WHY REDDY FOX WEARS RED
Peter Rabbit sat in the middle of
the dear Old Briar-patch making faces and laughing
at Reddy Fox. Of course that wasn’t a nice
thing to do, not a bit nice. But Peter had just
had a narrow escape, a very narrow escape, for Reddy
Fox had sprung out from behind a bush as Peter came
down the Lone Little Path, and had so nearly caught
Peter that he had actually pulled some fur out of
Peter’s coat. Now Peter was safe in the
dear Old Briar-patch. He was a little out of breath,
because he had had to use his long legs as fast as
he knew how, but he was safe. You see, Reddy
Fox wouldn’t run the risk of tearing his handsome
red coat on the brambles. Besides, they scratched
terribly.
“Never mind, Peter Rabbit, I’ll
get you yet!” snarled Reddy, as he gave up and
started back for the Green Forest.
“Reddy Fox is very sly!
Reddy Fox is very spry!
But sly and spry, ’tis
vain to try
To be as sly and spry
as I.”
When Peter Rabbit shouted this, Reddy
looked back and showed all his teeth, but Peter only
laughed, and Reddy trotted on. Peter watched him
out of sight.
“My! I wish I had such
a handsome coat,” he said, with a long sigh,
for you know Peter’s coat is very plain, very
plain, indeed.
“You wouldn’t, if you
had to wear it for the same reason that Reddy Fox
has to wear his. A good heart and honest ways
are better than fine clothes, Peter Rabbit.”
Peter looked up. There was saucy,
pert, little Jenny Wren fussing around in one of the
old bramble bushes.
“Hello, Jenny!” said Peter.
“Why does Reddy wear a red coat?”
“Do you mean to say that you
don’t know?” Jenny Wren looked very hard
at Peter with her sharp eyes. “I thought
everybody knew that! You certainly are slow,
Peter Rabbit. I haven’t time to tell you
about it now. Go ask Grandfather Frog; he knows
all about it.” Jenny Wren bustled off before
Peter could find his tongue.
Now, you all know how full of curiosity
Peter Rabbit is. Jenny Wren’s busy tongue
had set that curiosity fairly boiling over. He
just couldn’t sit still for wondering and wondering
why Reddy Fox wears a red coat. He had never
thought anything about it before, but now he couldn’t
get it out of his head. He just had to
know. So, making sure that Reddy Fox had disappeared
in the Green Forest, Peter started for the Smiling
Pool, lipperty-lipperty-lip, as fast as he could go.
There he found Grandfather Frog setting on his big
green lily-pad, just as usual.
“If you please, Grandfather
Frog, why does Reddy Fox wear a red coat?” panted
Peter, quite out of breath.
“Chug-a-rum!” grunted
Grandfather Frog crossly. “Don’t you
know that it is very impolite to disturb people when
they are having a nap?”
“I—I’m very
sorry. Indeed I am, Grandfather Frog,” said
Peter very humbly. “Will you tell me if
I come again some time when you are not so sleepy?”
Now, like everybody else, Grandfather
Frog is rather fond of Peter Rabbit, and now Peter
looked so truly sorry, and at the same time there
was such a look of disappointment in Peter’s
eyes, that Grandfather Frog forgot all about his crossness.
“Chug-a-rum!” said he.
“You and your questions are a nuisance, Peter
Rabbit, and I may as well get rid of you now as to
have you keep coming down here and pestering me to
death. Besides, any one who has to keep such
a sharp watch for Reddy Fox as you do ought to know
why he wears a red coat. If you’ll promise
to sit perfectly still and ask no foolish questions,
I’ll tell you the story.”
Of course Peter promised, and settled
himself comfortably to listen. And this is the
story that Grandfather Frog told:
“A long time ago, when the world
was young, old Mr. Fox, the grandfather a thousand
times removed of Reddy Fox, was one of the smartest
of all the forest and meadow people, just as Reddy
is now. He was so smart that he knew enough not
to appear smart, and the fact is his neighbors thought
him rather dull. He wore just a common, everyday
suit of dull brown, like most of the others, and there
wasn’t anything about him to attract attention.
