A home is always what you make it.
With love there you will ne’er
forsake it.
— Whitefoot.
Whitefoot climbed up to the old nest
of Melody the Wood Thrush over the edge of which little
Mrs. Whitefoot was looking down at him. It took
Whitefoot hardly a moment to get up there, for the
nest was only a few feet above the ground in a young
tree, and you know Whitefoot is a very good climber.
He found Mrs. Whitefoot very much
excited. She was delighted with that old nest
and she showed it. For his part, Whitefoot couldn’t
see anything but a deserted old house of no use to
any one. To be sure, it had been a very good
home in its time. It had been made of tiny twigs,
stalks of old weeds, leaves, little fine roots and
mud. It was still quite solid, and was firmly
fixed in a crotch of the young tree. But Whitefoot
couldn’t see how it could be turned into a home
for a Mouse. He said as much.
Little Mrs. Whitefoot became more
excited than ever. “You dear old stupid,”
said she, “whatever is the matter with you?
Don’t you see that all we need do is to put
a roof on, make an entrance on the under side, and
make a soft comfortable bed inside to make it a delightful
home?”
“I don’t see why we don’t
make a new home altogether,” protested Whitefoot.
“It seems to me that hollow stub of mine is
ever so much better than this. That has good
solid walls, and we won’t have to do a thing
to it.”
“I told you once before that
it doesn’t suit me for summer,” replied
little Mrs. Whitefoot rather sharply, because she was
beginning to lose patience. “It will be
all right for winter, but winter is a long way off.
It may suit you for summer, but it doesn’t suit
me, and this place does. So this is where we
are going to live.”
“Certainly, my dear. Certainly,”
replied Whitefoot very meekly. “If you
want to live here, here we will live. But I must
confess it isn’t clear to me yet how we are
going to make a decent home out of this old nest.”
“Don’t you worry about
that,” replied Mrs. Whitefoot. “You
can get the material, and I’ll attend to the
rest. Let us waste no time about it. I
am anxious to get our home finished and to feel a
little bit settled. I have already planned just
what has got to be done and how we will do it.
Now you go look for some nice soft, dry weed stalks
and strips of soft bark, and moss and any other soft,
tough material that you can find. Just get busy
and don’t stop to talk.”
Of course Whitefoot did as he was
told. He ran down to the ground and began to
hunt for the things Mrs. Whitefoot wanted. He
was very particular about it. He still didn’t
think much of her idea of making over that old home
of Melody’s, but if she would do it, he meant
that she should have the very best of materials to
do it with.
So back and forth from the ground
to the old nest in the tree Whitefoot hurried, and
presently there was quite a pile of weed stalks and
soft grass and strips of bark in the old nest.
Mrs. Whitefoot joined Whitefoot in hunting for just
the right things, but she spent more time in arranging
the material. Over that old nest she made a fine
high roof. Down through the lower side she cut
a little round doorway just big enough for them to
pass through. Unless you happened to be underneath
looking up, you never would have guessed there was
an entrance at all. Inside was a snug, round
room, and in this she made the softest and most comfortable
of beds. As it began to look more and more like
a home, Whitefoot himself became as excited and eager
as Mrs. Whitefoot had been from the beginning.
“It certainly is going to be a fine home,”
said Whitefoot.
“Didn’t I tell you it
would be?” retorted Mrs. Whitefoot.