SAMMY JAY PROVES THAT HE IS NOT ALL BAD
Sammy Jay hadn’t had so much
fun for a long time as he found in watching the funny
little school in Farmer Brown’s old orchard,
where Johnny Chuck was teaching his three baby Chucks
the things that every little Chuck must learn, if
he would grow up into a big Chuck. When they
had learned to mind without waiting to ask why, and
had learned the signals which told them just what
to do when danger was near, Johnny began to lead them
farther and farther away from home.
He took them up along the old stone
wall and showed them how to find safe hiding-places
among the stones. Then he took them off a little
way and suddenly gave the danger signal. It was
funny, very funny indeed to see the three little Chucks
scamper for the old stone wall and crawl out of sight.
The first time, two of them tried
to squeeze into the same hole together, and each was
in such a hurry that he wouldn’t let the other
go first. Then both lost their tempers and they
began to fight about it, quite forgetting that if
there was really any danger near, they surely would
come to harm. Such a scolding as Johnny Chuck
did give those two little Chucks! Then he made
them try it all over again.
Once he found a foot print which Reddy
Fox had made in some soft earth during the night,
and made each little Chuck smell of it, while he told
them all about Reddy and old Granny Fox and how smart
and sly they were and how very, very fond they were
of tender young Chucks for dinner.
The three little Chucks shivered when
they smelled of Reddy’s track, and the hair
along their backs stood up in a way that was very funny
to see.
Then Johnny Chuck took them over to
the edge of the old orchard, where they could peep
out over the Green Meadows. He pointed out old
Whitetail the Marshhawk, sailing back and forth over
the meadows, and told them how once, when he was a
little Chuck and had run away from home, old Whitetail
had nearly caught him. He told them about Farmer
Brown’s boy and about Bowser the Hound and a
great many other things that little Chucks should
learn about.
Now all the time that Johnny Chuck
was teaching these things, he was keeping the sharpest
kind of a watch for danger, and there were many times
when he would give the danger signal. Then they
would all lie flat down in the grass and keep perfectly
still, or else scamper as fast as they could along
the little paths which Johnny had made, to the safety
of the snug home under the old apple-tree. But
even the most watchful are surprised sometimes.
One morning, when Johnny Chuck had
led the three little Chucks farther from home than
usual, Farmer Brown’s boy took it into his head
to visit the old orchard. Johnny Chuck did not
see him coming. You see, the orchard grass had
grown so tall that even when he sat up his very straightest,
Johnny could not always see over the top of it.
So this morning he failed to see Farmer Brown’s
boy coming.
But Sammy Jay, sitting in his snug
hiding-place in the top of one of the old apple-trees,
saw him. At first Sammy Jay’s sharp eyes
twinkled. There would be some fun now! Perhaps
Farmer Brown’s boy would catch one of the little
Chucks! Sammy Jay could picture to himself the
fright of Johnny Chuck and the three little Chucks.
He fairly hugged himself in delight, for you know
Sammy Jay dearly loves to see other people in trouble.
Then he thought of all the fun he
had had watching those three little Chucks learn their
lessons, and suddenly the thought of anything happening
to them made Sammy Jay feel uncomfortable. Almost
without stopping to think, he screamed at the top
of his lungs:
“Run, Johnny Chuck, run!
Here comes Farmer Brown’s boy!”
And Johnny Chuck ran. He didn’t
wait to ask questions or even to look. He started
the three little Chucks ahead of him, and he nipped
their heels to make them run faster. And just
in time they reached the snug house under the old
apple-tree in the far corner.
Farmer Brown’s boy was just
in time to see them disappear. He watched Sammy
Jay flying over to the Green Forest and screaming “Thief!
thief!” as he flew.
“I wonder now if that jay warned
those chucks purposely,” said he, as he scratched
his head thoughtfully.
If Peter Rabbit had been there, he
could have told him that Sammy Jay did, for he knows
all about Sammy Jay and his tricks. But Peter
wasn’t there. The fact is, Peter was very
busy doing the most foolish of all the foolish things
he has ever done—trying to change his name.
You may read all about it in The Adventures of Peter
Cottontail. You see it takes a whole book to
tell all about Peter and his doings.
* END of the Project
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