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<h2> CHAPTER IV WHY JIMMY SKUNK WEARS STRIPES </h2>
<p>Jimmy Skunk, as everybody knows, wears a striped suit, a suit of black and
white. There was a time, long, long ago, when all the Skunk family wore
black. Very handsome their coats were, too, a beautiful, glossy black.
They were very, very proud of them and took the greatest care of them,
brushing them carefully ever so many times a day.</p>
<p>There was a Jimmy Skunk then, just as there is now, and he was head of all
the Skunk family. Now this Jimmy Skunk was very proud and thought himself
very much of a gentleman. He was very independent and cared for no one.
Like a great many other independent people, he did not always consider the
rights of others. Indeed, it was hinted in the wood and on the Green
Meadows that not all of Jimmy Skunk's doings would bear the light of day.
It was openly said that he was altogether too fond of prowling about at
night, but no one could prove that he was responsible for mischief done in
the night, for no one saw him. You see his coat was so black that in the
darkness of the night it was not visible at all.</p>
<p>Now about this time of which I am telling you Mrs. Ruffed Grouse made a
nest at the foot of the Great Pine and in it she laid fifteen beautiful
buff eggs. Mrs. Grouse was very happy, very happy indeed, and all the
little meadow folks who knew of her happiness were happy too, for they all
loved shy, demure, little Mrs. Grouse. Every morning when Peter Rabbit
trotted down the Lone Little Path through the wood past the Great Pine he
would stop for a few minutes to chat with Mrs. Grouse. Happy Jack Squirrel
would bring her the news every afternoon. The Merry Little Breezes of Old
Mother West Wind would run up a dozen times a day to see how she was
getting along.</p>
<p>One morning Peter Rabbit, coming down the Lone Little Path for his usual
morning call, found a terrible state of affairs. Poor little Mrs. Grouse
was heart-broken. All about the foot of the Great Pine lay the empty
shells of her beautiful eggs. They had been broken and scattered this way
and that.</p>
<p>"How did it happen?" asked Peter Rabbit.</p>
<p>"I don't know," sobbed poor little Mrs. Grouse. "In the night when I was
fast asleep something pounced upon me. I managed to get away and fly up in
the top of the Great Pine. In the morning I found all my eggs broken, just
as you see them here."</p>
<p>Peter Rabbit looked the ground over very carefully. He hunted around
behind the Great Pine, he looked under the bushes, he studied the ground
with a very wise air. Then he hopped off down the Lone Little Path to the
Green Meadows. He stopped at the house of Johnny Chuck.</p>
<p>"What makes your eyes so big and round?" asked Johnny Chuck.</p>
<p>Peter Rabbit came very close so as to whisper in Johnny Chuck's ear, and
told him all that he had seen. Together they went to Jimmy Skunk's house.
Jimmy Skunk was in bed. He was very sleepy and very cross when he came to
the door. Peter Rabbit told him what he had seen.</p>
<p>"Too bad! Too bad!" said Jimmy Skunk, and yawned sleepily.</p>
<p>"Won't you join us in trying to find out who did it?" asked Johnny Chuck.</p>
<p>Jimmy Skunk said he would be delighted to come but that he had some other
business that morning and that he would join them in the afternoon. Peter
Rabbit and Johnny Chuck went on. Pretty soon they met the Merry Little
Breezes and told them the dreadful story.</p>
<p>"What shall we do?" asked Johnny Chuck.</p>
<p>"We'll hurry over and tell Old Dame Nature," cried the Merry Little
Breezes, "and ask her what to do."</p>
<p>So away flew the Merry Little Breezes to Old Dame Nature and told her all
the dreadful story. Old Dame Nature listened very attentively. Then she
sent the Merry Little Breezes to all the little meadow folks to tell every
one to be at the Great Pine that afternoon. Now whatever Old Dame Nature
commanded all the meadow folks were obliged to do. They did not dare to
disobey her. Promptly at four o'clock that afternoon all the meadow folks
were gathered around the foot of the Great Pine. Broken-hearted little
Mrs. Ruffed Grouse sat beside her empty nest, with all the broken shells
about her.</p>
<p>Reddy Fox, Peter Rabbit, Johnny Chuck, Billy Mink, Little Joe Otter, Jerry
Muskrat, Hooty the Owl, Bobby Coon, Sammy Jay, Blacky the Crow,
Grandfather Frog, Mr. Toad, Spotty the Turtle, the Merry Little Breezes,
all were there. Last of all came Jimmy Skunk. Very handsome he looked in
his shining black coat and very sorry he appeared that such a dreadful
thing should have happened. He told Mrs. Grouse how badly he felt, and he
loudly demanded that the culprit should be found out and severely
punished.</p>
<p>Old Dame Nature has the most smiling face in the world, but this time it
was very, very grave indeed. First she asked little Mrs. Grouse to tell
her story all over again that all might hear. Then each in turn was asked
to tell where he had been the night before. Johnny Chuck, Happy Jack
Squirrel, Striped Chipmunk, Sammy Jay and Blacky the Crow had gone to bed
when Mr. Sun went down behind the Purple Hills. Jerry Muskrat, Billy Mink,
Little Joe Otter, Grandfather Frog and Spotty the Turtle had not left the
Smiling Pool. Bobby Coon had been down in Farmer Brown's cornfield. Hooty
