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- This is the Project Gutenberg-tm 10th edition of Aesop's Fables.
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- Aesop's Fables Translated by George Fyler Townsend
-
-
- The Wolf and the Lamb
-
- WOLF, meeting with a Lamb astray from the fold, resolved not to
- lay violent hands on him, but to find some plea to justify to the
- Lamb the Wolf's right to eat him. He thus addressed him:
- "Sirrah, last year you grossly insulted me." "Indeed," bleated
- the Lamb in a mournful tone of voice, "I was not then born." Then
- said the Wolf, "You feed in my pasture." "No, good sir," replied
- the Lamb, "I have not yet tasted grass." Again said the Wolf,
- "You drink of my well." "No," exclaimed the Lamb, "I never yet
- drank water, for as yet my mother's milk is both food and drink
- to me." Upon which the Wolf seized him and ate him up, saying,
- "Well! I won't remain supperless, even though you refute every
- one of my imputations." The tyrant will always find a pretext for
- his tyranny.
-
-
- The Bat and the Weasels
-
- A BAT who fell upon the ground and was caught by a Weasel pleaded
- to be spared his life. The Weasel refused, saying that he was by
- nature the enemy of all birds. The Bat assured him that he was
- not a bird, but a mouse, and thus was set free. Shortly
- afterwards the Bat again fell to the ground and was caught by
- another Weasel, whom he likewise entreated not to eat him. The
- Weasel said that he had a special hostility to mice. The Bat
- assured him that he was not a mouse, but a bat, and thus a second
- time escaped.
-
- It is wise to turn circumstances to good account.
-
-
- The Ass and the Grasshopper
-
- AN ASS having heard some Grasshoppers chirping, was highly
- enchanted; and, desiring to possess the same charms of melody,
- demanded what sort of food they lived on to give them such
- beautiful voices. They replied, "The dew." The Ass resolved that
- he would live only upon dew, and in a short time died of hunger.
-
-
- The Lion and the Mouse
-
- A LION was awakened from sleep by a Mouse running over his face.
- Rising up angrily, he caught him and was about to kill him, when
- the Mouse piteously entreated, saying: "If you would only spare
- my life, I would be sure to repay your kindness." The Lion
- laughed and let him go. It happened shortly after this that the
- Lion was caught by some hunters, who bound him by st ropes to the
- ground. The Mouse, recognizing his roar, came gnawed the rope
- with his teeth, and set him free, exclaim
-
- "You ridiculed the idea of my ever being able to help you,
- expecting to receive from me any repayment of your favor; I now
- you know that it is possible for even a Mouse to con benefits on
- a Lion."
-
-
- The Charcoal-Burner and the Fuller
-
- A CHARCOAL-BURNER carried on his trade in his own house. One day
- he met a friend, a Fuller, and entreated him to come and live
- with him, saying that they should be far better neighbors and
- that their housekeeping expenses would be lessened. The Fuller
- replied, "The arrangement is impossible as far as I am concerned,
- for whatever I should whiten, you would immediately blacken again
- with your charcoal."
-
- Like will draw like.
-
-
- The Father and His Sons
-
- A FATHER had a family of sons who were perpetually quarreling
- among themselves. When he failed to heal their disputes by his
- exhortations, he determined to give them a practical illustration
- of the evils of disunion; and for this purpose he one day told
- them to bring him a bundle of sticks. When they had done so, he
- placed the faggot into the hands of each of them in succession,
- and ordered them to break it in pieces. They tried with all
- their strength, and were not able to do it. He next opened the
- faggot, took the sticks separately, one by one, and again put
- them into his sons' hands, upon which they broke them easily. He
- then addressed them in these words: "My sons, if you are of one
- mind, and unite to assist each other, you will be as this faggot,
- uninjured by all the attempts of your enemies; but if you are
- divided among yourselves, you will be broken as easily as these
- sticks."
-
-
- The Boy Hunting Locusts
-
- A BOY was hunting for locusts. He had caught a goodly number,
- when he saw a Scorpion, and mistaking him for a locust, reached
- out his hand to take him. The Scorpion, showing his sting, said:
- If you had but touched me, my friend, you would have lost me, and
- all your locusts too!"
-
-
- The Cock and the Jewel
-
- A COCK, scratching for food for himself and his hens, found a
- precious stone and exclaimed: "If your owner had found thee, and
- not I, he would have taken thee up, and have set thee in thy
- first estate; but I have found thee for no purpose. I would
- rather have one barleycorn than all the jewels in the world."
-
-
- The Kingdom of the Lion
-
- THE BEASTS of the field and forest had a Lion as their king. He
- was neither wrathful, cruel, nor tyrannical, but just and gentle
- as a king could be. During his reign he made a royal
- proclamation for a general assembly of all the birds and beasts,
- and drew up conditions for a universal league, in which the Wolf
- and the Lamb, the Panther and the Kid, the Tiger and the Stag,
- the Dog and the Hare, should live together in perfect peace and
- amity. The Hare said, "Oh, how I have longed to see this day, in
- which the weak shall take their place with impunity by the side
- of the strong." And after the Hare said this, he ran for his
- life.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Crane
-
- A WOLF who had a bone stuck in his throat hired a Crane, for a
- large sum, to put her head into his mouth and draw out the bone.
- When the Crane had extracted the bone and demanded the promised
- payment, the Wolf, grinning and grinding his teeth, exclaimed:
- "Why, you have surely already had a sufficient recompense, in
- having been permitted to draw out your head in safety from the
- mouth and jaws of a wolf."
-
- In serving the wicked, expect no reward, and be thankful if you
- escape injury for your pains.
-
-
- The Fisherman Piping
-
- A FISHERMAN skilled in music took his flute and his nets to the
- seashore. Standing on a projecting rock, he played several tunes
- in the hope that the fish, attracted by his melody, would of
- their own accord dance into his net, which he had placed below.
- At last, having long waited in vain, he laid aside his flute, and
- casting his net into the sea, made an excellent haul of fish.
- When he saw them leaping about in the net upon the rock he said:
- "O you most perverse creatures, when I piped you would not dance,
- but now that I have ceased you do so merrily."
-
-
- Hercules and the Wagoner
-
- A CARTER was driving a wagon along a country lane, when the
- wheels sank down deep into a rut. The rustic driver, stupefied
- and aghast, stood looking at the wagon, and did nothing but utter
- loud cries to Hercules to come and help him. Hercules, it is
- said, appeared and thus addressed him: "Put your shoulders to the
- wheels, my man. Goad on your bullocks, and never more pray to me
- for help, until you have done your best to help yourself, or
- depend upon it you will henceforth pray in vain."
-
- Self-help is the best help.
-
-
- The Ants and the Grasshopper
-
- THE ANTS were spending a fine winter's day drying grain collected
- in the summertime. A Grasshopper, perishing with famine, passed
- by and earnestly begged for a little food. The Ants inquired of
- him, "Why did you not treasure up food during the summer?' He
- replied, "I had not leisure enough. I passed the days in
- singing." They then said in derision: "If you were foolish enough
- to sing all the summer, you must dance supperless to bed in the
- winter."
-
-
- The Traveler and His Dog
-
- A TRAVELER about to set out on a journey saw his Dog stand at the
- door stretching himself. He asked him sharply: "Why do you stand
- there gaping? Everything is ready but you, so come with me
- instantly." The Dog, wagging his tail, replied: "O, master! I am
- quite ready; it is you for whom I am waiting."
-
- The loiterer often blames delay on his more active friend.
-
-
- The Dog and the Shadow
-
- A DOG, crossing a bridge over a stream with a piece of flesh in
- his mouth, saw his own shadow in the water and took it for that
- of another Dog, with a piece of meat double his own in size. He
- immediately let go of his own, and fiercely attacked the other
- Dog to get his larger piece from him. He thus lost both: that
- which he grasped at in the water, because it was a shadow; and
- his own, because the stream swept it away.
-
-
- The Mole and His Mother
-
- A MOLE, a creature blind from birth, once said to his Mother: "I
- am sure than I can see, Mother!" In the desire to prove to him
- his mistake, his Mother placed before him a few grains of
- frankincense, and asked, "What is it?' The young Mole said, "It
- is a pebble." His Mother exclaimed: "My son, I am afraid that you
- are not only blind, but that you have lost your sense of smell.
-
-
- The Herdsman and the Lost Bull
-
- A HERDSMAN tending his flock in a forest lost a Bull-calf from
- the fold. After a long and fruitless search, he made a vow that,
- if he could only discover the thief who had stolen the Calf, he
- would offer a lamb in sacrifice to Hermes, Pan, and the Guardian
- Deities of the forest. Not long afterwards, as he ascended a
- small hillock, he saw at its foot a Lion feeding on the Calf.
- Terrified at the sight, he lifted his eyes and his hands to
- heaven, and said: "Just now I vowed to offer a lamb to the
- Guardian Deities of the forest if I could only find out who had
- robbed me; but now that I have discovered the thief, I would
- willingly add a full-grown Bull to the Calf I have lost, if I may
- only secure my own escape from him in safety."
-
-
- The Hare and the Tortoise
-
- A HARE one day ridiculed the short feet and slow pace of the
- Tortoise, who replied, laughing: "Though you be swift as the
- wind, I will beat you in a race." The Hare, believing her
- assertion to be simply impossible, assented to the proposal; and
- they agreed that the Fox should choose the course and fix the
- goal. On the day appointed for the race the two started
- together. The Tortoise never for a moment stopped, but went on
- with a slow but steady pace straight to the end of the course.
- The Hare, lying down by the wayside, fell fast asleep. At last
- waking up, and moving as fast as he could, he saw the Tortoise
- had reached the goal, and was comfortably dozing after her
- fatigue.
-
- Slow but steady wins the race.
-
-
- The Pomegranate, Apple-Tree, and Bramble
-
- THE POMEGRANATE and Apple-Tree disputed as to which was the most
- beautiful. When their strife was at its height, a Bramble from
- the neighboring hedge lifted up its voice, and said in a boastful
- tone: "Pray, my dear friends, in my presence at least cease from
- such vain disputings."
-
-
- The Farmer and the Stork
-
- A FARMER placed nets on his newly-sown plowlands and caught a
- number of Cranes, which came to pick up his seed. With them he
- trapped a Stork that had fractured his leg in the net and was
- earnestly beseeching the Farmer to spare his life. "Pray save
- me, Master," he said, "and let me go free this once. My broken
- limb should excite your pity. Besides, I am no Crane, I am a
- Stork, a bird of excellent character; and see how I love and
- slave for my father and mother. Look too, at my feathers--
- they are not the least like those of a Crane." The Farmer
- laughed aloud and said, "It may be all as you say, I only know
- this: I have taken you with these robbers, the Cranes, and you
- must die in their company."
-
- Birds of a feather flock together.
-
-
- The Farmer and the Snake
-
- ONE WINTER a Farmer found a Snake stiff and frozen with cold. He
- had compassion on it, and taking it up, placed it in his bosom.
- The Snake was quickly revived by the warmth, and resuming its
- natural instincts, bit its benefactor, inflicting on him a mortal
- wound. "Oh," cried the Farmer with his last breath, "I am
- rightly served for pitying a scoundrel."
-
- The greatest kindness will not bind the ungrateful.
-
-
- The Fawn and His Mother
-
- A YOUNG FAWN once said to his Mother, "You are larger than a dog,
- and swifter, and more used to running, and you have your horns as
- a defense; why, then, O Mother! do the hounds frighten you so?"
- She smiled, and said: "I know full well, my son, that all you say
- is true. I have the advantages you mention, but when I hear even
- the bark of a single dog I feel ready to faint, and fly away as
- fast as I can."
-
- No arguments will give courage to the coward.
-
-
- The Bear and the Fox
-
- A BEAR boasted very much of his philanthropy, saying that of all
- animals he was the most tender in his regard for man, for he had
- such respect for him that he would not even touch his dead body.
- A Fox hearing these words said with a smile to the Bear, "Oh!
- that you would eat the dead and not the living."
-
-
- The Swallow and the Crow
-
- THE SWALLOW and the Crow had a contention about their plumage.
- The Crow put an end to the dispute by saying, "Your feathers are
- all very well in the spring, but mine protect me against the
- winter."
-
- Fair weather friends are not worth much.
-
-
- The Mountain in Labor
-
- A MOUNTAIN was once greatly agitated. Loud groans and noises
- were heard, and crowds of people came from all parts to see what
- was the matter. While they were assembled in anxious expectation
- of some terrible calamity, out came a Mouse.
-
- Don't make much ado about nothing.
-
-
- The Ass, the Fox, and the Lion
-
- THE ASS and the Fox, having entered into partnership together for
- their mutual protection, went out into the forest to hunt. They
- had not proceeded far when they met a Lion. The Fox, seeing
- imminent danger, approached the Lion and promised to contrive for
- him the capture of the Ass if the Lion would pledge his word not
- to harm the Fox. Then, upon assuring the Ass that he would not
- be injured, the Fox led him to a deep pit and arranged that he
- should fall into it. The Lion, seeing that the Ass was secured,
- immediately clutched the Fox, and attacked the Ass at his
- leisure.
-
-
- The Tortoise and the Eagle
-
- A TORTOISE, lazily basking in the sun, complained to the
- sea-birds of her hard fate, that no one would teach her to fly.
- An Eagle, hovering near, heard her lamentation and demanded what
- reward she would give him if he would take her aloft and float
- her in the air. "I will give you," she said, "all the riches of
- the Red Sea." "I will teach you to fly then," said the Eagle; and
- taking her up in his talons he carried her almost to the clouds
- suddenly he let her go, and she fell on a lofty mountain, dashing
- her shell to pieces. The Tortoise exclaimed in the moment of
- death: "I have deserved my present fate; for what had I to do
- with wings and clouds, who can with difficulty move about on the
- earth?'
-
- If men had all they wished, they would be often ruined.
-
-
- The Flies and the Honey-Pot
-
- A NUMBER of Flies were attracted to a jar of honey which had been
- overturned in a housekeeper's room, and placing their feet in it,
- ate greedily. Their feet, however, became so smeared with the
- honey that they could not use their wings, nor release
- themselves, and were suffocated. Just as they were expiring,
- they exclaimed, "O foolish creatures that we are, for the sake of
- a little pleasure we have destroyed ourselves."
-
- Pleasure bought with pains, hurts.
-
-
- The Man and the Lion
-
- A MAN and a Lion traveled together through the forest. They soon
- began to boast of their respective superiority to each other in
- strength and prowess. As they were disputing, they passed a
- statue carved in stone, which represented "a Lion strangled by a
- Man." The traveler pointed to it and said: "See there! How strong
- we are, and how we prevail over even the king of beasts." The
- Lion replied: "This statue was made by one of you men. If we
- Lions knew how to erect statues, you would see the Man placed
- under the paw of the Lion."
-
- One story is good, till another is told.
-
-
- The Farmer and the Cranes
-
- SOME CRANES made their feeding grounds on some plowlands newly
- sown with wheat. For a long time the Farmer, brandishing an
- empty sling, chased them away by the terror he inspired; but when
- the birds found that the sling was only swung in the air, they
- ceased to take any notice of it and would not move. The Farmer,
- on seeing this, charged his sling with stones, and killed a great
- number. The remaining birds at once forsook his fields, crying
- to each other, "It is time for us to be off to Liliput: for this
- man is no longer content to scare us, but begins to show us in
- earnest what he can do."
-
- If words suffice not, blows must follow.
-
-
- The Dog in the Manger
-
- A DOG lay in a manger, and by his growling and snapping prevented
- the oxen from eating the hay which had been placed for them.
- "What a selfish Dog!" said one of them to his companions; "he
- cannot eat the hay himself, and yet refuses to allow those to eat
- who can."
-
-
- The Fox and the Goat
-
- A FOX one day fell into a deep well and could find no means of
- escape. A Goat, overcome with thirst, came to the same well, and
- seeing the Fox, inquired if the water was good. Concealing his
- sad plight under a merry guise, the Fox indulged in a lavish
- praise of the water, saying it was excellent beyond measure, and
- encouraging him to descend. The Goat, mindful only of his
- thirst, thoughtlessly jumped down, but just as he drank, the Fox
- informed him of the difficulty they were both in and suggested a
- scheme for their common escape. "If," said he, "you will place
- your forefeet upon the wall and bend your head, I will run up
- your back and escape, and will help you out afterwards." The Goat
- readily assented and the Fox leaped upon his back. Steadying
- himself with the Goat's horns, he safely reached the mouth of the
- well and made off as fast as he could. When the Goat upbraided
- him for breaking his promise, he turned around and cried out,
- "You foolish old fellow! If you had as many brains in your head
- as you have hairs in your beard, you would never have gone down
- before you had inspected the way up, nor have exposed yourself to
- dangers from which you had no means of escape."
-
- Look before you leap.
-
-
- The Bear and the Two Travelers
-
- TWO MEN were traveling together, when a Bear suddenly met them on
- their path. One of them climbed up quickly into a tree and
- concealed himself in the branches. The other, seeing that he
- must be attacked, fell flat on the ground, and when the Bear came
- up and felt him with his snout, and smelt him all over, he held
- his breath, and feigned the appearance of death as much as he
- could. The Bear soon left him, for it is said he will not touch
- a dead body. When he was quite gone, the other Traveler
- descended from the tree, and jocularly inquired of his friend
- what it was the Bear had whispered in his ear. "He gave me this
- advice," his companion replied. "Never travel with a friend who
- deserts you at the approach of danger."
-
- Misfortune tests the sincerity of friends.
-
-
- The Oxen and the Axle-Trees
-
- A HEAVY WAGON was being dragged along a country lane by a team of
- Oxen. The Axle-trees groaned and creaked terribly; whereupon the
- Oxen, turning round, thus addressed the wheels: "Hullo there! why
- do you make so much noise? We bear all the labor, and we, not
- you, ought to cry out."
-
- Those who suffer most cry out the least.
-
-
- The Thirsty Pigeon
-
- A PIGEON, oppressed by excessive thirst, saw a goblet of water
- painted on a signboard. Not supposing it to be only a picture,
- she flew towards it with a loud whir and unwittingly dashed
- against the signboard, jarring herself terribly. Having broken
- her wings by the blow, she fell to the ground, and was caught by
- one of the bystanders.
-
- Zeal should not outrun discretion.
-
-
- The Raven and the Swan
-
- A RAVEN saw a Swan and desired to secure for himself the same
- beautiful plumage. Supposing that the Swan's splendid white
- color arose from his washing in the water in which he swam, the
- Raven left the altars in the neighborhood where he picked up his
- living, and took up residence in the lakes and pools. But
- cleansing his feathers as often as he would, he could not change
- their color, while through want of food he perished.
-
- Change of habit cannot alter Nature.
-
-
- The Goat and the Goatherd
-
- A GOATHERD had sought to bring back a stray goat to his flock.
- He whistled and sounded his horn in vain; the straggler paid no
- attention to the summons. At last the Goatherd threw a stone,
- and breaking its horn, begged the Goat not to tell his master.
- The Goat replied, "Why, you silly fellow, the horn will speak
- though I be silent."
-
- Do not attempt to hide things which cannot be hid.
-
-
- The Miser
-
- A MISER sold all that he had and bought a lump of gold, which he
- buried in a hole in the ground by the side of an old wall and
- went to look at daily. One of his workmen observed his frequent
- visits to the spot and decided to watch his movements. He soon
- discovered the secret of the hidden treasure, and digging down,
- came to the lump of gold, and stole it. The Miser, on his next
- visit, found the hole empty and began to tear his hair and to
- make loud lamentations. A neighbor, seeing him overcome with
- grief and learning the cause, said, "Pray do not grieve so; but
- go and take a stone, and place it in the hole, and fancy that the
- gold is still lying there. It will do you quite the same
- service; for when the gold was there, you had it not, as you did
- not make the slightest use of it."
-
-
- The Sick Lion
-
- A LION, unable from old age and infirmities to provide himself
- with food by force, resolved to do so by artifice. He returned
- to his den, and lying down there, pretended to be sick, taking
- care that his sickness should be publicly known. The beasts
- expressed their sorrow, and came one by one to his den, where the
- Lion devoured them. After many of the beasts had thus
- disappeared, the Fox discovered the trick and presenting himself
- to the Lion, stood on the outside of the cave, at a respectful
- distance, and asked him how he was. "I am very middling,"
- replied the Lion, "but why do you stand without? Pray enter
- within to talk with me." "No, thank you," said the Fox. "I
- notice that there are many prints of feet entering your cave, but
- I see no trace of any returning."
-
- He is wise who is warned by the misfortunes of others.
-
-
- The Horse and Groom
-
- A GROOM used to spend whole days in currycombing and rubbing down
- his Horse, but at the same time stole his oats and sold them for
- his own profit. "Alas!" said the Horse, "if you really wish me
- to be in good condition, you should groom me less, and feed me
- more."
-
-
- The Ass and the Lapdog
-
- A MAN had an Ass, and a Maltese Lapdog, a very great beauty. The
- Ass was left in a stable and had plenty of oats and hay to eat,
- just as any other Ass would. The Lapdog knew many tricks and was
- a great favorite with his master, who often fondled him and
- seldom went out to dine without bringing him home some tidbit to
- eat. The Ass, on the contrary, had much work to do in grinding
- the corn-mill and in carrying wood from the forest or burdens
- from the farm. He often lamented his own hard fate and
- contrasted it with the luxury and idleness of the Lapdog, till at
- last one day he broke his cords and halter, and galloped into his
- master's house, kicking up his heels without measure, and
- frisking and fawning as well as he could. He next tried to jump
- about his master as he had seen the Lapdog do, but he broke the
- table and smashed all the dishes upon it to atoms. He then
- attempted to lick his master, and jumped upon his back. The
- servants, hearing the strange hubbub and perceiving the danger of
- their master, quickly relieved him, and drove out the Ass to his
- stable with kicks and clubs and cuffs. The Ass, as he returned
- to his stall beaten nearly to death, thus lamented: "I have
- brought it all on myself! Why could I not have been contented to
- labor with my companions, and not wish to be idle all the day
- like that useless little Lapdog!"
-
-
- The Lioness
-
- A CONTROVERSY prevailed among the beasts of the field as to which
- of the animals deserved the most credit for producing the
- greatest number of whelps at a birth. They rushed clamorously
- into the presence of the Lioness and demanded of her the
- settlement of the dispute. "And you," they said, "how many sons
- have you at a birth?' The Lioness laughed at them, and said:
- "Why! I have only one; but that one is altogether a thoroughbred
- Lion."
-
- The value is in the worth, not in the number.
-
-
- The Boasting Traveler
-
- A MAN who had traveled in foreign lands boasted very much, on
- returning to his own country, of the many wonderful and heroic
- feats he had performed in the different places he had visited.
- Among other things, he said that when he was at Rhodes he had
- leaped to such a distance that no man of his day could leap
- anywhere near him as to that, there were in Rhodes many persons
- who saw him do it and whom he could call as witnesses. One of
- the bystanders interrupted him, saying: "Now, my good man, if
- this be all true there is no need of witnesses. Suppose this
- to be Rhodes, and leap for us."
-
-
- The Cat and the Cock
-
- A CAT caught a Cock, and pondered how he might find a reasonable
- excuse for eating him. He accused him of being a nuisance to men
- by crowing in the nighttime and not permitting them to sleep.
- The Cock defended himself by saying that he did this for the
- benefit of men, that they might rise in time for their labors.
- The Cat replied, "Although you abound in specious apologies, I
- shall not remain supperless"; and he made a meal of him.
-
-
- The Piglet, the Sheep, and the Goat
-
- A YOUNG PIG was shut up in a fold-yard with a Goat and a Sheep.
- On one occasion when the shepherd laid hold of him, he grunted
- and squeaked and resisted violently. The Sheep and the Goat
- complained of his distressing cries, saying, "He often handles
- us, and we do not cry out." To this the Pig replied, "Your
- handling and mine are very different things. He catches you only
- for your wool, or your milk, but he lays hold on me for my very
- life."
-
-
- The Boy and the Filberts
-
- A BOY put his hand into a pitcher full of filberts. He grasped
- as many as he could possibly hold, but when he tried to pull out
- his hand, he was prevented from doing so by the neck of the
- pitcher. Unwilling to lose his filberts, and yet unable to
- withdraw his hand, he burst into tears and bitterly lamented his
- disappointment. A bystander said to him, "Be satisfied with half
- the quantity, and you will readily draw out your hand."
-
- Do not attempt too much at once.
-
-
- The Lion in Love
-
- A LION demanded the daughter of a woodcutter in marriage. The
- Father, unwilling to grant, and yet afraid to refuse his request,
- hit upon this expedient to rid himself of his importunities. He
- expressed his willingness to accept the Lion as the suitor of his
- daughter on one condition: that he should allow him to extract
- his teeth, and cut off his claws, as his daughter was fearfully
- afraid of both. The Lion cheerfully assented to the proposal.
- But when the toothless, clawless Lion returned to repeat his
- request, the Woodman, no longer afraid, set upon him with his
- club, and drove him away into the forest.
-
-
- The Laborer and the Snake
-
- A SNAKE, having made his hole close to the porch of a cottage,
- inflicted a mortal bite on the Cottager's infant son. Grieving
- over his loss, the Father resolved to kill the Snake. The next
- day, when it came out of its hole for food, he took up his axe,
- but by swinging too hastily, missed its head and cut off only the
- end of its tail. After some time the Cottager, afraid that the
- Snake would bite him also, endeavored to make peace, and placed
- some bread and salt in the hole. The Snake, slightly hissing,
- said: "There can henceforth be no peace between us; for whenever
- I see you I shall remember the loss of my tail, and whenever you
- see me you will be thinking of the death of your son."
