
In an unrecorded 14th-century French legend, the Beast was never a man turned into a monster — he was a god turned into flesh.
The peasants of Montferraud worshipped a forest spirit called Le Dévoreur, the Devourer. They offered him roses, believing the flower’s blood-red petals would calm his appetite. But when the last priestess broke her vow and fell in love with a mortal, the god’s heart shattered and turned to horn.
Banished to wander in animal form, he consumed everything he once loved — until one day, he saw her again. Reborn.
Every few centuries, the god finds her reincarnation — always drawn by the rose, the symbol of his restraint.
And every time, he fails.
When Beauty and the Beast was reimagined in the 18th century, that cycle became a romance — not a curse. But in the oldest version, the story never ends in a kiss. It ends when the rose wilts, and the Beast eats his own heart to remember what love once felt like.



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