274. The Lion and the Eagle
AN EAGLE stayed his flight and entreated a Lion to make an alliance with him to their
mutual advantage. The Lion replied, "I have no objection, but you must excuse me for requiring you to find surety for your good faith, for how can I trust anyone as a friend who is able to fly away from his bargain whenever he pleases?'
Try before you trust.
275. The Hen and the Swallow
A HEN
finding the eggs of a viper and carefully keeping them warm, nourished them into life. A Swallow, observing what she had done, said, "You silly creature! why have you hatched these vipers which, when they shall have grown, will
inflict injury on all, beginning with yourself?'
276. The Buffoon and the Countryman
A RICH NOBLEMAN once opened the theaters without charge to the people, and gave a public notice that he would handsomely reward any person who invented a new amusement for the occasion. Various public performers contended for the prize.
Among them came a Buffoon well known among the
populace for his jokes, and said that he had a kind of entertainment which had never been brought out on any stage before. This report being spread about made a great stir, and the theater was
crowded in every part.
The Buffoon appeared alone upon the platform, without any
apparatus or confederates, and the very sense of
expectation caused an
intense silence. He suddenly bent his head towards his bosom and imitated the
squeaking of a little pig so
admirably with his voice that the audience declared he had a porker under his cloak, and demanded that it should be shaken out. When that was done and nothing was found, they cheered the actor, and loaded him with the loudest
applause.
A Countryman in the crowd, observing all that has passed, said, "So help me, Hercules, he shall not beat me at that trick!" and at once proclaimed that he would do the same thing on the next day, though in a much more natural way.
On the
morrow a still larger crowd assembled in the theater, but now partiality for their favorite actor very generally prevailed, and the audience came rather to
ridicule the Countryman than to see the spectacle.
Both of the performers appeared on the stage. The Buffoon grunted and
squeaked away first, and obtained, as on the
preceding day, the
applause and cheers of the spectators. Next the Countryman commenced, and pretending that he concealed a little pig beneath his clothes (which in truth he did, but not suspected by the audience ) contrived to take hold of and to pull his ear causing the pig to
squeak. The Crowd, however, cried out with one consent that the Buffoon had given a far more exact
imitation, and clamored for the Countryman to be kicked out of the theater.
On this the
rustic produced the little pig from his cloak and showed by the most
positive proof the
greatness of their mistake. "Look here," he said, "this shows what sort of judges you are."
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