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These educational materials present a classic fable by Jean de la Fontaine featuring a sly fox and a vain raven. The story describes how the fox uses dishonest flattery regarding the bird’s beauty to trick him into singing. When the raven opens his mouth, he drops a prized piece of food, allowing the fox to snatch it away. Following the poem, comprehension activities challenge students to identify key plot points and characters. Ultimately, the text serves as a moral lesson warning readers against the dangers of excessive pride and trusting insincere compliments. The central moral lesson of this fable is to beware of flattery and the dangers of excessive pride. The story illustrates this through the Fox’s interaction with the Raven: • Don't trust flatterers: The Fox uses "sweet words" and "admiring tones" to convince the Raven he is handsome and should be "King" if only he would sing. The lesson explicitly warns to "ignore sweet words that make you glow" because they are often used for manipulation. • Pride is unwise: The Raven, consumed by "foolish pride," forgets that his natural voice is merely a croak. By trying to prove his greatness through singing, he opens his beak and loses the food he was holding. As the Fox concludes, "Pride, my friend, is rather unwise". Ultimately, the fable teaches that vanity can cloud your judgment and lead you to make foolish mistakes that benefit those who flatter you