The Beaver (fable)

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A 13th-century manuscript illustrating a hunted beaver castrating itself

The beaver fable, or the story of the hunted beaver, tells of how, when hunted, the beaver will chew off his own testicles, or tail,[1] and leave them behind to distract his pursuers. It is based on the idea that, in ancient times, the beaver was hunted for its testicles, which it was thought had medicinal qualities. The story that the animal would gnaw these off to save itself when hunted was preserved by some ancient Greek naturalists and perpetuated into the Middle Ages.[2] It also appeared as a Greek fable ascribed to Aesop and is numbered 118 in the Perry Index.

In Latin literary sources, the fable was versified by 1st-century CE Roman fabulist Phaedrus[3] and is alluded to a little later by the Roman poet Juvenal in a satire. There the merchant Catullus jettisons his rich cargo from a ship caught in a storm 'in imitation of the beaver that in its desire to escape death, will bite off its testicles and render itself a eunuch'.[4] The moral that Juvenal and later fabulists drew from the story is that in order to preserve oneself it is better to sacrifice lesser considerations.

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