<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN>VII</h2>
<h3>WHY JERRY MUSKRAT BUILDS HIS HOUSE IN THE WATER</h3>
<p>Peter Rabbit and Johnny Chuck had gone down to the Smiling
Pool for a call on their old friend, Jerry Muskrat. But Jerry
was nowhere to be seen. They waited and waited, but no Jerry
Muskrat.</p>
<p>"Probably he is taking a nap in that big house of his," said
Johnny Chuck, "and if he is we'll have to sit here until he
wakes up, or else go back home and visit him some other
time."</p>
<p>"That's so," replied Peter. "I don't see what he has his
house in the water for, anyway. If he had built it on land,
like sensible people, we might be able to waken him. Funny
place to build a house, isn't it?"</p>
<p>Johnny Chuck scratched his head thoughtfully. "It does seem
a funny place," he admitted. "It certainly does seem a funny
place. But then, Jerry Muskrat is a funny fellow. You know how
much of the time he stays in the water. That seems funny to me.
I suppose there is a reason for it, and probably there is a
reason for building his house where it is. I've found that
there is a reason for most things. Probably Jerry's
great-great-grandfather built his house that way, and so Jerry
does the same thing."</p>
<p>Peter Rabbit suddenly brightened up. "I do believe you are
right, Johnny Chuck, and if you are, there must be a story
about it, and if there is a story, Grandfather Frog will be
sure to know it. There he is, over on his big green lily-pad,
and he looks as if he might be feeling very good-natured this
morning. Let's go ask him why Jerry Muskrat builds his house in
the water."</p>
<p>Grandfather Frog saw them coming, and he guessed right away
that they were coming for a story. He grinned to himself and
pretended to go to sleep.</p>
<p>"Good morning, Grandfather Frog," said Johnny Chuck.
Grandfather Frog didn't answer. Johnny tried again, and still
no reply.</p>
<p>"He's asleep," said Johnny, looking dreadfully disappointed,
"and I guess we'd better not disturb him, for he might wake up
cross, and of course we wouldn't get a story if he did."</p>
<p>Peter looked at Grandfather Frog sharply. He wasn't so sure
that that was a real nap. It seemed to him that there was just
the least little hint of a smile in the corners of Grandfather
Frog's big mouth. "You sit here a minute," he whispered in
Johnny Chuck's ear.</p>
<p>So Johnny Chuck sat down where he was, which was right where
Grandfather Frog could see him by lifting one eyelid just the
teeniest bit, and Peter hopped along the bank until he was
right behind Grandfather Frog. Now just at that place on the
bank was growing a toadstool. Peter looked over at Johnny Chuck
and winked. Then he turned around, and with one of his long
hind-feet, he kicked the toadstool with all his might. Now
toadstools, as you all know, are not very well fastened at the
roots, and this one was no different from the rest. When Peter
kicked it it flew out into the air and landed with a great
splash in the Smiling Pool, close beside the big green lily-pad
on which Grandfather Frog was sitting. Of course he didn't see
it coming, and of course it gave him a great start.</p>
<p>"Chug-a-rum!" exclaimed Grandfather Frog and dived head
first into the water. A minute later Peter's sharp eyes saw him
peeping out from under a lily-pad to see what had frightened
him so.</p>
<p>"Ha, ha, ha!" shouted Peter, dancing about on the bank. "Ha,
ha, ha! Grandfather Frog, afraid of a toadstool! Ha, ha,
ha!"</p>
<p>At first Grandfather Frog was angry, very angry indeed. But
he is too old and too wise to lose his temper for long over a
joke, especially when he has been fairly caught trying to play
a joke himself. So presently he climbed back on to his big
green lily-pad, blinking his great, goggly eyes and looking
just a wee bit foolish.</p>
<p>"Chug-a-rum! I might have known that that was some of your
work, Peter Rabbit," said he, "but I thought it surely was a
stone thrown by Farmer Brown's boy. What do you mean by
frightening an old fellow like me this way?"</p>
<p>"Just trying to get even with you for trying to fool us into
thinking that you were asleep when you were wide awake,"
replied Peter. "Oh, Grandfather Frog, do tell us why it is that
Jerry Muskrat builds his house in the water. Please do!"</p>
<p>"I have a mind not to, just to get even with you," said
Grandfather Frog, settling himself comfortably, "but I believe
I will, to show you that there are some folks who can take a
