It depends on who tells the story. In most of the Chicken Little (or Chicken Licken/Henny Penny) stories, Chicken LIttle gets the other animal eaten by Foxy Loxy because he incited them to hysteria. The moral for those would be "don't follow blindly" or "don't believe everything you hear."
The kid-gloves version is a little nicer and usually involves the animals getting saved and that moral would be "always believe in yourself, even if others don't."
The Moral of a fable is a short folk or fairy tale with the primary purpose of influencing moral behavior.
The moral to the stone cutter fable is dont be greedy. Be grateful for what you have.
lesson
what is an example of a moral from Hercules and the wagoner.
The term that is defined as a wise saying that describes the lesson taught at the end of a fable is 'the moral of the fable'.
Not to gossip or believe it
It is the message of the fable.
Not always. A fable may have a moral, or it may not. Aesop's Fables usually had a moral.
The Moral of a fable is a short folk or fairy tale with the primary purpose of influencing moral behavior.
The moral to the stone cutter fable is dont be greedy. Be grateful for what you have.
lesson
A Fable and Its Moral - 1914 was released on: USA: 19 February 1914
a passage that points out the message to be drawn from the fable.
what is an example of a moral from Hercules and the wagoner.
a folk tale teaches a lesson indirectly.
yes because a fable is called a fable it has a moral in it like the fox and the grapes:"People tend to despise that which they dont have" hope this helps BTW im eleven
No, it is a story with a moral or lesson to learn from reading the fable.