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<div style="text-align: center;"> <big><big><big>FABLES FOR THE
FRIVOLOUS</big></big></big><br/>
<br/>
<span style="font-style: italic;">(With Apologies to La Fontaine)</span><br/>
<br/>
By GUY WETMORE CARRYL<br/>
<br/>
With Illustrations by Peter Newell<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
1898<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
FABLES FOR THE FRIVOLOUS<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
TO<br/>
MY FATHER<br/>
<br/></div>
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<div style="text-align: left;">NOTE:<br/>
I have pleasure in acknowledging the courteous permission<br/>
the editors to reprint in this form such of the following fables<br/>
were originally published in Harper's periodicals, in <span
style="font-style: italic;">Life</span>,<br/>
and <span style="font-style: italic;">Munsey's Magazine</span>. <br/>
G. W. C.<br/></div>
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<div style="text-align: center;"> <big><big><span
style="font-weight: bold;">CONTENTS</span></big></big><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#1"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE AMBITIOUS FOX AND THE
UNAPPROACHABLE GRAPES</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#2"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE PERSEVERING TORTOISE
AND THE PRETENTIOUS HARE</span><br style="font-weight: bold;"></SPAN> <br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#3"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE PATRICIAN PEACOCKS
AND THE OVERWEENING JAY</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#4"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE ARROGANT FROG AND THE
SUPERIOR BULL</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#5"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE DOMINEERING EAGLE AND
THE INVENTIVE BRATLING</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#6"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE ICONOCLASTIC RUSTIC
AND THE APROPOS ACORN</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#7"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE UNUSUAL GOOSE AND THE
IMBECILIC WOODCUTTER</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#8"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE RUDE RAT AND THE
UNOSTENTATIOUS OYSTER</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#9"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE URBAN RAT AND THE
SUBURBAN RAT</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#10"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE IMPECUNIOUS CRICKET
AND THE FRUGAL ANT</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#11"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE PAMPERED LAPDOG AND
THE MISGUIDED ASS</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#12"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE VAINGLORIOUS OAK AND
THE MODEST BULRUSH</span><br style="font-weight: bold;"></SPAN> <br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#13"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE INHUMAN WOLF AND THE
LAMB SANS GENE</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#14"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE SYCOPHANTIC FOX AND
THE GULLIBLE RAVEN</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN href="#15"> THE MICROSCOPIC TROUT
AND THE MACHIAVELIAN FISHERMAN</SPAN></span><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#16"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE CONFIDING PEASANT
AND THE MALADROIT BEAR</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#17"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE PRECIPITATE COCK AND
THE UNAPPRECIATED PEARL</span></SPAN><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#18"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE ABBREVIATED FOX AND
HIS SCEPTICAL COMRADES</span><br style="font-weight: bold;"></SPAN> <br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#19"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE HOSPITABLE
CALEDONIAN AND THE THANKLESS VIPER</span></SPAN><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<SPAN href="#20"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE IMPETUOUS BREEZE AND
THE DIPLOMATIC SUN</span><br style="font-weight: bold;"></SPAN> </div>
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<div style="text-align: center;"><big style="font-weight: bold;">
ILLUSTRATIONS</big><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#fox">"THE FOX RETREATED OUT OF RANGE"</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#frog">"HE STROVE TO GROW ROTUNDER"</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#acorn">"AN ACORN FELL ABRUPTLY"</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#ass">"SAID SHE, 'GET UP, YOU BRUTE YOU!'"</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#crow">"'<span style="font-style: italic;">J'ADMIRE</span>,' SAID HE, '<span
style="font-style: italic;">TON BEAU PLUMAGE</span>'"</SPAN><br/>
<br/>
<SPAN href="#bear">"AND SO A WEIGHTY ROCK SHE AIMED"</SPAN><br/></div>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="1"> THE AMBITIOUS FOX</SPAN></span><SPAN name="1"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE UNAPPROACHABLE GRAPES</span></SPAN><br/>
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A farmer built around his crop<br/>
A wall, and crowned his labors<br/>
By placing glass upon the top<br/>
To lacerate his neighbors,<br/>
Provided they at any time<br/>
Should feel disposed the wall to climb.<br/>
<br/>
He also drove some iron pegs<br/>
Securely in the coping,<br/>
To tear the bare, defenceless legs<br/>
Of brats who, upward groping,<br/>
Might steal, despite the risk of fall,<br/>
The grapes that grew upon the wall.<br/>
<br/>
One day a fox, on thieving bent,<br/>
A crafty and an old one,<br/>
Most shrewdly tracked the pungent scent<br/>
That eloquently told one<br/>
That grapes were ripe and grapes were good<br/>
And likewise in the neighborhood.<br/>
<br/>
He threw some stones of divers shapes<br/>
