<div><h1 id='ch4'>CHAPTER IV<br/> <span class='sub-head'>PETER RABBIT LEARNS BY SITTING STILL</span></h1></div>
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<p class='line0'>By sitting still may much be learned</p>
<p class='line0'>And thus be useful knowledge earned.</p>
<p class='line0'>                 <span class='it'>Little Joe Otter.</span></p>
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<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Do</span> you know that you can learn
things by sitting perfectly still?
You can. That is, you can if
you use your eyes and use your
ears and all the other senses that
Old Mother Nature has given you.
Peter Rabbit discovered it quite
by accident. You know how curious
he is. It seems as if his
curiosity never can be satisfied.</p>
<p class='pindent'>On the day that Little Joe
Otter invited him to call at his
home and then promptly disappeared,
Peter could think of nothing
but that home, and wonder
where it was. Whenever he got
the chance he went over to the
Green Forest to look for Little
Joe and his home. He had
hopped up and down the banks of
the Laughing Brook until his feet
ached, and he was just as wise
as before.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last one day, he sat down
just a little way from a great big
tree with spreading roots near the
bank of a little pool in the Laughing
Brook. He was tired. Also
he was discouraged. “I don’t believe
Little Joe has a home at
all,” he muttered. Then, because
he was tired, he squatted down
in a little brown heap and closed
his eyes. How long he slept Peter
never knew. When he awoke it
was very, very still there in the
Green Forest. He felt rested and
therefore in a better frame of mind.
He decided he would sit there a
little longer and enjoy his beautiful
surrounding’s before going back
to the dear Old Briar-patch.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Now when Peter sits perfectly
still, he is very hard to see. He
looks like nothing so much as a
little brown heap of dead leaves,
and that was the way he was
looking then. But all the time
he was watching this way and that
way to see what he could discover.
Quite without any warning at all
there was a rustling of leaves
between two of the roots of the
old tree a little way off. Peter
didn’t have to turn his head to
look. You see, his eyes are set
so far back that he can see without
turning his head. What he
saw made him catch his breath
and open his eyes wider than ever.
What do you think it was? Why
it was a little brown baby rolling
and tumbling in the leaves!</p>
<p class='pindent'>Peter had never seen a baby
like it before. While he was
watching and wondering whose
baby it could be, another joined
it. They tumbled and rolled over
each other. They played tug-of-war
with a little stick, each holding
one end. They made believe
bite each other. It was very rough
play, but the rougher it was the
better they seemed to like it.
Peter watched them for a long
time. Then, because he had a
cramp in one of his feet, he moved
ever so little, and in doing so he
rustled the leaves. Instantly the
two brown babies disappeared as
if the earth had swallowed them
up. Peter waited, but they didn’t
appear again.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last his curiosity proved too
much for him. He hopped over
to the spreading roots of the old
tree and there was the nicest little
doorway he had ever seen. He
knew then where the two brown
babies had disappeared.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I wonder,” muttered Peter,
“whose babies those were. I wonder—”
A sudden thought popped
into his head. It made him jump
right up in the air. “Do you
suppose that those could have been
Little Joe Otter’s babies?” he exclaimed
right out loud to nobody
in particular. Then, because he
was so full of his discovery, he
scampered away to the dear Old
Briar-patch to tell Mrs. Peter all
about it.</p>
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<p class='caption'><span class='sc'>One morning he saw Mrs. Joe out with the two babies.</span> <span class='it'><SPAN href='#t28'>Page 28</SPAN>.</span></p>
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