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A bold bad butterfly

Chapter 3: CRUMBS
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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.

CRUMBS

Up to my frozen window-shelf
Each day a begging birdie comes,
And when I have a crust myself
The birdie always gets the crumbs.
They say who on the water throws
His bread, will get it back again;
If that is true, perhaps—who knows?—
I have not cast my crumbs in vain.
Indeed, I know it is not quite
The thing to boast of one’s good deed;
To what the left hand does, the right,
I am aware, should pay no heed.
Yet if in modest verse I tell
My tale, some editor, maybe,
May like it very much, and—well,
My bread will then return to me.