PETER RABBIT HAS A SUDDEN CHANGE OF MIND
Whatever you decide to do
Make up your mind to see it through.
Peter
Rabbit.
Peter Rabbit stared at the two soft,
gentle eyes peeping at him from behind the big fern
just back of the sunning-bank in the far corner of
the Old Pasture. He had so fully expected to see
the angry face of the big, gray, old Rabbit who had
made life so miserable for him that for a minute he
couldn’t believe that he really saw what he did
see. And so he just stared and stared. It
was very rude. Of course it was. It was very
rude indeed. It is always rude to stare at any
one. So it was no wonder that after a minute
the two soft, gentle eyes disappeared behind one of
the great green leaves of the fern. Peter gave
a great sigh. Then he remembered how rude he
had been to stare so.
“I—I beg your pardon,”
said Peter in his politest manner, which is very polite
indeed, for Peter can be very polite when he wants
to be. “I beg your pardon. I didn’t
mean to frighten you. Please forgive me.”
With the greatest eagerness Peter
waited for a reply. You know it was because he
had been so lonesome that he had left his home in the
dear Old Briar-patch on the Green Meadows. And
since he had been in the Old Pasture he had been almost
as lonesome, for he had had no one to talk to.
So now he waited eagerly for a reply. You see,
he felt sure that the owner of such soft, gentle eyes
must have a soft, gentle voice and a soft, gentle
heart, and there was nothing in the world that Peter
needed just then so much as sympathy. But though
he waited and waited, there wasn’t a sound from
the big fern.
“Perhaps you don’t know
who I am. I’m Peter Rabbit, and I’ve
come up here from the Green Meadows, and I’d
like very much to be your friend,” continued
Peter after a while. Still there was no sound.
Peter peeped from the corner of one eye at the place
where he had seen the two soft, gentle eyes, but there
was nothing to be seen but the gently waving leaf
of the big fern. Peter didn’t know just
what to do. He wanted to hop over to the big
fern and peep behind it, but he didn’t dare to.
He was afraid that whoever was hiding there would
run away.
“I’m very lonesome; won’t
you speak to me?” said Peter, in his gentlest
voice, and he sighed a deep, doleful sort of sigh.
Still there was no reply. Peter had just about
made up his mind that he would go over to the big
fern when he saw those two soft, gentle eyes peeping
from under a different leaf. It seemed to Peter
that never in all his life had he seen such beautiful
eyes. They looked so shy and bashful that Peter
held his breath for fear that he would frighten them
away.
After a time the eyes disappeared.
Then Peter saw a little movement among the ferns,
and he knew that whoever was there was stealing away.
He wanted to follow, but something down inside him
warned him that It was best to sit still. So
Peter sat just where he was and kept perfectly still
for the longest time.
But the eyes didn’t appear again,
and at last he felt sure that whoever they belonged
to had really gone away. Then he sighed another
great sigh, for suddenly he felt more lonesome than
ever. He hopped over to the big fern and looked
behind it. There in the soft earth was a footprint,
the footprint of a Rabbit, and it was smaller
than his own. It seemed to Peter that it was
the most wonderful little footprint he ever had seen.
“I believe,” said Peter
right out loud, “that I’ll change my mind.
I won’t go back to the dear Old Briar-patch
just yet, after all.”