He was always very polite, very polite indeed, to
every one. Yes, Sir, Mr. Fox was very polite.
He always seemed to be minding his own business, and
he never went around asking foolish questions or poking
his nose into other people’s affairs.”
Grandfather Frog stopped a minute
and looked very hard at Peter after he said this,
and Peter looked uncomfortable.
“Now, although Mr. Fox didn’t
appear to take any interest in other people’s
affairs and never asked questions, he had two of the
sharpest ears among all the little meadow and forest
people, and while he was going about seeming to be
just minding his own business, he was listening and
listening to all that was said. Everything he
heard he remembered, so that it wasn’t long
before he knew more about what was going on than all
his neighbors together. But he kept his mouth
tight closed, did Mr. Fox, and was very humble and
polite to everybody. Every night he came home
early and went to bed by sundown, and everybody said
what good habits Mr. Fox had.
“But when everybody else was
asleep, Mr. Fox used to steal out and be gone half
the night. Yes, Sir, sometimes he’d be gone
until almost morning. But he always took care
to get home before any of his neighbors were awake,
and then he’d wait until everybody was up before
he showed himself. When he came out and started
to hunt for his breakfast, some one was sure to tell
him of mischief done during the darkness of the night.
Sometimes it was a storehouse broken into, and the
best things taken. Sometimes it was of terrible
frights that some of the littlest people had received
by being wakened in the night and seeing a fierce
face with long, sharp teeth grinning at them.
Sometimes it was of worse things that were told in
whispers. Mr. Fox used to listen as if very much
shocked, and say that something ought to be done about
it, and wonder who it could be who would do such dreadful
things.
“By and by things got so bad
that they reached the ears of Old Mother Nature, and
she came to find out what it all meant. Now, the
very night before she arrived, Mrs. Quack, who lived
on the river bank, had a terrible fright. Somebody
sprang upon her as she was sleeping, and in the struggle
she lost all her tail feathers. She hurried to
tell Old Mother Nature all about it, and big tears
rolled down her cheeks as she told how she had lost
all her beautiful tail feathers. Mother Nature
called all the people of the forest and the meadows
together. She made them all pass before her, and
she looked sharply at each one as they went by.
Mr. Fox looked meeker than ever, and he was very humble
and polite.
“Now when Mr. Fox had paid his
respects and turned his back, Old Mother Nature saw
something red on the tail of his coat. It was
nothing but a little smear of red clay, but that was
enough for Old Mother Nature. You see, she knew
that Mrs. Quack’s home was right at the foot
of a red claybank. She didn’t say a word
until everybody had paid their respects and passed
before her. Then she told them how grieved she
was to hear of all the trouble there had been, but
that she couldn’t watch over each one all the
time; they must learn to watch out for themselves.
“And so that you may know who
to watch out for, from now on never trust the one
who wears a bright red coat,” concluded Old Mother
Nature.
“All of a sudden Mr. Fox became
aware that everybody was looking at him, and in every
face was hate. He glanced at his coat. It
was bright red! Then Mr. Fox knew that he had
been found out, and he sneaked away with his tail
between his legs. The first chance he got, he
went to Old Mother Nature and begged her to give him
back his old coat. She promised that she would
when his heart changed, and he changed his ways.
But his heart never did change, and his children and
his children’s children were just like him.
They have always been the smartest and the sliest
and the most feared and disliked of all the little
people on the meadows or in the forest. And now
you know why Reddy Fox wears a red coat,” concluded
Grandfather Frog.
Peter Rabbit drew a long breath.
“Thank you, thank you, Grandfather Frog!”
said he. “I—I think hereafter
I’ll be quite content with my own suit, even
if it isn’t handsome. Jenny Wren was right.
A good heart and honest ways are better than fine
clothes.”