III. MRS. QUACK TELLS ABOUT HER HOME
“It's a long story,” said Mrs. Quack, shaking the tears from her eyes, “and I hardly know where to begin.”
“Begin at the beginning,” said Jerry Muskrat. “Your home is somewhere way up in the Northland where Honker the Goose lives, isn't it?”
Mrs. Quack nodded. “I wish I were there this very minute,” she replied, the tears coming again. “But sometimes I doubt if ever I'll get there again. You folks who don't have to leave your homes every year don't know how well off you are or how much you have to be thankful for.”
“I never could understand what people want to leave their homes for, anyway,” declared Peter.
“We don't leave because we want to, but because we HAVE to,” replied Mrs. Quack, “and we go back just as soon as we can. What would you do if you couldn't find a single thing to eat?”
“I guess I'd starve,” replied Peter simply.
“I guess you would, and that is just what we would do, if we didn't take the long journey south when Jack Frost freezes everything tight up there where my home is,” returned Mrs. Quack. “He comes earlier up there and stays twice as long as he does here, and makes ten times as much ice and snow. We get most of our food in the water or in the mud under the water, as of course you know, and when the water is frozen, there isn't a scrap of anything we can get to eat. We just HAVE to come south. It isn't because we want to, but because we must! There is nothing else for us to do.”
“Then I don't see what you want to make your home in such a place for,” said practical Peter. “I should think you would make it where you can live all the year around.”