THE LITTLE TOADS START OUT TO SEE THE WORLD
The world is a wonderful great big place
And in it the young must roam
To learn what their elders have long since
learned—
There’s never a place
like home.
It had been some time since Peter
Rabbit had visited the Smiling Pool to watch the pollywogs.
But one cloudy morning he happened to think of them,
and decided that he would run over there and see how
they were getting along. So off he started, lipperty-lipperty-lip.
He wondered if those pollywog children of Old Mr.
Toad would be much changed. The last time he
saw them some of them had just begun to grow legs,
although they still had long tails.
He had almost reached the Smiling
Pool when great big drops of rain began to splash
down. And with those first raindrops something
funny happened. Anyway, it seemed funny to Peter.
Right away he was surrounded by tiny little Toads.
Everywhere he looked he saw Toads, tiny little Toads
just like Old Mr. Toad, only so tiny that one could
have sat comfortably on a ten-cent piece and still
had plenty of room.
Peter’s big eyes grew round
with surprise as he stared. Where had they all
come from so suddenly? A minute before he hadn’t
seen a single one, and now he could hardly move without
stepping on one. It seemed, it really seemed,
as if each raindrop turned into a tiny Toad the instant
it struck the ground. Of course Peter knew that
that couldn’t be, but it was very puzzling.
And all those little Toads were bravely hopping along
as if they were bound for some particular place.
Peter watched them for a few minutes,
then he once more started for the Smiling Pool.
On the very bank whom should he meet but Old Mr. Toad.
He looked rather thin, and his back was to the Smiling
Pool. Yes, Sir, he was hopping away from the
Smiling Pool where he had been all the spring, singing
in the great chorus. Peter was almost as surprised
to see him as he had been to see the little Toads,
but just then he was most interested in those little
Toads.
“Good morning, Old Mr. Toad,”
said Peter in his most polite manner. “Can
you tell me where all these little Toads came from?”
[Illustration: “Can you
tell me where all these little Toads came from?”]
“Certainly,” replied Old
Mr. Toad. “They came from the Smiling Pool,
of course. Where did you suppose they came from?”
“I—I didn’t
know. There wasn’t one to be seen, and then
it began to rain, and right away they were everywhere.
It—it almost seemed as if they had rained
down out of the sky.”
Old Mr. Toad chuckled. “They’ve
got good sense, if I must say it about my own children,”
said he. “They know that wet weather is
the only weather for Toads to travel in. They
left the Smiling Pool in the night while it was damp
and comfortable, and then, when the sun came up, they
hid, like sensible children, under anything they could
find, sticks, stones, pieces of bark, grass.
The minute this shower came up, they knew it was good
traveling weather and out they popped.”
“But what did they leave the
Smiling Pool for?” Peter asked.
“To see the Great World,”
replied Old Mr. Toad. “Foolish, very foolish
of them, but they would do it. I did the same
thing myself when I was their age. Couldn’t
stop me any more than I could stop them. They
don’t know when they’re well off, but
young folks never do. Fine weather, isn’t
it?”