Aesop is a
slave and story-teller who was believed to live in ancient Greece around 620 to
560 BC. He collected many tales from diverse origins, and from generations to
generations, Aesop’s tales had been retold and reinterpreted in many media. The
first printed version of Aesop's Fables in English was published on March 26,
1484, by William Caxton [source: wiki]. Fables were advocated by John Locke to
be targeted to children only on 1693, while previously they were targeted to
adult only.
When I first
opened the book (I read Wordsworth Classics’ edition), I was amazed by the
table of contents. I had no idea that there were so many fables! There were
probably more than 200 titles. The fables are usually very short; one page
could contain two to three fables, with illustrations every few or more pages.
And browsing all the titles (and they are stretched to eleven pages alone!), I
can see that the ‘characters’ are quite varied; but the lion, fox, and wolf
appear most often.
Plunging
into the fables, I quickly realized that most of them have similar themes, and
after around 40% I have got bored already. It felt like reading a same thing
over and over again, with only the characters or the circumstances were
changed. And so, I must pick another book as a change to be read along Aesop’s
Fables. In the end I felt more exhausted than entertained by the fables, but realizing
that I am reading some works which have been inherited for generations, I could
appreciate it more.
There are
few gems, anyway, from the 200+ tales, which I found inspiring and encouraging.
Especially because some of the stories are equipped with the moral value as
quotes. Some of my favorites are:
The Slave & the Lion – A slave run
away from his master and finds a cave where a wounded lion stays. The slave
takes care and saves the lion’s life, and they become best friends. Later on
the master finds what the slave has done; and he is to be thrown to beasts as punishment. You
could guess, I think, which beast would find the slave, and how the tale ends. I
am always touched by the friendship between men and animals, and that’s why
this tale becomes one of my favorites.
The Apes & the Two Travelers – Two travelers,
one is a liar, while the other is an honest person, are treated by the King of
Apes. The King is proud of his noble monarch and asks the travelers their
opinion. The liar praises the apes and gets reward. The honest one, who feels
that his honesty would get him more rewards that the liar, tells the truth,
that he thinks they are merely apes. Again, you must have guessed the outcome.
There is a difference between telling truth for the sake of the truth, or out
of greediness. Anyway, virtue only comes from goodwill.
The Eagle & His Captor – A man
catches an eagle then clips his wings before he sells him. The buyer takes the
eagle home and lets his wings grow. When he is recovered, the eagle catches a
hare and presents it to his benefactor. Now a fox tells him that he should have
presented the hare to his first captor rather than his benefactor, so the captor
will be his friend, and won’t clip his wings again if he catches him the second
time. This is something we never, or rarely, consider. Good advice, indeed. And
this time comes from a fox! :)
Three and a
half stars for Aesop’s Fables.
~~~~~~~~~
I read the Wordsworth Classics paperback edition
This book is counted as:
65th book for The Classics Club Project
Nah mbak Fanda review karya2 Aesopnya, saya review kisah (rekaan) dibalik munculnya karya2 Aesop. Ini berapa halaman mbak?
ReplyDeleteLho...iyakah? OK, ntar aku jalan-jalan ke blogmu deh..
DeleteHalamannya sekitar 200-an.
Hmm, I felt the same after reading Grimm Fairytales, lots of repetitions, very boring... although there are some great stories inside. Maybe this kind of book is not suitable to be read in one sitting :)
ReplyDeleteYep, they are meant to be read bit by bit, not in a whole. Not the kind of my reading then.... :(
Deletewahah, di Guttenberg ada ngga ya. pingin baca ._.
ReplyDeleteKalo gak salah ada Vin, coba aja... :)
DeleteAku sempat baca sekilas2, dan memang kebanyakan mirip sih. Pesan moralnya juga ga jauh2
ReplyDeleteBetul, dan karakternya klise, kalo wolf pasti cerdik tapi jahat, lamb selalu korban yg innocent, dst. Hehehe...
DeleteSetelah Dion ternyata mba Fanda juga baca buku ini. Jadi pengen baca juga
ReplyDeletedi Gutenberg ada keknya, dulu pernah liat tapi lupa linknya. fabel2 di Aesop Fable itu memang udah banyak ya turunannya. beberapa yang ada di buku Fabled Wisdom yang pernah kubaca juga ada beberapa cerita yang mirip2.
ReplyDeletewah, samaan ama Dion ini bukunya, jadi pengen baca ;)
ReplyDelete@lucktygs
http://luckty.wordpress.com/2014/01/30/review-the-frog-princess/