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The Golden Pitcher.

Topics: classic

A father once, whose sons were two,      For each a gift had much ado.      At last upon this course he fell:      'My sons,' said he, 'within our well      Two treasures lodge, as I am told;      The one a sunken piece of gold, -      A bowl it may be, or a pitcher, -      The other is a thing far richer.      These treasures if you can but find,      Each may be suited to his mind;      For both are precious in their kind.      To gain the one you'll need a hook;      The other will but cost a look.      But O, of this, I pray, beware! -      You who may choose the tempting share, -      Too eager fishing for the pitcher      May ruin that which is far richer.'      Out ran the boys, their gifts to draw:      But eagerness was check'd with awe,      How could there be a richer prize      Than solid gold beneath the skies?      Or, if there could, how could it dwell      Within their own old, mossy well?      Were questions which excited wonder,      And kept their headlong av'rice under.      The golden cup each fear'd to choose,      Lest he the better gift should lose;      And so resolved our prudent pair,      The gifts in common they would share.      The well was open to the sky.      As o'er its curb they keenly pry,      It seems a tunnel piercing through,      From sky to sky, from blue to blue;      And, at its nether mouth, each sees      A brace of their antipodes,      With earnest faces peering up,      As if themselves might seek the cup.      'Ha!' said the elder, with a laugh,      'We need not share it by the half.      The mystery is clear to me;      That richer gift to all is free.      Be only as that water true,      And then the whole belongs to you.'      That truth itself was worth so much,      It cannot be supposed that such.      A pair of lads were satisfied;      And yet they were before they died.      But whether they fish'd up the gold      I'm sure I never have been told.      Thus much they learn'd, I take for granted, -      And that was what their father wanted: -      If truth for wealth we sacrifice,      We throw away the richer prize.

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"A father once, whose sons were two,..."

This evocative piece by Jean de La Fontaine, titled "The Golden Pitcher.", 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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