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New Lights on Old Paths

Chapter 21: CROWING.
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About This Book

A collection of short fables and parables that recast traditional moral teachings in plain, domestic and rural scenes. Each brief piece uses human and animal vignettes, everyday objects, and simple allegory to illustrate virtues such as honesty, industry, humility, and prudence, and to show practical consequences of vice. The contributions range from gentle anecdotes to pointed moral lessons and are paired with many original illustrations intended to reinforce the themes and aid reader engagement.

CROWING.

EARLY one morning, while the fowls were waiting around the kitchen door for their breakfast, a spring chicken attempted to crow, but succeeded only in uttering a feeble squawk.

A young cock, hearing this, stood up and crowed loud and clear, saying to the other:

“You’d better be still till you can crow like that.”

To which a guinea-hen that was restlessly flitting about replied with a shrill, high voice:

“It was only the spring before last when you did no better yourself!”

“Impossible!” said the cock. “It must be some other chicken you are thinking of.”

“Not so,” replied the guinea. “I remember you ever since you were hatched—while you were a little chick sleeping under your mother’s wing, when you grew bigger and first flew up to the roost, and how like this spring chicken’s your crowing was then, only with this difference: you were so conceited that the whole barnyard was laughing at you. All this is forgotten now, luckily for you. But take my advice: be tender of the failings of others, lest your own be recalled and displayed in full light.”


Let us not refuse to pardon in others what we, through others’ kindness, have been pardoned for ourselves.