The Fox And The Crow Flashcards
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Flashcard Review
Flashcards: The Fox And The Crow
What is the moral of "The Fox and the Crow"?
<p>The moral is <strong>"The flatterer lives at the expense of those who listen to him"</strong> β or more directly, "do not trust flatterers." The Fox uses elaborate praise to manipulate the Crow into opening her beak, causing her to drop the cheese. The fable teaches that <strong>flattery is a tool of manipulation</strong>, and that vanity makes us vulnerable. When someone praises you extravagantly, the wise response is to ask what they want, not to bask in it.</p>
What is the theme of "The Fox and the Crow"?
<p>The central theme is <strong>the danger of vanity and the power of flattery</strong>. The Crow is not stupid β she initially watches the Fox with suspicion. But her desire to be called "Queen of Birds" overrides her judgment. Related themes include <strong>manipulation through words</strong> (the Fox never lies directly; he just implies), <strong>the cost of ego</strong> (the Crow sacrifices something real for a moment of imagined glory), and <strong>the cunning of predators</strong> β the Fox succeeds not through force but through psychological insight into the Crowβs weakness.</p>
Why does the Crow drop the cheese?
<p>The Crow drops the cheese because <strong>she opens her beak to sing</strong>, trying to prove she has a beautiful voice. The Fox had praised everything about her β her feathers, her form, her wings β and then said that if she could sing just one song, he would call her "Queen of Birds." The Crow wanted so badly to earn that title that she forgot she was holding cheese in her beak. The moment she opened her mouth to caw, the cheese fell straight into the Foxβs waiting mouth. <strong>Her vanity made her forget her own interests.</strong></p>
Is the Fox the villain or the hero of the story?
<p>The Fox is <strong>the villain, but he wins</strong> β which makes this fable unusual among Aesopβs stories, where tricksters are usually punished. The Fox is clever, manipulative, and completely unscrupulous. He walks away with the cheese and even delivers a parting insult: "You have a voice, sure enough. But where are your wits?" However, <a href="/author/aesop/" class="al-author">Aesop</a> directs the moral at the Crow, not the Fox. The fable doesnβt condemn the Fox for flattering β it warns the listener against <em>being flattered</em>. The responsibility falls on the one who should have known better.</p>
How old is "The Fox and the Crow" fable?
<p>The fable is attributed to <a href="/author/aesop/" class="al-author">Aesop</a> (circa 620β564 BCE), making it approximately <strong>2,600 years old</strong>. It is classified as Perry Index 124. The Roman fabulist Phaedrus retold it in Latin verse (1st century CE), and <span class="al-person">Jean de La Fontaine</span> adapted it as <em>Le Corbeau et le Renard</em> (1668), which became one of the most memorized poems in French schools. The fable has remained extraordinarily popular because its lesson about flattery is as relevant today β in the age of social media and influencer culture β as it was in ancient Greece.</p>
What does "The Fox and the Crow" teach about flattery?
<p>The fable teaches that <strong>flattery is most dangerous when it tells you what you want to hear</strong>. The Fox doesnβt say anything obviously false. The Crow does have feathers, wings, and a form. The genius of his manipulation is in the <em>implication</em>: that her voice must be equally magnificent. The Crow knows she canβt really sing, but the fantasy is so appealing that she suspends her own judgment. The lesson is universal: <strong>when praise feels too good, it probably is</strong>. Genuine admiration doesnβt ask you to perform on command.</p>
What are the best Aesop fables to read next?
<p>If you enjoyed <span class="al-title">The Fox and the Crow</span>, here are more of Aesopβs most brilliant fables:</p><ul><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-fox-and-the-grapes/" class="al-title">The Fox and the Grapes</a> β A fox who canβt reach grapes dismisses them as sour, giving us the phrase βsour grapes.β</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-wolf-in-sheeps-clothing/" class="al-title">The Wolf in Sheepβs Clothing</a> β A wolfβs disguise becomes his undoing when the shepherd comes looking for mutton.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-dog-and-his-reflection/" class="al-title">The Dog and His Reflection</a> β A greedy dog loses his bone chasing his own reflection in the water.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-north-wind-and-the-sun/" class="al-title">The North Wind and the Sun</a> β A contest between force and gentleness proves that persuasion beats brute strength.</li></ul>