A rich man bought a Swan and Goose -- That for song, and this for use. It chanced his simple-minded cook One night the Swan for Goose mistook. But in the dark about to chop The Swan in two above the crop, He heard the lyric note, and stayed The action of the fatal blade. And thus we see a proper tune Is sometimes very opportune. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...NOT BY THE SEA by SARA TEASDALE THE DESERTED HOUSE by MARY ELIZABETH COLERIDGE TO AN INSECT by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES BOUND NO'TH BLUES by JAMES LANGSTON HUGHES LAY OF THE TRILOBITE by MAY EMMA GOLDWORTH KENDALL SONNET: 36 by WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE MANNERLY MARGERY, MILK AND ALE by JOHN SKELTON |