Akirill.com

The Countryman And The Serpent

French Tales

Fables Of La Fontaine

Download PDF

Children’s books – Fables Of La Fontaine – Contents
< < < The Ass And His Masters
The Sick Lion And The Fox > > >

The Countryman And The Serpent

LE VILLAGEOIS ET LE SERPENT
LE VILLAGEOIS ET LE SERPENT

A countryman, as Aesop certifies,
A charitable man, but not so wise,
One day in winter found,
Stretch’d on the snowy ground,
A chill’d or frozen snake,
As torpid as a stake,
And, if alive, devoid of sense.
He took him up, and bore him home,
And, thinking not what recompense
For such a charity would come,
Before the fire stretch’d him,
And back to being fetch’d him.
The snake scarce felt the genial heat
Before his heart with native malice beat.
He raised his head, thrust out his forkèd tongue,
Coil’d up, and at his benefactor sprung.
‘Ungrateful wretch!’ said he, ‘is this the way
My care and kindness you repay?
Now you shall die.’ With that his axe he takes,
And with two blows three serpents makes.
Trunk, head, and tail were separate snakes;
And, leaping up with all their might,
They vainly sought to reunite.

‘Tis good and lovely to be kind;
But charity should not be blind;
For as to wretchedness ingrate,
You cannot raise it from its wretched state.

LE VILLAGEOIS ET LE SERPENT
LE VILLAGEOIS ET LE SERPENT

< < < The Ass And His Masters
The Sick Lion And The Fox > > >

Children’s books – Fables Of La Fontaine – Contents

Copyright holders –  Public Domain Book

If you liked this site, subscribe , put likes, write comments!

Share on social networks

© 2023 Akirill.com – All Rights Reserved

Leave a comment