The luscious fruit to jar off:<br/>
It made him ill to see the grapes<br/>
So near and yet so far off.<br/>
His throws were strong, his aim was
fine,<br/>
But "Never touched me!" said the vine.<br/>
<br/>
The farmer shouted, "Drat the boys!"<br/>
And, mounting on a ladder,<br/>
He sought the cause of all the noise;<br/>
No farmer could be madder,<br/>
Which was not hard to understand<br/>
Because the glass had cut his hand.<br/>
<br/>
His passion he could not restrain,<br/>
But shouted out, "You're thievish!"<br/>
The fox replied, with fine disdain,<br/>
"Come, country, don't be peevish."<br/>
(Now "country" is an epithet<br/>
One can't forgive, nor yet forget.)<br/>
<br/>
The farmer rudely answered back<br/>
With compliments unvarnished,<br/>
And downward hurled the <span style="font-style: italic;">bric-à-brac</span><br/>
With which the wall was garnished,<br/>
In view of which demeanor strange,<br/>
The fox retreated out of range.<br/>
<br/>
"I will not try the grapes to-day,"<br/>
He said. "My appetite is<br/>
Fastidious, and, anyway,<br/>
I fear appendicitis."<br/>
(The fox was one of the <span
style="font-style: italic;">élite</span><br/>
Who call it <span style="font-style: italic;">site</span>
instead of <span style="font-style: italic;">seet</span>.)<br/>
<br/>
The moral is that if your host<br/>
Throws glass around his entry<br/>
You know it isn't done by most<br/>
Who claim to be the gentry,<br/>
While if he hits you in the head<br/>
You may be sure he's underbred.<br/>
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<div style="text-align: center;"> <ANTIMG src="images/Grapes.png" title="" alt="" style="width: 323px; height: 480px;"><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"><span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="2"> THE PERSEVERING TORTOISE</SPAN></span><SPAN name="2"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE PRETENTIOUS HARE</span></SPAN><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: left;"> <br/>
Once a turtle, finding plenty<br/>
In seclusion to bewitch,<br/>
Lived a <span style="font-style: italic;">dolce far niente</span><br/>
Kind of life within a ditch;<br/>
Rivers had no charm for him,<br/>
As he told his wife and daughter,<br/>
"Though my friends are in the swim,<br/>
Mud is thicker far than water."<br/>
<br/>
One fine day, as was his habit,<br/>
He was dozing in the sun,<br/>
When a young and flippant rabbit<br/>
Happened by the ditch to run:<br/>
"Come and race me," he exclaimed,<br/>
"Fat inhabitant of puddles.<br/>
Sluggard! You should be ashamed.<br/>
Such a life the brain befuddles."<br/>
<br/>
This, of course, was banter merely,<br/>
But it stirred the torpid blood<br/>
Of the turtle, and severely<br/>
Forth he issued from the mud.<br/>
"Done!" he cried. The race began,<br/>
But the hare resumed his banter,<br/>
Seeing how his rival ran<br/>
In a most unlovely canter.<br/>
<br/>
Shouting, "Terrapin, you're bested!<br/>
You'd be wiser, dear old chap,<br/>
If you sat you down and rested<br/>
When you reach the second lap."<br/>
Quoth the turtle, "I refuse.<br/>
As for you, with all your talking,<br/>
Sit on any lap you choose.<br/>
<span style="font-style: italic;">I</span> shall
simply go on walking."<br/>
<br/>
Now this sporting proposition<br/>
Was, upon its face, absurd;<br/>
Yet the hare, with expedition,<br/>
Took the tortoise at his word,<br/>
Ran until the final lap,<br/>
Then, supposing he'd outclassed him,<br/>
Laid him down and took a nap<br/>
And the patient turtle passed him!<br/>
<br/>
Plodding on, he shortly made the<br/>
Line that marked the victor's goal;<br/>
Paused, and found he'd won, and laid the<br/>
Flattering unction to his soul.<br/>
Then in fashion grandiose,<br/>
Like an after-dinner speaker,<br/>
Touched his flipper to his nose,<br/>
And remarked, "Ahem! Eureka!"<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL (lest you miss one)<br/>
Is: There's often time to spare,<br/>
And that races are (like this one)<br/>
Won not always by a hair.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="3"> THE PATRICIAN PEACOCKS</SPAN></span><SPAN name="3"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE OVERWEENING JAY</span></SPAN><br/>
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Once a flock of stately peacocks<br/>
Promenaded on a green,<br/>
There were twenty-two or three cocks,<br/>
Each as proud as seventeen,<br/>
And a glance, however hasty,<br/>
Showed their plumage to be tasty;<br/>
Wheresoever one was placed, he<br/>
Was a credit to the scene.<br/>
<br/>
Now their owner had a daughter<br/>
Who, when people came to call,<br/>
Used to say, "You'd reelly oughter<br/>
See them peacocks on the mall."<br/>
Now this wasn't to her credit,<br/>
And her callers came to dread it,<br/>
For the way the lady said it<br/>
Wasn't <span style="font-style: italic;"></span><span
style="font-style: italic;">recherché</span> at all.<br/>
<br/>
But a jay that overheard it<br/>
From his perch upon a fir<br/>
Didn't take in how absurd it<br/>
Was to every one but her;<br/>
When they answered, "You don't tell us!"<br/>
And to see the birds seemed zealous<br/>
He became extremely jealous,<br/>
Wishing, too, to make a stir.<br/>
<br/>
As the peacocks fed together<br/>
He would join them at their lunch,<br/>
Culling here and there a feather<br/>
Till he'd gathered quite a bunch;<br/>
Then this bird, of ways perfidious,<br/>
Stuck them on him most fastidious<br/>
Till he looked uncommon hideous,<br/>
Like a Judy or a Punch.<br/>
<br/>
But the peacocks, when they saw him,<br/>
One and all began to haul,<br/>
And to harry and to claw him<br/>
Till the creature couldn't crawl;<br/>
While their owner's vulgar daughter,<br/>
When her startled callers sought her,<br/>
And to see the struggle brought her,<br/>
Only said, "They're on the maul."<br/>
<br/>
It was really quite revolting<br/>
When the tumult died away,<br/>
One would think he had been moulting<br/>
So dishevelled was the jay;<br/>
He was more than merely slighted,<br/>
He was more than disunited,<br/>
He'd been simply dynamited<br/>