-
- No one truly forgets injuries in the presence of him who caused
- the injury.
-
-
- The Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
-
- ONCE UPON A TIME a Wolf resolved to disguise his appearance in
- order to secure food more easily. Encased in the skin of a
- sheep, he pastured with the flock deceiving the shepherd by his
- costume. In the evening he was shut up by the shepherd in the
- fold; the gate was closed, and the entrance made thoroughly
- secure. But the shepherd, returning to the fold during the night
- to obtain meat for the next day, mistakenly caught up the Wolf
- instead of a sheep, and killed him instantly.
-
- Harm seek. harm find.
-
-
- The Ass and the Mule
-
- A MULETEER set forth on a journey, driving before him an Ass and
- a Mule, both well laden. The Ass, as long as he traveled along
- the plain, carried his load with ease, but when he began to
- ascend the steep path of the mountain, felt his load to be more
- than he could bear. He entreated his companion to relieve him of
- a small portion, that he might carry home the rest; but the Mule
- paid no attention to the request. The Ass shortly afterwards
- fell down dead under his burden. Not knowing what else to do in
- so wild a region, the Muleteer placed upon the Mule the load
- carried by the Ass in addition to his own, and at the top of all
- placed the hide of the Ass, after he had skinned him. The Mule,
- groaning beneath his heavy burden, said to himself: "I am treated
- according to my deserts. If I had only been willing to assist
- the Ass a little in his need, I should not now be bearing,
- together with his burden, himself as well."
-
-
- The Frogs Asking for a King
-
- THE FROGS, grieved at having no established Ruler, sent
- ambassadors to Jupiter entreating for a King. Perceiving their
- simplicity, he cast down a huge log into the lake. The Frogs
- were terrified at the splash occasioned by its fall and hid
- themselves in the depths of the pool. But as soon as they
- realized that the huge log was motionless, they swam again to the
- top of the water, dismissed their fears, climbed up, and began
- squatting on it in contempt. After some time they began to think
- themselves ill-treated in the appointment of so inert a Ruler,
- and sent a second deputation to Jupiter to pray that he would set
- over them another sovereign. He then gave them an Eel to govern
- them. When the Frogs discovered his easy good nature, they sent
- yet a third time to Jupiter to beg him to choose for them still
- another King. Jupiter, displeased with all their complaints,
- sent a Heron, who preyed upon the Frogs day by day till there
- were none left to croak upon the lake.
-
-
- The Boys and the Frogs
-
- SOME BOYS, playing near a pond, saw a number of Frogs in the
- water and began to pelt them with stones. They killed several of
- them, when one of the Frogs, lifting his head out of the water,
- cried out: "Pray stop, my boys: what is sport to you, is death to
- us."
-
-
- The Sick Stag
-
- A SICK STAG lay down in a quiet corner of its pasture-ground.
- His companions came in great numbers to inquire after his health,
- and each one helped himself to a share of the food which had been
- placed for his use; so that he died, not from his sickness, but
- from the failure of the means of living.
-
- Evil companions bring more hurt than profit.
-
-
- The Salt Merchant and His Ass
-
- A PEDDLER drove his Ass to the seashore to buy salt. His road
- home lay across a stream into which his Ass, making a false step,
- fell by accident and rose up again with his load considerably
- lighter, as the water melted the sack. The Peddler retraced his
- steps and refilled his panniers with a larger quantity of salt
- than before. When he came again to the stream, the Ass fell down
- on purpose in the same spot, and, regaining his feet with the
- weight of his load much diminished, brayed triumphantly as if he
- had obtained what he desired. The Peddler saw through his trick
- and drove him for the third time to the coast, where he bought a
- cargo of sponges instead of salt. The Ass, again playing the
- fool, fell down on purpose when he reached the stream, but the
- sponges became swollen with water, greatly increasing his load.
- And thus his trick recoiled on him, for he now carried on his
- back a double burden.
-
-
- The Oxen and the Butchers
-
- THE OXEN once upon a time sought to destroy the Butchers, who
- practiced a trade destructive to their race. They assembled on a
- certain day to carry out their purpose, and sharpened their horns
- for the contest. But one of them who was exceedingly old (for
- many a field had he plowed) thus spoke: "These Butchers, it is
- true, slaughter us, but they do so with skillful hands, and with
- no unnecessary pain. If we get rid of them, we shall fall into
- the hands of unskillful operators, and thus suffer a double
- death: for you may be assured, that though all the Butchers
- should perish, yet will men never want beef."
-
- Do not be in a hurry to change one evil for another.
-
-
- The Lion, the Mouse, and the Fox
-
- A LION, fatigued by the heat of a summer's day, fell fast asleep
- in his den. A Mouse ran over his mane and ears and woke him from
- his slumbers. He rose up and shook himself in great wrath, and
- searched every corner of his den to find the Mouse. A Fox seeing
- him said: "A fine Lion you are, to be frightened of a Mouse."
- "'Tis not the Mouse I fear," said the Lion; "I resent his
- familiarity and ill-breeding."
-
- Little liberties are great offenses.
-
-
- The Vain Jackdaw
-
- JUPITER DETERMINED, it is said, to create a sovereign over the
- birds, and made proclamation that on a certain day they should
- all present themselves before him, when he would himself choose
- the most beautiful among them to be king. The Jackdaw, knowing
- his own ugliness, searched through the woods and fields, and
- collected the feathers which had fallen from the wings of his
- companions, and stuck them in all parts of his body, hoping
- thereby to make himself the most beautiful of all. When the
- appointed day arrived, and the birds had assembled before
- Jupiter, the Jackdaw also made his appearance in his many
- feathered finery. But when Jupiter proposed to make him king
- because of the beauty of his plumage, the birds indignantly
- protested, and each plucked from him his own feathers, leaving
- the Jackdaw nothing but a Jackdaw.
-
-
- The Goatherd and the Wild Goats
-
- A GOATHERD, driving his flock from their pasture at eventide,
- found some Wild Goats mingled among them, and shut them up
- together with his own for the night. The next day it snowed very
- hard, so that he could not take the herd to their usual feeding
- places, but was obliged to keep them in the fold. He gave his
- own goats just sufficient food to keep them alive, but fed the
- strangers more abundantly in the hope of enticing them to stay
- with him and of making them his own. When the thaw set in, he
- led them all out to feed, and the Wild Goats scampered away as
- fast as they could to the mountains. The Goatherd scolded them
- for their ingratitude in leaving him, when during the storm he
- had taken more care of them than of his own herd. One of them,
- turning about, said to him: "That is the very reason why we are
- so cautious; for if you yesterday treated us better than the
- Goats you have had so long, it is plain also that if others came
- after us, you would in the same manner prefer them to ourselves."
-
-
- Old friends cannot with impunity be sacrificed for new ones.
-
-
- The Mischievous Dog
-
- A DOG used to run up quietly to the heels of everyone he met, and
- to bite them without notice. His master suspended a bell about
- his neck so that the Dog might give notice of his presence
- wherever he went. Thinking it a mark of distinction, the Dog
- grew proud of his bell and went tinkling it all over the
- marketplace. One day an old hound said to him: Why do you make
- such an exhibition of yourself? That bell that you carry is not,
- believe me, any order of merit, but on the contrary a mark of
- disgrace, a public notice to all men to avoid you as an ill
- mannered dog."
-
- Notoriety is often mistaken for fame.
-
-
- The Fox Who Had Lost His Tail
-
- A FOX caught in a trap escaped, but in so doing lost his tail.
- Thereafter, feeling his life a burden from the shame and ridicule
- to which he was exposed, he schemed to convince all the other
- Foxes that being tailless was much more attractive, thus making
- up for his own deprivation. He assembled a good many Foxes and
- publicly advised them to cut off their tails, saying that they
- would not only look much better without them, but that they would
- get rid of the weight of the brush, which was a very great
- inconvenience. One of them interrupting him said, "If you had
- not yourself lost your tail, my friend, you would not thus
- counsel us."
-
-
- The Boy and the Nettles
-
- A BOY was stung by a Nettle. He ran home and told his Mother,
- saying, "Although it hurts me very much, I only touched it
- gently." "That was just why it stung you," said his Mother. "The
- next time you touch a Nettle, grasp it boldly, and it will be
- soft as silk to your hand, and not in the least hurt you."
-
- Whatever you do, do with all your might.
-
-
- The Man and His Two Sweethearts
-
- A MIDDLE-AGED MAN, whose hair had begun to turn gray, courted two
- women at the same time. One of them was young, and the other
- well advanced in years. The elder woman, ashamed to be courted
- by a man younger than herself, made a point, whenever her admirer
- visited her, to pull out some portion of his black hairs. The
- younger, on the contrary, not wishing to become the wife of an
- old man, was equally zealous in removing every gray hair she
- could find. Thus it came to pass that between them both he very
- soon found that he had not a hair left on his head.
-
- Those who seek to please everybody please nobody.
-
-
- The Astronomer
-
- AN ASTRONOMER used to go out at night to observe the stars. One
- evening, as he wandered through the suburbs with his whole
- attention fixed on the sky, he fell accidentally into a deep
- well. While he lamented and bewailed his sores and bruises, and
- cried loudly for help, a neighbor ran to the well, and learning
- what had happened said: "Hark ye, old fellow, why, in striving to
- pry into what is in heaven, do you not manage to see what is on
- earth?'
-
-
- The Wolves and the Sheep
-
- "WHY SHOULD there always be this fear and slaughter between us?"
- said the Wolves to the Sheep. "Those evil-disposed Dogs have
- much to answer for. They always bark whenever we approach you
- and attack us before we have done any harm. If you would only
- dismiss them from your heels, there might soon be treaties of
- peace and reconciliation between us." The Sheep, poor silly
- creatures, were easily beguiled and dismissed the Dogs, whereupon
- the Wolves destroyed the unguarded flock at their own pleasure.
-
-
- The Old Woman and the Physician
-
- AN OLD WOMAN having lost the use of her eyes, called in a
- Physician to heal them, and made this bargain with him in the
- presence of witnesses: that if he should cure her blindness, he
- should receive from her a sum of money; but if her infirmity
- remained, she should give him nothing. This agreement being
- made, the Physician, time after time, applied his salve to her
- eyes, and on every visit took something away, stealing all her
- property little by little. And when he had got all she had, he
- healed her and demanded the promised payment. The Old Woman,
- when she recovered her sight and saw none of her goods in her
- house, would give him nothing. The Physician insisted on his
- claim, and. as she still refused, summoned her before the Judge.
- The Old Woman, standing up in the Court, argued: "This man here
- speaks the truth in what he says; for I did promise to give him a
- sum of money if I should recover my sight: but if I continued
- blind, I was to give him nothing. Now he declares that I am
- healed. I on the contrary affirm that I am still blind; for when
- I lost the use of my eyes, I saw in my house various chattels and
- valuable goods: but now, though he swears I am cured of my
- blindness, I am not able to see a single thing in it."
-
-
- The Fighting Cocks and the Eagle
-
- TWO GAME COCKS were fiercely fighting for the mastery of the
- farmyard. One at last put the other to flight. The vanquished
- Cock skulked away and hid himself in a quiet corner, while the
- conqueror, flying up to a high wall, flapped his wings and crowed
- exultingly with all his might. An Eagle sailing through the air
- pounced upon him and carried him off in his talons. The
- vanquished Cock immediately came out of his corner, and ruled
- henceforth with undisputed mastery.
-
- Pride goes before destruction.
-
-
- The Charger and the Miller
-
- A CHARGER, feeling the infirmities of age, was sent to work in a
- mill instead of going out to battle. But when he was compelled
- to grind instead of serving in the wars, he bewailed his change
- of fortune and called to mind his former state, saying, "Ah!
- Miller, I had indeed to go campaigning before, but I was barbed
- from counter to tail, and a man went along to groom me; and now I
- cannot understand what ailed me to prefer the mill before the
- battle." "Forbear," said the Miller to him, "harping on what was
- of yore, for it is the common lot of mortals to sustain the ups
- and downs of fortune."
-
-
- The Fox and the Monkey
-
- A MONKEY once danced in an assembly of the Beasts, and so pleased
- them all by his performance that they elected him their King. A
- Fox, envying him the honor, discovered a piece of meat lying in a
- trap, and leading the Monkey to the place where it was, said that
- she had found a store, but had not used it e had kept it for him
- as treasure trove of his kingdom, and counseled him to lay hold
- of it. The Monkey approached carelessly and was caught in the
- trap; and on his accusing the Fox of purposely leading him into
- the snare, she replied, "O Monkey, and are you, with such a mind
- as yours, going to be King over the Beasts?"
-
-
- The Horse and His Rider
-
- A HORSE SOLDIER took the utmost pains with his charger. As long
- as the war lasted, he looked upon him as his fellow-helper in all
- emergencies and fed him carefully with hay and corn. But when
- the war was over, he only allowed him chaff to eat and made him
- carry heavy loads of wood, subjecting him to much slavish
- drudgery and ill-treatment. War was again proclaimed, however,
- and when the trumpet summoned him to his standard, the Soldier
- put on his charger its military trappings, and mounted, being
- clad in his heavy coat of mail. The Horse fell down straightway
- under the weight, no longer equal to the burden, and said to his
- master, "You must now go to the war on foot, for you have
- transformed me from a Horse into an Ass; and how can you expect
- that I can again turn in a moment from an Ass to a Horse?'
-
-
- The Belly and the Members
-
- THE MEMBERS of the Body rebelled against the Belly, and said,
- "Why should we be perpetually engaged in administering to your
- wants, while you do nothing but take your rest, and enjoy
- yourself in luxury and self-indulgence?' The Members carried out
- their resolve and refused their assistance to the Belly. The
- whole Body quickly became debilitated, and the hands, feet,
- mouth, and eyes, when too late, repented of their folly.
-
-
- The Vine and the Goat
-
- A VINE was luxuriant in the time of vintage with leaves and
- grapes. A Goat, passing by, nibbled its young tendrils and its
- leaves. The Vine addressed him and said: "Why do you thus injure
- me without a cause, and crop my leaves? Is there no young grass
- left? But I shall not have to wait long for my just revenge; for
- if you now should crop my leaves, and cut me down to my root, I
- shall provide the wine to pour over you when you are led as a
- victim to the sacrifice."
-
-
- Jupiter and the Monkey
-
- JUPITER ISSUED a proclamation to all the beasts of the forest and
- promised a royal reward to the one whose offspring should be
- deemed the handsomest. The Monkey came with the rest and
- presented, with all a mother's tenderness, a flat-nosed,
- hairless, ill-featured young Monkey as a candidate for the
- promised reward. A general laugh saluted her on the presentation
- of her son. She resolutely said, "I know not whether Jupiter
- will allot the prize to my son, but this I do know, that he is at
- least in the eyes of me his mother, the dearest, handsomest, and
- most beautiful of all."
-
-
- The Widow and Her Little Maidens
-
- A WIDOW who was fond of cleaning had two little maidens to wait
- on her. She was in the habit of waking them early in the
- morning, at cockcrow. The maidens, aggravated by such excessive
- labor, resolved to kill the cock who roused their mistress so
- early. When they had done this, they found that they had only
- prepared for themselves greater troubles, for their mistress, no
- longer hearing the hour from the cock, woke them up to their work
- in the middle of the night.
-
-
- The Shepherd's Boy and the Wolf
-
- A SHEPHERD-BOY, who watched a flock of sheep near a village,
- brought out the villagers three or four times by crying out,
- "Wolf! Wolf!" and when his neighbors came to help him, laughed at
- them for their pains. The Wolf, however, did truly come at last.
- The Shepherd-boy, now really alarmed, shouted in an agony of
- terror: "Pray, do come and help me; the Wolf is killing the
- sheep"; but no one paid any heed to his cries, nor rendered any
- assistance. The Wolf, having no cause of fear, at his leisure
- lacerated or destroyed the whole flock.
-
- There is no believing a liar, even when he speaks the truth.
-
-
- The Cat and the Birds
-
- A CAT, hearing that the Birds in a certain aviary were ailing
- dressed himself up as a physician, and, taking his cane and a bag
- of instruments becoming his profession, went to call on them. He
- knocked at the door and inquired of the inmates how they all did,
- saying that if they were ill, he would be happy to prescribe for
- them and cure them. They replied, "We are all very well, and
- shall continue so, if you will only be good enough to go away,
- and leave us as we are."
-
-
- The Kid and the Wolf
-
- A KID standing on the roof of a house, out of harm's way, saw a
- Wolf passing by and immediately began to taunt and revile him.
- The Wolf, looking up, said, "Sirrah! I hear thee: yet it is not
- thou who mockest me, but the roof on which thou art standing."
-
- Time and place often give the advantage to the weak over the
- strong.
-
-
- The Ox and the Frog
-
- AN OX drinking at a pool trod on a brood of young frogs and
- crushed one of them to death. The Mother coming up, and missing
- one of her sons, inquired of his brothers what had become of him.
- "He is dead, dear Mother; for just now a very huge beast with
- four great feet came to the pool and crushed him to death with
- his cloven heel." The Frog, puffing herself out, inquired, "if
- the beast was as big as that in size." "Cease, Mother, to puff
- yourself out," said her son, "and do not be angry; for you would,
- I assure you, sooner burst than successfully imitate the hugeness
- of that monster."
-
-
- The Shepherd and the Wolf
-
- A SHEPHERD once found the whelp of a Wolf and brought it up, and
- after a while taught it to steal lambs from the neighboring
- flocks. The Wolf, having shown himself an apt pupil, said to the
- Shepherd, "Since you have taught me to steal, you must keep a
- sharp lookout, or you will lose some of your own flock."
-
-
- The Father and His Two Daughters
-
- A MAN had two daughters, the one married to a gardener, and the
- other to a tile-maker. After a time he went to the daughter who
- had married the gardener, and inquired how she was and how all
- things went with her. She said, "All things are prospering with
- me, and I have only one wish, that there may be a heavy fall of
- rain, in order that the plants may be well watered." Not long
- after, he went to the daughter who had married the tilemaker, and
- likewise inquired of her how she fared; she replied, "I want for
- nothing, and have only one wish, that the dry weather may
- continue, and the sun shine hot and bright, so that the bricks
- might be dried." He said to her, "If your sister wishes for rain,
- and you for dry weather, with which of the two am I to join my
- wishes?'
-
-
- The Farmer and His Sons
-
- A FATHER, being on the point of death, wished to be sure that his
- sons would give the same attention to his farm as he himself had
- given it. He called them to his bedside and said, "My sons,
- there is a great treasure hid in one of my vineyards." The sons,
- after his death, took their spades and mattocks and carefully dug
- over every portion of their land. They found no treasure, but
- the vines repaid their labor by an extraordinary and
- superabundant crop.
-
-
- The Crab and Its Mother
-
- A CRAB said to her son, "Why do you walk so one-sided, my child?
- It is far more becoming to go straight forward." The young Crab
- replied: "Quite true, dear Mother; and if you will show me the
- straight way, I will promise to walk in it." The Mother tried in
- vain, and submitted without remonstrance to the reproof of her
- child.
-
- Example is more powerful than precept.
-
-
- The Heifer and the Ox
-
- A HEIFER saw an Ox hard at work harnessed to a plow, and
- tormented him with reflections on his unhappy fate in being
- compelled to labor. Shortly afterwards, at the harvest festival,
- the owner released the Ox from his yoke, but bound the Heifer
- with cords and led him away to the altar to be slain in honor of
- the occasion. The Ox saw what was being done, and said with a
- smile to the Heifer: "For this you were allowed to live in
- idleness, because you were presently to be sacrificed."
-
-
- The Swallow, the Serpent, and the Court of Justice
-
- A SWALLOW, returning from abroad and especially fond of dwelling
- with men, built herself a nest in the wall of a Court of Justice
- and there hatched seven young birds. A Serpent gliding past the
- nest from its hole in the wall ate up the young unfledged
- nestlings. The Swallow, finding her nest empty, lamented greatly
- and exclaimed: "Woe to me a stranger! that in this place where
- all others' rights are protected, I alone should suffer wrong."
-
-
- The Thief and His Mother
-
- A BOY stole a lesson-book from one of his schoolfellows and took
- it home to his Mother. She not only abstained from beating him,
- but encouraged him. He next time stole a cloak and brought it to
- her, and she again commended him. The Youth, advanced to
- adulthood, proceeded to steal things of still greater value. At
- last he was caught in the very act, and having his hands bound
- behind him, was led away to the place of public execution. His
- Mother followed in the crowd and violently beat her breast in
- sorrow, whereupon the young man said, "I wish to say something to
- my Mother in her ear." She came close to him, and he quickly
- seized her ear with his teeth and bit it off. The Mother
- upbraided him as an unnatural child, whereon he replied, "Ah! if
- you had beaten me when I first stole and brought to you that
- lesson-book, I should not have come to this, nor have been thus
- led to a disgraceful death."
-
-
- The Old Man and Death
-
- AN OLD MAN was employed in cutting wood in the forest, and, in
- carrying the faggots to the city for sale one day, became very
- wearied with his long journey. He sat down by the wayside, and
- throwing down his load, besought "Death" to come. "Death"
- immediately appeared in answer to his summons and asked for what
- reason he had called him. The Old Man hurriedly replied, "That,
- lifting up the load, you may place it again upon my shoulders."
-
-
- The Fir-Tree and the Bramble
-
- A FIR-TREE said boastingly to the Bramble, "You are useful for
- nothing at all; while I am everywhere used for roofs and houses."
- The Bramble answered: 'You poor creature, if you would only call
- to mind the axes and saws which are about to hew you down, you
- would have reason to wish that you had grown up a Bramble, not a
- Fir-Tree."
-
- Better poverty without care, than riches with.
-
-
- The Mouse, the Frog, and the Hawk
-
- A MOUSE who always lived on the land, by an unlucky chance formed
- an intimate acquaintance with a Frog, who lived for the most part
- in the water. The Frog, one day intent on mischief, bound the
- foot of the Mouse tightly to his own. Thus joined together, the
- Frog first of all led his friend the Mouse to the meadow where
- they were accustomed to find their food. After this, he
- gradually led him towards the pool in which he lived, until
- reaching the very brink, he suddenly jumped in, dragging the
- Mouse with him. The Frog enjoyed the water amazingly, and swam
- croaking about, as if he had done a good deed. The unhappy Mouse
- was soon suffocated by the water, and his dead body floated about
- on the surface, tied to the foot of the Frog. A Hawk observed
- it, and, pouncing upon it with his talons, carried it aloft. The
- Frog, being still fastened to the leg of the Mouse, was also
- carried off a prisoner, and was eaten by the Hawk.
-
- Harm hatch, harm catch.
-
-
- The Man Bitten by a Dog
-
- A MAN who had been bitten by a Dog went about in quest of someone
- who might heal him. A friend, meeting him and learning what he
- wanted, said, "If you would be cured, take a piece of bread, and
- dip it in the blood from your wound, and go and give it to the
- Dog that bit you." The Man who had been bitten laughed at this
- advice and said, "Why? If I should do so, it would be as if I
- should beg every Dog in the town to bite me."
-
- Benefits bestowed upon the evil-disposed increase their means of
- injuring you.
-
-
- The Two Pots
-
- A RIVER carried down in its stream two Pots, one made of
- earthenware and the other of brass. The Earthen Pot said to the
- Brass Pot, "Pray keep at a distance and do not come near me, for
- if you touch me ever so slightly, I shall be broken in pieces,
- and besides, I by no means wish to come near you."
-
- Equals make the best friends.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Sheep
-
- A WOLF, sorely wounded and bitten by dogs, lay sick and maimed in
- his lair. Being in want of food, he called to a Sheep who was
- passing, and asked him to fetch some water from a stream flowing
- close beside him. "For," he said, "if you will bring me drink, I
- will find means to provide myself with meat." "Yes," said the
- Sheep, "if I should bring you the draught, you would doubtless
- make me provide the meat also."
-
- Hypocritical speeches are easily seen through.
-
-
- The Aethiop
-
- THE PURCHASER of a black servant was persuaded that the color of
- his skin arose from dirt contracted through the neglect of his
- former masters. On bringing him home he resorted to every means
- of cleaning, and subjected the man to incessant scrubbings. The
- servant caught a severe cold, but he never changed his color or
- complexion.
-
- What's bred in the bone will stick to the flesh.
-
-
- The Fisherman and His Nets
-
- A FISHERMAN, engaged in his calling, made a very successful cast
- and captured a great haul of fish. He managed by a skillful
- handling of his net to retain all the large fish and to draw them
- to the shore; but he could not prevent the smaller fish from
- falling back through the meshes of the net into the sea.
-
-
- The Huntsman and the Fisherman
-
- A HUNTSMAN, returning with his dogs from the field, fell in by
- chance with a Fisherman who was bringing home a basket well laden
- with fish. The Huntsman wished to have the fish, and their owner
- experienced an equal longing for the contents of the game-bag.
- They quickly agreed to exchange the produce of their day's sport.
- Each was so well pleased with his bargain that they made for some
- time the same exchange day after day. Finally a neighbor said to
- them, "If you go on in this way, you will soon destroy by
- frequent use the pleasure of your exchange, and each will again
- wish to retain the fruits of his own sport."
-
- Abstain and enjoy.
