Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Philosopher And Pheasant. by John Gay
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Philosopher And Pheasant.

    By John Gay



            A sage awakened by the dawn,
            By music of the groves was drawn
            From tree to tree: responsive notes
            Arose from many warbling throats.
            As he advanced, the warblers ceased;
            Silent the bird and scared the beast -
            The nightingale then ceased her lay,
            And the scared leveret ran away.
            The sage then pondered, and his eye
            Roamed round to learn the reason why.

            He marked a pheasant, as she stood
            Upon a bank, above her brood;
            With pride maternal beat her breast
            As she harangued and led from nest:

            "Play on, my infant brood - this glen
            Is free from bad marauding men.
            O trust the hawk, and trust the kite,
            Sooner than man - detested wight!
            Ingratitude sticks to his mind, -
            A vice inherent to the kind.
            The sheep, that clothes him with her wool,
            Dies at the shambles - butcher's school;
            The honey-bees with waxen combs
            Are slain by hives and hecatombs;
            And the sagacious goose, who gives
            The plume whereby he writes and lives,
            And as a guerdon for its use
            He cuts the quill and eats the goose.
            Avoid the monster: where he roams
            He desolates our raided homes;
            And where such acts and deeds are boasted,
            I hear we pheasants all are roasted."



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