NEWS FROM THE OLD BRIAR-PATCH
To use your eyes is very wise
And much to be commended;
But never see what cannot be
For such as you intended.
Peter Rabbit.
Jenny Wren is a busybody. Yes,
Sir, she certainly is a busybody. If there is
anything going on in her neighborhood that she doesn’t
know about, it isn’t because she doesn’t
try to find out. She is so small and spry that
it is hard work to keep track of her, and she pops
out at the most unexpected times and places.
Then, before you can say a word, she is gone.
And in all the Old Orchard or on the
Green Meadows there is not to be found another tongue
so busy as that of Jenny Wren. It is sharp sometimes,
but when she wants it to be so there is none smoother.
You see she is a great gossip, is Jenny Wren, a great
gossip. But if you get on the right side of Jenny
Wren and ask her to keep a secret, she’ll do
it. No one knows how to keep a secret better than
she does.
How it happened nobody knows, but
it did happen that when Peter Rabbit came home to
the clear Old Briar-patch, bringing Mrs. Peter with
him, Jenny Wren didn’t hear about it. Probably
it was because the new home which she had just completed
was so carefully hidden that the messengers sent by
Peter to invite all his friends to call didn’t
find it, and afterward she was so busy with household
affairs that she didn’t have time to gossip.
Anyway, Peter had been back some time before Jenny
Wren knew it. She was quite upset to think that
she was the last to hear the news, but she consoled
herself with the thought that she had been attending
strictly to her duties, and now that her children were
able to look out for themselves she could make up
for lost time.
Just as soon as she could get away,
she started for the Old Briar-patch. She wanted
to hear all about Peter’s adventures in the Old
Pasture and to meet Mrs. Peter. But like a great
many other busybodies, she wanted to find out all
she could about Peter’s affairs, and she thought
that the surest way to do it was not to let Peter
know that she was about until she had had a chance
to use her sharp little eyes all she wanted to.
So when she reached the Old Briar-patch, she didn’t
make a sound. It didn’t take her long to
find Peter. He was sitting under one of his favorite
bramble-bushes smiling to himself. He smiled and
smiled until Jenny Wren had to bite her tongue to
keep from asking what was pleasing him so.
[Illustration with caption: “The
quickest way for me to know
is for you to tell me,”
Replied Jimmy.]
“He looks tickled almost to
death over something, but very likely if I should
ask him what it is he wouldn’t tell me,”
thought Jenny Wren. “I guess I’ll
look around a bit first. I wonder where Mrs. Peter
is.”
So leaving Peter to smile to his heart’s
content, she went peeking and peering through the
Old Briar-patch. Of course it wasn’t a nice
thing to do, not a bit nice. But Jenny Wren didn’t
stop to think of that. By and by she saw something
that made her flutter all over with excitement.
She looked and looked until she could sit still no
longer. Then she hurried back to where Peter
was sitting. He was still smiling.
“Oh, Peter Rabbit, it’s perfectly lovely!”
she cried.
Peter looked up quickly, and a worried
look chased the smile away. “Hello, Jenny
Wren! Where did you come from? I haven’t
seen you since I got back,” said he.
“I’ve been so busy that
I haven’t had time to call before,” replied
Jenny. “I know what you’ve been smiling
about, Peter, and it’s perfectly splendid.
Has everybody heard the news?”
“No,” said Peter, “nobody
knows it but you, and I don’t want anybody else
to know it just yet. Will you keep it a secret,
Jenny Wren?”
Now Jenny was just bursting with desire
to spread the news, but Peter looked so anxious that
finally she promised that she would keep it to herself,
and she really meant to. But though Peter looked
greatly relieved as he watched her start for home,
he didn’t smile as he had before. “I
wish her tongue didn’t wag so much,” said
he.