Three Hundred Æsop's Fables/The Rose and the Amaranth

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London: George Routledge and Sons, page 174

THE ROSE AND THE AMARANTH.

An Amaranth planted in a garden near a Rose-tree thus addressed it: "What a lovely flower is the Rose, a favourite alike with Gods and with men. I envy you your beauty and your perfume." The Rose replied, "I indeed, dear Amaranth, flourish but for a brief season! If no cruel hand pluck me from my stem, yet I must perish by an early doom. But thou art immortal, and dost never fade, but bloomest for ever in renewed youth."