The Lion In Love
The Lion in Love is a fable about a lion that falls in love with a woodcutter?s daughter. The lion demanded the daughter in marriage but her father would not grant his request. The daughter was fearfully afraid of his claws and teeth, and after serious consideration, the fathers? willingness to accept the Lion as a suitor of his daughter under one condition, that he would allow him to extract his defenses, such as his teeth, and cut off his claws. The lion assented to the fathers? proposal. When the toothless and clawless lion returned to repeat his request to marry his daughter, the woodcutter, no longer fearing the lion, sat upon him with his club and drove him into the forest.
This fable represents the good and evil in the world. The lion only wanting to marry his daughter out of love and father only wanting him to give up his defenses so he could never fear him again shows that out of something good comes evil.
The morals of the story is to never resign to your own defenses; love can blind even the wildest; and an extravagant love consults neither life, fortune,
love, lion, give, daughter, fable, honor, defenses, someone, person, marry, life, happy, dignity, world, something, passion, never, need, make, woodcutter?s, wanting, transports, think, teeth, sense, self, sacrifices, request, reputation, pride, people, out, nor, neither, man