In the fervor of the fray.<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL of the verses<br/>
Is: That short men can't be tall.<br/>
Nothing sillier or worse is<br/>
Than a jay upon a mall.<br/>
And the jay opiniative<br/>
Who, because he's imitative,<br/>
Thinks he's highly decorative<br/>
Is the biggest jay of all.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="4"> THE ARROGANT FROG</SPAN></span><SPAN name="4"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE SUPERIOR BULL</span></SPAN><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
Once, on a time and in a place<br/>
Conducive to malaria,<br/>
There lived a member of the race<br/>
Of <span style="font-style: italic;">Rana Temporaria</span>;<br/>
Or, more concisely still, a frog<br/>
Inhabited a certain bog.<br/>
<br/>
A bull of Brobdingnagian size,<br/>
Too proud for condescension,<br/>
One morning chanced to cast his eyes<br/>
Upon the frog I mention;<br/>
And, being to the manner born,<br/>
Surveyed him with a lofty scorn.<br/>
<br/>
Perceiving this, the bactrian's frame<br/>
With anger was inflated,<br/>
Till, growing larger, he became<br/>
Egregiously elated;<br/>
For inspiration's sudden spell<br/>
Had pointed out a way to swell.<br/>
<br/>
"Ha! ha!" he proudly cried, "a fig<br/>
For this, your mammoth torso!<br/>
Just watch me while I grow as big<br/>
As you--or even more so!"<br/>
To which magniloquential gush<br/>
His bullship simply answered "Tush!"<br/>
<br/>
Alas! the frog's success was slight,<br/>
Which really was a wonder,<br/>
In view of how with main and might<br/>
He strove to grow rotunder!<br/>
And, standing patiently the while,<br/>
The bull displayed a quiet smile.<br/>
<br/>
[Illustration: "HE STROVE TO GROW ROTUNDER"]<br/>
<br/>
But ah, the frog tried once too oft<br/>
And, doing so, he busted;<br/>
Whereat the bull discreetly coughed<br/>
And moved away, disgusted,<br/>
As well he might, considering<br/>
The wretched taste that marked the thing.<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL: Everybody knows<br/>
How ill a wind it is that blows.<br/>
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<SPAN name="frog"></SPAN>
<div style="text-align: center;"><ANTIMG src="images/Frog.png" title="" alt=""
style="width: 308px; height: 480px;"><br/></div>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="5">THE DOMINEERING EAGLE</SPAN></span><SPAN name="5"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE INVENTIVE BRATLING</span></SPAN><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
O'er a small suburban borough<br/>
Once an eagle used to fly,<br/>
Making observations thorough<br/>
From his station in the sky,<br/>
And presenting the appearance<br/>
Of an animated V,<br/>
Like the gulls that lend coherence<br/>
Unto paintings of the sea.<br/>
<br/>
Looking downward at a church in<br/>
This attractive little shire,<br/>
He beheld a smallish urchin<br/>
Shooting arrows at the spire;<br/>
In a spirit of derision,<br/>
"Look alive!" the eagle said;<br/>
And, with infinite precision,<br/>
Dropped a feather on his head.<br/>
<br/>
Then the boy, annoyed distinctly<br/>
By the freedom of the bird,<br/>
Voiced his anger quite succinctly<br/>
In a single scathing word;<br/>
And he sat him on a barrow,<br/>
And he fashioned of this same<br/>
Eagle's feather such an arrow<br/>
As was worthy of the name.<br/>
<br/>
Then he tried his bow, and, stringing<br/>
It with caution and with care,<br/>
Sent that arrow singing, winging<br/>
Towards the eagle in the air.<br/>
Straight it went, without an error,<br/>
And the target, bathed in blood,<br/>
Lurched, and lunged, and fell to <span
style="font-style: italic;">terra</span><br style="font-style: italic;">
<span style="font-style: italic;"> Firma</span>,
landing with a thud.<br/>
<br/>
"Bird of freedom," quoth the urchin,<br/>
With an unrelenting frown,<br/>
"You shall decorate a perch in<br/>
The menagerie in town;<br/>
But of feathers quite a cluster<br/>
I shall first remove for Ma:<br/>
Thanks to you, she'll have a duster<br/>
For her precious <span style="font-style: italic;">objets
d'art</span>."<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL is that pride is<br/>
The precursor of a fall.<br/>
Those beneath you to deride is<br/>
Not expedient at all.<br/>
Howsoever meek and humble<br/>
Your inferiors may be,<br/>
They perchance may make you tumble,<br/>
So respect them. Q. E. D.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="6">THE ICONOCLASTIC RUSTIC</SPAN></span><SPAN name="6"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE APROPOS ACORN</span></SPAN><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
Reposing 'neath some spreading trees,<br/>
A populistic bumpkin<br/>
Amused himself by offering these<br/>
Reflections on a pumpkin:<br/>
"I would not, if the choice were mine,<br/>
Grow things like that upon a vine,<br/>
For how imposing it would be<br/>
If pumpkins grew upon a tree."<br/>
<br/>
Like other populists, you'll note,<br/>
Of views enthusiastic,<br/>
He'd learned by heart, and said by rote<br/>
A creed iconoclastic;<br/>
And in his dim, uncertain sight<br/>
Whatever wasn't must be right,<br/>
From which it follows he had strong<br/>
Convictions that what was, was wrong.<br/>
<br/>
As thus he sat beneath an oak<br/>
An acorn fell abruptly<br/>
And smote his nose: whereat he spoke<br/>
Of acorns most corruptly.<br/>
"Great Scott!" he cried. "The Dickens!" too,<br/>
And other authors whom he knew,<br/>
And having duly mentioned those,<br/>
He expeditiously arose.<br/>
<br/>
Then, though with pain he nearly swooned,<br/>
He bathed his organ nasal<br/>
With arnica, and soothed the wound<br/>
With extract of witch hazel;<br/>
And surely we may well excuse<br/>
The victim if he changed his views:<br/>
"If pumpkins fell from trees like that,"<br/>
He murmured, "Where would I be at?"<br/>
<br/>
Of course it's wholly clear to you<br/>
That when these words he uttered<br/>
He proved conclusively he knew<br/>
Which side his bread was buttered;<br/>
And, if this point you have not missed,<br/>
You'll learn to love this populist,<br/>
The only one of all his kind<br/>
