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A bold bad butterfly cover

A bold bad butterfly

Chapter 23: THE FIRST FIRST OF APRIL
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About This Book

A compact collection of whimsical fables and light verse that personify animals, plants, and fanciful figures to satirize human foibles and social manners. Short narrative poems and epigrammatic pieces move between playful storytelling and wry moral observation, often turning a single conceit into a sly reversal. Many items are paired with the author’s line illustrations, and the overall tone balances gentle humor with ironic commentary on pride, vanity, and pretension.

THE FIRST FIRST OF APRIL

The Infant Earth one April day
(The first of April—so they say),
When toddling on her usual round,
Spied in her path upon the ground
A dainty little garland ring
Of violets—and that was Spring.
She caught the pretty wreath of Spring
And all the birds began to sing;
But when she thought to hold it tight
’Twas rudely jerked from out her sight;
And while she looked for it in vain
The birds all flew away again.
Alas! The flowering wreath of Spring
Was fastened to a silken string,
And Time, the urchin, laughed for glee
(He held the other end, you see).
And that was long ago, they say,
When Time was young and Earth was gay.
Now Earth is old and Time is lame,
Yet still they play the same old game:
Old Earth still reaches out for Spring,
And Time—well—Time still holds the string.