-
-
- The Old Woman and the Wine-Jar
-
- AN OLD WOMAN found an empty jar which had lately been full of
- prime old wine and which still retained the fragrant smell of its
- former contents. She greedily placed it several times to her
- nose, and drawing it backwards and forwards said, "O most
- delicious! How nice must the Wine itself have been, when it
- leaves behind in the very vessel which contained it so sweet a
- perfume!"
-
- The memory of a good deed lives.
-
-
- The Fox and the Crow
-
- A CROW having stolen a bit of meat, perched in a tree and held it
- in her beak. A Fox, seeing this, longed to possess the meat
- himself, and by a wily stratagem succeeded. "How handsome is the
- Crow," he exclaimed, in the beauty of her shape and in the
- fairness of her complexion! Oh, if her voice were only equal to
- her beauty, she would deservedly be considered the Queen of
- Birds!" This he said deceitfully; but the Crow, anxious to refute
- the reflection cast upon her voice, set up a loud caw and dropped
- the flesh. The Fox quickly picked it up, and thus addressed the
- Crow: "My good Crow, your voice is right enough, but your wit is
- wanting."
-
-
- The Two Dogs
-
- A MAN had two dogs: a Hound, trained to assist him in his sports,
- and a Housedog, taught to watch the house. When he returned home
- after a good day's sport, he always gave the Housedog a large
- share of his spoil. The Hound, feeling much aggrieved at this,
- reproached his companion, saying, "It is very hard to have all
- this labor, while you, who do not assist in the chase, luxuriate
- on the fruits of my exertions." The Housedog replied, "Do not
- blame me, my friend, but find fault with the master, who has not
- taught me to labor, but to depend for subsistence on the labor of
- others."
-
- Children are not to be blamed for the faults of their parents.
-
-
- The Stag in the Ox-Stall
-
- A STAG, roundly chased by the hounds and blinded by fear to the
- danger he was running into, took shelter in a farmyard and hid
- himself in a shed among the oxen. An Ox gave him this kindly
- warning: "O unhappy creature! why should you thus, of your own
- accord, incur destruction and trust yourself in the house of your
- enemy?' The Stag replied: "Only allow me, friend, to stay where I
- am, and I will undertake to find some favorable opportunity of
- effecting my escape." At the approach of the evening the herdsman
- came to feed his cattle, but did not see the Stag; and even the
- farm-bailiff with several laborers passed through the shed and
- failed to notice him. The Stag, congratulating himself on his
- safety, began to express his sincere thanks to the Oxen who had
- kindly helped him in the hour of need. One of them again
- answered him: "We indeed wish you well, but the danger is not
- over. There is one other yet to pass through the shed, who has
- as it were a hundred eyes, and until he has come and gone, your
- life is still in peril." At that moment the master himself
- entered, and having had to complain that his oxen had not been
- properly fed, he went up to their racks and cried out: "Why is
- there such a scarcity of fodder? There is not half enough straw
- for them to lie on. Those lazy fellows have not even swept the
- cobwebs away." While he thus examined everything in turn, he
- spied the tips of the antlers of the Stag peeping out of the
- straw. Then summoning his laborers, he ordered that the Stag
- should be seized and killed.
-
-
- The Hawk, the Kite, and the Pigeons
-
- THE PIGEONS, terrified by the appearance of a Kite, called upon
- the Hawk to defend them. He at once consented. When they had
- admitted him into the cote, they found that he made more havoc
- and slew a larger number of them in one day than the Kite could
- pounce upon in a whole year.
-
- Avoid a remedy that is worse than the disease.
-
-
- The Widow and the Sheep
-
- A CERTAIN poor widow had one solitary Sheep. At shearing time,
- wishing to take his fleece and to avoid expense, she sheared him
- herself, but used the shears so unskillfully that with the fleece
- she sheared the flesh. The Sheep, writhing with pain, said, "Why
- do you hurt me so, Mistress? What weight can my blood add to the
- wool? If you want my flesh, there is the butcher, who will kill
- me in an instant; but if you want my fleece and wool, there is
- the shearer, who will shear and not hurt me."
-
- The least outlay is not always the greatest gain.
-
-
- The Wild Ass and the Lion
-
- A WILD ASS and a Lion entered into an alliance so that they might
- capture the beasts of the forest with greater ease. The Lion
- agreed to assist the Wild Ass with his strength, while the Wild
- Ass gave the Lion the benefit of his greater speed. When they
- had taken as many beasts as their necessities required, the Lion
- undertook to distribute the prey, and for this purpose divided it
- into three shares. "I will take the first share," he said,
- "because I am King: and the second share, as a partner with you
- in the chase: and the third share (believe me) will be a source
- of great evil to you, unless you willingly resign it to me, and
- set off as fast as you can."
-
- Might makes right.
-
-
- The Eagle and the Arrow
-
- AN EAGLE sat on a lofty rock, watching the movements of a Hare
- whom he sought to make his prey. An archer, who saw the Eagle
- from a place of concealment, took an accurate aim and wounded him
- mortally. The Eagle gave one look at the arrow that had entered
- his heart and saw in that single glance that its feathers had
- been furnished by himself. "It is a double grief to me," he
- exclaimed, "that I should perish by an arrow feathered from my
- own wings."
-
-
- The Sick Kite
-
- A KITE, sick unto death, said to his mother: "O Mother! do not
- mourn, but at once invoke the gods that my life may be
- prolonged." She replied, "Alas! my son, which of the gods do you
- think will pity you? Is there one whom you have not outraged by
- filching from their very altars a part of the sacrifice offered
- up to them?'
-
- We must make friends in prosperity if we would have their help in
- adversity.
-
-
- The Lion and the Dolphin
-
- A LION roaming by the seashore saw a Dolphin lift up its head out
- of the waves, and suggested that they contract an alliance,
- saying that of all the animals they ought to be the best friends,
- since the one was the king of beasts on the earth, and the other
- was the sovereign ruler of all the inhabitants of the ocean. The
- Dolphin gladly consented to this request. Not long afterwards
- the Lion had a combat with a wild bull, and called on the Dolphin
- to help him. The Dolphin, though quite willing to give him
- assistance, was unable to do so, as he could not by any means
- reach the land. The Lion abused him as a traitor. The Dolphin
- replied, "Nay, my friend, blame not me, but Nature, which, while
- giving me the sovereignty of the sea, has quite denied me the
- power of living upon the land."
-
-
- The Lion and the Boar
-
- ON A SUMMER DAY, when the great heat induced a general thirst
- among the beasts, a Lion and a Boar came at the same moment to a
- small well to drink. They fiercely disputed which of them should
- drink first, and were soon engaged in the agonies of a mortal
- combat. When they stopped suddenly to catch their breath for a
- fiercer renewal of the fight, they saw some Vultures waiting in
- the distance to feast on the one that should fall first. They at
- once made up their quarrel, saying, "It is better for us to make
- friends, than to become the food of Crows or Vultures."
-
-
- The One-Eyed Doe
-
- A DOE blind in one eye was accustomed to graze as near to the
- edge of the cliff as she possibly could, in the hope of securing
- her greater safety. She turned her sound eye towards the land
- that she might get the earliest tidings of the approach of hunter
- or hound, and her injured eye towards the sea, from whence she
- entertained no anticipation of danger. Some boatmen sailing by
- saw her, and taking a successful aim, mortally wounded her.
- Yielding up her last breath, she gasped forth this lament: "O
- wretched creature that I am! to take such precaution against the
- land, and after all to find this seashore, to which I had come
- for safety, so much more perilous."
-
-
- The Shepherd and the Sea
-
- A SHEPHERD, keeping watch over his sheep near the shore, saw the
- Sea very calm and smooth, and longed to make a voyage with a view
- to commerce. He sold all his flock, invested it in a cargo of
- dates, and set sail. But a very great tempest came on, and the
- ship being in danger of sinking, he threw all his merchandise
- overboard, and barely escaped with his life in the empty ship.
- Not long afterwards when someone passed by and observed the
- unruffled calm of the Sea, he interrupted him and said, "It is
- again in want of dates, and therefore looks quiet."
-
-
- The Ass, the Cock, and the Lion
-
- AN ASS and a Cock were in a straw-yard together when a Lion,
- desperate from hunger, approached the spot. He was about to
- spring upon the Ass, when the Cock (to the sound of whose voice
- the Lion, it is said, has a singular aversion) crowed loudly, and
- the Lion fled away as fast as he could. The Ass, observing his
- trepidation at the mere crowing of a Cock summoned courage to
- attack him, and galloped after him for that purpose. He had run
- no long distance, when the Lion, turning about, seized him and
- tore him to pieces.
-
- False confidence often leads into danger.
-
-
- The Mice and the Weasels
-
- THE WEASELS and the Mice waged a perpetual war with each other,
- in which much blood was shed. The Weasels were always the
- victors. The Mice thought that the cause of their frequent
- defeats was that they had no leaders set apart from the general
- army to command them, and that they were exposed to dangers from
- lack of discipline. They therefore chose as leaders Mice that
- were most renowned for their family descent, strength, and
- counsel, as well as those most noted for their courage in the
- fight, so that they might be better marshaled in battle array and
- formed into troops, regiments, and battalions. When all this was
- done, and the army disciplined, and the herald Mouse had duly
- proclaimed war by challenging the Weasels, the newly chosen
- generals bound their heads with straws, that they might be more
- conspicuous to all their troops. Scarcely had the battle begun,
- when a great rout overwhelmed the Mice, who scampered off as fast
- as they could to their holes. The generals, not being able to
- get in on account of the ornaments on their heads, were all
- captured and eaten by the Weasels.
-
- The more honor the more danger.
-
-
- The Mice in Council
-
- THE MICE summoned a council to decide how they might best devise
- means of warning themselves of the approach of their great enemy
- the Cat. Among the many plans suggested, the one that found most
- favor was the proposal to tie a bell to the neck of the Cat, so
- that the Mice, being warned by the sound of the tinkling, might
- run away and hide themselves in their holes at his approach. But
- when the Mice further debated who among them should thus "bell
- the Cat," there was no one found to do it.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Housedog
-
- A WOLF, meeting a big well-fed Mastiff with a wooden collar about
- his neck asked him who it was that fed him so well and yet
- compelled him to drag that heavy log about wherever he went.
- "The master," he replied. Then said the Wolf: "May no friend of
- mine ever be in such a plight; for the weight of this chain is
- enough to spoil the appetite."
-
-
- The Rivers and the Sea
-
- THE RIVERS joined together to complain to the Sea, saying, "Why
- is it that when we flow into your tides so potable and sweet, you
- work in us such a change, and make us salty and unfit to drink?"
- The Sea, perceiving that they intended to throw the blame on him,
- said, "Pray cease to flow into me, and then you will not be made
- briny."
-
-
- The Playful Ass
-
- AN ASS climbed up to the roof of a building, and frisking about
- there, broke in the tiling. The owner went up after him and
- quickly drove him down, beating him severely with a thick wooden
- cudgel. The Ass said, "Why, I saw the Monkey do this very thing
- yesterday, and you all laughed heartily, as if it afforded you
- very great amusement."
-
-
- The Three Tradesmen
-
- A GREAT CITY was besieged, and its inhabitants were called
- together to consider the best means of protecting it from the
- enemy. A Bricklayer earnestly recommended bricks as affording
- the best material for an effective resistance. A Carpenter, with
- equal enthusiasm, proposed timber as a preferable method of
- defense. Upon which a Currier stood up and said, "Sirs, I differ
- from you altogether: there is no material for resistance equal to
- a covering of hides; and nothing so good as leather."
-
- Every man for himself.
-
-
- The Master and His Dogs
-
- A CERTAIN MAN, detained by a storm in his country house, first of
- all killed his sheep, and then his goats, for the maintenance of
- his household. The storm still continuing, he was obliged to
- slaughter his yoke oxen for food. On seeing this, his Dogs took
- counsel together, and said, "It is time for us to be off, for if
- the master spare not his oxen, who work for his gain, how can we
- expect him to spare us?'
-
- He is not to be trusted as a friend who mistreats his own family.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Shepherds
-
- A WOLF, passing by, saw some Shepherds in a hut eating a haunch
- of mutton for their dinner. Approaching them, he said, "What a
- clamor you would raise if I were to do as you are doing!"
-
-
- The Dolphins, the Whales, and the Sprat
-
- THE DOLPHINS and Whales waged a fierce war with each other. When
- the battle was at its height, a Sprat lifted its head out of the
- waves and said that he would reconcile their differences if they
- would accept him as an umpire. One of the Dolphins replied, "We
- would far rather be destroyed in our battle with each other than
- admit any interference from you in our affairs."
-
-
- The Ass Carrying the Image
-
- AN ASS once carried through the streets of a city a famous wooden
- Image, to be placed in one of its Temples. As he passed along,
- the crowd made lowly prostration before the Image. The Ass,
- thinking that they bowed their heads in token of respect for
- himself, bristled up with pride, gave himself airs, and refused
- to move another step. The driver, seeing him thus stop, laid his
- whip lustily about his shoulders and said, "O you perverse
- dull-head! it is not yet come to this, that men pay worship to an
- Ass."
-
- They are not wise who give to themselves the credit due to
- others.
-
-
- The Two Travelers and the Axe
-
- TWO MEN were journeying together. One of them picked up an axe
- that lay upon the path, and said, "I have found an axe." "Nay, my
- friend," replied the other, "do not say 'I,' but 'We' have found
- an axe." They had not gone far before they saw the owner of the
- axe pursuing them, and he who had picked up the axe said, "We are
- undone." "Nay," replied the other, "keep to your first mode of
- speech, my friend; what you thought right then, think right now.
- Say 'I,' not 'We' are undone."
-
- He who shares the danger ought to share the prize.
-
-
- The Old Lion
-
- A LION, worn out with years and powerless from disease, lay on
- the ground at the point of death. A Boar rushed upon him, and
- avenged with a stroke of his tusks a long-remembered injury.
- Shortly afterwards the Bull with his horns gored him as if he
- were an enemy. When the Ass saw that the huge beast could be
- assailed with impunity, he let drive at his forehead with his
- heels. The expiring Lion said, "I have reluctantly brooked the
- insults of the brave, but to be compelled to endure such
- treatment from thee, a disgrace to Nature, is indeed to die a
- double death."
-
-
- The Old Hound
-
- A HOUND, who in the days of his youth and strength had never
- yielded to any beast of the forest, encountered in his old age a
- boar in the chase. He seized him boldly by the ear, but could
- not retain his hold because of the decay of his teeth, so that
- the boar escaped. His master, quickly coming up, was very much
- disappointed, and fiercely abused the dog. The Hound looked up
- and said, "It was not my fault. master: my spirit was as good as
- ever, but I could not help my infirmities. I rather deserve to
- be praised for what I have been, than to be blamed for what I
- am."
-
-
- The Bee and Jupiter
-
- A BEE from Mount Hymettus, the queen of the hive, ascended to
- Olympus to present Jupiter some honey fresh from her combs.
- Jupiter, delighted with the offering of honey, promised to give
- whatever she should ask. She therefore besought him, saying,
- "Give me, I pray thee, a sting, that if any mortal shall approach
- to take my honey, I may kill him." Jupiter was much displeased,
- for he loved the race of man, but could not refuse the request
- because of his promise. He thus answered the Bee: "You shall
- have your request, but it will be at the peril of your own life.
- For if you use your sting, it shall remain in the wound you make,
- and then you will die from the loss of it."
-
- Evil wishes, like chickens, come home to roost.
-
-
- The Milk-Woman and Her Pail
-
- A FARMER'S daughter was carrying her Pail of milk from the field
- to the farmhouse, when she fell a-musing. "The money for which
- this milk will be sold, will buy at least three hundred eggs.
- The eggs, allowing for all mishaps, will produce two hundred and
- fifty chickens. The chickens will become ready for the market
- when poultry will fetch the highest price, so that by the end of
- the year I shall have money enough from my share to buy a new
- gown. In this dress I will go to the Christmas parties, where
- all the young fellows will propose to me, but I will toss my head
- and refuse them every one." At this moment she tossed her head in
- unison with her thoughts, when down fell the milk pail to the
- ground, and all her imaginary schemes perished in a moment.
-
-
- The Seaside Travelers
-
- SOME TRAVELERS, journeying along the seashore, climbed to the
- summit of a tall cliff, and looking over the sea, saw in the
- distance what they thought was a large ship. They waited in the
- hope of seeing it enter the harbor, but as the object on which
- they looked was driven nearer to shore by the wind, they found
- that it could at the most be a small boat, and not a ship. When
- however it reached the beach, they discovered that it was only a
- large faggot of sticks, and one of them said to his companions,
- "We have waited for no purpose, for after all there is nothing to
- see but a load of wood."
-
- Our mere anticipations of life outrun its realities.
-
-
- The Brazier and His Dog
-
- A BRAZIER had a little Dog, which was a great favorite with his
- master, and his constant companion. While he hammered away at
- his metals the Dog slept; but when, on the other hand, he went to
- dinner and began to eat, the Dog woke up and wagged his tail, as
- if he would ask for a share of his meal. His master one day,
- pretending to be angry and shaking his stick at him, said, "You
- wretched little sluggard! what shall I do to you? While I am
- hammering on the anvil, you sleep on the mat; and when I begin to
- eat after my toil, you wake up and wag your tail for food. Do
- you not know that labor is the source of every blessing, and that
- none but those who work are entitled to eat?'
-
-
- The Ass and His Shadow
-
- A TRAVELER hired an Ass to convey him to a distant place. The
- day being intensely hot, and the sun shining in its strength, the
- Traveler stopped to rest, and sought shelter from the heat under
- the Shadow of the Ass. As this afforded only protection for one,
- and as the Traveler and the owner of the Ass both claimed it, a
- violent dispute arose between them as to which of them had the
- right to the Shadow. The owner maintained that he had let the
- Ass only, and not his Shadow. The Traveler asserted that he had,
- with the hire of the Ass, hired his Shadow also. The quarrel
- proceeded from words to blows, and while the men fought, the Ass
- galloped off.
-
- In quarreling about the shadow we often lose the substance.
-
-
- The Ass and His Masters
-
- AN ASS, belonging to an herb-seller who gave him too little food
- and too much work made a petition to Jupiter to be released from
- his present service and provided with another master. Jupiter,
- after warning him that he would repent his request, caused him to
- be sold to a tile-maker. Shortly afterwards, finding that he had
- heavier loads to carry and harder work in the brick-field, he
- petitioned for another change of master. Jupiter, telling him
- that it would be the last time that he could grant his request,
- ordained that he be sold to a tanner. The Ass found that he had
- fallen into worse hands, and noting his master's occupation,
- said, groaning: "It would have been better for me to have been
- either starved by the one, or to have been overworked by the
- other of my former masters, than to have been bought by my
- present owner, who will even after I am dead tan my hide, and
- make me useful to him."
-
-
- The Oak and the Reeds
-
- A VERY LARGE OAK was uprooted by the wind and thrown across a
- stream. It fell among some Reeds, which it thus addressed: "I
- wonder how you, who are so light and weak, are not entirely
- crushed by these strong winds." They replied, "You fight and
- contend with the wind, and consequently you are destroyed; while
- we on the contrary bend before the least breath of air, and
- therefore remain unbroken, and escape."
-
- Stoop to conquer.
-
-
- The Fisherman and the Little Fish
-
- A FISHERMAN who lived on the produce of his nets, one day caught
- a single small Fish as the result of his day's labor. The Fish,
- panting convulsively, thus entreated for his life: "O Sir, what
- good can I be to you, and how little am I worth? I am not yet
- come to my full size. Pray spare my life, and put me back into
- the sea. I shall soon become a large fish fit for the tables of
- the rich, and then you can catch me again, and make a handsome
- profit of me." The Fisherman replied, "I should indeed be a very
- simple fellow if, for the chance of a greater uncertain profit, I
- were to forego my present certain gain."
-
-
- The Hunter and the Woodman
-
- A HUNTER, not very bold, was searching for the tracks of a Lion.
- He asked a man felling oaks in the forest if he had seen any
- marks of his footsteps or knew where his lair was. "I will,"
- said the man, "at once show you the Lion himself." The Hunter,
- turning very pale and chattering with his teeth from fear,
- replied, "No, thank you. I did not ask that; it is his track
- only I am in search of, not the Lion himself."
-
- The hero is brave in deeds as well as words.
-
-
- The Wild Boar and the Fox
-
- A WILD BOAR stood under a tree and rubbed his tusks against the
- trunk. A Fox passing by asked him why he thus sharpened his
- teeth when there was no danger threatening from either huntsman
- or hound. He replied, "I do it advisedly; for it would never do
- to have to sharpen my weapons just at the time I ought to be
- using them."
-
-
- The Lion in a Farmyard
-
- A LION entered a farmyard. The Farmer, wishing to catch him,
- shut the gate. When the Lion found that he could not escape, he
- flew upon the sheep and killed them, and then attacked the oxen.
- The Farmer, beginning to be alarmed for his own safety, opened
- the gate and released the Lion. On his departure the Farmer
- grievously lamented the destruction of his sheep and oxen, but
- his wife, who had been a spectator to all that took place, said,
- "On my word, you are rightly served, for how could you for a
- moment think of shutting up a Lion along with you in your
- farmyard when you know that you shake in your shoes if you only
- hear his roar at a distance?'
-
-
- Mercury and the Sculptor
-
- MERCURY ONCE DETERMINED to learn in what esteem he was held among
- mortals. For this purpose he assumed the character of a man and
- visited in this disguise a Sculptor's studio having looked at
- various statues, he demanded the price of two figures of Jupiter
- and Juno. When the sum at which they were valued was named, he
- pointed to a figure of himself, saying to the Sculptor, "You will
- certainly want much more for this, as it is the statue of the
- Messenger of the Gods, and author of all your gain." The
- Sculptor replied, "Well, if you will buy these, I'll fling you
- that into the bargain."
-
-
- The Swan and the Goose
-
- A CERTAIN rich man bought in the market a Goose and a Swan. He
- fed the one for his table and kept the other for the sake of its
- song. When the time came for killing the Goose, the cook went to
- get him at night, when it was dark, and he was not able to
- distinguish one bird from the other. By mistake he caught the
- Swan instead of the Goose. The Swan, threatened with death,
- burst forth into song and thus made himself known by his voice,
- and preserved his life by his melody.
-
-
- The Swollen Fox
-
- A VERY HUNGRY FOX, seeing some bread and meat left by shepherds
- in the hollow of an oak, crept into the hole and made a hearty
- meal. When he finished, he was so full that he was not able to
- get out, and began to groan and lament his fate. Another Fox
- passing by heard his cries, and coming up, inquired the cause of
- his complaining. On learning what had happened, he said to him,
- "Ah, you will have to remain there, my friend, until you become
- such as you were when you crept in, and then you will easily get
- out."
-
-
- The Fox and the Woodcutter
-
- A FOX, running before the hounds, came across a Woodcutter
- felling an oak and begged him to show him a safe hiding-place.
- The Woodcutter advised him to take shelter in his own hut, so the
- Fox crept in and hid himself in a corner. The huntsman soon came
- up with his hounds and inquired of the Woodcutter if he had seen
- the Fox. He declared that he had not seen him, and yet pointed,
- all the time he was speaking, to the hut where the Fox lay
- hidden. The huntsman took no notice of the signs, but believing
- his word, hastened forward in the chase. As soon as they were
- well away, the Fox departed without taking any notice of the
- Woodcutter: whereon he called to him and reproached him, saying,
- "You ungrateful fellow, you owe your life to me, and yet you
- leave me without a word of thanks." The Fox replied, "Indeed, I
- should have thanked you fervently if your deeds had been as good
- as your words, and if your hands had not been traitors to your
- speech."
-
-
- The Birdcatcher, the Partridge, and the Cock
-
- A BIRDCATCHER was about to sit down to a dinner of herbs when a
- friend unexpectedly came in. The bird-trap was quite empty, as
- he had caught nothing, and he had to kill a pied Partridge, which
- he had tamed for a decoy. The bird entreated earnestly for his
- life: "What would you do without me when next you spread your
- nets? Who would chirp you to sleep, or call for you the covey of
- answering birds?' The Birdcatcher spared his life, and determined
- to pick out a fine young Cock just attaining to his comb. But
- the Cock expostulated in piteous tones from his perch: "If you
- kill me, who will announce to you the appearance of the dawn?
- Who will wake you to your daily tasks or tell you when it is time
- to visit the bird-trap in the morning?' He replied, "What you say
- is true. You are a capital bird at telling the time of day. But
- my friend and I must have our dinners."
-
- Necessity knows no law.
-
-
- The Monkey and the Fishermen
-
- A MONKEY perched upon a lofty tree saw some Fishermen casting
- their nets into a river, and narrowly watched their proceedings.
- The Fishermen after a while gave up fishing, and on going home to
- dinner left their nets upon the bank. The Monkey, who is the
- most imitative of animals, descended from the treetop and
- endeavored to do as they had done. Having handled the net, he
- threw it into the river, but became tangled in the meshes and
- drowned. With his last breath he said to himself, "I am rightly
- served; for what business had I who had never handled a net to
- try and catch fish?'
-
-
- The Flea and the Wrestler
-
- A FLEA settled upon the bare foot of a Wrestler and bit him,
- causing the man to call loudly upon Hercules for help. When the
- Flea a second time hopped upon his foot, he groaned and said, "O
- Hercules! if you will not help me against a Flea, how can I hope
- for your assistance against greater antagonists?'
