Aesop s Fables. Retold by Julie Harding Illustrated by Maria Voris. U.K. VERSION Aesop s Fables

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LEVELED READER M Aesop s Fables Retold by Julie Harding Illustrated by Maria Voris U.K. VERSION www.readinga-z.com Aesop s Fables A Reading A Z Level M Leveled Reader Word Count: 760 www.readinga-z.com

Aesop s Fables Retold by Julie Harding Illustrated by Maria Voris www.readinga-z.com Aesop s Fables Level M Leveled Reader 2002 Learning Page, Inc. Retold by Julie Harding Illustrated by Maria Voris ReadingA Z TM Learning Page, Inc. All rights reserved. Learning Page 1630 E. River Road #121 Tucson, AZ 85718 www.readinga-z.com

Table of Contents The Fox and the Stork... 4 The Fox and the Crow... 6 The Crow and the Pitcher... 8 The Peacock and Juno... 10 The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse... 12 The Wolf in Sheep s Clothing... 14 The Dog and His Shadow... 16 3 The Fox and the Stork The fox invited the stork over to eat soup. The fox put the soup in a flat dish. The stork could not eat any soup. He could not reach it with his long beak. The fox ate all the soup, and the stork went hungry. The next day, the stork invited the fox over for dinner. The stork put some meat in a jar with a long neck. The stork ate easily because his long beak fit into the jar. The fox could not get to the meat. This time he went hungry. The fox admitted that he had been wrong. Moral: If you do mean things to others, they might do mean things to you in return. 4

5 The Fox and the Crow The fox saw the crow fly to her favourite branch. She had a piece of cheese in her beak. The fox thought for a moment. He walked under the crow s branch and looked up at her. You are the prettiest bird I have ever seen, said the fox. The crow looked down at the fox. You fly so fast and gracefully. I bet you can sing, too, he said. The crow loved to hear compliments. She decided to sing for the fox. She opened her beak to sing. The cheese fell into the fox s mouth. When he was done eating, he said, Thank you very much. That was all I really wanted. 6 Moral: Do not trust strangers who try to flatter you.

7 The Crow and the Pitcher The crow had been flying all day, and he was very thirsty. He came across a pitcher that was half full of water. He could not reach the water in the pitcher to drink. His beak could not fit in the neck of the bottle. He tried tipping the pitcher, but it was too heavy. He saw that there were pebbles all over the ground. He began to drop pebbles one at a time into the pitcher. It took a very long time, but the water rose to the top. Then he drank all the water he wanted. Moral: Doing things little by little is just as good as doing things all at once. 8

9 The Peacock and Juno A peacock came to the goddess Juno. He did not like it that his voice made people laugh. The tiny nightingale made everyone happy with his beautiful song. Juno was angry as she replied, You are jealous of the nightingale, but you should not be. The feathers on your neck shine with every colour of the rainbow. And your tail looks like it is covered in gems. No one has it all. The falcon is very fast. The eagle is very strong. The parrot can speak. The raven is clever. The nightingale has a pretty song. You are big and beautiful. You are special just as you are. 10 Moral: No one can be the best at everything. Treasure your own gifts and talents.

11 The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse The poor country mouse came to visit his cousin, the rich town mouse. There were many things to do in the city. The country mouse had never seen so many other mice. The city mouse warned the country mouse that there was a cat in the house. The country mouse was scared. He decided that he would rather live in the poor, quiet country than live in fear every day. With that, the country mouse happily left for his humble home. Moral: It is better to live simply in safety than to live in luxury and fear. 12

13 The Wolf in Sheep s Clothing A wolf put on a costume to look like a sheep. The wolf then went to a nearby pasture where there were many sheep. The shepherd let him into the pasture, thinking that he was a sheep. The wolf was about to bite a poor lamb when the shepherd saw what he was doing. The shepherd threw the wolf out of the pasture and told him not to come back. From that day on, the shepherd never let a sheep into the pasture until he checked it for sharp teeth. Moral: The way things look is not always the way things are. 14

15 The Dog and His Shadow A dog was walking across the bridge over a stream. He had a nice piece of meat in his mouth. He looked down. He thought that he saw another dog. He thought the other dog had meat, too. He snapped at the meat in the dog s mouth. His own meat fell into the water. Then he realized it was not another dog after all. It was only his reflection. 16 Moral: If you are always greedy for more, you might lose what you already have.