<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER ONE<br/> <span class="cheaderfont">WHY PETER RABBIT HAS ONE LESS ENEMY</span></h2></div>
<p class="dropcap">Peter Rabbit was happy.
There was no question about
that. You had only to watch
him a few minutes to know it. He
couldn’t hide that happiness any more
than the sun at midday can hide when
there are no clouds in the sky. Happiness
seemed to fairly shoot from his long
heels as they twinkled merrily this way
and that way through the dear Old
Briar-patch.</p>
<p>Peter was doing crazy things. He
was so happy that he was foolish. Happiness,<span class="pagenum">[2]</span>
you know, is the only excuse for
foolishness. And Peter was foolish,
very, very foolish. He would suddenly
jump into the air, kick his long heels,
dart off to one side, change his mind and
dart the other way, run in a circle, and
then abruptly plump himself down
under a bush and sit as still as if he
couldn’t move. Then, without any
warning at all, he would cut up some
other funny antic.</p>
<p>He was so foolish and so funny that
finally Tommy, who, unseen by Peter,
was watching him, laughed aloud. Perhaps
Peter doesn’t like being laughed
at. Most people don’t. It may be
Peter was a little bit uncertain as to
why he was being laughed at. Anyway,
with a sudden thump of his stout hind-feet,
he scampered out of sight along<span class="pagenum">[3]</span>
one of his private little paths which led
into the very thickest tangle in the dear
Old Briar-patch.</p>
<p>“I’ll have to come over here with my
gun and get that rabbit for my dinner,”
said Tommy, as he trudged homeward.
“Probably though, if I have a gun, I
won’t see him at all. It’s funny how a
fellow is forever seeing things when he
hasn’t got a gun, and when he goes
hunting he never sees anything!”</p>
<p>Tommy had come to the great gray
stone which was his favorite resting-place.
He sat down from sheer force
of habit. Somehow, he never could get
past that stone without sitting on it for
a few minutes. It seemed to just beg
to be sat on. He was still thinking of
Peter Rabbit.</p>
<p>“I wonder what made him feel so<span class="pagenum">[4]</span>
frisky,” thought Tommy. Then he
laughed aloud once more as he remembered
how comical Peter had looked. It
must be fun to feel as happy as all that.
Without once thinking of where he was,
Tommy exclaimed aloud: “I declare, I
wish I were a rabbit!”</p>
<p>He was. His wish had come true.
Just as quick as that, he found himself
a rabbit. You see, he had been sitting
on the wishing-stone. If he had remembered,
perhaps, he wouldn’t have
wished. But he had forgotten, and
now here he was, looking as if he might
very well be own brother to Peter
Rabbit.</p>
<p>Not only did he look like Peter, but
he felt like him. Anyway, he felt a
crazy impulse to run and jump and do
foolish things, and he did them. He<span class="pagenum">[5]</span>
just couldn’t help doing them. It was
his way of showing how good he felt,
just as shouting is a boy’s way, and singing
is the way of a bird.</p>
<p>But in the very midst of one of his
wildest whirls, he heard a sound that
brought him up short, as still as a stone.
It was the sound of a heavy thump, and
it came from the direction of the Old
Briar-patch. Tommy didn’t need to be
told that it was a signal, a signal from
Peter Rabbit to all other rabbits within
hearing distance. He didn’t know just
the meaning of that signal, and, because
he didn’t, he just sat still.</p>
<p>Now it happens that that was exactly
what that signal meant—to sit tight and
not move. Peter had seen something
that to him looked very suspicious. So
on general principles he had signaled,<span class="pagenum">[6]</span>
and then had himself sat perfectly still
until he should discover if there was any
real danger.</p>
<p>Tommy didn’t know this, but being
a rabbit now, he felt as a rabbit feels,
and, from the second he heard that
thump, he was as frightened as he had
been happy a minute before. And being
frightened, yet not knowing of what he
was afraid, he sat absolutely still, listening
with all his might, and looking this
way and that, as best he could, without
moving his head. And all the time, he
worked his nose up and down, up and
down, as all rabbits do, and tested the
air for strange smells.</p>
<p>Presently Tommy heard behind him a
sound that filled him with terrible fear.
