HAPPY DAYS FOR MR. AND MRS. QUACK
Whose heart is true and brave and
strong, Who ne’er gives up to grim despair,
Will find some day that skies are blue And
all the world is bright and fair.
If you don’t believe it, just
ask Mr. and Mrs. Quack. They know. Certainly
the world never looked darker for any one than it did
for them when the terrible gun of a hunter broke Mr.
Quack’s wing on the Big River and ended all
their dreams of a home in the far Northland.
Then, through the help of Jerry Muskrat, they found
the lonely pond of Paddy the Beaver deep in the Green
Forest, and there, because their secret had been well
kept, presently they found peace and hope and then
happiness. You see, the heart of Mrs. Quack was
true and brave and strong. She was the kind to
make the best of things, and she at once decided that
if they couldn’t have their home where they
wanted it, they would have it where they could have
it. She was determined that they should have a
home anyway, and Paddy the Beaver’s little pond
was not such a bad place after all.
So she wasted no time. She examined
every inch of the shore of that little pond.
At last, a little back from the water, she found a
place to suit her, a place so well hidden by bushes
that only the sharpest eyes ever would find it.
And a little later it would be still harder to find,
as she well knew, for all about clumps of tall ferns
were springing up, and when they had fully unfolded,
not even the keen eyes of Sammy Jay looking down from
a near-by tree would be able to discover her secret.
There she made a nest on the ground, a nest of dried
grass and leaves, and lined it with the softest and
most beautiful of linings, down plucked from her own
breast. In it she laid ten eggs. Then came
long weeks of patient sitting on them, watching the
wonder of growing things about her, the bursting into
bloom of shy wood flowers, the unfolding of leaves
on bush and tree, the springing up in a night of queer
mushrooms, which people call toadstools, and all the
time dreaming beautiful Duck dreams of the babies
which would one day hatch from those precious eggs.
She never left them save to get a little food and
just enough exercise to keep her well and strong, and
when she did leave them, she always carefully pulled
soft down over them to keep them warm while she was
away.
Mr. Quack knew all about that nest,
though he had taken no part in building it and had
no share in the care of those eggs. He was very
willing that she should do all the work and thought
it quite sufficient that he should be on guard to
give warning if danger should appear. So he spent
the long beautiful days lazily swimming about in the
little pond, gossiping with Paddy the Beaver, and
taking the best of care of himself. The broken
wing healed and grew strong again, for it had not
been so badly broken, after all. If he missed
the company of others of his kind which he would have
had during these long days of waiting had they been
able to reach their usual nesting-place in the far
Northland, he never mentioned it.
Unknown to them, Farmer Brown’s
boy discovered where they were. Later he came
often to the pond and was content to sit quietly on
the shore and watch Mr. Quack, so that Mr. Quack grew
quite used to him and did not fear him at all.
In fact, after the first few times, he made no attempt
to hide. You see he discovered that Farmer Brown’s
boy was a friend. Always after he had left, there
was something good to eat near where he had been sitting,
for Farmer Brown’s boy brought corn and oats
and sometimes a handful of wheat.
He knew, and Mr. Quack knew that he
knew, that somewhere near was a nest, but he did not
try to find it much as he longed to, for he knew that
would frighten and worry Mrs. Quack. So the dear,
precious secret of Mr. and Mrs. Quack was kept, for
not even Paddy the Beaver knew just where that nest
was, and in due time, early one morning, Mrs. Quack
proudly led forth for their first swim ten downy, funny
ducklings.
[Illustration with caption: Those
were happy days indeed for Mr. and Mrs. Quack in the
pond of Paddy the Beaver.]
Oh, those were happy days indeed for
Mr. and Mrs. Quack in the pond of Paddy the Beaver,
and in their joy they quite forgot for a time the
terrible journey which had brought them there.
But finally the Ducklings grew up, and when Jack Frost
came in the fall, the whole family started on the
long journey to the sunny Southland. I hope they
got there safely, don’t you?
Among those whom Mr. and Mrs. Quack
came to know very well while they lived in the pond
of Paddy the Beaver was that funny fellow who wears
rings on his tail—Bobby Coon. In the
next book I will tell you of some of Bobby’s
adventures.