There was a man. And he had a moustache. And this moustache was a sign. It was a sign that he must go and fight the bull. He told his mother. He told his father that he would set out to follow that destiny, but his mother, his father, they said, "Nonono!" They said, "You will not fight the bull. It is dangerous. It is not respectable. You will stay here at home and write actuarial software as does your father, as did his father before him, and his father before him. You will respect the legacy of our family and not fight the bull." The man said that he MUST go and fight the bull. That he was proud of his family tradition of writing actuarial software, but that he had to go. His father said to him, "If you walk through that door, then you are no son of mine!" And the man set forth, his heart so heavy. The man set forth to fight the bull! He went into the fighting ring. The bull it charged, it snorted low. His sword he readied, cape he twirled Prepared to give the blow. The bull it ran, the cape it swirled He let it pass unscathed. Then back once more a second pass A closer call, the crowd all gasped But groaned aloud for all the while Violence did they crave. The man so nimble jumped away Out from the raging creature's path And every blow they swore would fall Just gored the air instead. They booed him, jeered and mocked his skill Although he was the best of those Who came into the ring To fight the bull! For hours he taunted, teased and dodged That bull grew madder all the while Until at last exhausted, it collapsed into a pile. But just at that moment, in its collapse, the bull's horn grazed his side. It was that rivulet of blood the crowd had waited for. Now that they'd seen red they saw the man for the genius he was! To go so long, for hours, to be wounded, and yet to defeat the bull without so much as touching it, this was a superhuman feat. Indeed they ran into the ring, they carried him off on their shoulders. They said, with his blood trickling down over their heads, "This man! This man is the greatest man to ever fight the bull!" And then they made to take the bull and chop it up with axes, swords hatchets, cleavers and all manner of bladed implements, but before they could dispatch it, he raised his hand. He said in saintly tones, "My friends, I have fought the bull. You say yourselves I have fought him better than any one has ever fought the bull before. Is he then not mine by right and custom? Then I choose to take him, alive. Please do not dismember my bull." The crowd was struck dumb! Then some of them grumbled, then some of them chered. And by and by the cheering won out, until they let the bull run free while they carried the man back to the house of his mother and father on their shoulders. His parents forgot their harsh words and welcomed him with open arms, for they had only been afraid that their boy would be killed if he should try to fight the bull. And then, flushed with success, the greatest man to fight the bull, he retired. He shaved his moustache, its destiny fulfilled. And he followed his father in writing actuarial software, married a nice girl, and lived happily ever after.