The Vain Jackdaw And His Borrowed Feathers Flashcards

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Flashcards: The Vain Jackdaw And His Borrowed Feathers

What is the moral of The Vain Jackdaw and His Borrowed Feathers?

<p>The moral, stated directly in the fable, is <strong>"Borrowed feathers do not make fine birds."</strong> The deeper lesson is that pretending to be something you are not leads to humiliation and isolation. The Jackdaw's attempt to pass himself off as a Peacock fails because <strong>true identity cannot be faked with superficial adornments</strong>. More importantly, his deception costs him not only the respect of the Peacocks but also the acceptance of his own kind, who remember his arrogance and refuse to welcome him back.</p>

What is the theme of The Vain Jackdaw and His Borrowed Feathers?

<p>The central themes are <strong>vanity, authenticity, and the consequences of pretense</strong>. The fable explores what happens when someone rejects their true identity in pursuit of a more glamorous one. The Jackdaw's envy of the Peacocks drives him to disguise himself, but the disguise only reveals his insecurity. A secondary theme is <strong>social belonging</strong>β€”the fable shows that trying to infiltrate a group through deception will alienate you from both the group you aspire to join and the community you abandoned.</p>

Why do the Jackdaw's own companions reject him when he returns?

<p>The Jackdaw's companions reject him because <strong>his disguise was an insult to them</strong>. By dressing in Peacock feathers and strutting proudly among his fellow Jackdaws before leaving, he made it clear that he considered himself better than them. When he returns humiliated, they have not forgotten his "superior airs." Their rejection is not about the feathers themselves but about the <strong>betrayal of loyalty</strong>β€”he chose vanity over his own community, and they punish him for it. This double rejection is what makes the fable's moral so powerful: the Jackdaw loses both worlds.</p>

What does the Jackdaw symbolize in Aesop's fable?

<p>The Jackdaw symbolizes <strong>anyone who tries to appear more important or impressive than they truly are</strong> by adopting the outward trappings of a higher status. In Aesop's world, the jackdawβ€”a common, plain black birdβ€”represents ordinary people who use "borrowed finery" such as false credentials, imitated manners, or stolen accomplishments to gain entry into circles where they do not belong. The Peacocks, by contrast, represent <strong>genuine distinction</strong> that cannot be imitated through surface-level copying.</p>

Where does the phrase "borrowed plumes" or "borrowed feathers" come from?

<p>The expressions <strong>"borrowed plumes" and "borrowed feathers"</strong> come directly from this Aesop fable, classified as Perry Index 101. The phrases entered common English usage to describe someone who <strong>takes credit for qualities or achievements that belong to others</strong>. <span class="al-person">Horace</span> referenced the story in his <em>Epistles</em>, and <span class="al-person">La Fontaine</span> adapted it in his 1668 fable collection as <em>Le Geai parΓ© des plumes du Paon</em>. The idiom remains widely used today, particularly in discussions of plagiarism, impostor syndrome, and false credentials.</p>

What is the Perry Index number for The Vain Jackdaw and His Borrowed Feathers?

<p>This fable is classified as <strong>Perry Index 101</strong> in the standard index of Aesop's fables compiled by scholar <span class="al-person">Ben Edwin Perry</span>. Perry 101 specifically covers the version where a jackdaw adorns itself with peacock feathers. The fable has Classical Greek origins and was later retold by Roman fabulists including <span class="al-person">Phaedrus</span>, who used the Latin word <em>graculus</em> (jackdaw), and <span class="al-person">Horace</span>, who substituted a crow (<em>cornicula</em>). It is one of the most frequently illustrated and adapted of all Aesop's fables.</p>

How is this fable different from The Ass in the Lion's Skin?

<p>Both fables involve an animal disguising itself as a more impressive creature, but the consequences differ in an important way. In <a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-ass-in-the-lions-skin/" class="al-title">The Ass in the Lion's Skin</a>, the Ass is exposed when he braysβ€”his <strong>voice betrays him</strong>β€”and the punishment is mockery. In <span class="al-title">The Vain Jackdaw</span>, the disguise is physically stripped away and the Jackdaw suffers <strong>double rejection</strong>, losing both the Peacocks' respect and his own flock's acceptance. The Jackdaw's fable is harsher because it shows that pretense does not just failβ€”it <strong>permanently damages your standing</strong> with everyone who witnessed it.</p>

What are the best Aesop fables to read next?

<p>If you enjoyed <span class="al-title">The Vain Jackdaw and His Borrowed Feathers</span>, these thematically related Aesop fables are excellent next reads:</p><ul><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-ass-carrying-the-image/" class="al-title">The Ass Carrying the Image</a> β€” an ass mistakes the crowd's reverence for a sacred statue on his back as admiration for himself, illustrating how easily we confuse borrowed importance with our own worth.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-farmer-and-the-stork/" class="al-title">The Farmer and the Stork</a> β€” a stork caught among cranes pleads innocence, but the farmer judges him by the company he keepsβ€”a sharp lesson about guilt by association.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-fir-tree-and-the-bramble/" class="al-title">The Fir-Tree and the Bramble</a> β€” a proud fir tree boasts of its height and beauty, unaware that its very grandeur makes it a target for the axe.</li><li><a href="/author/aesop/short-story/the-ass-in-the-lions-skin/" class="al-title">The Ass in the Lion's Skin</a> β€” an ass dresses in a lion's skin to frighten other animals, but his bray gives him away, proving that disguises cannot change your true nature.</li></ul>

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