With sense enough to change his mind.<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL: In the early spring<br/>
A pumpkin-tree would be a thing<br/>
Most gratifying to us all,<br/>
But how about the early fall?<br/>
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<SPAN name="acorn"></SPAN>
<div style="text-align: center;"> <ANTIMG src="images/Acorn.png" title="" alt="" style="width: 302px; height: 480px;"><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="7">THE UNUSUAL GOOSE</SPAN></span><SPAN name="7"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE IMBECILIC WOODCUTTER</span></SPAN><br/>
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</tr>
<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A woodcutter bought him a gander,<br/>
Or at least that was what he supposed,<br/>
As a matter of fact, 'twas a slander<br/>
As a later occurrence disclosed;<br/>
For they locked the bird up in the garret<br/>
To fatten, the while it grew old,<br/>
And it laid there a twenty-two carat<br/>
Fine egg of the purest of gold!<br/>
<br/>
There was much unaffected rejoicing<br/>
In the home of the woodcutter then,<br/>
And his wife, her exuberance voicing,<br/>
Proclaimed him most lucky of men.<br/>
"'Tis an omen of fortune, this gold egg,"<br/>
She said, "and of practical use,<br/>
For this fowl doesn't lay any old egg,<br/>
She's a highly superior goose."<br/>
<br/>
Twas this creature's habitual custom,<br/>
This laying of superfine eggs,<br/>
And they made it their practice to dust 'em<br/>
And pack them by dozens in kegs:<br/>
But the woodcutter's mind being vapid<br/>
And his foolishness more than profuse,<br/>
In order to get them more rapid<br/>
He slaughtered the innocent goose.<br/>
<br/>
He made her a gruel of acid<br/>
Which she very obligingly ate,<br/>
And at once with a touchingly placid<br/>
Demeanor succumbed to her fate.<br/>
With affection that passed the platonic<br/>
They buried her under the moss,<br/>
And her epitaph wasn't ironic<br/>
In stating, "We mourn for our loss."<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL: It isn't much use,<br/>
As the woodcutter found to be true,<br/>
To lay for an innocent goose<br/>
Just because she is laying for you.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="8">THE RUDE RAT</SPAN></span><SPAN name="7"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE UNOSTENTATIOUS OYSTER</span></SPAN><br/>
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</tr>
<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
Upon the shore, a mile or more<br/>
From traffic and confusion,<br/>
An oyster dwelt, because he felt<br/>
A longing for seclusion;<br/>
Said he: "I love the stillness of<br/>
This spot. It's like a cloister."<br/>
(These words I quote because, you note,<br/>
They rhyme so well with oyster.)<br/>
<br/>
A prying rat, believing that<br/>
She needed change of diet,<br/>
In search of such disturbed this much-<br/>
To-be-desired quiet.<br/>
To say the least, this tactless beast<br/>
Was apt to rudely roister:<br/>
She tapped his shell, and called him--well,<br/>
A name that hurt the oyster.<br/>
<br/>
"I see," she cried, "you're open wide,<br/>
And, searching for a reason,<br/>
September's here, and so it's clear<br/>
That oysters are in season."<br/>
She smiled a smile that showed this style<br/>
Of badinage rejoiced her,<br/>
Advanced a pace with easy grace,<br/>
And <span style="font-style: italic;">sniffed</span>
the silent oyster.<br/>
<br/>
The latter's pride was sorely tried,<br/>
He thought of what he <span
style="font-style: italic;">could</span> say,<br/>
Reflected what the common lot<br/>
Of vulgar molluscs <span style="font-style: italic;">would</span>
say;<br/>
Then caught his breath, grew pale as death,<br/>
And, as his brow turned moister,<br/>
Began to close, and nipped her nose!<br/>
Superb, dramatic oyster!<br/>
<br/>
We note with joy that oi polloi,<br/>
Whom maidens bite the thumb at,<br/>
Are apt to try some weak reply<br/>
To things they should be dumb at.<br/>
THE MORAL, then, for crafty men<br/>
Is: When a maid has voiced her<br/>
Contemptuous heart, don't think you're smart,<br/>
But shut up--like the oyster.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="9">THE URBAN RAT</SPAN></span><SPAN name="8"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE SUBURBAN RAT</span></SPAN><br/>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A metropolitan rat invited<br/>
His country cousin in town to dine:<br/>
The country cousin replied, "Delighted."<br/>
And signed himself, "Sincerely thine."<br/>
The town rat treated the country cousin<br/>
To half a dozen<br/>
Kinds of wine.<br/>
<br/>
He served him terrapin, kidneys devilled,<br/>
And roasted partridge, and candied fruit;<br/>
In Little Neck Clams at first they revelled,<br/>
And then in Pommery, <span
style="font-style: italic;">sec</span> and <span
style="font-style: italic;">brut</span>;<br/>
The country cousin exclaimed: "Such feeding<br/>
Proclaims your breeding<br/>
Beyond dispute!"<br/>
<br/>
But just as, another bottle broaching,<br/>
They came to chicken <span
style="font-style: italic;">en casserole</span><br/>
A ravenous cat was heard approaching,<br/>
And, passing his guest a finger-bowl,<br/>
The town rat murmured, "The feast is ended."<br/>
And then descended<br/>
The nearest hole.<br/>
<br/>
His cousin followed him, helter-skelter,<br/>
And, pausing beneath the pantry floor,<br/>
He glanced around at their dusty shelter<br/>
And muttered, "This is a beastly bore.<br/>
My place as an epicure resigning,<br/>
I'll try this dining<br/>
In town no more.<br/>
<br/>
"You must dine some night at my rustic cottage;<br/>
I'll warn you now that it's simple fare:<br/>
A radish or two, a bowl of pottage,<br/>
And the wine that's known as <span
style="font-style: italic;">ordinaire</span>,<br/>
But for holes I haven't to make a bee-line,<br/>
No prowling feline<br/>
Molests me there.<br/>
<br/>
"You smile at the lot of a mere commuter,<br/>
You think that my life is hard, mayhap,<br/>
But I'm sure than you I am far acuter:<br/>
I ain't afraid of no cat nor trap."<br/>
The city rat could but meekly stammer,<br/>
