[s1e4] Song Of The Petalars -
The Petalars’ song taught him that Lion-O stood taller that night, not because he was a king, but because he finally knew how to cherish the light before the dawn.
But as the sun began to climb, Lion-O noticed something startling: Emrick was growing. By midday, the "child" he had met was a young man. By the time the golden hues of evening hit the trees, Emrick’s leaves were turning brittle and his voice was raspy with age. [S1E4] Song of the Petalars
The ThunderCats were racing through the Forest of Magi Oar, desperate to outrun Mumm-Ra’s forces. To Lion-O, the forest felt like a beautiful but dangerous obstacle. To the , however, this forest was their entire universe. The Petalars’ song taught him that Lion-O stood
He explained that to a Petalar, a single breeze is a lifetime of adventure. A drop of dew is a feast. They didn't mourn the years they lacked; they celebrated the moments they had. Emrick didn't see his life as "short"—he saw it as . By the time the golden hues of evening
As Emrick took his final breath and his body returned to the earth to become part of the forest floor, Lion-O finally understood. He had been so worried about winning a war in the future that he was forgetting to live in the present.
The Petalars’ song taught him that Lion-O stood taller that night, not because he was a king, but because he finally knew how to cherish the light before the dawn.
But as the sun began to climb, Lion-O noticed something startling: Emrick was growing. By midday, the "child" he had met was a young man. By the time the golden hues of evening hit the trees, Emrick’s leaves were turning brittle and his voice was raspy with age.
The ThunderCats were racing through the Forest of Magi Oar, desperate to outrun Mumm-Ra’s forces. To Lion-O, the forest felt like a beautiful but dangerous obstacle. To the , however, this forest was their entire universe.
He explained that to a Petalar, a single breeze is a lifetime of adventure. A drop of dew is a feast. They didn't mourn the years they lacked; they celebrated the moments they had. Emrick didn't see his life as "short"—he saw it as .
As Emrick took his final breath and his body returned to the earth to become part of the forest floor, Lion-O finally understood. He had been so worried about winning a war in the future that he was forgetting to live in the present.