-
-
- The Two Frogs
-
- TWO FROGS dwelt in the same pool. When the pool dried up under
- the summer's heat, they left it and set out together for another
- home. As they went along they chanced to pass a deep well, amply
- supplied with water, and when they saw it, one of the Frogs said
- to the other, "Let us descend and make our abode in this well: it
- will furnish us with shelter and food." The other replied with
- greater caution, "But suppose the water should fail us. How can
- we get out again from so great a depth?'
-
- Do nothing without a regard to the consequences.
-
-
- The Cat and the Mice
-
- A CERTAIN HOUSE was overrun with Mice. A Cat, discovering this,
- made her way into it and began to catch and eat them one by one.
- Fearing for their lives, the Mice kept themselves close in their
- holes. The Cat was no longer able to get at them and perceived
- that she must tempt them forth by some device. For this purpose
- she jumped upon a peg, and suspending herself from it, pretended
- to be dead. One of the Mice, peeping stealthily out, saw her and
- said, "Ah, my good madam, even though you should turn into a
- meal-bag, we will not come near you."
-
-
- The Lion, the Bear, and the Fox
-
- A LION and a Bear seized a Kid at the same moment, and fought
- fiercely for its possession. When they had fearfully lacerated
- each other and were faint from the long combat, they lay down
- exhausted with fatigue. A Fox, who had gone round them at a
- distance several times, saw them both stretched on the ground
- with the Kid lying untouched in the middle. He ran in between
- them, and seizing the Kid scampered off as fast as he could. The
- Lion and the Bear saw him, but not being able to get up, said,
- "Woe be to us, that we should have fought and belabored ourselves
- only to serve the turn of a Fox."
-
- It sometimes happens that one man has all the toil, and another
- all the profit.
-
-
- The Doe and the Lion
-
- A DOE hard pressed by hunters sought refuge in a cave belonging
- to a Lion. The Lion concealed himself on seeing her approach,
- but when she was safe within the cave, sprang upon her and tore
- her to pieces. "Woe is me," exclaimed the Doe, "who have escaped
- from man, only to throw myself into the mouth of a wild beast?'
-
- In avoiding one evil, care must be taken not to fall into
- another.
-
-
- The Farmer and the Fox
-
- A FARMER, who bore a grudge against a Fox for robbing his poultry
- yard, caught him at last, and being determined to take an ample
- revenge, tied some rope well soaked in oil to his tail, and set
- it on fire. The Fox by a strange fatality rushed to the fields
- of the Farmer who had captured him. It was the time of the wheat
- harvest; but the Farmer reaped nothing that year and returned
- home grieving sorely.
-
-
- The Seagull and the Kite
-
- A SEAGULL having bolted down too large a fish, burst its deep
- gullet-bag and lay down on the shore to die. A Kite saw him and
- exclaimed: "You richly deserve your fate; for a bird of the air
- has no business to seek its food from the sea."
-
- Every man should be content to mind his own business.
-
-
- The Philosopher, the Ants, and Mercury
-
- A PHILOSOPHER witnessed from the shore the shipwreck of a vessel,
- of which the crew and passengers were all drowned. He inveighed
- against the injustice of Providence, which would for the sake of
- one criminal perchance sailing in the ship allow so many innocent
- persons to perish. As he was indulging in these reflections, he
- found himself surrounded by a whole army of Ants, near whose nest
- he was standing. One of them climbed up and stung him, and he
- immediately trampled them all to death with his foot. Mercury
- presented himself, and striking the Philosopher with his wand,
- said, "And are you indeed to make yourself a judge of the
- dealings of Providence, who hast thyself in a similar manner
- treated these poor Ants?'
-
-
- The Mouse and the Bull
-
- A BULL was bitten by a Mouse and, angered by the wound, tried to
- capture him. But the Mouse reached his hole in safety. Though
- the Bull dug into the walls with his horns, he tired before he
- could rout out the Mouse, and crouching down, went to sleep
- outside the hole. The Mouse peeped out, crept furtively up his
- flank, and again biting him, retreated to his hole. The Bull
- rising up, and not knowing what to do, was sadly perplexed. At
- which the Mouse said, "The great do not always prevail. There
- are times when the small and lowly are the strongest to do
- mischief."
-
-
- The Lion and the Hare
-
- A LION came across a Hare, who was fast asleep. He was just in
- the act of seizing her, when a fine young Hart trotted by, and he
- left the Hare to follow him. The Hare, scared by the noise,
- awoke and scudded away. The Lion was unable after a long chase
- to catch the Hart, and returned to feed upon the Hare. On
- finding that the Hare also had run off, he said, "I am rightly
- served, for having let go of the food that I had in my hand for
- the chance of obtaining more."
-
-
- The Peasant and the Eagle
-
- A PEASANT found an Eagle captured in a trap, and much admiring
- the bird, set him free. The Eagle did not prove ungrateful to
- his deliverer, for seeing the Peasant sitting under a wall which
- was not safe, he flew toward him and with his talons snatched a
- bundle from his head. When the Peasant rose in pursuit, the
- Eagle let the bundle fall again. Taking it up, the man returned
- to the same place, to find that the wall under which he had been
- sitting had fallen to pieces; and he marveled at the service
- rendered him by the Eagle.
-
-
- The Image of Mercury and the Carpenter
-
- A VERY POOR MAN, a Carpenter by trade, had a wooden image of
- Mercury, before which he made offerings day by day, and begged
- the idol to make him rich, but in spite of his entreaties he
- became poorer and poorer. At last, being very angry, he took his
- image down from its pedestal and dashed it against the wall.
- When its head was knocked off, out came a stream of gold, which
- the Carpenter quickly picked up and said, "Well, I think thou art
- altogether contradictory and unreasonable; for when I paid you
- honor, I reaped no benefits: but now that I maltreat you I am
- loaded with an abundance of riches."
-
-
- The Bull and the Goat
-
- A BULL, escaping from a Lion, hid in a cave which some shepherds
- had recently occupied. As soon as he entered, a He-Goat left in
- the cave sharply attacked him with his horns. The Bull quietly
- addressed him: "Butt away as much as you will. I have no fear of
- you, but of the Lion. Let that monster go away and I will soon
- let you know what is the respective strength of a Goat and a
- Bull."
-
- It shows an evil disposition to take advantage of a friend in
- distress.
-
-
- The Dancing Monkeys
-
- A PRINCE had some Monkeys trained to dance. Being naturally
- great mimics of men's actions, they showed themselves most apt
- pupils, and when arrayed in their rich clothes and masks, they
- danced as well as any of the courtiers. The spectacle was often
- repeated with great applause, till on one occasion a courtier,
- bent on mischief, took from his pocket a handful of nuts and
- threw them upon the stage. The Monkeys at the sight of the nuts
- forgot their dancing and became (as indeed they were) Monkeys
- instead of actors. Pulling off their masks and tearing their
- robes, they fought with one another for the nuts. The dancing
- spectacle thus came to an end amidst the laughter and ridicule of
- the audience.
-
- The Fox and the Leopard
-
- THE FOX and the Leopard disputed which was the more beautiful of
- the two. The Leopard exhibited one by one the various spots
- which decorated his skin. But the Fox, interrupting him, said,
- "And how much more beautiful than you am I, who am decorated, not
- in body, but in mind."
-
-
- The Monkeys and Their Mother
-
- THE MONKEY, it is said, has two young ones at each birth. The
- Mother fondles one and nurtures it with the greatest affection
- and care, but hates and neglects the other. It happened once
- that the young one which was caressed and loved was smothered by
- the too great affection of the Mother, while the despised one was
- nurtured and reared in spite of the neglect to which it was
- exposed.
-
- The best intentions will not always ensure success.
-
-
- The Oaks and Jupiter
-
- THE OAKS presented a complaint to Jupiter, saying, "We bear for
- no purpose the burden of life, as of all the trees that grow we
- are the most continually in peril of the axe." Jupiter made
- answer: "You have only to thank yourselves for the misfortunes to
- which you are exposed: for if you did not make such excellent
- pillars and posts, and prove yourselves so serviceable to the
- carpenters and the farmers, the axe would not so frequently be
- laid to your roots."
-
-
- The Hare and the Hound
-
- A HOUND started a Hare from his lair, but after a long run, gave
- up the chase. A goat-herd seeing him stop, mocked him, saying
- "The little one is the best runner of the two." The Hound
- replied, "You do not see the difference between us: I was only
- running for a dinner, but he for his life."
-
-
- The Traveler and Fortune
-
- A TRAVELER wearied from a long journey lay down, overcome with
- fatigue, on the very brink of a deep well. Just as he was about
- to fall into the water, Dame Fortune, it is said, appeared to him
- and waking him from his slumber thus addressed him: "Good Sir,
- pray wake up: for if you fall into the well, the blame will be
- thrown on me, and I shall get an ill name among mortals; for I
- find that men are sure to impute their calamities to me, however
- much by their own folly they have really brought them on
- themselves."
-
- Everyone is more or less master of his own fate.
-
-
- The Bald Knight
-
- A BALD KNIGHT, who wore a wig, went out to hunt. A sudden puff
- of wind blew off his hat and wig, at which a loud laugh rang
- forth from his companions. He pulled up his horse, and with
- great glee joined in the joke by saying, "What a marvel it is
- that hairs which are not mine should fly from me, when they have
- forsaken even the man on whose head they grew."
-
-
- The Shepherd and the Dog
-
- A SHEPHERD penning his sheep in the fold for the night was about
- to shut up a wolf with them, when his Dog perceiving the wolf
- said, "Master, how can you expect the sheep to be safe if you
- admit a wolf into the fold?'
-
-
- The Lamp
-
- A LAMP, soaked with too much oil and flaring brightly, boasted
- that it gave more light than the sun. Then a sudden puff of wind
- arose, and the Lamp was immediately extinguished. Its owner lit
- it again, and said: "Boast no more, but henceforth be content to
- give thy light in silence. Know that not even the stars need to
- be relit"
-
-
- The Lion, the Fox, and the Ass
-
- THE LION, the Fox and the Ass entered into an agreement to assist
- each other in the chase. Having secured a large booty, the Lion
- on their return from the forest asked the Ass to allot his due
- portion to each of the three partners in the treaty. The Ass
- carefully divided the spoil into three equal shares and modestly
- requested the two others to make the first choice. The Lion,
- bursting out into a great rage, devoured the Ass. Then he
- requested the Fox to do him the favor to make a division. The
- Fox accumulated all that they had killed into one large heap and
- left to himself the smallest possible morsel. The Lion said,
- "Who has taught you, my very excellent fellow, the art of
- division? You are perfect to a fraction." He replied, "I learned
- it from the Ass, by witnessing his fate."
-
- Happy is the man who learns from the misfortunes of others.
-
-
- The Bull, the Lioness, and the Wild-Boar Hunter
-
- A BULL finding a lion's cub asleep gored him to death with his
- horns. The Lioness came up, and bitterly lamented the death of
- her whelp. A wild-boar Hunter, seeing her distress, stood at a
- distance and said to her, "Think how many men there are who have
- reason to lament the loss of their children, whose deaths have
- been caused by you."
-
-
- The Oak and the Woodcutters
-
- THE WOODCUTTER cut down a Mountain Oak and split it in pieces,
- making wedges of its own branches for dividing the trunk. The
- Oak said with a sigh, "I do not care about the blows of the axe
- aimed at my roots, but I do grieve at being torn in pieces by
- these wedges made from my own branches."
-
- Misfortunes springing from ourselves are the hardest to bear.
-
-
- The Hen and the Golden Eggs
-
- A COTTAGER and his wife had a Hen that laid a golden egg every
- day. They supposed that the Hen must contain a great lump of
- gold in its inside, and in order to get the gold they killed it.
- Having done so, they found to their surprise that the Hen
- differed in no respect from their other hens. The foolish pair,
- thus hoping to become rich all at once, deprived themselves of
- the gain of which they were assured day by day.
-
-
- The Ass and the Frogs
-
- AN ASS, carrying a load of wood, passed through a pond. As he
- was crossing through the water he lost his footing, stumbled and
- fell, and not being able to rise on account of his load, groaned
- heavily. Some Frogs frequenting the pool heard his lamentation,
- and said, "What would you do if you had to live here always as we
- do, when you make such a fuss about a mere fall into the water?"
-
-
- Men often bear little grievances with less courage than they do
- large misfortunes.
-
-
- The Crow and the Raven
-
- A CROW was jealous of the Raven, because he was considered a bird
- of good omen and always attracted the attention of men, who noted
- by his flight the good or evil course of future events. Seeing
- some travelers approaching, the Crow flew up into a tree, and
- perching herself on one of the branches, cawed as loudly as she
- could. The travelers turned towards the sound and wondered what
- it foreboded, when one of them said to his companion, "Let us
- proceed on our journey, my friend, for it is only the caw of a
- crow, and her cry, you know, is no omen."
-
- Those who assume a character which does not belong to them, only
- make themselves ridiculous.
-
-
- The Trees and the Axe
-
- A MAN came into a forest and asked the Trees to provide him a
- handle for his axe. The Trees consented to his request and gave
- him a young ash-tree. No sooner had the man fitted a new handle
- to his axe from it, than he began to use it and quickly felled
- with his strokes the noblest giants of the forest. An old oak,
- lamenting when too late the destruction of his companions, said
- to a neighboring cedar, "The first step has lost us all. If we
- had not given up the rights of the ash, we might yet have
- retained our own privileges and have stood for ages."
-
-
- The Crab and the Fox
-
- A CRAB, forsaking the seashore, chose a neighboring green meadow
- as its feeding ground. A Fox came across him, and being very
- hungry ate him up. Just as he was on the point of being eaten,
- the Crab said, "I well deserve my fate, for what business had I
- on the land, when by my nature and habits I am only adapted for
- the sea?'
-
- Contentment with our lot is an element of happiness.
-
-
- The Woman and Her Hen
-
- A WOMAN possessed a Hen that gave her an egg every day. She
- often pondered how she might obtain two eggs daily instead of
- one, and at last, to gain her purpose, determined to give the Hen
- a double allowance of barley. From that day the Hen became fat
- and sleek, and never once laid another egg.
-
-
- The Ass and the Old Shepherd
-
- A SHEPHERD, watching his Ass feeding in a meadow, was alarmed all
- of a sudden by the cries of the enemy. He appealed to the Ass to
- fly with him, lest they should both be captured, but the animal
- lazily replied, "Why should I, pray? Do you think it likely the
- conqueror will place on me two sets of panniers?' "No," rejoined
- the Shepherd. "Then," said the Ass, "as long as I carry the
- panniers, what matters it to me whom I serve?'
-
- In a change of government the poor change nothing beyond the name
- of their master.
-
-
- The Kites and the Swans
-
- TEE KITES of olden times, as well as the Swans, had the privilege
- of song. But having heard the neigh of the horse, they were so
- enchanted with the sound, that they tried to imitate it; and, in
- trying to neigh, they forgot how to sing.
-
- The desire for imaginary benefits often involves the loss of
- present blessings.
-
-
- The Wolves and the Sheepdogs
-
- THE WOLVES thus addressed the Sheepdogs: "Why should you, who are
- like us in so many things, not be entirely of one mind with us,
- and live with us as brothers should? We differ from you in one
- point only. We live in freedom, but you bow down to and slave
- for men, who in return for your services flog you with whips and
- put collars on your necks. They make you also guard their sheep,
- and while they eat the mutton throw only the bones to you. If
- you will be persuaded by us, you will give us the sheep, and we
- will enjoy them in common, till we all are surfeited." The Dogs
- listened favorably to these proposals, and, entering the den of
- the Wolves, they were set upon and torn to pieces.
-
-
- The Hares and the Foxes
-
- THE HARES waged war with the Eagles, and called upon the Foxes to
- help them. They replied, "We would willingly have helped you, if
- we had not known who you were, and with whom you were fighting."
-
- Count the cost before you commit yourselves.
-
-
- The Bowman and Lion
-
- A VERY SKILLFUL BOWMAN went to the mountains in search of game,
- but all the beasts of the forest fled at his approach. The Lion
- alone challenged him to combat. The Bowman immediately shot out
- an arrow and said to the Lion: "I send thee my messenger, that
- from him thou mayest learn what I myself shall be when I assail
- thee." The wounded Lion rushed away in great fear, and when a Fox
- who had seen it all happen told him to be of good courage and not
- to back off at the first attack he replied: "You counsel me in
- vain; for if he sends so fearful a messenger, how shall I abide
- the attack of the man himself?'
-
- Be on guard against men who can strike from a distance.
-
-
- The Camel
-
- WHEN MAN first saw the Camel, he was so frightened at his vast
- size that he ran away. After a time, perceiving the meekness and
- gentleness of the beast's temper, he summoned courage enough to
- approach him. Soon afterwards, observing that he was an animal
- altogether deficient in spirit, he assumed such boldness as to
- put a bridle in his mouth, and to let a child drive him.
-
- Use serves to overcome dread.
-
-
- The Wasp and the Snake
-
- A WASP seated himself upon the head of a Snake and, striking him
- unceasingly with his stings, wounded him to death. The Snake,
- being in great torment and not knowing how to rid himself of his
- enemy, saw a wagon heavily laden with wood, and went and
- purposely placed his head under the wheels, saying, "At least my
- enemy and I shall perish together."
-
-
- The Dog and the Hare
-
- A HOUND having started a Hare on the hillside pursued her for
- some distance, at one time biting her with his teeth as if he
- would take her life, and at another fawning upon her, as if in
- play with another dog. The Hare said to him, "I wish you would
- act sincerely by me, and show yourself in your true colors. If
- you are a friend, why do you bite me so hard? If an enemy, why do
- you fawn on me?'
-
- No one can be a friend if you know not whether to trust or
- distrust him.
-
-
- The Bull and the Calf
-
- A BULL was striving with all his might to squeeze himself through
- a narrow passage which led to his stall. A young Calf came up,
- and offered to go before and show him the way by which he could
- manage to pass. "Save yourself the trouble," said the Bull; "I
- knew that way long before you were born."
-
-
- The Stag, the Wolf, and the Sheep
-
- A STAG asked a Sheep to lend him a measure of wheat, and said
- that the Wolf would be his surety. The Sheep, fearing some fraud
- was intended, excused herself, saying, "The Wolf is accustomed to
- seize what he wants and to run off; and you, too, can quickly
- outstrip me in your rapid flight. How then shall I be able to
- find you, when the day of payment comes?'
-
- Two blacks do not make one white.
-
-
- The Peacock and the Crane
-
- A PEACOCK spreading its gorgeous tail mocked a Crane that passed
- by, ridiculing the ashen hue of its plumage and saying, "I am
- robed, like a king, in gold and purple and all the colors of the
- rainbow; while you have not a bit of color on your wings."
- "True," replied the Crane; "but I soar to the heights of heaven
- and lift up my voice to the stars, while you walk below, like a
- cock, among the birds of the dunghill."
-
- Fine feathers don't make fine birds.
-
-
- The Fox and the Hedgehog
-
- A FOX swimming across a rapid river was carried by the force of
- the current into a very deep ravine, where he lay for a long time
- very much bruised, sick, and unable to move. A swarm of hungry
- blood-sucking flies settled upon him. A Hedgehog, passing by,
- saw his anguish and inquired if he should drive away the flies
- that were tormenting him. "By no means," replied the Fox; "pray
- do not molest them." "How is this?' said the Hedgehog; "do you
- not want to be rid of them?' "No," returned the Fox, "for these
- flies which you see are full of blood, and sting me but little,
- and if you rid me of these which are already satiated, others
- more hungry will come in their place, and will drink up all the
- blood I have left."
-
-
- The Eagle, the Cat, and the Wild Sow
-
- AN EAGLE made her nest at the top of a lofty oak; a Cat, having
- found a convenient hole, moved into the middle of the trunk; and
- a Wild Sow, with her young, took shelter in a hollow at its foot.
- The Cat cunningly resolved to destroy this chance-made colony.
- To carry out her design, she climbed to the nest of the Eagle,
- and said, "Destruction is preparing for you, and for me too,
- unfortunately. The Wild Sow, whom you see daily digging up the
- earth, wishes to uproot the oak, so she may on its fall seize our
- families as food for her young." Having thus frightened the Eagle
- out of her senses, she crept down to the cave of the Sow, and
- said, "Your children are in great danger; for as soon as you go
- out with your litter to find food, the Eagle is prepared to
- pounce upon one of your little pigs." Having instilled these
- fears into the Sow, she went and pretended to hide herself in the
- hollow of the tree. When night came she went forth with silent
- foot and obtained food for herself and her kittens, but feigning
- to be afraid, she kept a lookout all through the day. Meanwhile,
- the Eagle, full of fear of the Sow, sat still on the branches,
- and the Sow, terrified by the Eagle, did not dare to go out from
- her cave. And thus they both, along with their families,
- perished from hunger, and afforded ample provision for the Cat
- and her kittens.
-
-
- The Thief and the Innkeeper
-
- A THIEF hired a room in a tavern and stayed a while in the hope
- of stealing something which should enable him to pay his
- reckoning. When he had waited some days in vain, he saw the
- Innkeeper dressed in a new and handsome coat and sitting before
- his door. The Thief sat down beside him and talked with him. As
- the conversation began to flag, the Thief yawned terribly and at
- the same time howled like a wolf. The Innkeeper said, "Why do
- you howl so fearfully?' "I will tell you," said the Thief, "but
- first let me ask you to hold my clothes, or I shall tear them to
- pieces. I know not, sir, when I got this habit of yawning, nor
- whether these attacks of howling were inflicted on me as a
- judgment for my crimes, or for any other cause; but this I do
- know, that when I yawn for the third time, I actually turn into a
- wolf and attack men." With this speech he commenced a second fit
- of yawning and again howled like a wolf, as he had at first. The
- Innkeeper. hearing his tale and believing what he said, became
- greatly alarmed and, rising from his seat, attempted to run away.
- The Thief laid hold of his coat and entreated him to stop,
- saying, "Pray wait, sir, and hold my clothes, or I shall tear
- them to pieces in my fury, when I turn into a wolf." At the same
- moment he yawned the third time and set up a terrible howl. The
- Innkeeper, frightened lest he should be attacked, left his new
- coat in the Thief's hand and ran as fast as he could into the inn
- for safety. The Thief made off with the coat and did not return
- again to the inn.
-
- Every tale is not to be believed.
-
-
- The Mule
-
- A MULE, frolicsome from lack of work and from too much corn,
- galloped about in a very extravagant manner, and said to himself:
- "My father surely was a high-mettled racer, and I am his own
- child in speed and spirit." On the next day, being driven a long
- journey, and feeling very wearied, he exclaimed in a disconsolate
- tone: "I must have made a mistake; my father, after all, could
- have been only an ass."
-
-
- The Hart and the Vine
-
- A HART, hard pressed in the chase, hid himself beneath the large
- leaves of a Vine. The huntsmen, in their haste, overshot the
- place of his concealment. Supposing all danger to have passed,
- the Hart began to nibble the tendrils of the Vine. One of the
- huntsmen, attracted by the rustling of the leaves, looked back,
- and seeing the Hart, shot an arrow from his bow and struck it.
- The Hart, at the point of death, groaned: "I am rightly served,
- for I should not have maltreated the Vine that saved me."
-
-
- The Serpent and the Eagle
-
- A SERPENT and an Eagle were struggling with each other in deadly
- conflict. The Serpent had the advantage, and was about to
- strangle the bird. A countryman saw them, and running up, loosed
- the coil of the Serpent and let the Eagle go free. The Serpent,
- irritated at the escape of his prey, injected his poison into the
- drinking horn of the countryman. The rustic, ignorant of his
- danger, was about to drink, when the Eagle struck his hand with
- his wing, and, seizing the drinking horn in his talons, carried
- it aloft.
-
-
- The Crow and the Pitcher
-
- A CROW perishing with thirst saw a pitcher, and hoping to find
- water, flew to it with delight. When he reached it, he
- discovered to his grief that it contained so little water that he
- could not possibly get at it. He tried everything he could think
- of to reach the water, but all his efforts were in vain. At last
- he collected as many stones as he could carry and dropped them
- one by one with his beak into the pitcher, until he brought the
- water within his reach and thus saved his life.
-
- Necessity is the mother of invention.
-
-
- The Two Frogs
-
- TWO FROGS were neighbors. One inhabited a deep pond, far removed
- from public view; the other lived in a gully containing little
- water, and traversed by a country road. The Frog that lived in
- the pond warned his friend to change his residence and entreated
- him to come and live with him, saying that he would enjoy greater
- safety from danger and more abundant food. The other refused,
- saying that he felt it so very hard to leave a place to which he
- had become accustomed. A few days afterwards a heavy wagon
- passed through the gully and crushed him to death under its
- wheels.
-
- A willful man will have his way to his own hurt.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Fox
-
- AT ONE TIME a very large and strong Wolf was born among the
- wolves, who exceeded all his fellow-wolves in strength, size, and
- swiftness, so that they unanimously decided to call him "Lion."
- The Wolf, with a lack of sense proportioned to his enormous size,
- thought that they gave him this name in earnest, and, leaving his
- own race, consorted exclusively with the lions. An old sly Fox,
- seeing this, said, "May I never make myself so ridiculous as you
- do in your pride and self-conceit; for even though you have the
- size of a lion among wolves, in a herd of lions you are
- definitely a wolf."
