Story Review Desk

Three archives, side-by-side versions, cleanup actions, and approval tracking.

Approved Stories
All Sources Back to catalog Fairytalez Open source Ririro Open source Grimm CMU Open source
Ririro · Fables

The Wolf And The Lion

fables--the-wolf-and-the-lion

Review Status Pending

Rule Cleanup

Displayed from tts_chunks

A Wolf had stolen a Lamb and was carrying it off to his lair to eat it. But his plans were very much changed when he met a Lion, who, without making any excuses, took the Lamb away from him.

The Wolf made off to a safe distance, and then said in a much injured tone:

"You have no right to take my property like that!"

The Lion looked back, but as the Wolf was too far away to be taught a lesson without too much inconvenience, he said:

"Your property? Did you buy it, or did the Shepherd make you a gift of it? Pray tell me, how did you get it?"

Raw JSON
{
  "cleanup_version": "v1",
  "cleanup_mode": "rule_based",
  "source_file": "story.json",
  "source_sha256": "bfb4fa9e078d795e79bfbde5ec0da5c0a0e2a194494d17b6caa16eee809a2ca1",
  "source_title": "The Wolf And The Lion",
  "tts_title": "The Wolf And The Lion",
  "kind": "story",
  "canonical_url": "https://ririro.com/fables/the-wolf-and-the-lion/",
  "slug": "the-wolf-and-the-lion",
  "story_dirname": "fables--the-wolf-and-the-lion",
  "section_slug": "fables",
  "title": "The Wolf And The Lion",
  "author": null,
  "publisher_label": "Ririro",
  "source_version": "unknown",
  "content_type": "story",
  "language": "en",
  "summary": "\"The Wolf And The Lion\" is a short fable by Aesop in which a wolf's stolen prize is abruptly taken by a far more powerful thief. Carrying off a lamb he has no rightful claim to, the wolf is stopped cold when a lion simply takes it for himself. Outraged, the wolf protests from a safe distance — only to be met with a cutting question that exposes the hollow nature of his complaint. The fable turns on that single, devastating exchange.",
  "clean_summary": "\"The Wolf And The Lion\" is a short fable by Aesop in which a wolf's stolen prize is abruptly taken by a far more powerful thief. Carrying off a lamb he has no rightful claim to, the wolf is stopped cold when a lion simply takes it for himself. Outraged, the wolf protests from a safe distance - only to be met with a cutting question that exposes the hollow nature of his complaint. The fable turns on that single, devastating exchange.",
  "body": [
    "A Wolf had stolen a Lamb and was carrying it off to his lair to eat it. But his plans were very much changed when he met a Lion, who, without making any excuses, took the Lamb away from him.",
    "The Wolf made off to a safe distance, and then said in a much injured tone:",
    "“You have no right to take my property like that!”",
    "The Lion looked back, but as the Wolf was too far away to be taught a lesson without too much inconvenience, he said:",
    "“Your property? Did you buy it, or did the Shepherd make you a gift of it? Pray tell me, how did you get it?”",
    "Aesop was an ancient Greek storyteller, believed to have lived around 620–564 BCE, whose fables have been retold across cultures for over two millennia. \"The Wolf And The Lion\" is among his sharpest moral parables, using only two exchanges of dialogue to dismantle the idea that stolen goods can ever become legitimate property."
  ],
  "body_text": "A Wolf had stolen a Lamb and was carrying it off to his lair to eat it. But his plans were very much changed when he met a Lion, who, without making any excuses, took the Lamb away from him.\n\nThe Wolf made off to a safe distance, and then said in a much injured tone:\n\n“You have no right to take my property like that!”\n\nThe Lion looked back, but as the Wolf was too far away to be taught a lesson without too much inconvenience, he said:\n\n“Your property? Did you buy it, or did the Shepherd make you a gift of it? Pray tell me, how did you get it?”\n\nAesop was an ancient Greek storyteller, believed to have lived around 620–564 BCE, whose fables have been retold across cultures for over two millennia. \"The Wolf And The Lion\" is among his sharpest moral parables, using only two exchanges of dialogue to dismantle the idea that stolen goods can ever become legitimate property.",
  "clean_body": [
    "A Wolf had stolen a Lamb and was carrying it off to his lair to eat it. But his plans were very much changed when he met a Lion, who, without making any excuses, took the Lamb away from him.",
    "The Wolf made off to a safe distance, and then said in a much injured tone:",
    "\"You have no right to take my property like that!\"",
    "The Lion looked back, but as the Wolf was too far away to be taught a lesson without too much inconvenience, he said:",
    "\"Your property? Did you buy it, or did the Shepherd make you a gift of it? Pray tell me, how did you get it?\""
  ],
  "clean_text": "A Wolf had stolen a Lamb and was carrying it off to his lair to eat it. But his plans were very much changed when he met a Lion, who, without making any excuses, took the Lamb away from him.\n\nThe Wolf made off to a safe distance, and then said in a much injured tone:\n\n\"You have no right to take my property like that!\"\n\nThe Lion looked back, but as the Wolf was too far away to be taught a lesson without too much inconvenience, he said:\n\n\"Your property? Did you buy it, or did the Shepherd make you a gift of it? Pray tell me, how did you get it?\"",
  "tts_chunks": [
    "A Wolf had stolen a Lamb and was carrying it off to his lair to eat it. But his plans were very much changed when he met a Lion, who, without making any excuses, took the Lamb away from him.",
    "The Wolf made off to a safe distance, and then said in a much injured tone:",
    "\"You have no right to take my property like that!\"",
    "The Lion looked back, but as the Wolf was too far away to be taught a lesson without too much inconvenience, he said:",
    "\"Your property? Did you buy it, or did the Shepherd make you a gift of it? Pray tell me, how did you get it?\""
  ],
  "theme_slugs": [],
  "listing_memberships": [
    {
      "type": "author",
      "slug": "aesop",
      "title": "Aesop",
      "url": "https://ririro.com/author/aesop/"
    },
    {
      "type": "category",
      "slug": "aesop",
      "title": "Aesop",
      "url": "https://ririro.com/category/aesop/"
    }
  ],
  "reading_meta": {
    "reading_level": null,
    "age_band": null,
    "read_time": null
  },
  "media": {
    "has_audio": false,
    "has_pdf": true,
    "has_images": true
  },
  "asset_refs": {
    "pdf_urls": [
      "https://ririro.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/The-Wolf-And-The-Lion_CompressPdf_1_2_CompressPdf-1.pdf"
    ],
    "audio_urls": [],
    "image_urls": [
      "https://ririro.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/de-wolf-en-de-leeuw.jpg"
    ]
  },
  "breadcrumbs": [
    "The Wolf And The Lion"
  ],
  "scraped_at": "2026-05-07T12:51:56+00:00",
  "removed_paragraphs": [
    {
      "index": 5,
      "reason": "remove_editorial_appendix",
      "text": "Aesop was an ancient Greek storyteller, believed to have lived around 620–564 BCE, whose fables have been retold across cultures for over two millennia. \"The Wolf And The Lion\" is among his sharpest moral parables, using only two exchanges "
    }
  ],
  "rules_applied": [
    "normalize_punctuation",
    "remove_editorial_appendix"
  ],
  "stats": {
    "original_paragraph_count": 6,
    "clean_paragraph_count": 5,
    "removed_paragraph_count": 1,
    "tts_chunk_count": 5
  }
}