The County Mouse and the Town Mouse
A
Country Mouse had a friend who lived in a house in town. Now the Town
Mouse was invited by the Country Mouse to take dinner with him, and out
he went and sat down to a meal of barley and wheat. "Do you know, my
friend," said he, "that you live a mere ant’s life out here? Now I have
abundance at home, come, and enjoy all the good things." So off the two
set for town, and there the Town Mouse showed the other his beans and meal,
his dates, too, his cheese, and fruit, and honey. And as the Country Mouse
ate, drank, and was merry, he praised his friend and bewailed his own poor
lot. But while they were urging each other to eat heartily, a man suddenly
opened the door, and frightened by the noise they crept into the cracks.
Then when they wanted to taste again of some dried figs, in came another
person to get something that was in the room, and when they caught sight
of him they ran and hid in a hole. At that, the Country Mouse forgot his
hunger, and fetching a sigh, said to the other: "Please yourself, my good
friend, eating all you want, and having your fill of good things with
jollity—and danger and a constant panic; as for me, poor wretch,
who have only barley and wheat, I will live on, without fear of any one
overlooking me."
The fable teaches that it is better worth while to live plainly and
undisturbed, than to have a surfeit and be always in terror.
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