Good appetite, you’ll always find,
Depends upon your state of mind.
Peter
Rabbit.
Peter Rabbit had lost his appetite.
Now when Peter Rabbit loses his appetite, something
is very wrong indeed with him. Peter has boasted
that he can eat any time and all the time. In
fact, the two things that Peter thinks most about
are his stomach and satisfying his curiosity, and
nearly all of the scrapes that Peter has gotten into
have been because of those two things. So when
Peter loses his appetite or his curiosity, there is
surely something the matter with him.
Ever since Old Man Coyote had come
to live on the Green Meadows, Peter had been afraid
to go very far from the dear Old Briar-patch where
he makes his home, and where he always feels safe.
Now there wasn’t any reason why he should go
far from the dear Old Briar-patch. There was
plenty to eat in it and all around it, for sweet clover
grew almost up to the very edge of it, and you know
Peter is very fond of sweet clover. So there
was plenty for Peter to eat without running any risk
of danger. With nothing to do but eat and sleep,
Peter should have grown fat and contented. But
he didn’t.
Now that is just the way with a lot
of people. The more they have and the less they
have to worry about, the more discontented they become,
and at last they are positively unhappy. There
was little Danny Meadow Mouse, living out on the Green
Meadows; he was happy all the livelong day, and yet
he had no safe castle like the dear Old Briar-patch
where he could always be safe. Every minute of
every day Danny had to keep his eyes wide open and
his wits working their very quickest, for any minute
he was likely to be in danger. Old Man Coyote
or Reddy Fox or Granny Fox or Digger the Badger or
Mr. Blacksnake was likely to come creeping through
the grass any time, and they are always hungry for
a fat Meadow Mouse. And as if that weren’t
worry enough, Danny had to watch the sky, too, for
Old Whitetail the Marsh Hawk, or his cousin Redtail,
or Blacky the Crow, each of whom would be glad of
a Meadow Mouse dinner. Yet in spite of all this,
Danny was happy and never once lost his appetite.
But Peter Rabbit, with nothing to
worry him so long as he stayed in the Old Briar-patch,
couldn’t eat and grew more and more unhappy.
“I don’t know what’s
the matter with me. I really don’t know
what’s the matter with me,” said Peter,
as he turned up his nose at a patch of sweet, tender
young clover. “I think I’ll go and
cut some new paths through the Old Briar-patch.”
Now, though he didn’t know it,
that was the very best thing he could do. It
gave him something to think about. For two or
three days he was very busy cutting new paths, and
his appetite came back. But when he had made
all the paths he wanted, and there was nothing else
to do, he lost his appetite again. He just sat
still all day long and moped and thought and thought
and thought. The trouble with Peter Rabbit’s
thinking was that it was all about himself and how
unhappy he was. Of course, the more he thought
about this, the more unhappy he grew.
“If I only had some one to talk
to, I’d feel better,” said he to himself.
That reminded him of Johnny Chuck and what good times
they used to have together when Johnny lived on the
Green Meadows. Then he thought of how happy Johnny
seemed with his little family in his new home in the
Old Orchard, in spite of all the worries his family
made him. And right then Peter found out what
was the matter with him.
“I believe I’m just lonesome,”
said Peter. “Yes, Sir, that’s what’s
the matter with me.
“It isn’t good
to be alone,
I’ve often heard
my mother say.
It makes one selfish,
grouchy, cross,
And quite unhappy all
the day.
One needs to think of
other folks,
And not of just one’s
self alone,
To find the truest happiness,
And joy and real content
to own.
“Now that I’ve found out
what is the trouble with me, the question is, what
am I going to do about it?”