e 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
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