THE VILLAGER AND THE SPECTACLES
There was a
villager. He was illiterate. He did not know how to read and write. He often
saw people wearing spectacles for reading books or papers. He thought, “If I
have spectacles, I can also read like these people. I must go to town and buy a
pair of spectacles for myself.”
So one day he
went to a town. He entered a spectacles shop He asked the shopkeeper for a pair
of spectacles for reading. The shopkeeper gave him various pairs of spectacles
and a book. The villager tried all the spectacles one by one. But he could not
read anything. He told the shopkeeper that all those spectacles were useless
for him. The shopkeeper gave him a doubtful look. Then he looked at the book.
It was upside down! The shopkeeper said, “Perhaps you don’t know how to read.”
The villager
said, “No, I don’t. I want to buy spectacles so that I can read like others.
But I can’t read with any of these spectacles.” The shopkeeper controlled his
laughter with great difficulty when he learnt the real problem of his
illiterate customer.
He explained
to the villager, “My dear friend, you are very ignorant. Spectacles don’t help
to read or write. They only help you to see better. First of all you must learn
to read and write.”
Moral: Ignorance is blindness.
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