The Stag at the Pool



The Stag at the Pool

The Stag at the Pool

An Aesop's Fable

A stag saw his shadow reflected in the water, and incredibly respected the span of his horns, yet felt irate with himself for having such feeble feet. 



While he was along these lines thinking about himself, a Lion showed up at the pool. The Stag betook himself to flight, and kept himself easily at a sheltered separation from the Lion, until he entered a wood and got to be entrapped with his horns. The Lion rapidly thought of him and got him. At the point when past the point of no return he hence blamed himself: "Poor me! How have I bamboozled myself! These feet which would have spared me I detested, and I gloried in these tusks which have demonstrated my annihilation."

Lesson of Aesop's Fable: What is most genuinely profitable is regularly underrated.
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The Stag at the Pool Fable

An Aesop's Fable With the Moral: What is most genuinely profitable is regularly underrated.

Aesop Author of the Fable: The Stag at the Pool

Nationality of Aesop - Ethiopian or Greek or Greek

Lifespan of Aesop - He lived roughly 620 - 560 BC

Life of Aesop - Slave - Author of the book of tales

Well known Works - Aesop's Fable book highlighting:

"The Goose With the Golden Eggs", "The Fisher",

"The Stag at the Pool" and "The Sick Lion"

The Stag at the Pool Fable
An Aesop's Fable 
With the Moral: What is most truly valuable is often underrated.





Aesop Author of the Fable: The Stag at the Pool
Nationality of Aesop - Ethiopian or Greek or Greek
Lifespan of Aesop - He lived approximately 620 - 560 BC
Life of Aesop - Slave - Author of the book of fables
Famous Works - Aesop's Fable book featuring:
 "The Goose With the Golden Eggs",  "The Fisher",
"The Stag at the Pool" and "The Sick Lion"

Stories With Moral--Writing from Imagination

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