Reread this passage from "The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage."
When people are too well off, though, they start to long for something new. One day, while out gathering twigs for fuel, the bird met another bird and began to brag about his situation. The other bird made fun of him and called him a fool. "Ha―you do all the hard work," the other bird said, "while the other two stay at home and have a good time!"
The bird who lived with the mouse and the sausage thought about this for the rest of the day. He decided that the other bird might have been right. After all, when the mouse had made the fire and fetched the water from the well, she could retire to her little room and rest until it was time to set the table. And when it was near dinner-time, the sausage simply threw himself into the broth and rolled around in the vegetables three or four times―until the meal was buttered, and salted, and ready to be served. After dinner, the mouse and the sausage could sleep till the following morning―and then continue to rest or take their leisure till dinner-time the next day. It was true, the bird thought, the mouse and the sausage really did have a more delightful life.
What theme is suggested by this passage―if you consider how the story ends?
There is more than one way to be a fool.
Making fun of someone is wrong.
Everyone is best suited for just one job.
The mouse and the sausage have easier jobs.
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