WHAT HAPPENED TO REDDY FOX
Reddy Fox wished with all his might
that he had kept his tongue still about not being
afraid to meet the strange creature that had given
Peter Rabbit such a fright. When he had boasted
that he would stop and find out all about it if he
happened to meet it, he didn’t have the least
intention of doing anything of the kind. He was
just idly boasting and nothing more. You see,
Reddy is one of the greatest boasters in the Green
Forest or on the Green Meadows. He likes to strut
around and talk big. But like most boasters, he
is a coward at heart.
Unc’ Billy Possum knew this,
and that is why he dared Reddy to go the next morning
to the foot of the hill where Prickly Porky the Porcupine
lives, and where Peter Rabbit had had his strange adventure,
and where Unc’ Billy himself claimed to have
seen the same strange creature without head, tail,
or legs which had so frightened Peter. Unc’
Billy had said that he would be there himself up in
a tree where he could see whether Reddy really did
come or not, and so there was nothing for Reddy to
do but to go and make good his foolish boast, if the
strange creature should appear. You see, a number
of little people had heard him boast and had heard
Unc’ Billy dare him, and he knew that if he
didn’t make good, he would never hear the end
of it and would be called a coward by everybody.
Reddy didn’t sleep at all well
that afternoon, and when at dusk he started to hunt
for his supper, he found that he had lost his appetite.
Instead of hunting, he spent most of the night in trying
to think of some good reason for not appearing at
Prickly Porky’s hill at daybreak. But think
as he would, he couldn’t think of a single excuse
that would sound reasonable. “If only Bowser
the Hound wasn’t chained up at night, I would
get him to chase me, and then I would have the very
best kind of an excuse,” thought he. But
he knew that Bowser was chained. Nevertheless
he did go up to Farmer Brown’s dooryard to make
sure. It was just as he expected,—Bowser
was chained.
Reddy sneaked away without even a
look at Farmer Brown’s hen-house. He didn’t
see that the door had carelessly been left open, and
even if he had, it would have made no difference.
He hadn’t a bit of appetite. No, Sir.
Reddy Fox wouldn’t have eaten the fattest chicken
there if it had been right before him. All he
could think of was that queer story told by Peter
Rabbit and Unc’ Billy Possum, and the scrape
he had got himself into by his foolish boasting.
He just wandered about restlessly, waiting for daybreak
and hoping that something would turn up to prevent
him from going to Prickly Porky’s hill.
He didn’t dare to tell old Granny Fox about
it. He knew just what she would say. It
seemed as if he could hear her sharp voice and the
very words:
“Serves you right for boasting
about something you don’t know anything about.
How many times have I told you that no good comes of
boasting? A wise Fox never goes near strange
things until he has found out all about them.
That is the only way to keep out of trouble and live
to a ripe old age. Wisdom is nothing but knowledge,
and a wise Fox always knows what he is doing.”
So Reddy wandered about all the long
night. It seemed as if it never would pass, and
yet he wished it would last forever. The more
he thought about it, the more afraid he grew.
At last he saw the first beams from jolly, round,
red Mr. Sun creeping through the Green Forest.
The time had come, and he must choose between making
his boast good or being called a coward by everybody.
Very, very slowly, Reddy Fox began to walk towards
the hill where Prickly Porky lives.