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Sunday, April 28, 2013

Aesop and His Fabulous Fables



Aesop and His Fabulous Fables

Ashim Kumar Paul



In the childhood when our ‘golden’ days were replete with numerous kinds of puerile activities, we were taught by our mentors, no matter, from our own house or school, the very axiom:  “slow and steady wins the race” that consistency, although progress may be slow, will eventually be more beneficial than being hasty or careless just to get something done. It does not really matter whether most of us paid heed to the axiom or the lesson of the axiom went unheard but we were taught to memorise the very sentence.

However, it always remained unknown to most of us about the man who generated the great lessons through the simple tale “The Tortoise and The Hare” or “The Boy Who Cried Wolf”. We just savour the tales printed on our books or told by our mentors. In fact, very few of us know the man, namely, Aesop.




Aesop is ever-remembered all over the world for his illustrious fables which convey moral lessons by means of weaving stories involving animals. He was a historical figure and many stories are told about him in ancient manuscripts. Most of his fables can be traced to 6th BC. Countless generations have been enthralled with his amusing and thought provoking tales always marked by a moral and ethical undertone.



Aesop, the most famous fabulist of all time, is a legendary figure shrouded in mystery. The history of Aesop is buried in antiquity and, like that of Homer, is cloaked in myth and legend. The place of his birth is uncertain -- Thrace, Phrygia, Aethiopia, Samos, Athens and Sardis--- all claiming the honour. It is argued by many that he was born a slave, and during his lifetime, two different masters owned him before being granted his freedom. The slave masters were named, Xanthus and Iadmon while the latter gave him his freedom as a reward for his opulent wit and intelligence.



However, the legend behind his freedom can be added to illustrate his stockpile of intelligence. The lord of Aesop, during a feast, too boldly stated that he would drink the sea. If he couldn't he would lose all his wealth. The next morning, realizing his claim was impossible to complete, he called Aesop. Aesop quickly comprehended the trouble his master was in and promised that he would help save his master’s dignity and honour. At that, both men went to the seashore to face a noisy crowd, gathered to see how the stupid man would make possible to "drink the sea". Aesop explained to the people that his master could "drink" the sea, but for the rules to be met all the water from the rivers and lakes, flowing into the sea, should be removed. Needless to say, nobody was able to separate the sea, and the master saved his wealth and honour. As a reward, Aesop received his freedom.


Although all of the fables by Aesop are relatively short and many of them are designed as cautionary tales, it is up to us to discover ourselves what is hidden behind the images presented by the author.  Many of them feature anthropomorphised animals. Each fable features a situation and a set of actions, and finishes with a brief moral. As a genre of fables, they are close to the artistic atmosphere of fairy tales about animals. They are not the typical Greek myths that we know from the Greek mythology about Gods and Heroes. Observing the life and characteristics of animals, the fabulist makes a comparison between them and the moral characteristics of men. Trickery is not only exclusive to the fox, calmness - not only for pigeons, deceit - not only for the snake, cowardice - not just for rabbits.


All these properties can be encountered in the conduct of people. Seeing these similarities, people began to call one another fox, snake, and rabbit in their domestic relations. But the images of animals and plants also have a parabolic meaning: the donkey began to express the characteristics of a hard and stupid man, the sheep - of the gentle and harmless, the snake - of the evil and vindictive, and the wolf reveals the nature of an evil and cruel man.


In that sense, Aesop summarises the essential morals of his time, giving them a satirical evaluation. Not only to hide the sharpness of his critics, but also to provoke the resourcefulness of people, Aesop often likens people with animals and plants.


This particular sense of expression has been associated with Aesop throughout the centuries, starting from ancient Greece, going into Rome and Byzantium, reaching the Renaissance and surviving until today. Since the time of Aesop the fable was a powerful tool to expose and ridicule our ills and vices as people and as a society.



Known history shows that Aesop never wrote down any of his fables (there’s actually no evidence that he could write at all), and that the first-known collection of fables bearing his name was collected by Demetrius Phalareus (founder of the Alexandria Library) in the 4th century BCE, but did not survive beyond the 9th century CE. Later, a Greek freedman of Augustus Caesar named Phaedrus turned Aesop’s fables into Latin iambics (verse poems). Finally in the 1300s, a monk named Maximus Planudes of Constantinople compiled the definitive book of Aesop’s fable. Two hundred years after his death, the famous statue of Aesop, carved by master craftsman Lysippus, was erected at Athens, set in place in front of the statues of the Seven Sages.



Among the Aesop’s tales packed up with amusing as well as thought-provoking contents, the tales like “The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse”, “The Hare and the Tortoise”, “The Lioness and Small Respect”, “The Boy Who Cried Wolf”, “The Dog and His Reflection” are well-read in our school days. The tale, “The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse” shows that although it’s tempting to envy another person’s life, their life is rarely as great as it seems from a distance while “The Hare and the Tortoise” is one of the famous tales by Aesop that concerns a hare who ridicules a slow-moving tortoise who challenges him to a race. The hare soon leaves the tortoise behind and, confident of winning, takes a nap midway through the course. The tortoise gets tired but he keeps going. When the hare awakes, however, he finds that his competitor, crawling slowly but steadily, has arrived before him. As in several other fables by Aesop, there is a moral ambiguity about the lesson it is teaching. Later interpreters have asserted that it is the proverbial 'the more haste, the worse speed'. We may also be familiar with the tale “The Boy Who Cried Wolf”   involving a shepherd boy who repeatedly tricks nearby villagers into thinking a wolf is attacking his flock. When a wolf actually does appear, the villagers do not believe the boy's cries for help, and the flock is destroyed. Or think of the tale “The Dog and His Reflection” that reflects the moral it is better to be satisfied with what you have because if you go running greedily after what somebody else has, you'll lose what you've got.



It is of note that many popular fables throughout history have been attributed to Aesop, the imprecision surrounding the writings and the accounts of his life has been yet to be culminated in. According to some legends, his death was unnatural. He was said to have been killed in Delphi by some people following a misunderstanding. There is no general consensus as to what constitutes the original fables of Aesop and how many were later added on ascribed to him owing to his popularity. There is also a theory that Aesop probably got some of his stories from the sailing Indian merchants or the traveling Buddhist monks and added them to his own. The similarity between some stories of the Panchatantra and those of Aesop do suggest that both these works had drawn probably from some common folklore of their times. It is possible that some of the fables might have traveled either ways along the trade routes and the wandering tribes and were incorporated in course of time into respective lists. However, notwithstanding the controversial stories surrounding the myths of the stories and life-span of Aesop, the fables still read by millions of readers in this busy, hectic and information technology-wrapped world have even now shield their ascendancy.