Read an Excerpt
Chapter One
CHARLES, the rooster, came out of the front
door of the chicken coop and walked slowly
across the barn-yard. It was still very dark
in the barn-yard, for it was half past four in the
morning, and the sun was not yet up. He shivered
and thought of his nice warm perch in the coop, but
there was a reason why he did not go back to it.
Mr. Bean, the farmer, did not have very much
money, and could not afford to buy an alarm-clock,
and he relied on the rooster to wake him up bright
and early in the morning. The last time Charles
had overslept, Mr. Bean had been very angry and
had threatened to have him fricasseed with baking-powder
biscuit for Sunday dinner. Charles did not
like getting up early, before any of the other birds
and animals were stirring, but he felt that it was
better to get up than to be fricasseed. And so this
morning he hopped sleepily on to a post and, after
clearing his throat several times, began to crow:
"Cock-a-doodle-doo! Cock-a-doodle-doo-oo-oo!!"
The eastern sky grew brighter and brighter and
pinker and pinker, and for a long time nothing else
happened. Then some robins began talking together
in little quiet voices in the big elm-tree that
grew by the barn, and a young chipmunk came
scampering along the fence and stopped on the
post next to Charles and started to wash his face
with his paws, and down in the house where the
pigs lived there was a great grunting and squealing,
so that Charles knew that the pigs were beginning
to think about breakfast. And he crowed
some more.
And at last, far off across the fields, where the
sky came down to meet them, there appeared a
little spark of bright gold, that grew and grew
until it looked like a bonfire and then like a house
on fire, and then like a whole city burning up.
And that was the upper edge of the sun, coming up
from the other side of the world, where all night
long it had been shining on Chinese pagodas and
the Himalayas and jungles in Africa and all the
queer places where people work and play while we
are sound asleep.
And just as the edge of the sun came into sight,
the head of Mr. Bean, the farmer, appeared at his
bedroom window. He had on a white cotton nightcap
with a red tassel, and his face was completely
hidden behind his bushy, grey whiskers, so that
nobody, not even his wife, had ever seen what he
really looked like. And he was looking out to see
what kind of a day it was going to be.
As soon as Mr. Bean poked his head out of the
window, Charles hopped down from the post. His
day's work was already done, but although he was
still cold and sleepy, he did not go back to the hen
house. For his wife and her eight sisters were up
by that time. "And nobody could get a minute's
peace in all that cackle," he muttered angrily. "I'll
go take forty winks in the barn."
"Good-morning, Charles," said Hank, the old,
white horse, whose stall was nearest the door.
"Touch of winter in the air this morning."
Charles flew up and perched on the edge of
Hank's manger.
"Touch of winter!" he exclaimed. "I guess there
is! It's cold, that's what it isdownright cold!"
"Well, we've got to expect it now," said Hank.
"Snow will be flying in another month or two."
"Ugh!" said Charles, and shivered.
"There's less work for me in winter," said Hank;
"though I must say I prefer the summer. I've got
a touch of rheumatism in my off hind leg, and these
cold nights set it aching."
"Of course," said Charles sympathetically.
"They would! It's a shame. You ought to have
a blanket or something to cover you, and this barn
is a terribly draughty old place. But Mr. Bean,
he never thinks how the animals and birds suffer;
he sleeps warm under his feather-bed and four
patchwork quiltshe doesn't care as long as he's
warm! Now, take me. Every morning, winter
and summer, I have to get up before daylight,
crawl out of my comfortable coop, and crow and
get things started on the farm, just because he's
too stingy to buy himself an alarm-clock. Doesn't
matter how cold and rainy it is, it has to be done.
And if I miss a morning, what do I get! I get
fricasseed, that's what!"
"It seems sort of hard," said Hank.
"I guess it does! And now winter's coming. I
detest winter! But I've got to get out, just the
same, and wade around in the snow and freeze my
bill. I wouldn't mind so much if I was warm the
rest of the time. If there was a stove in the hen
house, and a couple of good wool blankets to sleep
under. That hen house ought to have a cellar under
it, toothe floor's as cold as stone."
Hank sighed. "Yes," he agreed, "it's a hard
life. There's no denying it. But what can we do
about it?"
A little twittering voice answered from high up
under the roof. "Why don't you migrate?" it said.
They looked up, but it was dark in the roof, and
they could not see anything.
"Who are you?" asked Charles. "And what are
you talking about?"
"I'm a barn swallow," said the voice, "and I'm
talking about migrating. We birds all migrate
every year, and I don't see why you can't do it too,
if you don't like the winter."
"Oh, you don't!" said Charles rather crossly.
"Well, suppose you tell us what you're talking
about. If it's worth listening to. We can't keep
track of everything you little unimportant birds
do."
Charles, being a farm bird, felt very superior to
all the wild birds, and he puffed out his chest with
importance. But the swallow only laughed chirpingly.
"You needn't be so grand," she said. "After all,
you've never been outside your own barn-yard, and
you have to do as you're told, or you get fricasseed.
And I've travelled thousands of miles in my time,
and I don't take orders from anyone."
"Well, of all the!" Charles began angrily. But
Hank shook his head at him.
"She may have something interesting to tell us,"
he said. And then he asked the swallow politely if
she would explain to them what migrating was.
So she told them that every fall, when it began
to get cold, the birds gathered together in big flocks
and started south. They travelled hundreds of
miles, and some of them went to Florida, and some
went to Central or South America. All winter
long, she said, it was sunny and warm down south.
There was never any snow, never any cold winds,
and there was always plenty to eat. And then in
the spring they came back north again.
When she had told them this, she dropped with
a twitter from the roof and shot like an arrow out
through the open door into the warm sunshine.
"Do you believe it?" Charles asked when she had
gone. He felt it beneath his dignity to pay much
attention to anything a swallow could tell him,
although he was really very much interested.
"Yes," said Hank. "I have heard of it before.
And it sounds pretty good. But it wouldn't do for
me, I'm afraid. It's a long road to Florida. If I
could fly, though, I won't say that I wouldn't try
it."
"I can't fly," said Charles. "Not much, that is.
But I would walk a good many miles to find a
place where it is warm and sunny all winter, and
where I shouldn't have to get up in the morning
till I got good and ready. It wouldn't be any fun
going alone, of course, but if we could get up a
party"
"If you could get up a party," said Hank, "I
won't say I shouldn't like to go myself."
Charles jumped down from the manger. "I'm
going to see some of the other animals," he said.
"If they're interested, we'll have a meeting to-night
and talk it over." And he went out into the yard.
The more he thought about it, the more excited
he became. He went out into the orchard and
talked to an oriole and a couple of blackbirds, and
the tales they told him of the lazy life they led in
the tropical, southern sunshine fairly made his
mouth water. Then he went to see the pigs and
the cows and the other animals, and they were very
much interested and said that they had all been
dreading the long, cold winter, and that if he really
knew of a place where it was warm and sunshiny
they would be very glad to go there. So he invited
them to come to a meeting that evening in the cow
barn, where he would tell them all about it, and
those who wanted to go could talk it over and
decide when to start.