- 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 Oxen and The Axle aka 'The Oxen and the Axle-tree'
- 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 Oxen and The Axle aka the Oxen and the Axle-tree
A team of oxen was hauling a wagon along a rutted, muddy track. They toiled in weary silence, while behind them, at every bump, the wooden axle creaked and rasped and groaned. Eventually, they grew tired of hearing the axle’s complaints.
“You, back there, enough of your moaning,” the oxen called. “It is we who sweat and strain, we who drag this load onward, not you, yet do you hear us grumble? Why then must we listen to you?”
“Friends, I did not ask to be here,” the axle replied. “I was cut down, severed from my roots, stripped of my branches, reduced from leafy splendour to be a part of this mud-spattered undercarriage. That is why I lament. I long for my home and the life I once had.”
The oxen stopped in the middle of the lane. They’d been so occupied by their own exertions they had never imagined others enduring greater hardship, and they were shocked to hear it. But the crack of the driver’s whip reminded them of their burden and they set off once more.
Again at every bump, the axle creaked and rasped and groaned, but the oxen now felt moved by the lament. They began to bellow, long and loud, for their sorrows and for those of their friend. And though the driver cursed and swore and lashed their hides, he could not silence them.
© Richard Parkin 2021
A team of oxen was hauling a wagon along a rutted, muddy track. They toiled in weary silence, while behind them, at every bump, the wooden axle creaked and rasped and groaned. Eventually, they grew tired of hearing the axle’s complaints.
“You, back there, enough of your moaning,” the oxen called. “It is we who sweat and strain, we who drag this load onward, not you, yet do you hear us grumble? Why then must we listen to you?”
“Friends, I did not ask to be here,” the axle replied. “I was cut down, severed from my roots, stripped of my branches, reduced from leafy splendour to be a part of this mud-spattered undercarriage. That is why I lament. I long for my home and the life I once had.”
The oxen stopped in the middle of the lane. They’d been so occupied by their own exertions they had never imagined others enduring greater hardship, and they were shocked to hear it. But the crack of the driver’s whip reminded them of their burden and they set off once more.
Again at every bump, the axle creaked and rasped and groaned, but the oxen now felt moved by the lament. They began to bellow, long and loud, for their sorrows and for those of their friend. And though the driver cursed and swore and lashed their hides, he could not silence them.
© Richard Parkin 2021