jaws. That fellow doesn’t hunt
fairly. He doesn’t give us a chance.
He hasn’t any honor.”
“Honor!” exclaimed Mrs.
Grouse. “Honor! Of course he hasn’t
any honor. There hasn’t been any honor
in Yowler’s family since old Mr. Bob-cat, the
first of all the Bob-cats, left his honor in Turkey
Wood, way back in the days when the world was young,
and failed to get it again. Honor! Of course
Yowler hasn’t any. What could you expect?”
At once Peter was all ears. “I’ve
never heard about that,” said he. “Tell
me about it, Mrs. Grouse. We’ve got to stay
right where we are for a long time to make sure that
Yowler has given us up and gone away, so you will
have plenty of time to tell me the story. Where
was Turkey Wood, and how did old Mr. Bob-cat happen
to leave his honor there?”
“He didn’t happen to;
he did it deliberately,” replied Mrs. Grouse.
“You see, it was like this: In the beginning
of things, when Old Mother Nature made the first little
people and the first big people of the Green Forest
and the Green Meadows, she was too busy to watch over
them all the time, so for a while she put them on
their honor not to harm one another or interfere with
one another in any way, for she wanted them to live
in peace and happiness and raise families to people
the Great World.
“Now it chanced that Mr. and
Mrs. Gobbler, the first of the Turkey family, chose
a certain little grove of trees in which to make their
home, and it became known as Turkey Wood. There,
in course of time, Mrs. Turkey made her nest on the
ground, well hidden among some bushes, and in it laid
twelve big eggs. It was the day on which she laid
the twelfth big egg that old Mr. Bob-cat, who, of
course, wasn’t old then, took it into his head
to prowl about in Turkey Wood. Already Mr. Bob-cat
had begun to form a sneaky habit of stealth.
He was very fond of watching his neighbors to find
out what they were about, and it was this fondness
of minding the business of other people instead of
his own that was making him sneaky and stealthy, for
of course he didn’t want any one to know what
he was doing.
“It happened that as he stole
into Turkey Wood, Mrs. Gobbler left her nest to get
a bite to eat. Mr. Bob-cat saw her, but she didn’t
see him. He crouched flat until she was out of
sight.
“‘She seemed mighty careful
about how she slipped out of those bushes,’
thought Mr. Bob-cat. ’She acted as if she
didn’t want to be seen. I wonder why.
I wonder if she has a secret hidden in those bushes.
I suppose the way to find out is to look.’
“First making sure that no one
saw him, Mr. Bob-cat crept in his sneaky way into
the bushes, and it didn’t take him long to find
that nest with the twelve big eggs. He didn’t
know what they were, for they were the first eggs
he had ever seen. He stared at them and wondered
if they were good to eat. He glanced this way
and that way to be sure that no one was watching him.
“‘Don’t touch them,’
warned something inside of him. ’These belong
to Mrs. Gobbler, and Old Mother Nature has put you
on your honor not to interfere with others or their
affairs.’
“‘It won’t do any
harm just to touch them and see what they are like,’
said another little tempting voice inside of him.
“‘Remember your honor,’ warned the
first little voice.
“‘Bother my honor!
I’m not going to do any harm,’ muttered
Mr. Bob-cat, and picked up one of the eggs in his
mouth. He tried it with his teeth to see if it
was hard, and of course he put his teeth right through
the shell. He started to put it back in a hurry,
but just then he noticed a good taste in his mouth.
The inside of that egg was good to eat, very good
indeed!
“‘One won’t be missed,’
thought Mr. Bob-cat, and then, fearing that Mrs. Gobbler
would return, he bounded away, taking the egg with
him.
“When Mrs. Gobbler returned,
she did miss that egg. She looked all about for
it, but there was nothing to show what had become of
it. With a troubled mind she began to sit on
her eggs. She was so worried that she didn’t
leave them until she simply had to get something
to eat.
“Meanwhile Mr. Bob-cat had eaten
that egg, and it had tasted so good that he could
think of nothing but how he could get another.
So at the first opportunity he sneaked back to Turkey
Wood, and without making a sound crept in among the
bushes until he could see Mrs. Gobbler sitting on
her eggs. There he lay and watched and watched
until Mrs. Gobbler left to get something to eat.
No sooner was she out of sight than Mr. Bob-cat stole
to the nest.
“‘Remember your honor,’ warned the
little voice inside.
“‘Bother honor. I’d
rather have an egg,’ muttered Mr. Bob-cat, and
pulled one out of the nest. He bit a hole in one
end and sucked out the contents. It was so good
he took another. This led to a third, and finally
Mr. Bob-cat had sucked every one of those eggs.
Then silently he sneaked away—away from
Turkey Wood to a distant part of the Green Forest.
Behind him in Turkey Wood he left a nestful of empty
shells and his honor.
“‘Nobody knows who did
it, and nobody ever will find out,’ thought Mr.
Bob-cat, but all the time he knew that he had left
his honor behind, and this made him more sneaky than
ever. He never would meet any one face to face.
You know that is something that one who has lost his
honor never can do. It wasn’t long before
all his neighbors knew that he was without honor,
and so would have nothing to do with him. They
shunned him. He grew to be more and more of a
sneak. And all the time he believed that no one
knew what he had done or where he had left his honor.
“But Old Mother Nature knew.
Of course Mrs. Gobbler told her what had happened
to her eggs. Old Mother Nature told her to make
a new nest and hide it more carefully than before,
which Mrs. Gobbler did and hatched out ten fine young
Gobblers. Meanwhile Old Mother Nature went about
her business, but all the time she was watching to
see who would fail to look her straight in the face.
The first time she met Mr. Bob-cat he tried to slip
past unseen. When Old Mother Nature stepped in
front of him, he couldn’t look her in the face,
try as he would.
“‘Ah-ha!’ said she.
’You are the one who left his honor in Turkey
Wood. From this time forth you shall be an outcast,
friendless and alone, hated by every one.’
“And so it was, and has been
ever since. And so it is with Yowler today.
You said truly, Peter, that he hasn’t any honor.
Isn’t it dreadful?”
And Peter agreed that it is.