The Milkmaid And Her Pail

Summary


"The Milkmaid And Her Pail" is one of Aesop's most beloved short fables about the danger of counting your chickens before they hatch. Walking home with a pail of fresh milk balanced on her head, a young milkmaid loses herself in an elaborate daydream — cream becomes butter, butter becomes eggs, eggs become chicks, chicks become a dress, and the dress becomes admiring suitors she plans to dismiss with a proud toss of her head. That single, careless gesture brings everything crashing back to reality.

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A Milkmaid had been out to milk the cows and was returning from the field with the shining milk pail balanced nicely on her head. As she walked along, her pretty head was busy with plans for the days to come.

“This good, rich milk,” she mused, “will give me plenty of cream to churn. The butter I make I will take to market, and with the money I get for it I will buy a lot of eggs for hatching. How nice it will be when they are all hatched and the yard is full of fine young chicks. Then when May day comes I will sell them, and with the money I’ll buy a lovely new dress to wear to the fair. All the young men will look at me. They will come and try to make love to me,—but I shall very quickly send them about their business!”

As she thought of how she would settle that matter, she tossed her head scornfully, and down fell the pail of milk to the ground. And all the milk flowed out, and with it vanished butter and eggs and chicks and new dress and all the milkmaid’s pride.


Credits

Aesop was an ancient Greek storyteller, believed to have lived around the 6th century BCE, whose fables have shaped moral literature across the world for over two millennia. "The Milkmaid And Her Pail" is one of his most enduring works, distilling the folly of vain daydreaming into a single, unforgettable image — a pail tumbling to the ground.