Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Elephant And The Ape Of Jupiter. by Jean de La Fontaine
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The Elephant And The Ape Of Jupiter.

    By Jean de La Fontaine



    'Twixt elephant and beast of horned nose
    About precedence a dispute arose,
    Which they determined to decide by blows.
    The day was fix'd, when came a messenger
    To say the ape of Jupiter
    Was swiftly earthward seen to bear
    His bright caduceus through the air.
    This monkey, named in history Gill,
    The elephant at once believed
    A high commission had received
    To witness, by his sovereign's will,
    The aforesaid battle fought.
    Uplifted by the glorious thought,
    The beast was prompt on Monsieur Gill to wait,
    But found him slow, in usual forms of state,
    His high credentials to present.
    The ape, however, ere he went,
    Bestow'd a passing salutation.
    His excellency would have heard
    The subject matter of legation:
    But not a word!
    His fight, so far from stirring heaven, -
    The news was not received there, even!
    What difference sees the impartial sky
    Between an elephant and fly?
    Our monarch, doting on his object,
    Was forced himself to break the subject.
    'My cousin Jupiter,' said he,
    'Will shortly, from his throne supreme,
    A most important combat see,
    For all his court a thrilling theme.'
    'What combat?' said the ape, with serious face.
    'Is't possible you should not know the case? - '
    The elephant exclaim'd - 'not know, dear sir,
    That Lord Rhinoceros disputes
    With me precedence of the brutes?
    That Elephantis is at war
    With savage hosts of Rhinocer?
    You know these realms, not void of fame?'
    'I joy to learn them now by name,'
    Return'd Sir Gill, 'for, first or last,
    No lisp of them has ever pass'd
    Throughout our dome so blue and vast.'
    Abash'd, the elephant replied,
    'What came you, then, to do? - '
    'Between two emmets to divide
    A spire of grass in two.
    We take of all a care;
    And, as to your affair,
    Before the gods, who view with equal eyes
    The small and great, it hath not chanced to rise.'



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