My husband reminded me of this Robert Burns poem the other day.
To A Mouse
Small, sleek, cowering, timorous beast,
O, what a panic is in your
breast!
You need not start away so hasty
With hurrying scamper!
I would
be loath to run and chase you,
With murdering plough-staff.
I'm truly
sorry man's dominion
Has broken Nature's social union,
And justifies that
ill opinion
Which makes thee startle
At me, thy poor, earth born
companion
And fellow mortal!
I doubt not, sometimes, but you may
steal;
What then? Poor beast, you must live!
An odd ear in twenty-four
sheaves
Is a small request;
I will get a blessing with what is
left,
And never miss it.
Your small house, too, in ruin!
It's
feeble walls the winds are scattering!
And nothing now, to build a new
one,
Of coarse grass green!
And bleak December's winds coming,
Both
bitter and keen!
You saw the fields laid bare and wasted,
And weary
winter coming fast,
And cozy here, beneath the blast,
You thought to
dwell,
Till crash! the cruel plough past
Out through your
cell.
That small bit heap of leaves and stubble,
Has cost you many a
weary nibble!
Now you are turned out, for all your trouble,
Without house
or holding,
To endure the winter's sleety dribble,
And hoar-frost
cold.
But Mouse, you are not alone,
In proving foresight may be
vain:
The best laid schemes of mice and men
Go often askew,
And leaves
us nothing but grief and pain,
For promised joy!
Still you are blest,
compared with me!
The present only touches you:
But oh! I backward cast my
eye,
On prospects dreary!
And forward, though I cannot see,
I guess and
fear!
3.28.2013
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