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The Greatest Works of E. Nesbit (220+ Titles in One Illustrated Edition)


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can talk funeral songs over its grave forever, and the other foxes can come and cry if they want to." He dumped the fox down on the moss under a young oak-tree as he spoke.

      "If Dicky fetched the spade and fork we could bury it here, and then he could tie up the dogs at the same time."

      "You're sick of carrying it," Dicky remarked, "that's what it is." But he went on condition the rest of us boys went too.

      While we were gone the girls dragged the fox to the edge of the wood; it was a different edge to the one we went in by—close to a lane—and while they waited for the digging or fatigue party to come back, they collected a lot of moss and green things to make the fox's long home soft for it to lie in. There are no flowers in the woods in August, which is a pity.

      When we got back with the spade and fork we dug a hole to bury the fox in. We did not bring the dogs back, because they were too interested in the funeral to behave with real, respectable calmness.

      The ground was loose and soft and easy to dig when we had scraped away the broken bits of sticks and the dead leaves and the wild honey-suckle; Oswald used the fork and Dicky had the spade. Noël made faces and poetry—he was struck so that morning—and the girls sat stroking the clean parts of the fox's fur till the grave was deep enough. At last it was; then Daisy threw in the leaves and grass, and Alice and Dora took the poor dead fox by his two ends, and we helped to put him in the grave. We could not lower him slowly—he was dropped in, really. Then we covered the furry body with leaves, and Noël said the Burial Ode he had made up. He says this was it, but it sounds better now than it did then, so I think he must have done something to it since:

      THE FOX'S BURIAL ODE "Dear Fox, sleep here, and do not wake. We picked these leaves for your sake. You must not try to rise or move, We give you this grave with our love. Close by the wood where once you grew Your mourning friends have buried you. If you had lived you'd not have been (Been proper friends with us, I mean), But now you're laid upon the shelf, Poor fox, you cannot help yourself, So, as I say, we are your loving friends And here your Burial Ode, dear Foxy, ends. P.S.—When in the moonlight bright The foxes wander of a night, They'll pass your grave and fondly think of you, Exactly like we mean to always do. So now, dear fox, adieu! Your friends are few But true To you. Adieu!"

      When this had been said we filled in the grave and covered the top of it with dry leaves and sticks to make it look like the rest of the wood. People might think it was treasure, and dig it up, if they thought there was anything buried there, and we wished the poor fox to sleep sound and not to be disturbed.

      The interring was over. We folded up Dora's blood-stained pink cotton petticoat, and turned to leave the sad spot.

      We had not gone a dozen yards down the lane when we heard footsteps and a whistle behind us, and a scrabbling and whining, and a gentleman with two fox-terriers had called a halt just by the place where we had laid low the "little red rover."

      The gentleman stood in the lane, but the dogs were digging—we could see their tails wagging and see the dust fly. And we saw where. We ran back.

      "Oh, please, do stop your dogs digging there!" Alice said.

      The gentleman said "Why?"

      "Because we've just had a funeral, and that's the grave."

      The gentleman whistled, but the fox-terriers were not trained like Pincher, who was brought up by Oswald. The gentleman took a stride through the hedge gap.

      "What have you been burying—a pet dicky bird, eh?" said the gentleman, kindly. He had riding breeches and white whiskers.

      We did not answer, because now, for the first time, it came over all of us, in a rush of blushes and uncomfortableness, that burying a fox is a suspicious act. I don't know why we felt this, but we did.

      Noël said, dreamily:

      "We found his murdered body in the wood,

       And dug a grave by which the mourners stood."

      But no one heard him except Oswald, because Alice and Dora and Daisy were all jumping about with the jumps of unstrained anguish, and saying, "Oh, call them off! Do! do!—oh, don't, don't! Don't let them dig!"

      Alas! Oswald was, as usual, right. The ground of the grave had not been trampled down hard enough, and he had said so plainly at the time, but his prudent counsels had been over-ruled. Now these busy-bodying, meddling, mischief-making fox-terriers (how different from Pincher, who minds his own business unless told otherwise) had scratched away the earth and laid bare the reddish tip of the poor corpse's tail.

      We all turned to go without a word, it seemed to be no use staying any longer.

      But in a moment the gentleman with the whiskers had got Noël and Dicky each by an ear—they were nearest him. H. O. hid in the hedge. Oswald, to whose noble breast sneakishness is, I am thankful to say, a stranger, would have scorned to escape, but he ordered his sisters to bunk in a tone of command which made refusal impossible.

      image "'WHAT DOES THAT MEAN?'"

      "And bunk sharp, too," he added sternly. "Cut along home."

      So they cut.

      The white-whiskered gentleman now encouraged his mangy fox-terriers, by every means at his command, to continue their vile and degrading occupation; holding on all the time to the ears of Dicky and Noël, who scorned to ask for mercy. Dicky got purple and Noël got white. It was Oswald who said:

      "Don't hang on to them, sir. We won't cut. I give you my word of honor."

      "Your word of honor," said the gentleman, in tones for which, in happier days, when people drew their bright blades and fought duels, I would have had his heart's dearest blood. But now Oswald remained calm and polite as ever.

      "Yes, on my honor," he said, and the gentleman dropped the ears of Oswald's brothers at the sound of his firm, unserving tones. He dropped the ears and pulled out the body of the fox and held it up. The dogs jumped up and yelled.

      "Now," he said, "you talk very big about words of honor. Can you speak the truth?"

      Dicky said, "If you think we shot it, you're wrong. We know better than that."

      The white-whiskered one turned suddenly to H. O. and pulled him out of the hedge.

      "And what does that mean?" he said, and he was pink with fury to the ends of his large ears, as he pointed to the card on H. O.'s breast, which said, "Moat House Fox-Hunters."

      Then Oswald said, "We were playing at fox-hunting, but we couldn't find anything but a rabbit that hid, so my brother was being the fox, and then we found the fox shot dead, and I don't know who did it; and we were sorry for it and we buried it—and that's all."

      "Not quite," said the riding-breeches gentleman, with what I think you call a bitter smile, "not quite. This is my land, and I'll have you up for trespass and damage. Come along now, no nonsense! I'm a magistrate and I'm Master of the Hounds. A vixen, too! What did you shoot her with? You're too young to have a gun. Sneaked your father's revolver, I suppose?"

      Oswald thought it was better to be goldenly silent. But it was vain. The Master of the Hounds made him empty his pockets, and there was the pistol and the cartridges.

      The magistrate laughed a harsh laugh of successful disagreeableness.

      "All right," said he, "where's your license? You come with me. A week or two in prison."

      I don't believe now he could have done it, but we all thought then he could and would, what's more.

      So H. O. began to cry, but Noël spoke up. His teeth were chattering, yet he spoke up like a man.

      He said, "You don't know us. You've no right not to believe us till you've found us out in a lie. We don't tell lies. You ask Albert's uncle if we do."

      "Hold your tongue," said the White Whiskered.

      But