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IX CHATTERER GROWS TOO CURIOUS EVERYBODY knows how
curious Peter
Rabbit is. He is forever poking his wobbly little nose in where it has
no
business to be, and as a result Peter is forever getting into trouble.
Whenever
Chatterer the Red Squirrel has heard a new story about Peter and the
scrapes
his curiosity has got him into, Chatterer has said that Peter got no
more than
he deserved. As for himself, he might be curious about .a thing he saw
for the
first time, but he had too much sense to meddle with it until he knew
all about
it. So Chatterer has come to be thought very, smart, quite too smart to
be
caught in a trap — at least to be caught in an ordinary trap. Now a great many people
manage to
make their neighbors think they are a great deal smarter than they
really are,
and Chatterer is one of this kind. If some of his neighbors could have
peeped
into Farmer Brown's corn-crib the morning after Farmer Brown's boy
found the
telltale corn-cob so carelessly dropped by Chatterer, they would have
been
surprised. Yes, Sir, they would have been surprised. They would have
seen
Chatterer the Red Squirrel, the boaster, he of the sharp wits, showing
quite as
much curiosity as ever possessed Peter Rabbit. Chatterer had come over
to the
corncrib as usual to get his daily supply of corn. As usual, he had
raced about
over the great pile of yellow corn. Quite suddenly his sharp eyes spied
something
that they hadn't seen before. It was down on the floor of the corn-crib
quite
near the door. Chatterer was sure that it hadn't been there the day
before. It
was a very queer looking thing, very queer indeed. And then he spied
another
queer looking thing near it, only this was very much smaller. What
could they
be? He looked at them suspiciously. They looked harmless enough. They
didn't
move. He ran a few steps towards them and scolded, just as he scolds at
anything new he finds out of doors. Still they didn't move. He ran
around on a
little ledge where he could look right down on the queer things. He was
sure
now that they were not alive. The biggest one he could see all through.
Inside
was something to eat. The littlest thing was round and flat with funny
bits of
wire on top. It looked as if it were made of wood, and in the sides
were little
round holes too small for him to put his head through. "Leave them alone," said
a
small voice inside of Chatterer. "But I want to see what
they
are and find out all about them," said Chatterer. "No good ever comes of
meddling
with things you don't know about," said the small voice. "But they are such queer
looking things, and they're not alive. They can't hurt me," said
Chatterer. Nevertheless he ran back
to the pile
of corn and tried to eat. Somehow he had lost his appetite. He couldn't
take
his eyes off those two queer things down on the floor. "Better keep away,"
warned
the small voice inside. "It won't do any harm to
have a
closer look at them," said Chatterer. So once more he scrambled
down, from
the pile of corn and little by little drew nearer to the two queer
things. The
nearer he got, the more harmless they looked. Finally he reached out
and
smelled of the smallest. Then he turned up his nose. "Smells of mice,"
muttered
Chatterer, "just common barn mice." Then he reached out a paw and
touched it. "Pooh!" said he, "it's nothing to be afraid
of." Just then he touched one of the little wires, and there was a
sudden
snap. It frightened Chatterer so that he scurried away. But he couldn't
stay
away. That snap was such a funny thing, and it hadn't done any harm.
You see,
he hadn't put his paw in at one of the little holes, or it might have
done some
harm. Pretty soon he was back again, meddling with those little wires on top. Every once in a while there would be a snap, and he would scamper away. It was very scary and great fun. By and by the thing wouldn't snap any more, and then Chatterer grew tired of his queer plaything and began to wonder about the other queer thing. No harm had come from the first one, and so he was sure no harm could come from the other. |