REDDY FOX DREAMS OF CHICKENS
It’s a poor watch-dog
who sleeps with both eyes closed.
Bowser the Hound.
Reddy Fox watched Blacky the Crow
grow smaller and smaller until he was just a black
speck in the distance. Finally he disappeared.
Reddy looked very thoughtful. He looked that
way because he was thoughtful. In fact,
Reddy was doing a lot of hard thinking. He was
thinking about those chickens Blacky had told him
of. The more he thought of them, the hungrier
he grew. You see, Reddy had been having rather
a hard time to get enough to eat.
“Yes, Sir,” said Reddy
to himself, “I would go a long, long distance
to get a good plump hen. I wish I knew just where
that farm is that that black rascal talked about.
I wonder if he has gone that way now. If I were
sure that he has, I would make a little journey in
that direction myself. But I’m not sure.
That black rascal flies all over the country.
That farm may lie in the direction he has gone now,
and it may be in quite the opposite direction.
Somehow I’ve got to find out in just which direction
it is.”
Reddy yawned, for he had been out
all night, and he was sleepy. He decided that
the best thing he could do would be to get a good rest.
One must always be fit if one is to get on in this
life. The harder one must work, the more fit
one should keep, and a proper amount of sleep is one
of the most necessary things in keeping fit. So
Reddy curled up to sleep.
Hardly had his eyes closed when he
began to dream. You see, he had been thinking
so hard about those fat hens, and he was so hungry
for one of them, that right away he began to dream
of fat hens. It was a beautiful dream. At
least, it was a beautiful dream to Reddy. Fat
hens were all about him. They were so fat that
they could hardly walk. Not only were they fat,
but they seemed to think that their one object in life
was to fill the stomachs of hungry foxes, for they
just stood about waiting to be caught.
Never in all his life had Reddy Fox
known anything so wonderful as was that dream.
There were no dogs to worry him. There were no
hunters with dreadful guns. All he had to do
was to reach out and help himself to as many fat hens
as he wanted. He ate and ate and ate, all in his
dream, you know, and when he could eat no more he
started for home. When he started for home the
fat hens that were left started along with him.
He led a procession of fat hens straight over to his
home in the Old Pasture.
Just imagine how Reddy felt when at
last he awoke and there was not so much as a feather
from a fat hen anywhere about, while his stomach fairly
ached with emptiness.