Moral and political fables ancient and modern. Done into Measurd Prose intermixd with Ryme. By Dr. Walter Pope |
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Fab. XXXIV. The Raven and Serpent. |
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Moral and political fables | ||
Fab. XXXIV. The Raven and Serpent.
A Raven flying o'er a River, spyd
A venomous Serpent, sleeping on the Grass,
And bore him thence, presuming he was dead;
But when the Serpent wakd, and found himself
I'th' Ravens Claws, he turnd about his head,
And made his Teeth meet in the Ravens Flank.
Who soon perceivd the smart o'th' mortal Wound.
And said, Oh might I lose what I have found,
This Prey has been my Death, this Gain my Loss.
A venomous Serpent, sleeping on the Grass,
And bore him thence, presuming he was dead;
But when the Serpent wakd, and found himself
I'th' Ravens Claws, he turnd about his head,
And made his Teeth meet in the Ravens Flank.
Who soon perceivd the smart o'th' mortal Wound.
And said, Oh might I lose what I have found,
This Prey has been my Death, this Gain my Loss.
The Moral.
Gain's often more pernicious than Loss. Moral and political fables | ||