A PLEASANT SURPRISE FOR PETER
Sticks will break and sticks will
bend,
And all things bad will have an end.
Peter Rabbit.
All morning, while someone was fooling
Old Jed Thumper, the cross old Rabbit who thought
he owned the Old Pasture, Peter Rabbit lay stretched
out on the warm little sunning-bank, dreaming of soft,
gentle eyes and beautiful little footprints.
It was a dangerous place to go to sleep, because at
any time fierce Mr. Goshawk might have come that way,
and if he had, and had found Peter Rabbit asleep,
why, that would have been the end of Peter and all
the stories about him.
Peter did go to sleep. You see,
the sunning-bank was so warm and comfortable, and
he was so tired and had had so little sleep for such
a long time that, in spite of all he could do, he
nodded and nodded and finally slipped off into dreamland.
Peter slept a long time, for no one
came to disturb him. It was past noon when he
opened his eyes and blinked up at jolly, round, red
Mr. Sun. For a minute he couldn’t remember
where he was. When he did, he sprang to his feet
and hastily looked this way and that way.
“My gracious!” exclaimed
Peter. “My gracious, what a careless fellow
I am! It’s a wonder that Old Jed Thumper
didn’t find me asleep. My, but I’m
hungry! Seems as if I hadn’t had a good
square meal for a year.”
Peter stopped suddenly and began to
wrinkle his nose. “Um-m!” said he,
“if I didn’t know better, I should say
that there is a patch of sweet clover close by.
Um-m, my, my! Am I really awake, or am I still
dreaming? I certainly do smell sweet clover!”
Slowly Peter turned his head In the
direction from which the delicious smell seemed to
come. Then he whirled around and stared as hard
as ever he could, his mouth gaping wide open in surprise.
He blinked, rubbed his eyes, then blinked again.
There could be no doubt of it; there on the edge of
the sunning-bank was a neat little pile of tender,
sweet clover. Yes, Sir, there it was!
Peter walked all around it, looking
for all the world as if he couldn’t believe
that it was real. Finally he reached out and nibbled
a leaf of it. It was real!
There was no doubt in Peter’s
mind then. Some one had put it there while Peter
was asleep, and Peter knew that it was meant for him.
Who could it have been?
Suddenly a thought popped into Peter’s
head. He stopped eating and hopped over to the
big fern from behind which he had first seen the two
soft, gentle eyes peeping at him the day before.
There in the soft earth was a fresh footprint, and
it looked very, very much like the footprint of dainty
little Miss Fuzzytail!
Peter’s heart gave a happy little
jump. He felt sure now who had put the clover
there. He looked wistfully about among the ferns,
but she was nowhere to be seen. Finally he hopped
back to the pile of clover and ate it, every bit,
and it seemed to him that it was the sweetest, tenderest
clover he had ever tasted in all his life.