Unhappiness without a cause you
never, never find;
It may be in the stomach, or it
may be in the mind.
— Whitefoot.
Whitefoot the Wood Mouse should have
been happy, but he wasn’t. Winter had gone
and sweet Mistress Spring had brought joy to all the
Green Forest. Every one was happy, Whitefoot
no less so than his neighbors at first. Up from
the Sunny South came the feathered friends and at
once began planning new homes. Twitterings and
songs filled the air. Joy was everywhere.
Food became plentiful, and Whitefoot became sleek
and fat. That is, he became as fat as a lively
Wood Mouse ever does become. None of his enemies
had discovered his new home, and he had little to
worry about.
But by and by Whitefoot began to feel
less joyous. Day by day he grew more and more
unhappy. He no longer took pleasure in his fine
home. He began to wander about for no particular
reason. He wandered much farther from home than
he had ever been in the habit of doing. At times
he would sit and listen, but what he was listening
for he didn’t know. “There is something
the matter with me, and I don’t know what it
is,” said Whitefoot to himself forlornly.
“It can’t be anything I have eaten.
I have nothing to worry about. Yet there is
something wrong with me. I’m losing my
appetite. Nothing tastes good any more.
I want something, but I don’t know what it
is I want.”
He tried to tell his troubles to his
nearest neighbor, Timmy the Flying Squirrel, but Timmy
was too busy to listen. When Peter Rabbit happened
along, Whitefoot tried to tell him. But Peter
himself was too happy and too eager to learn all the
news in the Green Forest to listen. No one had
any interest in Whitefoot’s troubles.
Every one was too busy with his own affairs.
So day by day Whitefoot the Wood Mouse
grew more and more unhappy, and when the dusk of early
evening came creeping through the Green Forest, he
sat about and moped instead of running about and playing
as he had been in the habit of doing. The beautiful
song of Melody the Wood Thrush somehow filled him
with sadness instead of with the joy he had always
felt before. The very happiness of those about
him seemed to make him more unhappy.
Once he almost decided to go hunt
for another home, but somehow he couldn’t get
interested even in this. He did start out, but
he had not gone far before he had forgotten all about
what he had started for. Always he had loved
to run about and climb and jump for the pure pleasure
of it, but now he no longer did these things.
He was unhappy, was Whitefoot. Yes, sir, he was
unhappy; and for no cause at all so far as he could
see.