Work, work all the night
While the stars are
shining bright;
Work, work all the day;
I have got no time to
play.
This little rhyme Paddy the Beaver
made up as he toiled at building the dam which was
to make the pond he so much desired deep in the Green
Forest. Of course it wasn’t quite true,
that about working all night and all day. Nobody
could do that, you know, and keep it up. Everybody
has to rest and sleep. Yes, and everybody has
to play a little to be at their best. So it wasn’t
quite true that Paddy worked all day after working
all night. But it was true that Paddy had no
time to play. He had too much to do. He
had had his playtime during the long summer, and now
he had to get ready for the long, cold winter.
Now, of all the little workers in
the Green Forest, on the Green Meadows, and in the
Smiling Pool, none can compare with Paddy the Beaver,
not even his cousin, Jerry Muskrat. Happy Jack
Squirrel and Striped Chipmunk store up food for the
long, cold months when rough Brother North Wind and
Jack Frost rule, and Jerry Muskrat builds a fine house
wherein to keep warm and comfortable, but all this
is as nothing to the work of Paddy the Beaver.
As I said before, Paddy had had a
long playtime through the summer. He had wandered
up and down the Laughing Brook. He had followed
it way up to the place where it started. And all
the time he had been studying and studying to make
sure that he wanted to stay in the Green Forest.
In the first place, he had to be sure that there was
plenty of the kind of food that he likes. Then
he had to be equally sure that he could make a pond
near where this particular food grew. Last of
all, he had to satisfy himself that if he did make
a pond and build a home, he would be reasonably safe
in it. And all these things he had done in his
playtime. Now he was ready to go to work, and
when Paddy begins work, he sticks to it until it is
finished. He says that is the only way to succeed,
and you know and I know that he is right.
Now Paddy the Beaver can see at night
just as Reddy Fox and Peter Rabbit and Bobby Coon
can, and he likes the night best, because he feels
safest then. But he can see in the daytime too,
and when he feels that he is perfectly safe and no
one is watching, he works then too. Of course,
the first thing to do was to build a dam across the
Laughing Brook to make the pond he so much needed.
He chose a low, open place deep in the Green Forest,
around the edge of which grew many young aspen trees,
the bark of which is his favorite food. Through
the middle of this open place flowed the Laughing
Brook. At the lower edge was just the place for
a dam. It would not have to be very long, and
when it was finished and the water was stopped in
the Laughing Brook, it would just have to flow over
the low, open place and make a pond there. Paddy’s
eyes twinkled when he first saw it. It was right
then that he made up his mind to stay in the Green
Forest.
So now that he was ready to begin
his dam he went up the Laughing Brook to a place where
alders and willows grew, and there he began work;
that work was the cutting of a great number of trees
by means of his big front teeth which were given him
for just this purpose. And as he worked, Paddy
was happy, for one can never be truly happy who does
no work.