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    The Fox and the Wolf - Page 2

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    enough for me; for "to the hungry no bread is hard."'

    'Oh, you are always joking! I'm sure you are not half as hungry as I!'

    'That we shall soon see,' cried the wolf, opening his huge mouth and crouching for a spring.

    'What are you doing?' exclaimed the fox, stepping backwards.

    'What am I doing? What I am going to do is to make my supper off you, in less time than a cock takes to crow.'

    'Well, I suppose you must have your joke,' answered the fox lightly, but never removing her eye from the wolf, who replied with a snarl which showed all his teeth:

    'I don't want to joke, but to eat!'

    'But surely a person of your talents must perceive that you might eat me to the very last morsel and never know that you had swallowed anything at all!'

    'In this world the cleverest people are always the hungriest,' replied the wolf.

    'Ah! how true that is; but--'

    'I can't stop to listen to your "buts" and "yets,"' broke in the wolf rudely; 'let us get to the point, and the point is that I want to eat you and not talk to you.'

    'Have you no pity for a poor mother?' asked the fox, putting her tail to her eyes, but peeping slily out of them all the same.

    'I am dying of hunger,' answered the wolf, doggedly; 'and you know,' he added with a grin, 'that charity begins at home.'

    'Quite so,' replied the fox; 'it would be unreasonable of me to object to your satisfying your appetite at my expense. But if the fox resigns herself to the sacrifice, the mother offers you one last request.'

    'Then be quick and don't waste my time, for I can't wait much longer. What is it you want?'

    'You must know,' said the fox, 'that in this village there is a rich man who makes in the summer enough cheeses to last him for the whole year, and keeps them in an old well, now dry, in his courtyard. By the well hang two buckets on a pole that were used, in former days, to draw up water. For many nights I have crept down to the palace, and have lowered myself in the bucket, bringing home with me enough cheese to feed the children. All I beg of you is to come with me, and, instead of hunting chickens and such things, I will make a good meal off cheese before I die.'

    'But the cheeses may be all finished by now?'

    'If you were only to see the quantities of them!' laughed the fox. 'And even if they were finished, there would always be ME to eat.'

    'Well, I will come. Lead the way, but I warn you that if you try to escape or play any tricks you are reckoning without your host-- that is to say, without my legs, which are as long as yours!'

    All was silent in the village, and not a light was to be seen but that of the moon, which shone bright and clear in the sky. The wolf and the fox crept softly along, when suddenly they stopped and looked at each other; a savoury smell of frying bacon reached their noses,
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