The Peacock

Summary


"The Peacock" is a short fable by Aesop in which a plain bird begs the goddess Juno for a magnificent train of feathers — and gets exactly what he wished for. Gleaming with emerald, gold, purple, and azure, he becomes the envy of every bird around him. But when he spots an Eagle soaring freely overhead and tries to follow, the stunning plumage he coveted so deeply pins him to the ground, leaving him more burdened than the humblest barnyard fowl.


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The Peacock, they say, did not at first have the beautiful feathers in which he now takes so much pride. These, Juno, whose favorite he was, granted to him one day when he begged her for a train of feathers to distinguish him from the other birds. Then, decked in his finery, gleaming with emerald, gold, purple, and azure, he strutted proudly among the birds. All regarded him with envy. Even the most beautiful pheasant could see that his beauty was surpassed.

Presently the Peacock saw an Eagle soaring high up in the blue sky and felt a desire to fly, as he had been accustomed to do. Lifting his wings he tried to rise from the ground. But the weight of his magnificent train held him down. Instead of flying up to greet the first rays of the morning sun or to bathe in the rosy light among the floating clouds at sunset, he would have to walk the ground more encumbered and oppressed than any common barnyard fowl.

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Credits

Aesop was an ancient Greek storyteller, believed to have lived around 620–564 BCE, whose fables have shaped moral literature across cultures for over two millennia. "The Peacock" reflects one of his most recurring themes — the hidden cost of vanity and the dangers of prizing appearance over ability. His stories were originally passed down orally before being collected and written down by later scholars.