You never can tell! You never can tell!
Things going wrong will often end well.
- Whitefoot.
The next time you meet him just ask Whitefoot if this isn't so.
Things had been going very wrong for Whitefoot. It had begun to
look to Whitefoot as if he would no longer have a snug, hidden
little home in Farmer Brown's sugar-house. The pile of wood under
which he had made that snug little home was disappearing so fast
that it began to look as if in a little while there would be no wood
at all.
Whitefoot quite lost his appetite. He no longer came out to take
food from Farmer Brown's boy's hand. He stayed right in his snug
little home and worried.
Now Farmer Brown's boy had not once thought of the trouble he was
making. He wondered what had become of Whitefoot, and in his turn
he began to worry. He was afraid that something had happened to his
little friend. He was thinking of this as he fed the sticks of wood
to the fire for boiling the sap to make syrup and sugar. Finally,
as he pulled away two big sticks, he saw something that made him
whistle with surprise. It was Whitefoot's nest which he had so
cleverly hidden way down underneath that pile of wood when he had
first moved into the sugar-house. With a frightened little squeak,
Whitefoot ran out, scurried across the little sugar-house and out
though the open door.
Farmer Brown's boy understood. He understood perfectly that little
people like Whitefoot want their homes hidden away in the dark.
"Poor little chap," said Farmer Brown's boy." He had a regular
castle here and we have destroyed it. He's got the snuggest kind of
a little nest here, but he won't come back to it so long as it is
right out in plain sight. He probably thinks we have been hunting
for this little home of his. Hello! Here's his storehouse!
I've often wondered how the little rascal could eat so much, but
now I understand. He stored away here more than half of the good
things I have given him. I am glad he did. If he hadn't, he might
not come back, but I feel sure that to-night, when all is quiet, he
will come back to take away all his food. I must do something to keep
him here."
Farmer Brown's boy sat down to think things over. Then he got
an old box and made a little round hole in one end of it.
Very carefully he took up Whitefoot's nest and placed it under the
old box in the darkest corner of the sugar-house. Then he carried all
Whitefoot's supplies over there and put them under the box. He went
outside, and got some branches of hemlock and threw these in a little
pile over the box. After this he scattered some crumbs just outside.
Late that night Whitefoot did come back. The crumbs led him to the
old box. He crept inside. There was his snug little home! All in
a second Whitefoot understood, and trust and happiness returned.