"Don't use such grammar,<br/>
My worthy chap."<br/>
<br/>
He dined next night with his poor relation,<br/>
And caught dyspepsia, and lost his train,<br/>
He waited an hour in the lonely station,<br/>
And said some things that were quite profane.<br/>
"I'll never," he cried, in tones complaining,<br/>
"Try entertaining<br/>
That rat again."<br/>
<br/>
It's easy to make a memorandum<br/>
About THE MORAL these verses teach:<br/>
<span style="font-style: italic;">De gustibus non est
disputandum;</span><br/>
The meaning of which Etruscan speech<br/>
Is wheresoever you're hunger quelling<br/>
Pray keep your dwelling<br/>
In easy reach.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="10">THE IMPECUNIOUS CRICKET</SPAN></span><SPAN name="9"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE FRUGAL ANT</span></SPAN><br/>
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<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
There was an ant, a spinster ant,<br/>
Whose virtues were so many<br/>
That she became intolerant<br/>
Of those who hadn't any:<br/>
She had a small and frugal mind<br/>
And lived a life ascetic,<br/>
Nor was her temperament the kind<br/>
That's known as sympathetic.<br/>
<br/>
I skip details. Suffice to say<br/>
That, knocking at her wicket,<br/>
There chanced to come one autumn day<br/>
A common garden cricket<br/>
So ragged, poor, and needy that,<br/>
Without elucidation,<br/>
One saw the symptoms of a bat<br/>
Of several months' duration.<br/>
<br/>
He paused beside her door-step, and,<br/>
With one pathetic gesture,<br/>
He called attention with his hand<br/>
To both his shoes and vesture.<br/>
"I joined," said he, "an opera troupe.<br/>
They suddenly disbanded,<br/>
And left me on the hostel stoop,<br/>
Lugubriously stranded.<br/>
<br/>
"I therefore lay aside my pride<br/>
And frankly ask for clothing."<br/>
"Begone!" the frugal ant replied.<br/>
"I look on you with loathing.<br/>
Your muddy shoes have spoiled the lawn,<br/>
Your hands have soiled the fence, too.<br/>
If you need money, go and pawn<br/>
Your watch--if you have sense to."<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL is: Albeit lots<br/>
Of people follow Dr. Watts,<br/>
The sluggard, when his means are scant,<br/>
Should seek an uncle, not an ant!<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="11">THE PAMPERED LAPDOG</SPAN></span><SPAN name="10"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE MISGUIDED ASS</span></SPAN><br/>
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<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A woolly little terrier pup<br/>
Gave vent to yelps distressing,<br/>
Whereat his mistress took him up<br/>
And soothed him with caressing,<br/>
And yet he was not in the least<br/>
What one would call a handsome beast.<br/>
<br/>
He might have been a Javanese,<br/>
He might have been a Jap dog,<br/>
And also neither one of these,<br/>
But just a common lapdog,<br/>
The kind that people send, you know,<br/>
Done up in cotton, to the Show.<br/>
<br/>
At all events, whate'er his race,<br/>
The pretty girl who owned him<br/>
Caressed his unattractive face<br/>
And petted and cologned him,<br/>
While, watching her with mournful eye,<br/>
A patient ass stood silent by.<br/>
<br/>
"If thus," he mused, "the feminine<br/>
And fascinating gender<br/>
Is led to love, I, too, can win<br/>
Her protestations tender."<br/>
And then the poor, misguided chap<br/>
Sat down upon the lady's lap.<br/>
<br/>
Then, as her head with terror swam,<br/>
"This method seems to suit you,"<br/>
Observed the ass, "so here I am."<br/>
Said she, "Get up, you brute you!"<br/>
And promptly screamed aloud for aid:<br/>
No ass was ever more dismayed.<br/>
<br/>
[Illustration: "SAID SHE, 'GET UP, YOU BRUTE YOU!'"]<br/>
<br/>
They took the ass into the yard<br/>
And there, with whip and truncheon,<br/>
They beat him, and they beat him hard,<br/>
From breakfast-time till luncheon.<br/>
He only gave a tearful gulp,<br/>
Though almost pounded to a pulp.<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL is (or seems, at least,<br/>
To be): In etiquette you<br/>
Will find that while enough's a feast<br/>
A surplus will upset you.<br/>
<span style="font-style: italic;">Toujours, toujours la
politesse</span>, if<br/>
The quantity be not excessive.<br/>
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<SPAN name="ass"></SPAN>
<div style="text-align: center;"><ANTIMG src="images/Ass.png" title="" alt=""
style="width: 367px; height: 480px;"><br/></div>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="12">THE VAINGLORIOUS OAK</SPAN></span><SPAN name="11"><br/>
<br/>
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br/>
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE MODEST BULRUSH</span></SPAN><br/>
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<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A bulrush stood on a river's rim,<br/>
And an oak that grew near by<br/>
Looked down with cold <span style="font-style: italic;">hauteur</span>
on him,<br/>
And addressed him this way: "Hi!"<br/>
The rush was a proud patrician, and<br/>
He retorted, "Don't you know,<br/>
What the veriest boor should understand,<br/>
That 'Hi' is low?"<br/>
<br/>
This cutting rebuke the oak ignored.<br/>
He returned, "My slender friend,<br/>
I will frankly state that I'm somewhat bored<br/>
With the way you bow and bend."<br/>
"But you quite forget," the rush replied,<br/>
"It's an art these bows to do,<br/>
An art I wouldn't attempt if I'd<br/>
Such boughs as you."<br/>
<br/>
"Of course," said the oak, "in my sapling days<br/>
My habit it was to bow,<br/>
But the wildest storm that the winds could raise<br/>
Would never disturb me now.<br/>
I challenge the breeze to make me bend,<br/>
And the blast to make me sway."<br/>
The shrewd little bulrush answered, "Friend,<br/>
Don't get so gay."<br/>
<br/>
And the words had barely left his mouth<br/>
When he saw the oak turn pale,<br/>
For, racing along south-east-by-south,<br/>
Came ripping a raging gale.<br/>
And the rush bent low as the storm went past,<br/>
But stiffly stood the oak,<br/>
