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XX CHATTERER HAS ANOTHER GREAT SURPRISE CHATTERER had never had
so many
surprises — good surprises — in all his life, as since the day he had
been
caught in a trap in Farmer Brown's corn-crib. In the first place, it
had been a
great surprise to him that he had not been given to Black Pussy, as he
had
fully expected to be. Then had come the even greater surprise of
finding that
Farmer Brown's boy was ever and ever go much nicer than he had thought.
A later
surprise had been the wire wheel in his cage, so that he could run to
his
heart's content. It was such a pleasant and wholly unexpected surprise
that it
had quite changed Chatterer's feelings towards Farmer Brown's boy. The fact is, Chatterer
could have
been truly happy but for one thing — he was a prisoner. Yes, Sir, he
was a
prisoner, and he couldn't forget it for one minute while he was awake.
He used
to watch Farmer Brown's boy and wish with all his might that he could
make him
understand how dreadful it was to be in a prison. But Farmer Brown's
boy
couldn't understand what Chatterer said, no matter how hard Chatterer
tried to
make him. He seemed to think that Chatterer was happy. He just didn't
understand that not all the good things in the world could make up for
loss of
freedom — that it is better to be free, though hungry and cold, than in
a
prison with every comfort. Chatterer had stood it
pretty well
and made the best of things until Sammy Jay had found him, and Reddy
Fox had
made fun of him, and Peter Rabbit had peeped at him from behind the old
stone
wall. The very sight of them going where they pleased and when they
pleased had
been too much for Chatterer, and such a great longing for the Green
Forest and
the Old Orchard filled his heart that he could think of nothing else.
He just
sat in a corner of his cage and looked as miserable as he felt. He lost
his
appetite. In vain Farmer Brown's boy brought him the fattest nuts and
other
dainties. He couldn't eat for the great longing for freedom that filled
his
heart until it seemed ready to burst. He no longer cared to run in the
new wire
wheel which had given him so much pleasure at first. He was homesick,
terribly
homesick, and he just couldn't help it. Farmer Brown's boy
noticed it, and his
face grew sober and thoughtful. He watched Chatterer when the latter
didn't
know that he was about, and if he couldn't understand Chatterer's talk,
he
could understand Chatterer's actions. He knew that he was unhappy and
guessed
why. One morning Chatterer did not come out of his hollow stump as he
usually
did when his cage was placed on the shelf outside the farm-house door.
He just
didn't feel like it. He stayed curled up in his bed for a long, long
time, too
sad and miserable to move. At last he crawled up and peeped out of his
little
round doorway. Chatterer gave a little gasp and rubbed his eyes. Was he
dreaming? He scrambled out in a hurry and peeped through the wires of
his cage.
Then he rubbed his eyes again and rushed over to the other side of the
cage for
another look. His cage wasn't on the usual shelf at all! It was on the
snow-covered stone wall at the edge of the Old Orchard. Chatterer was so excited
he didn't
know what to do. He raced around the cage. Then he jumped into the wire
wheel
and made it spin round and round as never before. When he was too tired
to run
any more, he jumped out. And right then he discovered something he
hadn't
noticed before. The little door in the top of his cage was open! It
must be
that Farmer Brown's boy had forgotten to close it when he put in
Chatterer's
breakfast. Chatterer forgot that he was tired. Like a little red flash
he was
outside and whisking along the snow-covered stone wall straight for his
home in
the Old Orchard. "Chickaree! Chickaree! Chickareel" he shouted as he ran. |