Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Miser And The Monkey. by Jean de La Fontaine
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The Miser And The Monkey.

    By Jean de La Fontaine



[1]

    A man amass'd. The thing, we know,
    Doth often to a frenzy grow.
    No thought had he but of his minted gold -
    Stuff void of worth when unemploy'd, I hold.
    Now, that this treasure might the safer be,
    Our miser's dwelling had the sea
    As guard on every side from every thief.
    With pleasure, very small in my belief,
    But very great in his, he there
    Upon his hoard bestow'd his care.
    No respite came of everlasting
    Recounting, calculating, casting;
    For some mistake would always come
    To mar and spoil the total sum.
    A monkey there, of goodly size, -
    And than his lord, I think, more wise, -
    Some doubloons from the window threw,
    And render'd thus the count untrue.
    The padlock'd room permitted
    Its owner, when he quitted,
    To leave his money on the table.
    One day, bethought this monkey wise
    To make the whole a sacrifice
    To Neptune on his throne unstable.
    I could not well award the prize
    Between the monkey's and the miser's pleasure
    Derived from that devoted treasure.
    With some, Don Bertrand, would the honour gain,
    For reasons it were tedious to explain.
    One day, then, left alone,
    That animal, to mischief prone,
    Coin after coin detach'd,
    A gold jacobus snatch'd,
    Or Portuguese doubloon,
    Or silver ducatoon,
    Or noble, of the English rose,
    And flung with all his might
    Those discs, which oft excite
    The strongest wishes mortal ever knows.
    Had he not heard, at last,
    The turning of his master's key,
    The money all had pass'd
    The same short road to sea;
    And not a single coin but had been pitch'd
    Into the gulf by many a wreck enrich'd.

    Now, God preserve full many a financier
    Whose use of wealth may find its likeness here!



Extra Info:
[1] The story is traced to the episode in Tristan L'Hermite's romance titled "Le Page disgracie," treating of "The Monkey and Master Robert." L'Hermite lived 1601-1655.



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