The Crow and the Snake

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The Crow and the Snake (with alternate versions involving a raven, a serpent or a scorpion) is one of Aesop's Fables and numbered 128 in the Perry Index.[1] Alternative Greek versions exist and two of these were adopted during the European Renaissance. The fable is not to be confused with the unrelated story of the same title in the Panchatantra.

In ancient times the fable is found only in Greek sources and concerns a crow in search of food that finds a snake asleep in the sun. But when the crow seizes her, the snake kills the crow with her sting. The story's moral is that good fortune may not be all that it seems.[2] An alternative fable concerning a raven and a scorpion is included as a poem by Archias of Mytilene in the Greek Anthology.[3] The story is much the same but the moral drawn is that the biter shall be bit. Another epigram by Antipater of Thessalonica, dating from the first century BCE, has an eagle carry off an octopus sunning itself on a rock, only to be entangled in its tentacles and fall into the sea, 'losing both its prey and its life'.[4]

European versions

References

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