The Ass And The Lap Dog Flashcards

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Flashcard Review

Flashcards: The Ass And The Lap Dog

What is the moral of "The Ass and the Lap Dog"?

<p>The moral is <strong>"Do not try to win favor by imitating those whose gifts are different from your own."</strong> The Donkey sees the Lap Dog earn affection through playful frisking and licking and assumes the same behavior will win him love too. But what is charming in a small, light pet is dangerous and destructive in a heavy donkey. Aesop teaches that <strong>each creature has its own natural strengths</strong>, and trying to copy someone else's talents instead of developing your own leads to failure and humiliation.</p>

What is "The Ass and the Lap Dog" about?

<p>The fable tells the story of a Donkey and a Lap Dog who belong to the same master. The Lap Dog is pampered, fed treats from the table, and allowed to sit on the master's lap. The Donkey, who works hard but receives little attention, grows jealous and decides to imitate the Dog's behavior. He breaks free from his stall, charges into the house, kicks up his heels, brays loudly, knocks over the dinner table, and tries to climb onto his master's lap. <strong>The terrified master calls for help, and the servants drive the Donkey back to his stall with a beating.</strong> The fable ends with the observation that behavior charming in one creature is rude and clumsy in another.</p>

What is the theme of "The Ass and the Lap Dog"?

<p>The central theme is <strong>the danger of envy-driven imitation</strong>. The Donkey does not simply want what the Dog has -- he believes he can get it by copying the Dog's behavior. But the fable shows that success is not just about what you do; it is about <strong>who you are when you do it</strong>. The Dog's playfulness works because it matches his nature. The Donkey's imitation fails because it contradicts his. A secondary theme is <strong>the injustice of unequal treatment</strong> -- the Donkey works hard while the Dog contributes nothing, yet the Dog receives all the affection. <span class="al-author">Aesop</span> acknowledges this unfairness but warns that imitating others is not the way to correct it.</p>

Why does the Donkey try to act like the Lap Dog?

<p>The Donkey is driven by <strong>jealousy and a misunderstanding of cause and effect</strong>. He watches the Lap Dog receive constant affection -- pats, kind words, treats from the table, and a place on the master's lap -- and concludes that the Dog's behavior is what causes the master's love. He reasons that if he frisks, jumps, and licks like the Dog, he will earn the same treatment. What the Donkey fails to understand is that the Dog's actions are appealing <em>because</em> the Dog is small and suited to them. <strong>The behavior is not the cause of the affection -- it is the expression of a relationship that already exists.</strong></p>

What is the Perry Index number for "The Ass and the Lap Dog"?

<p><span class="al-title">The Ass and the Lap Dog</span> is <strong>Perry Index 91</strong>, sometimes titled "The Ass Who Would Be Playmate to His Master." The fable appears in the earliest Greek Aesop collections and was later versified by <span class="al-person">Phaedrus</span> in Latin (1st century CE). <span class="al-person">Jean de La Fontaine</span> adapted it as <em>L'Ane et le petit Chien</em> (Fables IV.5) in 1668. The version most familiar to English readers comes from <span class="al-person">Milo Winter</span>'s <em>The Aesop for Children</em> (1919), which softened the story for younger audiences while keeping the core lesson intact.</p>

What lesson does "The Ass and the Lap Dog" teach children?

<p>For children, the fable teaches a straightforward lesson: <strong>be yourself instead of trying to copy others</strong>. The Donkey sees the little Dog getting attention and thinks, "I can do that too!" But he cannot -- he is too big, too heavy, and too clumsy. Instead of winning love, he breaks dishes, scares his master, and earns a beating. The story helps children understand that <strong>everyone has different strengths</strong>. Just because something works for someone else does not mean it will work for you. The healthier approach is to discover what <em>you</em> do well and let that be the source of your value.</p>

How is "The Ass and the Lap Dog" similar to "The Ass in the Lion's Skin"?

<p>Both fables belong to Aesop's "foolish donkey" cycle and share the theme of <strong>an ass pretending to be something it is not</strong>. In <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-ass-in-the-lions-skin/" class="al-title">The Ass in the Lion's Skin</a> (Perry 188), a donkey dresses in a lion's hide to frighten other animals but is exposed by his bray. In <span class="al-title">The Ass and the Lap Dog</span> (Perry 91), the donkey imitates a pet dog's playful behavior but is exposed by his size and clumsiness. In both cases, <strong>the donkey's true nature reveals itself despite his performance</strong>. The paired fables reinforce Aesop's warning that disguises and imitations always fail because you cannot hide what you fundamentally are.</p>

What are the best Aesop fables to read next?

<p>If you enjoyed <span class="al-title">The Ass and the Lap Dog</span>, here are more of Aesop's fables that explore similar themes of identity, envy, and knowing your true nature:</p><ul><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-mule/" class="al-title">The Mule</a> -- A mule boasts about his horse mother until a hard day's work reminds him he is also the son of a donkey.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-wolf-and-the-house-dog/" class="al-title">The Wolf and the House Dog</a> -- A starving wolf envies a well-fed dog's life until he sees the price of comfort: a chain around the neck.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/jupiter-and-the-monkey/" class="al-title">Jupiter and the Monkey</a> -- A monkey enters her baby in a beauty contest among the gods, teaching that love can blind us to reality.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-ass-and-his-driver/" class="al-title">The Ass and His Driver</a> -- A stubborn donkey ignores his driver's warnings and pays the ultimate price for refusing good advice.</li></ul>

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