Now it happened that the very day
before Paddy the Beaver decided that his pond was
big enough, and so allowed the water to run in the
Laughing Brook once more, Farmer Brown’s boy
took it into his head to go fishing in the Smiling
Pool. Just as usual he went whistling down across
the Green Meadows. Somehow, when he goes fishing,
he always feels like whistling. Grandfather Frog
heard him coming and dived into the little bit of
water remaining in the Smiling Pool and stirred up
the mud at the bottom so that Farmer Brown’s
boy shouldn’t see him.
Nearer and nearer drew the whistle.
Suddenly it stopped right short off. Farmer Brown’s
boy had come in sight of the Smiling Pool or rather,
it was what used to be the Smiling Pool. Now
there wasn’t any Smiling Pool, for the very little
pool left was too small and sickly looking to smile.
There were great banks of mud, out of which grew the
bulrushes. The lily pads were forlornly stretched
out toward the tiny pool of water remaining.
Where the banks were steep and high, the holes that
Jerry Muskrat and Billy Mink knew so well were plain
to see. Over at one side stood Jerry Muskrat’s
house, wholly out of water.
Somehow, it seemed to Farmer Brown’s
boy that he must be dreaming. He never, never
had seen anything like this before, not even in the
very driest weather of the hottest part of the summer.
He looked this way and looked that way. The Green
Meadows looked just as usual. The Green Forest
looked just as usual. The Laughing Brook—ha!
What was the matter with the Laughing Brook?
He couldn’t hear it and that, you know, was very
unusual. He dropped his rod and ran over to the
Laughing Brook. There wasn’t any brook.
No, sir, there wasn’t any brook; just pools of
water with the tiniest of streams trickling between.
Big stones over which he had always seen the water
running in the prettiest of little white falls were
bare and dry. In the little pools frightened
minnows were darting about.
Farmer Brown’s boy scratched
his head in a puzzled way. “I don’t
understand it,” said he. “I don’t
understand it at all. Something must have gone
wrong with the springs that supply the water for the
Laughing Brook. They must have failed. Yes,
Sir, that is just what must have happened. But
I never heard of such a thing happening before, and
I really don’t see how it could happen.
He stared up into the Green Forest just as if he thought
he could see those springs. Of course, he didn’t
think anything of the kind. He was just turning
it all over in his mind. “I know what I’ll
do, I’ll go up to those springs this afternoon
and find out what the trouble is,” he said out
loud. “They are way over almost on the
other side of the Green Forest, and the easiest way
to get there will be to start from home and cut across
the Old Pasture up to the edge of the Mountain behind
the Green Forest. If I try to follow up the Laughing
Brook now, it will take too long, because it winds
and twists so. Besides, it is too hard work.”
With that, Farmer Brown’s boy
went back and picked up his rod. Then he started
for home across the Green Meadows, and for once he
wasn’t whistling. You see, he was too busy
thinking. In fact, he was so busy thinking that
he didn’t see Jimmy Skunk until he almost stepped
on him, and then he gave a frightened jump and ran,
for without a gun he was just as much afraid of Jimmy
as Jimmy was of him when he did have a gun.
Jimmy just grinned and went on about
his business. It always tickles Jimmy to see
people run away from him, especially people so much
bigger than himself; they look so silly.
“I should think that they would
have learned by this time that if they don’t
bother me, I won’t bother them, he muttered as
he rolled over a stone to look for fat beetles.
“Somehow, folks never seem to understand me.”