A Peacock, puffed up with vanity, met a Crane one day, and to impress
him spread his gorgeous tail in the Sun.
"Look," he said. "What have you to compare with this? I am dressed in
all the glory of the rainbow, while your feathers are gray as
dust!"
The Crane spread his broad wings and flew up toward the sun.
"Follow me if you can," he said. But the Peacock stood where he was
among the birds of the barnyard, while the Crane soared in freedom far
up into the blue sky.
Once a Cat and a Fox were traveling together. As they went along,
picking up provisions on the way—a stray mouse here, a fat chicken
there—they began an argument to while away the time between bites.
And, as usually happens when comrades argue, the talk began to get
personal.
"You think you are extremely clever, don't you?" said the Fox. "Do you
pretend to know more than I? Why, I know a whole sackful of tricks!"
"Well," retorted the Cat, "I admit I know one trick only, but that
one, let me tell you, is worth a thousand of yours!"
Just then, close by, they heard a hunter's horn and the yelping of a
pack of hounds. In an instant the Cat was up a tree, hiding among the
leaves.
"This is my trick," he called to the Fox. "Now let me see what yours
are worth."
But the Fox had so many plans for escape he could not decide which one
to try first. He dodged here and there with the hounds at his heels.
He doubled on his tracks, he ran at top speed, he entered a dozen
burrows,—but all in vain. The hounds caught him, and soon put an end
to the boaster and all his tricks.
Common sense is always worth more than cunning.
A Wolf had been prowling around a flock of Sheep for a long time, and
the Shepherd watched very anxiously to prevent him from carrying off a
Lamb.
But the Wolf did not try to do any harm. Instead he seemed to be
helping the Shepherd take care of the Sheep. At last the Shepherd got
so used to seeing the Wolf about that he forgot how wicked he could
be.
One day he even went so far as to leave his flock in the Wolf's care
while he went on an errand. But when he came back and saw how many of
the flock had been killed and carried off, he knew how foolish to
trust a Wolf.