Please Help 50 points + Brainliest
Read each fable and identify the best objective summary for each. Be able to justify your answer.
The Dog and the Reflection 1.The Dog and the Reflection a Dog was crossing a plank bridge over a stream with a piece of meat in his mouth when he happened to see his own reflection in the water. He thought it was another dog with a piece of meat twice as big, so he let go of his own piece of meant and flew at the other dog to get the larger piece. But, of course, all that happened was that he got neither, for one was only a reflection, and the other was carried away by a strong, fast current. –By AesopWhich of the following is the BEST objective summary of the fable?a. “The Dog and the Reflection” by Aesop teaches the lesson to be thankful for what you have instead of always wanting more. A dog had a piece of meat but wanted another piece that he thought was better. He dropped the piece of meat into a stream and lost it only to find out he was looking at his reflection. In the end, he was left with nothing.b. “The Dog and the Reflection” by Aesop teaches the lesson to be thankful for what you have instead of always wanting more. The grass is not always greener on the other side, and people should not want what does not belong to them. The dog made a stupid mistake which cost him everything. He dropped the piece of meat into a stream, and in the end, he was left with nothing. c. “The Dog and the Reflection” by Aesop teaches the lesson to be thankful for what you have instead of always wanting more. A dog had a nice, large piece of meat. He walked over to a bridge across a stream. He was looking at his reflection, but he did not realize this. He wanted the piece of meat that his reflection had, so he dropped his own piece to try and get the other piece of meat. The current, however carried his piece of meat away. In the end, the dog had nothing at all. He should have kept the one he had.d. “The Dog and the Reflection” by Aesop teaches the lesson to be thankful for what you have instead of always wanting more. According to the story, the
