Portal:Children's literature/Selected quote/15

{{Portal:Children and Young Adult Literature/Selected quote/Layout

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|caption=Aesop's Fables

|quote=A Crow having taken a Piece of Cheese out of a Cottage-Window, flew up into a high Tree with it, in order to eat it. Which a Fox observing, came and sate underneath, and began to compliment the Crow upon the Subject of her Beauty. I protest, says he, I never observ'd it before, but your Feathers are of a more delicate White than any that ever I saw in my Life: Ah! what a fine Shape, and graceful turn of Body is there! And I make no question but you have a tolerable Voice? If it were but as fine as your Complexion, as I hope to live, I don't know a Bird that could pretend to stand in Competition with you. The Crow, ticked with this very civil Language, nestled and riggled about, and hardly knew where she was; but thinking the Fox a little in the dark as to the Particular of her Voice, and having a mind to set him right in that Matter, she began to sing, for his Information; and, in the same Instant, let the cheese drop out of her Mouth. This being what the Fox wanted, he chop'd it up in a Moment; and trotted away, laughing in his Sleeve, at the easie Credulity of the Crow.

|link=Samuel Croxall

|detail="The Fox and the Crow," Aesop's Fables

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Source

  • {{cite book|title=The Norton Anthology of Children's Literature|year=2005|publisher=W. W. Norton & Co.|isbn=0393327760|pages=395|editor1=Jack Zipes |editor2=Lissa Paul |editor3=Lynne Vallone |chapter=Samuel Croxall}}