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<h2> CHAPTER XXI: Whitefoot Envies Timmy </h2>
<p>A useless thing is envy;<br/>
A foolish thing to boot.<br/>
Why should a Fox who has a bark<br/>
Want like an Owl to hoot?<br/></p>
<p>Whitefoot was beginning to feel quite at home. He would have been wholly
contented but for one thing,—he had no well-filled storehouse. This
meant that each day he must hunt for his food.</p>
<p>It wasn't that Whitefoot minded hunting for food. He would have done that
anyway, even though he had had close at hand a store-house with plenty in
it. But he would have felt easier in his mind. He would have had the
comfortable feeling that if the weather turned so bad that he could not
easily get out and about, he would not have to go hungry.</p>
<p>But Whitefoot is a happy little fellow and wisely made the best of things.
At first he came out very little by day. He knew that there were many
sharp eyes watching for him, and that he was more likely to be seen in the
light of day than when the Black Shadows had crept all through the Green
Forest.</p>
<p>He would peek out of his doorway and watch for chance visitors in the
daytime. Twice he saw Butcher the Shrike alight a short distance from the
tree in which Timmy lived. He knew Butcher had not forgotten that he had
chased a badly frightened Mouse into a hole in that tree. Once he saw
Whitey the Snowy Owl and so knew that Whitey had not yet returned to the
Far North. Once Reddy Fox trotted along right past the foot of the old
stub in which Whitefoot lived, and didn't even suspect that he was
anywhere near. Twice he saw Old Man Coyote trotting past, and once Terror
the Goshawk alighted on that very stub, and sat there for half an hour.</p>
<p>So Whitefoot formed the habit of doing just what Timmy the Flying Squirrel
did; he remained in his house for most of the day and came out when the
Black Shadows began to creep in among the trees. Timmy came out about the
same time, and they had become the best of friends.</p>
<p>Now Whitefoot is not much given to envying others, but as night after
night he watched Timmy a little envy crept into his heart in spite of all
he could do. Timmy would nimbly climb to the top of a tree and then jump.
Down he would come in a long beautiful glide, for all the world as if he
were sliding on the air.</p>
<p>The first time Whitefoot saw him do it he held his breath. He really
didn't know what to make of it. The nearest tree to the one from which
Timmy had jumped was so far away that it didn't seem possible any one
without wings could reach it without first going to the ground.</p>
<p>“Oh!” squeaked Whitefoot. “Oh! he'll kill himself! He surely will kill
himself! He'll break his neck!” But Timmy did nothing of the kind. He
sailed down, down, down and alighted on that distant tree a foot or two
from the bottom; and without stopping a second scampered up to the top of
that tree and once more jumped. Whitefoot had hard work to believe his own
eyes. Timmy seemed to be jumping just for the pleasure of it. As a matter
of fact, he was. He was getting his evening exercise.</p>
<p>Whitefoot sighed. “I wish I could jump like that,” said he to himself. “I
wouldn't ever be afraid of anybody if I could jump like that. I envy
Timmy. I do so.”</p>
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