Aesop\'s Fables A New Revised Version From Original Sources
AESOP'S FABLES A NEW REVISED VERSION FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES [Illustration] WITH UPWARDS OF 200 ILLUSTRATIONS BY HARRISON WEIR,[A] JOHN TENNIEL, ERNEST GRISET AND OTHERS NEW YORK FRANK F. LOVELL & COMPANY 142 AND 144 WORTH STREET [Illustration]
and showed by every movement how glad he was to see me. We really
have reached the understanding that the immemorial persecution
of his race by mine is ended; and now more than ever my fondness
settles about him, since I have found his happiness plotted against,
and have perhaps saved his very life. It would be easy to trap
him. His eye should be made to distrust every well-arranged pile
of sticks under which lurks a morsel.
To=night I called upon Georgiana and sketched the arrested tragedy
of the morning. She watched me curiously, and then dashed into a
little treatise on the celebrated friendships of man for the lower
creatures, in fact and fiction, from camels down to white mice.
Her father must have been a remarkably learned man. I didn't
like this. It made me somehow feel as though I were one of Asp's
Fables, or were being translated into English as that old school-room
horror of Androclus and the Lion. In the bottom of my soul I don't
believe that Georgiana cares for birds, or knows the difference
between a blackbird and a crow. I am going to send her a little
story, "The Passion of the Desert." Mrs. Walters is now confident
that Georgiana regrets having broken off her engagement. But then
Mrs. Walters can be a great fool when she puts her whole mind to
it.
XIV
AESOP'S FABLES A NEW REVISED VERSION FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES [Illustration] WITH UPWARDS OF 200 ILLUSTRATIONS BY HARRISON WEIR,[A] JOHN TENNIEL, ERNEST GRISET AND OTHERS NEW YORK FRANK F. LOVELL & COMPANY 142 AND 144 WORTH STREET [Illustration]