Page:Skeealyn Aesop a Selection of Aesops Fables Translated Into Manx-Gaelic Together with a Few Poems.djvu/87

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THE TORTOISE AND THE EAGLE.


A tortoise was lazily basking in the sun, and complaining to the sea-birds of her hard fate, that no one would teach her to fly. An eagle hovering near, heard her lamentation, and demanded what reward she would give him if he would take her aloft, and float her in the air. "I will give you," she said, "all the riches of the Red Sea." "I will teach you to fly, then," said the eagle; and taking her up in his talons, he carried her almost to the clouds—when suddenly letting her go, she fell on a lofty mountain, and dashed her shell to pieces. The tortoise exclaimed in the moment of death: "I have deserved my present fate; for what had I to do with wings and clouds, who can with difficulty move about the earth?"

If men had all they wished, they would be often ruined.