Johnny Chuck is naturally lazy. You see, Johnny has very simple tastes
and usually he is contented. He does not have to go far from his own
doorstep to get all he wants to eat. He does not have to hunt for his
food, as so many of the little meadow and forest people do, and so he
has a great deal of time to sit on his doorstep and watch the world go
by and dream pleasant daydreams and grow fat. Now people who do not
have to work usually become lazy. It is the easiest habit in the world
to learn and the hardest to get over. And so, because he seldom has to
work, Johnny Chuck quite naturally is lazy.
But Johnny can work when there really is need of it. No one, unless it
is Digger the Badger or Miner the Mole, can dig faster than Johnny
Chuck. And when there is real need of working, Johnny works with a
will. When he was a very tiny Chuck, old Mother Chuck had taught him
this:
"When work there is that must be done
Don't fret and whine and spoil the day!
The quicker that you do your work
The longer time you'll have to play."
Johnny never has forgotten this, and when it is really necessary that
he should work, no one works harder than he does. But he always first
makes sure that it is necessary work and that he will not be wasting
his time in doing foolish, unnecessary things.
And now Johnny Chuck was the busiest he had ever been in all his life.
If he felt lazy these beautiful spring days, he didn't have time to
think about it. No, Sir, he actually didn't have time to remember that
he is naturally lazy. You see, he had a family to look out for--three
babies to find sweet, tender young clover for and to teach all the
things that every Chuck should know, and to watch out for, that no
harm should come to them. So Johnny Chuck was busy, so busy that he
hardly had time to get enough to eat.
Every morning Johnny would come out as soon as jolly, round, red Mr.
Sun began his daily climb up in the blue, blue sky. He would look this
way and look that way to make sure that Reddy Fox or Granny Fox or
Redtail the Hawk or Bowser the Hound or any other danger was nowhere
near. And he never forgot to look up in the apple-trees to make sure
that Sammy Jay was not there. Then he would call to Polly Chuck and
the three baby Chucks.
Polly Chuck would come out with a very worried air, and after her
would come the three funny little baby Chucks, who would roll and
tumble over each other on the doorstep. When he thought they had
played enough, Johnny Chuck would lead the way along a little private
path which he had made through the grass. After him, one behind
another, would trot the three little Chucks, and behind them would
march Polly Chuck, to see that none went astray.
When they reached the patch of tender, sweet, young clover, Johnny
Chuck would sit up very straight and still, watching as sharp as he
knew how for the least sign of danger. When the three little stomachs
were full of sweet, tender, young clover, he would proudly lead the
way home again, and then as before he would sit up very straight and
watch for danger, while the three baby Chucks sprawledout on the
doorstep for a sun-nap.
Oh, those were busy days for Johnny Chuck, and anxious days, too! You
see he had not forgotten that Sammy Jay had found out his secret, and
he hadn't the least doubt in the world that Sammy Jay would tell Reddy
Fox. So, from the first thing in the morning until the very last thing
at night, Johnny Chuck was on the watch for danger.
And all the time, though Johnny didn't know it, a pair of sharp eyes
were watching him from a snug hiding-place in one of the old apple-
trees. Whose were they? Why, Sammy Jay's, to be sure. You see, Sammy
Jay hadn't told Johnny Chuck's great secret, after all.