Paddy Beaver - Paddy Plans a House
by: Thorton Burgess
Rank: N/A
Paddy the Beaver sat on his dam,
and his eyes shone with happiness as he looked out over the shining
water of the pond he had made. All around the edge of it grew the
tall trees of the Green Forest. It was very beautiful and very still
and very lonesome. That is, it would have seemed lonesome to almost
any one but Paddy the Beaver. But Paddy never is lonesome. You see,
he finds company in the trees and flowers and all the little plants.
It was still, very, very still. Over on one side was a beautiful
rosy glow in the water. It was the reflection from jolly, round, red
Mr. Sun. Paddy couldn't see him because of the tall trees, but he
knew exactly what Mr. Sun was doing. He was going to bed behind the
Purple Hills. Pretty soon the little stars would come out and
twinkle down at him. He loves the little stars and always watches
for the first one.
Yes, Paddy the Beaver was very happy. He would have been perfectly
happy but for one thing: Farmer Brown's boy had found his dam and
pond that very afternoon, and Paddy wasn't quite sure what Farmer
Brown's boy might do. He had kept himself snugly hidden while Farmer
Brown's boy was there, and he felt quite sure that Farmer Brown's
boy didn't know who had built the dam. But for this very reason he
might, he just might, try to find out all about it, and that would
mean that Paddy would have to be always on the watch.
"But what's the use of worrying over troubles that haven't come yet,
and may never come? Time enough to worry when they do come," said
Paddy to himself, which shows that Paddy has a great deal of wisdom
in his little brown head. "The thing for me to do now is to get
ready for winter, and that means a great deal of work," he
continued. "Let me see, I've got to build a house, a big, stout,
warm house, where I will be warm and safe when my pond is frozen
over. And I've got to lay in a supply of food, enough to last me
until gentle Sister South Wind comes to prepare the way for lovely
Mistress Spring. My, my, I can't afford to be sitting here dreaming,
when there is such a lot to be done!"
With that Paddy slipped into the water and swam all around his new
pond to make sure of just the best place to build his house. Now
placing one's house in just the right place is a very important
matter. Some people are dreadfully careless about this. Jimmy Skunk,
for instance, often makes the mistake of digging his house (you know
Jimmy makes his house underground) right where every one who happens
along that way will see it. Perhaps that is because Jimmy is so
independent that he doesn't care who knows where he lives.
But Paddy the Beaver never is careless. He always chooses just the
very best place. He makes sure that it is best before he begins. So
now, although he was quite positive just where his house should be,
he swam around the pond to make doubly sure. Then, when he was quite
satisfied, he swam over to the place he had chosen. It was where the
water was quite deep.
"There mustn't be the least chance that the ice will ever get thick
enough to close up my doorway," said he, "and I'm sure it never will
here. I must make the foundations strong and the walls thick. I must
have plenty of mud to plaster with, and inside, up above the water,
I must have the snuggest, warmest room where I can sleep in comfort.
This is the place to build it, and it is high time I was at work."
With that Paddy swam over to the place where he had cut the trees
for his dam, and his heart was light, for he had long ago learned
that the surest way to be happy is to be busy.