There’s a cry and a shout,
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And a deuce of a rout,
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And nobody seems to know what they ’re about,
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But the monks have their pockets all turn’d inside out;
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The friars are kneeling,
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And hunting, and feeling
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The carpet, the floor, and the walls, and the ceiling.
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The Cardinal drew
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Off each plum-color’d shoe,
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And left his red stockings expos’d to the view:
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He peeps, and he feels
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In the toes and the heels;
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They turn up the dishes,—they turn up the plates,—
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They take up the poker and poke out the grates,
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—They turn up the rugs,
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They examine the mugs:
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But no!—no such thing;
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They can’t find THE RING!
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And the Abbot declar’d that, “when nobody twigg’d it,
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Some rascal or other had popp’d in and prigg’d it!”
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The Cardinal rose with a dignified look,
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He call’d for his candle, his bell, and his book:
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In holy anger, and pious grief,
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He solemnly curs’d that rascally thief!
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He curs’d him at board, he curs’d him in bed,
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From the sole of his foot to the crown of his head!
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He curs’d him in sleeping, that every night
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He should dream of the devil, and wake in a fright;
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He curs’d him in eating, he curs’d him in drinking,
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He curs’d him in coughing, in sneezing, in winking;
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He curs’d him in sitting, in standing, in lying;
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He curs’d him in walking, in riding, in flying;
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He curs’d him in living, he curs’d him in dying!
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Never was heard such a terrible curse!
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But what gave rise
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To no little surprise,
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Nobody seem’d one penny the worse!
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The day was gone,
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The night came on,
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The monks and the friars they search’d till dawn;
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When the sacristan saw,
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On crumpled claw,
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Come limping a poor little lame Jackdaw.
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No longer gay,
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As on yesterday;
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His feathers all seem’d to be turn’d the wrong way;
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His pinions droop’d—he could hardly stand,
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His head was as bald as the palm of your hand;
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His eye so dim,
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So wasted each limb,
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That, heedless of grammar, they all cried,
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“THAT ’S HIM!
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That’s the scamp that has done this scandalous thing!
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That’s the thief that has got my Lord Cardinal’s Ring!”
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The poor little Jackdaw,
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When the monks he saw,
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Feebly gave vent to the ghost of a caw;
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And turn’d his bald head, as much as to say,
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“Pray, be so good as to walk this way!”
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Slower and slower
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He limp’d on before,
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Till they came to the back of the belfry-door,
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Where the first thing they saw,
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Midst the sticks and the straw,
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Was the RING, in the nest of that little Jackdaw.
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Then the great Lord Cardinal call’d for his book,
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And off that terrible curse he took;
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The mute expression
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Serv’d in lieu of confession,
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And, being thus coupled with full restitution,
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The Jackdaw got plenary absolution!
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—When those words were heard,
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That poor little bird
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Was so changed in a moment,’t was really absurd.
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He grew sleek and fat;
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In addition to that,
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A fresh crop of feathers came thick as a mat.
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His tail waggled more
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Even than before;
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But no longer it wagg’d with an impudent air,
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No longer he perch’d on the Cardinal’s chair.
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He hopp’d now about
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With a gait devout;
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At matins, at vespers, he never was out;
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And, so far from any more pilfering deeds,
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He always seem’d telling the Confessor’s beads.
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If anyone lied, or if any one swore,
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Or slumber’d in pray’r-time and happen’d to snore,
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That good Jackdaw
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Would give a great “Caw!”
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As much as to say, “Don’t do so anymore!”
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While many remark’d, as his manners they saw,
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That they “never had known such a pious Jackdaw!”
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He long liv’d the pride
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Of that country side,
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And at last in the odor of sanctity died;
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When, as words were too faint
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His merits to paint,
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The Conclave determin’d to make him a Saint;
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And on newly-made Saints and Popes, as you know,
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It’s the custom, at Rome, new names to bestow,
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So they canoniz’d him by the name of Jem Crow!
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2 comments:
Every time I see that bird my fingers itch!!!
es precioso todo el cuervo y la lectura
besos
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