<h2><SPAN name="XV" id="XV"></SPAN>XV</h2>
<h3>WHY SPOTTY THE TURTLE CARRIES HIS HOUSE WITH HIM</h3>
<p>Spotty the Turtle sat on an old log on the bank of the
Smiling Pool, taking a sun-bath. He had sat that way for the
longest time without once moving. Peter Rabbit had seen him
when he went by on his way to the Laughing Brook and the Green
Forest to look for some one to pass the time of day with.
Spotty was still there when Peter returned a long time after,
and he didn't look as if he had moved. A sudden thought struck
Peter. He couldn't remember that he ever had seen Spotty's
house. He had seen the houses of most of his other friends, but
think as hard as ever he could, he didn't remember having seen
Spotty's.</p>
<p>"Hi, Spotty!" he shouted. "Where do you live?"</p>
<p>Spotty slowly turned his head and looked up at Peter. There
was a twinkle in his eyes, though Peter didn't see it.</p>
<p>"Right here in the Smiling Pool. Where else should I live?"
he replied.</p>
<p>"I mean, where is your house?" returned Peter. "Of course I
know you live in the Smiling Pool, but where is your house? Is
it in the bank or down under water?"</p>
<p>"It is just wherever I happen to be. Just now it is right
here," said Spotty. "I always take it with me wherever I go; I
find it much the handiest way."</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/007-lg.png" name="fig07" id="fig07"><ANTIMG src="images/007-sm.png" alt=""Hi, Spotty!" he shouted. "Where do you live?"" /></SPAN> <h4>"Hi, Spotty!" he shouted. "Where do you live?"</h4></div>
<p>With that Spotty disappeared. That is to say, his head and
legs and tail disappeared. Peter stared very hard. Then he
began to laugh, for it came to him that what Spotty had said
was true. His house was with him, and now he had simply retired
inside. He didn't need any other house than just that hard,
spotted shell, inside of which he was now so cosily tucked
away.</p>
<p>"That's a great idea! Ho, ho, ho! That's a great idea!"
shouted Peter.</p>
<p>"Of course it is," replied Spotty, putting nothing but his
head out, "You will always find me at home whenever you call,
Peter, and that is more than you can say of most other
people."</p>
<p>All the way to his own home in the dear Old Briar-patch,
Peter thought about Spotty and how queer it was that he should
carry his house around with him.</p>
<p>"I wonder how it happens that he does it," thought he. "No
wonder he is so slow. Of course, it is very handy to have his
house always with him. As he says, he is always at home. Still,
when he is in a hurry to get away from an enemy, it must be
very awkward to have to carry his house on his back.
I—I—why, how stupid of me! He doesn't have to run
away at all! All he has got to do is to go inside his house and
stay there until the danger is past! I never thought of that
before. Why, that is the handiest thing I ever heard of."</p>
<p>Now Peter knew that there must be a good story about Spotty
and his house, and you know Peter dearly loves a good story. So
at the very first opportunity the next day, he hurried over to
the Smiling Pool to ask Grandfather Frog about it. As usual,
Grandfather Frog was sitting on his big green lily-pad. No
sooner did Peter pop his head above the edge of the bank of the
Smiling Pool than Grandfather Frog exclaimed:</p>
<p>"Chug-a-rum! You've kept me waiting a long time, Peter
Rabbit. I don't like to be kept waiting. If you wanted to know
about Spotty the Turtle, why didn't you come earlier?" All the
time there was a twinkle in the big, goggly eyes of Grandfather
Frog.</p>
<p>Peter was so surprised that he couldn't find his tongue. He
hadn't said a word to any one about Spotty, so how could
Grandfather Frog know what he had come for? For a long time he
had had a great deal of respect for Grandfather Frog, who, as
you know, is very old and very wise, but now Peter felt almost
afraid of him. You see, it seemed to Peter as if Grandfather
Frog had read his very thoughts.</p>
<p>"I—I didn't know you were waiting. Truly I didn't,"
stammered Peter. "If I had, I would have been here long ago. If
you please, how did you know that I was coming and what I was
coming for?"</p>
<p>"Never mind how I knew. I know a great deal that I don't
tell, which is more than some folks can say," replied
Grandfather Frog.</p>
<p>Peter wondered if he meant him, for you know Peter is a
great gossip. But he didn't say anything, because he didn't
know just what to say, and in a minute Grandfather Frog began
the story Peter so much wanted.</p>
<p>"Of course you know, without me telling you, that there is a
reason for Spotty's carrying his house around with him, because
there is a reason for everything in this world. And of course
you know that that reason is because of something that happened
a long time ago, way back in the days when the world was young.
