A saucy tongue is dangerous to possess;
Be sure some day ’t will get
you in a mess.
— Old Granny
Fox.
Reddy Fox is headstrong and, like
most headstrong people, is given to thinking that
his way is the best way just because it is his way.
He is smart, is Reddy Fox. Yes, indeed, Reddy
Fox is very, very smart. He has to be in order
to live. But a great deal of what he knows he
learned from Old Granny Fox. The very best tricks
he knows she taught him. She began teaching
him when he was so little that he tumbled over his
own feet. It was she who taught him how to hunt,
that it is better never to steal chickens near home
but to go a long way off for them, and how to fool
Bowser the Hound.
It was Granny who taught Reddy how
to use his little black nose to follow the tracks
of careless young Rabbits, and how to catch Meadow
Mice under the snow. In fact, there is little
Reddy knows which he didn’t learn from wise,
shrewd Old Granny Fox.
But as he grew bigger and bigger,
until he was quite as big as Granny herself, he forgot
what he owed to her. He grew to have a very
good opinion of himself and to feel that he knew just
about all there was to know. So sometimes when
he had done foolish or careless things and Granny
had scolded him, telling him he was big enough and
old enough to know better, he would sulk and go off
muttering to himself. But he never quite dared
to be openly disrespectful to Granny, and this, of
course, was quite as it should have been.
“If only I could catch Granny
doing something foolish or careless,” he would
say to himself. But he never could, and he had
begun to think that he never would. But now
at last Granny, clever Old Granny Fox, had been careless!
She had allowed Farmer Brown’s boy to catch
her napping! Reddy did wish he had been there
to see it himself. But anyway, he had been told
about it, and he made up his mind that the next time
Granny said anything sharp to him about his carelessness
he would have something to say back. Yes, Sir,
Reddy Fox was deliberately planning to answer back,
which, as you know, is always disrespectful to one’s
elders.
At last the chance came. Reddy
did a thing no truly wise Fox ever will do.
He went two nights in succession to the same henhouse,
and the second time he barely escaped being shot.
Old Granny Fox found out about it. How she
found out Reddy doesn’t know to this day, but
find out she did, and she gave him such a scolding
as even her sharp tongue had seldom given him.
“You are the stupidest Fox I
ever heard of,” scolded Granny.
“I’m no more stupid than
you are!” retorted Reddy in the most impudent
way.
“What’s that?” demanded Granny.
“What’s that you said?”
“I said I’m no more stupid
than you are, and what is more, I hope I’m not
so stupid. I know better than to take a nap in
broad daylight right under the very nose of Farmer
Brown’s boy.” Reddy grinned in the
most impudent way as he said this.
Granny’s eyes snapped.
Then things happened. Reddy was cuffed this
way and cuffed that way and cuffed the other way until
it seemed to him that the air was full of black paws,
every one of which landed on his head or face with
a sting that made him whimper and put his tail between
his legs, and finally howl.
“There!” cried Granny,
when at last she had to stop because she was quite
out of breath. “Perhaps that will teach
you to be respectful to your elders. I was careless
and stupid, and I am perfectly ready to admit it,
because it has taught me a lesson. Wisdom often
is gained through mistakes, but never when one is
not willing to admit the mistakes. No Fox lives
long who makes the same mistake twice. And those
who are impudent to their elders come to no good end.
I’ve got a fat goose hidden away for dinner,
but you will get none of it.”
“I — I wish I’d
never heard of Granny’s mistake,” whined
Reddy to himself as he crept dinnerless to bed.
“You ought to wish that you
hadn’t been impudent,” whispered a small
voice down inside him.