Aesop's Fables
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The Weasel and The Mice

Where strength fails, guile may succeed.

Townsend version

A weasel, inactive from age and infirmities, was not able to catch mice as he once did. He therefore rolled himself in flour and lay down in a dark corner. A Mouse, supposing him to be food, leaped upon him, and was instantly caught and squeezed to death. Another perished in a similar manner, and then a third, and still others after them. A very old Mouse, who had escaped many a trap and snare, observed from a safe distance the trick of his crafty foe and said, "Ah! you that lie there, may you prosper just in the same proportion as you are what you pretend to be!"

L'Estrange version

An old weazle that was now almost past mousing, try'd what she could do by her wits, when she found she could live no longer upon the square, and so conveys her self into a meal-tub for the mice to come to her, since she could not go to them. They came thick and threefold for a time, as she expected they should, till at last, one experienc'd stager that had baffled twenty traps and tricks before, discover'd the plot, and quite spoyl'd the jest.

Moral

The want of force, strength, and other abilities to compass our ends must be supply'd by industry and intention.

 

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