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Aesop's Fables
 You're here » Kids Index » Aesop's Fables » Part 4 » The Impostor Print Version

The Impostor

A certain man fell ill, and, being in a very bad way, he made a vow that he would sacrifice a hundred oxen to the gods if they would grant him a return to health.
      
      Wishing to see how he would keep his vow, they caused him to recover in a short time.
      
      Now, he hadn't an ox in the world, so he made a hundred little oxen out of tallow and offered them up on an altar, at the same time saying, "Ye gods, I call you to witness that I have discharged my vow."
      
      The gods determined to be even with him, so they sent him a dream, in which he was bidden to go to the sea-shore and fetch a hundred crowns which he was to find there.
      
      Hastening in great excitement to the shore, he fell in with a band of robbers, who seized him and carried him off to sell as a slave: and when they sold him a hundred crowns was the sum he fetched.

Moral: Do not promise more than you can perform.

Next Story:
The Dogs And The Hides

Previous Story:
The Stag And The Lion

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