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"How,
then, can I satisfy you?" the immortal asked.
" You don't seem to want the gold. What do you
want?"
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The
fable as we know it is Greek. The form of the fable that
is recognized as “Aesopic” is an inherited genre from Greco-Roman
models with its fairly recently evolved but now standard
form of narrative and epimythium, or moral tag line at the
end.
This
model is not, strictly speaking, classical, as it was only
during the many centuries of writing and rewriting the same
motifs over and over again in the Middle Ages that the final
form of narrative and epimythium became the standard form.
The fable lived on for millennia after having been established
as a fairly distinct rhetorical device and later a literary
genre of its own, and it extends into our day.
But
there are fables to be found elsewhere, and some were considerably
earlier than those associated with the Aesopic form. The
Sumerian fable, for example, would have been at least as
old to Aesop as Aesop's fables are to us. The Babylonians
inherited a great deal of material from the Sumerians, and
their descendants carried on a similar tradition for centuries
before and after Aesop. And there are indications of other
fable traditions that might be as old as the Babylonian
fables. All these may well be interconnected and borrowed
in part, but the idea of fable seems to have occurred to
a small number of peoples perhaps quite independently. A
few cultures have developed fables all on their own, or
in analogy with other cultures. The Chinese equivalent is
the yu-yen. Yu-yen ("lodged words") denotes allegory, metaphor,
or fable and is also used to cover certain anecdotes and
other forms. The Yu-yen is found in all periods of Chinese
literary history, but the form especially flourished during
the fifth to the third century B.C.
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Copyright 2001 THE
WORLD AND I Magazine. All rights reserved.
The World & I is published monthly by News World Communications,
Inc.
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Five
Tales from
China
Author:
Yao-wen Li
June 1986
The
Dragon King's
Daughter
Author:
Shien Min Jen
October 1988
The
Eight Immortals,
Part 1
Author:
Pack Carnes
December 1993
The
Eight Immortals,
Part 2
Author:
Pack Carnes
January 1994
Flower,
Birds,
and Butterflies
Author:
David Hicks
November 1997
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