Frogs by Aesop
The Frogs & the Ox
An Ox came down to a reedy pool to drink. As he splashed heavily into
the water, he crushed a young Frog into the mud.
"Spare me!" begged the poor Mouse. "Please let me go and some day I
will surely repay you."
The old Frog soon missed the little one and asked his brothers and
sisters what had become of him.
The old Frog soon missed the little one and asked his brothers and
sisters what had become of him.
"Big, was he!" said the old Frog, puffing herself up. "Was he as big
as this?"
"Oh, much bigger!" they cried.
The Frog puffed up still more.
"He could not have been bigger than this," she said. But the little
Frogs all declared that the monster was much, much bigger and the old
Frog kept puffing herself out more and more until, all at once, she
burst.
Do not attempt the impossible.
The Frog & the Mouse
A young Mouse in search of adventure was running along the bank of a
pond where lived a Frog. When the Frog saw the Mouse, he swam to the
bank and croaked:
"Won't you pay me a visit? I can promise you a good time if you
do."
The Mouse did not need much coaxing, for he was very anxious to see
the world and everything in it. But though he could swim a little, he
did not dare risk going into the pond without some help.
The Frog had a plan. He tied the Mouse's leg to his own with a tough
reed. Then into the pond he jumped, dragging his foolish companion
with him. The Mouse soon had enough of it and wanted to return to
shore; but the treacherous Frog had other plans. He pulled the Mouse
down under the water and drowned him. But before he could untie the
reed that bound him to the dead Mouse, a Hawk came sailing over the
pond. Seeing the body of the Mouse floating on the water, the Hawk
swooped down, seized the Mouse and carried it off, with the Frog
dangling from its leg. Thus at one swoop he had caught both meat and
fish for his dinner.
Those who seek to harm others often come to harm themselves through
their own deceit.
The Boys & the Frogs
Some Boys were playing one day at the edge of a pond in which lived a
family of Frogs. The Boys amused themselves by throwing stones into
the pond so as to make them skip on top of the water.
The stones were flying thick and fast and the Boys were enjoying
themselves very much; but the poor Frogs in the pond were trembling
with fear.
At last one of the Frogs, the oldest and bravest, put his head out of
the water, and said, "Oh, please, dear children, stop your cruel play!
Though it may be fun for you, it means death to us!"
Always stop to think whether your fun may not be the cause of
another's unhappiness.