The Fox and The Pheasants
By
Aesop
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirkRZkPZHQhLzkrrMPb1hcVcphmEP9_9EQ8YuW0lyP7znDhZFA5GyfXqkdlMRYqHifU5iVuAIsG-PzgHWxMK20B7BnuWx-73cqYSA_HvKdhZtWHooF5em468QPACGar2kGwnUkuezEQjk/s320/The+Fox+and+The+Pheasants.jpg)
Now the Fox made as if to climb a tree, now he fell over and lay still, playing dead, and the next instant he was hopping on all fours, his back in the air, and his bushy tail shaking so that it seemed to throw out silver sparks in the moonlight.
By this time the poor birds’ heads were in a whirl. And when the Fox began his performance all over again, so dazed did they become, that they lost their hold on the limb, and fell down one by one to the Fox.
((Too much attention to danger may cause us to fall victims to it.))