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<h2> CHAPTER XXV. Three Cousins Quite Unlike. </h2>
<p>As Peter Rabbit passed one of the apple-trees in the Old Orchard, a thin,
wiry voice hailed him. "It's a wonder you wouldn't at least say you're
glad to see me back, Peter Rabbit," said the voice.</p>
<p>Peter, who had been hopping along rather fast, stopped abruptly to look
up. Running along a limb just over his head, now on top and now
underneath, was a little bird with a black and white striped coat and a
white waistcoat. Just as Peter looked it flew down to near the base of the
tree and began to run straight up the trunk, picking things from the bark
here and there as it ran. Its way of going up that tree trunk reminded
Peter of one of his winter friends, Seep Seep the Brown Creeper.</p>
<p>"It strikes me that this is a mighty poor welcome for one who has just
come all the way from South America," said the little black and white bird
with twinkling eyes.</p>
<p>"Oh, Creeper, I didn't know you were here!" cried Peter. "You know I'm
glad to see you. I'm just as glad as glad can be. You are such a quiet
fellow I'm afraid I shouldn't have seen you at all if you hadn't spoken.
You know it's always been hard work for me to believe that you are really
and truly a Warbler."</p>
<p>"Why so?" demanded Creeper the Black and White Warbler, for that is the
name by which he is commonly known. "Why so? Don't I look like a Warbler?"</p>
<p>"Ye-es," said Peter slowly. "You do look like one but you don't act like
one."</p>
<p>"In what way don't I act like one I should like to know?" demanded
Creeper.</p>
<p>"Well," replied Peter, "all the rest of the Warblers are the uneasiest
folks I know of. They can't seem to keep still a minute. They are
everlastingly flitting about this way and that way and the other way. I
actually get tired watching them. But you are not a bit that way. Then the
way you run up tree trunks and along the limbs isn't a bit Warbler-like.
Why don't you flit and dart about as the others do?"</p>
<p>Creeper's bright eyes sparkled.</p>
<p>"I don't have to," said he. "I'm going to let you into a little secret,
Peter. The rest of them get their living from the leaves and twigs and in
the air, but I've discovered an easier way. I've found out that there are
lots of little worms and insects and eggs on the trunks and big limbs of
the trees and that I can get the best kind of a living there without
flitting about everlastingly. I don't have to share them with anybody but
the Woodpeckers, Nuthatches, and Tommy Tit the Chickadee."</p>
<p>"That reminds me," said Peter. "Those folks you have mentioned nest in
holes in trees; do you?"</p>
<p>"I should say not," retorted Creeper. "I don't know of any Warbler who
does. I build on the ground, if you want to know. I nest in the Green
Forest. Sometimes I make my nest in a little hollow at the base of a tree;
sometimes I put it under a stump or rock or tuck it in under the roots of
a tree that has been blown over. But there, Peter Rabbit, I've talked
enough. I'm glad you're glad that I'm back, and I'm glad I'm back too."</p>
<p>Creeper continued on up the trunk of the tree, picking here and picking
there. Just then Peter caught sight of another friend whom he could always
tell by the black mask he wore. It was Mummer the Yellow-throat. He had
just darted into the thicket of bushes along the old stone wall. Peter
promptly hurried over there to look for him.</p>
<p>When Peter reached the place where he had caught a glimpse of Mummer, no
one was to be seen. Peter sat down, uncertain which way to go. Suddenly
Mummer popped out right in front of Peter, seemingly from nowhere at all.
His throat and breast were bright yellow and his back wings and tail a
soft olive-green. But the most remarkable thing about him was the mask of
black right across his cheeks, eyes and forehead. At least it looked like
a mask, although it really wasn't one.</p>
<p>"Hello, Mummer!" cried Peter.</p>
<p>"Hello yourself, Peter Rabbit!" retorted Mummer and then disappeared as
suddenly as he had appeared.</p>
<p>Peter blinked and looked in vain all about.</p>
<p>"Looking for some one?" asked Mummer, suddenly popping into view where
Peter least expected him.</p>
<p>"For goodness' sake, can't you sit still a minute?" cried Peter. "How do
you expect a fellow can talk to you when he can't keep his eyes on you
more than two seconds at a time."</p>
<p>"Who asked you to talk to me?" responded Mummer, and popped out of sight.
Two seconds later he was back again and his bright little eyes fairly
shone with mischief. Then before Peter could say a word Mummer burst into
a pleasant little song. He was so full of happiness that Peter couldn't be
cross with him.</p>
<p>"There's one thing I like about you, Mummer," declared Peter, "and that is
that I never get you mixed up with anybody else. I should know you just as
far as I could see you because of that black mask across your face. Has
Mrs. Yellow-throat arrived yet?"</p>
<p>"Certainly," replied another voice, and Mrs. Yellow-throat flitted across
right in front of Peter. For just a second she sat still, long enough for
him to have one good look at her. She was dressed very like Mummer save
that she did not wear the black mask.</p>
<p>Peter was just about to say something polite and pleasant when from just
back of him there sounded a loud, very emphatic, "Chut! Chut!" Peter
whirled about to find another old friend. It was Chut-Chut the
Yellow-breasted Chat, the largest of the Warbler family. He was so much
bigger than Mummer that it was hard to believe that they were own cousins.
But Peter knew they were, and he also knew that he could never mistake
Chut-Chut for any other member of the family because of his big size,
which was that of some of the members of the Sparrow family. His back was
a dark olive-green, but his throat and breast were a beautiful bright
yellow. There was a broad white line above each eye and a little white
line underneath. Below his breast he was all white.</p>
<p>To have seen him you would have thought that he suspected Peter might do
him some harm. He acted that way. If Peter hadn't known him so well he
might have been offended. But Peter knew that there is no one among his
feathered friends more cautious than Chut-Chut the Chat. He never takes
anything for granted. He appears to be always on the watch for danger,
even to the extent of suspecting his very best friends.</p>
<p>When he had decided in his own mind that there was no danger, Chut-Chut
came out for a little gossip. But like all the rest of the Warblers he
couldn't keep still. Right in the middle of the story of his travels from
far-away Mexico he flew to the top of a little tree, began to sing, then
flew out into the air with his legs dangling and his tail wagging up and
down in the funniest way, and there continued his song as he slowly
dropped down into the thicket again. It was a beautiful song and Peter
hastened to tell him so.</p>
<p>Chut-Chut was pleased. He showed it by giving a little concert all by
himself. It seemed to Peter that he never had heard such a variety of
whistles and calls and songs as came from that yellow throat. When it was
over Chut-Chut abruptly said good-by and disappeared. Peter could hear his
sharp "Chut! Chut!" farther along in the thicket as he hunted for worms
among the bushes.</p>
<p>"I wonder," said Peter, speaking out loud without thinking, "where he
builds his nest. I wonder if he builds it on the ground, the way Creeper
does."</p>
<p>"No," declared Mummer, who all the time had been darting about close at
hand. "He doesn't, but I do. Chut-Chut puts his nest near the ground,
however, usually within two or three feet. He builds it in bushes or
briars. Sometimes if I can find a good tangle of briars I build my nest in
it several feet from the ground, but as a rule I would rather have it on
the ground under a bush or in a clump of weeds. Have you seen my cousin
Sprite the Parula Warbler, yet?"</p>
<p>"Not yet," said Peter, as he started for home.</p>
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