Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Two Ogres by William Schwenck Gilbert
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The Two Ogres

    By William Schwenck Gilbert



    Good children, list, if you're inclined,
    And wicked children too
    This pretty ballad is designed
    Especially for you.

    Two ogres dwelt in Wickham Wold
    Each TRAITS distinctive had:
    The younger was as good as gold,
    The elder was as bad.

    A wicked, disobedient son
    Was JAMES M'ALPINE, and
    A contrast to the elder one,
    Good APPLEBODY BLAND.

    M'ALPINE brutes like him are few
    In greediness delights,
    A melancholy victim to
    Unchastened appetites.

    Good, well-bred children every day
    He ravenously ate,
    All boys were fish who found their way
    Into M'ALPINE'S net:

    Boys whose good breeding is innate,
    Whose sums are always right;
    And boys who don't expostulate
    When sent to bed at night;

    And kindly boys who never search
    The nests of birds of song;
    And serious boys for whom, in church,
    No sermon is too long.

    Contrast with JAMES'S greedy haste
    And comprehensive hand,
    The nice discriminating taste
    Of APPLEBODY BLAND.

    BLAND only eats bad boys, who swear
    Who CAN behave, but DON'T
    Disgraceful lads who say "don't care,"
    And "shan't," and "can't," and "won't."

    Who wet their shoes and learn to box,
    And say what isn't true,
    Who bite their nails and jam their frocks,
    And make long noses too;

    Who kick a nurse's aged shin,
    And sit in sulky mopes;
    And boys who twirl poor kittens in
    Distracting zoetropes.

    But JAMES, when he was quite a youth,
    Had often been to school,
    And though so bad, to tell the truth,
    He wasn't quite a fool.

    At logic few with him could vie;
    To his peculiar sect
    He could propose a fallacy
    With singular effect.

    So, when his Mentors said, "Expound
    Why eat good children why?"
    Upon his Mentors he would round
    With this absurd reply:

    "I have been taught to love the good
    The pure the unalloyed
    And wicked boys, I've understood,
    I always should avoid.

    "Why do I eat good children why?
    Because I love them so!"
    (But this was empty sophistry,
    As your Papa can show.)

    Now, though the learning of his friends
    Was truly not immense,
    They had a way of fitting ends
    By rule of common sense.

    "Away, away!" his Mentors cried,
    "Thou uncongenial pest!
    A quirk's a thing we can't abide,
    A quibble we detest!

    "A fallacy in your reply
    Our intellect descries,
    Although we don't pretend to spy
    Exactly where it lies.

    "In misery and penal woes
    Must end a glutton's joys;
    And learn how ogres punish those
    Who dare to eat good boys.

    "Secured by fetter, cramp, and chain,
    And gagged securely so
    You shall be placed in Drury Lane,
    Where only good lads go.

    "Surrounded there by virtuous boys,
    You'll suffer torture wus
    Than that which constantly annoys
    Disgraceful TANTALUS.

    ("If you would learn the woes that vex
    Poor TANTALUS, down there,
    Pray borrow of Papa an ex-
    Purgated LEMPRIERE.)

    "But as for BLAND who, as it seems,
    Eats only naughty boys,
    We've planned a recompense that teems
    With gastronomic joys.

    "Where wicked youths in crowds are stowed
    He shall unquestioned rule,
    And have the run of Hackney Road
    Reformatory School!"



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