160. The Lion, the Fox, and the Ass
THE LION, the Fox and the Ass entered into an agreement to assist each other in the chase. Having secured a large booty, the Lion on their return from the forest asked the Ass to allot his due portion to each of the three partners in the treaty.
The Ass carefully divided the spoil into three equal shares and
modestly requested the two others to make the first choice. The Lion, bursting out into a great rage, devoured the Ass.
Then he requested the Fox to do him the favor to make a division. The Fox accumulated all that they had killed into one large heap and left to himself the smallest possible
morsel.
The Lion said, "Who has taught you, my very excellent fellow, the art of division? You are perfect to a fraction." He replied, "I
learned it from the Ass, by witnessing his fate."
Happy is the man who learns from the misfortunes of others.
161. The Bull, the Lioness, and the Wild-Boar Hunter
A BULL
finding a lion's cub asleep gored him to death with his horns. The Lioness came up, and bitterly
lamented the death of her whelp.
A wild-boar Hunter,
seeing her distress, stood at a distance and said to her, "Think how many men there are who have reason to
lament the loss of their children, whose deaths have been caused by you."
162. The Oak and the Woodcutters
THE WOODCUTTER cut down a Mountain Oak and split it in pieces, making wedges of its own branches for dividing the trunk.
The Oak said with a sigh, "I do not care about the blows of the axe aimed at my roots, but I do grieve at being torn in pieces by these wedges made from my own branches."
Misfortunes springing from ourselves are the hardest to bear.
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