The Two Travelers and the Axe

Summary


"The Two Travelers and the Axe" is a short Aesop fable about two companions whose friendship is tested the moment one finds an axe on the road. Claiming the find as his alone, he quickly discovers the limits of his thinking when the axe's rightful owner comes running after them. What he refused to share in good fortune, he now cannot share in trouble — and his companion is quick to remind him of exactly that.


Read Online

Two Men were journeying together. One of them picked up an axe that lay upon the path, and said, “I have found an axe.” “Nay, my friend,” replied the other, “do not say ‘I,’ but ‘We’ have found an axe.” They had not gone far before they saw the owner of the axe pursuing them, and he who had picked up the axe said, “We are undone.” “Nay,” replied the other, “keep to your first mode of speech, my friend; what you thought right then, think right now. Say ‘I,’ not ‘We’ are undone.”


Credits

Aesop was an ancient Greek storyteller, traditionally believed to have lived around 620–564 BCE, whose fables have shaped moral literature across the world for over two millennia. "The Two Travelers and the Axe" is a particularly pointed example of his style — delivering its lesson on fairness and shared responsibility in under a hundred words.