Blacky was puzzled. He didn't know what to make of that egg he had
stolen from Farmer Brown's henhouse. It wasn't like any egg he ever
had seen or even heard of. It was a beautiful-looking egg, and he
had been sure that it would taste as good, quite as good as it
looked. Even now he wasn't sure that if he could only taste it, it
would be all that he had hoped. But how could he taste it, when he
couldn't break that shell? He never had heard of such a shell. He
doubted if anybody else ever had, either. He had hammered at it with
his stout bill until he was afraid that he would break that, instead
of the egg. The more he tried to break into it and couldn't, the
hungrier he grew, and the more certain that nothing else in all the
world could possibly taste so good. But the Old Orchard was not the
place for him to work on that egg. In the first place, it was too
near Farmer Brown's house. This made Blacky uneasy. You see, he had
something of a guilty conscience. Not that he felt at all a sense of
having done wrong. To his way of thinking, if he were smart enough
to get that egg, he had just as much right to it as any one else,
particularly Farmer Brown's boy. Yet he wasn't at all sure that
Farmer Brown's boy would look at the matter quite that way. In fact,
he had a feeling that Farmer Brown's boy would call him a thief if
he should be discovered with that egg. Then, too, there were too
many sharp eyes in the Old Orchard. He wanted to get away where he
could be sure of being alone. Then if he couldn't break that shell,
no one would be the wiser. So he picked up the egg and flew straight
over to the Green Forest, and this time he managed to get there
without dropping it.
Now you would never suspect Blacky the Crow, he of the sharp wits
and crafty ways, of being amused by bright things, would you? But he
is. In fact, Blacky is quite like a little child in this
matter. Anything that is bright and shiny interests Blacky right
away. If he finds anything of this kind, he will take it away to a
certain secret place, and there he will admire it and play with it
and finally hide it. If I didn't know that it isn't so, because it
couldn't possibly be so, I should think that Blacky was some
relation to certain small boys I know. Always their pockets are
filled with all sorts of useless odds and ends which they have
picked up here and there. Blacky has no pockets, so he keeps his
treasures of this kind in a secret hiding-place, a sort of treasure
storehouse. He visits this secretly every day, uncovers his
treasures, and gloats over them and plays with them, then carefully
covers them up again. First Blacky took this egg over near his home,
and there he once more tried and tried and tried to break the
shell. But the shell wouldn't break, not even when Blacky quite lost
his temper and hammered at it for all he was worth. Then he gave the
thing up as a bad matter and flew up to his favorite roost in the
top of a tall pine-tree, leaving the egg on the ground. But from
where he sat on his favorite roost in the tall pine-tree he could
see that provoking egg, a little spot of shining white. When a Jolly
Little Sunbeam found it and rested on it, it was so very bright and
shiny that Blacky couldn't keep his eyes off it.
Little by little he forgot that it was an egg. At least, he forgot
that he wanted to eat it. He began to find pleasure in just looking
at it. It might not satisfy his stomach, but it certainly was very
satisfying to his eyes. He forgot to think of it as a thing to eat,
but began to think of it wholly as a thing to look at and admire. He
was glad he hadn't been able to break that shell.
Once more he spread his black wings and flew down to the egg. He
cocked his head to one side and looked at it. He cocked his head to
the other side and looked at it. He walked all around it, chuckling
and saying to himself, "Pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty and all mine,
mine, mine, mine! Pretty, pretty, and all mine!"
Than he craftily looked all about to make sure that no one was
watching him. Having made quite sure, he rolled the egg over and
turned it around and admired it to his heart's content. At last he
picked it up and carried it to his treasure-house and covered it
over very carefully. And there that china nest-egg, for that is what
he had stolen, is still his chief treasure to this day, and Blacky
still sometimes wonders what kind of a hen laid such a hard-shelled egg.
Blacky has had very many other adventures, but it would take another
book to tell about all of them. That would be hardly fair to some of
the other little people who also have had adventures and want them
told to you. One of these is a beautiful little fellow who lives in
the Green Forest, and so the next book will be Whitefoot the Wood Mouse.