Myths, Fairytales and Legends

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Myths, Fairytales and Legends’

43
The Wolf, the Fox and the Monkey Clay Lane

A Wolf and a Fox go to court over a petty theft, but they have a hard time getting the Judge to believe them.

Phaedrus was a Roman fabulist, roughly a contemporary of St Paul, who turned large numbers of Aesop’s Fables into Latin verse. He admits that many of the Fables are actually his own, but says that this one, in which a Wolf and a Fox struggle to overcome their reputations for dishonesty, is an Aesop original.

Read

44
Peasie and Beansie Clay Lane

Peasie wants to visit her lonely father, but she can’t get her sister Beansie to come along with her.

This story comes from a collection of folktales from the Punjab, as told by Flora Annie Steel (1847-1929) who spent twenty-two years in India. It reminds us that little acts of kindness bring their own rewards, so long as the rewards aren’t the reason that we do them.

Read

45
The Boy Who Cried Wolf Clay Lane

A shepherd boy has fun teasing the local farmers, but comes to regret it.

Floods! Food shortages! Spies! Invasion! Such cries we read daily in British newspapers. If they fall on deaf ears, Aesop of Samos would have said that the newspapers had only themselves to blame.

Read

46
Vortigern’s Tower Geoffrey of Monmouth

Geoffrey of Monmouth tells the tale of how Merlin first came to the attention of Britain’s kings.

Fifth-century tribal leader Vortigern has taken refuge from Saxon invaders in Snowdonia, but his new fortress keeps collapsing. His druid priests say it must be sprinkled with the blood of a virgin’s child — and rumour has it that young Merlin had no father.

Read

47
A Cock and Horses Sir Roger L’Estrange

When some people talk about compromise, what they mean is that everyone else should compromise for their benefit.

The following Aesop-like fable comes from the trend-setting collection by Roger L’Estrange (1616-1704), who told it with such bracing energy it seems only right to let him tell it again. A cockerel calls for compromise, but it’s all on one side.

Read

48
Niobe’s Tears E. M. Berens

Niobe, daughter of Tantalus, was so proud of her fourteen children that she brazenly claimed the privileges of a goddess.

Niobe was a legendary Queen of Thebes with fourteen lovely children. In a moment of motherly pride, she scoffed at the goddess Leto, mother of just two. But they were Apollo and Artemis; and Niobe had unleashed an unstoppable divine feud that would make her name synonymous with tears.

Read