The Vain Jackdaw
    
    
      Jupiter announced that he intended to appoint a king over the birds,
    and named a day on which they were to appear before his throne, when
    he would select the most beautiful of them all to be their ruler.
    Wishing to look their best on the occasion they repaired to the
    banks of a stream, where they busied themselves in washing and
    preening their feathers. The Jackdaw was there along with the rest,
    and realized that, with his ugly plumage, he would have no chance of
    being chosen as he was: so he waited till they were all gone, and then
    picked up the most gaudy of the feathers they had dropped, and
    fastened them about his own body, with the result that he looked gayer
    than any of them. When the appointed day came, the birds assembled
    before Jupiter's throne. After passing them in review, he was about to
    make the Jackdaw king, when all the rest set upon the king-select,
    stripped him of his borrowed plumes, and exposed him for the Jackdaw
    that he was.
    
    
    	"It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds."
    


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