It is never safe to be wiser than one's friends
John Lockwood Kipling (1837-1911)
1894
Illustration for "The Jackal and the Pea-hen" in Tales of the Punjab: Told by the People, facing p.196.
This is a fable worthy of Aesop, in which the boastful pea-hen, who hah buried some plum-stones after eating the fruit, taunts the jackal whose similarly buried meat-bone has, of course, not yielded any harvest. The two creatures had once been friends, but this is too much for the jackal, and he gobbles her up in a fit of peevish rage (and hunger).
Scanned image and text by Jacqueline Banerjee.