The Serpent And The Eagle Flashcards
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Flashcard Review
Flashcards: The Serpent And The Eagle
What is the moral of The Serpent and the Eagle?
<p>The moral of <span class="al-title">The Serpent and the Eagle</span> is <strong>"An act of kindness is well repaid"</strong>βoften expressed as the proverb "One good turn deserves another." When a Countryman rescues an Eagle from a Serpent's coils, the Eagle later repays the favor by swooping down and knocking a poisoned drinking horn from the Countryman's hands, saving his life. The fable teaches that <strong>genuine acts of generosity create bonds of gratitude</strong> that can return to protect us in unexpected ways.</p>
What is the theme of The Serpent and the Eagle?
<p>The central theme of <span class="al-title">The Serpent and the Eagle</span> is <strong>reciprocal gratitude</strong>βthe idea that kindness naturally inspires kindness in return. A secondary theme is <strong>the self-defeating nature of revenge</strong>: the Serpent's attempt to poison the Countryman ultimately fails because the Eagle is watching. The fable also explores the contrast between <strong>nobility and treachery</strong>, with the Eagle representing honor and memory, and the Serpent representing cunning turned to spite.</p>
What do the Eagle and the Serpent symbolize in the fable?
<p>In Aesop's fable, the <strong>Eagle symbolizes nobility, gratitude, and a higher perspective</strong>βboth literally, as it watches from the sky, and morally, as it remembers its debt and acts on it. The <strong>Serpent symbolizes cunning, vengefulness, and treachery</strong>βit strikes at the Countryman through poison rather than a direct attack, representing the kind of intelligence that serves only malice. This eagle-versus-serpent duality is one of the oldest symbolic pairings in Western mythology, representing the eternal conflict between the sky and the earth, good and evil.</p>
Why did the Serpent poison the Countryman's drinking horn?
<p>The Serpent poisoned the drinking horn <strong>out of revenge</strong>. After the Countryman freed the Eagle from the Serpent's coils, the Serpent was furious but could not bite the watchful man directly. Instead, he struck at the drinking horn hanging from the Countryman's belt and released his venom into itβa cowardly, indirect attack. The Serpent hoped the Countryman would later drink from the horn without knowing it was poisoned. This detail highlights the Serpent's <strong>devious nature</strong>: when he cannot win through strength, he resorts to hidden treachery.</p>
How does The Serpent and the Eagle compare to The Lion and the Mouse?
<p>Both fables teach the same core lessonβ<strong>kindness is always worth giving because it may be repaid when you least expect it</strong>βbut they approach it differently. In <span class="al-title">The Lion and the Mouse</span>, the lesson centers on the idea that even the smallest creature can help the mightiest, emphasizing that <strong>no one is too humble to return a favor</strong>. In <span class="al-title">The Serpent and the Eagle</span>, the stakes are higher: the repayment is not just helpful but <strong>life-saving</strong>, and a villain (the Serpent) actively tries to undo the good deed. This makes the Eagle's intervention feel more dramatic and urgent.</p>
What is the Perry Index number for The Serpent and the Eagle?
<p><span class="al-title">The Serpent and the Eagle</span> is cataloged as <strong>Perry Index 395</strong> in the standard classification system for Aesop's fables. The Perry Index, compiled by scholar <strong>Ben Edwin Perry</strong> in 1952, assigns a unique number to each fable in the Aesopic tradition. This fable appears in early Greek collections and was later retold in Latin by Phaedrus under the title <em>Draco et Aquila</em> ("The Dragon and the Eagle"). It is one of the most widely retold fables about gratitude in the Western literary tradition.</p>
What is the origin of the proverb 'one good turn deserves another'?
<p>The proverb <strong>"One good turn deserves another"</strong> is closely associated with Aesop's fable <span class="al-title">The Serpent and the Eagle</span> (Perry 395), in which a Countryman's act of rescuing an Eagle is repaid when the Eagle saves the man from drinking poison. While the exact phrase emerged in English around the 15th century, <strong>the underlying principle traces back to ancient Greek fable collections</strong>. Several Aesop fables illustrate this idea, including <span class="al-title">The Dove and the Ant</span> and <span class="al-title">The Lion and the Mouse</span>, but <em>The Serpent and the Eagle</em> is among the earliest and most dramatic examples.</p>
What are the best Aesop fables to read next?
<p>If you enjoyed <span class="al-title">The Serpent and the Eagle</span>, here are four more Aesop fables worth reading:</p><ul><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-wolf-and-the-crane/" class="al-title">The Wolf and the Crane</a> β A Crane risks her life to help a choking Wolf, only to learn that not everyone repays a kindnessβa darker counterpoint to this fable's message.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-eagle-and-the-jackdaw/" class="al-title">The Eagle and the Jackdaw</a> β A Jackdaw tries to imitate an Eagle's power and pays the price, exploring the dangers of overreaching ambition.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-two-pots/" class="al-title">The Two Pots</a> β A brass pot and an earthen pot travel together, showing why unequal partnerships can be dangerous for the weaker party.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-cat-and-the-fox/" class="al-title">The Cat and the Fox</a> β A Fox boasts of knowing a hundred tricks while the Cat knows only oneβbut when danger comes, simplicity wins.</li></ul>