-
-
- The Walnut-Tree
-
- A WALNUT TREE standing by the roadside bore an abundant crop of
- fruit. For the sake of the nuts, the passers-by broke its
- branches with stones and sticks. The Walnut-Tree piteously
- exclaimed, "O wretched me! that those whom I cheer with my fruit
- should repay me with these painful requitals!"
-
-
- The Gnat and the Lion
-
- A GNAT came and said to a Lion, "I do not in the least fear you,
- nor are you stronger than I am. For in what does your strength
- consist? You can scratch with your claws and bite with your teeth
- an a woman in her quarrels. I repeat that I am altogether more
- powerful than you; and if you doubt it, let us fight and see who
- will conquer." The Gnat, having sounded his horn, fastened
- himself upon the Lion and stung him on the nostrils and the parts
- of the face devoid of hair. While trying to crush him, the Lion
- tore himself with his claws, until he punished himself severely.
- The Gnat thus prevailed over the Lion, and, buzzing about in a
- song of triumph, flew away. But shortly afterwards he became
- entangled in the meshes of a cobweb and was eaten by a spider.
- He greatly lamented his fate, saying, "Woe is me! that I, who can
- wage war successfully with the hugest beasts, should perish
- myself from this spider, the most inconsiderable of insects!"
-
-
- The Monkey and the Dolphin
-
- A SAILOR, bound on a long voyage, took with him a Monkey to amuse
- him while on shipboard. As he sailed off the coast of Greece, a
- violent tempest arose in which the ship was wrecked and he, his
- Monkey, and all the crew were obliged to swim for their lives. A
- Dolphin saw the Monkey contending with the waves, and supposing
- him to be a man (whom he is always said to befriend), came and
- placed himself under him, to convey him on his back in safety to
- the shore. When the Dolphin arrived with his burden in sight of
- land not far from Athens, he asked the Monkey if he were an
- Athenian. The latter replied that he was, and that he was
- descended from one of the most noble families in that city. The
- Dolphin then inquired if he knew the Piraeus (the famous harbor
- of Athens). Supposing that a man was meant, the Monkey answered
- that he knew him very well and that he was an intimate friend.
- The Dolphin, indignant at these falsehoods, dipped the Monkey
- under the water and drowned him.
-
-
- The Jackdaw and the Doves
-
- A JACKDAW, seeing some Doves in a cote abundantly provided with
- food, painted himself white and joined them in order to share
- their plentiful maintenance. The Doves, as long as he was
- silent, supposed him to be one of themselves and admitted him to
- their cote. But when one day he forgot himself and began to
- chatter, they discovered his true character and drove him forth,
- pecking him with their beaks. Failing to obtain food among the
- Doves, he returned to the Jackdaws. They too, not recognizing
- him on account of his color. expelled him from living with them.
- So desiring two ends, he obtained neither.
-
-
- The Horse and the Stag
-
- AT ONE TIME the Horse had the plain entirely to himself. Then a
- Stag intruded into his domain and shared his pasture. The Horse,
- desiring to revenge himself on the stranger, asked a man if he
- were willing to help him in punishing the Stag. The man replied
- that if the Horse would receive a bit in his mouth and agree to
- carry him, he would contrive effective weapons against the Stag.
- The Horse consented and allowed the man to mount him. From that
- hour he found that instead of obtaining revenge on the Stag, he
- had enslaved himself to the service of man.
-
-
- The Kid and the Wolf
-
- A KID, returning without protection from the pasture, was pursued
- by a Wolf. Seeing he could not escape, he turned round, and
- said: "I know, friend Wolf, that I must be your prey, but before
- I die I would ask of you one favor you will play me a tune to
- which I may dance." The Wolf complied, and while he was piping
- and the Kid was dancing, some hounds hearing the sound ran up and
- began chasing the Wolf. Turning to the Kid, he said, "It is just
- what I deserve; for I, who am only a butcher, should not have
- turned piper to please you."
-
-
- The Prophet
-
- A WIZARD, sitting in the marketplace, was telling the fortunes of
- the passers-by when a person ran up in great haste, and
- announced to him that the doors of his house had been broken open
- and that all his goods were being stolen. He sighed heavily and
- hastened away as fast as he could run. A neighbor saw him
- running and said, "Oh! you fellow there! you say you can foretell
- the fortunes of others; how is it you did not foresee your own?'
-
-
- The Fox and the Monkey
-
- A FOX and a Monkey were traveling together on the same road. As
- they journeyed, they passed through a cemetery full of monuments.
- "All these monuments which you see," said the Monkey, "are
- erected in honor of my ancestors, who were in their day freedmen
- and citizens of great renown." The Fox replied, "You have chosen
- a most appropriate subject for your falsehoods, as I am sure none
- of your ancestors will be able to contradict you."
-
- A false tale often betrays itself.
-
-
- The Thief and the Housedog
-
- A THIEF came in the night to break into a house. He brought with
- him several slices of meat in order to pacify the Housedog, so
- that he would not alarm his master by barking. As the Thief
- threw him the pieces of meat, the Dog said, "If you think to stop
- my mouth, you will be greatly mistaken. This sudden kindness at
- your hands will only make me more watchful, lest under these
- unexpected favors to myself, you have some private ends to
- accomplish for your own benefit, and for my master's injury."
-
-
- The Man, the Horse, the Ox, and the Dog
-
- A HORSE, Ox, and Dog, driven to great straits by the cold, sought
- shelter and protection from Man. He received them kindly,
- lighted a fire, and warmed them. He let the Horse make free with
- his oats, gave the Ox an abundance of hay, and fed the Dog with
- meat from his own table. Grateful for these favors, the animals
- determined to repay him to the best of their ability. For this
- purpose, they divided the term of his life between them, and each
- endowed one portion of it with the qualities which chiefly
- characterized himself. The Horse chose his earliest years and
- gave them his own attributes: hence every man is in his youth
- impetuous, headstrong, and obstinate in maintaining his own
- opinion. The Ox took under his patronage the next term of life,
- and therefore man in his middle age is fond of work, devoted to
- labor, and resolute to amass wealth and to husband his resources.
- The end of life was reserved for the Dog, wherefore the old man
- is often snappish, irritable, hard to please, and selfish,
- tolerant only of his own household, but averse to strangers and
- to all who do not administer to his comfort or to his
- necessities.
-
-
- The Apes and the Two Travelers
-
- TWO MEN, one who always spoke the truth and the other who told
- nothing but lies, were traveling together and by chance came to
- the land of Apes. One of the Apes, who had raised himself to be
- king, commanded them to be seized and brought before him, that he
- might know what was said of him among men. He ordered at the
- same time that all the Apes be arranged in a long row on his
- right hand and on his left, and that a throne be placed for him,
- as was the custom among men. After these preparations he
- signified that the two men should be brought before him, and
- greeted them with this salutation: "What sort of a king do I seem
- to you to be, O strangers?' The Lying Traveler replied, "You seem
- to me a most mighty king." "And what is your estimate of those
- you see around me?' "These," he made answer, "are worthy
- companions of yourself, fit at least to be ambassadors and
- leaders of armies." The Ape and all his court, gratified with the
- lie, commanded that a handsome present be given to the flatterer.
- On this the truthful Traveler thought to himself, "If so great a
- reward be given for a lie, with what gift may not I be rewarded,
- if, according to my custom, I tell the truth?' The Ape quickly
- turned to him. "And pray how do I and these my friends around me
- seem to you?' "Thou art," he said, "a most excellent Ape, and all
- these thy companions after thy example are excellent Apes too."
- The King of the Apes, enraged at hearing these truths, gave him
- over to the teeth and claws of his companions.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Shepherd
-
- A WOLF followed a flock of sheep for a long time and did not
- attempt to injure one of them. The Shepherd at first stood on
- his guard against him, as against an enemy, and kept a strict
- watch over his movements. But when the Wolf, day after day, kept
- in the company of the sheep and did not make the slightest effort
- to seize them, the Shepherd began to look upon him as a guardian
- of his flock rather than as a plotter of evil against it; and
- when occasion called him one day into the city, he left the sheep
- entirely in his charge. The Wolf, now that he had the
- opportunity, fell upon the sheep, and destroyed the greater part
- of the flock. When the Shepherd returned to find his flock
- destroyed, he exclaimed: "I have been rightly served; why did I
- trust my sheep to a Wolf?'
-
-
- The Hares and the Lions
-
- THE HARES harangued the assembly, and argued that all should be
- equal. The Lions made this reply: "Your words, O Hares! are
- good; but they lack both claws and teeth such as we have."
-
-
- The Lark and Her Young Ones
-
- A LARK had made her nest in the early spring on the young green
- wheat. The brood had almost grown to their full strength and
- attained the use of their wings and the full plumage of their
- feathers, when the owner of the field, looking over his ripe
- crop, said, "The time has come when I must ask all my neighbors
- to help me with my harvest." One of the young Larks heard his
- speech and related it to his mother, inquiring of her to what
- place they should move for safety. "There is no occasion to move
- yet, my son," she replied; "the man who only sends to his friends
- to help him with his harvest is not really in earnest." The owner
- of the field came again a few days later and saw the wheat
- shedding the grain from excess of ripeness. He said, "I will
- come myself tomorrow with my laborers, and with as many reapers
- as I can hire, and will get in the harvest." The Lark on hearing
- these words said to her brood, "It is time now to be off, my
- little ones, for the man is in earnest this time; he no longer
- trusts his friends, but will reap the field himself."
-
- Self-help is the best help.
-
-
- The Fox and the Lion
-
- WHEN A FOX who had never yet seen a Lion, fell in with him by
- chance for the first time in the forest, he was so frightened
- that he nearly died with fear. On meeting him for the second
- time, he was still much alarmed, but not to the same extent as at
- first. On seeing him the third time, he so increased in boldness
- that he went up to him and commenced a familiar conversation with
- him.
-
- Acquaintance softens prejudices.
-
-
- The Weasel and the Mice
-
- A WEASEL, inactive from age and infirmities, was not able to
- catch mice as he once did. He therefore rolled himself in flour
- and lay down in a dark corner. A Mouse, supposing him to be
- food, leaped upon him, and was instantly caught and squeezed to
- death. Another perished in a similar manner, and then a third,
- and still others after them. A very old Mouse, who had escaped
- many a trap and snare, observed from a safe distance the trick of
- his crafty foe and said, "Ah! you that lie there, may you prosper
- just in the same proportion as you are what you pretend to be!"
-
-
- The Boy Bathing
-
- A BOY bathing in a river was in danger of being drowned. He
- called out to a passing traveler for help, but instead of holding
- out a helping hand, the man stood by unconcernedly, and scolded
- the boy for his imprudence. "Oh, sir!" cried the youth, "pray
- help me now and scold me afterwards."
-
- Counsel without help is useless.
-
-
- The Ass and the Wolf
-
- AN ASS feeding in a meadow saw a Wolf approaching to seize him,
- and immediately pretended to be lame. The Wolf, coming up,
- inquired the cause of his lameness. The Ass replied that passing
- through a hedge he had trod with his foot upon a sharp thorn. He
- requested that the Wolf pull it out, lest when he ate him it
- should injure his throat. The Wolf consented and lifted up the
- foot, and was giving his whole mind to the discovery of the
- thorn, when the Ass, with his heels, kicked his teeth into his
- mouth and galloped away. The Wolf, being thus fearfully mauled,
- said, "I am rightly served, for why did I attempt the art of
- healing, when my father only taught me the trade of a butcher?'
-
-
- The Seller of Images
-
- A CERTAIN MAN made a wooden image of Mercury and offered it for
- sale. When no one appeared willing to buy it, in order to
- attract purchasers, he cried out that he had the statue to sell
- of a benefactor who bestowed wealth and helped to heap up riches.
- One of the bystanders said to him, "My good fellow, why do you
- sell him, being such a one as you describe, when you may yourself
- enjoy the good things he has to give?' "Why," he replied, "I am
- in need of immediate help, and he is wont to give his good gifts
- very slowly."
-
-
- The Fox and the Grapes
-
- A FAMISHED FOX saw some clusters of ripe black grapes hanging
- from a trellised vine. She resorted to all her tricks to get at
- them, but wearied herself in vain, for she could not reach them.
- At last she turned away, hiding her disappointment and saying:
- "The Grapes are sour, and not ripe as I thought."
-
-
- The Man and His Wife
-
- A MAN had a Wife who made herself hated by all the members of his
- household. Wishing to find out if she had the same effect on the
- persons in her father's house, he made some excuse to send her
- home on a visit to her father. After a short time she returned,
- and when he inquired how she had got on and how the servants had
- treated her, she replied, "The herdsmen and shepherds cast on me
- looks of aversion." He said, "O Wife, if you were disliked by
- those who go out early in the morning with their flocks and
- return late in the evening, what must have been felt towards you
- by those with whom you passed the whole day!"
-
- Straws show how the wind blows.
-
-
- The Peacock and Juno
-
- THE PEACOCK made complaint to Juno that, while the nightingale
- pleased every ear with his song, he himself no sooner opened his
- mouth than he became a laughingstock to all who heard him. The
- Goddess, to console him, said, "But you far excel in beauty and
- in size. The splendor of the emerald shines in your neck and you
- unfold a tail gorgeous with painted plumage." "But for what
- purpose have I," said the bird, "this dumb beauty so long as I am
- surpassed in song?' "The lot of each," replied Juno, "has been
- assigned by the will of the Fates--to thee, beauty; to the eagle,
- strength; to the nightingale, song; to the raven, favorable,
- and to the crow, unfavorable auguries. These are all contented
- with the endowments allotted to them."
-
-
- The Hawk and the Nightingale
-
- A NIGHTINGALE, sitting aloft upon an oak and singing according to
- his wont, was seen by a Hawk who, being in need of food, swooped
- down and seized him. The Nightingale, about to lose his life,
- earnestly begged the Hawk to let him go, saying that he was not
- big enough to satisfy the hunger of a Hawk who, if he wanted
- food, ought to pursue the larger birds. The Hawk, interrupting
- him, said: "I should indeed have lost my senses if I should let
- go food ready in my hand, for the sake of pursuing birds which
- are not yet even within sight."
-
-
- The Dog, the Cock, and the Fox
-
- A DOG and a Cock being great friends, agreed to travel together.
- At nightfall they took shelter in a thick wood. The Cock flying
- up, perched himself on the branches of a tree, while the Dog
- found a bed beneath in the hollow trunk. When the morning
- dawned, the Cock, as usual, crowed very loudly several times. A
- Fox heard the sound, and wishing to make a breakfast on him, came
- and stood under the branches, saying how earnestly he desired to
- make the acquaintance of the owner of so magnificent a voice.
- The Cock, suspecting his civilities, said: "Sir, I wish you would
- do me the favor of going around to the hollow trunk below me, and
- waking my porter, so that he may open the door and let you in."
- When the Fox approached the tree, the Dog sprang out and caught
- him, and tore him to pieces.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Goat
-
- A WOLF saw a Goat feeding at the summit of a steep precipice,
- where he had no chance of reaching her. He called to her and
- earnestly begged her to come lower down, lest she fall by some
- mishap; and he added that the meadows lay where he was standing,
- and that the herbage was most tender. She replied, "No, my
- friend, it is not for the pasture that you invite me, but for
- yourself, who are in want of food."
-
-
- The Lion and the Bull
-
- A LION, greatly desiring to capture a Bull, and yet afraid to
- attack him on account of his great size, resorted to a trick to
- ensure his destruction. He approached the Bull and said, "I have
- slain a fine sheep, my friend; and if you will come home and
- partake of him with me, I shall be delighted to have your
- company." The Lion said this in the hope that, as the Bull was in
- the act of reclining to eat, he might attack him to advantage,
- and make his meal on him. The Bull, on approaching the Lion's
- den, saw the huge spits and giant caldrons, and no sign whatever
- of the sheep, and, without saying a word, quietly took his
- departure. The Lion inquired why he went off so abruptly without
- a word of salutation to his host, who had not given him any cause
- for offense. "I have reasons enough," said the Bull. "I see no
- indication whatever of your having slaughtered a sheep, while I
- do see very plainly every preparation for your dining on a bull."
-
-
-
- The Goat and the Ass
-
- A MAN once kept a Goat and an Ass. The Goat, envying the Ass on
- account of his greater abundance of food, said, "How shamefully
- you are treated: at one time grinding in the mill, and at another
- carrying heavy burdens"; and he further advised him to pretend to
- be epileptic and fall into a ditch and so obtain rest. The Ass
- listened to his words, and falling into a ditch, was very much
- bruised. His master, sending for a leech, asked his advice. He
- bade him pour upon the wounds the lungs of a Goat. They at once
- killed the Goat, and so healed the Ass.
-
-
- The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse
-
- A COUNTRY MOUSE invited a Town Mouse, an intimate friend, to pay
- him a visit and partake of his country fare. As they were on the
- bare plowlands, eating there wheat-stocks and roots pulled up
- from the hedgerow, the Town Mouse said to his friend, "You live
- here the life of the ants, while in my house is the horn of
- plenty. I am surrounded by every luxury, and if you will come
- with me, as I wish you would, you shall have an ample share of my
- dainties." The Country Mouse was easily persuaded, and returned
- to town with his friend. On his arrival, the Town Mouse placed
- before him bread, barley, beans, dried figs, honey, raisins, and,
- last of all, brought a dainty piece of cheese from a basket. The
- Country Mouse, being much delighted at the sight of such good
- cheer, expressed his satisfaction in warm terms and lamented his
- own hard fate. Just as they were beginning to eat, someone
- opened the door, and they both ran off squeaking, as fast as they
- could, to a hole so narrow that two could only find room in it by
- squeezing. They had scarcely begun their repast again when
- someone else entered to take something out of a cupboard,
- whereupon the two Mice, more frightened than before, ran away and
- hid themselves. At last the Country Mouse, almost famished, said
- to his friend: "Although you have prepared for me so dainty a
- feast, I must leave you to enjoy it by yourself. It is
- surrounded by too many dangers to please me. I prefer my bare
- plowlands and roots from the hedgerow, where I can live in
- safety, and without fear."
-
-
- The Wolf, the Fox, and the Ape
-
- A WOLF accused a Fox of theft, but the Fox entirely denied the
- charge. An Ape undertook to adjudge the matter between them.
- When each had fully stated his case the Ape announced this
- sentence: "I do not think you, Wolf, ever lost what you claim;
- and I do believe you, Fox, to have stolen what you so stoutly
- deny."
-
- The dishonest, if they act honestly, get no credit.
-
-
- The Fly and the Draught-Mule
-
- A FLY sat on the axle-tree of a chariot, and addressing the
- Draught-Mule said, "How slow you are! Why do you not go faster?
- See if I do not prick your neck with my sting." The Draught-Mule
- replied, "I do not heed your threats; I only care for him who
- sits above you, and who quickens my pace with his whip, or holds
- me back with the reins. Away, therefore, with your insolence,
- for I know well when to go fast, and when to go slow."
-
-
- The Fishermen
-
- SOME FISHERMEN were out trawling their nets. Perceiving them to
- be very heavy, they danced about for joy and supposed that they
- had taken a large catch. When they had dragged the nets to the
- shore they found but few fish: the nets were full of sand and
- stones, and the men were beyond measure cast downso much at the
- disappointment which had befallen them, but because they had
- formed such very different expectations. One of their company,
- an old man, said, "Let us cease lamenting, my mates, for, as it
- seems to me, sorrow is always the twin sister of joy; and it was
- only to be looked for that we, who just now were over-rejoiced,
- should next have something to make us sad."
-
-
- The Lion and the Three Bulls
-
- THREE BULLS for a long time pastured together. A Lion lay in
- ambush in the hope of making them his prey, but was afraid to
- attack them while they kept together. Having at last by guileful
- speeches succeeded in separating them, he attacked them without
- fear as they fed alone, and feasted on them one by one at his own
- leisure.
-
- Union is strength.
-
-
- The Fowler and the Viper
-
- A FOWLER, taking his bird-lime and his twigs, went out to catch
- birds. Seeing a thrush sitting upon a tree, he wished to take
- it, and fitting his twigs to a proper length, watched intently,
- having his whole thoughts directed towards the sky. While thus
- looking upwards, he unknowingly trod upon a Viper asleep just
- before his feet. The Viper, turning about, stung him, and
- falling into a swoon, the man said to himself, "Woe is me! that
- while I purposed to hunt another, I am myself fallen unawares
- into the snares of death."
-
-
- The Horse and the Ass
-
- A HORSE, proud of his fine trappings, met an Ass on the highway.
- The Ass, being heavily laden, moved slowly out of the way.
- "Hardly," said the Horse, "can I resist kicking you with my
- heels." The Ass held his peace, and made only a silent appeal to
- the justice of the gods. Not long afterwards the Horse, having
- become broken-winded, was sent by his owner to the farm. The
- Ass, seeing him drawing a dungcart, thus derided him: "Where, O
- boaster, are now all thy gay trappings, thou who are thyself
- reduced to the condition you so lately treated with contempt?'
-
-
- The Fox and the Mask
-
- A FOX entered the house of an actor and, rummaging through all
- his properties, came upon a Mask, an admirable imitation of a
- human head. He placed his paws on it and said, "What a beautiful
- head! Yet it is of no value, as it entirely lacks brains."
-
-
- The Geese and the Cranes
-
- THE GEESE and the Cranes were feeding in the same meadow, when a
- birdcatcher came to ensnare them in his nets. The Cranes, being
- light of wing, fled away at his approach; while the Geese, being
- slower of flight and heavier in their bodies, were captured.
-
-
- The Blind Man and the Whelp
-
- A BLIND MAN was accustomed to distinguishing different animals by
- touching them with his hands. The whelp of a Wolf was brought
- him, with a request that he would feel it, and say what it was.
- He felt it, and being in doubt, said: "I do not quite know
- whether it is the cub of a Fox, or the whelp of a Wolf, but this
- I know full well. It would not be safe to admit him to the
- sheepfold."
-
- Evil tendencies are shown in early life.
-
-
- The Dogs and the Fox
-
- SOME DOGS, finding the skin of a lion, began to tear it in pieces
- with their teeth. A Fox, seeing them, said, "If this lion were
- alive, you would soon find out that his claws were stronger than
- your teeth."
-
- It is easy to kick a man that is down.
-
-
- The Cobbler Turned Doctor
-
- A COBBLER unable to make a living by his trade and made desperate
- by poverty, began to practice medicine in a town in which he was
- not known. He sold a drug, pretending that it was an antidote to
- all poisons, and obtained a great name for himself by long-winded
- puffs and advertisements. When the Cobbler happened to fall sick
- himself of a serious illness, the Governor of the town determined
- to test his skill. For this purpose he called for a cup, and
- while filling it with water, pretended to mix poison with the
- Cobbler's antidote, commanding him to drink it on the promise of
- a reward. The Cobbler, under the fear of death, confessed that
- he had no knowledge of medicine, and was only made famous by the
- stupid clamors of the crowd. The Governor then called a public
- assembly and addressed the citizens: "Of what folly have you been
- guilty? You have not hesitated to entrust your heads to a man,
- whom no one could employ to make even the shoes for their feet."
-
-
- The Wolf and the Horse
-
- A WOLF coming out of a field of oats met a Horse and thus
- addressed him: "I would advise you to go into that field. It is
- full of fine oats, which I have left untouched for you, as you
- are a friend whom I would love to hear enjoying good eating." The
- Horse replied, "If oats had been the food of wolves, you would
- never have indulged your ears at the cost of your belly."
-
- Men of evil reputation, when they perform a good deed, fail to
- get credit for it.
-
-
- The Brother and the Sister
-
- A FATHER had one son and one daughter, the former remarkable for
- his good looks, the latter for her extraordinary ugliness. While
- they were playing one day as children, they happened by chance to
- look together into a mirror that was placed on their mother's
- chair. The boy congratulated himself on his good looks; the girl
- grew angry, and could not bear the self-praises of her Brother,
- interpreting all he said (and how could she do otherwise?) into
- reflection on herself. She ran off to her father. to be avenged
- on her Brother, and spitefully accused him of having, as a boy,
- made use of that which belonged only to girls. The father
- embraced them both, and bestowing his kisses and affection
- impartially on each, said, "I wish you both would look into the
- mirror every day: you, my son, that you may not spoil your beauty
- by evil conduct; and you, my daughter, that you may make up for
- your lack of beauty by your virtues."
-
-
- The Wasps, the Partridges, and the Farmer
-
- THE WASPS and the Partridges, overcome with thirst, came to a
- Farmer and besought him to give them some water to drink. They
- promised amply to repay him the favor which they asked. The
- Partridges declared that they would dig around his vines and make
- them produce finer grapes. The Wasps said that they would keep
- guard and drive off thieves with their stings. But the Farmer
- interrupted them, saying: "I have already two oxen, who, without
- making any promises, do all these things. It is surely better
- for me to give the water to them than to you."
-
-
- The Crow and Mercury
-
- A CROW caught in a snare prayed to Apollo to release him, making
- a vow to offer some frankincense at his shrine. But when rescued
- from his danger, he forgot his promise. Shortly afterwards,
- again caught in a snare, he passed by Apollo and made the same
- promise to offer frankincense to Mercury. Mercury soon appeared
- and said to him, "O thou most base fellow? how can I believe
- thee, who hast disowned and wronged thy former patron?'
