The Lion, the Wolf, and the Fox

Summary


"The Lion, the Wolf, and the Fox" is a short fable by Aesop in which a sick and aging lion holds court in his cave while the Wolf seizes the moment to slander the absent Fox. When the Fox arrives and overhears the accusation, he must think fast to save himself — and does so with devastating cleverness. What unfolds is a sharp lesson in the dangers of scheming against the wrong opponent, told with economy and a darkly satisfying twist.


Read Online

A Lion, growing old, lay sick in his cave. All the beasts came to visit their king, except the Fox. The Wolf therefore, thinking that he had a capital opportunity, accused the Fox to the Lion of not paying any respect to him who had the rule over them all and of not coming to visit him. At that very moment the Fox came in and heard these last words of the Wolf. The Lion roaring out in a rage against him, the Fox sought an opportunity to defend himself and said, “And who of all those who have come to you have benefited you so much as I, who have traveled from place to place in every direction, and have sought and learnt from the physicians the means of healing you?” The Lion commanded him immediately to tell him the cure, when he replied, “You must flay a wolf alive and wrap his skin yet warm around you.” The Wolf was at once taken and flayed; whereon the Fox, turning to him, said with a smile, “You should have moved your master not to ill, but to good, will.”


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. This particular fable is notable for its layered irony — the Wolf's attempt to destroy the Fox through false accusation becomes the very instrument of his own undoing.