WHAT REDDY FOX SAW AND DID
Who guards his tongue as he
would keep
A treasure rich
and rare,
Will keep himself from trouble
free,
And dodge both
fear and care.
The trouble with a great many people
is that they remember this too late. Reddy Fox
is one of these. Reddy is smart and sly and clever
in some ways, but he hasn’t learned yet to guard
his tongue, and half the trouble he gets into is because
of that unruly member. You see it is a boastful
tongue and an untruthful tongue and that is the worst
combination for making trouble that I know of.
It has landed him in all kinds of scrapes in the past,
and here he was in another, all on account of that
tongue.
Jolly, round, red Mr. Sun had kicked
his rosy blankets off and was smiling down on the
Great World as he began his daily climb up in the
blue, blue sky. The Jolly Little Sunbeams were
already dancing through the Green Forest, chasing
out the Black Shadows, and Reddy knew that it was
high time for him to be over by the hill where Prickly
Porky the Porcupine lives. With lagging steps
he sneaked along from tree to tree, peering out from
behind each anxiously, afraid to go on, and still
more afraid not to, for fear that he would be called
a coward.
He had almost reached the foot of
the hill without seeing anything out of the usual
and without any signs of Unc’ Billy Possum.
He was just beginning to hope that Unc’ Billy
wasn’t there, as he had said he would be, when
a voice right over his head said:
“Ah cert’nly am glad to
see that yo’ are as good as your word, Brer
Fox, fo’ we need some one brave like yo’
to find out what this strange creature is that has
been chasing we-uns.”
Reddy looked up with a sickly grin.
There sat Unc’ Billy Possum in a pine tree right
over his head. He knew now that there was no backing
out; he had got to go on. He tried to swagger
and look very bold and brave.
“I told you I’m not afraid.
If there’s anything queer around here, I’ll
find out what it is,” he once more boasted, but
Unc’ Billy noticed that his voice sounded just
a wee bit trembly.
“Keep right on to the foot of
the hill; that’s where Ah saw it yesterday.
My, Ah’m glad that we’ve got some one so
truly brave!” replied Unc’ Billy.
Reddy looked at him sharply, but there
wasn’t a trace of a smile on Unc’ Billy’s
face, and Reddy couldn’t tell whether Unc’
Billy was making fun of him or not. So, there
being nothing else to do, he went on. He reached
the foot of the hill without seeing or hearing a thing
out of the usual. The Green Forest seemed just
as it always had seemed. Redeye the Vireo was
pouring out his little song of gladness, quite as
if everything was just as it should be. Reddy’s
courage began to come back. Nothing had happened,
and nothing was going to happen. Of course not!
It was all some of Peter Rabbit’s foolishness.
Some day he would catch Peter Rabbit and put an end
to such silly tales.
“Ah! What was that?”
Reddy’s sharp ears had caught a sound up near
the top of the hill. He stopped short and looked
up. For just a little wee minute Reddy couldn’t
believe that his eyes saw right. Coming down
the hill straight towards him was the strangest thing
he ever had seen. He couldn’t see any legs.
He couldn’t see any head. He couldn’t
see any tail. It was round like a ball, but it
was the strangest looking ball that ever was.
It was covered with old leaves. Reddy wouldn’t
have believed that it was alive but for the noises
it was making. For just a wee minute he stared,
and then, what do you think he did? Why, he gave
a frightened yelp, put his tail between his legs,
and ran just as fast as he could make his legs go.
Yes, Sir, that’s just what Reddy Fox did.
[Illustration: Reddy wouldn’t
have believed that it was alive. Page 69.]