If you try to please everybody, you have pleased no body


Once A Miller and his son were driving their Ass to the fair to sell them. They had not gone far, when they met a troop of girls, returning from the town, talking and laughing.

"Look there! cried one of them. "Did you ever see such fools, to be trudging along on foot, when they might be riding?"

The Miller, when he heard this, bade his Son, get up on the Ass, and walked along merrily by his side. Soon they came to a group of old men talking gravely. 

"There!" said one of them; "that proves what I was saying. What respect is shown to old age in these days? Do you see that idle young rogue riding, while his father has to walk? Get down, lazy boy, and let the old man get on!"

The Son got down from the Ass, and the Miller took his place. They had not gone far when they met a company of women and children.

"Why, you lazy old fellow!" cried several at once. "How can you ride upon the beast, when that poor little, lad can hardly keep up with you?"

So the good-nurtured Miller took his Son up behind him. They had now almost reached the town.

"Pray, my friend," said a townsman, "is that Ass your own?"

"Yes," said the Miller.

"I should not have thought so," said the other, "by the way you load him. Why, you two are better able to carry the poor beast than he to carry you."

"Anything to please you," said the Miller. So he and his Son got down from the Ass. They tied his legs together and taking a stout pole, tried to carry him on their shoulder over a bridge that led to the town.

This was so odd a sight that crowds of people ran out to see it, and to laugh at it. The Ass, not liking to be tied, kicked the cords away, and tumbled off the pole into the water. At this the Miller and his Son hung down their heads. They made their wan home again, having learned that by trying to please everybody, they have pleased no body, and lost the Ass into the bargain. 


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