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Truth in Fiction

Or, Morality in Masquerade. A Collection of Two hundred twenty five Select Fables of Aesop, and other Authors. Done into English Verse. By Edmund Arwaker
  

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FABLE XXXVI. The Eagle and Daw:
  
  
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144

FABLE XXXVI. The Eagle and Daw:

Or, Good Counsel ill design'd.

An Eagle, touring long in quest of Prey,
Seiz'd a large Scallop on the Sandy Bay;
But found the Shell so strong, and clos'd so fast,
She cou'd not reach the Meat she long'd to taste.
A pert Young Daw, that saw her strive in vain,
Advis'd her thus to supersede her Pain:
Bear it aloft, and drop it on a Stone,
'Twill crack the Shell, and make the Meat your own.
The Eagle mounts, and, in her airy Flight,
Let the Fish drop from the stupendous Height.
The watchful Daw, observing where it fell,
Pick'd the fat Scallop from its broken Shell;
Then with her Booty made a swift Retreat,
And left the Eagle to resent the Cheat.

The MORAL.

‘Of all Advice, and by whom giv'n, beware;
‘That is not safest, that do's best appear.
‘Designing Men, consulting private Ends,
‘Seek their own Int'rest, and pretend their Friend's.