In this fable a crowd of pigeon are caught in a net , butthe king tells the pigeons to fly together when he gives the word. And they flapped their wings together and flew free.
Fable.
Gives You Strength was created in 1991.
union gives strength
"The Oak and the Reed" is the fable to which Aesop (ca. 620 B.C.E. - 564 B.C.E.) refers in "Antigone" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban Prince Haemon argues for flexibility versus rigidity in personal happiness and professional success. He gives the examples of boat sails being adjusted to the winds and of tree branches moving with the wind. In the fable to which Haemon refers, the rigid oak is blown over in a storm that the reed survives by going with the flow.
It comes from one of Aesop's fables, in which a fox tries again and again to jump high enough to reach grapes hanging high on a vine, and finally gives up, asserting that the grapes were probably sour anyway. The moral of the fable is "it is easy to despise what you cannot get."
The skeletal system gives the body shape and strength.
The cell membrane gives strength to animal cells and the cell wall gives strength to plant cells.
Aesop the greek story teller .his stoies are known as fables which gives us a moral.
the H-bonds form a backbone of β-pleated sheets which gives the silk its strength.
calcium
cytoskeleton
it gives them strength