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Quote by Aesop

“The North Wind and the Sun disputed which was the more powerful, and agreed that he should be declared the victor who could first strip a wayfaring man of his clothes. The North Wind first tried his power, and blew with all his might; but the keener became his blasts, the closer the Traveler wrapped his cloak around him, till at last, resigning all hope of victory, he called upon the Sun to see what he could do. The Sun suddenly shone out with all his warmth. The Traveler no sooner felt his genial rays that he took off one garment after another, and at last, fairly overcome with heat, undressed, and bathed in a stream that lay in his path. Persuasion i better than Force.”

Quote by Aesop

Work

Aesop's fables

This celebrated anthology gathers hundreds of brief narratives in which anthropomorphized animals encounter human situations, learning through their Experiences and choices lessons about honesty, greed, humility, perseverance, and virtue. The exact origins of the fables remain shrouded in antiquity, with the figure of Aesop himself existing somewhere between history and legend, possibly as a freed slave from ancient Greece. The stories have survived through centuries primarily via oral tradition before being compiled in written form, and they have since been translated into countless languages and adapted for audiences of all ages. Each tale typically concludes with a succinct moral that distills the lesson into a memorable principle, making these fables enduring tools for teaching values to young readers while remaining resonant with mature audiences. The collection has exerted enormous influence on Western literary tradition and continues to be read worldwide as foundational examples of the fable genre. more

Author

Aesop
Aesop

Aesop, born around 620 BC and died around 564 BC, was a renowned Greek fabulist. His life remains shrouded in mystery, with accounts suggesting he was born in Ionia and later became a slave. Aesop is famous for his concise and profound fables, which have been widely celebrated and continue to influence literature and moral education to this day. more

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“Come, let's go to the maze with its sixteen-foot-high box hedges, designed by Perrault himself, who advised Louis XIV to include thirty-nine fountains each representing one of Aesop's fables. Water jets spurt from the animals' mouths to give the charming impression of speech between the creatures, powered by waterwheels on the Seine. Within here are the Owl and Birds, the Eagle and Fox, the Peacock and Jackdaw, the Wolf and Heron, the Tortoise and Hare, the Council of Mice.”

“how is a Greek chorus like a lawyer they’re both in the business of searching for a precedent finding an analogy locating a prior example so as to be able to say this terrible thing we’re witnessing now is not unique you know it happened before or something much like it we’re not at a loss how to think about this we’re not without guidance there is a pattern we can find an historically parallel case and file it away under ANTIGONE BURIED ALIVE FRIDAY AFTERNOON COMPARE CASE HISTORIES 7, 17 AND 49 now I could dig up those case histories tell you about Danaos and Lykourgos and the sons of Phineus people locked up in a room or a cave or their own dark mind it wouldn’t help you it doesn’t help me it’s Friday afternoon there goes Antigone to be buried alive”