Though not for long, for he found the blast<br/>
No idle joke.<br/>
<br/>
* *
* * *
* * *<br/>
Imagine the lightning's gleaming bars,<br/>
Imagine the thunder's roar,<br/>
For that is exactly what eight stars<br/>
Are set in a row here for!<br/>
The oak lay prone when the storm was done,<br/>
While the rush, still quite erect,<br/>
Remarked aside, "What under the sun<br/>
Could one expect?"<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL, I'd have you understand,<br/>
Would have made La Fontaine blush,<br/>
For it's this: Some storms come early, and<br/>
Avoid the rush!<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="13">THE INHUMAN WOLF</SPAN></span><SPAN name="12"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE LAMB SANS GENE</span></SPAN><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A gaunt and relentless wolf, possessed<br/>
Of a quite insatiable thirst,<br/>
Once paused at a stream to drink and rest,<br/>
And found that, bound on a similar quest,<br/>
A lamb had arrived there first.<br/>
<br/>
The lamb was a lamb of a garrulous mind<br/>
And frivolity most extreme:<br/>
In the fashion common to all his kind,<br/>
He cantered in front and galloped behind.<br/>
And troubled the limpid stream.<br/>
<br/>
"My friend," said the wolf, with a winsome air,<br/>
"Your capers I can't admire."<br/>
"Go to!" quoth the lamb. (Though he said not where,<br/>
He showed what he meant by his brazen stare<br/>
And the way that he gambolled higher.)<br/>
<br/>
"My capers," he cried, "are the kind that are<br/>
Invariably served with lamb.<br/>
Remember, this is a public bar,<br/>
And I'll do as I please. If your drink I mar,<br/>
I don't give a tinker's ----."<br/>
<br/>
He paused and glanced at the rivulet,<br/>
And that pause than speech was worse,<br/>
For his roving eye a saw-mill met,<br/>
And, near it, the word which should be set<br/>
At the end of the previous verse.<br/>
<br/>
Said the wolf: "You are tough and may bring remorse,<br/>
But of such is the world well rid.<br/>
I've swallowed your capers, I've swallowed your sauce,<br/>
And it's plain to be seen that my only course<br/>
Is swallowing you." He did.<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL: The wisest lambs they are<br/>
Who, when they're assailed by thirst,<br/>
Keep well away from a public bar;<br/>
For of all black sheep, or near, or far,<br/>
The public bar-lamb's worst!<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="14">THE SYCOPHANTIC FOX</SPAN></span><SPAN name="13"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE GULLIBLE RAVEN</span></SPAN><br/>
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<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A raven sat upon a tree,<br/>
And not a word he spoke, for<br/>
His beak contained a piece of Brie,<br/>
Or, maybe, it was Roquefort:<br/>
We'll make it any kind you please--<br/>
At all events, it was a cheese.<br/>
<br/>
Beneath the tree's umbrageous limb<br/>
A hungry fox sat smiling;<br/>
He saw the raven watching him,<br/>
And spoke in words beguiling.<br/>
"<span style="font-style: italic;">J'admire</span>,"
said he, "<span style="font-style: italic;">ton beau plumage</span>."<br/>
(The which was simply persiflage.)<br/>
<br/>
Two things there are, no doubt you know,<br/>
To which a fox is used:<br/>
A rooster that is bound to crow,<br/>
A crow that's bound to roost,<br/>
And whichsoever he espies<br/>
He tells the most unblushing lies.<br/>
<br/>
"Sweet fowl," he said, "I understand<br/>
You're more than merely natty,<br/>
I hear you sing to beat the band<br/>
And Adelina Patti.<br/>
Pray render with your liquid tongue<br/>
A bit from 'Gotterdammerung.'"<br/>
<br/>
This subtle speech was aimed to please<br/>
The crow, and it succeeded:<br/>
He thought no bird in all the trees<br/>
Could sing as well as he did.<br/>
In flattery completely doused,<br/>
He gave the "Jewel Song" from "Faust."<br/>
<br/>
[Illustration: "'<span style="font-style: italic;">J'ADMIRE</span>,'
SAID HE, '<span style="font-style: italic;">TON BEAU PLUMAGE</span>'"]<br/>
<br/>
But gravitation's law, of course,<br/>
As Isaac Newton showed it,<br/>
Exerted on the cheese its force,<br/>
And elsewhere soon bestowed it.<br/>
In fact, there is no need to tell<br/>
What happened when to earth it fell.<br/>
<br/>
I blush to add that when the bird<br/>
Took in the situation<br/>
He said one brief, emphatic word,<br/>
Unfit for publication.<br/>
The fox was greatly startled, but<br/>
He only sighed and answered "Tut."<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL is: A fox is bound<br/>
To be a shameless sinner.<br/>
And also: When the cheese comes round<br/>
You know it's after dinner.<br/>
But (what is only known to few)<br/>
The fox is after dinner, too.<br/>
<br/>
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<SPAN name="crow"></SPAN>
<div style="text-align: center;"><ANTIMG src="images/Crow.png" title="" alt=""
style="width: 329px; height: 480px;"><br/></div>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="15">THE MICROSCOPIC TROUT</SPAN></span><SPAN name="14"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE MACHIAVELIAN FISHERMAN</span></SPAN><br/>
</td>
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<tr>
<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
<br/>
A fisher was casting his flies in a brook,<br/>
According to laws of such sciences,<br/>
With a patented reel and a patented hook<br/>
And a number of other appliances;<br/>
And the thirty-fifth cast, which he vowed was the last<br/>
(It was figured as close as a decimal),<br/>
Brought suddenly out of the water a trout<br/>
Of measurements infinitesimal.<br/>
<br/>
This fish had a way that would win him a place<br/>
In the best and most polished society,<br/>
And he looked at the fisherman full in the face<br/>
With a visible air of anxiety:<br/>
He murmered "Alas!" from his place in the grass,<br/>
And then, when he'd twisted and wriggled, he<br/>
Remarked in a pet that his heart was upset<br/>
And digestion all higgledy-piggledy.<br/>
<br/>
"I request," he observed, "to be instantly flung<br/>
