Mamma Goose was trying to think.
She had left the barnyard because it was so noisy there that she
could not collect her wits, and had hidden herself between the rows
of tall red hollyhocks which border one side of the garden. Here, at
least, it was quiet.
Thinking had always been hard work for Mamma Goose. And besides, her
family kept her so busy that she had no time for it anyway. There
was always something to be done for the babies.
For Mamma Goose had a whole dozen of the dearest little
goslings, and she was very proud of them. They were soft, and round,
and fluffy, like little yellow balls, and besides being prettier
than any other babies in the barnyard, they were so bright, too, and
knew as much as any gosling could be expected to know,--far more
than little Red Hen's chicks, even though she did make such a fuss
about them!
The goslings could hunt for their breakfasts almost as well as their
mother, while little Red Hen had to scratch up every thing her
children ate. And as for the water--well, the chicks were simply not
in it there! They did not like to be in the water at all, but the
goslings loved their morning bath in the brook better than anything
else in the whole day.
Yes, her goslings were by far the finer babies! Mamma Goose swelled
with pride when she thought of it, and carefully smoothed her
feathers. She could have been perfectly happy except for just one
thing. She was afraid that before long something dreadful might
happen to the goslings, and once more she settled herself to think.
There was something wrong in the barnyard. What could it be that
came each night when every one was sound asleep? And what was it
that carried one of the chickens away each time so that, when the
next morning came, there was always one less than there had been the
day before? Whatever it was, it made no noise. Only, always the next
morning some one was missing, and usually it was a little baby chick
that was gone. The worst of it was that no one else knew any more
about it than she did. To be sure, little Bantam Rooster had said it
was the hawk. But then Bantam always thought he knew everything, and
was almost always wrong, so that nobody ever believed anything he
said.
Besides, if it had been, the big white rooster would have known it,
for the big white rooster knew everything. He was the king of the
barnyard, and took care of them all. He had a bright red comb and
beautiful, long, green tail-feathers, and Mamma Goose thought him
the most wonderful being in the whole world.
But something seemed to be wrong with him, too. He did not crow half
so often as he used to, and his beautiful red comb did not stand
stiff and straight any more. It drooped to one side and he looked
very tired and very unhappy, as if he, too, had been trying to
think. But if he did not know what it was that came night after
night, then nobody knew.
Everything had been very different when old Fido lived in his little
house by the barnyard gate. Nothing had ever happened to trouble
them then. But old Fido was gone now, and nobody knew about that
either. One morning after breakfast he had trotted off behind the
wagon, and nobody had seen him since. Every one liked old Fido, and
they all missed him, but he had never come back and his little house
stood empty all night long.
Some thought that he had gone to take care of the sheep who
lived in the big field on the other side of the hill. But it was
only little Bantam Rooster who said so. Nobody knew. Things had been
better, though, before Fido went away, for he had always stayed
awake all night and watched to see that no harm came to any of them.
Then suddenly Mamma Goose had a thought, and a very bright idea it
was, too. She would stay awake all night herself, and watch and see
with her own eyes what it was that carried away the little chicks.
As soon as she had made this plan she stopped thinking, for it was
such hard work and the sun was getting very hot on her poor head.
Besides, the goslings had been in the water long enough. They never
did know when to come out!
So she waddled down to the brook to get them. Then they all went for
a walk in the meadow where the red clover-tops nod in the wind, and
Mamma Goose did no more thinking that day.
But when night came, she did not forget her plan. As soon as the sun
had gone down behind the hill, the chickens all perched themselves
along the roost with the big white rooster at the end of the row, and
soon they were all fast asleep. Little Red Hen gathered her chicks
under her wing to keep them cosy and warm, and then she, too, went
to sleep.
Mamma Goose tucked her babies in also, and spread her wings wide
over them all, but she did not go to sleep.
Instead, she kept both eyes wide open and stared straight at the
big white rooster, that she might not go to sleep without knowing it.
It was very hard to sit so long in the dark and keep awake. First
one eye and then the other would close tight, but Mamma Goose would
stretch them wide open again, and stare harder than ever at the big
rooster, and then she saw that the rooster was watching, too, and that
made it much easier.
Then it happened after a long time, when the moon had climbed high
above the trees, and everything was very quiet, that a long, slim
fox stole softly beneath the fence and came creeping--creeping
across the barn yard. Mamma Goose was so frightened that she almost
said "Quack! quack!" out loud, but still she kept her eyes on the
big white rooster, and that was a great help.
The fox was creeping softly toward the roost where the chickens
slept in a row,--but not straight toward it. He was keeping as far
away from old Fido's house as he possibly could. Although she was so
frightened, Mamma Goose wondered why. She had always heard that the
fox was afraid of old Fido, but didn't he know that Fido was far
away? Didn't he know that his little house was empty? It did not
take the fox long, however, to creep softly past it, and in the
morning another little chick was gone!
But a new thought had come to Mamma Goose. If the fox would not
go near old Fido's house, then he could not find the goslings if
they hid inside. It seemed to Mamma Goose the only thing to do, and
a very sensible plan indeed. She would ask all the chickens to come
in, too, and then they would all be safe!
But when she went the next day to her best friends and told them
about her plan, most of them only made fun of her, and all of them
turned their backs on her. No one would listen!
But Mamma Goose was not to be talked out of it. If the others wished
to sit still and let the fox carry them away one at a time, that was
one thing, but for her to do nothing to keep her little goslings
safe,--that was quite another.
So that very evening, when the sun had gone down behind the
hill, and the chickens had perched themselves on the roost with the
big rooster at the end, Mamma Goose led all the little goslings into
Fido's house. Every one laughed when she went in, but Mamma Goose
had made up her mind, and she kept straight on as if she had not
heard them! But the big white rooster--he did not laugh at her!
So every night Mamma Goose led her babies into Fido's house, and
every morning brought them out again safe and whole. But always a
little chick was missing!
Then one night when the sun was sinking low, the big white rooster flew
up to the top of the fence and crowed. All the chickens listened
then, while he told them that they were every one to go into old
Fido's house that night with Mamma Goose; for that was the only way
to keep the fox from carrying them all away.
Now when the big rooster said that they were to do anything, it was
always done, and no words about it! So that night all the chickens
went into Fido's house. It was all they could do to get in, for the
house was not large; and some of them were not polite and pushed
against the others to make more room. But the big rooster did all he
could to keep them in order, and at last all the little chicks went
to sleep.
But the next morning when the farmer's boy came to scatter the corn
for breakfast, he looked at the empty roost and did not know what to
think!
By and by, however, he found them and at first he only laughed, but
after he had seen that no little chick was missing, he looked as if
he were thinking, too. And that evening, when the sun had gone down
behind the hill, the farmer's boy came back, and who do you think
was with him?--old Fido, wagging his tail, and looking as if he were
very glad to get back!
The big white rooster and all the chickens were just as glad as he was,
for now they knew that the fox would never come any more. Mamma
Goose, too, was just as glad as the rest, for now she knew that she
would never need to bother herself to think about the goslings
again.
But she didn't dream that anything more could happen, and she was
too much surprised to think about anything at all, when old Fido
came trotting straight up to her, and wagged his tail just for her
alone, and told her how glad he was that she had been wise enough to
use his house, and had taken such good care of the chickens while he
was gone, and what a sensible little goose he thought she was! You
might almost have knocked Mamma Goose over with one of her own
feathers! She couldn't imagine who had told him.
But perhaps it was the big white rooster.