By Roger Duvoisin
Copyright 1950
While walking through the meadow one day, silly goose
Petunia comes across something she has never seen before – a book. She remembers hearing someone say, “He who
owns Books and loves them is wise”.
Petunia makes the assumption that since she has a book to carry around,
she also has the accompanying wisdom.
Proud Petunia now struts through the barnyard, dispensing advice to all
the other animals.
When Ida the hen comes to her for help in counting her
chicks to make sure all nine are there, Petunia counts 3 sets of 3 chicks, and
says that 3 x 3 is six, and six is much more than nine. Poor Ida worries because she doesn’t know how
she can take care of so many chicks.
More trouble ensues as Petunia dispenses her “wisdom”
throughout the barnyard.
It takes a disastrous encounter with a box of firecrackers
that is mistakenly read as “candies” to finally put Petunia in her place. Petunia’s pride and wisdom exploded with the
firecrackers and she comes to the realization that “It was not enough to carry
wisdom under my wing. I must put it in
my mind and heart. And to do that I must
learn to read.”
The importance of literacy is of course the key lesson here.
I take another important lesson from Petunia’s story. Just because someone has the book – or the
degree – or the status – that makes them seem wise, don’t blindly take their
advice. We can’t be experts on
everything, so we need to sometimes lean on the wisdom of others. We should, however, learn to be discerning
and not assume that wisdom automatically comes with status.
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