The miller, his son and the donkey is a widely dispersed
fable, number 721 in the
Perry Index and number 1215 in the
Aarne–Thompson classification systems of folklore narratives. Though it may have ancient analogues, the earliest extant version is in the work of the 13th-century Arab writer
Ibn Said. There are many eastern versions of the tale and in Europe it was included in a number of Mediaeval collections. Since then it has been frequently included in collections of
Aesop's fables as well as the influential ''
Fables'' of
Jean de la Fontaine
Jean de La Fontaine (, , ; 8 July 162113 April 1695) was a French fabulist and one of the most widely read French poets of the 17th century. He is known above all for his ''Fables'', which provided a model for subsequent fabulists across Euro ...
.
The fable
In this fable a man and his son are accompanied by their donkey and meet constant criticism from passers-by of the way it is used or treated by them. The story's purpose is to show that everyone has their own opinion and there is no way one can satisfy all. There are four or five different elements to the story that are ordered differently according to version. When both walk beside the donkey they are criticised for not riding it. When the father rides, he is blamed for making his young son walk; when the son rides, he is blamed for leaving his elderly father on foot. When both ride, they are berated for overburdening their beast. In later versions the father then exclaims that the only option left is to carry the donkey on his back; in others he does so, or father and son tie the donkey to a pole which they carry on their shoulders. This action causes general mirth and has an unhappy outcome, resulting in the donkey's death through one cause or another.
History
Although there is no ancient source for the tale, there may be some link with a dialogue in
Aristophanes' ''
The Frogs'', produced in 405 BC. Dionysos is talking to his slave Xanthias, who is riding on a donkey but also carrying a burden himself. Xanthias says the donkey is no help with that weight on his shoulders. "All right, then," answers Dionysos, "Since you claim the donkey’s useless to you, why not take your turn and carry it?"
Eastern
The oldest documented occurrence of the actual story is in the work of the historian, geographer and poet
Ibn Said (1213–1286), born and educated in
Al-Andalus.
There are many versions of the tale in the East. It occurs in the ''Forty Vezirs''
translated from Arabic into Turkish by Sheykh Zada in the early 17th century, summarised as:
:::An old gardener, having mounted his son upon an ass, is going to his garden, when he is met by certain persons who jeer at him; he then makes the boy get down and mounts himself, when certain others jeer at him; next he makes the boy get up before, and then behind him, always with the same result; at length both go on foot, and thus reach the garden.
The story occurs in the Mulla
Nasreddin corpus,
where it is the Mulla and his son who are subject to the advice and comments of passers-by. After the experience is over, the Mulla advises his son:
:::"If you ever should come into the possession of a donkey, never trim its tail in the presence of other people. Some will say that you have cut off too much, and others that you have cut off too little. If you want to please everyone, in the end your donkey will have no tail at all."
Many Nasreddin tales are also told of Goha in the
Arab world, and sure enough, Goha features in a similar story, popular as a subject for the patchwork story cloths of the tentmakers of the Street of Tentmakers (Sharia al Khiyamiya) in
Cairo. The story is framed as a deliberate lesson on the part of the father. As Sarah Gauch comments in ''The adventures of Goha, the Wise Fool'', a book illustrated with the tentmakers' creations, "every tentmaker has a Goha... but whatever the Goha, it seems the favourite story is the tale 'Goha Gives His Son a Lesson About Life'."
European
In Mediaeval Europe it is found from the 13th century on in collections of parables created for inclusion in sermons, of which
Jacques de Vitry
Jacques de Vitry (''Jacobus de Vitriaco'', c. 1160/70 – 1 May 1240) was a French canon regular who was a noted theologian and chronicler of his era.
He was elected bishop of Acre in 1214 and made cardinal in 1229.
His ''Historia Oriental ...
's ''
Tabula exemplorum'' is the earliest. Among collections of fables in European tongues, it makes its earliest appearance in the Castilian of
Don Juan Manuel. Titled "What happened to a good Man and his Son, leading a beast to market" (story 23), it is included in his ''
Tales of Count Lucanor'' (1335). Here it is the son who is so infirm of will that he is guided by the criticisms of others along the road until the father expostulates with him that they have run out of alternatives. The moral given is:
:::In thy chosen life’s adventures, stedfastly pursue the cause,
:::Neither moved by critic’s censure, nor the multitude’s applause.
In this version the episode of the two carrying the ass is absent, but it appears in
Poggio Bracciolini's ''Facetiae'' (1450), where the story is related as one that a papal secretary has heard and seen depicted in Germany. The miller and his son are on the way to sell the ass at market but finally the father is so frustrated by the constant criticism that he throws the ass into the river. The same story is told among the "100 Fables" (''Fabulae Centum'') of
Gabriele Faerno (1564) and as the opening poem in
Giovanni Maria Verdizotti
Giovanni Maria Verdizotti was a well-connected writer and artist who was born in Venice in 1525 and died there in 1600.
Life and work
As an artist, Verdizotti is mainly remembered for his friendship with Titian, whose pupil he was, and later his ...
's ''Cento favole morali'' (1570). It also appeared in English in ''Merry Tales and Quick Answers or
Shakespeare's Jest Book'' (c.1530) with the same ending of the old man throwing the ass into the water.
