<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0029" id="link2HCH0029"></SPAN> CHAPTER XXIX<br/> The New Home In The Old Pasture</h2>
<p class="poem">
Who keeps a watch upon his toes<br/>
Need never fear he’ll bump his nose.<br/>
—<i>Old Granny Fox</i>.</p>
<p>Now there is nothing like being shut in alone in the dark to make one think. A
voice inside of Reddy began to whisper to him. “If you hadn’t tried
to be smart and show off you wouldn’t have brought all this trouble on
yourself and Old Granny Fox,” said the voice.</p>
<p>“I know it,” replied Reddy right out loud, forgetting that it was
only a small voice inside of him.</p>
<p>“What do you know?” asked Prickly Porky. He was still keeping Reddy
in and Granny out and he had overheard what Reddy said.</p>
<p>“It is none of your business!” snapped Reddy.</p>
<p>Reddy could hear Prickly Porky chuckle. Then Prickly Porky repeated as if to
himself in a queer cracked voice the following:</p>
<p class="poem">
“Rudeness never, never pays,<br/>
Nor is there gain in saucy ways.<br/>
It’s always best to be polite<br/>
And ne’er give way to ugly spite.<br/>
If that’s the way you feel inside<br/>
You’d better all such feelings hide;<br/>
For he must smile who hopes to win,<br/>
And he who loses best will grin.”</p>
<p>Reddy pretended that he hadn’t heard. Prickly Porky continued to chuckle
for a while and finally Reddy fell asleep. When he awoke it was to find that
Prickly Porky had left and old Granny Fox had brought him something to eat.</p>
<p>Just as soon as Reddy Fox was able to travel he and Granny had moved to the Old
Pasture. The Old Pasture is very different from the Green Meadows or the Green
Forest. Yes, indeed, it is very, very different. Reddy Fox thought so. And
Reddy didn’t like the change,—not a bit. All about were great
rocks, and around and over them grew bushes and young trees and bull-briars
with long ugly thorns, and blackberry and raspberry canes that seemed to have a
million little hooked hands, reaching to catch in and tear his red coat and to
scratch his face and hands. There were little open places where wild-eyed young
cattle fed on the short grass. They had made many little paths all crisscross
among the bushes, and when you tried to follow one of these paths you never
could tell where you were coming out.</p>
<p>No, Reddy Fox did not like the Old Pasture at all. There was no long, soft
green grass to lie down in. And it was lonesome up there. He missed the little
people of the Green Meadows and the Green Forest. There was no one to bully and
tease. And it was such a long, long way from Farmer Brown’s henyard that
old Granny Fox wouldn’t even try to bring him a fat hen. At least,
that’s what she told Reddy.</p>
<p>The truth is, wise old Granny Fox knew that the very best thing she could do
was to stay away from Farmer Brown’s for a long time. She knew that Reddy
couldn’t go down there, because he was still too lame and sore to travel
such a long way, and she hoped that by the time Reddy was well enough to go, he
would have learned better than to do such a foolish thing as to try to show off
by stealing a chicken in broad daylight, as he had when he brought all this
trouble on them.</p>
<p>Down on the Green Meadows, the home of Granny and Reddy Fox had been on a
little knoll, which you know is a little low hill, right where they could sit
on their doorstep and look all over the Green Meadows. It had been very, very
beautiful down there. They had made lovely little paths through the tall green
meadow grass, and the buttercups and daisies had grown close up to their very
doorstep. But up here in the Old Pasture Granny Fox had chosen the thickest
clump of bushes and young trees she could find, and in the middle was a great
pile of rocks. Way in among these rocks Granny Fox had dug their new house. It
was right down under the rocks. Even in the middle of the day jolly, round, red
Mr. Sun could hardly find it with a few of his long, bright beams. All the rest
of the time it was dark and gloomy there.</p>
<p>No, Reddy Fox didn’t like his new home at all, but when he said so old
Granny Fox boxed his ears.</p>
<p>“It’s your own fault that we’ve got to live here now,”
said she. “It’s the only place where we are safe. Farmer
Brown’s boy never will find this home, and even if he did he
couldn’t dig into it as he did into our old home on the Green Meadows.
Here we are, and here we’ve got to stay, all because a foolish little Fox
thought himself smarter than anybody else and tried to show off.”</p>
<p>Reddy hung his head. “I don’t care!” he said, which was very,
very foolish, because, you know, he did care a very great deal.</p>
<p>And here we will leave wise Old Granny Fox and Reddy, safe, even if they do not
like their new home. You see, Lightfoot the Deer is getting jealous. He thinks
there should be some books about the people of the Green Forest, and that the
first one should be about him. And because we all love Lightfoot the Deer, the
very next book is to bear his name.</p>
<!--end chapter-->
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />