(Reprinted by permission of Canada West Monthly.)
Johnny was the only John rabbit in
the family that lived in the poplar bluff in the pasture.
He had a bold and adventurous spirit, but was sadly
hampered by his mother’s watchfulness. She
was as full of warnings as the sign-board at the railway
crossing. It was “Look out for the cars!”
all the time with mother. She warned him of dogs
and foxes, hawks and snakes, boys and men. It
was in vain that Johnny showed her his paces how
he could leap and jump and run. She admitted
that he was quite a smart little rabbit for his age,
but oh, well! you know what mothers are
like.
Johnny was really tired of it, and
then, too, Johnny had found out that what mother had
said about dogs was very much exaggerated. Johnny
had met two dogs, so he thought he knew something
about them. One was a sleek, fat, black puppy,
with a vapid smile, called Juno; and the other was
an amber-eyed spaniel with woolly, fat legs. They
had run after Johnny one day when he was out playing
on the road, and he had led them across a ploughed
field. Johnny was accustomed to add, as he told
the story to the young rabbits that lived down in
the pasture, that he had to spurt around the field
a few times after the race was over just to limber
up his legs he was so cramped from sitting
around waiting for the dogs. So it came about
that Johnny, in his poor, foolish little heart, thought
dogs were just a joke.
Johnny’s mother told him that
all men were bad, and the men who carried guns were
worst of all, for guns spit out fire and death.
She said there were men who wore coats the color of
dead grass, and drove in rigs that rattled and had
dogs with them, and they killed ducks and geese that
were away up in the air. She said those men drove
miles and miles just to kill things, and they lived
sometimes in a little house away out near the lakes
where the ducks stayed, and they didn’t mind
getting up early in the morning or sitting up at night
to get a shot at a duck, and when they got the ducks
they just gave them away. If half what old Mrs.
Rabbit said about them was true, they certainly were
the Bad Men from Bitter Creek! Johnny listened,
big-eyed, to all this, and there were times when he
was almost afraid to go to bed. Still, when he
found out that dogs were not so dangerous, he began
to think his mother might have overstated the man
question, too.
One day Johnny got away from his mother,
when she was busy training the other little rabbits
in the old trick of dodging under the wire fence just
when the dog is going to grab you. Johnny knew
how it was done it was as easy as rolling
off a log for him, and so he ran away. He came
up at the Agricultural Grounds. He had often been
close to the fence before, but his mother had said
decidedly he must never go in.
Just beside the gate he found a bread
crust which was lovely, and there might be more, mightn’t
there? There wasn’t a person in sight, or
a dog. Johnny went a little farther in and found
a pile of cabbage leaves a pile of them,
mind you he really didn’t know what
to think of his mother she certainly was
the limit! Johnny grew bolder; a little farther
on he found more bread crumbs and some stray lettuce
leaves he began to feel a little sorry for
his mother lettuce leaves, cabbage leaves
and bread crumbs and she had said, “Don’t
go in there, Johnny, whatever you do!”
The band was playing, and there were
flags in the air, but Johnny didn’t notice it.
He didn’t know, of course, that the final lacrosse
match of the season was going to be played that afternoon.
Johnny had just gone into one of the cattle sheds
to see what was there, when a little boy, with flopped-out
ears and a Cow Brand Soda cap on, stealthily closed
the gate. Johnny didn’t know he had on a
Cow Brand Soda cap, and he didn’t know that
the gate was shut, but he did know that that kind
of a yell meant business. He wasn’t afraid.
Pshaw! He’d give young Mr. Flop-Ears a
run for his money. Come on, kid r-r-r-r-r!
Johnny ran straight to the gate with a rabbit’s
unerring instinct, and hurled himself against it in
vain. The flop-eared boy screamed with laughter.
Then there were more Boys. And Dogs. All
screaming. The primitive savage in them was awake
now. Here was a wild thing who defied them, with
all his speed. Johnny was running now with his
ears laid back, mad with terror, dogs barking, boys
screaming, even men joining in the chase, for the
lust for blood was on them. Again Johnny made
the circuit of the field the noise grew a
hundred voices, it seemed, not one that was friendly.
It was one little throbbing rabbit against the field,
with all the odds against him, running for his life,
and losing! “Sic him, Togo! Sic him,
Collie! Gee! Can’t he run? But
we’ve got him this time. He’ll soon
slow up.” A dog snapped at him and his
hind leg grew heavy. Some one struck at him with
a lacrosse stick, and then
He found himself running alone.
Behind him a dog yelped with pain, and above the noise
someone shouted: “Here, you kids, let up
on that! Shame on you! Let him alone!
Call off your dogs, there! Poor little duffer,
let him go. Get back there, Twin!”
Johnny ran dazed and dizzy, and once
more made the circuit and dashed again for the gate.
But this time the gate was open, and Johnny was free!
Saved, and by whom?
Well, of course, old Mrs. Rabbit didn’t
believe a word of it when Johnny went home and told
her who called off the dogs and opened the gate for
him. She said, well, she talked very
plainly to Johnny, but he stuck to it, that he owed
his life to one of the Bad Men who wear clothes the
color of grass, and whose gun spits fire and death.
For old Mrs. Rabbit made just the same mistake that
many people make of thinking that a man that hunts
must be cruel, forgetting that the true sportsman
loves the wild things he makes war on, and though he
kills them, he does it fairly and openly.