- The Shepherd Boy and the Wolf
- the Wolf and the Lamb
- the Lion the Ass and the Fox
- the Girl and the Jar of Nuts
- the Oxen and the Axle
- the old Wolf admires his Shadow
- the Frog and the Mouse
- the Jackdaw and the Fox
- the Nightingale and the Bat
- the Two Dogs
- the Boy who wouldn’t cry Wolf
- the Raindrops and the River
- the Frogs who wanted a King
- the Frog the Crab and the Snake
- the Fox the Mouse and the Grapes
- the Tortoise and the Geese
- the Birds and the Bat
- the Lion and the Hares
- Jackdaw and the Borrowed Feathers
- the Frog King and the Snake
- Jackdaw and the Pigeons
- Jackdaw and the Piece of String
- the Lion in Love
- the Wolf and the Sleeping Dog
- the Blackbird and its Wings
- the Snail the Mirror and the Monkey
- the Lion’s Breath
- the Monkey, the Goat, and the Sailboat
- the Astrologer and the Young Prince
- the Stargazer
- the Eagle and the Crow
- the Hippos at the Waterhole
- the Truce at the Waterhole
- the Goose that Laid the Golden Eggs
- A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
- the Frog and the Butterfly
- the Frog and the Flowers
- Another Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
- the Boy and the Snake
- Two Foxes and a Bunch of Grapes
- the Hare and the Hunting Dog
- the Toad and the Frog
- the Lion the Cat and the Mice
- the Fowler and the Woodpigeons
- The Tortoises
- the Angry Wasp and the Honey Bee
- the Camel Driver and the Snake
- Fall in the Garden of Eden
- A Monument for a Lion
- Two Dogs, One Bone
- the Tortoise and the Hare
The Stargazer after Aesop
- The Shepherd Boy and the Wolf
- the Wolf and the Lamb
- the Lion the Ass and the Fox
- the Girl and the Jar of Nuts
- the Oxen and the Axle
- the old Wolf admires his Shadow
- the Frog and the Mouse
- the Jackdaw and the Fox
- the Nightingale and the Bat
- the Two Dogs
- the Boy who wouldn’t cry Wolf
- the Raindrops and the River
- the Frogs who wanted a King
- the Frog the Crab and the Snake
- the Fox the Mouse and the Grapes
- the Tortoise and the Geese
- the Birds and the Bat
- the Lion and the Hares
- Jackdaw and the Borrowed Feathers
- the Frog King and the Snake
- Jackdaw and the Pigeons
- Jackdaw and the Piece of String
- the Lion in Love
- the Wolf and the Sleeping Dog
- the Blackbird and its Wings
- the Snail the Mirror and the Monkey
- the Lion’s Breath
- the Monkey, the Goat, and the Sailboat
- the Astrologer and the Young Prince
- the Stargazer
- the Eagle and the Crow
- the Hippos at the Waterhole
- the Truce at the Waterhole
- the Goose that Laid the Golden Eggs
- A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
- the Frog and the Butterfly
- the Frog and the Flowers
- Another Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing
- the Boy and the Snake
- Two Foxes and a Bunch of Grapes
- the Hare and the Hunting Dog
- the Toad and the Frog
- the Lion the Cat and the Mice
- the Fowler and the Woodpigeons
- The Tortoises
- the Angry Wasp and the Honey Bee
- the Camel Driver and the Snake
- Fall in the Garden of Eden
- A Monument for a Lion
- Two Dogs, One Bone
- the Tortoise and the Hare
The Stargazer after Aesop
It was a perfect night for stargazing, clear and moonless, and the astrologer hurried into the darkness of the fields where his view of the firmament would be untouched by the light of lamps and fires.
Pressing his spyglass to his eye, and not looking where he put his feet, he scoured the stars greedy for their secrets. He was not to be disappointed. He stopped suddenly and clasped his hands in delight. A tiny, inconspicuous pin-prick had flared and fizzed across the sky.
It was a sign. A calamity! The sign of a calamity! Now his task was to understand where and upon whom this misfortune would fall. But in his excitement he noticed he had dropped his spyglass. He stooped to retrieve it…
…and discovered he had been standing on the verge of a deep ditch. A fact he appreciated only in the moment of losing his balance and tumbling head first into the hole.
His cries woke the peasants in a nearby farmstead. They lit torches and hastened to the source of the disturbance, where they found an agitated old man lying in the bottom on a ditch. “Don’t worry,” they assured him. “We’ll soon have you out of there.”
But the old man did not want their aid. He wanted them to go away, or put out their torches, as they were obscuring his view. “I fell because the stars decreed,” he explained. “And I shall be rescued upon their command, not before.”
The peasants shrugged, but did not argue with the old man, leaving him to pursue his observations from the bottom of the ditch. An hour later, the astrologer’s work was done. He could now be rescued. He called to the peasants, but this time the peasants did not come.
© Richard Parkin, 2023
It was a perfect night for stargazing, clear and moonless, and the astrologer hurried into the darkness of the fields where his view of the firmament would be untouched by the light of lamps and fires.
Pressing his spyglass to his eye, and not looking where he put his feet, he scoured the stars greedy for their secrets. He was not to be disappointed. He stopped suddenly and clasped his hands in delight. A tiny, inconspicuous pin-prick had flared and fizzed across the sky.
It was a sign. A calamity! The sign of a calamity! Now his task was to understand where and upon whom this misfortune would fall. But in his excitement he noticed he had dropped his spyglass. He stooped to retrieve it…
…and discovered he had been standing on the verge of a deep ditch. A fact he appreciated only in the moment of losing his balance and tumbling head first into the hole.
His cries woke the peasants in a nearby farmstead. They lit torches and hastened to the source of the disturbance, where they found an agitated old man lying in the bottom on a ditch. “Don’t worry,” they assured him. “We’ll soon have you out of there.”
But the old man did not want their aid. He wanted them to go away, or put out their torches, as they were obscuring his view. “I fell because the stars decreed,” he explained. “And I shall be rescued upon their command, not before.”
The peasants shrugged, but did not argue with the old man, leaving him to pursue his observations from the bottom of the ditch. An hour later, the astrologer’s work was done. He could now be rescued. He called to the peasants, but this time the peasants did not come.
© Richard Parkin 2023