WHY PETER RABBIT CANNOT FOLD HIS HANDS
Happy Jack Squirrel sat with his hands
folded across his white waistcoat. He is very
fond of sitting with his hands folded that way.
A little way from him sat Peter Rabbit. Peter
was sitting up very straight, but his hands dropped
right down in front. Happy Jack noticed it.
“Why don’t you fold your
hands the way I do, Peter Rabbit?” shouted Happy
Jack.
“I—I—don’t want
to,” stammered Peter.
“You mean you can’t!” jeered Happy
Jack.
Peter pretended not to hear, and a
few minutes later he hopped away towards the dear
Old Briar-patch, lipperty-lipperty-lip. Happy
Jack watched him go, and there was a puzzled look
in Happy Jack’s eyes.
“I really believe he can’t
fold his hands,” said Happy Jack to himself,
but speaking aloud.
“He can’t, and none of
his family can,” said a gruff voice.
Happy Jack turned to find Old Mr.
Toad sitting in the Lone Little Path.
“Why not?” asked Happy Jack.
“Ask Grandfather Frog; he knows,”
replied Old Mr. Toad, and started on about his business.
And this is how it happens that Grandfather
Frog told this story to the little meadow and forest
people gathered around him on the bank of the Smiling
Pool.
“Chug-a-rum!” said Grandfather
Frog. “Old Mr. Rabbit, the grandfather
a thousand times removed of Peter Rabbit, was always
getting into trouble. Yes, Sir, old Mr. Rabbit
was always getting into trouble. Seemed like
he wouldn’t be happy if he couldn’t get
into trouble. It was all because he was so dreadfully
curious about other people’s business, just
as Peter Rabbit is now. It seemed that he was
just born to be curious and so, of course, to get
into trouble.
“One day word came to the Green
Forest and to the Green Meadows that Old Mother Nature
was coming to see how all the little meadow and forest
people were getting along, to settle all the little
troubles and fusses between them, and to find out
who were and who were not obeying the orders she had
given them when she had visited them last. My,
my, my, such a hurrying and scurrying and worrying
as there was! You see, everybody wanted to look
his best when Old Mother Nature arrived, Yes, Sir,
everybody wanted to look his best.
“There was the greatest changing
of clothes you ever did see. Old King Bear put
on his blackest coat. Mr. Coon and Mr. Mink and
Mr. Otter sat up half the night brushing their suits
and making them look as fine and handsome as they
could. Even Old Mr. Toad put on a new suit under
his old one, and planned to pull the old one off and
throw it away as soon as Old Mother Nature should
arrive. Then everybody began to fix up their
homes and make them as neat and nice as they knew
how—everybody but Mr. Rabbit.
“Now Mr. Rabbit was lazy.
He didn’t like to work any more than Peter Rabbit
does now. No, Sir, old Mr. Rabbit was afraid of
work. The very sight of work scared old Mr. Rabbit.
You see, he was so busy minding other people’s
business that he didn’t have time to attend to
his own. So his brown and gray coat always was
rumpled and tumbled and dirty. His house was
a tumble-down affair in which no one but Mr. Rabbit
would ever have thought of living, and his garden—oh,
dear me, such a garden you never did see! It
was all weeds and brambles. They filled up the
yard, and old Mr. Rabbit actually couldn’t have
gotten into his own house if he hadn’t cut a
path through the brambles.
“Now when old Mr. Rabbit heard
that Old Mother Nature was coming, his heart sank
way, way down, for he knew just how angry she would
be when she saw his house, his garden and his shabby
suit.
“‘Oh, dear! Oh, dear!
What shall I do?’ wailed Mr. Rabbit, wringing
his hands.
“‘Get busy and clean up,’
advised Mr. Woodchuck, hurrying about his own work.
“Now Mr. Woodchuck was a worker
and very, very neat. He meant to have his home
looking just as fine as he could make it. He brought
up some clean yellow sand from deep down in the ground
and sprinkled it smoothly over his doorstep.