-
-
- The North Wind and the Sun
-
- THE NORTH WIND and the Sun disputed as to which was the most
- powerful, and agreed that he should be declared the victor who
- could first strip a wayfaring man of his clothes. The North Wind
- first tried his power and blew with all his might, but the keener
- his blasts, the closer the Traveler wrapped his cloak around him,
- until at last, resigning all hope of victory, the Wind called
- upon the Sun to see what he could do. The Sun suddenly shone out
- with all his warmth. The Traveler no sooner felt his genial rays
- than he took off one garment after another, and at last, fairly
- overcome with heat, undressed and bathed in a stream that lay in
- his path.
-
- Persuasion is better than Force.
-
-
- The Two Men Who Were Enemies
-
- TWO MEN, deadly enemies to each other, were sailing in the same
- vessel. Determined to keep as far apart as possible, the one
- seated himself in the stem, and the other in the prow of the
- ship. A violent storm arose, and with the vessel in great danger
- of sinking, the one in the stern inquired of the pilot which of
- the two ends of the ship would go down first. On his replying
- that he supposed it would be the prow, the Man said, "Death would
- not be grievous to me, if I could only see my Enemy die before
- me."
-
-
- The Gamecocks and the Partridge
-
- A MAN had two Gamecocks in his poultry-yard. One day by chance
- he found a tame Partridge for sale. He purchased it and brought
- it home to be reared with his Gamecocks. When the Partridge was
- put into the poultry-yard, they struck at it and followed it
- about, so that the Partridge became grievously troubled and
- supposed that he was thus evilly treated because he was a
- stranger. Not long afterwards he saw the Cocks fighting together
- and not separating before one had well beaten the other. He then
- said to himself, "I shall no longer distress myself at being
- struck at by these Gamecocks, when I see that they cannot even
- refrain from quarreling with each other."
-
-
- The Quack Frog
-
- A FROG once upon a time came forth from his home in the marsh and
- proclaimed to all the beasts that he was a learned physician,
- skilled in the use of drugs and able to heal all diseases. A Fox
- asked him, "How can you pretend to prescribe for others, when you
- are unable to heal your own lame gait and wrinkled skin?'
-
-
- The Lion, the Wolf, and the Fox
-
- A LION, growing old, lay sick in his cave. All the beasts came
- to visit their king, except the Fox. The Wolf therefore,
- thinking that he had a capital opportunity, accused the Fox to
- the Lion of not paying any respect to him who had the rule over
- them all and of not coming to visit him. At that very moment the
- Fox came in and heard these last words of the Wolf. The Lion
- roaring out in a rage against him, the Fox sought an opportunity
- to defend himself and said, "And who of all those who have come
- to you have benefited you so much as I, who have traveled from
- place to place in every direction, and have sought and learnt
- from the physicians the means of healing you?' The Lion commanded
- him immediately to tell him the cure, when he replied, "You must
- flay a wolf alive and wrap his skin yet warm around you." The
- Wolf was at once taken and flayed; whereon the Fox, turning to
- him, said with a smile, "You should have moved your master not to
- ill, but to good, will."
-
-
- The Dog's House
-
- IN THE WINTERTIME, a Dog curled up in as small a space as
- possible on account of the cold, determined to make himself a
- house. However when the summer returned again, he lay asleep
- stretched at his full length and appeared to himself to be of a
- great size. Now he considered that it would be neither an easy
- nor a necessary work to make himself such a house as would
- accommodate him.
-
-
- The Wolf and the Lion
-
- ROAMING BY the mountainside at sundown, a Wolf saw his own shadow
- become greatly extended and magnified, and he said to himself,
- "Why should I, being of such an immense size and extending nearly
- an acre in length, be afraid of the Lion? Ought I not to be
- acknowledged as King of all the collected beasts?' While he was
- indulging in these proud thoughts, a Lion fell upon him and
- killed him. He exclaimed with a too late repentance, "Wretched
- me! this overestimation of myself is the cause of my
- destruction."
-
-
- The Birds, the Beasts, and the Bat
-
- THE BIRDS waged war with the Beasts, and each were by turns the
- conquerors. A Bat, fearing the uncertain issues of the fight,
- always fought on the side which he felt was the strongest. When
- peace was proclaimed, his deceitful conduct was apparent to both
- combatants. Therefore being condemned by each for his treachery,
- he was driven forth from the light of day, and henceforth
- concealed himself in dark hiding-places, flying always alone and
- at night.
-
-
- The Spendthrift and the Swallow
-
- A YOUNG MAN, a great spendthrift, had run through all his
- patrimony and had but one good cloak left. One day he happened
- to see a Swallow, which had appeared before its season, skimming
- along a pool and twittering gaily. He supposed that summer had
- come, and went and sold his cloak. Not many days later, winter
- set in again with renewed frost and cold. When he found the
- unfortunate Swallow lifeless on the ground, he said, "Unhappy
- bird! what have you done? By thus appearing before the springtime
- you have not only killed yourself, but you have wrought my
- destruction also."
-
-
- The Fox and the Lion
-
- A FOX saw a Lion confined in a cage, and standing near him,
- bitterly reviled him. The Lion said to the Fox, "It is not thou
- who revilest me; but this mischance which has befallen me."
-
-
- The Owl and the Birds
-
- AN OWL, in her wisdom, counseled the Birds that when the acorn
- first began to sprout, to pull it all up out of the ground and
- not allow it to grow. She said acorns would produce mistletoe,
- from which an irremediable poison, the bird-
- lime, would be extracted and by which they would be captured.
- The Owl next advised them to pluck up the seed of the flax, which
- men had sown, as it was a plant which boded no good to them.
- And, lastly, the Owl, seeing an archer approach, predicted that
- this man, being on foot, would contrive darts armed with feathers
- which would fly faster than the wings of the Birds themselves.
- The Birds gave no credence to these warning words, but considered
- the Owl to be beside herself and said that she was mad. But
- afterwards, finding her words were true, they wondered at her
- knowledge and deemed her to be the wisest of birds. Hence it is
- that when she appears they look to her as knowing all things,
- while she no longer gives them advice, but in solitude laments
- their past folly.
-
-
- The Trumpeter Taken Prisoner
-
- A TRUMPETER, bravely leading on the soldiers, was captured by the
- enemy. He cried out to his captors, "Pray spare me, and do not
- take my life without cause or without inquiry. I have not slain
- a single man of your troop. I have no arms, and carry nothing
- but this one brass trumpet." "That is the very reason for which
- you should be put to death," they said; "for, while you do not
- fight yourself, your trumpet stirs all the others to battle."
-
-
- The Ass in the Lion's Skin
-
- AN ASS, having put on the Lion's skin, roamed about in the forest
- and amused himself by frightening all the foolish animals he met
- in his wanderings. At last coming upon a Fox, he tried to
- frighten him also, but the Fox no sooner heard the sound of his
- voice than he exclaimed, "I might possibly have been frightened
- myself, if I had not heard your bray."
-
-
- The Sparrow and the Hare
-
- A HARE pounced upon by an eagle sobbed very much and uttered
- cries like a child. A Sparrow upbraided her and said, "Where now
- is thy remarkable swiftness of foot? Why were your feet so slow?"
- While the Sparrow was thus speaking, a hawk suddenly seized him
- and killed him. The Hare was comforted in her death, and
- expiring said, "Ah! you who so lately, when you supposed yourself
- safe, exulted over my calamity, have now reason to deplore a
- similar misfortune."
-
-
- The Flea and the Ox
-
- A FLEA thus questioned an Ox: "What ails you, that being so huge
- and strong, you submit to the wrongs you receive from men and
- slave for them day by day, while I, being so small a creature,
- mercilessly feed on their flesh and drink their blood without
- stint?' The Ox replied: "I do not wish to be ungrateful, for I am
- loved and well cared for by men, and they often pat my head and
- shoulders." "Woe's me!" said the flea; "this very patting which
- you like, whenever it happens to me, brings with it my inevitable
- destruction."
-
-
- The Goods and the Ills
-
- ALL the Goods were once driven out by the Ills from that common
- share which they each had in the affairs of mankind; for the Ills
- by reason of their numbers had prevailed to possess the earth.
- The Goods wafted themselves to heaven and asked for a righteous
- vengeance on their persecutors. They entreated Jupiter that they
- might no longer be associated with the Ills, as they had nothing
- in common and could not live together, but were engaged in
- unceasing warfare; and that an indissoluble law might be laid
- down for their future protection. Jupiter granted their request
- and decreed that henceforth the Ills should visit the earth in
- company with each other, but that the Goods should one by one
- enter the habitations of men. Hence it arises that Ills abound,
- for they come not one by one, but in troops, and by no means
- singly: while the Goods proceed from Jupiter, and are given, not
- alike to all, but singly, and separately; and one by one to those
- who are able to discern them.
-
-
- The Dove and the Crow
-
- A DOVE shut up in a cage was boasting of the large number of
- young ones which she had hatched. A Crow hearing her, said: "My
- good friend, cease from this unseasonable boasting. The larger
- the number of your family, the greater your cause of sorrow, in
- seeing them shut up in this prison-house."
-
-
- Mercury and the Workmen
-
- A WORKMAN, felling wood by the side of a river, let his axe drop
- - by accident into a deep pool. Being thus deprived of the means
- of his livelihood, he sat down on the bank and lamented his hard
- fate. Mercury appeared and demanded the cause of his tears.
- After he told him his misfortune, Mercury plunged into the
- stream, and, bringing up a golden axe, inquired if that were the
- one he had lost. On his saying that it was not his, Mercury
- disappeared beneath the water a second time, returned with a
- silver axe in his hand, and again asked the Workman if it were
- his. When the Workman said it was not, he dived into the pool
- for the third time and brought up the axe that had been lost.
- The Workman claimed it and expressed his joy at its recovery.
- Mercury, pleased with his honesty, gave him the golden and silver
- axes in addition to his own. The Workman, on his return to his
- house, related to his companions all that had happened. One of
- them at once resolved to try and secure the same good fortune for
- himself. He ran to the river and threw his axe on purpose into
- the pool at the same place, and sat down on the bank to weep.
- Mercury appeared to him just as he hoped he would; and having
- learned the cause of his grief, plunged into the stream and
- brought up a golden axe, inquiring if he had lost it. The
- Workman seized it greedily, and declared that truly it was the
- very same axe that he had lost. Mercury, displeased at his
- knavery, not only took away the golden axe, but refused to
- recover for him the axe he had thrown into the pool.
-
-
- The Eagle and the Jackdaw
-
- AN EAGLE, flying down from his perch on a lofty rock, seized upon
- a lamb and carried him aloft in his talons. A Jackdaw, who
- witnessed the capture of the lamb, was stirred with envy and
- determined to emulate the strength and flight of the Eagle. He
- flew around with a great whir of his wings and settled upon a
- large ram, with the intention of carrying him off, but his claws
- became entangled in the ram's fleece and he was not able to
- release himself, although he fluttered with his feathers as much
- as he could. The shepherd, seeing what had happened, ran up and
- caught him. He at once clipped the Jackdaw's wings, and taking
- him home at night, gave him to his children. On their saying,
- "Father, what kind of bird is it?' he replied, "To my certain
- knowledge he is a Daw; but he would like you to think an Eagle."
-
-
-
- The Fox and the Crane
-
- A FOX invited a Crane to supper and provided nothing for his
- entertainment but some soup made of pulse, which was poured out
- into a broad flat stone dish. The soup fell out of the long bill
- of the Crane at every mouthful, and his vexation at not being
- able to eat afforded the Fox much amusement. The Crane, in his
- turn, asked the Fox to sup with him, and set before her a flagon
- with a long narrow mouth, so that he could easily insert his neck
- and enjoy its contents at his leisure. The Fox, unable even to
- taste it, met with a fitting requital, after the fashion of her
- own hospitality.
-
-
- Jupiter, Neptune, Minerva, and Momus
-
- ACCORDING to an ancient legend, the first man was made by
- Jupiter, the first bull by Neptune, and the first house by
- Minerva. On the completion of their labors, a dispute arose as
- to which had made the most perfect work. They agreed to appoint
- Momus as judge, and to abide by his decision. Momus, however,
- being very envious of the handicraft of each, found fault with
- all. He first blamed the work of Neptune because he had not made
- the horns of the bull below his eyes, so he might better see
- where to strike. He then condemned the work of Jupiter, because
- he had not placed the heart of man on the outside, that everyone
- might read the thoughts of the evil disposed and take precautions
- against the intended mischief. And, lastly, he inveighed against
- Minerva because she had not contrived iron wheels in the
- foundation of her house, so its inhabitants might more easily
- remove if a neighbor proved unpleasant. Jupiter, indignant at
- such inveterate faultfinding, drove him from his office of judge,
- and expelled him from the mansions of Olympus.
-
-
- The Eagle and the Fox
-
- AN EAGLE and a Fox formed an intimate friendship and decided to
- live near each other. The Eagle built her nest in the branches
- of a tall tree, while the Fox crept into the underwood and there
- produced her young. Not long after they had agreed upon this
- plan, the Eagle, being in want of provision for her young ones,
- swooped down while the Fox was out, seized upon one of the little
- cubs, and feasted herself and her brood. The Fox on her return,
- discovered what had happened, but was less grieved for the death
- of her young than for her inability to avenge them. A just
- retribution, however, quickly fell upon the Eagle. While
- hovering near an altar, on which some villagers were sacrificing
- a goat, she suddenly seized a piece of the flesh, and carried it,
- along with a burning cinder, to her nest. A strong breeze soon
- fanned the spark into a flame, and the eaglets, as yet unfledged
- and helpless, were roasted in their nest and dropped down dead at
- the bottom of the tree. There, in the sight of the Eagle, the
- Fox gobbled them up.
-
-
- The Man and the Satyr
-
- A MAN and a Satyr once drank together in token of a bond of
- alliance being formed between them. One very cold wintry day, as
- they talked, the Man put his fingers to his mouth and blew on
- them. When the Satyr asked the reason for this, he told him that
- he did it to warm his hands because they were so cold. Later on
- in the day they sat down to eat, and the food prepared was quite
- scalding. The Man raised one of the dishes a little towards his
- mouth and blew in it. When the Satyr again inquired the reason,
- he said that he did it to cool the meat, which was too hot. "I
- can no longer consider you as a friend," said the Satyr, "a
- fellow who with the same breath blows hot and cold."
-
-
- The Ass and His Purchaser
-
- A MAN wished to purchase an Ass, and agreed with its owner that
- he should try out the animal before he bought him. He took the
- Ass home and put him in the straw-yard with his other Asses, upon
- which the new animal left all the others and at once joined the
- one that was most idle and the greatest eater of them all.
- Seeing this, the man put a halter on him and led him back to his
- owner. On being asked how, in so short a time, he could have
- made a trial of him, he answered, "I do not need a trial; I know
- that he will be just the same as the one he chose for his
- companion."
-
- A man is known by the company he keeps.
-
-
- The Two Bags
-
- EVERY MAN, according to an ancient legend, is born into the world
- with two bags suspended from his neck all bag in front full of
- his neighbors' faults, and a large bag behind filled with his own
- faults. Hence it is that men are quick to see the faults of
- others, and yet are often blind to their own failings.
-
-
- The Stag at the Pool
-
- A STAG overpowered by heat came to a spring to drink. Seeing his
- own shadow reflected in the water, he greatly admired the size
- and variety of his horns, but felt angry with himself for having
- such slender and weak feet. While he was thus contemplating
- himself, a Lion appeared at the pool and crouched to spring upon
- him. The Stag immediately took to flight, and exerting his
- utmost speed, as long as the plain was smooth and open kept
- himself easily at a safe distance from the Lion. But entering a
- wood he became entangled by his horns, and the Lion quickly came
- up to him and caught him. When too late, he thus reproached
- himself: "Woe is me! How I have deceived myself! These feet which
- would have saved me I despised, and I gloried in these antlers
- which have proved my destruction."
-
- What is most truly valuable is often underrated.
-
-
- The Jackdaw and the Fox
-
- A HALF-FAMISHED JACKDAW seated himself on a fig-tree, which had
- produced some fruit entirely out of season, and waited in the
- hope that the figs would ripen. A Fox seeing him sitting so long
- and learning the reason of his doing so, said to him, "You are
- indeed, sir, sadly deceiving yourself; you are indulging a hope
- strong enough to cheat you, but which will never reward you with
- enjoyment."
-
-
- The Lark Burying Her Father
-
- THE LARK (according to an ancient legend) was created before the
- earth itself, and when her father died, as there was no earth,
- she could find no place of burial for him. She let him lie
- uninterred for five days, and on the sixth day, not knowing what
- else to do, she buried him in her own head. Hence she obtained
- her crest, which is popularly said to be her father's
- grave-hillock.
-
- Youth's first duty is reverence to parents.
-
-
- The Gnat and the Bull
-
- A GNAT settled on the horn of a Bull, and sat there a long time.
- Just as he was about to fly off, he made a buzzing noise, and
- inquired of the Bull if he would like him to go. The Bull
- replied, "I did not know you had come, and I shall not miss you
- when you go away."
-
- Some men are of more consequence in their own eyes than in the
- eyes of their neighbors.
-
-
- The Bitch and Her Whelps
-
- A BITCH, ready to whelp, earnestly begged a shepherd for a place
- where she might litter. When her request was granted, she
- besought permission to rear her puppies in the same spot. The
- shepherd again consented. But at last the Bitch, protected by
- the bodyguard of her Whelps, who had now grown up and were able
- to defend themselves, asserted her exclusive right to the place
- and would not permit the shepherd to approach.
-
-
- The Dogs and the Hides
-
- SOME DOGS famished with hunger saw a number of cowhides steeping
- in a river. Not being able to reach them, they agreed to drink
- up the river, but it happened that they burst themselves with
- drinking long before they reached the hides.
-
- Attempt not impossibilities.
-
-
- The Shepherd and the Sheep
-
- A SHEPHERD driving his Sheep to a wood, saw an oak of unusual
- size full of acorns, and spreading his cloak under the branches,
- he climbed up into the tree and shook them down. The Sheep
- eating the acorns inadvertently frayed and tore the cloak. When
- the Shepherd came down and saw what was done, he said, "O you
- most ungrateful creatures! You provide wool to make garments for
- all other men, but you destroy the clothes of him who feeds you."
-
-
-
- The Grasshopper and the Owl
-
- AN OWL, accustomed to feed at night and to sleep during the day,
- was greatly disturbed by the noise of a Grasshopper and earnestly
- besought her to stop chirping. The Grasshopper refused to
- desist, and chirped louder and louder the more the Owl entreated.
- When she saw that she could get no redress and that her words
- were despised, the Owl attacked the chatterer by a stratagem.
- "Since I cannot sleep," she said, "on account of your song which,
- believe me, is sweet as the lyre of Apollo, I shall indulge
- myself in drinking some nectar which Pallas lately gave me. If
- you do not dislike it, come to me and we will drink it together."
- The Grasshopper, who was thirsty, and pleased with the praise of
- her voice, eagerly flew up. The Owl came forth from her hollow,
- seized her, and put her to death.
-
-
- The Monkey and the Camel
-
- THE BEASTS of the forest gave a splendid entertainment at which
- the Monkey stood up and danced. Having vastly delighted the
- assembly, he sat down amidst universal applause. The Camel,
- envious of the praises bestowed on the Monkey and desiring to
- divert to himself the favor of the guests, proposed to stand up
- in his turn and dance for their amusement. He moved about in so
- utterly ridiculous a manner that the Beasts, in a fit of
- indignation, set upon him with clubs and drove him out of the
- assembly.
-
- It is absurd to ape our betters.
-
-
- The Peasant and the Apple-Tree
-
- A PEASANT had in his garden an Apple-Tree which bore no fruit but
- only served as a harbor for the sparrows and grasshoppers. He
- resolved to cut it down, and taking his axe in his hand, made a
- bold stroke at its roots. The grasshoppers and sparrows
- entreated him not to cut down the tree that sheltered them, but
- to spare it, and they would sing to him and lighten his labors.
- He paid no attention to their request, but gave the tree a second
- and a third blow with his axe. When he reached the hollow of the
- tree, he found a hive full of honey. Having tasted the
- honeycomb, he threw down his axe, and looking on the tree as
- sacred, took great care of it.
-
- Self-interest alone moves some men.
-
-
- The Two Soldiers and the Robber
-
- TWO SOLDIERS traveling together were set upon by a Robber. The
- one fled away; the other stood his ground and defended himself
- with his stout right hand. The Robber being slain, the timid
- companion ran up and drew his sword, and then, throwing back his
- traveling cloak said, "I'll at him, and I'll take care he shall
- learn whom he has attacked." On this, he who had fought with the
- Robber made answer, "I only wish that you had helped me just now,
- even if it had been only with those words, for I should have been
- the more encouraged, believing them to be true; but now put up
- your sword in its sheath and hold your equally useless tongue,
- till you can deceive others who do not know you. I, indeed, who
- have experienced with what speed you run away, know right well
- that no dependence can be placed on your valor."
-
-
- The Trees Under the Protection of the Gods
-
- THE GODS, according to an ancient legend, made choice of certain
- trees to be under their special protection. Jupiter chose the
- oak, Venus the myrtle, Apollo the laurel, Cybele the pine, and
- Hercules the poplar. Minerva, wondering why they had preferred
- trees not yielding fruit, inquired the reason for their choice.
- Jupiter replied, "It is lest we should seem to covet the honor
- for the fruit." But said Minerva, "Let anyone say what he will
- the olive is more dear to me on account of its fruit." Then said
- Jupiter, "My daughter, you are rightly called wise; for unless
- what we do is useful, the glory of it is vain."
-
-
- The Mother and the Wolf
-
- A FAMISHED WOLF was prowling about in the morning in search of
- food. As he passed the door of a cottage built in the forest, he
- heard a Mother say to her child, "Be quiet, or I will throw you
- out of the window, and the Wolf shall eat you." The Wolf sat all
- day waiting at the door. In the evening he heard the same woman
- fondling her child and saying: "You are quiet now, and if the
- Wolf should come, we will kill him." The Wolf, hearing these
- words, went home, gasping with cold and hunger. When he reached
- his den, Mistress Wolf inquired of him why he returned wearied
- and supperless, so contrary to his wont. He replied: "Why,
- forsooth!
- use I gave credence to the words of a woman!"
-
-
- The Ass and the Horse
-
- AN ASS besought a Horse to spare him a small portion of his feed.
- "Yes," said the Horse; "if any remains out of what I am now
- eating I will give it you for the sake of my own superior
- dignity, and if you will come when I reach my own stall in the
- evening, I will give you a little sack full of barley." The Ass
- replied, "Thank you. But I can't think that you, who refuse me a
- little matter now. will by and by confer on me a greater
- benefit."
-
-
- Truth and the Traveler
-
- A WAYFARING MAN, traveling in the desert, met a woman standing
- alone and terribly dejected. He inquired of her, "Who art thou?"
- "My name is Truth," she replied. "And for what cause," he asked,
- "have you left the city to dwell alone here in the wilderness?"
- She made answer, "Because in former times, falsehood was with
- few, but is now with all men."
-
- The Manslayer
-
- A MAN committed a murder, and was pursued by the relations of the
- man whom he murdered. On his reaching the river Nile he saw a
- Lion on its bank and being fearfully afraid, climbed up a tree.
- He found a serpent in the upper branches of the tree, and again
- being greatly alarmed, he threw himself into the river, where a
- crocodile caught him and ate him. Thus the earth, the air, and
- the water alike refused shelter to a murderer.
-
- The Lion and the Fox
-
- A FOX entered into partnership with a Lion on the pretense of
- becoming his servant. Each undertook his proper duty in
- accordance with his own nature and powers. The Fox discovered
- and pointed out the prey; the Lion sprang on it and seized it.
- The Fox soon became jealous of the Lion carrying off the Lion's
- share, and said that he would no longer find out the prey, but
- would capture it on his own account. The next day he attempted
- to snatch a lamb from the fold, but he himself fell prey to the
- huntsmen and hounds.
-
- The Lion and the Eagle
-
- AN EAGLE stayed his flight and entreated a Lion to make an
- alliance with him to their mutual advantage. The Lion replied,
- "I have no objection, but you must excuse me for requiring you to
- find surety for your good faith, for how can I trust anyone as a
- friend who is able to fly away from his bargain whenever he
- pleases?'
-
- Try before you trust.
-
- The Hen and the Swallow
-
- A HEN finding the eggs of a viper and carefully keeping them
- warm, nourished them into life. A Swallow, observing what she
- had done, said, "You silly creature! why have you hatched these
- vipers which, when they shall have grown, will inflict injury on
- all, beginning with yourself?'
-
- The Buffoon and the Countryman
-
- A RICH NOBLEMAN once opened the theaters without charge to the
- people, and gave a public notice that he would handsomely reward
- any person who invented a new amusement for the occasion.
- Various public performers contended for the prize. Among them
- came a Buffoon well known among the populace for his jokes, and
- said that he had a kind of entertainment which had never been
- brought out on any stage before. This report being spread about
- made a great stir, and the theater was crowded in every part.
