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๐Ÿ–Œ Moral story of the day ๐Ÿ–Œ
The Origin of the Mole
July 11, 2022 by Ukrainian folktale
Once upon a time a rich man and a poor man had a field in common, and they sowed it with the same seed at the same time. But God prospered the poor manโ€™s labour and made his seed to grow, but the rich manโ€™s seed did not grow. Then the rich man claimed that part of the field where the grain had sprung up, and said to the poor man, โ€œLook now! โ€™tis my seed that has prospered, and not thine!โ€ The poor man protested, but the rich man would not listen, but said to him, โ€œIf thou wilt not believe me, then, poor man, come into the field quite early to-morrow morning, before dawn, and God shall judge betwixt us.โ€
Then the poor man went home. But the rich man dug a deep trench in the poor manโ€™s part of the field and placed his son in it, and said to him, โ€œLook now, my son; when I come hither to-morrow morning and ask whose field this is, say that it is not the poor manโ€™s, but the rich manโ€™s.โ€
Then he well covered up his son with straw, and departed to his own house.
In the morning all the people assembled together and went to the field, and the rich man cried, โ€œSpeak, O God! whose field is this, the rich manโ€™s or the poor manโ€™s?โ€
โ€œThe rich manโ€™s, the rich manโ€™s,โ€ cried a voice from the midst of the field.
But the Lord Himself was among the people gathered together there, and He said, โ€œListen not to that voice, for the field is verily the poor manโ€™s.โ€
Then the Lord told all the people how the matter went, and then He said to the son of the rich man,
โ€œStay where thou art, and sit beneath the earth all thy days, so long as the sun is in the sky.โ€
So the rich manโ€™s son became a mole on the spot, and that is why the mole always flies the light of day.

Thanks for reading this story.
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๐Ÿ–Œ Short Story of the day ๐Ÿ–Œ
The Story of the Unlucky Days
July 14, 2022 by Ukrainian folktale

At the end of a village on the verge of the steppe dwelt two brothers, one rich and the other poor. One day the poor brother came to the rich brotherโ€™s house and sat down at his table; but the rich brother drove him away and said, โ€œHow durst thou sit at my table? Be off! Thy proper place is in the fields to scare away the crows!โ€ So the poor brother went into the fields to scare away the crows. The crows all flew away when they saw him, but among them was a raven that flew back again and said to him, โ€œO man! in this village thou wilt never be able to live, for here there is neither luck nor happiness for thee, but go into another village and thou shalt do well!โ€ Then the man went home, called together his wife and children, put up the few old clothes that still remained in his wardrobe, and went on to the next village, carrying his water-skin on his shoulders. On and on they tramped along the road, but the Unlucky Days clung on to the man behind, and said, โ€œWhy dost thou not take us with thee? We will never leave thee, for thou art ours!โ€ So they went on with him till they came to a river, and the man, who was thirsty, went down to the waterโ€™s edge for a drink. He undid his water-skin, persuaded the Unlucky Days to get into it, tied it fast again and buried it on the bank close by the river. Then he and his family went on farther. They went on and on till they came to another village, and at the very end of it was an empty hutโ€“โ€“the people who had lived there had died of hunger. There the whole family settled down. One day they were all sitting down there when they heard something in the mountain crying, โ€œCatch hold! catch hold! catch hold!โ€ The man went at once into his stable, took down the bit and reins that remained to him, and climbed up into the mountain. He looked all about him as he went, and at last he saw, sitting down, an old goat with two large hornsโ€“โ€“it was the Devil himself, but of course he didnโ€™t know that. So he made a lasso of the reins, threw them round the old goat, and began to drag it gently down the mountain-side. He dragged it all the way up the ladder of his barn, when the goat disappeared, but showers and showers of money came tumbling through the ceiling. He collected them all together, and they filled two large coffers. Then the poor man made the most of his money, and in no very long time he was well-to-do. Then he sent some of his people to his rich brother, and invited him to come and live with him. The rich brother pondered the matter over. โ€œMaybe he has nothing to eat,โ€ thought he, โ€œand that is why he sends for me.โ€ So he bade them bake him a good store of fat pancakes, and set out accordingly. On the way he heard that his brother had grown rich, and the farther he went the more he heard of his brotherโ€™s wealth. Then he regretted that he had brought all the pancakes with him, so he threw them away into the ditch. At last he came to his brotherโ€™s house, and his brother showed him first one of the coffers full of money and then the other. Then envy seized upon the rich brother, and he grew quite green in the face. But his brother said to him, โ€œLook now! I have buried a lot more money in a water-skin, hard by the river; you may dig it up and keep it if you like, for I have lots of my own here!โ€ The rich brother did not wait to be told twice. Off he went to the river, and began digging up the water-skin straightway. He unfastened it with greedy, trembling hands; but he had no sooner opened it than the Unlucky Days all popped out and clung on to him. โ€œThou art ours!โ€ said they. He went home, and when he got there he found that all his wealth was consumed, and a heap of ashes stood where his house had been. So he went and lived in the place where his brother had lived, and the Unlucky Days lived with him ever afterward.
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๐Ÿ–ŒPhrasal verb of the day ๐Ÿ–Œ
round somebody/something โ†” up
phrasal verb
1) if police or soldiers round up a particular group of people, they find them and force them to go to prison

-Thousands of men were rounded up and jailed.

2) to find and gather together a group of people, animals, or things
-See if you can round up a few friends to help you!
-His dog Nell started to round up the sheep.

3) to increase an exact figure to the next highest whole number โ†’ โž” round down

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๐Ÿ–Œ Idiom of the day ๐Ÿ–Œ
๐Ÿ“ša pain in the neck



โœ๐ŸพMeaning
You can say someone is a pain in the neck if they annoy you, or something is a pain in the neck if you don't like doing it.


โ—๏ธFor example

๐Ÿ”ธLenny's being a pain in the neck today. He keeps interrupting me while I'm trying to work.

๐Ÿ”ธIt's a real pain in the neck when you're trying to get some sleep on the train and people keep shouting into their mobile phones all around you.
โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”โ”
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