Sometimes when we can not get that what we want, we pretend that it is not worth having.
OR
A BAD WORKER ALWAYS QUARREL WITH HIS TOOLS
There are a few stories involving a fox and a cow. These stories range from happy to teaching moral lessons.
After failing to get the grapes ,after jumping many times the fox said the grapes were sour he should have tried harder.
what is theme
it's a fable by aseop
The classic example in history is of ongoing feuds which result in families, cities, or nations continuing to persecute one another on the basis of something their alleged enemy's ancestors were reputed to have done. All of these tactics have greed of some sort as their basis: they aim to justify the acquisition of what does not rightfully belong to the predator. Or the weaker are the losers.
what was the central message (or moral) of the story
what was the central message (or moral) of the story
In the fable "The Fox and the Grapes," the fox is portrayed as unable to reach the grapes and dismisses them as undesirable once he fails to obtain them. Some interpretations see this as a commentary on sour grapes (disparaging what one cannot acquire) rather than cleverness or success.
Fables are stories that teach moral lessons. Some common ones are The Tortoise and the Hare, The Fox and the Grapes, The Ants and the Grasshopper, and other stories of that nature (usually with talking animals). Many of the fables we know today were written by Aesop.
It is telling what you remembered about the story and how you feel about it.
We shall try our best to work hard and to face the next situation there is always a way and pleasure
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