Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Stag Seeing Himself In The Water. by Jean de La Fontaine
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The Stag Seeing Himself In The Water.

    By Jean de La Fontaine



[1]

    Beside a placid, crystal flood,
    A stag admired the branching wood
    That high upon his forehead stood,
    But gave his Maker little thanks
    For what he call'd his spindle shanks.
    'What limbs are these for such a head! -
    So mean and slim!' with grief he said.
    'My glorious heads o'ertops
    The branches of the copse;
    My legs are my disgrace.'
    As thus he talk'd, a bloodhound gave him chase.
    To save his life he flew
    Where forests thickest grew.
    His horns, - pernicious ornament! -
    Arresting him where'er he went,
    Did unavailing render
    What else, in such a strife,
    Had saved his precious life -
    His legs, as fleet as slender.
    Obliged to yield, he cursed the gear
    Which nature gave him every year.

    Too much the beautiful we prize;
    The useful, often, we despise:
    Yet oft, as happen'd to the stag,
    The former doth to ruin drag.



Extra Info:
[1] Aesop; also Phaedrus, I.12.


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