PETER FINDS TRACKS
Every day is different from every other day,
And always there is something new to see along
the way.
Peter
Rabbit.
Peter Rabbit had sat still just as
long as he could. He was stiff and lame and sore
from the wounds made by Hooty the Owl, but his curiosity
wouldn’t let him sit still a minute longer.
He just had to explore the Old Pasture.
So with many a wry face and many an “Ouch”
he limped out from the shelter of the friendly old
bramble-bush and started out to see what the Old Pasture
was like.
Now Hooty the Owl had taught Peter
wisdom. With his torn clothes and his aches and
smarts he couldn’t very well forget to be careful.
First he made sure that there was no danger near,
and this time he took pains to look all around in
the sky as well as on the ground. Then he limped
out to the very patch of sweet clover where Hooty
had so nearly caught him the night before.
“A good breakfast,” said
Peter, “will make a new Rabbit of me.”
You know Peter thinks a great deal of his stomach.
So he began to eat as fast as he could, stopping every
other mouthful to look and listen. “I know
it’s a bad habit to eat fast,” said he,
“but it’s a whole lot worse to have an
empty stomach.” So he ate and ate and ate
as fast as he could make his little jaws go, which
is very fast indeed.
When Peter’s stomach was stuffed
full he gave a great sigh of relief and limped back
to the friendly old bramble-bush to rest. But
he couldn’t sit still long, for he just had
to find out all about the Old Pasture. So pretty
soon he started out to explore. Such a wonderful
place as it seemed to Peter! There were clumps
of bushes with little open spaces between, just the
nicest kind of playgrounds. Then there were funny
spreading, prickly juniper-trees, which made the very
safest places to crawl out of harm’s way and
to hide. Everywhere were paths made by cows.
Very wonderful they seemed to Peter, who had never
seen any like them before. He liked to follow
them because they led to all kinds of queer places.
Sometimes he would come to places
where tall trees made him think of the Green Forest,
only there were never more than a few trees together.
Once he found an old tumble-down stone wall all covered
with vines, and he shouted right out with delight.
“It’s a regular castle!”
cried Peter, and he knew that there he would be safe
from every one but Shadow the Weasel. But he never
was wholly safe from Shadow the Weasel anywhere, so
he didn’t let that thought worry him. By
and by he came to a wet place called a swamp.
The ground was soft, and there were little pools of
water. Great ferns grew here just as they did
along the bank of the Laughing Brook, only more of
them. There were pretty birch-trees and wild
cherry-trees. It was still and dark and oh, so
peaceful! Peter liked that place and sat down
under a big fern to rest. He didn’t hear
a sound excepting the beautiful silvery voice of Veery
the Thrush. Listening to it, Peter fell asleep,
for he was very tired.
By and by Peter awoke. For a
minute he couldn’t think where he was. Then
he remembered. But for a long time he sat perfectly
still, thinking of his adventures and wondering if
he would be missed down on the Green Meadows.
Then all of a sudden Peter saw something that made
him sit up so suddenly that he cried “Ouch!”
for he had forgotten all about how stiff and sore
he was.
What do you think Peter saw?
Tracks! Yes, Sir, he saw tracks, Rabbit tracks
in the soft mud, and Peter knew that he hadn’t
made them!