The Elephant and the Dog by Ellsworth Young

More Jataka Tales by Ellen C. Babbitt

The Prince Wicked and the Grateful Animals by Ellsworth Young

More Jataka Tales
by Ellen C. Babbitt

Foreword

The Girl Monkey and the String of Pearls

The Three Fishes

The Tricky Wolf and the Rats

The Woodpecker, Turtle, and Deer

The Golden Goose

The Stupid Monkeys

The Cunning Wolf

The Penny-Wise Monkey

The Red-Bud Tree

The Woodpecker and the Lion

The Otters and the Wolf

How the Monkey Saved His Troop

The Hawks and Their Friends

The Brave Little Bowman

The Foolhardy Wolf

The Stolen Plow

The Lion in Bad Company

The Wise Goat and the Wolf

The Prince Wicked and the Grateful Animals

Beauty and the Brownie

The Elephant and the Dog


Jataka Tales
by Ellen C. Babbitt

SurLaLune Fairy Tales Main Page

The Golden Goose

ONCE upon a time there was a Goose who had beautiful golden feathers. Not far away from this Goose lived a poor, a very poor woman, who had two daughters. The Goose saw that they had a hard time to get along and said he to himself:

"If I give them one after another of my golden feathers, the mother can sell them, and with the money they bring she and her daughters can then live in comfort."

So away the Goose flew to the poor woman's house.

Seeing the Goose, the woman said: "Why do you come here? We have nothing to give you."

"But I have something to give you," said the Goose. "I will give my feathers, one by one, and you can sell them for enough so that you and your daughters can live in comfort."

So saying the Goose gave her one of his feathers, and then flew away. From time to time he came back, each time leaving another feather.

The mother and her daughters sold the beautiful feathers for enough money to keep them in comfort. But one day the mother said to her daughters: "Let us not trust this Goose. Some day he may fly away and never come back. Then we should be poor again. Let us get all of his feathers the very next time he comes."

The daughters said: "This will hurt the Goose. We will not do such a thing."

But the mother was greedy. The next time the Golden Goose came she took hold of him with both hands, and pulled out every one of his feathers.

Now the Golden Goose has strange feathers. If his feathers are plucked out against his wish, they no longer remain golden but turn white and are of no more value than chicken-feathers. The new ones that come in are not golden, but plain white.

As time went on his feathers grew again, and then he flew away to his home and never came back again.

Babbitt, Ellen C. More Jataka Tales. Ellsworth Young, illustrator. New York: The Century Co., 1922.


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Page last updated June 28, 2005
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