One morning when big round Mr. Sun
was climbing up in the sky and Old Mother West Wind
had sent all her Merry Little Breezes to play in the
Green Meadows, Johnny Chuck started out for a walk.
First he sat up very straight and looked and looked
all around to see if Reddy Fox was anywhere about,
for you know Reddy Fox liked to tease Johnny Chuck.
But Reddy Fox was nowhere to be seen,
so Johnny Chuck trotted down the Lone Little Path
to the wood. Mr. Sun was shining as brightly
as ever he could and Johnny Chuck, who was very, very
fat, grew very, very warm. By and by he sat down
on the end of a log under a big tree to rest.
Thump! Something hit Johnny Chuck
right on the top of his round little head. It
made Johnny Chuck jump.
“Hello, Johnny Chuck!”
said a voice that seemed to come right out of the
sky. Johnny Chuck tipped his head way, way back
and looked up. He was just in time to see Happy
Jack Squirrel drop a nut. Down it came and hit
Johnny Chuck right on the tip of his funny, black,
little nose.
“Oh!” said Johnny Chuck,
and tumbled right over back off the log. But
Johnny Chuck was so round and so fat and so roly-poly
that it didn’t hurt him a bit.
“Ha! Ha! Ha!” laughed Happy
Jack up in the tree.
“Ha! Ha! Ha!”
laughed Johnny Chuck, picking himself up. Then
they both laughed together. It was such a good
joke.
“What are you laughing at?”
asked a voice so close to Johnny Chuck that he rolled
over three times he was so surprised. It was
Peter Rabbit.
“What are you doing in my wood?” asked
Peter Rabbit.
“I’m taking a walk,” said Johnny
Chuck.
“Good,” said Peter Rabbit, “I’ll
come along too.”
So Johnny Chuck and Peter Rabbit set
out along the Lone Little Path through the wood.
Peter Rabbit hopped along with great big jumps, for
Peter’s legs are long and meant for jumping,
but Johnny Chuck couldn’t keep up though he
tried very hard, for Johnny’s legs are short.
Pretty soon Peter Rabbit came back, walking very softly.
He whispered in Johnny Chuck’s ear.
“I’ve found something,” said Peter
Rabbit.
“What is it?” asked Johnny Chuck.
“I’ll show you,”
said Peter Rabbit, “but you must be very, very
still, and not make the least little bit of noise.”
Johnny Chuck promised to be very,
very still for he wanted very much to see what Peter
Rabbit had found. Peter Rabbit tip-toed down
the Lone Little Path through the wood, his funny long
ears pointing right up to the sky. And behind
him tip-toed Johnny Chuck, wondering and wondering
what it could be that Peter Rabbit had found.
Pretty soon they came to a nice mossy
green log right across the Lone Little Path.
Peter Rabbit stopped and sat up very straight.
He looked this way and looked that way. Johnny
Chuck stopped too and he sat up very straight and
looked this way and looked that way, but all he could
see was the mossy green log across the Lone Little
Path.
“What is it, Peter Rabbit?” whispered
Johnny Chuck.
“You can’t see it yet,”
whispered Peter Rabbit, “for first we have to
jump over that mossy green log. Now I’ll
jump first, and then you jump just the way I do, and
then you’ll see what it is I’ve found,”
said Peter Rabbit.
So Peter Rabbit jumped first, and
because his legs are long and meant for jumping, he
jumped way, way over the mossy green log. Then
he turned around and sat up to see Johnny Chuck jump
over the mossy green log, too.
Johnny Chuck tried to jump very high
and very far, just as he had seen Peter Rabbit jump,
but Johnny Chuck’s legs are very short and not
meant for jumping. Besides, Johnny Chuck was very,
very fat. So though he tried very hard indeed
to jump just like Peter Rabbit, he stubbed his toes
on the top of the mossy green log and over he tumbled,
head first, and landed with a great big thump right
on Reddy Fox, who was lying fast asleep on the other
side of the mossy green log.
Peter Rabbit laughed and laughed until
he had to hold his sides.
My, how frightened Johnny Chuck was
when he saw what he had done! Before he could
get on his feet he had rolled right over behind a
little bush, and there he lay very, very still.
Reddy Fox awoke with a grunt when
Johnny Chuck fell on him so hard, and the first thing
he saw was Peter Rabbit laughing so that he had to
hold his sides. Reddy Fox didn’t stop to
look around. He thought that Peter Rabbit had
jumped on him. Up jumped Reddy Fox and away ran
Peter Rabbit. Away went Reddy Fox after Peter
Rabbit. Peter dodged behind the trees, and jumped
over the bushes, and ran this way and ran that way,
just as hard as ever he could, for Peter Rabbit was
very much afraid of Reddy Fox. And Reddy Fox
followed Peter Rabbit behind the trees and over the
bushes this way and that way, but he couldn’t
catch Peter Rabbit. Pretty soon Peter Rabbit
came to the house of Jimmy Skunk. He knew that
Jimmy Skunk was over in the pasture, so he popped right
in and then he was safe, for the door of Jimmy Skunk’s
house was too small for Reddy Fox to squeeze in.
Reddy Fox sat down and waited, but Peter Rabbit didn’t
come out. By and by Reddy Fox gave it up and
trotted off home where old Mother Fox was waiting
for him.
All this time Johnny Chuck had sat
very still, watching Reddy Fox try to catch Peter
Rabbit. And when he saw Peter Rabbit pop into
the house of Jimmy Skunk and Reddy Fox trot away home,
Johnny Chuck stood up and brushed his little coat
very clean and then he trotted back up the Lone Little
Path through the wood to his own dear little path
through the Green Meadows where the Merry Little Breezes
of Old Mother West Wind were still playing, till he
was safe in his own snug little house once more.