Aesopica

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Aesopica’

13
The Country Milkmaid Thomas James

A pretty young milkmaid plans just a little bit too far ahead.

‘Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched’ is a proverbial warning not to plan too far ahead. In this little fable, our daydreaming country milkmaid goes some way beyond counting unhatched chicks.

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14
The Wind and the Sun Clay Lane

The Wind and the Sun compete to see which of them can make an unsuspecting traveller shed his cloak.

The following Aesop’s Fable dramatises a lesson which would seem particularly relevant to the time in which we live. Blessings and persuasion will win hearts, whereas threats and force will win at most resentful compliance, and more likely angry rebellion.

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15
The King of the Banyan Deer Clay Lane

The lord of Benares is so partial to venison that fields lie fallow and marketplaces stand empty while his people catch deer for him.

The following tale comes from the collection known as the Jataka, a series of fables setting out the wisdom of Siddhartha Gautama, the fifth- or fourth-century BC teacher of enlightenment. This particular story is set in the deer park near Varanasi (Benares) in Uttar Pradesh where tradition says that Gautama Buddha first taught.

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16
Heracles and the Flea Sir Roger L’Estrange

A man begs the mighty Heracles to save him the effort of despatching a flea.

Like the Fable of Heracles and the Waggoner, this is a tale about doing all you can before asking for help. Sir Roger L’Estrange, however, took it further. Mindful of the secularism gaining ground in English society, he said the story was a warning to those who give up on religion when trivial matters do not go their way.

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17
Heracles and the Waggoner Sir Roger L’Estrange

Heracles refuses to come to the aid of man who is perfectly able to help himself.

This little tale has popularised the expression ‘put one’s shoulder to the wheel.’ A waggoner gets into difficulties, and begs heavenly help. All right and proper so far, said Sir Roger l’Estrange, but it wouldn’t do any harm to give it a push too...

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18
The Boy Who Cried Wolf Clay Lane

A shepherd boy has fun teasing the local farmers, but comes to regret it.

Floods! Food shortages! Spies! Invasion! Such cries we read daily in British newspapers. If they fall on deaf ears, Aesop of Samos would have said that the newspapers had only themselves to blame.

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