Aesop's Fables Edited by Charles Stikeney.

 
THE MICE IN COUNCIL
 
SOME little  Mice,  who  lived in the  walls
of a house,  met  together one night,  to talk
of the wicked Cat, and to consider what could
be done to get rid of her.  The head Mice were
Brown-back, Grey-ear, and White-whisker.
   "There  is  no  comfort  in  the  house," said
Brown-back; "if  I  but  step in the pantry  to
pick up  a  few  crumbs, down she comes, and
I have hardly time to run to my nest again."
   "What can we do?"  asked Grey-ear, "shall
we  all  run at her at once and bite  her,  and
frighten her away?"
   "No," said  White-whisker; "she is so hold
we could not frighten her.   I have thought of
something better than that.   Let  us hang  a
bell round her neck.  Then, if she moves, the
bell will ring, and we shall hear it, and  have
time to run away."
   "O  yes!  yes!"  cried  all  the  Mice.  "That
is  a  capital  idea.   We  will  bell the  Cat!
and they danced in glee.
   When  their  glee  had  subsided  a  little,
Brown-back asked,  "But  who  will  hang the
bell round her neck?"
   No  one  answered.  "Will you?" he asked of
White-whisker.
   "I  don't   think  I  can,"  replied  White-
whisker; "I  am  lame,   you   know.  It  needs
some one who can move quickly."
   "Will you,  Gray-ear?"  said  Brown-back.
   "Excuse me," answered Grey-ear; "I have
not been  well since that time when  I was
almost caught in the trap."
   "Who will bell the Cat, then?" said  Brown-
back.   "If it is to be done, some one must
do it."
   Not  a  sound  was heard, and one by one
the little Mice stole away to their  holes, no
better off than they were before.

   When  there  is  trouble,  there  is need  of
some one to act as well as some to advise.
 
 

 
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