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New Lights on Old Paths

Chapter 67: THE PLOUGH AND THE MOWING-MACHINE.
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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.

THE PLOUGH AND THE MOWING-MACHINE.

A  FARMER, having bought a new mowing-machine, brought it home and put it in the barn where his plough was housed, waiting for the opening of spring.

When the mower, in its bright paint and glossy varnish, saw the soiled and toil-worn plough, it said, with a scornful look:

“Why am I placed in such low company?”

“You think yourself better than I am,” said the plough, “but where would you be without me? If I did not first turn up the soil for the planting, you would never be wanted for the mowing. You only finish where I have begun, and on my work your very existence depends.”


We sometimes look down on those who are not only our equals in usefulness, but whose honest labor has helped to make us better off than themselves.