Gateway to the Classics: Aesop's Fables by J. H. Stickney
 
Aesop's Fables by  J. H. Stickney

The Cock and the Jewel

"C OME, my dears," said a Cock to his hens one morning; "I am hungry, and so are you. Let us go out. I will scratch up some nice worms and beetles for our breakfast."

The hens stood waiting while he scratched.

But the first thing that he found was neither a beetle nor a worm but a precious stone. It may have been a ruby or an emerald.

"Dear me!" said the Cock; "what is this? a Jewel! How glad anybody else might be to have found such a prize; but I have no need of it. I would rather have a few kernels of good corn than all the Jewels in the world."

"And so would we," said the hens. "Nothing can do us good if it is not a thing that we ourselves want."


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