- The Buffoon appeared alone upon the platform, without any
- apparatus or confederates, and the very sense of expectation
- caused an intense silence. He suddenly bent his head towards his
- bosom and imitated the squeaking of a little pig so admirably
- with his voice that the audience declared he had a porker under
- his cloak, and demanded that it should be shaken out. When that
- was done and nothing was found, they cheered the actor, and
- loaded him with the loudest applause. A Countryman in the crowd,
- observing all that has passed, said, "So help me, Hercules, he
- shall not beat me at that trick!" and at once proclaimed that he
- would do the same thing on the next day, though in a much more
- natural way. On the morrow a still larger crowd assembled in the
- theater, but now partiality for their favorite actor very
- generally prevailed, and the audience came rather to ridicule the
- Countryman than to see the spectacle. Both of the performers
- appeared on the stage. The Buffoon grunted and squeaked away
- first, and obtained, as on the preceding day, the applause and
- cheers of the spectators. Next the Countryman commenced, and
- pretending that he concealed a little pig beneath his clothes
- (which in truth he did, but not suspected by the audience )
- contrived to take hold of and to pull his ear causing the pig to
- squeak. The Crowd, however, cried out with one consent that the
- Buffoon had given a far more exact imitation, and clamored for
- the Countryman to be kicked out of the theater. On this the
- rustic produced the little pig from his cloak and showed by the
- most positive proof the greatness of their mistake. "Look here,"
- he said, "this shows what sort of judges you are."
-
- The Crow and the Serpent
-
- A CROW in great want of food saw a Serpent asleep in a sunny
- nook, and flying down, greedily seized him. The Serpent, turning
- about, bit the Crow with a mortal wound. In the agony of death,
- the bird exclaimed: "O unhappy me! who have found in that which I
- deemed a happy windfall the source of my destruction."
-
- The Hunter and the Horseman
-
- A CERTAIN HUNTER, having snared a hare, placed it upon his
- shoulders and set out homewards. On his way he met a man on
- horseback who begged the hare of him, under the pretense of
- purchasing it. However, when the Horseman got the hare, he rode
- off as fast as he could. The Hunter ran after him, as if he was
- sure of overtaking him, but the Horseman increased more and more
- the distance between them. The Hunter, sorely against his will,
- called out to him and said, "Get along with you! for I will now
- make you a present of the hare."
-
- The King's Son and the Painted Lion
-
- A KING, whose only son was fond of martial exercises, had a dream
- in which he was warned that his son would be killed by a lion.
- Afraid the dream should prove true, he built for his son a
- pleasant palace and adorned its walls for his amusement with all
- kinds of life-sized animals, among which was the picture of a
- lion. When the young Prince saw this, his grief at being thus
- confined burst out afresh, and, standing near the lion, he said:
- "O you most detestable of animals! through a lying dream of my
- father's, which he saw in his sleep, I am shut up on your account
- in this palace as if I had been a girl: what shall I now do to
- you?' With these words he stretched out his hands toward a
- thorn-tree, meaning to cut a stick from its branches so that he
- might beat the lion. But one of the tree's prickles pierced his
- finger and caused great pain and inflammation, so that the young
- Prince fell down in a fainting fit. A violent fever suddenly set
- in, from which he died not many days later.
-
- We had better bear our troubles bravely than try to escape them.
-
-
- The Cat and Venus
-
- A CAT fell in love with a handsome young man, and entreated Venus
- to change her into the form of a woman. Venus consented to her
- request and transformed her into a beautiful damsel, so that the
- youth saw her and loved her, and took her home as his bride.
- While the two were reclining in their chamber, Venus wishing to
- discover if the Cat in her change of shape had also altered her
- habits of life, let down a mouse in the middle of the room. The
- Cat, quite forgetting her present condition, started up from the
- couch and pursued the mouse, wishing to eat it. Venus was much
- disappointed and again caused her to return to her former shape.
-
-
- Nature exceeds nurture.
-
-
- The She-Goats and Their Beards
-
- THE SHE-GOATS having obtained a beard by request to Jupiter, the
- He-Goats were sorely displeased and made complaint that the
- females equaled them in dignity. "Allow them," said Jupiter, "to
- enjoy an empty honor and to assume the badge of your nobler sex,
- so long as they are not your equals in strength or courage."
-
- It matters little if those who are inferior to us in merit should
- be like us in outside appearances.
-
- The Camel and the Arab
-
- AN ARAB CAMEL-DRIVER, after completing the loading of his Camel,
- asked him which he would like best, to go up hill or down. The
- poor beast replied, not without a touch of reason: "Why do you
- ask me? Is it that the level way through the desert is closed?"
-
-
- The Miller, His Son, and Their Ass
-
- A MILLER and his son were driving their Ass to a neighboring fair
- to sell him. They had not gone far when they met with a troop of
- women collected round a well, talking and laughing. "Look
- there," cried one of them, "did you ever see such fellows, to be
- trudging along the road on foot when they might ride?' The old
- man hearing this, quickly made his son mount the Ass, and
- continued to walk along merrily by his side. Presently they came
- up to a group of old men in earnest debate. "There," said one of
- them, "it proves what I was a-saying. What respect is shown to
- old age in these days? Do you see that idle lad riding while his
- old father has to walk? Get down, you young scapegrace, and let
- the old man rest his weary limbs." Upon this the old man made his
- son dismount, and got up himself. In this manner they had not
- proceeded far when they met a company of women and children:
- "Why, you lazy old fellow," cried several tongues at once, "how
- can you ride upon the beast, while that poor little lad there can
- hardly keep pace by the side of you?' The good-natured Miller
- immediately took up his son behind him. They had now almost
- reached the town. "Pray, honest friend," said a citizen, "is
- that Ass your own?' "Yes," replied the old man. "O, one would
- not have thought so," said the other, "by the way you load him.
- Why, you two fellows are better able to carry the poor beast than
- he you." "Anything to please you," said the old man; "we can but
- try." So, alighting with his son, they tied the legs of the Ass
- together and with the help of a pole endeavored to carry him on
- their shoulders over a bridge near the entrance to the town.
- This entertaining sight brought the people in crowds to laugh at
- it, till the Ass, not liking the noise nor the strange handling
- that he was subject to, broke the cords that bound him and,
- tumbling off the pole, fell into the river. Upon this, the old
- man, vexed and ashamed, made the best of his way home again,
- convinced that by endeavoring to please everybody he had pleased
- nobody, and lost his Ass in the bargain.
-
- The Crow and the Sheep
-
- A TROUBLESOME CROW seated herself on the back of a Sheep. The
- Sheep, much against his will, carried her backward and forward
- for a long time, and at last said, "If you had treated a dog in
- this way, you would have had your deserts from his sharp teeth."
- To this the Crow replied, "I despise the weak and yield to the
- strong. I know whom I may bully and whom I must flatter; and I
- thus prolong my life to a good old age."
-
- The Fox and the Bramble
-
- A FOX was mounting a hedge when he lost his footing and caught
- hold of a Bramble to save himself. Having pricked and grievously
- tom the soles of his feet, he accused the Bramble because, when
- he had fled to her for assistance, she had used him worse than
- the hedge itself. The Bramble, interrupting him, said, "But you
- really must have been out of your senses to fasten yourself on
- me, who am myself always accustomed to fasten upon others."
-
- The Wolf and the Lion
-
- A WOLF, having stolen a lamb from a fold, was carrying him off to
- his lair. A Lion met him in the path, and seizing the lamb, took
- it from him. Standing at a safe distance, the Wolf exclaimed,
- "You have unrighteously taken that which was mine from me!" To
- which the Lion jeeringly replied, "It was righteously yours, eh?
- The gift of a friend?'
-
- The Dog and the Oyster
-
- A DOG, used to eating eggs, saw an Oyster and, opening his mouth
- to its widest extent, swallowed it down with the utmost relish,
- supposing it to be an egg. Soon afterwards suffering great pain
- in his stomach, he said, "I deserve all this torment, for my
- folly in thinking that everything round must be an egg."
-
- They who act without sufficient thought, will often fall into
- unsuspected danger.
-
- The Ant and the Dove
-
- AN ANT went to the bank of a river to quench its thirst, and
- being carried away by the rush of the stream, was on the point of
- drowning. A Dove sitting on a tree overhanging the water plucked
- a leaf and let it fall into the stream close to her. The Ant
- climbed onto it and floated in safety to the bank. Shortly
- afterwards a birdcatcher came and stood under the tree, and laid
- his lime-twigs for the Dove, which sat in the branches. The Ant,
- perceiving his design, stung him in the foot. In pain the
- birdcatcher threw down the twigs, and the noise made the Dove
- take wing.
-
- The Partridge and the Fowler
-
- A FOWLER caught a Partridge and was about to kill it. The
- Partridge earnestly begged him to spare his life, saying, "Pray,
- master, permit me to live and I will entice many Partridges to
- you in recompense for your mercy to me." The Fowler replied, "I
- shall now with less scruple take your life, because you are
- willing to save it at the cost of betraying your friends and
- relations."
-
- The Flea and the Man
-
- A MAN, very much annoyed with a Flea, caught him at last, and
- said, "Who are you who dare to feed on my limbs, and to cost me
- so much trouble in catching you?' The Flea replied, "O my dear
- sir, pray spare my life, and destroy me not, for I cannot
- possibly do you much harm." The Man, laughing, replied, "Now you
- shall certainly die by mine own hands, for no evil, whether it be
- small or large, ought to be tolerated."
-
- The Thieves and the Cock
-
- SOME THIEVES broke into a house and found nothing but a Cock,
- whom they stole, and got off as fast as they could. Upon
- arriving at home they prepared to kill the Cock, who thus pleaded
- for his life: "Pray spare me; I am very serviceable to men. I
- wake them up in the night to their work." "That is the very
- reason why we must the more kill you," they replied; "for when
- you wake your neighbors, you entirely put an end to our
- business."
-
- The safeguards of virtue are hateful to those with evil
- intentions.
-
- The Dog and the Cook
-
- A RICH MAN gave a great feast, to which he invited many friends
- and acquaintances. His Dog availed himself of the occasion to
- invite a stranger Dog, a friend of his, saying, "My master gives
- a feast, and there is always much food remaining; come and sup
- with me tonight." The Dog thus invited went at the hour
- appointed, and seeing the preparations for so grand an
- entertainment, said in the joy of his heart, "How glad I am that
- I came! I do not often get such a chance as this. I will take
- care and eat enough to last me both today and tomorrow." While he
- was congratulating himself and wagging his tail to convey his
- pleasure to his friend, the Cook saw him moving about among his
- dishes and, seizing him by his fore and hind paws, bundled him
- without ceremony out of the window. He fell with force upon the
- ground and limped away, howling dreadfully. His yelling soon
- attracted other street dogs, who came up to him and inquired how
- he had enjoyed his supper. He replied, "Why, to tell you the
- truth, I drank so much wine that I remember nothing. I do not
- know how I got out of the house."
-
- The Travelers and the Plane-Tree
-
- TWO TRAVELERS, worn out by the heat of the summer's sun, laid
- themselves down at noon under the widespreading branches of a
- Plane-Tree. As they rested under its shade, one of the Travelers
- said to the other, "What a singularly useless tree is the Plane!
- It bears no fruit, and is not of the least service to man." The
- Plane-Tree, interrupting him, said, "You ungrateful fellows! Do
- you, while receiving benefits from me and resting under my shade,
- dare to describe me as useless, and unprofitable?'
-
- Some men underrate their best blessings.
-
-
- The Hares and the Frogs
-
- THE HARES, oppressed by their own exceeding timidity and weary of
- the perpetual alarm to which they were exposed, with one accord
- determined to put an end to themselves and their troubles by
- jumping from a lofty precipice into a deep lake below. As they
- scampered off in large numbers to carry out their resolve, the
- Frogs lying on the banks of the lake heard the noise of their
- feet and rushed helter-skelter to the deep water for safety. On
- seeing the rapid disappearance of the Frogs, one of the Hares
- cried out to his companions: "Stay, my friends, do not do as you
- intended; for you now see that there are creatures who are still
- more timid than ourselves."
-
-
- The Lion, Jupiter, and the Elephant
-
- THE LION wearied Jupiter with his frequent complaints. "It is
- true, O Jupiter!" he said, "that I am gigantic in strength,
- handsome in shape, and powerful in attack. I have jaws well
- provided with teeth, and feet furnished with claws, and I lord it
- over all the beasts of the forest, and what a disgrace it is,
- that being such as I am, I should be frightened by the crowing of
- a cock." Jupiter replied, "Why do you blame me without a cause? I
- have given you all the attributes which I possess myself, and
- your courage never fails you except in this one instance." On
- hearing this the Lion groaned and lamented very much and,
- reproaching himself with his cowardice, wished that he might die.
- As these thoughts passed through his mind, he met an Elephant and
- came close to hold a conversation with him. After a time he
- observed that the Elephant shook his ears very often, and he
- inquired what was the matter and why his ears moved with such a
- tremor every now and then. Just at that moment a Gnat settled on
- the head of the Elephant, and he replied, "Do you see that little
- buzzing insect? If it enters my ear, my fate is sealed. I should
- die presently." The Lion said, "Well, since so huge a beast is
- afraid of a tiny gnat, I will no more complain, nor wish myself
- dead. I find myself, even as I am, better off than the
- Elephant."
-
- The Lamb and the Wolf
-
- A WOLF pursued a Lamb, which fled for refuge to a certain Temple.
- The Wolf called out to him and said, "The Priest will slay you in
- sacrifice, if he should catch you." On which the Lamb replied,
- "It would be better for me to be sacrificed in the Temple than to
- be eaten by you."
-
-
- The Rich Man and the Tanner
-
- A RICH MAN lived near a Tanner, and not being able to bear the
- unpleasant smell of the tan-yard, he pressed his neighbor to go
- away. The Tanner put off his departure from time to time, saying
- that he would leave soon. But as he still continued to stay, as
- time went on, the rich man became accustomed to the smell, and
- feeling no manner of inconvenience, made no further complaints.
-
-
- The Shipwrecked Man and the Sea
-
- A SHIPWRECKED MAN, having been cast upon a certain shore, slept
- after his buffetings with the deep. After a while he awoke, and
- looking upon the Sea, loaded it with reproaches. He argued that
- it enticed men with the calmness of its looks, but when it had
- induced them to plow its waters, it grew rough and destroyed
- them. The Sea, assuming the form of a woman, replied to him:
- "Blame not me, my good sir, but the winds, for I am by my own
- nature as calm and firm even as this earth; but the winds
- suddenly falling on me create these waves, and lash me into
- fury."
-
-
- The Mules and the Robbers
-
- TWO MULES well-laden with packs were trudging along. One carried
- panniers filled with money, the other sacks weighted with grain.
- The Mule carrying the treasure walked with head erect, as if
- conscious of the value of his burden, and tossed up and down the
- clear-toned bells fastened to his neck. His companion followed
- with quiet and easy step. All of a sudden Robbers rushed upon
- them from their hiding-places, and in the scuffle with their
- owners, wounded with a sword the Mule carrying the treasure,
- which they greedily seized while taking no notice of the grain.
- The Mule which had been robbed and wounded bewailed his
- misfortunes. The other replied, "I am indeed glad that I was
- thought so little of, for I have lost nothing, nor am I hurt with
- any wound."
-
-
- The Viper and the File
-
- A LION, entering the workshop of a smith, sought from the tools
- the means of satisfying his hunger. He more particularly
- addressed himself to a File, and asked of him the favor of a
- meal. The File replied, "You must indeed be a simple-minded
- fellow if you expect to get anything from me, who am accustomed
- to take from everyone, and never to give anything in return."
-
-
- The Lion and the Shepherd
-
- A LION, roaming through a forest, trod upon a thorn. Soon
- afterward he came up to a Shepherd and fawned upon him, wagging
- his tail as if to say, "I am a suppliant, and seek your aid." The
- Shepherd boldly examined the beast, discovered the thorn, and
- placing his paw upon his lap, pulled it out; thus relieved of his
- pain, the Lion returned into the forest. Some time after, the
- Shepherd, being imprisoned on a false accusation, was condemned
- "to be cast to the Lions" as the punishment for his imputed
- crime. But when the Lion was released from his cage, he
- recognized the Shepherd as the man who healed him, and instead of
- attacking him, approached and placed his foot upon his lap. The
- King, as soon as he heard the tale, ordered the Lion to be set
- free again in the forest, and the Shepherd to be pardoned and
- restored to his friends.
-
-
- The Camel and Jupiter
-
- THE CAMEL, when he saw the Bull adorned with horns, envied him
- and wished that he himself could obtain the same honors. He went
- to Jupiter, and besought him to give him horns. Jupiter, vexed
- at his request because he was not satisfied with his size and
- strength of body, and desired yet more, not only refused to give
- him horns, but even deprived him of a portion of his ears.
-
-
- The Panther and the Shepherds
-
- A PANTHER, by some mischance, fell into a pit. The Shepherds
- discovered him, and some threw sticks at him and pelted him with
- stones, while others, moved with compassion towards one about to
- die even though no one should hurt him, threw in some food to
- prolong his life. At night they returned home, not dreaming of
- any danger, but supposing that on the morrow they would find him
- dead. The Panther, however, when he had recruited his feeble
- strength, freed himself with a sudden bound from the pit, and
- hastened to his den with rapid steps. After a few days he came
- forth and slaughtered the cattle, and, killing the Shepherds who
- had attacked him, raged with angry fury. Then they who had
- spared his life, fearing for their safety, surrendered to him
- their flocks and begged only for their lives. To them the
- Panther made this reply: "I remember alike those who sought my
- life with stones, and those who gave me food
- aside, therefore, your fears. I return as an enemy only to those
- who injured me."
-
-
- The Ass and the Charger
-
- AN ASS congratulated a Horse on being so ungrudgingly and
- carefully provided for, while he himself had scarcely enough to
- eat and not even that without hard work. But when war broke out,
- a heavily armed soldier mounted the Horse, and riding him to the
- charge, rushed into the very midst of the enemy. The Horse was
- wounded and fell dead on the battlefield. Then the Ass, seeing
- all these things, changed his mind, and commiserated the Horse.
-
-
- The Eagle and His Captor
-
- AN EAGLE was once captured by a man, who immediately clipped his
- wings and put him into his poultry-yard with the other birds, at
- which treatment the Eagle was weighed down with grief. Later,
- another neighbor purchased him and allowed his feathers to grow
- again. The Eagle took flight, and pouncing upon a hare, brought
- it at once as an offering to his benefactor. A Fox, seeing this,
- exclaimed, "Do not cultivate the favor of this man, but of your
- former owner, lest he should again hunt for you and deprive you a
- second time of your wings."
-
-
- The Bald Man and the Fly
-
- A FLY bit the bare head of a Bald Man who, endeavoring to destroy
- it, gave himself a heavy slap. Escaping, the Fly said mockingly,
- "You who have wished to revenge, even with death, the Prick of a
- tiny insect, see what you have done to yourself to add insult to
- injury?' The Bald Man replied, "I can easily make peace with
- myself, because I know there was no intention to hurt. But you,
- an ill-favored and contemptible insect who delights in sucking
- human blood, I wish that I could have killed you even if I had
- incurred a heavier penalty."
-
-
- The Olive-Tree and the Fig-Tree
-
- THE OLIVE-TREE ridiculed the Fig-Tree because, while she was
- green all the year round, the Fig-Tree changed its leaves with
- the seasons. A shower of snow fell upon them, and, finding the
- Olive full of foliage, it settled upon its branches and broke
- them down with its weight, at once despoiling it of its beauty
- and killing the tree. But finding the Fig-Tree denuded of
- leaves, the snow fell through to the ground, and did not injure
- it at all.
-
-
- The Eagle and the Kite
-
- AN EAGLE, overwhelmed with sorrow, sat upon the branches of a
- tree in company with a Kite. "Why," said the Kite, "do I see you
- with such a rueful look?' "I seek," she replied, "a mate suitable
- for me, and am not able to find one." "Take me," returned the
- Kite, "I am much stronger than you are." "Why, are you able to
- secure the means of living by your plunder?' "Well, I have often
- caught and carried away an ostrich in my talons." The Eagle,
- persuaded by these words, accepted him as her mate. Shortly
- after the nuptials, the Eagle said, "Fly off and bring me back
- the ostrich you promised me." The Kite, soaring aloft into the
- air, brought back the shabbiest possible mouse, stinking from the
- length of time it had lain about the fields. "Is this," said the
- Eagle, "the faithful fulfillment of your promise to me?' The Kite
- replied, "That I might attain your royal hand, there is nothing
- that I would not have promised, however much I knew that I must
- fail in the performance."
-
-
- The Ass and His Driver
-
- AN ASS, being driven along a high road, suddenly started off and
- bolted to the brink of a deep precipice. While he was in the act
- of throwing himself over, his owner seized him by the tail,
- endeavoring to pull him back. When the Ass persisted in his
- effort, the man let him go and said, "Conquer, but conquer to
- your cost."
-
-
- The Thrush and the Fowler
-
- A THRUSH was feeding on a myrtle-tree and did not move from it
- because its berries were so delicious. A Fowler observed her
- staying so long in one spot, and having well bird-limed his
- reeds, caught her. The Thrush, being at the point of death,
- exclaimed, "O foolish creature that I am! For the sake of a
- little pleasant food I have deprived myself of my life."
-
-
- The Rose and the Amaranth
-
- AN AMARANTH planted in a garden near a Rose-Tree, thus addressed
- it: "What a lovely flower is the Rose, a favorite alike with Gods
- and with men. I envy you your beauty and your perfume." The Rose
- replied, "I indeed, dear Amaranth, flourish but for a brief
- season! If no cruel hand pluck me from my stem, yet I must perish
- by an early doom. But thou art immortal and dost never fade, but
- bloomest for ever in renewed youth."
-
-
- The Frogs' Complaint Against the Sun
-
- ONCE UPON A TIME, when the Sun announced his intention to take a
- wife, the Frogs lifted up their voices in clamor to the sky.
- Jupiter, disturbed by the noise of their croaking, inquired the
- cause of their complaint. One of them said, "The Sun, now while
- he is single, parches up the marsh, and compels us to die
- miserably in our arid homes. What will be our future condition
- if he should beget other suns?'
-
-
- LIFE OF AESOP
-
- THE LIFE and History of Aesop is involved, like that of Homer,
- the most famous of Greek poets, in much obscurity. Sardis, the
- capital of Lydia; Samos, a Greek island; Mesembria, an ancient
- colony in Thrace; and Cotiaeum, the chief city of a province of
- Phrygia, contend for the distinction of being the birthplace of
- Aesop. Although the honor thus claimed cannot be definitely
- assigned to any one of these places, yet there are a few
- incidents now generally accepted by scholars as established
- facts, relating to the birth, life, and death of Aesop. He is,
- by an almost universal consent, allowed to have been born about
- the year 620 B.C., and to have been by birth a slave. He was
- owned by two masters in succession, both inhabitants of Samos,
- Xanthus and Jadmon, the latter of whom gave him his liberty as a
- reward for his learning and wit. One of the privileges of a
- freedman in the ancient republics of Greece, was the permission
- to take an active interest in public affairs; and Aesop, like the
- philosophers Phaedo, Menippus, and Epictetus, in later times,
- raised himself from the indignity of a servile condition to a
- position of high renown. In his desire alike to instruct and to
- be instructed, he travelled through many countries, and among
- others came to Sardis, the capital of the famous king of Lydia,
- the great patron, in that day, of learning and of learned men.
- He met at the court of Croesus with Solon, Thales, and other
- sages, and is related so to have pleased his royal master, by the
- part he took in the conversations held with these philosophers,
- that he applied to him an expression which has since passed into
- a proverb, "The Phrygian has spoken better than all."
-
- On the invitation of Croesus he fixed his residence at Sardis,
- and was employed by that monarch in various difficult and
- delicate affairs of State. In his discharge of these commissions
- he visited the different petty republics of Greece. At one time
- he is found in Corinth, and at another in Athens, endeavouring,
- by the narration of some of his wise fables, to reconcile the
- inhabitants of those cities to the administration of their
- respective rulers Periander and Pisistratus. One of these
- ambassadorial missions, undertaken at the command of Croesus, was
- the occasion of his death. Having been sent to Delphi with a
- large sum of gold for distribution among the citizens, he was so
- provoked at their covetousness that he refused to divide the
- money, and sent it back to his master. The Delphians, enraged at
- this treatment, accused him of impiety, and, in spite of his
- sacred character as ambassador, executed him as a public
- criminal. This cruel death of Aesop was not unavenged. The
- citizens of Delphi were visited with a series of calamities,
- until they made a public reparation of their crime; and, "The
- blood of Aesop" became a well-
- known adage, bearing witness to the truth that deeds of wrong
- would not pass unpunished. Neither did the great fabulist lack
- posthumous honors; for a statue was erected to his memory at
- Athens, the work of Lysippus, one of the most famous of Greek
- sculptors. Phaedrus thus immortalizes the event:
-
- Aesopo ingentem statuam posuere Attici,
- Servumque collocarunt aeterna in basi:
- Patere honoris scirent ut cuncti viam;
- Nec generi tribui sed virtuti gloriam.
-
- These few facts are all that can be relied on with any degree of
- certainty, in reference to the birth, life, and death of Aesop.
- They were first brought to light, after a patient search and
- diligent perusal of ancient authors, by a Frenchman, M. Claude
- Gaspard Bachet de Mezeriac, who declined the honor of being
- tutor to Louis XIII of France, from his desire to devote himself
- exclusively to literature. He published his Life of Aesop, Anno
- Domini 1632. The later investigations of a host of English and
- German scholars have added very little to the facts given by M.
- Mezeriac. The substantial truth of his statements has been
- confirmed by later criticism and inquiry. It remains to state,
- that prior to this publication of M. Mezeriac, the life of Aesop
- was from the pen of Maximus Planudes, a monk of Constantinople,
- who was sent on an embassy to Venice by the Byzantine Emperor
- Andronicus the elder, and who wrote in the early part of the
- fourteenth century. His life was prefixed to all the early
- editions of these fables, and was republished as late as 1727 by
- Archdeacon Croxall as the introduction to his edition of Aesop.