the Owl had been hunting in the lower end of the Green Meadows. Peter
Rabbit had been down in the berry patch. Mr. Toad had been under the piece
of bark which he called a house. Old Dame Nature called on Jimmy Skunk
last of all. Jimmy protested that he had been very, very tired and had
gone to bed very early indeed and had slept the whole night through.</p>
<p>Then Old Dame Nature asked Peter Rabbit what he had found among the egg
shells that morning.</p>
<p>Peter Rabbit hopped out and laid three long black hairs before Old Dame
Nature. "These," said Peter Rabbit "are what I found among the egg
shells."</p>
<p>Then Old Dame Nature called Johnny Chuck. "Tell us, Johnny Chuck," said
she, "what you saw when you called at Jimmy Skunk's house this morning."</p>
<p>"I saw Jimmy Skunk," said Johnny Chuck, "and Jimmy seemed very, very
sleepy. It seemed to me that his whiskers were yellow."</p>
<p>"That will do," said Old Dame Nature, and then she called Old Mother West
Wind.</p>
<p>"What time did you come down on the Green Meadows this morning?"</p>
<p>"Just at the break of day," said Old Mother West Wind, "as Mr. Sun was
coming up from behind the Purple Hills."</p>
<p>"And whom did you see so early in the morning?" asked Old Dame Nature.</p>
<p>"I saw Bobby Coon going home from old Farmer Brown's cornfield," said Old
Mother West Wind. "I saw Hooty the Owl coming back from the lower end of
the Green Meadows. I saw Peter Rabbit down in the berry patch. Last of all
I saw something like a black shadow coming down the Lone Little Path
toward the house of Jimmy Skunk."</p>
<p>Every one was looking very hard at Jimmy Skunk. Jimmy began to look very
unhappy and very uneasy.</p>
<p>"Who wears a black coat?" asked Dame Nature.</p>
<p>"Jimmy Skunk!" shouted all the little meadow folks.</p>
<p>"What MIGHT make whiskers yellow?" asked Old Dame Nature.</p>
<p>No one seemed to know at first. Then Peter Rabbit spoke up. "It MIGHT be
the yolk of an egg," said Peter Rabbit.</p>
<p>"Who are likely to be sleepy on a bright sunny morning?" asked Old Dame
Nature.</p>
<p>"People who have been out all night," said Johnny Chuck, who himself
always goes to bed with the sun.</p>
<p>"Jimmy Skunk," said Old Dame Nature, and her voice was very stern, very
stern indeed, and her face was very grave. "Jimmy Skunk, I accuse you of
having broken and eaten the eggs of Mrs. Grouse. What have you to say for
yourself?"</p>
<p>Jimmy Skunk hung his head. He hadn't a word to say. He just wanted to
sneak away by himself.</p>
<p>"Jimmy Skunk," said Old Dame Nature, "because your handsome black coat of
which you are so proud has made it possible for you to move about in the
night without being seen, and because we can no longer trust you upon your
honor, henceforth you and your descendants shall wear a striped coat,
which is the sign that you cannot be trusted. Your coat hereafter shall be
black and white, that when you move about in the night you will always be
visible."</p>
<p>And this is why that to this day Jimmy Skunk wears a striped suit of black
and white.</p>
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<h2> CHAPTER V THE WILFUL LITTLE BREEZE </h2>
<p>Old Mother West Wind was tired—tired and just a wee bit cross—cross
because she was tired. She had had a very busy day. Ever since early
morning she had been puffing out the white sales of the ships on the big
ocean so that they could go faster; she had kept all the big and little
wind mills whirling and whirling to pump water for thirsty folks and grind
corn for hungry folks; she had blown away all the smoke from tall chimneys
and engines and steamboats. Yes, indeed, Old Mother West Wind had been
very, very busy.</p>
<p>Now she was coming across the Green Meadows on her way to her home behind
the Purple Hills, and as she came she opened the big bag she carried and
called to her children, the Merry Little Breezes, who had been playing
hard on the Green Meadows all the long day. One by one they crept into the
big bag, for they were tired, too, and ready to go to their home behind
the Purple Hills.</p>
<p>Pretty soon all were in the bag but one, a willful little Breeze, who was
not quite ready to go home; he wanted to play just a little longer. He
danced ahead of Old Mother West Wind. He kissed the sleepy daisies. He
shook the nodding buttercups. He set all the little poplar leaves a
dancing, too, and he wouldn't come into the big bag. So Old Mother West
Wind closed the big bag and slung it over her shoulder. Then she started
on towards her home behind the Purple Hills.</p>
<p>When she had gone, the willful little Breeze left behind suddenly felt
very lonely—very lonely indeed! The sleepy daisies didn't want to
play. The nodding buttercups were cross. Great round bright Mr. Sun, who
had been shining and shining all day long, went to bed and put on his
night cap of golden clouds. Black shadows came creeping, creeping out into
the Green Meadows.</p>
<p>The willful little Breeze began to wish that he was safe in Old Mother
West Wind's big bag with all the other Merry Little Breezes.</p>
<p>So he started across the Green Meadows to find the Purple Hills. But all
the hills were black now and he could not tell which he should look behind
to find his home with Old Mother West Wind and the Merry Little Breezes.
