The Lion and the Mouse
A
Mouse happened to run into the mouth of a sleeping Lion, who roused
himself, caught him, and was just about eating him, when the little
fellow begged him to let him go, saying, "If I am saved, I shall be
everlastingly grateful." So, with a smile, he let him off. It befell
him, not long after, to be saved by the Mouse’s gratitude, for when he
was caught by some hunters and bound by ropes to a tree, the Mouse,
hearing his roaring groans, came and gnawed the ropes, and set him
free, saying, "You laughed at me once, as if you could receive no
return from me, but now, you see, it is you who have to be grateful
to me."
The story shows that there come sudden changes of affairs, when the
most powerful owe everything to the weakest.
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