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The Butterfly's
Ball
"Come, take up
your hats, and away let us haste
To the Butterfly's
Ball and the Grasshopper's Feast,
The Trumpeter,
Gadfly, has summon'd the crew,
And the Revels
are now only waiting for you."
So said little
Robert, and pacing along,
His merry Companions
came forth in a throng,
And on the smooth
Grass by the side of a Wood,
Beneath a broad
oak that for ages had stood,
Saw the Children
of Earth and the Tenants of Air
For an Evening's
Amusement together repair.
And there came
the Beetle, so blind and so black,
Who carried
the Emmet, his friend, on his back,
And there was
the Gnat and the Dragonfly too,
With all their
Relations, green, orange, and blue.
And there came
the Moth, with his plumage of down,
And the Hornet
in jacket of yellow and brown;
Who with him
the Wasp, his companion, did bring,
But they promised
that evening to lay by their sting.
And the sly
little Dormouse crept out of his hole,
And brought
to the Feast his blind Brother, the Mole;
And the Snail,
with his horns peeping out of his shell,
Came from a
great distance, the length of an ell.
A Mushroom, their
Table, and on it was laid
A water-dock
leaf, which a table-cloth made.
The Viands were
various, to each of their taste,
And the Bee
brought her honey to crown the Repast.
Then close on
his haunches, so solemn and wise,
The Frog from
a corner look'd up to the skies;
And the Squirrel,
well pleased such a diversion to see,
Mounted high
overhead and look'd down from a tree.
Then out
came the Spider, with finger so fine,
To show his
dexterity on the tight-line,
From one branch
to another his cobwebs he slung,
Then quick as
an arrow he darted along,
But just in
the middle -- oh! shocking to tell,
From his rope,
in an instant, poor Harlequin fell.
Yet he touch'd
not the ground, but with talons outspread
Hung suspended
in air, at the end of a thread.
Then the Grasshopper
came with a jerk and a spring,
Very long was
his Leg, though but short was his Wing;
He took but
three leaps, and was soon out of sight,
Then chirp'd
his own praises the rest of the night.
With step so
majestic the Snail did advance,
And promised
the Gazers a Minuet to dance;
But they all
laughed so loud that he pulled in his head,
And went in
his own little chamber to bed.
Then as Evening
gave way to the shadows of Night,
Their Watchman,
the Glowworm, came out with a light.
"Then Home let
us hasten while yet we can see,
For no Watchman
is waiting for you and for me."
So Said little
Robert, and pacing along,
His merry Companions
return'd in a throng.
--William P. Roscoe
--from
Mother
Goose: From Nursery to Literature,
McFarland ©1987/iUniverse
©2000 by Gloria T. Delamar
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