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Bryant, Sara Cone, 1873-

"How to Tell Stories to Children, And Some Stories to Tell"

When he gnaws and gnaws at me
I crumble and crumble, and at last I fall; go to the Rat, little brother."
And so, after going all over the world to find the strongest person, the
Rat King had to marry his daughter to a rat, after all; but the princess
was very glad of it, for she wanted to marry the grey Rat, all the time.

THE FROG AND THE OX
Once a little Frog sat by a big Frog, by the side of a pool. "Oh, father,"
said he, "I have just seen the biggest animal in the world; it was as big
as a mountain, and it had horns on its head, and it had hoofs divided in
two."
"Pooh, child," said the old Frog, "that was only Farmer White's Ox. He is
not so very big. I could easily make myself as big as he." And he blew,
and he blew, and he blew, and swelled himself out.
"Was he as big as that?" he asked the little Frog.
"Oh, much bigger," said the little Frog.
The old Frog blew, and blew, and blew again, and swelled himself out, more
than ever.
"Was he bigger than that?" he said.
"Much, much bigger," said the little Frog.
"I can make myself as big," said the old Frog. And once more he blew, and
blew, and blew, and swelled himself out,--and he burst!
Self-conceit leads to self-destruction.

THE FIRE-BRINGER[1]
[Footnote 1: Adapted from _The Basket Woman_, by Mary Austin.


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