It was a loud sniff, sniff. Rolling his
eyes back so that he could look behind<span class="pagenum">[7]</span>
without turning his head, he saw a dog
sniffing and snuffing in the grass. Now
that dog wasn’t very big as dogs go, but
he was so much bigger than even the
largest rabbit that to Tommy he looked
like a giant. The terrible fear that filled
him clutched at Tommy’s heart until it
seemed as if it would stop beating.</p>
<p>What should he do, sit still or run?
Somehow he was afraid to do either.
Just then the matter was settled for him.
“<em>Thump, thump, thump!</em>” the signal
came along the ground from the Old
Briar-patch, and almost any one would
have known just by the short sharp
sound that those thumps meant “Run!”
At just the same instant, the dog caught
the scent of Tommy full and strong.
With a roar of his great voice he sprang
forward, his nose in Tommy’s tracks.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[8]</span></p>
<p>Tommy waited no longer. With a
great bound he leaped forward in the
direction of the Old Briar-patch. How
he did run! A dozen bounds brought
him to the Old Briar-patch, and there
just before him was a tiny path under
the brambles. He didn’t stop to question
how it came there or who had made
it. He dodged in and scurried along it
to the very middle of the Old Briar-patch.
Then he stopped to listen and
look.</p>
<p>The dog had just reached the edge of
the briars. He knew where Tommy had
gone. Of course he knew. His nose
told him that. He thrust his head in at
the entrance to the little path and tried
to crawl in. But the sly old brambles
tore his long tender ears, and he yelped<span class="pagenum">[9]</span>
with pain now instead of with the excitement
of the chase. Then he backed out,
whining and yelping. He ran around
the edge of the Old Briar-patch looking
for some place where he could get in
more comfortably. But there was no
place, and after a while he gave up and
went off.</p>
<p>Tommy sat right where he was until
he was quite sure that the dog had gone.
When he <em>was</em> quite sure, he started to
explore the dear Old Briar-patch, for he
was very curious to see what it was like
in there. He found little paths leading
in all directions. Some of them led
right through the very thickest tangles
of ugly looking brambles, and Tommy
found that he could run along these with
never a fear of a single scratch. And
as he hopped along, he knew that here<span class="pagenum">[10]</span>
he was safe, absolutely safe from most
of his enemies, for no one bigger than
he could possibly get through those
briars without being terribly scratched.</p>
<p>So it was with a very comfortable
feeling that Tommy peered out through
the brambles and watched that annoying
dog trot off in disgust. He felt that
never, so long as he was within running
distance of the dear Old Briar-patch,
would he be afraid of a dog.</p>
<p>Right into the midst of his pleasant
thoughts broke a rude “<em>Thump, thump,
thump!</em>” It wasn’t a danger-signal this
time. That is, it didn’t mean “Run for
your life.” Tommy was very sure of
that. And yet it might be a kind of
danger-signal, too. It all depended on
what Tommy decided to do.</p>
<p>There it was again—“<em>Thump, thump,<span class="pagenum"><span class="normalfont">[11]</span></span>
thump!</em>” It had an ugly, threatening
sound. Tommy knew just as well as if
there had been spoken words instead of
mere thumps on the ground that he was
being warned to get out of the Old
Briar-patch—that he had no right there,
because it belonged to some one else.</p>
<p>But Tommy had no intention of leaving
such a fine place, such a beautifully
safe place, unless he had to, and no mere
thumps on the ground could make him
believe that. He could thump himself.
