The Eagle And The Jackdaw Flashcards

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Flashcards: The Eagle And The Jackdaw

What is the moral of The Eagle and the Jackdaw?

<p>The moral of <span class="al-title">The Eagle and the Jackdaw</span> is <strong>"Do not let your vanity make you overestimate your powers."</strong> The fable warns that envy and unchecked ambition can lead us to attempt feats far beyond our real abilities. The Jackdaw watches the Eagle seize a lamb and assumes he can do the same, but he lacks the Eagle's strength and skill. His failure is not just embarrassing — it costs him his freedom. The lesson is that <strong>self-awareness and honest self-assessment</strong> are essential before taking on any great challenge.</p>

What is the theme of The Eagle and the Jackdaw?

<p>The central themes of <span class="al-title">The Eagle and the Jackdaw</span> are <strong>vanity, self-knowledge, and the danger of imitation</strong>. The fable explores what happens when envy replaces honest self-assessment: the Jackdaw sees the Eagle's success and copies the action without possessing the ability. A secondary theme is <strong>the gap between self-perception and reality</strong> — even after his humiliating capture, the Jackdaw still considers himself an Eagle. Aesop uses this to show that vanity often survives the very consequences it creates.</p>

Why does the Jackdaw try to carry off the Ram?

<p>The Jackdaw tries to carry off the Ram because <strong>he is envious of the Eagle's successful capture of a lamb</strong>. After watching the Eagle swoop down and fly away with prey in its talons, the Jackdaw's "foolish head was filled with the idea" that he could do the same. He does not stop to consider that the Eagle is far larger, stronger, and equipped with powerful talons designed for hunting. <strong>His motivation is pure imitation driven by vanity</strong> — he wants to appear as powerful as the Eagle without having any of the Eagle's actual abilities.</p>

What happens to the Jackdaw at the end of the story?

<p>When the Jackdaw lands on the Ram's back and tries to fly away with it, <strong>his claws become tangled in the thick wool</strong>, and he cannot free himself. The Shepherd sees the fluttering bird, catches him, and <strong>clips his wings</strong> so he can never fly properly again. That evening, the Shepherd gives the Jackdaw to his children as a pet. When the children ask what kind of bird it is, the Shepherd delivers the fable's famous punchline: "That is a Jackdaw, my children. But if you asked him, he would say he is an Eagle."</p>

What does the Shepherd's final line mean in The Eagle and the Jackdaw?

<p>The Shepherd's remark — "That is a Jackdaw, but if you asked him, he would say he is an Eagle" — is the fable's sharpest observation about vanity. It means that <strong>the Jackdaw's delusion has survived his failure</strong>. Despite being caught, having his wings clipped, and being reduced to a children's pet, he still sees himself as an Eagle. The line highlights <strong>the stubborn persistence of self-deception</strong>: some people are not cured of their inflated self-image even when reality proves them wrong. It is both humorous and unsettling.</p>

What is the Perry Index number for The Eagle and the Jackdaw?

<p><span class="al-title">The Eagle and the Jackdaw</span> is <strong>Perry Index number 2</strong>, making it one of the earliest numbered fables in the Aesopic canon. It is sometimes listed under the title "The Eagle, the Jackdaw, and the Shepherd." The fable was retold by the Roman poet <strong>Phaedrus</strong> in his Latin verse collection and later adapted by <strong>Jean de La Fontaine</strong>. It appears in the Townsend translation (number 250) and the Joseph Jacobs collection, both widely used English-language editions of Aesop's fables.</p>

What is the difference between the Eagle and the Jackdaw in the fable?

<p>The Eagle and the Jackdaw represent <strong>genuine ability versus empty imitation</strong>. The Eagle acts from natural strength — it has powerful wings, sharp talons, and the predatory instinct to seize a lamb and carry it away. The Jackdaw, by contrast, is a small, common bird with none of these attributes. <strong>The Eagle succeeds because its ambition matches its capability</strong>, while the Jackdaw fails because his ambition is based entirely on envy, not on any honest assessment of his own powers. Aesop uses this contrast to argue that aspiration must be grounded in self-knowledge.</p>

What are the best Aesop fables to read next?

<p>If you enjoyed <span class="al-title">The Eagle and the Jackdaw</span>, try these thematically related Aesop fables: <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-lark-and-her-young-ones/" class="al-title">The Lark and Her Young Ones</a>, about a mother bird who teaches her chicks that you can only rely on yourself when danger comes; <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-lions-share/" class="al-title">The Lion's Share</a>, a fable about power, greed, and the folly of partnering with those who will take everything; <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-man-and-the-satyr/" class="al-title">The Man and the Satyr</a>, which warns against people whose words do not match their nature; and <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-owl-and-the-grasshopper/" class="al-title">The Owl and the Grasshopper</a>, where flattery lures the unwary into a deadly trap.</p>

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