Once upon a time, oh fortunate one, in ancient times, there was a distant forest filled with many animals, dense tall trees, and many colorful, blooming flowers - white, red, orange, and yellow.
It contained many animals - large, medium, and small. Among them was a group of mice. It was known about those mice that they didn’t like mixing with other animals, as predatory animals often chased them and wanted to devour them.
One day, a small mouse was born, named Farfour. He always loved to stroll in the forest, but his mother frequently warned him about this, so no predatory animal would devour him. However, he didn’t care what she said.
Whenever Farfour asked his mother to play with other animals, she would refuse strongly and advise him to play with mice. But he wasn’t convinced, as he saw other animals as harmless and non-harming.
One day, Farfour went out without telling his mother while she was preparing food. When he went out, he saw a beautiful cat from afar playing alone. He rejoiced greatly and hurried to her, smiling. When the cat saw him, she was very happy - her food had come to her. As for Farfour, he didn’t know that cats devour mice.
The cat didn’t hesitate and pounced on the mouse to devour him. The mouse was terrified and began running in the forest with the cat running quickly behind him. He passed a tree with the cat behind him. Suddenly, he saw he had hurried into a small hole in the tree. The cat couldn’t reach him.
The mouse looked around and found he had entered a snake’s home. He didn’t know that snakes devour mice. He approached it and greeted it. The snake pounced on him immediately, wanting to devour him. The mouse ran quickly. Whenever he ran, he found another wanting to devour him. So he began running and racing in the forest, hurrying until he returned to his home.
While the mouse was on his way, he looked around him. He didn’t recognize the place and found he was lost in the forest. He began crying bitterly. While he was thus, a large vulture descended on him wanting to devour him. He began running from it, and suddenly the mouse fell into a deep hole.
The mouse couldn’t get out of the hole. While he was in the hole, he saw a small dog standing far from him outside the hole. He approached him and asked how he had fallen. There was a warning outside the hole. The dog feared for Farfour and asked him if he wanted to devour him.
All the dog did was tell him that dogs don’t eat mice. The mouse narrated to him what had happened to him. The dog smiled at him, looked at him with a compassionate gaze, felt pity for him, took his hand until he returned him to his home, and advised him not to go out again without his mother’s knowledge and to always listen to her advice because her experience is greater, then left him and departed.