<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"></SPAN> CHAPTER XV<br/> Reddy Fights A Battle</h2>
<p class="poem">
’Tis not the foes that are without<br/>
But those that are within<br/>
That give us battles that we find<br/>
The hardest are to win.<br/>
—<i>Old Granny Fox</i>.</p>
<p>After the last of his three foolish wishes, Reddy Fox left the Smiling Pool and
headed straight for the Old Pasture for which he had started in the first
place. He wished now that he had gone straight there. Then he wouldn’t
have seen the suet tied out of reach to the branch of a tree in the Old
Orchard; he wouldn’t have seen the Bob Whites fly away to safety just as
he felt almost sure of catching one; he wouldn’t have seen Billy Mink
bring a fine fish out of the water and eat it right before him. It is bad
enough to be starving with no food in sight, but to be as hungry as Reddy Fox
was and to see food just out of reach, to smell it, and not be able to get it
is,—well, it is more than most folks can stand patiently.</p>
<p>So Reddy Fox was grumbling to himself as he hurried to the Old Pasture and his
heart was very bitter. It seemed to him that everything was against him. His
neighbors had food, but he had none, not so much as a crumb. It was unfair. Old
Mother Nature was unjust. If he could climb he could get food. If he could fly
he could get food. If he could dive he could get food. But he could neither
climb, fly, nor dive. He didn’t stop to think that Old Mother Nature had
given him some of the sharpest wits in all the Green Forest or on all the Green
Meadows; that she had given him a wonderful nose; that she had given him the
keenest of ears; that she had given him speed excelled by few. He forgot these
things and was so busy thinking bitterly of the things he didn’t have
that he forgot to use his wits and nose and ears when he reached the Old
Pasture. The result was that he trotted right past Old Jed Thumper, the big
gray Rabbit, who was sitting behind a little bush holding his breath. The
minute Old Jed saw that Reddy was safely past, he started for his bull-briar
castle as fast as he could.</p>
<p>It was not until then that Reddy discovered him. Of course, Reddy started after
him, and this time he made good use of his speed. But he was too late. Old Jed
Thumper reached his castle with Reddy two jumps behind him. Reddy knew now that
there was no chance to catch Old Jed that day, and for a few minutes he felt
more bitter than ever. Then all in a flash Reddy Fox became the shrewd, clever
fellow that he really is. he grinned.</p>
<p>“It’s of no use to try to fill an empty stomach on wishes,”
said he.</p>
<p>“If I had come straight here and minded my own business, I’d have
caught old Jed Thumper. Now I’m going to get some food and I’m not
going home until I do.”</p>
<p>Very wisely Reddy put all unpleasant thoughts out of his head and settled down
to using his wits and his eyes and his ears and his nose for all they were
worth, as Old Mother Nature had intended he should.</p>
<p>All through the Old Pasture he hunted, taking care not to miss a single place
where there was the least chance of finding food. But it was all in vain. Reddy
gulped down his disappointment.</p>
<p>“Now for the Big River,” said he, and started off bravely.</p>
<p>When he reached the edge of the Big River, he hurried along the bank until he
reached a place where the water seldom freezes. As he had hoped, he found that
it was not frozen now. It looked so black and cold that it made him shiver just
to see it. Back and forth with his nose to the ground he ran. Suddenly he
stopped and sniffed. Then he sniffed again. Then he followed his nose straight
to the very edge of the Big River. There, floating in the black water, was a
dead fish! By wading in he could get it.</p>
<p>Reddy shivered at the touch of the cold water, but what were wet feet compared
with such an empty stomach as his? In a minute he had that fish and was back on
the shore. It wasn’t a very big fish, but it would stop the ache in his
stomach until he could get something more. With a sigh of pure happiness he
sank his teeth into it and then—well, then he remembered poor Old Granny
Fox. Reddy swallowed a mouthful and tried to forget Granny. But he
couldn’t. He swallowed another mouthful. Poor old Granny was back there
at home as hungry as he was and too stiff and tired to hunt. Reddy choked. Then
he began a battle with himself. His stomach demanded that fish. If he ate it,
no one would be the wiser. But Granny needed it even more than he did. For a
long time Reddy fought with himself. In the end he picked up the fish and
started for home.</p>
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