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A bold bad butterfly

Chapter 25: THE TRAGIC MICE
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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 TRAGIC MICE

It was a tragic little mouse
All bent on suicide
Because another little mouse
Refused to be his bride.
“Alas!” he squeaked, “I shall not wed!
My heart and paw she spurns;
I’ll hie me to the cat instead,
From whence no mouse returns!”
The playful cat met him half way,
Said she, “I feel for you,
You’re dying for a mouse, you say,
I’m dying for one, too!”
Now when Miss Mouse beheld his doom,
Struck with remorse, she cried,
“In death we’ll meet!—O cat! make room
For one more mouse inside.”
The playful cat was charmed; said she,
“I shall be, in a sense,
Your pussy catafalque!” Ah me!
It was her last offence!

Reader, take warning from this tale,
And shun the punster’s trick:
Those mice, for fear lest cats might fail,
Had eaten arsenic!