WHY BOBBY COON HAS RINGS ON HIS TAIL
Peter Rabbit would give Grandfather
Frog no peace. Every day Peter visited the Smiling
Pool to tease Grandfather Frog for a story—for
one particular story. He wanted to know why it
is that Bobby Coon wears rings on his tail. You
see, Peter had admired Bobby Coon’s tail for
a long time. Peter has such a funny little tail
himself, just a little white bunch of cotton, that
such a handsome tail as Bobby Coon’s sometimes
stirs just a wee bit of envy in Peter’s heart.
But it wasn’t envy so much as
curiosity that prompted Peter to tease for that story.
Bobby Coon’s tail is very handsome, you know.
It has beautiful rings of black and gray, and Peter
didn’t know of any other tail at all like it.
Somehow, he felt right down deep in his heart that
there must be a reason for those rings, just as there
is a reason for his own long ears and long legs.
The more he thought about it, the more he felt that
he simply must know, and the only way he could find
out was from Grandfather Frog, who is very old and
very wise. So he teased and he teased until finally
Grandfather Frog promised him that on the next afternoon
he would tell Peter why Bobby Coon has rings on his
tail. Peter hurried away to tell all the little
meadow and forest people, and the next afternoon they
were all on hand on the bank of the Smiling Pool to
hear the story about Bobby Coon’s tail.
“Chug-a-rum!” began Grandfather
Frog, smoothing down his white and yellow waistcoat.
“Chug-a-rum! Some folks seem to think that
what they do doesn’t matter to anybody but themselves.
That was the way with old Mr. Rabbit, who lived a
long time ago when the world was young. He thought
he could make all the trouble he pleased by his dreadful
curiosity, and if he was found out, no one would suffer
but himself. But it wasn’t so. Here
is Peter Rabbit, his grandchild a thousand times removed,
with long legs and long ears, and the bad habit of
curiosity, all because old Mr. Rabbit had a bad habit
and didn’t try to overcome it.
“It was the same way with old
Mr. Coon. He was dishonest and stole from Old
King Bear. Old Mother Nature punished him by putting
mustard in his food, and Mr. Coon thought he was so
smart that he could get ahead of Old Mother Nature
by washing all his food before he ate it. Old
Mother Nature didn’t say anything, but watched
him and smiled to herself. You see, she knew
that Mr. Coon was beginning a good habit, a very good
habit indeed—the habit of neatness.
So, though she knew perfectly well that he was doing
it just to get ahead of her, she was glad, for she
was fond of Mr. Coon in spite of the bad ways he had
grown into, and she knew that good habits are like
bad habits—once started they grow and grow,
and are very likely to lead to more good habits.
“It was so with Mr. Coon.
He found that his food tasted better for being so
clean, and he grew very fussy about what he ate.
No matter where he found it or how tempting it looked,
he wouldn’t eat it until he had carried it to
the nearest water and washed it. He still remembered
the mustard and tried to fool himself into thinking
that he was simply spiting Old Mother Nature, but
right down in his heart he knew that even if he should
be told that never again would there be mustard in
his food, he would wash it just the same.
“One day, as he sat beside the
Laughing Brook eating his supper, he noticed that
while his food had been washed clean, his hands were
dirty. They spoiled his supper. Yes, Sir,
they spoiled his supper.
“’What good does it do
to wash my food, if I eat it out of dirty hands?’
said Mr. Coon to himself, and he hurried to a quiet
little pool to give them a good scrubbing. Then
he washed his face and brushed his coat. ’Now
I feel better, and I know my supper will taste better,’
said he.
“From that time he began to
be particular, very particular, about keeping himself
clean, until finally there was no one on the Green
Meadows or in the Green Forest quite so neat as Mr.
Coon.
“Now at this time Mr. Coon had
a very plain tail. It was all of one color, a
grayish white, not at all pretty. Mr. Coon used
to think a great deal about that tail and wish and
wish that it was handsome. Sometimes he used
to envy Mr. Fox his beautiful red tail with its black
and white tip. One day, as he sat on an old log
with his chin in his hands, thinking about his tail,
who should come along but Old Mother Nature.
“‘Good morning, Mr. Coon,’
said she in her pleasantest voice.