Almost everything to-day is the result of things that happened
in those long-ago days. The great-great-ever-so-great
grandfather of Spotty the Turtle lived then, and unlike Spotty,
whom you know, he had no house. He was very quiet and bashful,
was Mr. Turtle, and he never meddled with any one's business,
because he believed that the best way of keeping out of trouble
was to attend strictly to his own affairs.</p>
<p>"He was a good deal like Spotty, just as fond of the water
and just as slow moving, but he didn't have the house which
Spotty has now. If he had had, he would have been saved a great
deal of trouble and worry. For a long time everybody lived at
peace with everybody else. Then came the trying time, of which
you already know, when those who lived on the Green Meadows and
in the Green Forest had the very hardest kind of work to find
enough to eat, and were hungry most of the time. Now Mr.
Turtle, living in the Smiling Pool, had plenty to eat. He had
nothing to worry about on that score. Everybody who lives in
the Smiling Pool knows that it is the best place in the world,
anyway."</p>
<p>Grandfather Frog winked at Jerry Muskrat, who was listening,
and Jerry nodded his head.</p>
<p>"But presently Mr. Turtle discovered that the big people
were eating the little people whenever they could catch them,
and that he wasn't safe a minute when on shore, and not always
safe in the water," continued Grandfather Frog. "He had two or
three very narrow escapes, and these set him to thinking. He
was too slow and awkward to run or to fight. The only thing he
could do was to keep out of sight as much as possible. So he
learned to swim with only his head out of water, and sometimes
with only the end of his nose out of water. When he went on
land, he would cover himself with mud, and then when he heard
anybody coming, he would lie perfectly still, with his legs and
his tail and his head drawn in just as close as possible, so
that he looked for all the world like just a little lump of
brown earth.</p>
<p>"One day he had crawled under a piece of bark to rest and at
the same time keep out of sight of any who might happen along.
When he got ready to go on his way, he found that the piece of
bark had caught on his back, and that he was carrying it with
him. At first he was annoyed and started to shake it off.
Before he succeeded, he heard someone coming, so he promptly
drew in his head and legs and tail. It was Mr. Fisher, and he
was very hungry and fierce. He looked at the piece of bark
under which Mr. Turtle was hiding, but all he saw was the bark,
because, you know, Mr. Turtle had drawn himself wholly
under.</p>
<p>"'I believe,' said Mr. Fisher, talking out loud to himself,
'that I'll have a look around the Smiling Pool and see if I can
catch that slow-moving Turtle who lives there. I believe he'll
make me a good dinner.'</p>
<p>"Of course Mr. Turtle heard just what he said, and he
blessed the piece of bark which had hidden him from Mr.
Fisher's sight. For a long time he lay very still. When he did
go on, he took the greatest care not to shake off that piece of
bark, for he didn't know but that any minute he might want to
hide under it again. At last he reached the Smiling Pool and
slipped into the water, leaving the piece of bark on the bank.
Thereafter, when he wanted to go on land, he would first make
sure that no one was watching. Then he would crawl under the
piece of bark and get it on his back. Wherever he went he
carried the piece of bark so as to have it handy to hide
under.</p>
<p>"Now all this time Old Mother Nature had been watching Mr.
Turtle, and it pleased her to see that he was smart enough to
think of such a clever way of fooling his enemies. So she began
to study how she could help Mr. Turtle. One day she came up
behind him just as he sat down to rest. The piece of bark was
uncomfortable and scratched his back, 'I wish,' said he,
talking to himself, for he didn't know that any one else was
near, 'I wish that I had a house of my own that I could carry
on my back all the time and be perfectly safe when I was inside
of it.'</p>
<p>"'You shall have,' said Old Mother Nature, and reaching out,
she touched his back and turned the skin into hard shell. Then
she touched the skin of his stomach and turned that into hard
shell. 'Now draw in your head and your legs and your tail,'
said she.</p>
<p>"Mr. Turtle did as he was told to do, and there he was in
the very best and safest kind of a house, perfectly hidden from
all his enemies!</p>
<p>"'Oh, Mother Nature, how can I ever thank you?' he
cried.</p>
<p>"'By doing as you always have done, attending wholly to your
own affairs,' replied Old Mother Nature.</p>
<p>"So ever since that long-ago day when the world was young,
all Turtles have carried their houses with them and never have
meddled in things that don't concern them," concluded
Grandfather Frog.</p>
<p>"Oh, thank you, Grandfather Frog," exclaimed Peter, drawing
a long breath. "That was a perfectly splendid thing for Old
Mother Nature to do."</p>
<p>Then he started for his own home in the dear Old
Briar-patch, and all the way there he wondered and wondered how
Grandfather Frog knew that he wanted that story, and to this
day he hasn't found out. You see, he didn't notice that
Grandfather Frog was listening when he asked Spotty about his
house. Of course, Grandfather Frog knows Peter and his
curiosity so well that he had guessed right away that Peter
would come to him for the story, just as Peter did.</p>
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