220. The Lion and the Three Bulls
THREE BULLS for a long time pastured together. A Lion lay in
ambush in the hope of making them his prey, but was afraid to attack them while they kept together.
Having at last by guileful speeches succeeded in separating them, he attacked them without fear as they fed alone, and feasted on them one by one at his own
leisure.
Union is strength.
221. The Fowler and the Viper
A FOWLER,
taking his bird-lime and his twigs, went out to catch birds. Seeing a
thrush sitting upon a tree, he wished to take it, and
fitting his twigs to a proper length, watched
intently, having his whole thoughts directed towards the sky.
While thus looking
upwards, he unknowingly trod upon a Viper asleep just before his feet. The Viper, turning about, stung him, and falling into a swoon, the man said to himself, "Woe is me! That while I purposed to hunt another, I am myself fallen unawares into the snares of death."
222. The Horse and the Ass
A HORSE, proud of his fine trappings, met an Ass on the highway. The Ass, being heavily laden, moved slowly out of the way. "Hardly," said the Horse, "can I resist kicking you with my heels." The Ass held his peace, and made only a silent
appeal to the justice of the gods.
Not long afterwards the Horse, having become broken-winded, was sent by his owner to the farm. The Ass,
seeing him
drawing a dungcart, thus derided him: "Where, O boaster, are now all thy gay trappings, thou who are thyself reduced to the condition you so lately treated with contempt?'
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