“Mr. Coon got up and made a
very low bow. ’Good morning, Mother Nature,’
he replied in his politest manner, which was very polite
indeed.
“‘What were you thinking
about so hard?’ asked Old Mother Nature.
“Mr. Coon looked a little bit
ashamed. Then he sighed. ’I was wishing
that my tail was handsomer,’ said he. ’But
it is a very good tail as it is,’ he added hastily.
“Old Mother Nature’s eyes
twinkled. She sat down beside Mr. Coon and asked
him all about his affairs, just as if she didn’t
know all about them already. She told him how
pleased she was to find him so neat and clean, and
Mr. Coon just tingled all over with pleasure.
At last she got up to go, and her eyes twinkled more
than ever, as she said:
“’By the way, Mr. Coon,
I am so pleased with your neatness that I am leaving
you a reward. I hope you will like it.’
“Mr. Coon didn’t see any
reward, but he thanked her just the same, and Old
Mother Nature went on her way. Mr. Coon watched
her out of sight. Then he sat down on the old
log again and scratched his head thoughtfully as he
looked this way and that.
“‘I wonder what she meant
by reward. I don’t see any anywhere,’
he said to himself.
“By and by he just happened
to glance at his tail. ‘Oh!’ cried
Mr. Coon, and then for a long time he couldn’t
say another word, but just looked and looked with
shining eyes and such a queer feeling of happiness
in his heart. You see, Old Mother Nature had left
a beautiful, broad, black ring around his tail.
Mr. Coon couldn’t do anything the rest of that
day but look at and admire that ring, until his neck
ached from twisting it around so long.
“After that he was neater than
ever, you may be sure, and the next time Old Mother
Nature came around, she left another handsome black
ring on his tail, because he hadn’t grown careless,
but had kept up his good habits.
“Now about this time, hard times
came to all the little people of the Green Forest
and the Green Meadows. Every one began to grumble.
Mr. Bear grumbled. Mr. Fox grumbled. Mr.
Rabbit grumbled. Mr. Jay grumbled. Mr. Squirrel
grumbled. Even Mr. Chuck grumbled. And one
and all they began to blame Old Mother Nature.
Then they began to quarrel among themselves and to
steal from each other. Some even left their homes
and went out into the Great World to try to find a
better place to live, only to find that the Great
World was a harder place to live in than the Green
Forest and the Green Meadows.
“But Mr. Coon didn’t grumble,
and he didn’t go away. No, Sir, Mr. Coon
just stuck to his home and did the best he could to
find enough to eat. He kept himself as neat as
ever and was always cheerful. Whenever he met
one of his grumbling neighbors, he would say:
“’Better times coming!
Better times coming! Old Mother Nature is doing
the best she can. Better times coming!’
“The others would laugh at him
for his faith in Old Mother Nature, and say ugly things
about her, and urge Mr. Coon to go with them out into
the Great World. But he kept right on minding
his own business and keeping neat and cheerful, until
at last Old Mother Nature, all worried and troubled,
came to see what she could do to straighten matters
out. It didn’t take her long to find out
how all the little meadow and forest people, except
Mr. Coon, had grumbled and been discontented and said
ugly things about her, for you can’t fool Old
Mother Nature, and it’s of no use to try.
Some she punished one way, and some she punished another
way, for of course she hadn’t been to blame
for the hard times, but had been working night and
day to put an end to them.
“Mr. Coon was the last to be
called before her, and instead of being frowning and
cross, as she had been to the others, she was all smiles.
She said a lot of nice things to him, and when at last
she sent him away, what do you think she had given
him?”
“More rings,” cried Peter Rabbit.
“Yes,” replied Grandfather
Frog, “Mr. Coon’s tail was ringed way to
the tip. There was one for cheerfulness, and one
for faith, and one for persistence in making the best
of a bad matter and staying at home. And ever
since that long-ago day when the world was young, the
Coons have been very proud of their beautiful tails
and have kept up the good habits of old Mr. Coon.
Now you know, Peter Rabbit, why Bobby Coon wears rings
on his tail,” concluded Grandfather Frog.
Peter gave a long sigh. “I
think it’s perfectly beautiful,” he said.
“I wish I had rings on my tail.”
And then he wondered why everybody laughed.