Aesōpus
(
Αἴσωπος). A famous writer of fables, the first author
who created an independent class of stories about animals, so that in a few generations his
name and person had become typical of that entire class of literature. In course of time,
thanks to his plain, popular manner, the story of his own life was enveloped in an almost
inextricable tissue of tales and traditions, which represent him as an ugly hunchback and
buffoon. In the Middle Ages these were woven into a kind of romance. A Phrygian by birth, and
living in the time of the Seven Sages, about B.C. 600, he is said to have been at first a
slave to several masters, till Iadmon of Samos set him free. That he next lived at the court
of Croesus, and being sent by him on an embassy to Delphi, was murdered by the priests there,
is pure fiction. Under his name were propagated in all parts of Greece, at first only by
tradition in the mouth of the people, a multitude of prose tales teaching the lessons of life
under the guise of fables about animals. We know how Socrates, during his last days in prison,
was engaged in turning the fables of Aesop into verse. The first written collection appears to
have been made by Demetrius of Phalerum, B.C. 300. The collections of
Aesop's
Fables that have come down to us are, in part, late prose renderings of the version in
choliambics by
Babrius (q.v.), which still retain
here and there a scrap of verse; partly products of the rhetorical schools, and therefore of
very different periods and degrees of merit. A good text of the version by Babrius is that of
Schneidewin
(1865), and of Hartung with German notes and a translation
(1858). See also Rutherford's edition of Babrius
(London, 1883).