Once again in the pool I've been living in."<br/>
The fisherman said, "You will tire out your tongue.<br/>
Do you see any signs of my giving in?<br/>
Put you back in the pool? Why, you fatuous fool,<br/>
I have eaten much smaller and thinner fish.<br/>
You're not salmon or sole, but I think, on the whole,<br/>
You're a fairly respectable dinner-fish."<br/>
<br/>
The fisherman's cook tried her hand on the trout<br/>
And with various herbs she embellished him;<br/>
He was lovely to see, and there isn't a doubt<br/>
That the fisherman's family relished him,<br/>
And, to prove that they did, both his wife and his kid<br/>
Devoured the trout with much eagerness,<br/>
Avowing no dish could compare with that fish,<br/>
Notwithstanding his singular meagreness.<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL, you'll find, is although it is kind<br/>
To grant favors that people are wishing for,<br/>
Still a dinner you'll lack if you chance to throw back<br/>
In the pool little trout that you're fishing for;<br/>
If their pleading you spurn you will certainly learn<br/>
That herbs will deliciously vary 'em:<br/>
It is needless to state that a trout on a plate<br/>
Beats several in the aquarium. </td>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="16">THE CONFIDING PEASANT</SPAN></span><SPAN name="15"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE MALADROIT BEAR</span></SPAN><br/>
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A peasant had a docile bear,<br/>
A bear of manners pleasant,<br/>
And all the love she had to spare<br/>
She lavished on the peasant:<br/>
She proved her deep affection plainly<br/>
(The method was a bit ungainly).<br/>
<br/>
The peasant had to dig and delve,<br/>
And, as his class are apt to,<br/>
When all the whistles blew at twelve<br/>
He ate his lunch, and napped, too,<br/>
The bear a careful outlook keeping<br/>
The while her master lay a-sleeping.<br/>
<br/>
As thus the peasant slept one day,<br/>
The weather being torrid,<br/>
A gnat beheld him where he lay<br/>
And lit upon his forehead,<br/>
And thence, like all such winged
creatures,<br/>
Proceeded over all his features.<br/>
<br/>
The watchful bear, perceiving that<br/>
The gnat lit on her master,<br/>
Resolved to light upon the gnat<br/>
And plunge him in disaster;<br/>
She saw no sense in being lenient<br/>
When stones lay round her, most
convenient.<br/>
<br/>
And so a weighty rock she aimed<br/>
With much enthusiasm:<br/>
"Oh, lor'!" the startled gnat exclaimed,<br/>
And promptly had a spasm:<br/>
A natural proceeding this was,<br/>
Considering how close the miss was.<br/>
<br/>
[Illustration: AND SO A WEIGHTY ROCK SHE AIMED]<br/>
<br/>
Now by his dumb companion's pluck,<br/>
Which caused the gnat to squall so,<br/>
The sleeping man was greatly struck<br/>
(And by the bowlder, also).<br/>
In fact, his friends who idolized him<br/>
Remarked they hardly recognized him.<br/>
<br/>
Of course the bear was greatly grieved,<br/>
But, being just a dumb thing,<br/>
She only thought: "I was deceived,<br/>
But still, I did hit <span
style="font-style: italic;">something!</span>"<br/>
Which showed this masculine achievement<br/>
Had somewhat soothed her deep
bereavement.<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL: If you prize your bones<br/>
Beware of females throwing stones.<br/>
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<div style="text-align: center;"><ANTIMG src="images/Bear.png" title="" alt=""
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="17">THE PRECIPITATE COCK</SPAN></span><SPAN name="16"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE UNAPPRECIATED PEARL</span></SPAN><br/>
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<br/>
A rooster once pursued a worm<br/>
That lingered not to brave him,<br/>
To see his wretched victim squirm<br/>
A pleasant thrill it gave him;<br/>
He summoned all his kith and kin,<br/>
They hastened up by legions,<br/>
With quaint, expressive gurgles in<br/>
Their oesophageal regions.<br/>
<br/>
Just then a kind of glimmering<br/>
Attracting his attention,<br/>
The worm became too small a thing<br/>
For more than passing mention:<br/>
The throng of hungry hens and rude<br/>
He skilfully evaded.<br/>
Said he, "I' faith, if this be food,<br/>
I saw the prize ere they did."<br/>
<br/>
It was a large and costly pearl,<br/>
Belonging in a necklace,<br/>
And dropped by some neglectful girl:<br/>
Some people are so reckless!<br/>
The cock assumed an air forlorn,<br/>
And cried, "It's really cruel.<br/>
I thought it was a grain of corn:<br/>
It's nothing but a jewel."<br/>
<br/>
He turned again to where his clan<br/>
In one astounding tangle<br/>
With eager haste together ran<br/>
To slay the helpless angle,<br/>
And sighed, "He was of massive size.<br/>
I should have used discretion.<br/>
Too late! Around the toothsome prize<br/>
A bargain-sale's in session."<br/>
<br/>
The worm's remarks upon his plight<br/>
Have never been recorded,<br/>
But any one may know how slight<br/>
Diversion it afforded;<br/>
For worms and human beings are<br/>
Unanimous that, when pecked,<br/>
To be the prey of men they far<br/>
Prefer to being hen-pecked.<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL: When your dinner comes<br/>
Don't leave it for your neighbors,<br/>
Because you hear the sound of drums<br/>
And see the gleam of sabres;<br/>
Or, like the cock, you'll find too late<br/>
That ornaments external<br/>
Do not for certain indicate<br/>
A bona fide kernel.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="18">THE ABBREVIATED FOX</SPAN></span><SPAN name="17"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> HIS SCEPTICAL COMRADES</span></SPAN><br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top;"><br/>
A certain fox had a Grecian nose<br/>
And a beautiful tail. His friends<br/>
Were wont to say in a jesting way<br/>
A divinity shaped his ends.<br/>
The fact is sad, but his foxship had<br/>
A fault we should all eschew:<br/>
He was so deceived that he quite believed<br/>
What he heard from friends was true.<br/>
<br/>
One day he found in a sheltered spot<br/>
