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O
NE was named Sandy, because Sandy is a Scotch name and
there were
One was named Peter, for his father. |
But Mother Piper never called her children Sandy and Pan and Peter. She called them all "Pete." She was so used to calling her mate "Pete," that that name was easier than any other for her to say.
The three of them played by the river all day long. Each amused himself in his own way and did not bother his brothers, although they did not stray too far apart to talk to one another. This they did by saying, "Peep," now and then.
About once an hour, and sometimes oftener, Mother Piper came flying over from Faraway Island, crying, "Pete, Pete, Pete," as if she were worried. It is no wonder that she was anxious about Sandy and Peter and Pan, for, to begin with, she had had four fine children, and the very first night they were out of their nest, the darlings, a terrible prowling animal named Tom or Tabby had killed one of her babies.
But Peter and Pan and Sandy were too young to know much
about being afraid. So they played by the river all day
long,
Oh! here was Sandy clambering up the rocky bank, so
steep that there was roothold only for the
Ho! here was Pan wandering where the river lapped the
rocky shore. His long slender legs were just right for
wading, and his toes felt comfortable in the cool
water. There was a pleasing scent from the
Oho! here was Peter on an island as big as an
umbrella, with a
Oh! Ho! and Oho! it was a day to be gay in, with so many new amusements wherever three brave, fearless little sandpipers might stray.
Then came sundown; and in the pleasant twilight Peter and Pan and Sandy somehow found themselves near each other on the bank, still walking forth so brave and bold, and yet each close enough to his brothers to hear a "Peep," were it ever so softly whispered.
Did it just happen that about that time Mother Piper came flying low over the water from Faraway Island to Nearby Island, calling, "Pete, Pete, Pete," in a different tone, a sort of sundown voice?
Was that the way to speak to three big, 'most-
Ah, but where were the 'most-
And three dear, sweet, little voices answered, "Peep,"
every time Mother Piper called, "Pete"; and three
little sons tagged obediently after her as she called
them from place to place all round and all about Nearby
Island, teaching them, perhaps, to make sure there was
no Tabby and no Tommy on their
So it was that, after twilight, when darkness was at hand and the curfew sounded for human children to be at home, Peter and Pan and Sandy settled down near each other and near Mother Piper for the night.
And where was Peter Piper, who had been abroad the day long, paying little attention to his family? He, too, at nightfall, had come flying low from Faraway Island; and now, with his head tucked behind his wing, was asleep not a rod away from Mother Piper and their three sons.
Somehow it was very pleasant to know that they were near together through the starlight—the five of them who had wandered forth alone by sunlight.
But not for long was the snug little Nearby Island to
serve for a night camp. Mother Piper had other plans.
Like the wise person she was, she let her children find
out many things for themselves, though she kept in
touch with them from time to time during the day, to
satisfy herself that they were safe. And at night she
found that they were willing enough to mind what they
were told to do, never seeming to bother their heads
over the fact that every now and then she led them to a
strange
So they did not seem surprised or troubled when, one
night soon, Mother Piper, instead of calling them to
Nearby Island, as had been her wont, rested patiently
in plain sight on a stump near the shore and, with
never a word, waited for the sunset hour to reach the
time of dusk. Then she flew to the log where Peter
Piper had been teetering up and down, and what she said
to him I do not know. But a minute later, back she
flew, this time rather high overhead, and swooped down
toward the little ones with a quick
Were they saying good-night to their babies? Were their
sons to be left on the bank by themselves, now that
they had shaken the last fringe of down from their
tails and lost the fluff from their heads? Did they
need no older company, now that they looked like
Ah, no! At Mother Piper's "Pete-weet," Peter answered,
"Peep," lifted his wings, and flew right past Nearby
Island and landed on a rock on Faraway Island. And,
"Peep," called Sandy, fluttering after. And, "Peep,"
said Pan, stopping himself in the midst of his
teetering, and flying over Nearby Island on his way to
the new
That is how it happened that they had their last luncheon on the shore of Faraway Island before snuggling down to sleep that night.
One of the haunts of Peter and Pan and Sandy was
Cardinal-Flower Path. This lovely place was along the
marshy shore not far from Nearby Island. It was almost
white with the fine blooms of
And it would be well for all children of men to know
that, although three bright active children of
sandpipers ran teetering about
But even the charms of Cardinal-Flower Path did not hold Pan and Peter and Sandy many weeks. They seemed to be a sort of gypsy folk, with the love of wandering in their hearts; and it is pleasant to know that, as soon as they were grown enough, there was nothing to prevent their journeying forth with Peter and Mother Piper.
