Paddy the Beaver was busy cutting
down trees for the dam he had planned to build.
Up in the woods of the North from which he had come
to the Green Forest, he had learned all about tree-cutting
and dam-building and canal-digging and house-building.
Paddy’s father and mother had been very wise
in the Beaver world, and Paddy had been quick to learn.
So now he knew just what to do and the best way of
doing it. You know, a great many people waste
time and labor doing things the wrong way, so that
they have to be done over again. They forget
to be sure they are right, and so they go ahead until
they find they are wrong, and all their work goes
for nothing.
But Paddy the Beaver isn’t this
kind. Paddy would never have leaped into the
spring with the steep sides without looking, as Grandfather
Frog did. So now he carefully picked out the trees
to cut. He could not afford to waste time cutting
down a tree that wasn’t going to be just what
he wanted when it was down. When he was sure
that the tree was right, he looked up at the top to
find out whether, when he had cut it, it would fall
clear of other trees. He had learned to do that
when he was quite young and heedless. He remembered
just how he had felt when, after working hard, oh,
so hard, to cut a big tree, he had warned all his
friends to get out of the way so that they would not
be hurt when it fell, and then it hadn’t fallen
at all because the top had caught in another tree.
He was so mortified that he didn’t get over
it for a long time.
So now he made sure that a tree was
going to fall clear and just where he wanted it.
Then he sat up on his hind legs, and with his great
broad tail for a brace, began to make the chips fly.
You know Paddy has the most wonderful teeth for cutting.
They are long and broad and sharp. He would begin
by making a deep bite, and then another just a little
way below. Then he would pry out the little piece
of wood between. When he had cut very deep on
one side so that the tree would fall that way, he would
work around to the other side. Just as soon as
the tree began to lean and he was sure that it was
going to fall, he would scamper away so as to be out
of danger. He loved to see those tall trees lean
forward slowly, then faster and faster, till they struck
the ground with a crash.
Just as soon as they were down, he
would trim off the branches until the trees where
just long poles. This was easy work, for he could
take off a good-sized branch with one bite. On
many he left their bushy tops. When he had trimmed
them to suit him and had cut them into the right lengths,
he would tug and pull them down to the place where
he meant to build his dam.
There he placed the poles side by
side, not across the Laughing Brook like a bridge,
but with the big ends pointing up the Laughing Brook,
which was quite broad but shallow right there.
To keep them from floating away, he rolled stones
and piled mud on the bushy ends. Clear across
on both sides he laid those poles until the water
began to rise. Then he dragged more poles and
piled them on top of these and wedged short sticks
crosswise between them.
And all the time the Laughing Brook
was having harder and harder work to run. Its
merry laugh grew less merry and finally almost stopped,
because, you see, the water could not get through
between all those poles and sticks fast enough.
It was just about that time that the little people
of the Smiling Pool decided that it was time to see
just what Paddy was doing, and they started up the
Laughing Brook, leaving only Grandfather Frog and the
tadpoles in the Smiling Pool, which for a little while
would smile no more.