A slightly later version by the German
meistersinger Hans Sachs was created as a broadsheet in 1531. In his retelling a man is asked by his son why they are living secluded in the woods and replies that it is because there is no pleasing anyone in the world. When the son wishes to test this, they set off with their ass and meet criticism whatever they do. Finally they beat the ass to death, are criticised for that too and retreat back into the forest. In drawing the lesson that one should stick to one's decisions despite what the world says, Sachs refers to the story as an 'old fable', although it is obviously not the one with which Poggio's fellow secretary was acquainted. The Latin version created in Germany by
Joachim Camerarius
Joachim Camerarius (12 April 150017 April 1574), the Elder, was a Germans, German classical scholar.
Life
He was born in Bamberg, in the Prince-Bishopric of Bamberg. His family name was Liebhard, but he was generally called Kammermeister, previo ...
under the title ''Asinus Vulgi'' ("The public ass") follows the standard story with the single variation that father and son throw the ass over a bridge when they reach it. It is this version too that the Dane Niels Heldvad (1563-1634) used for his translation of the fable.
When
Jean de La Fontaine
Jean de La Fontaine (, , ; 8 July 162113 April 1695) was a French fabulist and one of the most widely read French poets of the 17th century. He is known above all for his ''Fables'', which provided a model for subsequent fabulists across Euro ...
included the tale in his work (''Fables'' III.1, 1668), he related that it had been told by the poet
François de Malherbe to his indecisive disciple
Honorat de Bueil, seigneur de Racan. The order of the episodes are radically altered, however, and the story begins with the father and son carrying the ass between them so that it will arrive fresh for sale at market. The laughter of bystanders causes him to set it free and subsequent remarks have them changing places until the miller loses patience and decides he will only suit himself in future, for "Doubt not but tongues will have their talk" whatever the circumstances. Earlier on he had reflected that 'He's mad who hopes to please the whole world and his brother'. Robert Dodsley draws the same conclusion in his version of 1764: 'there cannot be a more fruitless attempt than to endeavour to please all mankind', a sentiment shortened by later authors to 'there's no pleasing everyone'.
Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea had also made a close translation of the poem, published in 1713.
The applied and decorative arts
The fable has been illustrated in a number of connections, including on a 1960 Hungarian postage stamp. In around 1800, a composite version of the episodes in the tale appeared as a design for printed cotton fabric in France and in 1817
Hippolyte Lecomte designed a lithograph of the fable suitable to be displayed in people's homes. Later in the 19th century it was the subject of cards issued by the Liebig meat extract company and Guérin Boutron chocolates. An educational postcard was also issued with the text on the back. Elsewhere, the
American Encaustic Tiling Company
The American Encaustic Tiling Company was founded in New York, New York in 1875, later establishing a factory in Zanesville, Ohio, in 1892. Their tiles were intended to compete with the English tiles that were selling in the United States for use ...
of Zanesville, Ohio, produced in 1890 a series of printed decal tiles taken directly from the original plates of
Walter Crane's ''
Baby's Own Aesop''. The fable was one of these and featured a composite design of its episodes.
At the start of the 18th century, French artist
Claude Gillot produced a coloured drawing of father and son riding side by side on the donkey. In 1835 it is recorded that the French Baron Bastien Felix Feuillet de Conches, a collector and great enthusiast of La Fontaine’s fables, got a colleague to commission a miniature of this and other fables from the Punjabi court painter Imam Bakhsh Lahori. The composite design shows the group positioned sideways along a street of handsome Indian buildings. It is now on exhibition at the
Musée Jean de La Fontaine at Château-Thierry, as well as
Hortense Haudebourt-Lescot's oil painting of the father riding through the town with the son holding onto the bridle. Other minor artists who painted the subject were Jules Salles-Wagner (1814–1900), Jules-Joseph Meynier (1826–1903) and Émile Louis Foubert (1848–1911).
Some artists painted more than one version of episodes from the fable. One was
Honoré Daumier, whose painting of 1849/50 is now in the
Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum. This shows a group of three women turning back to mock the miller and son as they cross the end of the street; but another version has them watched by a woman and her children as they take the road round the edge of the town. Another such artist was the American Symbolist painter
Elihu Vedder, whose nine scenes from the story (dating from 1867/8) are in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art and follow the donkey's course through an Italian hill town until it topples over a bridge into a ravine. European Symbolist painters who treated the subject include the French
Gustave Moreau, who made it part of a set of watercolours dedicated to La Fontaine's fables, and the Swiss
Ferdinand Hodler (1853–1918). In the 20th century there has been an etching by
Marc Chagall
Marc Chagall; russian: link=no, Марк Заха́рович Шага́л ; be, Марк Захаравіч Шагал . (born Moishe Shagal; 28 March 1985) was a Russian-French artist. An early modernism, modernist, he was associated with se ...
and a coloured woodcut by
André Planson
André Planson (10 April 1898 – 29 September 1981) was a French painter. His work was part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1924 Summer Olympics
The 1924 Summer Olympics (french: Jeux olympiques d'été de 1924), o ...
(1898–1981).
Notes
External links
*
wikisource:The Miller, His Son, and Their Ass, the Aesop's fable translated by
George Fyler Townsend (1887) from
Three Hundred Æsop's FablesThe Man, the Boy, and the Donkey, Folktales of Aarne-Thompson-Uther Type 1215 translated and/or edited by D. L. Ashlimanillustrations of the fable, ''Pater, Filius, et Asinus'', on laurakgibbs photostream on flickr
{{DEFAULTSORT:Miller, his son and the donkey, The
Fables
La Fontaine's Fables
Fictional millers
Fictional donkeys
ATU 1200-1349