A trap with stalwart springs<br/>
That was cunningly planned to supply the demand<br/>
For some of those tippet things.<br/>
The fox drew nigh, and resolved to try<br/>
The way that the trap was set:<br/>
(When the trap was through with this interview<br/>
There was one less tippet to get!)<br/>
<br/>
The fox returned to his doting friends<br/>
And said, with an awkward smile,<br/>
"My tail I know was <span style="font-style: italic;">comme il
faut</span>,<br/>
And served me well for a while."<br/>
When his comrades laughed at his shortage aft<br/>
He added, with scornful bow,<br/>
"Pray check your mirth, for I hear from Worth<br/>
They're wearing them shorter now."<br/>
<br/>
But one of his friends, a bookish chap,<br/>
Replied, with a thoughtful frown,<br/>
"You know to-day the publishers say<br/>
That the short tale won't go down;<br/>
And, upon my soul, I think on the whole,<br/>
That the publishers' words are true.<br/>
I should hate, good sir, to part my fur<br/>
In the middle, as done by you."<br/>
<br/>
And another added these truthful words<br/>
In the midst of the eager hush,<br/>
"We can part our hair 'most anywhere<br/>
So long as we keep the brush."<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL is this: It is never amiss<br/>
To treasure the things you've penned:<br/>
Preserve your tales, for, when all else fails,<br/>
They'll be useful things--in the end.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="19">THE HOSPITABLE CALEDONIAN</SPAN></span><SPAN name="18"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE THANKLESS VIPER</span></SPAN><br/>
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<br/>
A Caledonian piper<br/>
Who was walking on the wold<br/>
Nearly stepped upon a viper<br/>
Rendered torpid by the cold;<br/>
By the sight of her admonished,<br/>
He forbore to plant his boot,<br/>
But he showed he was astonished<br/>
By the way he muttered "Hoot!"<br/>
<br/>
Now this simple-minded piper<br/>
Such a kindly nature had<br/>
That he lifted up the viper<br/>
And bestowed her in his plaid.<br/>
"Though the Scot is stern, at least he<br/>
No unhappy creature spurns,<br/>
'Sleekit, cowrin, tim'rous beastie,'"<br/>
Quoth the piper (quoting Burns).<br/>
<br/>
This was unaffected kindness,<br/>
But there was, to state the fact,<br/>
Just a slight <span style="font-style: italic;">soupçon</span>
of blindness<br/>
In his charitable act.<br/>
If you'd watched the piper, shortly<br/>
You'd have seen him leap aloft,<br/>
As this snake, of ways uncourtly,<br/>
Bit him suddenly and oft.<br/>
<br/>
There was really no excuse for<br/>
This, the viper's cruel work,<br/>
And the piper found a use for<br/>
Words he'd never learned at kirk;<br/>
But the biting was so thorough<br/>
That although the doctors tried,<br/>
Not the best in Edinburgh<br/>
Could assist him, and he died.<br/>
<br/>
And THE MORAL is: The piper<br/>
Of the matter made a botch;<br/>
One can hardly blame the viper<br/>
If she took a nip of Scotch,<br/>
For she only did what he did,<br/>
And <span style="font-style: italic;">his</span>
nippie wasn't small,<br/>
Otherwise, you see, he needed<br/>
Not have seen the snake at all.<br/>
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<td style="vertical-align: top; text-align: center;"> <span
style="font-weight: bold;"><SPAN name="20">THE IMPETUOUS BREEZE</SPAN></span><SPAN name="19"><br style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> AND</span><br
style="font-weight: bold;">
<br style="font-weight: bold;">
<span style="font-weight: bold;"> THE DIPLOMATIC SUN</span></SPAN><br/>
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<br/>
A Boston man an ulster had,<br/>
An ulster with a cape that fluttered:<br/>
It smacked his face, and made him mad,<br/>
And polyglot remarks he uttered:<br/>
"I bought it at a bargain," said he,<br/>
"I'm tired of the thing already."<br/>
<br/>
The wind that chanced to blow that day<br/>
Was easterly, and rather strong, too:<br/>
It loved to see the galling way<br/>
That clothes vex those whom they belong to:<br/>
"Now watch me," cried this spell of
weather,<br/>
"I'll rid him of it altogether."<br/>
<br/>
It whirled the man across the street,<br/>
It banged him up against a railing,<br/>
It twined the ulster round his feet,<br/>
But all of this was unavailing:<br/>
For not without resource it found him:<br/>
He drew the ulster closer round him.<br/>
<br/>
"My word!" the man was heard to say,<br/>
"Although I like not such abuse, it's<br/>
Not strange the wind is strong to-day,<br/>
It always is in Massachusetts.<br/>
Such weather threatens much the health of<br/>
Inhabitants this Commonwealth of."<br/>
<br/>
The sun, emerging from a rift<br/>
Between the clouds, observed the victim,<br/>
And how the wind beset and biffed,<br/>
Belabored, buffeted, and kicked him.<br/>
Said he, "This wind is doubtless new
here:<br/>
'Tis quite the freshest ever blew here."<br/>
<br/>
And then he put forth all his strength,<br/>
His warmth with might and main exerted,<br/>
Till upward in its tube at length<br/>
The mercury most nimbly spurted.<br/>
Phenomenal the curious sight was,<br/>
So swift the rise in Fahrenheit was.<br/>
<br/>
The man supposed himself at first<br/>
The prey of some new mode of smelting:<br/>
His pulses were about to burst,<br/>
His every limb seemed slowly melting,<br/>
And, as the heat began to numb him,<br/>
He cast the ulster wildly from him.<br/>
<br/>
"Impulsive breeze, the use of force,"<br/>
Observed the sun, "a foolish act is,<br/>
Perceiving which, you see, of course.<br/>
How highly efficacious tact is."<br/>
The wondering wind replied, "Good
gracious!<br/>
You're right about the efficacious."<br/>
<br/>
THE MORAL deals, as morals do,<br/>
With tact, and all its virtues boasted,<br/>
But still I can't forget, can you,<br/>
That wretched man, first chilled, then roasted?<br/>
Bronchitis seized him shortly after,<br/>
And that's no cause for vulgar laughter.<br/>
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<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE
END</span><br/></div>
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