欢迎访一网宝!您身边的知识小帮手,专注做最新的学习参考资料!
首页 > 其他 >

Mercury and the Sculptor

一网宝 分享 时间: 加入收藏 我要投稿 点赞

  A Woodman was felling a tree on the bank of a river, when his axe1,

  glancing off the trunk, flew out of his hands and fell into the water.

  As he stood by the water's edge lamenting2 his loss, Mercury appeared

  and asked him the reason for his grief. On learning what had happened,

  out of pity for his distress3, Mercury dived into the river and,

  bringing up a golden axe, asked him if that was the one he had lost.

  The Woodman replied that it was not, and Mercury then dived a second

  time, and, bringing up a silver axe, asked if that was his. "No,

  that is not mine either," said the Woodman. Once more Mercury dived

  into the river, and brought up the missing axe. The Woodman was

  overjoyed at recovering his property, and thanked his benefactor

  warmly; and the latter was so pleased with his honesty that he made

  him a present of the other two axes. When the Woodman told the story

  to his companions, one of these was filled with envy of his good

  fortune and determined4 to try his luck for himself. So he went and

  began to fell a tree at the edge of the river, and presently contrived

  to let his axe drop into the water. Mercury appeared as before, and,

  on learning that his axe had fallen in, he dived and brought up a

  golden axe, as he had done on the previous occasion. Without waiting

  to be asked whether it was his or not, the fellow cried, "That's mine,

  that's mine," and stretched out his hand eagerly for the prize: but

  Mercury was so disgusted at his dishonesty that he not only declined

  to give him the golden axe, but also refused to recover for him the

  one he had let fall into the stream.

  "Honesty is the best policy."

精选图文

221381
领取福利

微信扫码领取福利

微信扫码分享