The Copybook

Short passages for reading, drawn from history, legend, poetry and fiction.

1663
The Selfless Courage of Leo the Cook Clay Lane

In 6th century France, a faithful kitchen servant sold himself into slavery to rescue a kidnapped boy.

Early in the 6th century, northern Gaul came under the control of the Franks, whose capital was Metz on what is now the border between France and Germany. Their chieftains frequently kidnapped and enslaved or ransomed the sons of noble Roman families.

Read

1664
The Star that Winked Clay Lane

John Goodricke’s observations of Algol won him the Copley Medal while still in his teens, despite his disability.

John Goodricke lost his hearing when just a child, but a combination of a loving family, a private education system more advanced than some people today would have us a believe, and sheer determination meant that he achieved more in his short life than seems possible.

Read

1665
The Emperor’s New Clothes Clay Lane

A telling satire on fashionable thinking among the elite.

Why do fashionable ideas continue to circulate among the elite, long after ordinary people have realised that they are nonsense? Andersen’s folk-tale explains it brilliantly.

Read

1666
The Cat’s Wedding Clay Lane

It’s easier to change how you look than to hide who you are.

Originally, this story was about a weasel, an animal which the ancient Greeks kept for pest control in the way we keep cats. Modern Greek versions of this story make it a story about a cat, as did Victorian storyteller Joseph Jacobs.

Read

1667
The Ape and the Fox Clay Lane

A valuable lesson when dealing with practised liars.

If you are going to tell outrageous fibs, it is a good idea to do it when there is no one around to contradict you.

Read

1668
The Goose with the Golden Egg Clay Lane

Don’t get greedy when things are going well.

THE story of a man whose impatience and greed cost him everything.

Read