He did. Those long hind-feet of his
were just made for thumping. When he
hit the ground with them, he did it with
a will, and the thumps he made sounded
just as ugly and threatening as the other
fellow’s, and he knew that the other
fellow knew exactly what they meant—“I’ll<span class="pagenum">[12]</span>
do as I please! Put me out if you
can!”</p>
<p>It was very clear that this was just
what the other proposed to do if his
thumps meant anything at all. Presently
Tommy saw a trim, neat-looking
rabbit in a little open space, and it was
something of a relief to find that he was
about Tommy’s own size.</p>
<p>“If I can’t whip him, he certainly
can’t whip me,” thought Tommy, and
straightway thumped, “I’m coming,” in
reply to the stranger’s angry demand
that he come out and fight.</p>
<p>Now the stranger was none other than
Peter Rabbit, and he was very indignant.
He considered that he owned the
dear Old Briar-patch. He was perfectly
willing that any other rabbit should find
safety there in time of danger, but when<span class="pagenum">[13]</span>
the danger was past, they must get out.
Tommy hadn’t; therefore he must be
driven out.</p>
<p>Now if Tommy had been himself,
instead of a rabbit, never, never would
he have dreamed of fighting as he was
preparing to fight now—by biting and
kicking, particularly kicking. But for
a rabbit, kicking was quite the correct
and proper thing. In fact, it was the
only way to fight.</p>
<p>So instead of coming together head-on,
Tommy and Peter approached each
other in queer little half-sidewise
rushes, each watching for a chance to
use his stout hind-feet. Suddenly Peter
rushed, jumped, and—well, when
Tommy picked himself up, he felt very
much as a boy feels when he has been
tackled and thrown in a football game.<span class="pagenum">[14]</span>
Certainly Peter’s hind-legs were in good
working order.</p>
<p>Just a minute later Tommy’s chance
came and Peter was sent sprawling.
Like a flash, Tommy was after him,
biting and pulling out little bunches of
soft fur. So they fought until at last
they were so out of wind and so tired
that there was no fight left in either.
Then they lay and panted for breath,
and quite suddenly they forgot their
quarrel. Each knew that he couldn’t
whip the other; and, that being so, what
was the use of fighting?</p>
<p>“I suppose this Old Briar-patch is big
enough for both of us,” said Peter, after
a little.</p>
<p>“I’ll live on one side, and you live on
the other,” replied Tommy. And so it
was agreed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[15]</span></p>
<p>In three things Tommy found that,
as a rabbit, he was not unlike Tommy
the boy. These three were appetite,
curiosity, and a decided preference for
pleasure rather than work. Tommy felt
as if he lived to eat instead of eating to
live. He wanted to eat most of the time.
It seemed as if he never could get his
stomach really full.</p>
<p>There was one satisfaction, and that
was that he never had to look very far
for something to eat. There were clover
and grass just outside the Briar-patch,—all
he wanted for the taking. There
were certain tender-leaved plants for a
change, not to mention tender bark from
young trees and bushes. <SPAN name="Ref_2_014a" href="#Ref_2_014">With Peter he
made occasional visits to a not too distant
garden</SPAN>, where they fairly reveled
in goodies.</p>
<div id="Ref_2_014" class="figcenter">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_2_014.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center"><SPAN href="#Ref_2_014a">WITH PETER HE MADE VISITS TO A GARDEN</SPAN></p>
</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum">[16]</span></p>
<p>These visits were in the nature of
adventure. It seemed to Tommy that
not even Danny Meadow-Mouse had so
many enemies as he and Peter had.
They used to talk it over sometimes.</p>
<p>“It isn’t fair,” said Peter in a grieved
tone. “We don’t hurt anybody. We
don’t do the least bit of harm to any
one, and yet it isn’t safe for us to play
two minutes outside the dear Old Briar-patch
without keeping watch. No, sir,
it isn’t fair! There’s Redtail the Hawk
watching this very minute from way up
there in the sky. He looks as if he were
just sailing round and round for the fun
of it; but he isn’t. He’s just watching
for you or me to get one too many jumps
away from these old briars. Then down
he’ll come like a shot. Now what harm<span class="pagenum">[17]</span>
have we ever done Redtail or any of his
family? Tell me that.”</p>
<p>Of course Tommy couldn’t tell him
that, and so Peter went on: “When I
was a baby, I came very near to finding
out just how far it is from Mr. Blacksnake’s
mouth to his stomach by the
inside passage, and all that saved me
was the interference of a boy, who set
me free. Now that I’m grown, I’m not
afraid of Mr. Blacksnake,—though I
keep out of his way,—but I have to keep
on the watch all the time for that boy!”</p>
<p>“The same one?” asked Tommy.</p>
<p>“The very same!” replied Peter.
