Johnny Chuck couldn't keep away from the Smiling Pool. No, Sir, Johnny
Chuck couldn't keep away from the Smiling Pool. Ever since he and
Peter Rabbit had gone over there looking for the sweet singers, who
every night and part of the day told all who would listen how glad
they were that Mistress Spring had come to the Green Meadows and the
Green Forest, Johnny Chuck had had something on his mind. And this is
why he couldn't keep away from the Smiling Pool.
You see it was this way: Johnny and Peter had thought that of course
the sweet singers were birds. They hadn't dreamed of anything else. So
of course they went looking for birds. When they reached the Smiling
Pool, the voices came right out of the water. Johnny knew that some
birds, like many of the cousins of Mrs. Quack, can stay under water a
long time, and so he didn't know but some other birds might.
Jerry Muskrat was always watching for Johnny, whenever he came to the
Smiling Pool, and his eyes would twinkle as he would gravely say:
"Hello, Johnny Chuck! Have you seen the birds sing under water yet?"
Johnny would smile good-naturedly and reply: "Not yet, Jerry Muskrat.
Won't you point them out to me?"
Then Jerry would reply:
"Two eyes you have, bright as can be;
Perhaps some day you'll learn to see."
Then Johnny Chuck would sit as still as ever he knew how, and watch
and watch the Smiling Pool, but not a bird did he see in the water,
though the singers were still there. One day a sudden thought popped
into his head. Perhaps those singers were not birds at all! Why hadn't
he thought of that before? Perhaps it was because he was looking so
hard for birds that he hadn't seen anything else. Johnny began to
look, not for anything in particular, but to see everything that he
could.
Almost right away he saw some tiny little dark spots on the water.
They didn't look like much of anything. They were so small that he
hadn't noticed them before. One of them was quite close to him, and as
Johnny Chuck looked at it, it began to look like a tiny nose, and
then--why, just then, Johnny was very sure that one of those singing
voices came right from that very spot!
He was so surprised that he hopped to his feet and excitedly beckoned
to Jerry Muskrat. The instant he did that, the voices near him stopped
singing, and the little spots on the water disappeared, leaving just
the tiniest of little rings, just such tiny little rings as drops of
rain falling on the Smiling Pool would make. And when that tiny spot
nearest to him that looked like a tiny nose disappeared, Johnny Chuck
caught just a glimpse of a little form under the water.
"Why--why-e-e! The singers are Grandfather Frog's children!" cried
Johnny Chuck.
"No, they're not, but they are own cousins to them; they are the
grandchildren of old Mr. Tree Toad! and they are called Hylas!" said
Jerry Muskrat, laughing and rubbing his hands in great glee. "I told
you that if you used your eyes, you'd learn to see."
"My, but they've got voices bigger than they are!" said Johnny Chuck,
as he started home across the Green Meadows. "I'm glad I know who the
singers of the Smiling Pool are, and I mustn't forget their name--
Hylas. What a funny name!" But Farmer Brown's boy, listening to their
song that evening, didn't call them Hylas. He said: "Hear the peepers!
Spring is surely here."