Of all the strange and wonderful plants and birds and insects they met upon the way I cannot tell you, for, in all my life, I have not traveled so far as these three children went long before they were one year old. They went, in fact, way to the land where the insects live that are so hard and beautiful and gemlike that people sometimes use them for jewels. These are called "Brazilian beetles," and you can tell by that name where the Pipers spent the winter, though it may seem a very far way for a young bird to go, with neither train nor boat to give him a lift.
Not even tired they were, from all accounts, those
little
"Coming," did I say? Why, surely! You didn't think
those sandpipers stayed in
Brazil? What did they care
for green
Be that as it may, there was something beneath their feathers that quickened like the heart of a journeying gypsy when, with nodding heads and teetering tails, they started again for the north.
Did they dream of a bank where the blue-bells grew, and a shore spiced with the fragrance of wild mint?
No one will ever know just how Nature whispers to the bird, "Northward ho!" But we know they come in the springtime, and right glad are we to hear their voices.
So Peter Piper, Junior, came back again to the shore of Nearby Island. And do you think Sandy and Pan walked behind him for company, calling, "Peep," one to another? And do you think Mother Piper and Father Peter showed him the way to Faraway Island at sundown, and guarded him o' nights? Not they! They were busy, every one, with their own affairs, and Peter would just have to get along without them.
Well, Peter could—Peter and Dot. For of course he was
a
The spot she teetered to most of all. |
The spot she teetered to most of all was a little
The eggs were creamy white, with brown spots splashed over them—the proper sort of eggs (if only they had been smaller) to tuck beneath a warm breast decorated with pretty polka dots. But still, they must have been her very own, or Dot could not have taken such good care of them.
Because of this care, day by day the little body inside
each shell grew from the wonderful single cell it
started life with, to a
Why, almost before one would think they had had time to dry their down and stretch their legs and get used to being outside of shells instead of inside, those little babies walked way to the edge of the river, and from that time forth never needed their nest.
And look! the fluffy, cunning little dears are nodding
their heads and teetering their tails! Yes, that proves
that they must be sandpipers, even if we did have
doubts of those eggs. Ah! Dot knew what she was about
all along. The size of her eggs might fool a person,
but she had not worried. Why, indeed, should she be
troubled? Those big shells had held
Tabby did not catch any of them, though one night she tried, and gave Dot an awful scare. It was while they were still tiny enough to be tucked under their mother's feathers after sundown, and before they could manage to get, stone by stone, to Nearby Island. So they were camped on the shore, and the prowling cat came very near. So near, in fact, that Mother Dot fluttered away from her young, calling back to them, in a language they understood, to scatter a bit, and then lie so still that not even the green eyes of the cat could see a motion. The four little Pipers obeyed. Not one of them questioned, "Why, Mother?" or whined, "I don't want to," or whimpered, "I'm frightened," or boasted, "Pooh, there's nothing here."
Dot led the crouching enemy away by fluttering as if
she had a broken wing, and she called for help with all
the agony of her
No one who hears the wail of a frightened sandpiper begging protection for her young can sit unmoved.
Someone at the Ledge House heard Dot, and gave a low
whistle and a quick command. Then there was a dashing
rush through the bushes, that sounded as if a dog were
chasing a cat. A few minutes later Dot's voice again
called in the dark—this time, not in anguish of
heart, but very cosily and gently.
So it happened that two sons and two daughters of Peter Piper, Junior, played and picnicked and bathed by the river. The one who had first pipped his eggshell was named Peter the Third, for his father and his grandfather, and a finer young sandpiper never shook the fluff of down from his head or the fringe from his tail, when his real feathers pushed into their places.
What his brother and sisters were named, I never knew; and it didn't matter much, for their mother called them all "Pete."
Peter the Third and the others grew up as Pan and Peter
and Sandy had grown, dallying happily along the
Dallying happily along the river-edge. |
Of course, as soon as the season came for their migration journey, the four of them started cheerfully off with Peter and Dot, for a leisurely little flight to Brazil and back—to fill the days, as it were, with pleasant wanderings, from the time the hummingbird fed at the feast of the cardinal flower in late summer, until he should be hovering over the columbine in the spring.