WHY BUSTER BEAR APPEARS TO HAVE NO TAIL
Peter Rabbit had something new to
bother his bump of curiosity. And it did bother
it a lot. He had just seen Buster Bear for the
first time, and what do you think had impressed him
most? Well, it wasn’t Buster’s great
size, or wonderful strength, or big claws, or deep,
grumbly-rumbly voice. No, Sir, it wasn’t
one of these. It was the fact that Buster Bear
seemed to have no tail! Peter couldn’t get
over that. He almost pitied Buster Bear.
You see, Peter has a great admiration for fine tails.
He has always been rather ashamed of the funny little
one he has himself. Still, it is a real tail,
and he has often comforted himself with that thought.
So the first thing Peter did when
he saw Buster Bear was to look to see what kind of
a tail he had. Just imagine how surprised he was
when he couldn’t make sure that Buster had any
tail at all. There was something that might,
just might, be meant for a tail, and Peter wasn’t
even sure of that. If it was, it was so ridiculously
small that Peter felt that he had no reason to be
ashamed of his own tail.
He was still thinking about this when
he started for home. Half way there, he paused,
saw that the way to the Smiling Pool was clear, and
suddenly made up his mind to ask Grandfather Frog about
Buster Bear’s tail. Off he started, lipperty-lipperty-lip.
“Oh, Grandfather Frog,”
he panted, as soon as he reached the edge of the Smiling
Pool, “has Buster Bear got a tail?”
Grandfather Frog regarded Peter in
silence for a minute or two.
Then very slowly he asked: “What
are your eyes for, Peter Rabbit? Couldn’t
you see whether or not he has a tail?”
“No, Grandfather Frog.
I really couldn’t tell whether he has a tail
or not,” replied Peter quite truthfully.
“At first I thought he hadn’t, and then
I thought he might have. If he has, it doesn’t
seem to me that it is enough to call a really truly
tail.”
“Well, it is a really truly
tail, even if you don’t think so,” retorted
Grandfather Frog, “and he has it for a reminder.”
“A reminder!” exclaimed
Peter, looking very much puzzled. “A reminder
of what?”
Grandfather Frog cleared his throat
two or three times. “Sit down, Peter, and
learn a lesson from the tale of the tail of Old King
Bear,” said he very seriously.
“You remember that once upon
a time, long ago, when the world was young, Old King
Bear ruled in the Green Forest, and everybody brought
tribute to him.”
Peter nodded and Grandfather Frog went on.
“Now Old King Bear was the great-great-ever-so-great
grandfather of Buster Bear, and he looked very much
as Buster does, except that he didn’t have any
tail at all, not the least sign of a tail. At
first, before he was made king of the Green Forest,
he didn’t mind this at all. In fact, he
was rather pleased that he didn’t have a tail.
You see, he couldn’t think of any earthly use
he would have for a tail, and so he was glad that
he hadn’t got one to bother with.
“This was just Old Mother Nature’s
view of the matter. She had done her very best
to give everybody everything that they really needed,
and not to give them things which they didn’t
need. She couldn’t see that Mr. Bear had
the least need of a tail, and so she hadn’t given
him one. Mr. Bear was perfectly happy without
one, and was so busy getting enough to eat that he
didn’t have time for silly thoughts or vain
wishes.
“Then he was made king over
all the people of the Green Forest, and his word was
law. It was a very great honor, and for a while
he felt it so and did his best to rule wisely.
He went about just as before, hunting for his living,
and had no more time than before for foolish thoughts
or vain wishes. But after a little, the little
people over whom he ruled began to bring him tribute,
so that he no longer had to hunt for enough to eat.
Indeed, he had so much brought to him, that he couldn’t
begin to eat all of it, and he grew very dainty and
fussy about what he did eat. Having nothing to
do but eat and sleep, he grew very fat and lazy, as
is the case with most people who have nothing to do.
He grew so fat that when he walked, he puffed and wheezed.
He grew so lazy that he wanted to be waited on all
the time.
“It happened about this time
that he overheard Mr. Fox talking to Mr. Wolf when
they both thought him asleep. ’A pretty
kind of a king, he is!’ sneered Mr. Fox.
‘The idea of a king without a tail!’
“‘That’s so,’
assented Mr. Wolf. ’Why, even that little
upstart, Mr. Rabbit, has got a make-believe tail.’”
Grandfather Frog’s eyes twinkled
as he said this, and Peter looked very much embarrassed.
But he didn’t say anything, so Grandfather Frog
went on.
“Old King Bear pretended to
wake up just then, and right away Mr. Fox and Mr.
Wolf were as polite and smiling as you please and began
to flatter him. They told him how proud they
were of their king, and how handsome he was, and a
lot of other nice things, all of which he had heard
often before and had believed. He pretended to
believe them now, but after they were through paying
their respects and had gone away, he kept turning
over and over in his mind what he had overheard them
say when they thought he was asleep.
“After that he couldn’t
think of anything but the fact that he hadn’t
any tail. He took particular notice of all who
came to pay him tribute, and he saw that every one
of them had a tail. Some had long tails; some
had short tails; some had handsome tails and some had
homely tails; but everybody had a tail of some kind.
The more he tried not to think of these tails, the
more he did think of them. The more he thought
of them, the more discontented he grew because he had
none. He didn’t stop to think that probably
all of them had use for their tails. No, Sir,
he didn’t think of that. Everybody else
had a tail, and he hadn’t. He felt that
it was a disgrace that he, the king, should have no
tail. He brooded over it so much that he lost
his appetite and grew cross and peevish.
“Then along came Old Mother
Nature to see how things were going in the Green Forest.
Of course she saw right away that something was wrong
with Old King Bear. When she asked him what the
matter was, he was ashamed to tell her at first.
But after a little he told her that he wanted a tail;
that he could never again be happy unless he had a
tail. She told him that he hadn’t the least
use in the world for a tail, and that he wouldn’t
be any happier if he had one. Nothing that she
could say made any difference—he wanted
a tail. Finally she gave him one.
“For a few days Old King Bear
was perfectly happy. He spent all his spare time
admiring his new tail. He called the attention
of all his subjects to it, and they all told him that
it was a very wonderful tail and was very becoming
to him. But it wasn’t long before he found
that his new tail was very much in the way. It
bothered him when he walked. It was in the way
when he sat down. It was a nuisance when he climbed
a tree. He didn’t have a single use for
it, and yet he had to carry it with him wherever he
went. Worse still, he overheard little Mr. Squirrel
and Mr. Possum making fun of it. And then he discovered
that the very ones who admired his tail so to his face
were laughing at him and poking fun at him behind
his back.
“And then Old King Bear wished
that he hadn’t a tail more than ever
he wished that he did have a tail. Again
he lost his appetite and grew cross and peevish, so
that no one dared come near him. So matters went
from bad to worse, until once more Old Mother Nature
visited the Green Forest to see how things were.
Very humbly Old King Bear went down on his knees and
begged her to take away his tail. At first Old
Mother Nature refused, but he begged so hard and promised
so faithfully never again to be discontented, that
finally she relented and took away his tail, all but
just a wee little bit. That she left as a reminder
lest he should forget the lesson he had learned and
should again grow envious.
[Illustration: “Then Old
King Bear wished that he hadn’t a tail.”]
“And every bear since that long-ago
day has carried about with him a reminder—you
can hardly call it a real tail—of the silly,
foolish discontent of Old King Bear,” concluded
Grandfather Frog.
Peter Rabbit scratched one long ear
thoughtfully as he replied: “Thank you,
Grandfather Frog. I think that hereafter I will
be quite content with what I’ve got and never
want things it is not meant that I should have.”