SAMMY JAY BECOMES CURIOUS
Learn all you can about others, but keep your own
affairs to yourself.
Peter
Rabbit.
Of course it was Sammy Jay who first
found out that Peter Rabbit was back in the dear Old
Briar-patch. Sammy took it into his head to fly
over there the very morning of Peter’s home-coming.
Indeed, little Miss Fuzzytail hadn’t had time
to half see the clear Old Briar-patch which, you know,
was to be her new home, when Peter saw Sammy Jay coming.
Now Peter was not quite ready to have all the world
know that there was a Mrs. Peter, for of course that
was what little Miss Fuzzytail was now that she had
come to make her home with Peter. They wanted
to keep by themselves for a little while and just
be happy with each other. So as soon as Peter
saw Sammy Jay headed towards the Old Briar-patch, he
hid little Miss Fuzzytail under the thickest sweet-briar
bush, and then hurried out to the nearest sweet-clover
patch.
Of course Sammy Jay saw him right
away, and of course Sammy was very much surprised.
“Hello, Peter Rabbit! Where’d
you come from?” he shouted, as he settled himself
comfortably in a little poplar-tree growing on the
edge of the Old Briar-patch.
“Oh,” said Peter with
a very grand air, “I’ve been on a long
journey to see the Great World.”
“Which means,” said Sammy
Jay with a chuckle, “that you’ve been in
the Old Pasture all this time, and let me tell you,
Peter Rabbit, the Old Pasture is a very small part
of the Great World. By the way, Tommy Tit the
Chickadee was down here the other day and told us all
about you. He said that you had fallen in love
with little Miss Fuzzytail, and he guessed that you
were going to make your home up there. What’s
the matter? Did her father, Old Jed Thumper,
drive you out?”
“No, he didn’t!”
snapped Peter angrily, “It’s none of your
business what I came home for, Sammy Jay, but I’ll
tell you just the same. I came home because I
wanted to.”
Sammy chuckled, for he dearly loves
to tease Peter and make him angry. Then the imp
of mischief, who seems always to live just under that
smart cap of Sammy’s, prompted him to ask:
“Did you come home alone?”
Now Peter couldn’t say “yes”
for that would be an untruth, and whatever faults
Peter may have, he is at least truthful. So he
just pretended not to have heard Sammy’s question.
Now when Sammy had asked the question
he had thought nothing about it. It had just
popped into his head by way of something to say.
But Sammy Jay is sharp, and he noticed right away
that Peter didn’t answer but began to talk about
other things,
“Ha, ha!” thought Sammy
to himself, “I believe he didn’t come alone,
I wonder now if he brought Miss Fuzzytail with him.”
Right away Sammy began to peer down
into the Old Briar-patch, twisting and turning so
that he could see in every direction, and all the time
talking as fast as his tongue could go. Two or
three times he flew out over the Old Briar-patch,
pretending to try to catch moths, but really so that
he could look down into certain hiding-places.
The last time that he did this he spied little Mrs.
Peter, who was, you know, Miss Fuzzytail. At
once Sammy Jay started for the Green Forest, screaming
at the top of his voice:
“Peter Rabbit’s married! Peter Rabbit’s
married!”