The Tree and The Reed
By
Aesop
A Giant Oak stood near a brook in which grew some slender Reeds. When the wind blew, the great Oak stood proudly upright with its hundred arms uplifted to the sky. But the Reeds bowed low in the wind and sang a sad and mournful song.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhAbDkW0F64B7t4DKk3UGu7tRx5TJzIAqHu-Uuo2B5bJJzxUzw7ptC23ZiZ9kgmIjx2Cr2teIZ8TdVm7-YOFPogpjMqML3Pi5Bf3IEH5EGVrV4Vz_O_7775Yl2EtX1T6-FdIJgwypKTyKI/s320/The+Tree+and+The+Reed.jpg)
“Do not worry about us,” replied the Reeds. “The winds do not harm us. We bow before them and so we do not break. You, in all your pride and strength, have so far resisted their blows. But the end is coming.”
As the Reeds spoke a great hurricane rushed out of the north. The Oak stood proudly and fought against the storm, while the yielding Reeds bowed low. The wind redoubled in fury, and all at once the great tree fell, torn up by the roots, and lay among the pitying Reeds.
((Obscurity often brings safety.))