PETER LEARNS MORE OF MRS. QUACK’S TROUBLES
It often happens when we know
The troubles that our friends pass through,
Our own seem very small indeed; You’ll
always find that this is true.
“My, you must have felt glad
when you reached your winter home!” exclaimed
Peter Rabbit when Mrs. Quack finished the account of
her long, terrible journey from her summer home in
the far Northland to her winter home in the far Southland.
“I did,” replied Mrs.
Quack, “but all the time I couldn’t forget
those to whom terrible things had happened on the way
down, and then, too, I kept dreading the long journey
back.”
“I don’t see why you didn’t
stay right there. I would have,” said Peter,
nodding his head with an air of great wisdom.
“Not if you were I,” replied
Mrs. Quack. “In the first place it isn’t
a proper place in which to bring up young Ducks and
make them strong and healthy. In the second place
there are more dangers down there for young Ducks
than up in the far Northland. In the third place
there isn’t room for all the Ducks to nest properly.
And lastly there is a great longing for our real home,
which Old Mother Nature has put in our hearts and
which just makes us go. We couldn’t
be happy if we didn’t.”
“Is the journey back as bad
as the journey down?” asked Peter.
“Worse, very much worse,”
replied Mrs. Quack sadly. “You can see
for yourself just how bad it is, for here I am all
alone.” Tears filled Mrs. Quack’s
eyes. “It is almost too terrible to talk
about,” she continued after a minute. “You
see, for one thing, food isn’t as plentiful
as it is in the fall, and we just have to go wherever
it is to be found. Those two-legged creatures
know where those feeding-grounds are just as well
as we do, and they hide there with their terrible
guns just as they did when we were coming south.
But it is much worse now, very much worse. You
see, when we were going the other way, if we found
them at one place we could go on to another, but when
we are going north we cannot always do that.
We cannot go any faster than Jack Frost does.
Sometimes we are driven out of a place by the bang,
bang of the terrible guns and go on, only to find
that we have caught up with Jack Frost, and that the
ponds and the rivers are still covered with ice.
Then there is nothing to do but to turn back to where
those terrible guns are waiting for us. We just
have to do it.”
Mrs. Quack stopped and shivered.
“It seems to me I have heard nothing but the
noise of those terrible guns ever since we started,”
said she. “I haven’t had a good square
meal for days and days, nor a good rest. That
is what makes me so dreadfully nervous. Sometimes,
when we had been driven from place to place until we
had caught up with Jack Frost, there would be nothing
but ice excepting in small places in a river where
the water runs too swiftly to freeze. We would
just have to drop into one of these to rest a little,
because we had flown so far that our wings ached as
if they would drop off. Then just as we would
think we were safe for a little while, there would
come the bang of a terrible gun. Then we would
have to fly again as long as we could, and finally
come back to the same place because there was no other
place where we could go. Then we would have to
do it all over again until night came. Sometimes
I think that those men with terrible guns must hate
us and want to kill every one of us. If they
didn’t, they would have a little bit of pity.
They simply haven’t any hearts at all.”
“It does seem so,” agreed
Peter. “But wait until you know Farmer
Brown’s boy! He’s got a heart!”
he added brightly.
“I don’t want to know
him,” retorted Mrs. Quack. “If he
comes near here, you’ll see me leave in a hurry.
I wouldn’t trust one of them, not one minute.
You don’t think he will come, do you?”
Peter sat up and looked across the
Green Meadows, and his heart sank. “He’s
coming now, but I’m sure he won’t hurt
you, Mrs. Quack,” said he.
But Mrs. Quack wouldn’t wait
to see. With a hasty promise to come back when
the way was clear, she jumped into the air and on swift
wings disappeared towards the Big River.