Chapter, Paragraph
1 13, 43| to the sun like the wild crane.~ The fowl in the coop has
2 13, 43| provisions are given to the wild crane, but the heavens and the~
3 14, 67| THE CRUEL CRANE OUTWITTED~ ~ A TAILOR who
4 14, 67| many generations ago as a crane near a~pond, and when the
5 14, 67| should we do?' Replied the crane:~'I know a fine, large lake,
6 14, 67| distrust the honesty of the crane, he proposed to have one
7 14, 67| sake of the others, and the crane carried him to~a beautiful
8 14, 67| gained confidence in the crane, and now the~crane took
9 14, 67| in the crane, and now the~crane took them one by one out
10 14, 67| in the pond, and when the crane wanted~to eat him too, he
11 14, 67| thee with my beak, said the crane. 'Thou wilt let~me fall
12 14, 67| not fear,' rejoined the crane; 'I~shall hold thee quite
13 14, 67| lobster to himself: 'If this crane once gets hold~of a fish,
14 14, 67| him!' So he said to~the crane: 'Look here, friend, thou
15 14, 67| to~go with thee.'~ "The crane did not see that the lobster
16 14, 67| out:~'Ready, ready, go!' crane took him and showed him
17 14, 67| other way.'~Answered the crane: 'Thinkest so? Am I thy
18 14, 67| So saying, he gave the crane's neck a pinch with his
19 14, 67| with the fear of death, the crane besought the lobster, saying: '
20 14, 67| replied the lobster. And the~crane turned round and stepped
21 14, 67| Then the lobster cut the crane's~neck through as clean
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