Across the Old Pasture to the foot
of the Mountain back of the Green Forest tramped Farmer
Brown’s boy. Ahead of him trotted Bowser
the Hound, sniffing and snuffing for the tracks of
Reddy or Granny Fox. Of course he didn’t
find them, for Reddy and Granny hadn’t been
up in the Old Pasture for a long time. But he
did find old Jed Thumper, the big gray Rabbit who had
made things so uncomfortable for Peter Rabbit once
upon a time and gave old Jed such a fright that he
didn’t look where he was going and almost ran
head-first into Farmer Brown’s boy.
“Hi, there, you old cottontail!”
yelled Farmer Brown’s boy, and this frightened
off Jed still more, so that he actually ran right
past his own castle of bullbriars without seeing it.
Farmer Brown’s boy kept on his
way, laughing at the fright of old Jed Thumper.
Presently he reached the springs from which came the
water that made the very beginning of the Laughing
Brook. He expected to find them dry, for way
down on the Green Meadows the Smiling Pool was nearly
dry, and the Laughing Brook was nearly dry, and he
had supposed that of course the reason was that the
springs where the Laughing Brook started were no longer
bubbling.
But they were! The clear cold
water came bubbling up out of the ground just as it
always had, and ran off down into the Green Forest
in a little stream that would grow and grow as it ran
and became the Laughing Brook. Farmer Brown’s
boy took off his ragged old straw hat and scowled
down at the bubbling water just as if it had no business
to be bubbling there.
Of course, he didn’t think just
that. The fact is, he didn’t know just
what he did think. Here were the springs bubbling
away just as they always had. There was the little
stream starting off down into the Green Forest with
a gurgle that by and by would become a laugh, just
as it always had. And yet down on the Green Meadows
on the other side of the Green Forest there was no
longer a Laughing Brook or a Smiling Pool. He
felt as if he ought to pinch himself to make sure
that he was awake and not dreaming.
“I don’t know what it
means,” said he, talking out loud. “No,
Sir, I don’t know what it means at all, but I’m
going to find out. There’s a cause for
everything in this world, and when a fellow doesn’t
know a thing, it is his business to find out all about
it. I’m going to find out what has happened
to the Laughing Brook, if it takes me a year!”
With that he started to follow the
little stream which ran gurgling down into the Green
Forest. He had followed that little stream more
than once, and now he found it just as he remembered
it. The farther it ran, the larger it grew, until
at last it became the Laughing Brook, merrily tumbling
over rocks and making deep pools in which the trout
loved to hide. At last he came to the edge of
a little open hollow in the very heart of the Green
Forest. He knew what splendid deep holes there
were in the Laughing Brook here, and how the big trout
loved to lie in them because they were deep and cool.
He was thinking of these trout now and wishing that
he had brought along his fishing rod. He pushed
his way through a thicket of alders and then—Farmer
Brown’s boy stopped suddenly and fairly gasped!
He had to stop because there right in front of him
was a pond!
He rubbed his eyes and looked again.
Then he stooped down and put his hand in the water
to see if it was real. There was no doubt about
it. It was real water—a real pond where
there never had been a pond before. It was very
still there in the heart of the Green Forest.
It was always very still there, but it seemed stiller
than usual as he tramped around the edge of this strange
pond. He felt as if it were all a dream.
He wondered if pretty soon he wouldn’t wake
up and find it all untrue. But he didn’t,
so he kept on tramping until presently he came to a
dam—a splendid dam of logs and sticks and
mud. Over the top of it the water was running,
and down in the Green Forest below he could hear the
Laughing Brook just beginning to laugh once more.
Farmer Brown’s boy sat down with his elbows
on his knees and his chin in his hands. He was
almost too much surprised to even think.