The Serpent and the File Flashcards
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Flashcard Review
Flashcards: The Serpent and the File
What is the moral of The Serpent and the File?
<p>The moral is <strong>"It is futile to attack those who are far stronger than you."</strong> The Serpent's fangs, lethal against living creatures, are powerless against a steel File. Aesop warns that misdirected aggression only harms the attacker, not the target.</p>
What happens in The Serpent and the File?
<p>A Serpent enters a blacksmith's workshop at night looking for food. It finds a steel File and begins gnawing at it. The File laughs and warns that the Serpent's teeth cannot make the slightest impression on metal made to wear down iron. The stubborn Serpent keeps biting until its mouth is raw and bleeding, while the File remains completely unharmed.</p>
What does the File symbolize in this fable?
<p>The File represents an adversary that is not merely resistant but actively superior at the very thing the attacker attempts. Unlike a passive obstacle, the File <em>bites</em> harder than the Serpent ever could — it wears down iron and steel for a living. This makes the Serpent's attack doubly foolish: it has challenged something that surpasses it at its own game.</p>
What is the Perry Index number for The Serpent and the File?
<p><span class="al-title">The Serpent and the File</span> is classified as <strong>Perry Index 93</strong> in the standard index of Aesop's fables. It appears in Phaedrus's Latin collection (1st century AD) and was later retold by Jean de La Fontaine as <em>Le Serpent et la Lime</em> in his celebrated French verse fables of 1668.</p>
How does this fable compare to The Fisherman and the Little Fish?
<p>Both fables deal with futility and poor judgment, but from opposite angles. In The Serpent and the File, the aggressor wastes effort attacking something invulnerable. In <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-fisherman-and-the-little-fish/" class="al-title">The Fisherman and the Little Fish</a>, a fisherman wisely keeps a small catch rather than risk losing it by throwing it back — a lesson about holding onto what you have rather than gambling on uncertain gains.</p>
What lesson does the Serpent's stubbornness teach?
<p>The Serpent's stubbornness transforms this from a simple power mismatch into a deeper lesson about pride. The File gives fair warning, yet the Serpent refuses to listen. This pattern — where pride leads to self-inflicted harm — appears throughout Aesop's fables, including <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-fox-and-the-monkey/" class="al-title">The Fox and the Monkey</a>, where overconfidence and deception likewise lead to humiliation.</p>
Is The Serpent and the File relevant to modern life?
<p>Absolutely. The fable applies to any situation where someone wastes energy fighting an adversary they cannot affect — futile arguments on social media, employees waging losing battles against corporate bureaucracy, or businesses competing in markets where they have no advantage. The wisdom echoes what Aesop teaches in <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/two-travelers-and-a-bear/" class="al-title">Two Travelers and a Bear</a>: true wisdom lies in recognizing which situations call for action and which call for retreat.</p>
How is The Serpent and the File different from The Farmer and the Snake?
<p>While both fables feature serpents, their lessons are distinct. In <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-farmer-and-the-snake/" class="al-title">The Farmer and the Snake</a>, a kind farmer warms a frozen snake that then bites him — a warning about trusting those whose nature is to do harm. In The Serpent and the File, the snake is the aggressor, not the betrayer, and the lesson is about futility rather than misplaced trust.</p>