The Stag The Sheep And The Wolf Flashcards
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Flashcard Review
Flashcards: The Stag The Sheep And The Wolf
What is the moral of The Stag, the Sheep, and the Wolf?
<p>The moral of the fable is <strong>"Two wrongs do not make a right"</strong> (traditionally phrased as "Two blacks do not make a white"). The Sheep refuses to lend wheat to the Stag because his guarantor, the Wolf, is just as untrustworthy as the borrower himself. Aesop's lesson is that <strong>combining two unreliable parties does not create a trustworthy arrangement</strong>. A dishonest guarantor cannot make a risky borrower safe, just as stacking one bad thing on top of another never produces something good.</p>
What is the theme of The Stag, the Sheep, and the Wolf?
<p>The central theme is <strong>trust and the judgment of character</strong>. The Sheep demonstrates wisdom by evaluating both the borrower and the guarantor on their known reputations rather than taking the deal at face value. A secondary theme is <strong>the danger of false assurances</strong> — the Stag speaks with confidence, but his confident tone cannot compensate for the poor character of his reference. The fable also touches on <strong>self-preservation through skepticism</strong>, showing that refusing a bad deal is an act of intelligence, not cowardice.</p>
Why does the Sheep refuse to lend wheat to the Stag?
<p>The Sheep refuses for two clear reasons. First, <strong>the Stag is an extremely fast runner</strong>, meaning he could easily flee and avoid repaying the debt. Second, the Stag offers <strong>the Wolf as his guarantor</strong>, but the Sheep knows the Wolf's reputation — he takes whatever he wants and never pays. The Sheep recognizes that neither party in this arrangement can be trusted, so <strong>the guarantee is worthless</strong>. She wisely concludes that lending under these conditions would guarantee her own loss.</p>
What role does the Wolf play in The Stag, the Sheep, and the Wolf?
<p>The Wolf serves as the <strong>proposed surety or guarantor</strong> for the Stag's loan. He never actually appears or speaks in the story — the Stag merely claims the Wolf has agreed to back the deal. The Wolf's role is symbolic: he represents <strong>a reference that is worse than no reference at all</strong>. Because the Wolf is known for taking things by force and never paying, his "guarantee" actually confirms the Sheep's suspicion that the deal is dishonest. His reputation alone is enough to condemn the arrangement.</p>
What does the Sheep symbolize in this fable?
<p>The Sheep symbolizes <strong>practical wisdom and cautious judgment</strong>. Unlike many Aesop characters who are tricked or deceived, the Sheep sees through the scheme immediately. She represents the person who <strong>judges others by their track record rather than their promises</strong>. Her refusal is not based on meanness or selfishness but on a rational assessment of risk. In Aesop's world, <strong>the Sheep is the rare character who avoids trouble not through strength or cunning, but through clear-eyed skepticism</strong>.</p>
What is the origin and history of The Stag, the Sheep, and the Wolf?
<p><span class="al-title">The Stag, the Sheep, and the Wolf</span> is classified as <strong>Perry Index 477</strong> in the standard catalog of Aesop's fables. The earliest surviving version comes from <strong>Phaedrus</strong>, the Roman fabulist who wrote in Latin verse during the first century AD. In his collection (Book I, Fable 16), it appears as <em>Ovis, Cervus et Lupus</em>. The fable's moral about false guarantors reflects the importance of <strong>surety law in ancient Rome</strong>, where co-signing debts was a common and legally binding practice.</p>
How is this fable relevant to modern life?
<p>This fable remains strikingly relevant in any situation involving <strong>financial guarantees, references, or endorsements</strong>. The Stag's scheme mirrors modern scenarios like a borrower with bad credit offering a co-signer who is equally unreliable, or a business presenting references that are just as questionable as the business itself. The Sheep's wisdom applies to <strong>evaluating job references, financial guarantors, and even online reviews</strong> — when the source vouching for someone is itself untrustworthy, the endorsement is meaningless. Aesop's core insight is timeless: <strong>always judge the guarantor as carefully as the person being guaranteed</strong>.</p>
What are the best Aesop fables to read next?
<p>If you enjoyed this fable about trust and deception, explore these related Aesop stories: <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-kid-and-the-wolf/" class="al-title">The Kid and the Wolf</a> — a young goat outwits a Wolf by seeing through his disguise, another tale of clever self-preservation. <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-ass-the-fox-and-the-lion/" class="al-title">The Ass, the Fox, and the Lion</a> — a Fox betrays his companion to save himself, exposing the danger of trusting a treacherous ally. <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-dog-and-his-masters-dinner/" class="al-title">The Dog and His Master's Dinner</a> — a faithful dog faces temptation, exploring the tension between duty and self-interest. <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-mischievous-dog/" class="al-title">The Mischievous Dog</a> — a dog learns that a bad reputation cannot be hidden by outward appearances, echoing this fable's theme that character always reveals itself.</p>