Web
and Book design,
Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2007 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
(HOME)
|
XX
CHATTERER REMEMBERS SOMETHING CHATTERER
was
disgusted with himself, with all his neighbors, and with the world in
general,
which is to say that Chatterer was very much put out about something.
There was
no doubt about it. He couldn't see anything cheerful in the sunshine
nor
anything pleasant in the blue, blue sky, and when any one fails to see
cheerfulness in the sunshine or to find something pleasant in the blue,
blue
sky, there is something wrong in his own heart. That was the trouble
with
Chatterer. There was a great deal wrong in his heart. In the
first place,
it was filled with anger, and anger, you know, will take all the joy
and
pleasantness out of anything. And then Chatterer was mortified. He was
both
angry and mortified because Sammy Jay had proved to have smarter wits
than he
had. So, as soon as he could do so without being seen, he slipped into
his new
home in the old house of Drummer the Woodpecker in an apple-tree in the
Old
Orchard, and there he sulked for the rest of the day. You see, Sammy
Jay had
made him go over to Farmer Brown's corn-crib and get him some corn
right in
broad daylight, and he had very narrowly escaped being seen by Farmer
Brown's
boy. "If only I
hadn't promised to get him corn whenever he asks me to!" he said over
and
over to himself, as he sulked in his home in the apple-tree. "If only I
hadn't! And yet I couldn't help myself — I just had to. Now whenever he
feels like
it, he'll make me do as he did to-day and perhaps I won't always be so
lucky.
Oh, dear; oh, dear; I've got myself into a dreadful mess, and I've just
got to
think of some way out of it." So all the
rest of
the day he thought and thought, and the more he thought the more
unhappy he
grew. It wasn't until just as he was going out for a breath of air
before going
to bed for the night that the great idea came to him. "Stupid,
stupid, stupid!" he muttered, meaning himself. "Why didn't I remember
it before? You won't see me going over to that corn-crib again, Mr.
Jay! I'll
get you the corn if I must, but you won't have the fun of laughing at
me trying
to dodge Black Pussy and Farmer Brown's boy. You're smart, Mr. Jay!
You're
smart, but you've got to get up early in the morning to play such a
trick on
Chatterer twice." Right away
he felt
so much better in his mind that he had a brisk run along the old stone
wall and
then turned in for a good night's sleep. The next day Sammy Jay
appeared in the
middle of the forenoon and demanded more corn. Chatterer pretended that
he
didn't dare go for it, but when Sammy insisted that he must, he
suddenly
started for — where do you think'? Why, for that store-house of his in
the
hollow rail at the edge of the cornfield. It was a long way to go, but
that was
better than running the risk of being seen by Farmer Brown's boy. It
took him
some time, but at last he was back with his cheeks stuffed with corn.
Sammy Jay
pretended to be cross because he had been kept waiting so long and
grumbled all
the time he was eating. He pretended to think that the corn was not as
good as
that from Farmer Brown's corn-crib and mumbled something about telling
Shadow
the Weasel if Chatterer didn't get him some corn from the crib the next
day. "You
can't!" cried Chatterer in triumph. "You promised not to tell Shadow
if I kept my promise and got you corn whenever you asked for it; but I
didn't
say where I would get it," and he chuckled to think that he had been
smarter than Sammy Jay. Sammy ate
every
grain and then went off, but as he went, Chatterer thought he heard
something
very like a chuckle. It made him thoughtful and a little uneasy, but he
couldn't think of any way Sammy could get the best of him now, so he
soon
forgot it, and all the rest of the day he thought of how lucky it was
that he
had remembered that store-house in the hollow rail. |