20:
57:. With one gulp of the sea she brought the mountains to view; islands appeared after the next. The third is yet to come and will dry the sea altogether, thus depriving the ferryman of his livelihood. Aristotle's reason for reporting this was in connection with the belief of the pre-Socratic philosopher
68:
when Aesop was mocked by shipbuilders. In this case he told them the creation myth in which the king of the gods wished to make dry land emerge when there was only chaos and water. Earth was therefore commanded to take three gulps, the third of which will dry up the sea altogether. The fable is
38:
where the circumstances in which he tells the story are mentioned. In this he is mocked by a
Ferryman, or boat-builders in another account, and tells them how they will soon be out of a job.
106:
73:. Babrius commented on the situation that people who cheek those smarter than themselves are asking for trouble.
118:
136:
141:
94:
8:
35:
91:
Ainoi, logoi, mythoi: fables in archaic, classical, and
Hellenistic Greek literature
61:
that the sea's level was gradually lowering and that it would eventually disappear.
130:
70:
58:
53:
how Aesop once teased a ferryman by relating to him a myth concerning
19:
54:
46:
65:
31:
64:
Some centuries later, a similar retort was recorded by
128:
23:"Death as a ferryman", a satirical drawing from
105:Aesop, The complete fables, Penguin 2003,
18:
129:
41:
13:
14:
153:
111:
99:
83:
1:
76:
7:
10:
158:
34:sometimes plays a part in
28:
22:
89:Gert-Jan van Dijk,
69:numbered 8 in the
29:
107:fable 19 and note
93:, Brill NL 1997;
42:Aetiological myth
149:
121:
115:
109:
103:
97:
87:
49:mentions in his
157:
156:
152:
151:
150:
148:
147:
146:
142:Greek mythology
127:
126:
125:
124:
116:
112:
104:
100:
88:
84:
79:
44:
17:
12:
11:
5:
155:
145:
144:
139:
137:Aesop's Fables
123:
122:
110:
98:
81:
80:
78:
75:
43:
40:
36:his own fables
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
154:
143:
140:
138:
135:
134:
132:
120:
114:
108:
102:
96:
92:
86:
82:
74:
72:
67:
62:
60:
56:
52:
51:Meteorologica
48:
39:
37:
33:
26:
21:
16:Aesop's fable
113:
101:
90:
85:
63:
50:
45:
30:
24:
95:pp. 351–353
71:Perry Index
131:Categories
77:References
59:Democritus
117:Babrius,
55:Charybdis
47:Aristotle
119:fable 3
66:Babrius
27:, 1858
32:Aesop
25:Punch
133::
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