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Aesop's fable about a clever fox and a proud crow is read by Jonathan Pryce in this adaptation combining text, audio and illustrations.

The video

The Fox and the Crow

The Crow is sitting in a tree with a piece of cheese in its beak. The Fox is passing by, smells the cheese and decides that, come what may, he will have the cheese. First the Fox tries to persuade the Crow to come down from the tree; but the Crow is having none of it. So the wily Fox tries flattery instead.

He tells the Crow how lovely his feathers are, and how fine-looking his head. Then, the Fox says how much he would like to hear the Crow sing. Tricked by the flattery, the Crow opens his beak to sing and drops the cheese to the ground, where the Fox gobbles it up.

The Crow protests that the Fox had said he loved to hear a Crow sing. To which the Fox replies: 'Never believe what people tell you when they're trying to steal your cheese.'

Reader: Jonathan Pryce
Writer: Rob John
Illustrations: Beth Tibbles

Video questions

  • How does the Fox know that there is some cheese nearby? (He can smell it)
  • Why doesn’t the Crow come down from the tree when asked to by the Fox? (He knows that the Fox is simply after the cheese)
  • Why does the Fox say that the cheese is mouldy? (He hopes that the Crow will throw it away)
  • How does the Crow know that the Fox is lying about the cheese being mouldy? (He can taste that it is fresh)
  • How does the Fox flatter the Crow? (The Fox tells the Crow his feathers are fine and his head makes him look fierce yet very wise)
  • What makes the Crow drop the cheese? (He decides to sing for the Fox…and the cheese falls from his beak)
  • Why doesn’t the Fox want the Crow to sing after all? (He was lying - the Fox never wanted to hear the Crow sing)
  • Do you think the Crow deserved what happened? Will the Crow have learnt a lesson?

Resources

Download / print the story as a pdf

The Fox and the Crow

Download / print the notes for this story as a pdf

Teacher Notes

See also...

The Hare and the Tortoise. video

Aesop's famous fable about a race between a hare and a tortoise is read by the late Richard Briers.

The Hare and the Tortoise

The Boy who cried Wolf. video

Aesop's famous fable about telling the truth is read by the late Richard Briers.

The Boy who cried Wolf

The North Wind and the Sun. video

Aesop's fable about a competition between the wind and sun is read by Lindsay Duncan.

The North Wind and the Sun