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Aesop's Fables; a new translation

by Aesop

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EPUB
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4.8 MB

Description

This collection of short stories belongs to the genre of moral fables and is presented as a new translation of traditional works attributed to the ancient Greek storyteller Aesop. The volume features animal characters that speak and behave in human-like ways, illustrating ethical lessons through concise and straightforward narratives. The stories reflect a broad cultural history, originating from oral traditions and evolving over centuries to encompass diverse sources and moral teachings. These fables are designed primarily for children and young adults, serving as instructive tools to promote virtues such as honesty, prudence, and humility. The work was produced in the 19th or early 20th century, a period when editions of Aesop’s fables were often revised for contemporary audiences, maintaining the core stories while adapting language and presentation.

The collection offers a compendium of tales that have been passed down through generations, with a focus on succinct narratives involving animals and natural elements. The stories are intended to teach ethical principles in a simple and accessible manner, making them suitable for instructional settings or familial reading. This edition aims to preserve the traditional structure of Aesop’s fables while providing a translation accessible to modern readers.

From the opening pages

Aesop embodies an epigram not uncommon in human history; his fame is all the more deserved because he never deserved it. The firm foundations of common sense, the shrewd shots at uncommon sense, that characterise all the Fables, belong not him but to humanity. In the earliest human history whatever is authentic is universal: and whatever is universal is anonymous. In such cases there is always some central man who had first the trouble of collecting them, and afterwards the fame of creating them. He had the fame; and, on the whole, he earned the fame. There must have been something great and human, something of the human future and the human past, in such a man: even if he only used it to rob the past or deceive the future. The story of Arthur may have been really connected with the most fighting Christianity of falling Rome or with the most heathen traditions hidden in the hills of Wales. But the word "Mappe" or "Malory" will always mean King Arthur; even though we find older and better origins than the Mabinogian; or write later and worse versions than the "Idylls of the King." The nursery fairy tales may have come out of Asia with the Indo-European race, now fortunately extinct; they may have been invented by some fine French lady or gentleman like Perrault: they may possibly even be what they profess to be. But we shall always call the best selection of such tales "Grimm's Tales": simply because it is the best collection. The historical Aesop, in so far as he was historical, would seem to have been a Phrygian slave, or at least one not to be specially and symbolically adorned with the Phrygian cap of liberty. He lived, if he did live, about the sixth century before Christ, in the time of that Croesus whose story we love and suspect like everything else in Herodotus. There are also stories of deformity of feature and a ready ribaldry of tongue: stories which (as the celebrated Cardinal said) explain, though they do not excuse, his having been hurled over a high precipice at Delphi. It is for those who read the Fables to judge whether he was really thrown over the cliff for being ugly and offensive, or rather for being highly moral and correct. But there is no kind of doubt that the general legend of him…

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