David Climbs the Unicorn and Escapes the Lion

Curated by The Jewish Mythology Team ·

David thought he had climbed a barren mountain. Then the mountain stood up.

Landa's 1919 retelling imagines David before the throne, still a shepherd boy with music in his ears. He wanders onto a plain, sees a high hill with a horn at its summit, and climbs. The ground is too hard for soil. No branch grows from the horn. Then the earth beneath him rises and falls like breath.

David is not standing on a hill. He is clinging to the horn of a sleeping re'em, the giant wild creature often rendered as a unicorn in older English Jewish folklore. When it wakes, it lifts him toward the clouds.

The danger changes shape. A lion appears below and roars that it is king of the beasts. The re'em lowers its head in submission, giving David his chance to slide down. But now the boy is face to face with the lion. He draws his knife and steps forward.

A deer breaks into the scene and calls him onto its back. It carries him away faster than the lion can follow, then tells him he is safe because he is destined to become king. Years later, the story says, David remembered the terror of that day in the words of the psalm: "Save me from the lion's mouth: for thou hast heard me from the horns of the unicorns" (Psalms 22:21).

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