Part 4 (2/2)
This the Young Ones, in a great fright, told also to their mother. ”Do not fear, children,” said she; ”kindred and relations are not always very forward in helping one another; but keep your ears open, and let me know what you hear to-morrow.”
The owner came the next day, and, finding his relations as backward as his neighbours, said to his son: ”Now listen to me. Get two good sickles ready for to-morrow morning, for it seems we must reap the grain by ourselves.” The Young Ones told this to their mother.
”Then, my dears,” said she, ”it is time for us to go; for when a man undertakes to do his work himself, it is not so likely that he will be disappointed.” She took them away at once, and the grain was reaped the next day by the old man and his son.
The Fox and the Stork
A Fox one day invited a Stork to dine with him, and, wis.h.i.+ng to be amused at his guest's expense, put the soup which he had for dinner in a large flat dish, so that, while he himself could lap it up quite well, the Stork could only dip in the tip of his long bill.
Some time after, the Stork, bearing his treatment in mind, invited the Fox to take dinner with him. He, in his turn, put some minced meat in a long and narrow-necked vessel, into which he could easily put his bill, while Master Fox was forced to be content with licking what ran down the sides of the vessel.
The Fox then remembered his old trick, and could not but admit that the Stork had well paid him off. ”I will not apologize for the dinner,”
said the Stork, ”nor for the manner of serving it, for one ill turn deserves another.”
The Gnat and the Bull
A st.u.r.dy Bull was once driven by the heat of the weather to wade up to his knees in a cool and swift-running stream. He had not been there long when a Gnat that had been disporting itself in the air pitched upon one of his horns.
”My dear fellow,” said the Gnat, with as great a buzz as he could manage, ”pray excuse the liberty I take. If I am too heavy only say so and I will go at once and rest upon the poplar which grows hard by the edge of the stream.
”Stay or go, it makes no matter to me,” replied the Bull. ”Had it not been for your buzz I should not even have known you were there.”
The Deer and the Lion
One warm day a Deer went down to a brook to get a drink. The stream was smooth and clear, and he could see himself in the water. He looked at his horns and was very proud of them, for they were large and long and had many branches, but when he saw his feet he was ashamed to own them, they were so slim and small.
While he stood knee-deep in the water, and was thinking only of his fine horns, a Lion saw him and came leaping out from the tall gra.s.s to get him. The Deer would have been caught at once if he had not jumped quickly out of the brook. He ran as fast as he could, and his feet were so light and swift that he soon left the Lion far behind. But by and by he had to pa.s.s through some woods, and, as he was running, his horns were caught in some vines that grew among the trees. Before he could get loose the Lion was upon him.
”Ah me!” cried the Deer, ”the things which pleased me most will now cause my death; while the things which I thought so mean and poor would have carried me safe out of danger.”
The Fox and the Grapes
There was a time when a Fox would have ventured as far for a Bunch of Grapes as for a shoulder of mutton, and it was a Fox of those days and that palate that stood gaping under a vine and licking his lips at a most delicious Cl.u.s.ter of Grapes that he had spied out there.
He fetched a hundred and a hundred leaps at it, till, at last, when he was as weary as a dog, and found that there was no good to be done:
”Hang 'em,” says he, ”they are as sour as crabs”; and so away he went, turning off the disappointment with a jest.
The Farmer and the Stork
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