THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BEING INSIDE AND OUTSIDE
You’ll find ’twill
often come about
That he who’s in fain
would be out.
Bowser the Hound.
It certainly is queer what a difference
there is between being inside and outside. Sometimes
happiness is inside and sometimes it is outside.
Sometimes the one who is inside wishes with all his
might that he were outside, and sometimes the one
who is outside would give anything in the world to
be inside.
Just take the case of Reddy Fox.
He had stolen inside of Farmer Brown’s henyard,
leaving the gate halfway open. He had set himself
to work to open the little sliding door through which
in the daytime the hens passed in and out of the henhouse.
As he worked he had been filled with great contentment
and joy. He knew that Bowser the Hound had disappeared.
He felt sure that there was nothing to fear, and he
fully expected to dine that night on chicken.
Then along came a mischievous little Night Breeze
and swung that gate shut.
At the click of the latch Reddy turned
his head, and in a flash he saw what had happened.
All in an instant everything had changed for Reddy
Fox. Fear and despair took the place of contentment
and happy anticipations. He was a prisoner inside
that henyard.
Frantically Reddy rushed over to the
gate. There wasn’t even a crack through
which he could thrust his sharp little nose. Then,
beside himself with fear, he raced around that henyard,
seeking a hole through which he might escape.
There wasn’t any hole. That fence had been
built to keep out such people as Reddy Fox, and of
course a fence that would keep Reddy out would also
keep him in, if he happened to be caught inside as
he now was. He couldn’t dig down under it,
because, you know, the ground was frozen hard and
covered with snow and an icy crust. He was caught,
and that was all there was to it.
Suddenly Reddy became aware of some
one just outside the wire fence, looking in and grinning
wickedly. It was Old Man Coyote. Between
them was nothing but that wire, but, oh, what a difference!
Reddy was inside and a prisoner. Old Man Coyote
was outside and free.
“Good evening, Reddy,”
said Old Man Coyote. “I hope you’ll
enjoy your chicken dinner. When you are eating
it, just think over this bit of advice: Never
take a risk when you can get some one else to take
it for you. I would like a chicken dinner myself,
but as it is, I think I will enjoy a Mouse or two
better. Pay my respects to Farmer Brown’s
boy when he comes in the morning.”
With this, Old Man Coyote once more
grinned that wicked grin of his and trotted away towards
the Green Forest. Reddy watched him disappear
and would have given anything in the world to have
been outside the fence in his place instead of inside,
where he then was.