The Boy Who Had an Elephant for a Pet and Other Fables

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Authors

Fargher, James F.

Issue Date

1990

Volume

Issue

Type

Book, Whole

Language

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

The book has four parts: The Man Who Believed in Autumn; Fables from Hasin -- The Laughing Man; First Gifts From Goshawk, The Wind-Walker; and Legends From Long Ago. I read and enjoyed the first three fables in Part II. All three had something clear to teach. If I could ask for something, it would that they be shorter and leave more to the reader. In He Wanted To Protect Them, a guest suggests to a host that giving his family security and goods may be less than giving them the courage and hope to deal with whatever comes. He Was Afraid To Dream tells a sad story of a teacher who crushed his student's every dream with limitations and realism, as the teacher saw it. The man had given up dreaming and made his stolid way through life. A second teacher fortunately renews the gift of dreaming and helps the student make his way through the realities. Fargher closes the story by adding because I was he-who-was-afraid-to-dream. (But no longer, as you can see) (48). The Cobbler's Son tells of an excellent shoemaker who, without knowing it, helped a painter to be a better painter. When the latter has become world famous, he comes back to thank the cobbler for the great shoes and to get a new pair. The cobbler has died, but the painter can tell his son, also now a cobbler, If I could paint as well as your father could make shoes, or if my paintings were as helpful to others as your father's work was to me, I would be a very happy man, indeed (51). I hope to delve into more of the book at another time.

Description

Citation

Publisher

Midgard Press

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

PubMed ID

DOI

Identifier

6871 (Access ID)

Additional link

ISSN

EISSN

Collections