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Introduction: The Bad Child's Book Of Beasts

Topics: classic

I call you bad, my little child,     Upon the title page,     Because a manner rude and wild     Is common at your age.     The Moral of this priceless work     (If rightly understood)     Will make you, from a little Turk     Unnaturally good.     Do not as evil children do,     Who on the slightest grounds     Will imitate the Kangaroo,     With wild unmeaning bounds:     Do not as children badly bred,     Who eat like little Hogs,     And when they have to go to bed     Will whine like Puppy Dogs:     Who take their manners from the Ape,     Their habits from the Bear,     Indulge the loud unseemly jape,     And never brush their hair.     But so control your actions that     Your friends may all repeat.     This child is dainty as the Cat,     And as the Owl discreet.

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"I call you bad, my little child,..."

This evocative piece by Hilaire Belloc, titled "Introduction: The Bad Child's Book Of Beasts", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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