WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Aesop for Children / With pictures by Milo Winter cover

The Aesop for Children / With pictures by Milo Winter

Chapter 152: THE FIGHTING COCKS AND THE EAGLE
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A collection of short illustrated fables presents concise animal-centered narratives that conclude with explicit moral lessons. Each entry stages a single situation, often comical or ironic, so children can grasp consequences of behaviors such as vanity, greed, folly, and kindness. The arrangement favors simple language, direct plotting, and clear resolutions, supported by pictures that emphasize characters and actions. Overall the volume functions as a didactic anthology of brief parables intended to teach practical ethical maxims through easily remembered stories.

A poor Fisherman, who lived on the fish he caught, had bad luck one day and caught nothing but a very small fry. The Fisherman was about to put it in his basket when the little Fish said:

"Please spare me, Mr. Fisherman! I am so small it is not worth while to carry me home. When I am bigger, I shall make you a much better meal."

But the Fisherman quickly put the fish into his basket.

"How foolish I should be," he said, "to throw you back. However small you may be, you are better than nothing at all."

A small gain is worth more than a large promise.


THE FIGHTING COCKS AND THE EAGLE

Once there were two Cocks living in the same farmyard who could not bear the sight of each other. At last one day they flew up to fight it out, beak and claw. They fought until one of them was beaten and crawled off to a corner to hide.

The Cock that had won the battle flew to the top of the hen-house, and, proudly flapping his wings, crowed with all his might to tell the world about his victory. But an Eagle, circling overhead, heard the boasting chanticleer and, swooping down, carried him off to his nest.

His rival saw the deed, and coming out of his corner, took his place as master of the farmyard.

Pride goes before a fall.