“He’s forever setting his dog after me
and trying to get a shot at me with his
terrible gun. Yet I’ve never done <em>him</em>
any harm,—nor the dog either.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[18]</span></p>
<p>“It’s very curious,” said Tommy, not
knowing what else to say.</p>
<p>“It seems to me there ought to be
some time when it is reasonably safe for
an honest rabbit to go abroad,” continued
Peter, who, now that he was started,
seemed bound to make the worst of his
troubles. “At night, I cannot even dance
in the moonlight without all the time
looking one way for Reddy Fox and
another for Hooty the Owl.”</p>
<p>“It’s a good thing that the Briar-patch
is always safe,” said Tommy, because he
could think of nothing else to say.</p>
<p>“But it isn’t!” snapped Peter. “I
wish to goodness it was! Now there’s—listen!”
Peter sat very still with his
ears pricked forward. Something very
like a look of fear grew and grew in his
eyes. Tommy sat quite as still and listened<span class="pagenum">[19]</span>
with all his might. Presently he
heard a faint rustling. It sounded as if
it was in one of the little paths through
the Briar-patch. Yes, it surely was!
And it was drawing nearer! Tommy
gathered himself together for instant
flight, and a strange fear gripped his
heart.</p>
<p>“It’s Billy Mink!” gasped Peter. “If
he follows you, don’t run into a hole in
the ground, or into a hollow log, whatever
you do! Keep going! He’ll get
tired after a while. There he is—run!”</p>
<p>Peter bounded off one way and
Tommy another. After a few jumps,
Tommy squatted to make sure whether
or not he was being followed. He saw
a slim, dark form slipping through the
brambles, and he knew that Billy Mink
was following Peter. Tommy couldn’t<span class="pagenum">[20]</span>
help a tiny sigh of relief. He was sorry
for Peter; but Peter knew every path
and twist and turn, while he didn’t. It
was a great deal better that Peter should
be the one to try to fool Billy Mink.</p>
<p>So Tommy sat perfectly still and
watched. He saw Peter twist and turn,
run in a circle, criss-cross, run back on
his own trail, and make a break by leaping
far to one side. He saw Billy Mink
follow every twist and turn, his nose in
Peter’s tracks. When he reached the
place where Peter had broken the trail,
he ran in ever widening circles until he
picked it up again, and once more Peter
was on the run.</p>
<p>Tommy felt little cold shivers chase
up and down his back as he watched how
surely and persistently Billy Mink followed.
And then—he hardly knew how<span class="pagenum">[21]</span>
it happened—Peter had jumped right
over him, and there was Billy Mink
coming! There was nothing to do but
run, and Tommy ran. He doubled and
twisted and played all the tricks he had
seen Peter play, and then at last, when
he was beginning to get quite tired, he
played the same trick on Peter that had
seemed so dreadful when Peter played it
on him; he led Billy Mink straight to
where Peter was sitting, and once more
Peter was the hunted.</p>
<p>But Billy Mink was getting tired.
After a little, he gave up and went in
quest of something more easily caught.</p>
<p>Peter came back to where Tommy was
sitting.</p>
<p>“Billy Mink’s a tough customer to
get rid of alone, but, with some one to
change off with, it is no trick at all!”<span class="pagenum">[22]</span>
said he. “It wouldn’t work so well with
his cousin, Shadow the Weasel. He’s
the one I <em>am</em> afraid of. I think we should
be safer if we had some new paths; what
do you think?”</p>
<p>Tommy confessed that he thought so
too. It would have been very much
easier to have dodged Billy Mink if
there had been a few more cross paths.</p>
<p>“We better make them before we
need them more than we did this time,”
said Peter; and, as this was just plain,
sound, rabbit common sense, Tommy
was forced to agree.</p>
<p>And so it was that he learned that a
rabbit must work if he would live long
and be happy. He didn’t think of it in
just this way as he patiently cut paths
through the brambles and tangles of
bush and vine. It was fear, just plain<span class="pagenum">[23]</span>
fear, that was driving him. And even
this drove him to work only by spells.
