Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Old Woman And Her Two Servants. by Jean de La Fontaine
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The Old Woman And Her Two Servants.

    By Jean de La Fontaine



[1]

    A beldam kept two spinning maids,
    Who plied so handily their trades,
    Those spinning sisters down below
    Were bunglers when compared with these.
    No care did this old woman know
    But giving tasks as she might please.
    No sooner did the god of day
    His glorious locks enkindle,
    Than both the wheels began to play,
    And from each whirling spindle
    Forth danced the thread right merrily,
    And back was coil'd unceasingly.
    Soon as the dawn, I say, its tresses show'd,
    A graceless cock most punctual crow'd.
    The beldam roused, more graceless yet,
    In greasy petticoat bedight,
    Struck up her farthing light,
    And then forthwith the bed beset,
    Where deeply, blessedly did snore
    Those two maid-servants tired and poor.
    One oped an eye, an arm one stretch'd,
    And both their breath most sadly fetch'd,
    This threat concealing in the sigh -
    'That cursed cock shall surely die!'
    And so he did: - they cut his throat,
    And put to sleep his rousing note.
    And yet this murder mended not
    The cruel hardship of their lot;
    For now the twain were scarce in bed
    Before they heard the summons dread.
    The beldam, full of apprehension
    Lest oversleep should cause detention,
    Ran like a goblin through her mansion.
    Thus often, when one thinks
    To clear himself from ill,
    His effort only sinks
    Him in the deeper still.
    The beldam, acting for the cock,
    Was Scylla for Charybdis' rock.



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