Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Wisdom Tooth

     Once upon a time there were two animals fighting about the value of themselves. There was a snail and a lion.
     The snail's opinion was that it was smaller which made it easier to hide and it said that it was smarter so even though it couldn't help the world with its strength, it said it had the knowledge to save the world if it's needed.
     Then the lion rebutted with his own opinion. He said that he was stronger and could be fast at doing things. With his strength, he said that he could do things like pushing a wagon for humans.
     But by looking at their lives, it was easy to see that the snail was wise and patient. But on the other hand, the lion was impatient, a mischief maker, and couldn't judge very well when it got mad.
     After a lot of talks about who has a better value of living, the snail insisted that they should have a competition on catching fish. They said that it would only count as a point if they catch the fish alive. They decided to meet at dawn and end the competition when the sun goes down. 
     Finally, the time came for them to see who really has the value of living. They divided the sea into two sides and the snail went to the left side and the lion went to the right side. 
     On the right side where the lion was, the lion went into the water without any planing. He jumped into the seas, but because of his weight, he could barely help himself not sink. It took him about three hours to catch a fish because he was catching every fish by hand and he couldn't hold his breath very well. It spent most of the time playing bad jokes on them like holding them up in the air for a long time so that they couldn't swim away.
     Well if you see the left side, the snail was working pretty well. The snail was planing what he was going to do. It planned to make a leaf boat and use a stick and a spider web for a paddle and a net. It tangled 15 spider webs together to make a stronger net. With his planning, he could easily catch 10 fish in three hours. 
    
a snail
.
.
.
.

and a lion



reference: https://www.google.co.kr/search?q=google&oq=google&aqs=chrome

Click here for ending 1.

Click here for ending 2.

Click here for ending 3.






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