WHY UNC’ BILLY POSSUM PLAYS DEAD
One thing puzzled Peter Rabbit and
Johnny Chuck and Striped Chipmunk a great deal after
they had come to know Unc’ Billy Possum and his
funny ways. They had talked it over and wondered
and wondered about it, and tried to understand it,
and even had asked Unc’ Billy about it.
Unc’ Billy had just grinned and said that they
would have to ask his mammy. Of course they couldn’t
do that, and Unc’ Billy knew they couldn’t,
for Unc’ Billy’s mammy had died long before
he even thought of coming up from Ol’ Virginny
to the Green Forest and the Green Meadows where they
lived. He said it just to tease them, and when
he said it, he chuckled until they chuckled too, just
as if it really were the best kind of a joke.
Now you know it always is the thing
that you try and try to find out and can’t find
out that you most want to find out. It was just
so with Peter Rabbit and Johnny Chuck and Striped
Chipmunk. The more they talked about it, the
more they wanted to know. Why was it that Unc’
Billy Possum played dead instead of trying to run away
when he was surprised by his enemies? They always
tried to run away. So did everybody else of their
acquaintance excepting Unc’ Billy Possum.
“There must be a reason”
said Peter gravely, as he pulled thoughtfully at one
of his long ears.
“Of course there is a reason,”
asserted Johnny Chuck, chewing the end of a blade
of grass.
“There’s a reason for
everything,” added Striped Chipmunk, combing
out the hair of his funny little tail.
“Then of course Grandfather Frog knows it,”
said Peter.
“Of course! Why didn’t we think of
him before?” exclaimed the others.
“I’ll beat you to the Smiling Pool!”
shouted Peter.
Of course he did, for his legs are
long and made for running, but Striped Chipmunk was
not far behind. Johnny Chuck took his time, for
he knew that he could not keep up with the others.
Besides he was so fat that to run made him puff and
blow. Grandfather Frog sat just as usual on his
big green lily-pad, and he grinned when he saw who
his visitors were, for he guessed right away what
they had come for.
“Chug-a-rum! What is it
you want to know now?” he demanded, before Peter
could fairly get his breath.
“If you please, Grandfather
Frog, we want to know why it is that Unc’ Billy
Possum plays dead,” replied Peter as politely
as he knew how.
Grandfather Frog chuckled. “Just
to fool people, stupid!” said he.
“Of course we know that,”
replied Striped Chipmunk, “but what we want
to know is how he ever found out that he could fool
people that way, and how he knows that he will fool
them.”
“I suspect that his mammy taught
him,” said Grandfather Frog, with another chuckle
way down deep in his throat.
“But who taught his mammy?” persisted
Striped Chipmunk.
Grandfather Frog snapped at a foolish
green fly, and when it was safely tucked away inside
his white and yellow waistcoat, he turned once more
to his three little visitors, and there was a twinkle
in his big, goggly eyes.
“I see,” said he, “that
you will have a story, and I suppose that the
sooner I tell it to you, the sooner you will leave
me in peace. Unc’ Billy Possum’s
grandfather a thousand times removed was—”
“Was this way back in the days
when the world was young?” interrupted Peter.
Grandfather Frog scowled at Peter.
“If I have any more interruptions, there will
be no story to-day” said he severely.
Peter looked ashamed and promised
that he would hold his tongue right between his teeth
until Grandfather Frog was through. Grandfather
Frog cleared his throat and began again.
“Unc’ Billy Possum’s
grandfather a thousand times removed was very much
as Unc’ Billy is now, only he was a little more
spry and knew better than to stuff himself so full
that he couldn’t run. He was always very
sly, and he played a great many tricks on his neighbors,
and sometimes he got them into trouble. But when
he did, he always managed to keep out of their way
until they had forgotten all about their anger.
“One morning the very imp of
mischief seemed to get into old Mr. Possum’s
head. Yes, Sir, it certainly did seem that way.
And when you see Mischief trotting along the Lone
Little Path, if you look sharp enough, you’ll
see Trouble following at his heels like a shadow.
I never knew it to fail. It’s just as sure
as a stomach-ache is to follow overeating.”
Just here Grandfather Frog paused
and looked very hard at Peter Rabbit. But Peter
pretended not to notice, and after slowly winking
one of his big, goggly eyes at Johnny Chuck, Grandfather
Frog continued:
“Anyway, as I said before, the
imp of mischief seemed to be in old Mr. Possum’s
head that morning, for he began to play tricks on his
neighbors as soon as they were out of bed. He
hid Old King Bear’s breakfast, while the latter
had his head turned, and then pretended that he had
just come along. He was very polite and offered
to help Old King Bear hunt for his lost breakfast.