“‘I’ll help you,
if I get through my own work in time,’ shouted
Mr. Woodchuck over his shoulder.
“That gave Mr. Rabbit an idea.
He would ask all his neighbors to help him, and perhaps
then he could get his house and garden in order by
the time Old Mother Nature arrived. So Mr. Rabbit
called on Mr. Skunk and Mr. Coon and Mr. Mink and
Mr. Squirrel and Mr. Chipmunk, and all the rest of
his neighbors, telling them of his trouble and asking
them to help. Now, in spite of the trouble Mr.
Rabbit was forever making for other people by his
dreadful curiosity and meddling with other people’s
affairs, all his neighbors had a warm place in their
hearts for Mr. Rabbit, and they all promised that
they would help him as soon as they had their own
work finished.
“Instead of hurrying home and
getting to work himself, Mr. Rabbit stopped a while
after each call and sat with his arms folded, watching
the one he was calling on work. Mr. Rabbit was
very fond of sitting with folded arms. It was
very comfortable. But this was no time to be
doing it, and Mr. Skunk told him so.
“’If you want the rest
of us to help you, you’d better get things started
yourself,’ said old Mr. Skunk, carefully combing
out his big, plumy tail.
“‘That’s right,
Mr. Skunk! That’s right!’ said Mr.
Rabbit, starting along briskly, just as if he was
going to hurry right home and begin work that very
instant.
“But half an hour later, when
Mr. Skunk happened to pass the home of Mr. Chipmunk,
there sat Mr. Rabbit with his arms folded, watching
Mr. Chipmunk hurrying about as only Mr. Chipmunk can.
“Finally Mr. Rabbit had made
the round of all his friends and neighbors, and he
once more reached his tumble-down house. ‘Oh,
dear,’ sighed Mr. Rabbit, as he looked at the
tangle of brambles which almost hid the little old
house, ’I never, never can clear away all this!
It will be a lot easier to work when all my friends
are here to help,’ So he sighed once more and
folded his arms, instead of beginning work as he should
have done. And then, because the sun was bright
and warm, and he was very, very comfortable, old Mr.
Rabbit began to nod, and presently he was fast asleep.
“Now Old Mother Nature likes
to take people by surprise, and it happened that she
chose this very day to make her promised visit.
She was greatly pleased with all she saw as she went
along, until she came to the home of Mr. Rabbit.
“‘Mercy me!’ exclaimed
Old Mother Nature, throwing up her hands as she saw
the tumble-down house almost hidden by the brambles
and weeds. ‘Can it be possible that any
one really lives here?’
Then, peering through the tangle of
brambles, she spied old Mr. Rabbit sitting on his
broken-down doorstep with his arms folded and fast
asleep.
“At first she was very indignant,
oh, very indignant, indeed! She decided that
Mr. Rabbit should be punished very severely. But
as she watched him sitting there, dreaming in the
warm sunshine, her anger began to melt away.
The fact is, Old Mother Nature was like all the rest
of Mr. Rabbit’s neighbors—she just
couldn’t help loving happy-go-lucky Mr. Rabbit
in spite of all his faults. With a long stick
she reached in and tickled the end of his nose.
“Mr. Rabbit sneezed, and this
made him wake up. He yawned and blinked, and
then his eyes suddenly flew wide open with fright.
He had discovered Old Mother Nature frowning at him.
She pointed a long forefinger at him and said:
’In every single blessed
day
There’s time for
work and time for play.
Who folds his arms with
work undone
Doth cheat himself and
spoil his fun.’
“’Hereafter, Mr. Rabbit,
you and your children and your children’s children
will never again be able to sit with folded arms until
you or they have learned to work.’
“And that is why Peter Rabbit
cannot fold his arms and still lives in a tumble-down
house among the brambles,” concluded Grandfather
Frog.