The Owl and the Grasshopper
The Owl always takes her sleep during the day. Then after sundown, when
the rosy light fades from the sky and the shadows rise slowly through
the wood, out she comes ruffling and blinking from the old hollow tree.
Now her weird "hoo-hoo-hoo-oo-oo" echoes through the quiet wood, and she
begins her hunt for the bugs and beetles, frogs and mice she likes so
well to eat.
Now there was a certain old Owl who had become very cross and hard to
please as she grew older, especially if anything disturbed her daily
slumbers. One warm summer afternoon as she dozed away in her den in the
old oak tree, a Grasshopper nearby began a joyous but very raspy song.
Out popped the old Owl's head from the opening in the tree that served
her both for door and for window.
"Get away from here, sir," she said to the Grasshopper. "Have you no
manners? You should at least respect my age and leave me to sleep in
quiet!"
But the Grasshopper answered saucily that he had as much right to his
place in the sun as the Owl had to her place in the old oak. Then he
struck up a louder and still more rasping tune.
The wise old Owl knew quite well that it would do no good to argue with
the Grasshopper, nor with anybody else for that matter. Besides, her
eyes were not sharp enough by day to permit her to punish the
Grasshopper as he deserved. So she laid aside all hard words and spoke
very kindly to him.
"Well sir," she said, "if I must stay awake, I am going to settle right
down to enjoy your singing. Now that I think of it, I have a wonderful
wine here, sent me from Olympus, of which I am told Apollo drinks before
he sings to the high gods. Please come up and taste this delicious drink
with me. I know it will make you sing like Apollo himself."
The foolish Grasshopper was taken in by the Owl's flattering words. Up
he jumped to the Owl's den, but as soon as he was near enough so the old
Owl could see him clearly, she pounced upon him and ate him up.
Flattery is not a proof of true admiration. Do not let flattery throw
you off your guard against an enemy.
The Plane Tree
Two Travellers, walking in the noonday sun, sought the shade of a
widespreading tree to rest.
As they lay looking up among the pleasant leaves, they saw that it was a
Plane Tree.
"How useless is the Plane!" said one of them. "It bears no fruit
whatever, and only serves to litter the ground with leaves."
"Ungrateful creatures!" said a voice from the Plane Tree. "You lie here
in my cooling shade, and yet you say I am useless! Thus ungratefully, O
Jupiter, do men receive their blessings!"
Our best blessings are often the least appreciated.
The Two Goats
Two Goats, frisking gayly on the rocky steeps of a mountain valley,
chanced to meet, one on each side of a deep chasm through which poured a
mighty mountain torrent. The trunk of a fallen tree formed the only
means of crossing the chasm, and on this not even two squirrels could
have passed each other in safety. The narrow path would have made the
bravest tremble. Not so our Goats. Their pride would not permit either
to stand aside for the other.
One set her foot on the log. The other did likewise. In the middle they
met horn to horn. Neither would give way, and so they both fell, to be
swept away by the roaring torrent below.
It is better to yield than to come to misfortune through
stubbornness.