All the little people who live on
the Green Meadows and in the Smiling Pool and along
the Laughing Brook were to have a holiday. The
Merry Little Breezes of Old Mother West Wind had been
very busy, oh very busy indeed, in sending word to
all the little meadow folks. You see, Peter Rabbit
had been boasting of how fast he could run. Reddy
Fox was quite sure that he could run faster than Peter
Rabbit. Billy Mink, who can move so quickly you
hardly can see him, was quite sure that neither Peter
Rabbit nor Reddy Fox could run as fast as he.
They all met one day beside the Smiling Pool and agreed
that old Grandfather Frog should decide who was the
swiftest.
Now Grandfather Frog was accounted
very wise. You see he had lived a long time,
oh, very much longer than any of the others, and therefore,
because of the wisdom of age, Grandfather Frog was
always called on to decide all disputes. He sat
on his green lily-pad while Billy Mink sat on the
Big Rock, and Peter Rabbit and Reddy Fox sat on the
bank. Each in turn told why he thought he was
the fastest. Old Grandfather Frog listened and
listened and said never a word until they were all
through. When they had finished, he stopped to
catch a foolish green fly and then he said: “The
best way to decide who is the swiftest is to have a
race.”
So it was agreed that Peter Rabbit
and Reddy Fox and Billy Mink should start together
from the old butternut tree on one edge of the Green
Meadows, race away across the Green Meadows to the
little hill on the other side and each bring back a
nut from the big hickory which grew there. The
one who first reached the old butternut tree with
a hickory nut would be declared the winner. The
Merry Little Breezes flew about over the Green Meadows
telling everyone about the race and everyone planned
to be there.
It was a beautiful summer day.
Mr. Sun smiled and smiled, and the more he smiled
the warmer it grew. Everyone was there to see
the race—Striped Chipmunk, Happy Jack Squirrel,
Sammy Jay, Blacky the Crow, Hooty the Owl and Bobby
Coon all sat up in the old butternut tree where it
was cool and shady. Johnny Chuck, Jerry Muskrat,
Jimmy Skunk, Little Joe Otter, Grandfather Frog and
even old Mr. Toad, were there. Last of all came
Spotty the Turtle. Now Spotty the Turtle is a
very slow walker, and he cannot run at all. When
Peter Rabbit saw him coming up towards the old butternut
tree he shouted: “Come, Spotty, don’t
you want to race with us?”
Everybody laughed because you know
Spotty is so very, very slow but Spotty didn’t
laugh and he didn’t get cross because everyone
else laughed.
“There is a wise old saying,
Peter Rabbit,” said Spotty the Turtle, “which
shows that those who run fastest do not always reach
a place first. I think I will enter this
race.”
Every one thought that that was the
best joke they had heard for a long time, and all
laughed harder than ever. They all agreed that
Spotty the Turtle should start in the race too.
So they all stood in a row, Peter
Rabbit first, the Billy Mink, then Reddy Fox, and
right side of Reddy Fox Spotty the Turtle.
“Are you ready?” asked Grandfather Frog.
“Go!”
Away went Peter Rabbit with great
big jumps. After him went Billy Mink so fast
that was just a little brown streak going through
the tall grass, and side by side with him ran Reddy
Fox. Now just as they started Spotty the Turtle
reached up and grabbed the long hair on the end of
Reddy’s big tail. Of course Reddy couldn’t
have stopped to shake him off, because Peter Rabbit
and Billy Mink were running so fast that he had to
run his very best to keep up with them. But he
didn’t even know that Spotty the Turtle was
there. You see Spotty is not very heavy and Reddy
Fox was so excited that he did not notice that his
big tail was heavier than usual.
The Merry Little Breezes flew along,
too, to see that the race was fair. Peter Rabbit
went with great big jumps. Whenever he came to
a little bush he jumped right over it, for Peter Rabbit’s
legs are long and meant for jumping. Billy Mink
is so slim that he slipped between the bushes and
through the long grass like a little brown streak.
Reddy Fox, who is bigger than either Peter Rabbit
or Billy Mink, had no trouble in keeping up with them.
Not one of them noticed that Spotty the Turtle was
hanging fast to the end of Reddy’s tail.
Now just at the foot of the little
hill on which the big hickory tree grew was a little
pond. It wasn’t very wide but it was quite
long. Billy Mink remembered this pond and he chuckled
to himself as he raced along, for he knew that Peter
Rabbit couldn’t swim and he knew that Reddy
Fox does not like the water, so therefore both would
have to run around it. He himself can swim even
faster than he can run. The more he thought of
this, the more foolish it seemed that he should hurry
so on such a warm day. “For,” said
Billy Mink to himself, “even if they reach the
pond first, they will have to run around it, while
I can swim across it and cool off while I am swimming.
I will surely get there first.” So Billy
Mink ran slower and slower, and pretty soon he had
dropped behind.
