A Parable By Aubrey Menen
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NCE UPON A TIME there was a
discontented tiger. He was not only tired of living in the jungle – although he
thought the jungle was indeed a very silly place, all trees, trees, trees; he
was not only tired of having a striped coat – although he thought that stripes
were a silly design, just a lot of brown lines on a lot of yellow; he was
deep-down discontented with being a tiger.
He put this point of view to three other tigers.
‘Don’t you feel dissatisfied with just being a tiger?’ he asked them.
One of them yawned so as to show off his magnificent teeth. ‘Why should I be? Who has as lovely teeth as I have?’ he said. One of them pretended he saw something move in the grasses, and leaped thirty feet in one bound to find out what it was.
'Dissatisfied?' He called back from among the grasses, ‘just find me an animal who can beat that leap.’
But the last one was a thoughtful tiger and he put a paw on the discontented tiger’s shoulder and said, ‘I know just how you feel!’
The discontented tiger was very grateful and said, ‘Do you really?’
The other tiger said, ‘Yes’ in a sympathetic voice. ‘It’s a sort of empty feeling, isn’t it?’
‘That’s it. That’s just it,’ said the discontented tiger. Fancy you having it too.’
The other tiger gave a shout of laughter (which sounded rather like laughing down a well) and slapped the discontented tiger on the back so hard that he fell over.
‘It’s nothing that a good hearty meal of buffalo won’t cure,’ he said, and all the three tigers started laughing together.
The discontented tiger picked himself up, shook the dust from his coat, and said, ‘This is what I mean. Tigers have coarse minds,’ and he went off into the jungle with his head in the air.
*
*
He put this point of view to three other tigers.
‘Don’t you feel dissatisfied with just being a tiger?’ he asked them.
One of them yawned so as to show off his magnificent teeth. ‘Why should I be? Who has as lovely teeth as I have?’ he said. One of them pretended he saw something move in the grasses, and leaped thirty feet in one bound to find out what it was.
'Dissatisfied?' He called back from among the grasses, ‘just find me an animal who can beat that leap.’
But the last one was a thoughtful tiger and he put a paw on the discontented tiger’s shoulder and said, ‘I know just how you feel!’
The discontented tiger was very grateful and said, ‘Do you really?’
The other tiger said, ‘Yes’ in a sympathetic voice. ‘It’s a sort of empty feeling, isn’t it?’
‘That’s it. That’s just it,’ said the discontented tiger. Fancy you having it too.’
The other tiger gave a shout of laughter (which sounded rather like laughing down a well) and slapped the discontented tiger on the back so hard that he fell over.
‘It’s nothing that a good hearty meal of buffalo won’t cure,’ he said, and all the three tigers started laughing together.
The discontented tiger picked himself up, shook the dust from his coat, and said, ‘This is what I mean. Tigers have coarse minds,’ and he went off into the jungle with his head in the air.
*
*