“Oh, tell me, you and you and you,
If it may hap you’ve ever
heard
Of all that wond’rous is and great
The greatest is the spoken word?”
It’s true. It’sthe
truest thing that ever was. If you don’t
believe it, you just go ask Jerry Muskrat. He’ll
tell you it’s true, and Jerry knows. You
see, it’s this way: Words are more than
just sounds. Oh, my, yes! They are little
messengers, and once they have been sent out, you
can’t call them back. No, Sir, you can’t
call them back, and sometimes that is a very sad thing,
because — well, you see these little messengers
always carry something to some one else, and that
something may be anger or hate or fear or an untruth,
and it is these things which make most of the trouble
in this world. Or that something may be love
or sympathy or helpfulness or kindness, and it is
these things which put an end to most of the troubles
in this world.
Just take the ease of Jerry Muskrat.
There he sat on the new dam, which had made the strange
pond in the Green Forest, shaking with fear until
his teeth chattered, as he watched a stranger very,
very much bigger than he climb up on the dam.
Jerry was afraid, because he had seen that the stranger
could swim as well as he could, and as Jerry had no
secret burrows there, he knew that he couldn’t
get away from the stranger if he wanted to.
Somehow, Jerry knew without being told that the stranger
had built the dam, and you know Jerry had twice made
a hole in the dam to let the water out of the strange
pond into the Laughing Brook. Jerry knew right
down in his heart that if he had built that dam, he
would be very, very angry with any one who tried to
spoil it, and that is just what he had tried to do.
So he sat with chattering teeth, too frightened to
even try to run.
“I wish I had let some one else
keep watch,” said Jerry to himself.
Then the big stranger had spoken.
He had said: “Hello, Jerry Muskrat!
Don’t you know me?” and his voice hadn’t
sounded the least bit angry. Then he had told
Jerry that he was his big cousin, Paddy the Beaver,
and he hoped that they would be friends.
Now everything was just as it had
been before — the strange pond, the dam,
Jerry himself and the big stranger, and the black shadows
of the night — and yet somehow, everything
was different, all because a few pleasant words had
been spoken. A great fear had fallen away from
Jerry’s heart, and in its place was a great hope
that after all there wasn’t to be any trouble.
So he replied to Paddy the Beaver as politely as
he knew how. Paddy was just as polite, and the
first thing Jerry knew, instead of being enemies, as
Jerry had all along made up his mind would be the
case when he found the builder of the dam, here they
were becoming the best of friends, all because Paddy
the Beaver had said the right thing in the right way.
“But you haven’t told
me yet what you made those holes in my dam for, Cousin
Jerry,” said Paddy the Beaver finally.
Jerry didn’t know just what
to say. He was so pleased with his big new cousin
that he didn’t want to hurt his feelings by telling
him that he didn’t think that dam had any business
to be across the Laughing Brook, and at the same time
he wanted Paddy to know how he had spoiled the Laughing
Brook and the Smiling Pool. At last he made
up his mind to tell the whole story.