WHY SAMMY JAY HAS A FINE COAT
Sammy Jay has a very fine coat, a
very beautiful coat. Everybody knows that.
In fact, Sammy’s coat has long been the envy
of a great many of his neighbors in the Green Forest.
Some of them, you know, have very modest coats.
They are not beautiful at all. And yet the owners
of some of these plain coats are among the most honest
and hard-working of all the little people who live
in the Green Forest. They find it hard, very
hard indeed, to understand why such a scamp and mischiefmaker
as Sammy Jay should be given such a wonderful blue
coat with white trimmings.
Peter Rabbit often had thought about
it. He has a number of feathered friends whom
he likes ever so much better than he does Sammy Jay.
In fact, he and Sammy are forever falling out, because
Sammy delights to tease Peter. He sometimes makes
up for it by warning Peter when Granny or Reddy Fox
happens to be about, and Peter is honest enough to
recognize this and put it to Sammy’s credit.
But in spite of this, it never seemed to him quite
right that Sammy Jay should be so handsomely dressed.
“Of course,” said Peter
to Grandfather Frog, “Old Mother Nature knows
a great deal more than I do—”
“Really! You don’t
mean to say so! Chug-a-rum! You don’t
mean to say so, Peter!” interrupted Grandfather
Frog, pretending to be very much surprised at what
Peter said.
[Illustration: “You don’t
mean to say so, Peter,” interrupted Grandfather
Frog.]
Peter grinned and wrinkled his nose at Grandfather
Frog.
“Yes,” said he, “Old
Mother Nature knows a great deal more than I do, but
it seems to me as if she had made a mistake in giving
Sammy Jay such a handsome coat. There must be
a reason, I suppose, but for the life of me I cannot
understand it. I should think that she would give
such a thief as Sammy Jay the very homeliest suit she
could find. You may depend I would, if I were
in her place.”
Grandfather Frog chuckled until he shook all over.
“It’s lucky for some of
us that you are not in her place!” said he.
“Chug-a-rum! It certainly is lucky!”
“If I were, I would give you
a handsome coat, too, Grandfather Frog,” replied
Peter.
Grandfather Frog suddenly swelled
out with indignation. “Chug-a-rum!
Chug-a-rum! What’s the matter with the coat
I have got, Peter Rabbit? Tell me that!
Who’s got a handsomer one?” Grandfather
Frog glared with his great, goggly eyes at Peter.
“I didn’t mean to say
that you haven’t got a handsome coat. Your
coat is handsome, very handsome indeed, Grandfather
Frog,” Peter hastened to say. “I
always did like green. I just love it! And
I should think you would be ever so proud of your
white and yellow waistcoat. I would if it were
mine. What I meant to say is, that if I were in
Old Mother Nature’s place, I would give some
plain folks handsome suits. Certainly, I wouldn’t
give such a rascal as Sammy Jay one of the handsomest
coats in all the Green Forest. Knowing Sammy as
well as I do, it is hard work to believe that he came
by it honestly.”
Grandfather Frog chuckled way down deep in his throat.
“Sammy came by it honestly enough,
Peter. Yes, Sir, he came by it honestly enough,
because it was handed down to him by his father, who
got it from his father, who got it from his father,
and so on, way back to the days when the world was
young, but—” Grandfather Frog paused,
and that dreamy, far-away look which Peter had seen
so often came into his great, goggly eyes.
“But what, Grandfather Frog?”
asked Peter eagerly, when he could keep still no longer.
Grandfather Frog settled himself comfortably
on his big green lily-pad and looked very hard at
Peter.
“I’m going to tell you
a story, Peter Rabbit,” said he, “so that
never again will you be led to doubt that Old Mother
Nature knows exactly what she is about. In the
first place, Sammy Jay is not wholly to blame for
all his bad habits. Some of them were handed down
to him with his fine coat, just the same as your troublesome
curiosity was handed down to you with the white patch
on the seat of your trousers.”
