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  The Lion and The Gnat 
 The Lion once said to the Gnat: "You brat, Clear out just as quick as you can, now--s'cat!
 If you meddle with me
 I will not guarantee
 That you won't be slammed perfectly flat--
 D'ye see?"
 
 
 Said the Gnat: "Because you're called King--you thing!-- You fancy that you will make me take wing.
 Why, an ox weighs much more,
 Yet I drive him before
 When I get good and ready to sting.
 Now, roar!"
 
 Then loudly his trumpet he blew. And--whew! How fiercely and fast at his foe he flew.
 From the tail to the toes
 He draws blood as he goes.
 Then he starts in to sting and to chew
 His nose.
 
 Sir Lion was mad with the pain. In vainHe roared and he foamed and he shook his mane.
 All the beasts that were nigh
 Fled in fear from his cry.
 But the Gnat only stung him again--
 In the eye.
 
 He looked and laughed as he saw--Haw, Haw!-- The Lion self-torn by his tooth and claw,
 So His Majesty's hide
 With his own blood was dyed.
 Said the Gnat: "Shall I serve you up raw--
 Or fried?"
 
 It's finished. The Lion's loud roar is o'er. He's bitten and beaten, he's sick and sore.
 But a spider's web spread
 Trapped the Gnat as he sped
 With the news...He will never fight more--
 He's dead!
 
 
 Don’t be a bully
 
 
 
 More Fairy Tales
 
 More Rhyming Stories
 
 To Nursery Rhymes Fun Home from
 The Lion and The Gnat
 
 
 
 The Lion and The Gnat Aesops Fables Stories with Morals. Help for parents in building character, teaching respect and lessons in virtue.
 
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