Between times, when he wasn’t eating,
he sat squatting under a bush just lazily
dreaming, but always ready to run for
his life.</p>
<p>In the moonlight he and Peter loved
to gambol and play in some open space
where there was room to jump and
dance; but, even in the midst of these
joyous times, they must need sit up
every minute or so to stop, look, and
listen for danger. It was at night, too,
that they wandered farthest from the
Old Briar-patch.</p>
<p>Once they met Bobby Coon, and Peter
warned Tommy never to allow Bobby
to get him cornered. And once they met
Jimmy Skunk, who paid no attention to
them at all, but went right on about his<span class="pagenum">[24]</span>
business. It was hard to believe that
he was another to be warned against;
but so Peter said, and Peter ought to
know if anybody did.</p>
<p>So Tommy learned to be ever on the
watch. He learned to take note of his
neighbors. He could tell by the sound
of his voice when Sammy Jay was
watching Reddy Fox, and when he saw
a hunter. When Blacky the Crow was
on guard, he knew that he was reasonably
safe from surprise. At least once
a day, but more often several times a
day, he had a narrow escape. But he
grew used to it, and, as soon as a fright
was over, he forgot it. It was the only
way to do.</p>
<p>As he learned more and more how to
watch, and to care for himself, he grew
bolder. Curiosity led him farther and<span class="pagenum">[25]</span>
farther from the Briar-patch. And then,
one day he discovered that <SPAN name="Ref_2_024a" href="#Ref_2_024">Reddy Fox
was between him and it</SPAN>. There was
nothing to do but to run and twist and
double and dodge. Every trick he had
learned he tried in vain. He was in the
open, and Reddy was too wise to be
fooled.</p>
<div id="Ref_2_024" class="figcenter">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_2_024.jpg" alt="" />
<div class="caption"><p class="center"><SPAN href="#Ref_2_024a">REDDY FOX WAS BETWEEN HIM AND HIS CASTLE</SPAN></p>
</div>
</div>
<p>He was right at Tommy’s heels now,
and with every jump Tommy expected
to feel those cruel white teeth. Just
ahead was a great rock. If he could
reach that, perhaps there might be a
crack in it big enough for a frightened
little rabbit to squeeze into, or a hole
under it where he might find safety.</p>
<p>He was almost up to it. Would he be
able to make it? One jump! He could
hear Reddy panting. Two jumps! He
could feel Reddy’s breath. Three<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>
jumps! He was on the rock! and—slowly
Tommy rubbed his eyes. Reddy
Fox was nowhere to be seen. Of course
not! No fox would be foolish enough to
come near a <em>boy</em> sitting in plain sight.
Tommy looked over to the Old Briar-patch.
That at least was real. Slowly
he walked over to it. Peering under the
bushes, he saw Peter Rabbit squatting
perfectly still, yet ready to run.</p>
<p>“You don’t need to, Peter,” said he.
“You don’t need to. You can cut one
boy off that long list of enemies you are
always watching for. You see, I know
just how you feel, Peter!”</p>
<p>He walked around to the other side
of the Briar-patch, and, stooping down,
thumped the ground once with his hand.
There was an answering thump from the<span class="pagenum">[27]</span>
spot where he had seen Peter Rabbit.
Tommy smiled.</p>
<p>“We’re friends, Peter,” said he, “and
it’s all on account of the wishing-stone.
I’ll never hunt you again. My! I
wouldn’t be a rabbit for anything in the
world. Being a boy is good enough for
me!”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[28]</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />