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Rating(4.2 / 5.0, 31 votes)
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31 reviews
April 1,2025
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An Athenian seeing Aesop in a crowd of boys at play with nuts, stopped and laughed at him for a madman. As soon as the Sage,—a laughter at others rather than one to be laughed at,—perceived this, he placed an unstrung bow in the middle of the road: “Hark you, wise man,” said he, “unriddle what I have done.” The people gather round. The man torments his invention a long time, but cannot make out the reason of the proposed question. At last he gives up. Upon this, the victorious Philosopher says: “You will soon break the bow, if you always keep it bent; but if you loosen it, it will be fit for use when you want it.” Thus ought recreation sometimes to be given to the mind, that it may return to you better fitted for thought.
April 1,2025
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Fábulas con moralejas para otros tiempos. Leídas hoy en día sorprende esa mezcla de ingenuidad, crueldad y candidez para intentar explicar el mundo. Hemos cambiado pero muchos comportamientos que perduran.
April 1,2025
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The Roman Aesop? Yes, but Phaedrus writes verse and he’s more didactic and more ready to stray from animals.
April 1,2025
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Leí solo "El lobo y el cordero" (1) y "La zorra y el cuervo" (3).
April 1,2025
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Una raccolta di brevi favolette, leggere ma con un'importante morale. Bellissime
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