Mr. Sun, round and red, looking down,
smiled and smiled to see the race. The more he
smiled the warmer it grew. Now, Peter Rabbit
had a thick gray coat and Reddy Fox had a thick red
coat, and they both began to get very, very warm.
Peter Rabbit did not make such long jumps as when
he first started. Reddy Fox began to feel very
thirsty, and his tongue hung out. Now that Billy
Mink was behind them they thought they did not need
to hurry so.
Peter Rabbit reached the little pond
first. He had not thought of that pond when he
agreed to enter the race. He stopped right on
the edge of it and sat up on his hind legs. Right
across he could see the big hickory tree, so near
and yet so far, for he knew that he must run around
the pond then back again, and it was a long, long
way. In just a moment Reddy Fox ran out of the
bushes and Reddy felt much as Peter Rabbit did.
Way, way behind them was Billy Mink, trotting along
comfortably and chuckling to himself. Peter Rabbit
looked at Reddy Fox in dismay, and Reddy Fox looked
at Peter Rabbit in dismay. Then they both looked
at Billy Mink and remembered that Billy Mink could
swim right across.
Then off Peter Rabbit started as fast
as he could go around the pond one way, and Reddy
Fox started around the pond the other way. They
were so excited that neither noticed a little splash
in the pond. That was Spotty the Turtle who had
let go of Reddy’s tail and now was swimming
across the pond, for you know that Spotty is a splendid
swimmer. Only once or twice he stuck his little
black nose up to get some air. The rest of the
time he swam under water and no one but the Merry
Little Breezes saw him. Right across he swam,
and climbed up the bank right under the big hickory
tree.
Now there were just three nuts left
under the hickory trees. Two of these Spotty
took down to the edge of the pond and buried in the
mud. The other he took in his mouth and started
back across the pond. Just as he reached the
other shore up trotted Billy Mink, but Billy Mink
didn’t see Spotty. He was too intent watching
Reddy Fox and Peter Rabbit, who were now half way around
the pond. In he jumped with a splash. My!
How good that cool water did feel! He didn’t
have to hurry now, because he felt sure that the race
was his. So he swam round and round and chased
some fish and had a beautiful time in the water.
By and by he looked up and saw that Peter Rabbit was
almost around the pond one way and Reddy Fox was almost
around the pond the other way. They both looked
tired and hot and discouraged.
Then Billy Mink swam slowly across
and climbed out on the bank under the big hickory
tree. But where were the nuts? Look as he
would, he could not see a nut anywhere, yet the Merry
Little Breezes had said there were three nuts lying
under the hickory tree. Billy Mink ran this way
and ran that way. He was still running around,
poking over the leaves and looking under the twigs
and pieces of bark when Peter Rabbit and Reddy Fox
came up.
Then they, too, began to look under
the leaves and under the bark. They pawed around
in the grass, they hunted in every nook and cranny,
but not a nut could they find. They were tired
and cross and hot and they accused Billy Mink of having
hidden the nuts. Billy Mink stoutly insisted
that he had not hidden the nuts, that he had not found
the nuts, and when they saw how hard he was hunting
they believed him.
All the afternoon they hunted and
hunted and hunted, and all the afternoon Spotty the
Turtle, with the nut in his mouth, was slowly, oh,
so slowly, crawling straight back across the Green
Meadows towards the old butternut tree. Round,
red Mr. Sun was getting very close to the Purple Hills,
where he goes to bed every night, and all the little
meadow folks were getting ready to go to their homes.
They were wondering and wondering what could have
happened to the racers, when Sammy Jay spied the Merry
Little Breezes dancing across the Green Meadows.
“Here come the Merry Little
Breezes; they’ll tell us who wins the race,”
cried Sammy Jay.
When the Merry Little Breezes reached
the old butternut tree, all the little meadow folks
crowded around them, but the Merry Little Breezes
just laughed and laughed and wouldn’t say a word.
Then all of a sudden, out of the tall meadow grass
crept Spotty the Turtle and laid the hickory nut at
the feet of old Grandfather Frog. Old Grandfather
Frog was so surprised that he actually let a great
green fly buzz right past his nose.
“Where did you get that hickory
nut?” asked Grandfather Frog.
“Under the big hickory tree
on the hill on the other side of the Green Meadows,”
said Spotty.
Then all the Merry Little Breezes
clapped their hands and shouted: “He did!
He did! Spotty wins the race!”
Then they told how Spotty reached
the pond by clinging to the tip of Reddy Fox’s
tail, and had hidden the other two nuts, and then
how he had patiently crawled home while Billy Mink
and Reddy Fox and Peter Rabbit were hunting and hunting
and hunting for the nuts they could not find.
And so Spotty the Turtle was awarded
the race, and to this day Peter Rabbit and Reddy Fox
and Billy Mink can’t bear the sight of a hickory
nut.