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The Man and the Weasel
Title | The Man and the Weasel |
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Original Title | Mustela et Homo |
Original Author | Phaedrus |
Original ID | trans-7890.xml |
Book Author | C. Smart |
Language code | eng |
A Weasel, by a person caught, And willing to get off; besought The man to spare. "Be not severe On him that keeps your pantry clear "This were," says he, "a work of price, Of those intolerable mice." If done entirely for my sake, And good had been the plea you make: But since, with all these pains and care, You seize yourself the dainty fare On which those vermin used to fall, And then devour the mice and all, Urge not a benefit in vain." This said, the miscreant was slain. The satire here those chaps will own, Who, useful to themselves alone, And bustling for a private end, Would boast the merit of a friend.