A NEW HOME AT LAST
Home, no matter where
it be,
Or it be big or small,
Is just the one place
in the world
That dearest is of all.
Johnny Chuck was thinking of this
as he worked with might and main. It was a new
house that he was building, but already he felt that
it was home, and every time he thought of it he felt
a queer little tugging at his heart. You see,
while it was his home, it was Polly Chuck’s
home, too, and that made it doubly dear to Johnny Chuck,
even before it was finished.
And where do you think Johnny was
building his new home? It was clear way over
on the edge of Farmer Brown’s old orchard!
Yes, Sir, after all the fuss Johnny Chuck had made
over any other Chuck living on the Green Meadows,
and after driving the old gray Chuck back to the Old
Pasture, Johnny Chuck had left the Green Meadows himself!
It wasn’t of his own accord
that Johnny Chuck had left the Green Meadows.
No, indeed! He loved them too well for that.
But he loved Polly Chuck more, and although he had
grumbled a little, he had followed her up to the old
orchard, and now they were going to stay there.
Sometimes Johnny shivered when he thought how near
were Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown’s boy and
Bowser the Hound.
He had never been so far from his
old home on the Green Meadows before, and it was all
very strange up here. It was very lovely, too.
Besides, it was in this very old orchard that Polly
Chuck had been born, and she knew every part of it.
Johnny felt better when he found that out. So
he set to work to build a home, and this time he meant
business. Polly Chuck could change her mind as
many times as she pleased; that was going to be their
home and that was where they were going to live.
Now Johnny Chuck had grown wise in
the ways of the world since he first ran away from
the home where he was born. Twice since then he
had built a new home, and now this would be better
than either of the others. He paid no heed to
Polly, when she pouted because he did not dig where
she wanted him to. He went from tree to tree,
big old apple-trees they were, and at the very last
tree, way down in a corner near a tumbled-down stone
wall, he found what he wanted—two spreading
roots gave him a chance to dig between them.
Polly watched him get ready for work
and she pouted some more.
“It would be a lot nicer out
in that grassy place, and a lot easier to dig,”
said she.
Johnny Chuck smiled and made the dirt
fly. “It certainly would be easier to dig,”
said he, when he stopped for breath, “easier
for me and easier for Bowser the Hound or for old
Granny Fox, if either wanted to dig us out. Now,
these old roots are just far enough apart for us to
go in and out. They make a beautiful doorway.
But Bowser the Hound cannot get through if he tries,
and he can’t make our doorway any larger.
Don’t you see how safe it is?”
Polly Chuck had to own up that it
was safer than a home in the open could possibly be,
and Johnny went on digging. He made a long hall
down to the snuggest of bedrooms, deep, deep down under
ground. Then he made a long back hall, and all
the sand from this he carried out the front way.
By and by he made a back door at the end of the back
hall, and it opened right behind a big stone fallen
from the old stone wall. You would never have
guessed that there was a back door there.
His new house was finished now, and
Johnny Chuck and Polly Chuck sat on the door-step
and watched jolly, round, red Mr. Sun go to bed behind
the Purple Hills and were happy.