Three Hundred Æsop's Fables/The Game-cocks and the Partridge

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London: George Routledge and Sons, page 152

THE GAME-COCKS AND THE PARTRIDGE.

A Man had two Game-cocks in his poultry-yard. One day by chance he fell in with a tame Partridge for sale. He purchased it, and brought it home that it might be reared with his Game-cocks. On its being put into the poultry-yard they struck at it, and followed it about, so that the Partridge was grievously troubled in mind, and supposed that he was thus evilly treated because he was a stranger. Not long afterwards he saw the Cocks fighting together, and not separating before one had well beaten the other. He then said to himself, "I shall no longer distress myself at being struck at by these Game- cocks, when I see that they cannot even refrain from quarrelling with each other."