JOHNNY CHUCK TURNS TRAMP
Johnny Chuck had turned tramp.
Yes, Sir, Johnny Chuck had turned tramp. It was
a funny thing to do, but he had done it. He didn’t
know why he had done it, excepting that he had become
dissatisfied and discontented and unhappy in his old
home. And then, almost without thinking what
he was doing, he had told Jimmy Skunk that he could
have the house he had worked so hard to build the
summer before and of which he had been so proud.
Then Johnny Chuck had swaggered away down the Lone
Little Path without once looking back at the home he
was leaving.
Where was he going? Well, to
tell the truth, Johnny didn’t know. He
was going to see the world, and perhaps when he had
seen the world, he would build him a new house.
So as long as he was in sight of Jimmy Skunk, he swaggered
along quite as if he was used to traveling about,
without any snug house to go to at night. But
right down in his heart Johnny Chuck didn’t
feel half so bold as he pretended.
You see, not since he was a little
Chuck and had run away from old Mother Chuck with
Peter Rabbit, had he ever been very far from his own
door-step. He had always been content to grow
fat and roly-poly right near his own home, and listen
to the tales of the great world from Jimmy Skunk and
Peter Rabbit and Bobby Coon and Unc’ Billy Possum,
all of whom are great travelers.
But now, here he was, actually setting
forth, and without a home to come back to! You
see, he had made up his mind that no matter what happened,
he wouldn’t come back, after having given his
house to Jimmy Skunk.
When he had reached a place where
he thought Jimmy Skunk couldn’t see him, Johnny
Chuck turned and looked back, and a queer little feeling
seemed to make a lump that filled his throat and choked
him. The fact is, Johnny Chuck already began
to feel homesick. But he swallowed very hard
and tried to make himself think that he was having
a splendid time. He stopped looking back and
started on, and as he tramped along, he tried to sing
a song he had once heard Jimmy Skunk sing:
“The world may stretch
full far and wide—
What matters that to
me?
I’ll tramp it
up; I’ll tramp it down!
For I am bold and free.”
It was a very brave little song, but
Johnny Chuck didn’t feel half so brave and bold
as he tried to think he did. Already he was beginning
to wonder where he should spend the night. Then
he thought of old Whitetail the Marshhawk, who had
given him such a fright and had so nearly caught him
when he was a little fellow. The thought made
him look around hastily, and there was old Whitetail
himself, sailing back and forth hungrily just ahead
of him. A great fear took possession of Johnny
Chuck, and he made himself as flat as possible in the
grass, for there was no place to hide. He made
up his mind that anyway he would fight.
Nearer and nearer came old Whitetail!
Finally he passed right over Johnny Chuck. But
he didn’t offer to touch him. Indeed, it
seemed to Johnny that old Whitetail actually grinned
and winked at him. And right then all his fear
left him.
“Pooh!” said Johnny Chuck
scornfully. “Who’s afraid of him!”
He suddenly realized that he was no longer a helpless
little Chuck who couldn’t take care of himself,
but big and strong, with sharp teeth with which his
old enemy had no mind to make a closer acquaintance,
when there were mice and snakes to be caught without
fighting. So he puffed out his chest and went
on, and actually began to enjoy himself, and almost
wished for a chance to show how big and strong he was.