Peter nodded. He had felt a great
many times that he just couldn’t help this habit
of poking that wobbly little nose of his in where it
had no business to be, any more than he could change
that funny little bunch of white cotton, which he
called a tail, for a really, truly tail.
“Of course, you have heard all
about what a very fine gentleman Sammy Jay’s
great-great-ever-so-great grandfather was thought to
be until it was discovered that he was all the time
stealing from his neighbors and putting the blame
on others, and how Old Mother Nature punished him
by taking away the beautiful voice of which he was
so proud, and giving him instead the harsh voice which
Sammy has now, and making him tell just what he is
by screaming ‘thief, thief, thief!’ every
time he opens his mouth to speak.
“At first Old Mother Nature
had intended to take away the fine coat of which Mr.
Jay was so proud, but when he discovered that he had
lost his fine voice, he was so ashamed that he hurried
away to hide himself from the eyes of his neighbors,
so that Old Mother Nature didn’t have time to
change his coat just then.
‘I’ll wait a bit,’
said she to herself, ’and see how he behaves.
Perhaps he is truly sorry for what he has done, and
I will not have to punish him more.’
“But if Mr. Jay was truly sorry,
he gave no signs of it. You see, he had cheated
his neighbors, and had stolen from them for so long,
that he found this the easiest way to get a living.
His bad habits had become fixed, as bad habits have
a way of doing. Besides, right down in his heart,
he wasn’t sorry for what he had done, only angry
at having been found out. Now that he had been
found out, of course every one was on the watch for
him, and it wasn’t so easy to steal as it had
been before. So now, instead of going about openly,
with his head held high, he grew very crafty, and
sneaked quietly about through the Green Forest, trying
to keep out of sight, that he might the easier steal
from his neighbors and make trouble for them.
“When Old Mother Nature saw
this, she changed her mind about taking away his handsome
suit. ‘If I do that,’ thought she,
’it will make it all the easier for him to keep
out of sight, and all the harder for his neighbors
to know when he is about.’
“So instead of giving him the
plain, homely suit that she had thought of giving
him, she made his coat of blue brighter than before
and trimmed it with the whitest of white trimmings,
so that Mr. Jay had one of the very handsomest coats
in all the Green Forest. At first he was very
proud of it, but it wasn’t long before he found
that it was very hard work to keep out of sight when
he wanted to. That bright blue coat was forever
giving him away when he was out on mischief.
Everybody was all the time on the watch for it, and
so where in the past Mr. Jay had been able, without
any trouble, to steal all he wanted to eat, now he
sometimes actually had to work for his food, and get
it honestly or else go hungry.
“You would suppose that he would
have mended him ways, wouldn’t you?”
Peter nodded.
“But he didn’t. He
grew more sly and crafty than ever. But in spite
of this, he didn’t begin to make as much trouble
as before. He couldn’t, you know, because
of his bright coat. When Old Mother Nature found
that Mr. Jay had passed along his bad habits to his
children, she passed along his handsome blue coat,
too, and so it has been from that long-ago day right
down to this. Sammy Jay’s fine coat isn’t
a reward for goodness, as is Winsome Bluebird’s,
but is to help the other little people of the Green
Forest and the Green Meadows to protect themselves,
and keep track of Sammy when he is sneaking and snooping
around looking for mischief. Now what do you think,
Peter Rabbit?”
Peter scratched one long ear and then
the other long ear thoughtfully, and he looked a wee
bit ashamed as he replied: “I guess Old
Mother Nature makes no mistakes and always knows just
what she is doing.”
“Chug-a-rum!” said Grandfather
Frog in his deepest voice. “You may be
sure she does. And another thing, Peter Rabbit:
Never judge any one by his clothes. It is a great
mistake, a very great mistake. Plain clothes
sometimes cover the kindest hearts, and fine clothes
often are a warning to beware of mischief.”
“I—I don’t know but you are
right,” admitted Peter.
“I know I am,” said Grandfather Frog.