fbpx

The Lion and the Mouse

Enjoy this retelling of the classic Aesop’s fable, “The Lion and the Mouse,” from The Good and the Beautiful Kids YouTube Channel.

Watch & Listen: The Lion and the Mouse Online Story 

Graphic of leafy vine - 1D

The Lion and the Mouse 

Written by Heather Horn

In the open grassland of Africa, where watering holes are rare and thick, tall grass is often brown, there lived a lion. Now, he wasn’t just any lion. This lion was known to be the most powerful and fierce of all the lions. 

He wore his bushy, thick mane proudly. With one swish of his tail, the flies on his back fled. His silent stare sent those around him running.

He feared nothing. But all the animals feared him.

Image Credit: New York Public Library Public Domain Archive & Project Gutenberg

Zebras zigzagged and antelope leapt, but the lion always outsmarted them. Even the sharp-toothed crocs and the huge hippos dove under the water when he came near.

In the middle of the open prairie stood a single tree. This tree was so tall and its canopy so wide that it could be seen throughout the land. 

One day the lion lay in the shade of the great tree. All the animals knew this was where the lion rested.

As he slept, a small mouse ran out from behind the tree. She had been so busy running from the eagle circling above her that she hadn’t noticed she had run right across the lion’s nose.

It didn’t take long for the lion to feel the little patter of the mouse’s tiny feet. 

First he opened his right eye and then his left. 

Image Credit: New York Public Library Public Domain Archive

“What is this! Who would dare to wake a sleeping lion?” the lion roared.

With a swift swipe of his enormous paw, he scooped up the timid little mouse. 

“You will make a tasty snack,” he said.

As he held her with his sharp claws, she looked into his big, wide eyes. 

“Please don’t eat me! I beg you to spare me. I promise someday soon I will repay you,” she begged. 

The lion looked back at her sad little face, “A tiny thing like you thinks you can help a creature as great and powerful as me?” The lion roared with laughter, “I don’t think so!”

She was so small. He really didn’t need her. A hare or a buffalo would be much more filling. He had a sudden feeling of kindness.

The lion released the helpless mouse. She hurried away and was thankful for the lion’s change of heart.

Image Credit: University of California Libraries/Public Domain

Days later, the lion learned his lesson. Hunting had become too easy for him, and he wasn’t paying attention to where he was going. He crept low through the tall grass. The lion did not see the hunter’s net hidden behind a bush.

The lion’s great weight sprung the hunter’s net. It surrounded him. The more he tried to rip it open, the more he became wrapped up in the rope. 

He roared. He swatted. Finally, he whimpered and cried. He had been outsmarted. How would he escape?

Meanwhile, the little mouse happened to be collecting seeds nearby. She heard the roaring and swatting of the angry animal. 

She knew that roar. It was the same lion who had been so quick to catch her. 

But what could be crying with such sadness? 

Surely the lion has caught another unsuspecting animal, the mouse thought to herself.

Image Credit: Project Gutenberg

To her great surprise, she found the lion tangled up in the net. It was the lion who needed help. 

It would be very understandable for the mouse to simply go on her way. The lion had been so mean to all the animals. She should leave the lion alone and afraid, but she remembered her promise.

Her nimble little body fit through the net. She easily chewed through the rope. Soon the lion was free and quite embarrassed. He hadn’t thought a little creature such as a mouse could ever do anything big enough to help a great creature like himself.

Graphic of leafy vine - 1D


 

Find more stories and books on our Kids channel on YouTube. Subscribe to receive notification when new content is added.

You may also like . . .

Kindergarten Readiness Post
Graphic ABC Charts Free Printable

Join the Discussion

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comments

  • Bianca Dayton

    These are awesome, I love this resource! I didn’t realize these were here. I got to listen and read the Lion and the Mouse with my son for the giveaway entry,

  • Elizabeth Hummel

    I’ve always enjoyed this story growing. Thank you for offering these stories to share with my children!

  • Nikita

    Great story!

  • Lisa Hayes

    I’m excited to read this with my son!

  • Joselyn Mazewski

    I just love how y’all can incorporate religion with education. Makes me feel great that I can teach my children not just education but the word of God in our every day life.