- The Bell and the Cat
"The Bell and the Cat", also known as "Belling the Cat" or "The Mice, the Bell, and the Cat", is a
fable attributed toAesop , providing a moral lesson about the fundamental difference between ideas and the feasibility of their execution, and how this plays into the value of a given plan. In the numbering system established for Aesopic fables by B. E. Perry, it is number 613. [cite book |author=Ben Edwin Perry |title=Babrius and Phaedrus |series=Loeb Classical Library |year=1965 |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge, MA |isbn=0-674-99480-9 |pages=p. 487, no. 373 ] The fable has been retold or adapted in a number of modern works.ynopsis
The Fable concerns a group of mice who debate over a variety of plans to nullify the threat of the cat. In the end, one mouse proposes a plan having to do with placing a bell around the neck of the cat, which is lauded by the other mice, until one mouse asks who it is who would place the bell on the cat. The story is used to teach the wisdom of evaluating a plan based not only on how desirable the outcome would be once executed, but to think first of how the plan would be executed. Some versions of the fable state a moral at the end, along the lines of:
:"It is one thing to suggest and another thing to do":"It is easy to propose impossible remedies"
Ancient versions
Versions of the fable are found in the verse collections of
Babrius andAphthonius , and in several prose collections including those attributed to Ademar andOdo of Cheriton .ee also
*
Aesop's Fables References
External links
* [http://www.mythfolklore.net/aesopica/perry/613.htm Perry 613 at Aesopica]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.