"The Wolf and the Fox" is a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm. The story involves a greedy, gluttonous wolf living with a fox. The wolf makes the fox do all his work and threatens to eat him if he does not otherwise comply. The fox, in turn, devises a scheme to rid himself of the wolf.[1]
Synopsis
A Wolf and a Fox are living together where the Fox (being the weaker of the two) is forced to do all the hard work for the Wolf. One day, the Wolf makes the Fox get him something to eat and the Fox says he knows where there are a couple of lambs. The Fox steals a lamb for the Wolf. But not content with just one, the Wolf goes back for more. He is caught by the farmer's men and thrown out after being severely beaten.
The next day, the Wolf again makes the Fox get him some food. The Fox says he knows of a house in the village where a woman is baking pancakes and steals some for the Wolf. Wanting more, the Wolf goes to the farm on his own, but causes a commotion which gets the woman's attention and is kicked out once again after she attacks him with her frying pan.
Some time later, the Wolf again makes the Fox get food. The Fox says he knows of a farmer's cellar where meat is being stored and leads the Wolf to the cellar. The Wolf gobbles up the meat. The Fox also takes some, but keeps checking to make sure he can still get out the way he came in. The Fox's constant scurrying gets the attention of the farmer who goes to investigate. The Fox is able to escape, but the Wolf has eaten so much that he cannot get out and is eventually caught and killed by the farmer.
In popular culture
- "The Wolf and the Fox" is included in the anime series Grimm's Fairy Tale Classics. In the English dub, the Wolf is voice provided by Steve Kramer and the Fox voice provided by Dave Mallow. There were some differences in the plot of this episode. In this version, the Wolf has had terrible hunting skills where he was unable to catch a deer, some rabbits, a family of ducks, and was repelled by a farmer when he tried to target the farmer's cattle. The Wolf has also tried to obtain some followers from a deer, a squirrel, a hawk, and a bear. After the Wolf threatens to eat him, the Fox ends up taking up the Wolf's previous offer to make him his follower which is where the Wolf makes the Fox obtain food for him. The first part involved fishing from a frozen pond during winter. The Wolf got his tail stuck in the ice which the Fox had to help the Wolf remove at the cost of part of the Wolf's tail. Then in the spring, Fox obtained a fried egg from a farmer's house. The Wolf tried to go for another, but broke one of the dishes giving himself away to the farmer's wife as the farmer beats up the Wolf. After talking with a deer, the Fox comes up with a plan where he takes the recuperated Wolf to a basement containing salted meat. To complete his trap to get rid of the Wolf, the Fox causes a racket to alert a local farmer and the Wolf gets stuck in the hole where he is caught by the farmer. The Fox continued to run and makes it back to the forest. The Fox tells the local animals that the Wolf isn't coming back and states that he is free of him.
- The story was adapted into an episode of the British animated series Wolves, Witches and Giants, in which the Wolf has become so fat after eating all the pastries in a baker's larder that he gets stuck while trying to escape, and is forced to do washing for the baker to pay off his debt.
- There is a song by the metal band Bring Me the Horizon entitled "The Fox and the Wolf" included in the album There Is a Hell Believe Me I've Seen It. There Is a Heaven Let's Keep It a Secret. It is unknown if the song is related to this story in any way besides the name.
References
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Notable tales |
- "Allerleirauh"
- "The Beam"
- "Bearskin"
- "The Brave Little Tailor"
- "The Bright Sun Brings It to Light"
- "Brother and Sister"
- "Brother Lustig"
- "Cat and Mouse in Partnership"
- "Cinderella"
- "Clever Elsie"
- "Clever Hans"
- "Clever Gretel"
- "The Clever Little Tailor"
- "Death's Messengers"
- "The Devil's Sooty Brother"
- "The Devil and his Grandmother"
- "The Devil with the Three Golden Hairs"
- "Doctor Know-all"
- "The Dog and the Sparrow"
- "The Donkey"
- "Donkey Cabbages"
- "The Elves and the Shoemaker"
- "Fair Katrinelje and Pif-Paf-Poltrie"
- "Ferdinand the Faithful and Ferdinand the Unfaithful"
- "The Fisherman and His Wife"
- "Fitcher's Bird"
- "The Flail from Heaven"
- "Foundling-Bird"
- "The Four Skillful Brothers"
- "The Fox and the Cat"
- "The Fox and the Geese"
- "Frederick and Catherine"
- "The Frog Prince"
- "Gambling Hansel"
- "The Girl Without Hands"
- "The Gnome"
- "Going a Traveling"
