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===Literary=== [[File:Rama stalks the demon Marica, who has assumed the form of a golden deer.jpg|thumb|upright|In the Indian epic [[Ramayana]], [[Rama]] kills the illusional [[Maricha|golden deer]]]] Deer have been an integral part of fables and other literary works since the inception of writing. Stags were used as symbols in the latter Sumerian writings. For instance, the boat of Sumerian god Enki is named the ''Stag of Azbu''. There are several mentions of the animal in the [[Rigveda]] as well as the [[Bible]]. In the Indian epic [[Ramayana]], [[Sita]] is lured by a golden deer which [[Rama]] tries to catch. In the absence of both Rama and [[Lakshman]], [[Ravana]] kidnaps Sita. Many of the allegorical [[Aesop's fables]], such as "The Stag at the Pool", "The One-Eyed Doe" and "The Stag and a Lion", personify deer to give moral lessons. For instance, "The Sick Stag" gives the message that uncaring friends can do more harm than good.<ref name=guide/> The [[Yaqui people|Yaqui]] deer song accompanies the deer dance which is performed by a pascola [from the Spanish 'pascua', Easter] dancer (also known as a deer dancer). Pascolas would perform at religious and social functions many times of the year, especially during Lent and Easter.<ref name=guide/><ref name=harvey>{{cite book |last1=Harvey |first1=G. |title=Readings in Indigenous Religions |date=2002 |publisher=Continuum |location=London |isbn=978-0826451019 |page=109}}</ref> In one of [[Rudolf Erich Raspe]]'s 1785 stories of ''[[Baron Munchausen]]'s Narrative of his Marvellous Travels and Campaigns in Russia'', the baron encounters a stag while eating cherries and, without ammunition, fires the cherry-pits at the stag with his musket, but it escapes. The next year, the baron encounters a stag with a [[cherry tree]] growing from its head; presumably this is the animal he had shot at the previous year. In [[Christmas]] lore (such as in the narrative poem "[[A Visit from St. Nicholas]]"), [[reindeer]] are often depicted pulling the [[sleigh]] of [[Santa Claus]].<ref name="A Visit from St. Nicholas">{{cite news |last=Moore |first=Clement C. |author-link=Clement Clarke Moore |url=http://iment.com/maida//familytree/henry/xmas/poemvariants/troysentinel1823.htm |title=An Account of A Visit from St. Nicholas |work=Troy Sentinel |date=2 December 1823 |page=2 |access-date=27 March 2015}}</ref> [[Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings]]'s [[Pulitzer Prize]]-winning 1938 novel ''[[The Yearling]]'' was about a boy's relationship with a baby deer. The fiction book ''[[Fire Bringer]]'' is about a young fawn who goes on a quest to save the Herla, the deer kind.<ref name=firebringer>{{cite book |last1=Clement-Davies |first1=D. |title=Fire Bringer |date=2007 |publisher=Firebird |location=New York |isbn=978-0142408735 |edition=1st American}}</ref> In the 1942 [[Walt Disney Pictures]] film, ''[[Bambi]]'' is a [[white-tailed deer]], while in [[Felix Salten]]'s original 1923 book ''[[Bambi, a Life in the Woods]]'', he is a [[roe deer]]. In [[C. S. Lewis]]'s 1950 fantasy novel ''[[The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe]]'' the adult Pevensies, now kings and queens of [[Narnia]], chase the White Stag on a hunt, as the Stag is said to grant its captor a wish. The hunt is key in returning the Pevensies to their home in England. In the 1979 book ''[[The Animals of Farthing Wood (book)|The Animals of Farthing Wood]]'', The Great White Stag is the leader of all the animals.
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