Old Mother Nature’s plans
for good
Quite often are not understood.
— Old Granny
Fox.
Tommy Tit and Drummer the Woodpecker
and Yank Yank the Nuthatch and Sammy Jay and Chatterer
the Red Squirrel were not the only ones who were out
and about as soon as the great storm ended. Oh,
my, no! No, indeed! Everybody who was not
sleeping the winter away, or who had not a store of
food right at hand, was out. But not all were
so fortunate as Tommy Tit and his friends in finding
a good meal.
Peter Rabbit and Mrs. Peter came out
of the hole in the heart of the dear Old Briar-patch,
where they had managed to keep comfortably warm, and
at once began to fill their stomachs with bark from
young trees and tender tips of twigs. It was
very coarse food, but it would take away that empty
feeling. Mrs. Grouse burst out of the snow and
hurried to get a meal before dark. She had no
time to be particular, and so she ate spruce buds.
They were very bitter and not much to her liking,
but she was too hungry, and night was too near for
her to be fussy. She was thankful to have that
much.
Granny Fox and Reddy were out too.
They didn’t need to hurry because, as you know,
they could hunt all night, but they were so hungry
that they just had to be looking for something to
eat. They knew, of course, that everybody else
would be out, and they hoped that some of these little
people would be so weak that they could easily be caught.
That seems like a dreadful hope, doesn’t it?
But one of the first laws of Old Mother Nature is
self-preservation. That means to save your own
life first. So perhaps Granny and Reddy are not
to be blamed for hoping that some of their neighbors
might be caught easily because of the great storm.
They were very hungry indeed, and they could not
eat bark like Peter Rabbit, or buds like Mrs. Grouse,
or seeds like Whitefoot the Woodmouse. Their
teeth and stomachs are not made for such food.
It was hard going for Granny and Reddy
Fox. The snow was soft and deep in many places,
and they had to keep pretty close to those places
where rough Brother North Wind had blown away enough
of the snow to make walking fairly easy. They
soon found that their hope that they would find some
of their neighbors too weak to escape was quite in
vain. When jolly, round, red Mr. Sun dropped
clown behind the Purple Hills to go to bed, their
stomachs were quite as empty as when they had started
out.
“We’ll go down to the
Old Briar-patch. I don’t believe it will
be of much use, but you never can tell until you try.
Peter Rabbit may take it into his silly head to come
outside,” said Granny, leading the way.
When they reached the dear Old Briar-patch
they found that Peter was not outside. In fact,
peering between the brambles and bushes, they could
see his little brown form bobbing about as he hunted
for tender bark. He had already made little
paths along which he could hop easily. Peter
saw them almost as soon as they saw him.
“Hard times these,” said
Peter pleasantly. “I hope your stomachs
are not as empty as mine.” He pulled a strip
of bark from a young tree and began to chew it.
This was more than Reddy could stand. To see
Peter eating while his own stomach was just one great
big ache from emptiness was too much.
“I’m going in there and
catch him, or drive him out where you can catch him,
if I tear my coat all to pieces!” snarled Reddy.
Peter stopped chewing and sat up.
“Come right along, Reddy. Come right
along if you want to, but I would advise you to save
your skin and your coat,” said he.
Reddy’s only reply was a snarl
as he pushed his way under the brambles. He
yelped as they tore his coat and scratched his face,
but he kept on. Now Peter’s paths were
very cunningly made. He had cut them through
the very thickest of the briars just big enough for
himself and Mrs. Peter to hop along comfortably.
But Reddy is so much bigger that he had to force
his way through and in places crawl flat on his stomach,
which was very slow work, to say nothing of the painful
scratches from the briars. It was no trouble
at all for Peter to keep out of his way, and before
long Reddy gave up. Without a word Granny Fox
led the way to the Green Forest. They would
try to find where Mrs. Grouse was sleeping under the
snow. But though they hunted all night, they
failed to find her, for she wisely had gone to bed
in a spruce-tree.