PETER LEARNS SOMETHING FEOM TOMMY TIT
When you find a friend in trouble
Pass along a word of cheer.
Often it is very helpful
Just to feel a friend is near.
Peter
Rabbit.
“Hello, Peter Rabbit! What
are you doing way up here, and what are you looking
so mournful about?”
Peter gave a great start of pleased
surprise. That was the first friendly voice he
had heard for days and days.
“Hello yourself, Tommy Tit!”
shouted Peter joyously. “My, my, my, but
I am glad to see you! But what are you doing
up here in the Old Pasture yourself?”
Tommy Tit the Chickadee hung head
down from the tip of a slender branch of a maple-tree
and winked a saucy bright eye at Peter. “I’ve
got a secret up here,” he said.
Now there is nothing in the world
Peter Rabbit loves more than a secret. But he
cannot keep one to save him. No, Sir, Peter Rabbit
can no more keep a secret than he can fly. He
means to. His intentions are the very best in
the world, but—
Alas! alack! poor Peter’s tongue
Is very, very loosely hung. And so, because he
must talk and will talk every chance he gets,
he cannot keep a secret. People who talk too
much never can.
“What is your secret?” asked Peter eagerly.
Tommy Tit looked down at Peter, and
his sharp little eyes twinkled. “It’s
a nest with six of the dearest little babies in the
world in it,” he replied.
“Oh, how lovely!” cried Peter. “Where
is it, Tommy Tit?”
“In a hollow birch-stub,”
replied Tommy, his eyes twinkling more than ever.
“But where is the hollow birch-stub?”
persisted Peter.
Tommy laughed. “That’s
my real secret,” said he, “and if I should
tell you it wouldn’t be a secret at all.
Now tell me what you are doing up here in the Old
Pasture, Peter Rabbit.”
Peter saw that it was of no use to
tease Tommy Tit for his secret, so instead he poured
out all his own troubles. He told how lonesome
he had been in the dear Old Briar-patch on the Green
Meadows because he didn’t dare to go about for
fear of Old Man Coyote, and how at last he had decided
to visit the Old Pasture. He told how Hooty the
Owl had nearly caught him on his way, and then how,
ever since his arrival, he had been hunted by the
big, gray, old Rabbit so that he could neither eat
nor sleep and had become so miserable that at last
he had made up his mind to go back to the dear Old
Briar-patch.
“Ho!” interrupted Tommy
Tit, “I know him. He’s Old Jed Thumper,
the oldest, biggest, crossest Rabbit anywhere around.
He’s lived in the Old Pasture so long that he
thinks he owns it. It’s a wonder that he
hasn’t killed you.”
“I guess perhaps he would have
only I can run faster than he can,” replied
Peter, looking a little shamefaced because he had to
own up that he ran away instead of fighting.
Tommy Tit laughed. “That’s
the very wisest thing you could have done,”
said he. “But why don’t you go back
to the dear Old Briar-patch in the Green Meadows?”
Peter hesitated and looked a wee bit
foolish. Finally he told Tommy Tit all about
the two soft, gentle eyes he had seen peeping at him
from behind a big fern, and how he wanted to know
who the eyes belonged to.
“If that’s all you want
to know, I can tell you,” said Tommy Tit, jumping
out into the air to catch a foolish little bug who
tried to fly past. “Those eyes belong to
little Miss Fuzzy-tail, and she’s the favorite
daughter of Old Jed Thumper. You take my advice,
Peter Rabbit, and trot along home to the Old Briar-patch
before you get into any more trouble. There’s
my wife calling. Yes, my dear, I’m coming!
Chickadee-dee-dee!”
And with a wink and a nod to Peter
Rabbit, off flew Tommy Tit.