Capitolo 29
literatures. Some of the fables of Talmudic are also found in the
classical and the more first Indian harvests; some in the later
harvests; some in the classics, but not in you list him Indian; some in
India, but not in the Latin and Greek authors. Among the second it is the
notorious fable of the _Fox and the Fishes_, so dramatically used from
Rabbi Akiba. The fables of original Talmudic are, according to the Mr. J.
Jacobs, the following: _Chaff, Straw and Wheat_ that dispute for that
of them the seed has been sown: the fan of sifting decides soon; _The
Bird_ caged that you/he/she is envied free by individual his/her; Wolf of _The and the two
Hounds_ that has quarrelled; the wolf grabs one, the other one goes to his
competitor's help, fearing him/it same fate him on the tomorrow unless him
it helps the other to-day of dog; Wolf of _The to the Well_, the mouth of the
well you/he/she is covered with a net: "If I go down to the good", it says the wolf,
"I will be picked up. If I don't come down, I will die because of thirst"; _The
Rooster and the Bat_ that sit while waiting together for the aurora: "I wait
for the dawn", says the rooster, "for the light it is my signals; but as for
thee--the light is thy they ruin"; and, finally, what calls the Mr. Jacobs the
surly beast-history of the _Fox as Singer_ in that the beasts--he/she invited from
the lion to a party, and it covered from him with the skins of wild
beasts--you/he/she is conducted by the fox in a choir: What is happened to those
above of us, it will happen to him above of", while implicating that their innkeeper, also the wish
comes to a death violent. In the context the fable is applied to Haman,
of who fate, it is aforesaid, it will resemble to that some two officers which
guilt that Mordecai has discovered.
Such fables in the Talmud are used for sharpening religious or also political
morals, a lot as they were the parables. However, the fable took a lower
I fly that the parable, and his/her ethic was based on convenience, rather
what on the ethical and taller ideals. The importance of the Talmudic