Pity the lonely, for deep in the
heart
Is an ache that no doctor can heal
by his art.
— Whitefoot.
Of all the little people of the Green
Forest Whitefoot seemed to be the only one who was
unhappy. And because he didn’t know why
he felt so he became day by day more unhappy.
Perhaps I should say that night by night he became
more unhappy, for during the brightness of the day
he slept most of the time.
“There is something wrong, something
wrong,” he would say over and over to himself.
“It must be with me, because
everybody else is happy, and this is the happiest
time of all the year. I wish some one would tell
me what ails me. I want to be happy, but somehow
I just can’t be.”
One evening he wandered a little farther
from home than usual. He wasn’t going anywhere
in particular. He had nothing in particular
to do. He was just wandering about because somehow
he couldn’t remain at home. Not far away
Melody the Wood Thrush was pouring out his beautiful
evening song. Whitefoot stopped to listen.
Somehow it made him more unhappy than ever.
Melody stopped singing for a few moments. It
was just then that Whitefoot heard a faint sound.
It was a gentle drumming. Whitefoot pricked
up his ears and listened. There it was again.
He knew instantly how that sound was made.
It was made by dainty little feet beating very fast
on an old log. Whitefoot had drummed that way
himself many times. It was soft, but clear, and
it lasted only a moment.
Right then something very strange
happened to Whitefoot. Yes, sir, something very
strange happened to Whitefoot. All in a flash
he felt better. At first he didn’t know
why. He just did, that was all. Without
thinking what he was doing, he began to drum himself.
Then he listened. At first he heard nothing.
Then, soft and low, came that drumming sound again.
Whitefoot replied to it. All the time he kept
feeling better. He ran a little nearer to the
place from which that drumming sound had come and
then once more drummed. At first he got no reply.
Then in a few minutes he heard it
again, only this time it came from a different place.
Whitefoot became quite excited. He knew that
that drumming was done by another Wood Mouse, and all
in a flash it came over him what had been the matter
with him.
“I have been lonely!”
exclaimed Whitefoot. “That is all that
has been the trouble with me. I have been lonely
and didn’t know it. I wonder if that other
Wood Mouse has felt the same way.”
Again he drummed and again came that
soft reply. Once more Whitefoot hurried in the
direction of it, and once more he was disappointed
when the next reply came from a different place.
By now he was getting quite excited. He was bound
to find that other Wood Mouse. Every time he
heard that drumming, funny little thrills ran all
over him. He didn’t know why. They
just did, that was all. He simply must find that
other Wood Mouse. He forgot everything else.
He didn’t even notice where he was going.
He would drum, then wait for a reply. As soon
as he heard it, he would scamper in the direction
of it, and then pause to drum again. Sometimes
the reply would be very near, then again it would
be so far away that a great fear would fill Whitefoot’s
heart that the stranger was running away.