The Farmer And The Snake Flashcards

by Aesop — tap or click to flip

Flashcard Review

Flashcards: The Farmer And The Snake

What is the moral of The Farmer and the Snake?

<p>The moral is <strong>"Learn from my fate not to take pity on a scoundrel"</strong>โ€”spoken by the dying Farmer himself. The fable warns that showing kindness to those whose nature is harmful will be repaid with betrayal. It does not condemn compassion altogether, but rather teaches that <strong>kindness without discernment is dangerous</strong>. The greatest generosity cannot change a fundamentally wicked nature. This moral gave rise to the idiom "to nourish a viper in one's bosom."</p>

What is the theme of The Farmer and the Snake?

<p>The central theme is <strong>the unchangeable nature of the wicked</strong>. No matter how much kindness the Farmer shows, the Snake acts according to its nature and bites him. Related themes include <strong>misplaced compassion</strong>, the danger of ignoring warning signs, and the tension between <strong>empathy and self-preservation</strong>. The fable explores the painful truth that some creaturesโ€”and some peopleโ€”will harm those who help them, not out of malice but simply because it is their nature.</p>

What does "nourish a viper in one's bosom" mean?

<p>The idiom <strong>"to nourish a viper in one's bosom"</strong> means to help or shelter someone who will ultimately betray you. It originates directly from this fable, where the Farmer literally places a deadly snake against his chest to warm it back to life. The phrase has been used for over two thousand years across European languages to describe situations where <strong>generosity is repaid with treachery</strong>โ€”particularly when the helper should have known better.</p>

Why does the snake bite the farmer?

<p>The Snake bites the Farmer because <strong>it is acting according to its nature</strong>. Once revived by the Farmer's warmth, the Snake does what snakes doโ€”it strikes. In <span class="al-person">Phaedrus</span>'s Latin version of the fable, the Snake explains: "I bit you to teach the lesson not to expect a reward from the wicked." The Snake feels no gratitude because <strong>gratitude is not in its nature</strong>. The fable's point is that the Farmer's mistake was expecting kindness to transform something fundamentally dangerous.</p>

What do the farmer and the snake symbolize?

<p>The Farmer symbolizes <strong>compassion without wisdom</strong>โ€”someone whose good heart overrides their better judgment. He knows the Snake is deadly yet helps it anyway, representing anyone who ignores clear warning signs out of empathy. The Snake symbolizes <strong>an unchangeably harmful nature</strong>โ€”those who will repay kindness with betrayal not out of choice but out of instinct. The frozen winter setting reinforces the contrast between the Farmer's warmth and the Snake's cold nature.</p>

Is The Farmer and the Snake the same as The Farmer and the Viper?

<p>Yes, they are the same fable. <span class="al-title">The Farmer and the Snake</span> is also known as <span class="al-title">The Farmer and the Viper</span>, classified as <strong>Perry Index 176</strong>. Different translators and collections use different titlesโ€”some specify "viper" to emphasize the snake's venomous nature. The story should not be confused with <span class="al-title">The Snake and the Farmer</span> (Perry Index 51), which is a different fable about a farmer who kills a snake's offspring, leading to an ongoing cycle of revenge.</p>

What is the origin of The Farmer and the Snake?

<p><span class="al-title">The Farmer and the Snake</span> (<strong>Perry Index 176</strong>) is attributed to <a href="/author/aesop/" class="al-author">Aesop</a> and dates to the oral tradition of the 6th century BCE. It was recorded in Greek by <span class="al-person">Babrius</span> and in Latin by <span class="al-person">Phaedrus</span> in the 1st century CE. <span class="al-person">Jean de La Fontaine</span> adapted it as "The Villager and the Snake" in his <em>Fables</em> (1668). The story became one of Aesop's most widely recognized fables and gave English the enduring idiom "to nourish a viper in one's bosom."</p>

What Aesop fables are similar to The Farmer and the Snake?

<p>If this fable's lesson about misplaced trust resonated, explore these related Aesop fables:</p><ul><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-shepherd-and-the-wolf/" class="al-title">The Shepherd and the Wolf</a> โ€” A wolf earns a shepherd's trust through patience, then betrays it the moment the shepherd lets his guard down.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-trees-and-the-axe/" class="al-title">The Trees and the Axe</a> โ€” Trees give wood to make an axe handle, only to watch that axe fell themโ€”another tale of helping your own destroyer.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-bat-the-bramble-and-the-seagull/" class="al-title">The Bat, the Bramble, and the Seagull</a> โ€” A partnership built on poor judgment ends in disaster for everyone involved.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-grasshopper-and-the-ant/" class="al-title">The Grasshopper and the Ant</a> โ€” A fable about the consequences of failing to prepare and the limits of expecting others' generosity.</li></ul>

0 / 0
Mastered: 0 Review: 0 Remaining: 0
Question
Click to reveal answer
Answer
Space flip   review again   got it