- "The Gold-Children"
- "The Godfather"
- "Godfather Death"
- "The Golden Bird"
- "The Golden Goose"
- "The Good Bargain"
- "The Goose Girl"
- "The Goose-Girl at the Well"
- "The Grave Mound"
- "Hans in Luck"
- "Hans My Hedgehog"
- "Hansel and Gretel"
- "The Hare's Bride"
- "Herr Korbes"
- "How Six Made Their Way in the World"
- "The Hurds
- "The Hut in the Forest"
- "Iron John"
- "The Iron Stove"
- "The Jew Among Thorns"
- "Jorinde and Joringel"
- "The Juniper Tree"
- "The Knapsack, the Hat, and the Horn"
- "The King of the Golden Mountain"
- "King Thrushbeard"
- "The Lambkin and the Little Fish"
- "The Lazy Spinner"
- "The Little Peasant"
- "Little Red Riding Hood"
- "Looking for a Bride"
- "The Louse and the Flea"
- "The Maid of Brakel"
- "Mary's Child"
- "Mother Trudy"
- "The Mouse, the Bird, and the Sausage"
- "Mother Holle"
- "Old Hildebrand"
- "Old Sultan"
- "The Old Man and his Grandson"
- "The Old Woman in the Wood"
- "One-Eye, Two-Eyes, and Three-Eyes"
- "The Pack of Ragamuffins"
- "The Peasant's Wise Daughter
- "Pied Piper of Hamelin"
- "The Pink"
- "The Queen Bee"
- "Rapunzel"
- "The Raven"
- "The Riddle"
- "The Robber Bridegroom"
- "Rumpelstiltskin"
- "The Seven Ravens"
- "The Seven Swabians"
- "The Shroud"
- "The Singing, Springing Lark"
- "The Singing Bone"
- "The Six Servants"
- "The Six Swans"
- "Sleeping Beauty"
- "Snow White"
- "Snow-White and Rose-Red"
- "The Spirit in the Bottle"
- "The Star Money"
- "The Story of the Youth Who Went Forth to Learn What Fear Was"
- "The Straw, the Coal, and the Bean"
- "Sweet Porridge"
- "Sweetheart Roland"
- "The Tailor in Heaven"
- "The Thief and His Master"
- "The Three Apprentices"
- "The Three Army Surgeons"
- "The Three Feathers"
- "The Three Languages"
- "The Three Little Birds"
- "The Three Little Men in the Wood"
- "The Three Snake-Leaves"
- "The Three Spinners"
- "The Twelve Idle Servants"
- "The Two Kings' Children"
- "The Water Nixie"
- "Thumbling"
- "Thumbling's Travels"
- "Town Musicians of Bremen"
- "Trusty John"
- "The Turnip"
- "The Twelve Brothers"
- "The Twelve Dancing Princesses"
- "The Twelve Huntsmen"
- "The Two Brothers"
- "The Water of Life"
- "The Wedding of Mrs. Fox"
- "The White Bride and the Black One"
- "The White Snake"
- "The Willful Child"
- "The Wishing-Table, the Gold-Ass, and the Cudgel in the Sack"
- "The Wolf and the Fox"
- "The Wolf and the Seven Young Goats"
- "The Wonderful Musician"
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Authority control databases |
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| International | |
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| National | |
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| Animal tales | |
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| Tales of magic |
- 300
- 301
- 301A
- 301B
- 302B
- 303 (The Twins, The Three Princes and their Beasts)
- 304
- 306
- 307
- 310 (Persinette, Petrosinella, Rapunzel)
- 311
- 312
- 313
- 313A (The Water Nixie, Foundling-Bird)
- 314
- 316
- 318
- 321
- 325
- 326
- 327
- 327A
- 327B (Molly Whuppie, Hop-o'-My-Thumb)
- 328
- 330A
- 331 (The Spirit in the Bottle, The Fisherman and the Jinni)
- 332
- 333
- 334
- 360
- 361
- 363
- 365 (Djákninn á Myrká, Lenore)
- 369
- 400
- 401
- 401A
- 402
- 403
- 404 (Biancabella and the Snake, The Enchanted Maiden)
- 405
- 407
- 408
- 410 (The Glass Coffin, Sleeping Beauty)
- 412
- 425
- 425A
- 425B
- 425C
- 425D
- 425E
- 425M
- 425N
- 426
- 430
- 431
- 432
- 433
- 433B
- 433C (The Story of the Hamadryad, The Origin of the Sirenia)
- 434*
- 440 (The Frog Prince, The Well of the World's End)
- 441 (The Pig King, Hans My Hedgehog)
- 442
- 450
- 451
- 451A
- 459
- 461
- 462 (The Witch in the Stone Boat, The Son of Seven Mothers)
- 465 (The Wife from the Dragon Palace, The Snail Bride, Go I Know Not Whither and Fetch I Know Not What)
- 475
- 476
- 480
- 500
- 501
- 502
- 503
- 505
- 507
- 507B
- 510
- 510A
- 510B
- 511
- 511A
- 513
- 513A (How Six Made Their Way in the World, The Six Servants)
- 514
- 516 (Father Roquelaure, Trusty John)
- 530
- 531
- 533
- 540
- 545B
- 550
- 551
- 552A
- 554
- 555
- 560 (Gyeonmyo jaengju, Jack and His Golden Snuff-Box)
- 561
- 562 (The Princess and the Tin Box, The Blue Light)
- 563
- 565
- 566 (Fortunatus, Little Muck)
- 571
- 575
- 585
- 650A
- 652
- 653
- 671
- 673
- 675
- 700 (Tom Thumb, Thumbling)
- 705A
- 706
- 706D
- 707
- 708
- 709
- 709A
- 710
- 711
- 712
- 713
- 714
- 715
- 720 (The Rose-Tree, The Juniper Tree)
- 729
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| Religious tales | |
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| Realistic tales | |
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| Anecdotes and jokes | |
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