| ID | Title | Moral | 
| 214 | The Pig And The Sheep |  | 
| 215 | The Gardener And His Dog |  | 
| 216 | The Rivers And The Sea |  | 
| 217 | The Lion In Love |  | 
| 218 | The Beekeeper | When you hit back make sure you have got the right man. | 
| 219 | The Wolf And The Horse | There is no virtue in giving to others what is useless to oneself. | 
| 220 | The Bat, The Bramble, And The Seagull | All men are more concerned to recover what they lose than to acquire what they lack. | 
| 221 | The Dog And The Wolf | Once bitten, twice shy. | 
| 222 | The Wasp And The Snake |  | 
| 223 | The Eagle And The Beetle | The weak will sometimes find ways to avenge an insult, even upon the strong. | 
| 224 | The Fowler And The Lark |  | 
| 225 | The Fisherman Piping |  | 
| 226 | The Weasel And The Man |  | 
| 227 | The Ploughman, The Ass, And The Ox |  | 
| 228 | Demades And His Fable |  | 
| 229 | The Monkey And The Dolphin |  | 
| 230 | The Crow And The Snake |  | 
| 231 | The Dogs And The Fox |  | 
| 232 | The Nightingale And The Hawk |  | 
| 233 | The Rose And The Amaranth |  | 
| 234 | The Man, The Horse, The Ox, And The Dog |  | 
| 235 | The Wolves, The Sheep, And The Ram |  | 
| 236 | The Swan |  | 
| 237 | The Snake And Jupiter |  | 
| 238 | The Wolf And His Shadow |  | 
| 239 | The Ploughman And The Wolf |  | 
| 240 | Mercury And The Man Bitten By An Ant |  | 
| 241 | The Wily Lion |  | 
| 242 | The Parrot And The Cat |  | 
| 243 | The Stag And The Lion | Out of the frying-pan into the fire. | 
| 244 | The Impostor | Do not promise more than you can perform. | 
| 245 | The Dogs And The Hides |  | 
| 246 | The Lion, The Fox, And The Ass | Happy is he who learns from the misfortunes of others. | 
| 247 | The Fowler, The Partridge, And The Cock |  | 
| 248 | The Gnat And The Lion |  | 
| 249 | The Farmer And His Dogs | Get while the getting's good. | 
| 250 | The Eagle And The Fox | False faith may escape human punishment, but cannot escape the divine. | 
| 251 | The Butcher And His Customers | Prevarication often amounts to perjury. | 
| 252 | Hercules And Minerva |  | 
| 253 | The Fox Who Served A Lion | Better servitude with safety than freedom with danger. | 
| 254 | The Quack Doctor |  | 
| 255 | The Lion, The Wolf, And The Fox |  | 
| 256 | Hercules And Plutus |  | 
| 257 | The Fox And The Leopard |  | 
| 258 | The Fox And The Hedgehog |  | 
| 259 | The Crow And The Raven | Those who pretend to be something they are not only make themselves ridiculous. | 
| 260 | The Witch |  | 
| 261 | The Old Man And Death |  | 
| 262 | The Miser |  | 
| 263 | The Foxes And The River |  | 
| 264 | The Horse And The Stag |  | 
| 265 | The Fox And The Bramble |  | 
| 266 | The Fox And The Snake |  | 
| 267 | The Lion, The Fox, And The Stag |  | 
| 268 | The Man Who Lost His Spade | A pretend god is no god at all. | 
| 269 | The Partridge And The Fowler |  | 
| 270 | The Runaway Slave |  | 
| 271 | The Hunter And The Woodman |  | 
| 272 | The Serpent And The Eagle | One good turn deserves another. | 
| 273 | The Rogue And The Oracle |  | 
| 274 | The Horse And The Ass |  | 
| 275 | The Dog Chasing A Wolf |  | 
| 276 | Grief And His Due |  | 
| 277 | The Hawk, The Kite, And The Pigeons |  | 
| 278 | The Woman And The Farmer |  | 
| 279 | Prometheus And The Making Of Man |  | 
| 280 | The Swallow And The Crow |  | 
| 281 | The Hunter And The Horseman |  | 
| 282 | The Goatherd And The Wild Goats | Don't take for granted that which you possess. | 
| 283 | The Nightingale And The Swallow | The scene of past sufferings revives painful memories. | 
| 284 | The Traveller And Fortune |  |