There’s nothing so foolishly
silly and vain
As to wish for a thing youcan never
attain.
— Old Granny
Fox.
We all know that, yet most of us are
just foolish enough to make such a wish now and then.
I guess you have done it. I know I have.
Peter Rabbit has done it often and then laughed at
himself afterwards. I suspect that even shrewd,
clever old Granny Fox has been guilty of it more than
once. So it is not surprising that Reddy Fox,
terribly hungry as he was, should do a little foolish
wishing.
When he left home to go to the Old
Pasture, in the hope that he would be able to find
something to eat there, he started off bravely.
It was cold, very cold indeed, but his fur coat kept
him warm as long as he was moving. The Green
Meadows were glistening white with snow. All
the world, at least all that part of it with which
Reddy was acquainted, was white. It was beautiful,
very beautiful, as millions of sparkles flashed in
the sun. But Reddy had no thought for beauty;
the only thought he had room for was to get something
to put in the empty stomachs of himself and Granny
Fox.
Jack Frost had hardened the snow so
that Reddy no longer had to wade through it.
He could run on the crust now without breaking through.
This made it much easier, so he trotted along swiftly.
He had intended to go straight to the Old Pasture,
but there suddenly popped into his head a memory of
the shelter down in a far corner of the Old Orchard
which Farmer Brown’s boy had built for Bob White.
Probably the Bob White family were there now, and he
might surprise them. He would go there first.
Reddy stopped and looked carefully
to make sure that Farmer Brown’s boy and Bowser
the Hound were nowhere in sight. Then he ran
swiftly towards the Old Orchard. Just as he
entered it he heard a merry voice just over his head:
“Dee, dee, dee, dee!” Reddy stopped and
looked up. There was Tommy Tit the Chickadee
clinging tightly to a big piece of fresh suet tied
fast to a branch of a tree, and Tommy was stuffing
himself. Reddy sat down right underneath that
suet and looked up longingly. The sight of it
made his mouth water so that it was almost more than
he could stand. He jumped once. He jumped
twice. He jumped three times. But all his
jumping was in vain. That suet was beyond his
reach. There was no possible way of reaching
it save by flying or climbing. Reddy’s
tongue hung out of his mouth with longing.
“I wish I could climb,” said Reddy.
But he couldn’t climb, and all
the wishing in the world wouldn’t enable him
to, as he very well knew. So after a little he
started on. As he drew near the far corner of
the Old Orchard, he saw Bob White and Mrs. Bob and
all the young Bobs picking up grain which Farmer Brown’s
boy had scattered for them just in front of the shelter
he had built for them. Reddy crouched down and
very slowly, an inch at a time, he crept forward,
his eyes shining with eagerness. Just as he
was almost within springing distance, Bob White gave
a signal, and away flew the Bob Whites to the safety
of a hemlock-tree on the edge of the Green Forest.
Tears of rage and disappointment welled
up in Reddy’s eyes. “I wish I could
fly,” he muttered, as he watched the brown birds
disappear in the big hemlock-tree.
This was quite as foolish a wish as
the other, so Reddy trotted on and decided to go down
past the Smiling Pool. When he got there he found
it, as he expected, frozen over. But just where
the Laughing Brook joins it there was a little place
where there was open water. Billy Mink was on
the ice at its edge, and just as Reddy got there Billy
dived in. A minute later he climbed out with
a fish in his mouth.
“Give me a bite,” begged Reddy.
“Catch your own fish,”
retorted Billy Mink. “I have to work hard
enough for what I get as it is.”
Reddy was afraid to go out on the
ice where Billy was, and so he sat and watched him
eat that fine fish. Then Billy dived into the
water again and disappeared. Reddy waited a
long time, but Billy did not return. “I
wish I could dive,” gulped Reddy, thinking of
the fine fish somewhere under the ice.
And this wish was quite as foolish as the other wishes.