The Old Lion Flashcards

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Flashcards: The Old Lion

What is the moral of The Old Lion?

<p>The stated moral of <span class="al-title">The Old Lion</span> is <strong>"It is cowardly to attack the defenseless, though he be an enemy."</strong> The fable condemns those who only dare to strike when their opponent can no longer fight back. However, the story also carries a deeper lesson: <strong>those who rule through fear and intimidation should not expect loyalty or mercy when their power fades</strong>. The Boar, Bull, and Ass attack the Lion not out of random cruelty, but because they are settling old scores with a former tyrant. Aesop warns both the powerful and the powerlessโ€”the powerful to govern justly, and the powerless to resist the temptation of cowardly revenge.</p>

What is the theme of The Old Lion?

<p>The central themes of <span class="al-title">The Old Lion</span> are <strong>the impermanence of power, cowardice, and the indignity of fallen greatness</strong>. The fable explores how authority built on fear collapses the moment strength fails. It also examines the psychology of humiliationโ€”the Lion endures attacks from the Boar and Bull, but finds the Ass's kick unbearable because it comes from the lowliest creature. This reveals a theme about <strong>how we measure degradation by the status of those who inflict it</strong>, not by the severity of the blow itself.</p>

Why does the Ass kicking the Lion hurt more than the other attacks?

<p>In classical versions of the fable, the Lion calls the Ass's kick <strong>"a double death"</strong>โ€”meaning it is worse than the physical attacks from the Boar and Bull combined. The reason is not physical pain but <strong>psychological humiliation</strong>. The Boar and Bull are at least formidable animals; being attacked by them carries no shame. But the Ass is the most contemptible animal in the ancient hierarchyโ€”slow, stubborn, and lowly. When even an Ass feels bold enough to attack you, <strong>it proves your fall from power is absolute and complete</strong>. The Lion can bear being wounded by equals, but being insulted by the lowest creature is the ultimate indignity.</p>

What does "a double death" mean in The Old Lion?

<p>In Phaedrus's Latin version of the fable, the Lion groans that the Ass's insult is <strong>"a double death" (<em>duplicem mortem</em>)</strong>. The first death is the literal, physical oneโ€”the Lion is already dying of old age. The second death is <strong>the death of his dignity and legacy</strong>. Being humiliated by a creature as lowly as an Ass means the Lion's reputation as the fearsome King of Beasts dies before his body does. The phrase captures the idea that <strong>losing one's honor can be worse than losing one's life</strong>, a concept that resonated deeply in ancient Greek and Roman culture.</p>

Who wrote The Old Lion fable and how old is it?

<p><span class="al-title">The Old Lion</span> is attributed to <strong>Aesop</strong>, the legendary Greek storyteller believed to have lived around 620โ€“564 BCE. The earliest written version comes from <strong><span class="al-person">Phaedrus</span></strong>, a Roman fabulist of the 1st century AD, who included it as Book I, Fable 21 in his Latin verse collection. It is listed as <strong>Perry Index 481</strong> in the standard classification of Aesop's fables. <span class="al-person">La Fontaine</span> later adapted it as <em>Le Lion devenu vieux</em> (The Lion Grown Old) in 1668, and <span class="al-person">Marie de France</span> retold it in the 12th century with a fox added among the attackers.</p>

Is the Lion a sympathetic character in The Old Lion?

<p>Aesop deliberately makes the Lion <strong>both sympathetic and unsympathetic</strong>, which is what gives the fable its lasting power. On one hand, the Lion is pitiableโ€”he is old, helpless, and dying, and being attacked by those who once feared him is undeniably cruel. On the other hand, <strong>the fable implies the Lion was a tyrant</strong>. The animals are not attacking a random creature; they are taking revenge for years of predation and intimidation. Aesop never tells us the Lion ruled justlyโ€”only that he was once powerful. This <strong>moral ambiguity</strong> forces readers to grapple with uncomfortable questions: Does a tyrant deserve pity in his final moments? Is revenge justified when it is the only chance the oppressed will ever get?</p>

What is the difference between The Old Lion and The Sick Lion?

<p>While both fables feature a weakened lion, they teach different lessons. In <span class="al-title">The Old Lion</span>, the Lion is dying of old age and is attacked by animals settling old scoresโ€”the moral is about <strong>cowardice and the indignity of fallen power</strong>. In <span class="al-title">The Sick Lion</span> (also called "The Fox and the Sick Lion"), the Lion pretends to be ill to lure animals into his cave and eat them, but a clever Fox notices that all the footprints lead in and none lead out. That fable's moral is about <strong>using observation and wisdom to detect hidden danger</strong>. The key difference is that <strong>The Old Lion is genuinely helpless</strong>, while The Sick Lion is a cunning predator using deception.</p>

What are the best Aesop fables to read next after The Old Lion?

<p>If you enjoyed <span class="al-title">The Old Lion</span>, these Aesop fables explore related themes of power, cunning, and survival:</p><ul><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-lions-share/" class="al-title">The Lion's Share</a> โ€” A lion uses his power to claim all the spoils of a hunt, showing how the strong exploit partnerships with the weak.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-lark-and-her-young-ones/" class="al-title">The Lark and Her Young Ones</a> โ€” A wise lark teaches her chicks to rely on themselves rather than trust others, a lesson in self-reliance and reading danger signals.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-man-and-the-satyr/" class="al-title">The Man and the Satyr</a> โ€” A satyr refuses to trust a man who blows both hot and cold, exploring the theme of hypocrisy and the danger of two-faced behavior.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-owl-and-the-grasshopper/" class="al-title">The Owl and the Grasshopper</a> โ€” An owl outwits a noisy grasshopper with flattery and cunning, demonstrating that intelligence can overcome those who refuse to listen.</li></ul>

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