Then, whenever Old King Bear came near the place where
it was hidden, old Mr. Possum would hide it somewhere
else. Old King Bear was hungry, and he worked
himself up into a terrible rage, for he was in a hurry
for his breakfast. Old Mr. Possum was very sympathetic
and seemed to be doing his very best to find the lost
meal. At last Old King Bear turned his head suddenly
and caught sight of old Mr. Possum hiding that breakfast
in a new place. My, my, but his temper did boil
over! It certainly did. And if he could
have laid hands on old Mr. Possum that minute, it
surely would have been the end of him.
“But old Mr. Possum was mighty
spry, and he went off through the Green Forest laughing
fit to kill himself. Pretty soon he met Mr. Panther.
He was very polite to Mr. Panther. He told him
that he had just come from a call on Old King Bear,
and hinted that Old King Bear was then enjoying a
feast and that there might be enough for Mr. Panther,
if he hurried up there at once.
“Now, Mr. Panther was hungry,
for he had found nothing for his breakfast that morning.
So he thanked old Mr. Possum and hurried away to find
Old King Bear and share in the good things old Mr.
Possum had told about.
“Old Mr. Possum himself hurried
on, chuckling as he thought of the way Mr. Panther
was likely to be received, with Old King Bear in such
a temper. Pretty soon along came Mr. Lynx.
Old Mr. Possum told him the same story he had told
Mr. Panther, and Mr. Lynx went bounding off in a terrible
hurry, for fear that he would not be in time to share
in that good breakfast. It was such a good joke
that old Mr. Possum tried it on Mr. Wolf and Mr. Fisher
and Mr. Fox. In fact, he hunted up every one
he could think of and sent them to call on Old King
Bear, and without really telling them so, he made
each one think that he would get a share in that breakfast.”
“Now, there wasn’t any
more breakfast than Old King Bear wanted himself,
and by the time Mr. Panther arrived, there wasn’t
so much as a crumb left. Then, one after another,
the others came dropping in, each licking his chops,
and all very polite to Old King Bear. At first
he didn’t know what to make of it, but pretty
soon Mr. Fox delicately hinted that they had come
in response to the invitation sent by Mr. Possum,
and that as they were all very hungry, they would like
to know when the feast would be ready. Right
away Old King Bear knew that old Mr. Possum had been
up to some of his tricks, and he told his visitors
that they were the victims of a practical joke.
[Illustration: “As they
were all very hungry, they would like to know when
the feast would be ready.”]
“My, my, my, how angry everybody
grew! With Old King Bear at their head, they
started out to hunt for old Mr. Possum. When he
saw them coming, he realized that what he had thought
was a joke had become no longer a laughing matter
for him. He was too frightened to run, so he
scrambled up a tree. He quite forgot that Mr.
Panther and Mr. Lynx could climb just as fast as he.
Up the tree after him they scrambled, and he crept
as far out as he could get on one of the branches.
Mr. Panther didn’t dare go out there, so he
just shook the branch. He shook and shook and
shook and shook, and the first thing old Mr. Possum
knew, he was flying through the air down to where the
others were all ready to pounce on him.
“Old Mr. Possum was frightened
almost to death. He shut his eyes, and then he
landed with a thump that knocked all the wind from
his body. When he got his breath again, he still
kept his eyes closed, for he couldn’t bear the
thought of looking at the cruel teeth and claws of
Old King Bear and the others. Presently, while
he was wondering why they didn’t jump on him
and tear him to pieces, Old King Bear spoke:
“‘I guess Mr. Possum won’t
play any more jokes, Mr. Panther,’ said he.
’You just knocked the life out of him when you
shook him off that branch.’
“Mr. Panther came over and sniffed
at Mr. Possum and turned him over with one paw.
All the time Mr. Possum lay just as if he were dead,
because he was too frightened to move. ‘I
didn’t mean to kill him,’ said Mr. Panther.
’We certainly will miss him. What will we
do with him?’
“‘Leave him here as a
warning to others,’ growled Old King Bear.
“Each in turn came up and sniffed
of Mr. Possum, and then they all went about their
business. He waited long enough to make sure that
they were out of sight, and then took the shortest
way home. When he got there and thought it all
over, he thought that the best joke of all was the
way he had made everybody think that he was dead.
And then a bright idea struck him: he would try
the same trick whenever he was caught. So the
next time he got in trouble, instead of running away,
he tried playing dead. It was such a success that
he taught his children how to do it, and they taught
their children, and so on down to Unc’ Billy,
whom you know. Unc’ Billy says it is a lot
easier than running away, and safer, too. Besides,
it is always such a joke. Now, don’t bother
me any more, for I want to take a nap,” concluded
Grandfather Frog.
“Thank you!” cried Peter
Rabbit and Johnny Chuck and Striped Chipmunk, and
started off to hunt up Unc’ Billy Possum.