Contoh Narrative Text Fabel
1. The Tiger Who Would Be King
One morning the tiger woke up in the jungle and told his mate that he was king of beasts.
“Leo, the lion, is king of beasts,” she said.
“We need a change,” said the tiger. “The creatures are crying for a change.”
The tigress listened but she could hear no crying, except that of her cubs.
“Oh sure,” said the tigress as she went to look after her young,
one of whom, a male, very like his father, had got an imaginary thorn in
his paw.
The tiger prowled through the jungle till he came to the lion’s
den. “Come out,” he roared,” and greet the king of beasts! The king is
dead, long live the king!”
Inside the den, the lioness woke her mate. “The king is here to see you,” she said.
“What king?” he inquired, sleepily.
“The king of beasts,” she said.
“I am the king of beasts,” roared Leo and he charged out of the den to defend his crown against the pretender.
It was a terrible fight and it lasted until the setting of the sun.
All the animals of the jungle joined in, some taking the side of the
tiger and others the side of the lion. Every creature from the aardvark
to the zebra took part in the struggle to overthrow the lion or to
repulse the tiger, and some did not knot know which they were fighting
for, and some fought for both, and some fought whoever was nearest and
some fought for the sake of fighting.
“What are we fighting for?” someone asked the aardvark.
“The old order,” said the aardvark.
“What are we dying for?” someone asked the zebra.
“The new order,” said the zebra.
When the moon rose, fevered and gibbous, it shone upon a jungle in
which nothing stirred except a macaw and a cockatoo, screaming in
horror. All the beasts were dead except the tiger, and his days were
numbered and his time was ticking away. He was monarch of all he
surveyed, but it didn’t seem to mean anything.
2. The Fox and the Crow
“They say you are sly and they say you are crazy,” said the crow,
having carefully removed the cheese from his beak with the claws of one
foot, “but you must be nearsighted as well. Warblers wear gay hats and
colored jackets and bright vest, and they are a dollar a hundred. I wear
black and I am unique.
“I am sure you are,” said the fox, who was neither crazy nor
nearsighted, but sly. “I recognize you, now that I look more closely, as
the most famed and talented of all birds, and I fain would hear you
tell about yourself, but I am hungry and must go.”
“Tarry awhile,” said the crow quickly, “and share my lunch with
me.” Whereupon he tossed the cunning fox the lion’s share of the cheese,
and began to tell about himself. “A ship that sails without a crow’s
nest sails to doom,” he said. “Bars may come and bars may go, but crow
bars last forever. I am the pioneer of flight, I am the map maker. Last,
but never least, my flight is known to scientists and engineers,
geometricians, and scholar, as the shortest distance between two points.
Any two points,” he concluded arrogantly.
“Oh, every two points, I am sure,” said the fox. “And thank you for
the lion’s share of what I know you could not spare.” And with this he
trotted away into the woods, his appetite appeased, leaving the hungry
crow perched forlornly in the tree.
3. The Wolf and the Dog
“You’re right,” said the wolf. “I haven’t eaten because you and
your friends are doing such a good job of guarding the sheep. Now I am
so weak that I have little hope of finding food. I think I will surely
die.”
Then why not join us? Asked the dog. “I work regularly and I eat
regularly. You could do the same. I will arrange it. You can help me and
the other dogs guard the sheep. In that way, we won’t have to worry
about your stealing the sheep any more and you won’t have to worry about
going hungry any more. It’s a good deal for both of us.”
The wolf thought it over for a few minutes and then decided that
the dog was right. So they went off together toward the ranch house
where the dog lived. But, as they were walking, the wolf noticed that
the hair on a certain part of the dog’s neck was very thin. He was
curious about this, for the dog had such a beautiful coat every where
else. Finally, he asked the dog about it.
“Oh, don’t worry about that,” said the dog. “It’s the place where
the collar rubs on my neck when my master chains me up at night.”
“Chained up!” cried the wolf, “Do you mean that you are chained up
at night? If I come to live with you, will I be chained up at night
too?”
That’s right,” answered the dog. “But, You’ll get used to it soon enough. I hardly think about it anymore.”
“But, if I am chained up, then I won’t be able to walk when I want
to take a walk or to run where I want to run,” the wolf said. “If I come
to live with you, I won’t be free anymore.” After saying this, the wolf
turned and ran away.
“The dog called after the wolf, saying, “Wait! Come back! I may not
be able to do everything I want to do, but I’m healthy, well-fed, and I
have a warm place to sleep. You are too worried about keeping alive to
enjoy life. I’m more free than you are.”
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