The Cunning Hyena and the Foolish Donkey

7 min
The hyena and the donkey meet by the watering hole under the golden hues of the Senegalese savanna. The hyena, cunning and sly, grins as he prepares to deceive, while the donkey, curious yet unsuspecting, listens intently. The tranquil landscape contrasts with the impending mischief.
The hyena and the donkey meet by the watering hole under the golden hues of the Senegalese savanna. The hyena, cunning and sly, grins as he prepares to deceive, while the donkey, curious yet unsuspecting, listens intently. The tranquil landscape contrasts with the impending mischief.

AboutStory: The Cunning Hyena and the Foolish Donkey is a Folktale Stories from senegal set in the Ancient Stories. This Humorous Stories tale explores themes of Wisdom Stories and is suitable for All Ages Stories. It offers Moral Stories insights. A clever hyena and a naïve donkey embark on a series of misadventures, but only one of them ever wins.

Flies buzzed over cracked earth and the baobabs cast long, gnarled shadows; dry wind tasted of dust and distant smoke. In that relentless heat, a sly laugh echoed from the tall grass — a warning that not all who smiled were friends. Two unlikely creatures would soon test trust and hunger beneath a perilous sky.

In the vast savannas of Senegal, where golden grasslands rolled away under a scorching sun and ancient baobabs stood like weathered pillars of time, two very different lives crossed paths again and again. One was a hyena: sleek, keen-eyed, and quick with a grin that hid cunning as surely as the night hides stars. The other was a donkey: steady, strong, and slow of mind, with a good heart and a belly that loved its comforts more than caution.

They were not companions in any true sense; rather, their meetings were the kind that sharpened the hyena’s appetite and softened the donkey’s resolve. The hyena delighted in devising plans, while the donkey delighted in the taste of fresh food and the praise of being called "clever" — praise he cherished despite how little it fit him. Between dusty days and cool, restless nights, the hyena learned that flattering the donkey was more fruitful than hunting alone.

The Tempting Offer

The dry season had tightened its grip. Rivers thinned to silver threads, wells lay pocked with dust, and the air itself seemed to sigh for rain. Every creature moved with the economy of hunger, counting steps, conserving breath. The hyena prowled with hunger and a mind full of schemes; the donkey walked with heavy feet and a hopeful, if simple, confidence.

When the hyena found the donkey browsing the meager remainder of a shriveled patch of grass, he put on his smoothest smile. "Ah, Donkey, my old friend," he called, voice oily as the mud in the riverbeds.

The donkey blinked, his big ears flicking. "Hello, Hyena. You look…well."

"I am always pleased to find you," the hyena said, brightening. "You seem to fare better than most. Where do you find food in such hard times?"

The donkey, honest as a plow, answered plainly: "What little grass I can. It is small, but it fills me."

The hyena feigned thoughtfulness, then released the bait. "There is a hidden field, untouched by the drought. Grass like spring, fruit like honey. It is known to be unclaimed because others are foolish or afraid — but we are clever, are we not?"

The word "clever" landed like a pleasing stone in the donkey's chest. He wanted to be clever. "If you think so…let us go," he said before caution could speak louder.

The hyena's grin widened. "We must be careful; the field has a farmer. We will outwit him."

And so the plan — simple, precise, and entirely the hyena's own — took shape.

The Midnight Feast

They moved beneath a soft moon, a silver coin in the black sky. The field lay in a hush, rows of crops bowed with weight, and the scent of fresh plant and damp earth rose up to the stars. The donkey's stomach rumbled like a distant drum.

"How will we enter?" he whispered, smelling that sweetness already.

"I will dig under the fence," the hyena answered with practiced calm. "You slither through first. Quiet as the night."

The hyena's paws were clever at such things, and soon a neat hole yawned beneath the wooden rail. The donkey squeezed through, eager eyes wide. He began to eat with greedy contentment, each mouthful a small paradise.

"Shh," hissed the hyena, but the donkey's joy made his chewing louder, his braying small and proud. "You fool!" the hyena spat at last.

As if on cue, the farmhouse door burst open and the farmer hurled himself out, club raised into the moonlight. "Thief!" he roared. The hyena, as expected, slipped through the hole and vanished into the shadowy scrub. The donkey tried to bolt after him and found his belly trapped in the narrow opening, stuck like a bar across a gate.

The farmer's club came down. Pain shocked through the donkey's back; humiliation, hotter than the sun, burned in his face. With one last frantic shove he slipped free, hobbling into the darkness as curses chased him down the path. The wind carried the hyena's faint, satisfied chuckle.

