'I shall tell you A pretty tale: it may be you have heard it; But, since it serves my purpose, I will venture To stale't a little more.'
Shakespeare: Coriolanus.
'He sat among the woods; he heard The sylvan merriment; he saw The pranks of butterfly and bird, The humours of the ape, the daw.
'And in the lion or the frog— In all the life of moor and fen, In ass and peacock, stork and log, He read similitudes of men.'
Andrew Lang.
'The fables which appeal to our higher moral sympathiesmay sometimes do as much for us as the truths of science.'
Mrs. Jameson.
'The years of infancy constitute, in the memory of each ofus, the fabulous season of existence; just as in the memoryof nations, the fabulous period was the period of theirinfancy.'—Giacomo Leopardi.