joke without losing their temper."</p>
<p>"Goody!" cried Peter and Johnny Chuck together, sitting down
side by side on the very edge of the bank.</p>
<p>Grandfather Frog folded his hands across his white and
yellow waistcoat and half closed his eyes, as if looking way,
way back into the past.</p>
<p>"Chug-a-rum!" he began. "A long, long time ago, when the
world was young, there was very little dry land, and most of
the animals lived in the water. Yes, Sir, most of the animals
lived in the water, as sensible animals do to-day."</p>
<p>Peter nudged Johnny Chuck. "He means himself and his
family," he whispered with a chuckle.</p>
<p>"After a time," continued Grandfather Frog, "there began to
be more land and still more. Then some of the animals began to
spend most of their time on the land. As there got to be more
and more land, more and more of the animals left the water,
until finally most of them were spending nearly all of the time
on land. Now Old Mother Nature had been keeping a sharp watch,
as she always does, and when she found that they were foolish
enough to like the land best, she did all that she could to
make things comfortable for them. She taught them how to run
and jump and climb and dig, according to which things they
liked best to do, so that it wasn't very long before a lot of
them forgot that they ever had lived in the water, and they
began to look down on those who still lived in the water, and
to put on airs and hold their heads very high.</p>
<p>"Now, of course, Old Mother Nature didn't like this, and to
punish them she said that they should no longer be able to live
in the water, even if they wanted to. At first they only
laughed, but after a while they found that quite often there
were times when it would be very nice to be at home in the
water as they once had been. But it was of no use. Some could
swim as long as they could keep their heads above water, but as
soon as they put their heads under water they were likely to
drown. You know that is the way with you to-day, Peter
Rabbit."</p>
<p>Peter nodded. He knew that he could swim if he had to, but
only for a very little way, and he hated the thought of it.</p>
<p>"Now there were a few animals, of whom old Mr. Muskrat, the
grandfather a thousand times removed of Jerry Muskrat, was one,
who learned to walk and run on dry land, but who still loved
the water," continued Grandfather Frog. "One day Old Mother
Nature found Mr. Muskrat sitting on a rock, looking very
mournful.</p>
<p>"'What's the matter, Mr. Muskrat?' she asked.</p>
<p>"Mr. Muskrat looked very much ashamed as he finally owned up
that he was envious of his cousins and some of the other
animals, because they had such fine houses on the land.</p>
<p>"'Then why don't you build you a fine house on the land?'
asked Old Mother Nature.</p>
<p>"Mr. Muskrat hesitated. 'I—I—love the water too
well to want to stay on land all the time,' said he,
'and—and—well, I was put in the water in the first
place, and I ought to be contented with what I have got and
make the best of it.'</p>
<p>"Old Mother Nature was so pleased with Mr. Muskrat's reply
that right away she made up her mind that he should have a
finer house than any of the others, so she took him over to a
quiet little pool, where the water was not too deep and she
showed him how to build a wonderful house of mud and rushes and
twigs, with a nice warm bedroom lined with grass above the
water, and an entrance down under the water, so that no one
except those who still lived most of the time in the water
could possibly get into it. None of his friends on land had
such a big, fine house, and Mr. Muskrat was very proud of it.
But with all his pride he never forgot that it was a reward for
trying to be content with his surroundings and making the best
of them.</p>
<p>"So from that day to this, the Muskrats have built their
houses in the water, and have been among the most industrious,
contented, and happy of all the animals. And that is why Jerry
Muskrat has built that fine house in the Smiling Pool and has
so few enemies," concluded Grandfather Frog.</p>
<p>Peter Rabbit drew a long breath, which was almost a sigh. "I
almost wish my grandfather a thousand times removed had been
content to stay in the water, too," he said.</p>
<p>"Chug-a-rum!" retorted Grandfather Frog. "If he had, you
wouldn't have the dear Old Briar-patch. Be content with what
you've got,"</p>
<p>"I think I will," said Peter.</p>
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