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The Wolf And The Lamb.[1]

Topics: classic

That innocence is not a shield,      A story teaches, not the longest.      The strongest reasons always yield      To reasons of the strongest.      A lamb her thirst was slaking,      Once, at a mountain rill.      A hungry wolf was taking      His hunt for sheep to kill,      When, spying on the streamlet's brink      This sheep of tender age,      He howl'd in tones of rage,      'How dare you roil my drink?      Your impudence I shall chastise!'      'Let not your majesty,' the lamb replies,      'Decide in haste or passion!      For sure 'tis difficult to think      In what respect or fashion      My drinking here could roil your drink,      Since on the stream your majesty now faces      I'm lower down, full twenty paces.'      'You roil it,' said the wolf; 'and, more, I know      You cursed and slander'd me a year ago.'      'O no! how could I such a thing have done!      A lamb that has not seen a year,      A suckling of its mother dear?'      'Your brother then.' 'But brother I have none.'      'Well, well, what's all the same,      'Twas some one of your name.      Sheep, men, and dogs of every nation,      Are wont to stab my reputation,      As I have truly heard.'      Without another word,      He made his vengeance good -      Bore off the lambkin to the wood,      And there, without a jury,      Judged, slew, and ate her in his fury.

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"That innocence is not a shield,..."

Exploring the themes of classic, Jean de La Fontaine delivers a powerful performance in "The Wolf And The Lamb.[1]"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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