The Wolf and the Dog
Once there was a wolf who was
nearly dead with hunger. He was very thin, so that the outline of his bones
could be seen clearly beneath his thinning coat of hair. With hardly enough
energy to walk, the wolf had little hope of finding food. As he lay beneath a
large tree, a dog out for a walk noticed him. Seeing how thin and hungry
looking the wolf was, the dog felt sorry for him and said, “You are in terrible
shape! You look as if you haven’t eaten for many days.”
“You’re right,” said the wolf. “I
haven’t eaten because you and your friends are doing such a good job of
guarding the sheep. Now I am so weak that I have little hope of finding food. I
think I will surely die.”
“Then why not join us?” Asked the
dog. “I work regularly and I eat regularly. You could do the same. I will arrange
it. You can help me and the other dogs guard the sheep. In that way, we won’t
have to worry about your stealing the sheep any more and you won’t have to
worry about going hungry any more. It’s a good deal for both of us.”
The wolf thought it over for a
few minutes and then decided that the dog was right. So they went off together
toward the ranch house where the dog lived. But, as they were walking, the wolf
noticed that the hair on a certain part of the dog’s neck was very thin. He was
curious about this, for the dog had such a beautiful coat every where else.
Finally, he asked the dog about it.
“Oh, don’t worry about that,”
said the dog. “It’s the place where the collar rubs on my neck when my master
chains me up at night.”
“Chained up!” cried the wolf, “Do
you mean that you are chained up at night? If I come to live with you, will I
be chained up at night too?”
“That’s right,” answered the dog.
“But you’ll get used to it soon enough. I hardly think about it anymore.”
“But, if I am chained up, then I
won’t be able to walk when I want to take a walk or to run where I want to
run,” the wolf said. “If I come to live with you, I won’t be free anymore.”
After saying this, the wolf turned and ran away.
The dog called after the wolf, saying, “Wait!
Come back! I may not be able to do everything I want to do, but I’m healthy,
well-fed, and I have a warm place to sleep. You are too worried about keeping
alive to enjoy life. I’m more free than you are.”
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