- This life by Planudes contains, however, so small an amount of
- truth, and is so full of absurd pictures of the grotesque
- deformity of Aesop, of wondrous apocryphal stories, of lying
- legends, and gross anachronisms, that it is now universally
- condemned as false, puerile, and unauthentic. l It is given up
- in the present day, by general consent, as unworthy of the
- slightest credit.
- G.F.T.
-
- 1 M. Bayle thus characterises this Life of Aesop by Planudes,
- "Tous les habiles gens conviennent que c'est un roman, et que les
- absurdites grossieres qui l'on y trouve le rendent indigne de
- toute."
- Dictionnaire Historique. Art. Esope.
- *********Preface********
- PREFACE
-
- THE TALE, the Parable, and the Fable are all common and popular
- modes of conveying instruction. Each is distinguished by its own
- special characteristics. The Tale consists simply in the
- narration of a story either founded on facts, or created solely
- by the imagination, and not necessarily associated with the
- teaching of any moral lesson. The Parable is the designed use of
- language purposely intended to convey a hidden and secret
- meaning other than that contained in the words themselves; and
- which may or may not bear a special reference to the hearer, or
- reader. The Fable partly agrees with, and partly differs from
- both of these. It will contain, like the Tale, a short but real
- narrative; it will seek, like the Parable, to convey a hidden
- meaning, and that not so much by the use of language, as by the
- skilful introduction of fictitious characters; and yet unlike to
- either Tale or Parable, it will ever keep in view, as its high
- prerogative, and inseparable attribute, the great purpose of
- instruction, and will necessarily seek to inculcate some moral
- maxim, social duty, or political truth. The true Fable, if it
- rise to its high requirements, ever aims at one great end and
- purpose representation of human motive, and the improvement of
- human conduct, and yet it so conceals its design under the
- disguise of fictitious characters, by clothing with speech the
- animals of the field, the birds of the air, the trees of the
- wood, or the beasts of the forest, that the reader shall receive
- advice without perceiving the presence of the adviser. Thus the
- superiority of the counsellor, which often renders counsel
- unpalatable, is kept out of view, and the lesson comes with the
- greater acceptance when the reader is led, unconsciously to
- himself, to have his sympathies enlisted in behalf of what is
- pure, honorable, and praiseworthy, and to have his indignation
- excited against what is low, ignoble, and unworthy. The true
- fabulist, therefore, discharges a most important function. He is
- neither a narrator, nor an allegorist. He is a great teacher, a
- corrector of morals, a censor of vice, and a commender of virtue.
- In this consists the superiority of the Fable over the Tale or
- the Parable. The fabulist is to create a laugh, but yet, under a
- merry guise, to convey instruction. Phaedrus, the great imitator
- of Aesop, plainly indicates this double purpose to be the true
- office of the writer of fables.
-
- Duplex libelli dos est: quod risum movet,
- Et quod prudenti vitam consilio monet.
-
- The continual observance of this twofold aim creates the charm,
- and accounts for the universal favor, of the fables of Aesop.
- "The fable," says Professor K. O. Mueller, "originated in Greece
- in an intentional travestie of human affairs. The 'ainos,' as
- its name denotes, is an admonition, or rather a reproof veiled,
- either from fear of an excess of frankness, or from a love of fun
- and jest, beneath the fiction of an occurrence happening among
- beasts; and wherever we have any ancient and authentic account of
- the Aesopian fables, we find it to be the same." l
-
- The construction of a fable involves a minute attention to (1)
- the narration itself; (2) the deduction of the moral; and (3) a
- careful maintenance of the individual characteristics of the
- fictitious personages introduced into it. The narration should
- relate to one simple action, consistent with itself, and neither
- be overladen with a multiplicity of details, nor distracted by a
- variety of circumstances. The moral or lesson should be so
- plain, and so intimately interwoven with, and so necessarily
- dependent on, the narration, that every reader should be
- compelled to give to it the same undeniable interpretation. The
- introduction of the animals or fictitious characters should be
- marked with an unexceptionable care and attention to their
- natural attributes, and to the qualities attributed to them by
- universal popular consent. The Fox should be always cunning, the
- Hare timid, the Lion bold, the Wolf cruel, the Bull strong, the
- Horse proud, and the Ass patient. Many of these fables are
- characterized by the strictest observance of these rules. They
- are occupied with one short narrative, from which the moral
- naturally flows, and with which it is intimately associated.
- "'Tis the simple manner," says Dodsley, 2 "in which the morals of
- Aesop are interwoven with his fables that distinguishes him, and
- gives him the preference over all other mythologists. His
- 'Mountain delivered of a Mouse,' produces the moral of his fable
- in ridicule of pompous pretenders; and his Crow, when she drops
- her cheese, lets fall, as it were by accident, the strongest
- admonition against the power of flattery. There is no need of a
- separate sentence to explain it; no possibility of impressing it
- deeper, by that load we too often see of accumulated
- reflections." 3 An equal amount of praise is due for the
- consistency with which the characters of the animals,
- fictitiously introduced, are marked. While they are made to
- depict the motives and passions of men, they retain, in an
- eminent degree, their own special features of craft or counsel,
- of cowardice or courage, of generosity or rapacity.
-
- These terms of praise, it must be confessed, cannot be bestowed
- on all the fables in this collection. Many of them lack that
- unity of design, that close connection of the moral with the
- narrative, that wise choice in the introduction of the animals,
- which constitute the charm and excellency of true Aesopian fable.
- This inferiority of some to others is sufficiently accounted for
- in the history of the origin and descent of these fables. The
- great bulk of them are not the immediate work of Aesop. Many are
- obtained from ancient authors prior to the time in which he
- lived. Thus, the fable of the "Hawk and the Nightingale" is
- related by Hesiod; 4 the "Eagle wounded by an Arrow, winged with
- its own Feathers," by Aeschylus; 5 the "Fox avenging his wrongs
- on the Eagle," by Archilochus. 6 Many of them again are of later
- origin, and are to be traced to the monks of the middle ages: and
- yet this collection, though thus made up of fables both earlier
- and later than the era of Aesop, rightfully bears his name,
- because he composed so large a number (all framed in the same
- mould, and conformed to the same fashion, and stamped with the
- same lineaments, image, and superscription) as to secure to
- himself the right to be considered the father of Greek fables,
- and the founder of this class of writing, which has ever since
- borne his name, and has secured for him, through all succeeding
- ages, the position of the first of moralists.7
-
- The fables were in the first instance only narrated by Aesop, and
- for a long time were handed down by the uncertain channel of oral
- tradition. Socrates is mentioned by Plato 8 as having employed
- his time while in prison, awaiting the return of the sacred ship
- from Delphos which was to be the signal of his death, in turning
- some of these fables into verse, but he thus versified only such
- as he remembered. Demetrius Phalereus, a philosopher at Athens
- about 300 B.C., is said to have made the first collection of
- these fables. Phaedrus, a slave by birth or by subsequent
- misfortunes, and admitted by Augustus to the honors of a
- freedman, imitated many of these fables in Latin iambics about
- the commencement of the Christian era. Aphthonius, a rhetorician
- of Antioch, A.D. 315, wrote a treatise on, and converted into
- Latin prose, some of these fables. This translation is the more
- worthy of notice, as it illustrates a custom of common use, both
- in these and in later times. The rhetoricians and philosophers
- were accustomed to give the Fables of Aesop as an exercise to
- their scholars, not only inviting them to discuss the moral of
- the tale, but also to practice and to perfect themselves thereby
- in style and rules of grammar, by making for themselves new and
- various versions of the fables. Ausonius, 9 the friend of the
- Emperor Valentinian, and the latest poet of eminence in the
- Western Empire, has handed down some of these fables in verse,
- which Julianus Titianus, a contemporary writer of no great name,
- translated into prose. Avienus, also a contemporary of Ausonius,
- put some of these fables into Latin elegiacs, which are given by
- Nevelet (in a book we shall refer to hereafter), and are
- occasionally incorporated with the editions of Phaedrus.
-
- Seven centuries elapsed before the next notice is found of the
- Fables of Aesop. During this long period these fables seem to
- have suffered an eclipse, to have disappeared and to have been
- forgotten; and it is at the commencement of the fourteenth
- century, when the Byzantine emperors were the great patrons of
- learning, and amidst the splendors of an Asiatic court, that we
- next find honors paid to the name and memory of Aesop. Maximus
- Planudes, a learned monk of Constantinople, made a collection of
- about a hundred and fifty of these fables. Little is known of
- his history. Planudes, however, was no mere recluse, shut up in
- his monastery. He took an active part in public affairs. In
- 1327 A.D. he was sent on a diplomatic mission to Venice by the
- Emperor Andronicus the Elder. This brought him into immediate
- contact with the Western Patriarch, whose interests he henceforth
- advocated with so much zeal as to bring on him suspicion and
- persecution from the rulers of the Eastern Church. Planudes has
- been exposed to a two-fold accusation. He is charged on the one
- hand with having had before him a copy of Babrias (to whom we
- shall have occasion to refer at greater length in the end of this
- Preface), and to have had the bad taste "to transpose," or to
- turn his poetical version into prose: and he is asserted, on the
- other hand, never to have seen the Fables of Aesop at all, but to
- have himself invented and made the fables which he palmed off
- under the name of the famous Greek fabulist. The truth lies
- between these two extremes. Planudes may have invented some few
- fables, or have inserted some that were current in his day; but
- there is an abundance of unanswerable internal evidence to prove
- that he had an acquaintance with the veritable fables of Aesop,
- although the versions he had access to were probably corrupt, as
- contained in the various translations and disquisitional
- exercises of the rhetoricians and philosophers. His collection
- is interesting and important, not only as the parent source or
- foundation of the earlier printed versions of Aesop, but as the
- direct channel of attracting to these fables the attention of the
- learned.
-
- The eventual re-introduction, however, of these Fables of Aesop
- to their high place in the general literature of Christendom, is
- to be looked for in the West rather than in the East. The
- calamities gradually thickening round the Eastern Empire, and the
- fall of Constantinople, 1453 A.D. combined with other events to
- promote the rapid restoration of learning in Italy; and with that
- recovery of learning the revival of an interest in the Fables of
- Aesop is closely identified. These fables, indeed, were among
- the first writings of an earlier antiquity that attracted
- attention. They took their place beside the Holy Scriptures and
- the ancient classic authors, in the minds of the great students
- of that day. Lorenzo Valla, one of the most famous promoters of
- Italian learning, not only translated into Latin the Iliad of
- Homer and the Histories of Herodotus and Thucydides, but also the
- Fables of Aesop.
-
- These fables, again, were among the books brought into an
- extended circulation by the agency of the printing press. Bonus
- Accursius, as early as 1475-1480, printed the collection of these
- fables, made by Planudes, which, within five years afterwards,
- Caxton translated into English, and printed at his press in West-
- minster Abbey, 1485. 10 It must be mentioned also that the
- learning of this age has left permanent traces of its influence
- on these fables, ll by causing the interpolation with them of
- some of those amusing stories which were so frequently introduced
- into the public discourses of the great preachers of those days,
- and of which specimens are yet to be found in the extant sermons
- of Jean Raulin, Meffreth, and Gabriel Barlette. 12 The
- publication of this era which most probably has influenced these
- fables, is the "Liber Facetiarum," l3 a book consisting of a
- hundred jests and stories, by the celebrated Poggio Bracciolini,
- published A.D. 1471, from which the two fables of the "Miller,
- his Son, and the Ass," and the "Fox and the Woodcutter," are
- undoubtedly selected.
-
- The knowledge of these fables rapidly spread from Italy into
- Germany, and their popularity was increased by the favor and
- sanction given to them by the great fathers of the Reformation,
- who frequently used them as vehicles for satire and protest
- against the tricks and abuses of the Romish ecclesiastics. The
- zealous and renowned Camerarius, who took an active part in the
- preparation of the Confession of Augsburgh, found time, amidst
- his numerous avocations, to prepare a version for the students in
- the university of Tubingen, in which he was a professor. Martin
- Luther translated twenty of these fables, and was urged by
- Melancthon to complete the whole; while Gottfried Arnold, the
- celebrated Lutheran theologian, and librarian to Frederick I,
- king of Prussia, mentions that the great Reformer valued the
- Fables of Aesop next after the Holy Scriptures. In 1546 A.D.
- the second printed edition of the collection of the Fables made
- by Planudes, was issued from the printing-press of Robert
- Stephens, in which were inserted some additional fables from a
- MS. in the Bibliotheque du Roy at Paris.
-
- The greatest advance, however, towards a re-introduction of the
- Fables of Aesop to a place in the literature of the world, was
- made in the early part of the seventeenth century. In the year
- 1610, a learned Swiss, Isaac Nicholas Nevelet, sent forth the
- third printed edition of these fables, in a work entitled
- "Mythologia Aesopica." This was a noble effort to do honor to
- the great fabulist, and was the most perfect collection of
- Aesopian fables ever yet published. It consisted, in addition to
- the collection of fables given by Planudes and reprinted in the
- various earlier editions, of one hundred and thirty-six new
- fables (never before published) from MSS. in the Library of the
- Vatican, of forty fables attributed to Aphthonius, and of
- forty-three from Babrias. It also contained the Latin versions
- of the same fables by Phaedrus, Avienus, and other authors. This
- volume of Nevelet forms a complete "Corpus Fabularum
- Aesopicarum;" and to his labors Aesop owes his restoration to
- universal favor as one of the wise moralists and great teachers
- of mankind. During the interval of three centuries which has
- elapsed since the publication of this volume of Nevelet's, no
- book, with the exception of the Holy Scriptures, has had a wider
- circulation than Aesop's Fables. They have been translated into
- the greater number of the languages both of Europe and of the
- East, and have been read, and will be read, for generations,
- alike by Jew, Heathen, Mohammedan, and Christian. They are, at
- the present time, not only engrafted into the literature of the
- civilized world, but are familiar as household words in the
- common intercourse and daily conversation of the inhabitants of
- all countries.
-
- This collection of Nevelet's is the great culminating point in
- the history of the revival of the fame and reputation of Aesopian
- Fables. It is remarkable, also, as containing in its preface the
- germ of an idea, which has been since proved to have been correct
- by a strange chain of circumstances. Nevelet intimates an
- opinion, that a writer named Babrias would be found to be the
- veritable author of the existing form of Aesopian Fables. This
- intimation has since given rise to a series of inquiries, the
- knowledge of which is necessary, in the present day, to a full
- understanding of the true position of Aesop in connection with
- the writings that bear his name.
-
- The history of Babrias is so strange and interesting, that it
- might not unfitly be enumerated among the curiosities of
- literature. He is generally supposed to have been a Greek of
- Asia Minor, of one of the Ionic Colonies, but the exact period in
- which he lived and wrote is yet unsettled. He is placed, by one
- critic, l4 as far back as the institution of the Achaian League,
- B.C. 250; by another as late as the Emperor Severus, who died
- A.D. 235; while others make him a contemporary with Phaedrus in
- the time of Augustus. At whatever time he wrote his version of
- Aesop, by some strange accident it seems to have entirely
- disappeared, and to have been lost sight of. His name is
- mentioned by Avienus; by Suidas, a celebrated critic, at the
- close of the eleventh century, who gives in his lexicon several
- isolated verses of his version of the fables; and by John
- Tzetzes, a grammarian and poet of Constantinople, who lived
- during the latter half of the twelfth century. Nevelet, in the
- preface to the volume which we have described, points out that
- the Fables of Planudes could not be the work of Aesop, as they
- contain a reference in two places to "Holy monks," and give a
- verse from the Epistle of St. James as an "Epimith" to one of
- the fables, and suggests Babrias as their author. Francis
- Vavassor, 15 a learned French jesuit, entered at greater length
- on this subject, and produced further proofs from internal
- evidence, from the use of the word Piraeus in describing the
- harbour of Athens, a name which was not given till two hundred
- years after Aesop, and from the introduction of other modern
- words, that many of these fables must have been at least
- committed to writing posterior to the time of Aesop, and more
- boldly suggests Babrias as their author or collector. 16 These
- various references to Babrias induced Dr. Plichard Bentley, at
- the close of the seventeenth century, to examine more minutely
- the existing versions of Aesop's Fables, and he maintained that
- many of them could, with a slight change of words, be resolved
- into the Scazonic l7 iambics, in which Babrias is known to have
- written: and, with a greater freedom than the evidence then
- justified, he put forth, in behalf of Babrias, a claim to the
- exclusive authorship of these fables. Such a seemingly
- extravagant theory, thus roundly asserted, excited much
- opposition. Dr. Bentley l8 met with an able antagonist in a
- member of the University of Oxford, the Hon. Mr. Charles Boyle,
- 19 afterwards Earl of Orrery. Their letters and disputations on
- this subject, enlivened on both sides with much wit and learning,
- will ever bear a conspicuous place in the literary history of the
- seventeenth century. The arguments of Dr. Bentley were yet
- further defended a few years later by Mr. Thomas Tyrwhitt, a
- well-read scholar, who gave up high civil distinctions that he
- might devote himself the more unreservedly to literary pursuits.
- Mr. Tyrwhitt published, A.D. 1776, a Dissertation on Babrias,
- and a collection of his fables in choliambic meter found in a MS.
- in the Bodleian Library at Oxford. Francesco de Furia, a learned
- Italian, contributed further testimony to the correctness of the
- supposition that Babrias had made a veritable collection of
- fables by printing from a MS. contained in the Vatican library
- several fables never before published. In the year 1844,
- however, new and unexpected light was thrown upon this subject.
- A veritable copy of Babrias was found in a manner as singular as
- were the MSS. of Quinctilian's Institutes, and of Cicero's
- Orations by Poggio in the monastery of St. Gall A.D. 1416. M.
- Menoides, at the suggestion of M. Villemain, Minister of Public
- Instruction to King Louis Philippe, had been entrusted with a
- commission to search for ancient MSS., and in carrying out his
- instructions he found a MS. at the convent of St. Laura, on
- Mount Athos, which proved to be a copy of the long suspected and
- wished-for choliambic version of Babrias. This MS. was found to
- be divided into two books, the one containing a hundred and
- twenty-five, and the other ninety-five fables. This discovery
- attracted very general attention, not only as confirming, in a
- singular manner, the conjectures so boldly made by a long chain
- of critics, but as bringing to light valuable literary treasures
- tending to establish the reputation, and to confirm the antiquity
- and authenticity of the great mass of Aesopian Fable. The Fables
- thus recovered were soon published. They found a most worthy
- editor in the late distinguished Sir George Cornewall Lewis, and
- a translator equally qualified for his task, in the Reverend
- James Davies, M.A., sometime a scholar of Lincoln College,
- Oxford, and himself a relation of their English editor. Thus,
- after an eclipse of many centuries, Babrias shines out as the
- earliest, and most reliable collector of veritable Aesopian
- Fables.
-
- The following are the sources from which the present translation
- has been prepared: Babrii Fabulae Aesopeae. George Cornewall
- Lewis. Oxford, 1846.
- Babrii Fabulae Aesopeae. E codice manuscripto partem secundam
- edidit. George Cornewall Lewis. London: Parker, 1857.
- Mythologica Aesopica. Opera et studia Isaaci Nicholai Neveleti.
- Frankfort, 1610.
- Fabulae Aesopiacae, quales ante Planudem ferebantur cura et
- studio Francisci de Furia. Lipsiae, 1810.
- ??????????????. Ex recognitione Caroli Halmii. Lipsiae, Phaedri
- Fabulae Esopiae. Delphin Classics. 1822.
-
- GEORGE FYLER TOWNSEND
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- 1 A History of the Literature of Ancient Greece, by K. O.
- Mueller. Vol. i, p. l9l. London, Parker, 1858.
- 2 Select Fables of Aesop, and other Fabulists. In three books,
- translated by Robert Dodsley, accompanied with a selection of
- notes, and an Essay on Fable. Birmingham, 1864. P. 60.
- 3 Some of these fables had, no doubt, in the first instance, a
- primary and private interpretation. On the first occasion of
- their being composed they were intended to refer to some passing
- event, or to some individual acts of wrong-doing. Thus, the
- fables of the "Eagle and the Fox" and of the "Fox and Monkey' are
- supposed to have been written by Archilochus, to avenge the
- injuries done him by Lycambes. So also the fables of the
- "Swollen Fox" and of the "Frogs asking a King" were spoken by
- Aesop for the immediate purpose of reconciling the inhabitants of
- Samos and Athens to their respective rulers, Periander and
- Pisistratus; while the fable of the "Horse and Stag" was composed
- to caution the inhabitants of Himera against granting a bodyguard
- to Phalaris. In a similar manner, the fable from Phaedrus, the
- "Marriage of the Sun," is supposed to have reference to the
- contemplated union of Livia, the daughter of Drusus, with Sejanus
- the favourite, and minister of Trajan. These fables, however,
- though thus originating in special events, and designed at first
- to meet special circumstances, are so admirably constructed as to
- be fraught with lessons of general utility, and of universal
- application.
- 4 Hesiod. Opera et Dies, verse 202.
- 5 Aeschylus. Fragment of the Myrmidons. Aeschylus speaks of
- this fable as existing before his day. See Scholiast on the Aves
- of Aristophanes, line 808.
- 6 Fragment. 38, ed. Gaisford. See also Mueller's History of
- the Literature of Ancient Greece, vol. i. pp. 190-193.
- 7 M. Bayle has well put this in his account of Aesop. "Il n'y a
- point d'apparence que les fables qui portent aujourd'hui son nom
- soient les memes qu'il avait faites; elles viennent bien de lui
- pour la plupart, quant a la matiere et la pensee; mais les
- paroles sont d'un autre." And again, "C'est donc a Hesiode, que
- j'aimerais mieux attribuer la gloire de l'invention; mais sans
- doute il laissa la chose tres imparfaite. Esope la perfectionne
- si heureusement, qu'on l'a regarde comme le vrai pere de cette
- sorte de production." M. Bayle. Dictionnaire Historique.
- 8 Plato in Ph2done.
- 9 Apologos en! misit tibi
- Ab usque Rheni limite
- Ausonius nomen Italum
- Praeceptor Augusti tui
- Aesopiam trimetriam;
- Quam vertit exili stylo
- Pedestre concinnans opus
- Fandi Titianus artifex.
- Ausonii Epistola, xvi. 75-80.
- 10 Both these publications are in the British Museum, and are
- placed in the library in cases under glass, for the inspection of
- the curious.
- ll Fables may possibly have been not entirely unknown to the
- mediaeval scholars. There are two celebrated works which might
- by some be classed amongst works of this description. The one is
- the "Speculum Sapientiae," attributed to St. Cyril, Archbishop
- of Jerusalem, but of a considerably later origin, and existing
- only in Latin. It is divided into four books, and consists of
- long conversations conducted by fictitious characters under the
- figures the beasts of the field and forest, and aimed at the
- rebuke of particular classes of men, the boastful, the proud, the
- luxurious, the wrathful, &c. None of the stories are precisely
- those of Aesop, and none have the concinnity, terseness, and
- unmistakable deduction of the lesson intended to be taught by
- the fable, so conspicuous in the great Greek fabulist. The exact
- title of the book is this: "Speculum Sapientiae, B. Cyrilli
- Episcopi: alias quadripartitus apologeticus vocatus, in cujus
- quidem proverbiis omnis et totius sapientiae speculum claret et
- feliciter incipit." The other is a larger work in two volumes,
- published in the fourteenth century by Caesar Heisterbach, a
- Cistercian monk, under the title of "Dialogus Miraculorum,"
- reprinted in 1851. This work consists of conversations in which
- many stories are interwoven on all kinds of subjects. It has no
- correspondence with the pure Aesopian fable.
- 12 Post-medieval Preachers, by S. Baring-Gould. Rivingtons,
- 1865.
- 13 For an account of this work see the Life of Poggio
- Bracciolini, by the Rev. William Shepherd. Liverpool. 1801.
- 14 Professor Theodore Bergh. See Classical Museum, No. viii.
- July, 1849.
- 15 Vavassor's treatise, entitled "De Ludicra Dictione" was
- written A.D. 1658, at the request of the celebrated M. Balzac
- (though published after his death), for the purpose of showing
- that the burlesque style of writing adopted by Scarron and
- D'Assouci, and at that time so popular in France, had no sanction
- from the ancient classic writers. Francisci Vavassoris opera
- omnia. Amsterdam. 1709.
- 16 The claims of Babrias also found a warm advocate in the
- learned Frenchman, M. Bayle, who, in his admirable dictionary,
- (Dictionnaire Historique et Critique de Pierre Bayle. Paris,
- 1820,) gives additional arguments in confirmation of the opinions
- of his learned predecessors, Nevelet and Vavassor.
- 17 Scazonic, or halting, iambics; a choliambic (a lame, halting
- iambic) differs from the iambic Senarius in always having a
- spondee or trichee for its last foot; the fifth foot, to avoid
- shortness of meter, being generally an iambic. See Fables of
- Babrias, translated by Rev. James Davies. Lockwood, 1860.
- Preface, p. 27.
- 18 See Dr. Bentley's Dissertations upon the Epistles of
- Phalaris.
- 19 Dr. Bentley's Dissertations on the Epistles of Phalaris, and
- Fables of Aesop examined. By the Honorable Charles Boyle.
-
- ***End of Project Gutenberg 10th Edition of Aesop's Fables***
-