REDDY’S FORLORN CHANCE
This saying is both true and
terse:
There’s nothing bad
but might be worse.
Bowser the Hound.
If any one had said this to Reddy
Fox during the first half hour after he discovered
that he was a prisoner in Farmer Brown’s henyard,
he wouldn’t have believed it. He wouldn’t
have believed a word of it. He would have said
that he couldn’t possibly have been worse off
than he was.
He was a prisoner, and he couldn’t
possibly get out. He knew that in the morning
Farmer Brown’s boy would certainly discover him.
It couldn’t be otherwise. That is, it couldn’t
be otherwise as long as he remained in that henyard.
There wasn’t a thing, not one solitary thing,
under or behind which he could hide. So, to Reddy’s
way of thinking, things couldn’t possibly have
been worse.
But after a while, having nothing
else to do, Reddy began to think. Now it is surprising
how thinking will change matters. One of the first
thoughts that came to Reddy was that he might have
been caught in a trap,—one of those cruel
traps that close like a pair of jaws and sometimes
break the bones of the foot or leg, and from which
there is no escape. Right away Reddy realized
that to have been so caught would have been much worse
than being a prisoner in Farmer Brown’s henyard.
This made him feel just a wee, wee bit better, and
he began to do some more thinking.
For a long time his thinking didn’t
help him in the least. At last, however, he remembered
the chicken dinner he had felt so sure he was going
to enjoy. The thought of the chicken dinner reminded
him that inside the henhouse it was dark. He
had been inside that henhouse before, and he knew
that there were boxes in there. If he were inside
the henhouse, it might be, it just might possibly be,
that he could hide when Farmer Brown’s boy came
in the morning.
So once more Reddy went to work at
that little sliding door where the hens ran in and
out during the day. He already had found out that
it wasn’t fastened, and he felt sure that with
patience he could open it. So he worked away
and worked away, until at last there was a little
crack. He got his claws in the little crack and
pulled and pulled. The little crack became a
little wider. By and by it was wide enough for
him to get his whole paw in. Then it became wide
enough for him to get his head half in. After
this, all he had to do was to force himself through,
for as he pushed and shoved, the little door opened.
He was inside at last! There was a chance, just
a forlorn chance, that he might be able to escape
the notice of Farmer Brown’s boy in the morning.