How he did wish that he had minded Old Mother West Wind.</p>
<p>By and by he curled up under a bayberry bush and tried to go to sleep, but
he was lonely, oh, so lonely! And he couldn't go to sleep. Old Mother Moon
came up and flooded all the Green Meadows with light, but it wasn't like
the bright light of jolly round Mr. Sun, for it was cold and white and it
made many black shadows.</p>
<p>Pretty soon the willful little Breeze heard Hooty the Owl out hunting for
a meadow mouse for his dinner. Then down the Lone Little Path which ran
close to the bayberry bush trotted Reddy Fox. He was trotting very softly
and every minute or so he turned his head and looked behind him to see if
he was followed. It was plain to see that Reddy Fox was bent on mischief.</p>
<p>When he reached the bayberry bush Reddy Fox sat down and barked twice.
Hooty the Owl answered him at once and flew over to join him. They didn't
see the willful little Breeze curled up under the bayberry bush, so intent
were these two rogues in plotting mischief. They were planning to steal
down across the Green Meadows to the edge of the Brown Pasture where Mr.
Bob White and pretty Mrs. Bob White and a dozen little Bob Whites had
their home.</p>
<p>"When they run along the ground I'll catch 'em, and when they fly up in
the air you'll catch 'em, and we'll gobble 'em all up," said Reddy Fox to
Hooty the Owl. Then he licked his chops and Hooty the Owl snapped his
bill, just as if they were tasting tender little Bob Whites that very
minute. It made the willful little Breeze shiver to see them. Pretty soon
they started on towards the Brown Pasture.</p>
<p>When they were out of sight the willful little Breeze jumped up and shook
himself. Then away he sped across the Green Meadows to the Brown Pasture.
And because he could go faster and because he went a shorter way he got
there first. He had to hunt and hunt to find Mrs. and Mr. Bob White and
all the little Bob Whites, but finally he did find them, all with their
heads tucked under their wings fast asleep.</p>
<p>The willful little Breeze shook Mr. Bob White very gently. In an instant
he was wide awake.</p>
<p>"Sh-h-h," said the willful little Breeze. "Reddy Fox and Hooty the Owl are
coming to the Brown Pasture to gobble up you and Mrs. Bob White and all
the little Bob Whites."</p>
<p>"Thank you, little Breeze," said Mr. Bob White, "I think I'll move my
family."</p>
<p>Then he woke Mrs. Bob White and all the little Bob Whites. With Mr. Bob
White in the lead away they all flew to the far side of the Brown Pasture
where they were soon safely hidden under a juniper tree.</p>
<p>The willful little Breeze saw them safely there, and when they were nicely
hidden hurried back to the place where the Bob Whites had been sleeping.
Reddy Fox was stealing up through the grass very, very softly. Hooty the
Owl was flying as silently as a shadow. When Reddy Fox thought he was near
enough he drew himself together, made a quick spring and landed right in
Mr. Bob White's empty bed. Reddy Fox and Hooty the Owl looked so surprised
and foolish when they found the Bob Whites were not there that the willful
little Breeze nearly laughed out loud.</p>
<p>Then Reddy Fox and Hooty the Owl hunted here and hunted there, all over
the Brown Pasture, but they couldn't find the Bob Whites.</p>
<p>And the willful little Breeze went back to the juniper tree and curled
himself beside Mr. Bob White to sleep, for he was lonely no longer.</p>
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