The Thieves and the Rooster

Aesop

The thieves carried off the rooster.

Some Thieves broke into a house, and found nothing worth taking except a Rooster, which they seized and carried off with them.

When they were preparing their supper, one of them caught up the Rooster, and was about to wring his neck, when he cried out for mercy and said, “Pray do not kill me: you will find me a most useful bird, for I rouse honest men to their work in the morning by my crowing.”

But the Thief replied with some heat, “Yes, I know you do, making it still harder for us to get a livelihood. Into the pot you go!”

From Aesop’s Fables: a new translation by V.S. Vernon Jones, with an introduction by G.K. Chesterton and illustrations by Arthur Rackham. 1912 edition. This work is in the public domain.