We tell children stories — like Aesop’s Fables, Little Red Riding Hood or the Big Bad Wolf — that implicitly teach us how to think about wolves. Many of these myths portray them as conniving,
cunning or deceitful.
“Expect no reward for serving the wicked,” writes Aesop after a wolf fools a crane. He calls the canine “the terrible wolf,” in another fable.
Stories of the opposite sentiment are also true.
The wolf is central to some Indigenous…
Will Matuska
2024-01-18 16:17:41
Boulder Weekly
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