> Which Aesop's fable has the moral, "Don't play tricks on your neighbors unlessyou can stand the same treatment yourself?"And the answer: The Fox and the Stork.The fox and stork during meal timeIn the story, a fox invites his friend thestork to eat with him. He provides soup in a shallow bowl, which the fox caneasily eat, but the stork cannot drink it with its beak. In return, the storkthen invites the fox to a meal, which is served in a narrow-necked vase. It'seasy for the stork to access, but impossible for the fox.Aesop's fables are ancient stories of trial and defeat, always offering someform of moral at their close. Oftentimes, animals or other personifiedcharacters serve as the metaphorical stand-ins for real, applicable moralquandaries. However, the image of Aesop as we know today is a picture disparate from theimage of him in his lifetime. As a Phrygian slave said to have lived between 620and 564 BCE, there is very little reputable information available to historiansto determine the truth about the stories attributed to his name. Today, disputesover whether or not Aesop wrote the fables, and even as to whether or not helived at all, continue to rage. Scattered details of Aesop's life can be foundin ancient sources, including Aristotle, Herodotus, and Plutarch.Aesop's fables originally belonged to the oral tradition, and weren'ttranscribed until some three centuries after his death. By that time, a varietyof other stories, jokes and proverbs were being ascribed to him, although someof that material was from sources earlier than him or came from beyond the Greekcultural sphere. Historians continue to add work to the so-called "Aesopcorpus," even including more recent work and known authors. In many ways, Aesophas come to be recognized more as a figurehead for the fabulist tradition than areal individual. Check out this site[https://study.com/academy/lesson/who-is-aesop-biography-fables-morals.html] tolearn more about this enigmatic fabulist, and watch the video below to hear thefull story of The Fox and the Stork.

