The Gnat and the Lion 
    
    
      A GNAT came and said to a Lion, "I do not in the least fear you,
    nor are you stronger than I am.  For in what does your strength
    consist? You can scratch with your claws and bite with your teeth
    an a woman in her quarrels.  I repeat that I am altogether more
    powerful than you; and if you doubt it, let us fight and see who
    will conquer."  The Gnat, having sounded his horn, fastened
    himself upon the Lion and stung him on the nostrils and the parts
    of the face devoid of hair.  While trying to crush him, the Lion
    tore himself with his claws, until he punished himself severely. 
    The Gnat thus prevailed over the Lion, and, buzzing about in a
    song of triumph, flew away.  But shortly afterwards he became
    entangled in the meshes of a cobweb and was eaten by a spider. 
    He greatly lamented his fate, saying, "Woe is me! that I, who can
    wage war successfully with the hugest beasts, should perish
    myself from this spider, the most inconsiderable of insects!"  
    


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