Question

In the frame story of a cycle narrated by two of these animals, one of them cons the Lion King into killing the Ox, his favorite member of his court. For 10 points each:
[10h] Name these animals, two of whom named Kalilah and Dimnah narrate a namesake cycle of Arabic cautionary animal fables. The Egyptian “Opener of the Ways,” Wepwawet, took the aspect of one of these animals.
ANSWER: jackals [accept wolves]
[10e] Many fables in the Kalilah wa-Dimnah were drawn from the Panchatantra, which may have inspired this Greek author’s fables The Fox and the Grapes and The Deer Without a Heart.
ANSWER: Aesop
[10m] In “The Ring-Dove” chapter of Kalilah wa-Dimnah, one of these animals narrates its life growing up in a monk’s house. In Aesop’s fables, two of these creatures contrast living luxuriously in danger and living simply in safety.
ANSWER: mouse [or mice; accept The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse]
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Summary

Data

OSU AKenyon B010010
Michigan A Kenyon A 010010
Ohio State BMichigan B 010010