Under the glow of the moon, the foolish donkey struggles as he finds himself stuck under a wooden fence. In the distance, the sly hyena watches with amusement, slipping away into the shadows, leaving the donkey to his fate.
Under the glow of the moon, the foolish donkey struggles as he finds himself stuck under a wooden fence. In the distance, the sly hyena watches with amusement, slipping away into the shadows, leaving the donkey to his fate.

He limped until dawn stained the sky a pale red. Under a baobab, he nursed bruises and pride in equal measure.

Another Chance

By morning, the hyena had returned, eyes dancing. "What misfortune!" he sighed at the sight of the donkey's torn coat.

"But despair not! If the farmer's land was rich, what then of a king's garden? Imagine fruit heavy on branches, guarded but glorious."

The donkey, sore and slow, hesitated. The memory of the club burned in him. But the idea of royal fruit — fruit fit for a king — seemed to sing to him. The hyena's smooth voice wrapped the notion in cunning, and the donkey wrapped his hopes around it.

"It will be careful work," the hyena promised. "You climb, you eat; I will keep watch." The donkey wanted to be brave, to be clever, to at last be praised. So he agreed.

The Royal Trap

They crept at night, past sleeping huts and pale starlight, to a high-walled garden where the king kept trees heavy with fruit. The hyena pointed to a stack of barrels, an easy, clumsy ladder for the donkey's hooves. "Climb, and you will land among plenty," he whispered.

The donkey climbed, toppled, and fell inside the garden's fragrant core. Fruit smelled of honey and sun; it filled his mouth and his head with dizzy happiness. He fed like one who had never known such abundance.

The hyena, however, had not meant to follow. He lingered, unseen, secure in the knowledge that he had contrived escape routes and alibis. Guards, trained to a sharp vigilance, soon spotted the intruder. "Thief!" they cried, closing in like a net.

The donkey, stunned, found the high walls imprisoning. The guards descended upon him with sticks, their discipline harsher than the farmer's fear. They beat and battered until the donkey was a patchwork of bruises and bewilderment, then threw him over the wall, broken and disgraced.

In the royal garden, the donkey stands frozen with fear, surrounded by lush fruit trees as the palace guards approach with torches in hand. He has been tricked once again, and the hyena is nowhere to be seen.
In the royal garden, the donkey stands frozen with fear, surrounded by lush fruit trees as the palace guards approach with torches in hand. He has been tricked once again, and the hyena is nowhere to be seen.

From the thicket's edge, the hyena's laughter was a dry rasp, like the rustle of dead leaves. He slipped away before sunrise, leaving behind a lesson carved into flesh rather than mind.

The Final Trick

Time passed in a blur of shame and scratching. The donkey swore to himself: "No more schemes. No more traps." He meant it. But hunger makes oaths thin, and the hyena had a final offer.

"There will be a wedding in the village," he said, voice honey-slick. "Feasts, laughter — if we sneak in, we will eat our fill."

Desperation overrode wisdom. They went to the wedding under the cover of night. But the villagers, spirited and sharp-eyed, recognized the battered creature who smelled of palace fruit. "It’s the thief from the king's garden!" someone cried.

Hands moved faster than judgement. The donkey was seized, tied to a post in the village square, and set upon as a spectacle — a living lesson in gullibility. Children pointed, elders shook heads, and loud laughter rolled through the crowd like a stone down a gully.

In the heart of the bustling village, the foolish donkey stands humiliated as the villagers laugh and point, recognizing him as the thief from the king’s garden. Behind a cart, the cunning hyena smirks, knowing he has escaped trouble once again.
In the heart of the bustling village, the foolish donkey stands humiliated as the villagers laugh and point, recognizing him as the thief from the king’s garden. Behind a cart, the cunning hyena smirks, knowing he has escaped trouble once again.

From the darkness, the hyena watched, his silhouette a crescent of smugness. "Some creatures never learn," he murmured, and then he melted away into the tall grass as if he had never been, leaving the donkey to the world’s scorn.

As the sun sets over the vast Senegalese savanna, the foolish donkey walks away with his head lowered in shame, having learned his lesson too late. In the distance, the cunning hyena vanishes into the tall grass, his sly form fading into the golden horizon.
As the sun sets over the vast Senegalese savanna, the foolish donkey walks away with his head lowered in shame, having learned his lesson too late. In the distance, the cunning hyena vanishes into the tall grass, his sly form fading into the golden horizon.

The donkey walked off at sunset, slow steps and a hollow sound in his chest. He had paid dearly for each lesson, learning too late that flattery can be a snare and that not every offer of bounty deserves trust.

Why it matters

Because the donkey chose quick food and praise over caution, the cost was physical harm, public shame, and loss of trust among neighbors. In many communities — from village squares to market paths — such moments change how others treat you, and cunning smiles can hide long debts. The story closes with the donkey moving away at sunset, dust rising from his slow steps as the hyena slips back into tall grass.

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