"Spare
me!" begged the poor mouse. "Please let me go and someday I will
surely repay you."
The
lion was so amused at the idea of the little mouse being able to help the King
of Beasts that he lifted up his paw and let her go.
Some
weeks later, the lion was caught in a net.
The hunters, who desired to carry the lion alive to their King, tied him
to a tree while they went in search of a wagon to carry him.
Just
then the little mouse happened to pass by, and seeing the lion's sad plight,
went up to him and soon gnawed away the ropes of the net, freeing the lion.
"You
have helped me and now I have returned the favor. Was I not right - even a mouse can help a
lion!" said the little mouse.
The
Moral of the story: No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted.
This
story has been told in many variations. It
is part of a collection called the Aesop Fables. The morals of the story are timeless and can
be enjoyed by children as well as adults.
Because the characters are represented by animals, we cannot be offended
by the message.
As the great English
writer G. K. Chesterton pointed out:
“They
have no choice, they cannot be anything but themselves.”