Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Old Dame And Cats. by John Gay
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Old Dame And Cats.

    By John Gay



            He who holds friendship with a knave,
            Will reputation hardly save;
            And thus upon our choice of friends
            Our good or evil name depends.

            A wrinkled hag - of naughty fame -
            Sat hovering o'er a flickering flame,
            Propped with both hands upon her knees
            She shook with palsy and the breeze.
            She had perhaps seen fourscore years,
            And backwards said her daily prayers;
            Her troop of cats with hunger mewed, -
            Tabbies and toms, a numerous brood.
            Teased with their murmuring, out she flew
            In angry passion: "Hence, ye crew! -
            What made me take to keeping cats?
            Ye are as bad as bawling brats:
            With brats I might perhaps have grown rich;
            I never had been thought a known witch.
            Boys pester me, and strive to awe -
            Across my path they place a straw;
            They nail the horse-shoe, hide the broom-stick,
            Put pins, and every sort of trick."

            "Dame," said a tabby, "cease your prate,
            Enough to break a pussy's pate.
            What is our lot beneath your roof?
            Within, starvation; out, reproof:
            Elsewhere we had been honest mousers,
            And slept, by, fireside carousers.
            Here we are imps who serve a hag,
            And yonder broom-stick's thought your nag;
            Boys hunt us with a doom condign,
            To take one life out of our nine."



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