How Thomas A Maid From A Dragon Released

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Though Philip the Second
  Of France was reckoned
  No coward, his breath came short
  When they told him a dragon
  As big as a wagon
  Was waiting below in the court!
  A dragon so long, and so wide, and so fat,
  That he couldn't get in at the door to chat:
  The king couldn't leave him
  Outside and grieve him,
  He had to receive him
  Upon the mat,

  The dragon bowed nicely,
  And very concisely
  He stated the reason he'd called:
  He made the disclosure
  With frigid composure.
  King Philip was simply appalled!
  He demanded for eating, a fortnight apart,
  The monarch's ten daughters, all dear to his heart.
  "And now you'll produce," he
  Concluded, "the juicy
  And succulent Lucie
  By way of start!"

  King Philip was pliant,
  And far from defiant
  --"And servile," no doubt you retort!--
  But if you struck a snag on
  A bottle-green dragon,
  Who filled up two-thirds of your court,
  And curled up his tail on your new tin roof,
  And made your piazza groan under his hoof,
  Would you threaten and thunder,
  Or just knuckle under
  Completely, I wonder,
  If put to proof?

  By way of a truce, he
  Brought out little Lucie
  And watched her conducted away,
  But all of the others
  Were out with their brothers!
  Thus gaining a little delay,
  He promised through heralds sent west and east,
  His crown, and his kingdom, and last, not least,
  His daughter so sightly
  To any one knightly
  Who'd come and politely
  Wipe out that beast!

  For love of the charmer,
  Arrayed in his armor,
  Each suitor for glory who yearned,
  Would gallantly hasten,
  The dragon to chasten,
  But none of them ever returned!
  When the dragon had eaten some sixteen score
  He hung up this sign on his cavern door,
  Whereat he lay pronely
  In majesty lonely:

  +------------------------------+
  There's Standing Room Only
  For Three Knights More!
  +------------------------------+

  A slim adolescent,
  His beard only crescent,
  Rode up at this stage of the game
  To where the old sinner
  Lay gorged with his dinner,
  And breathing out torrents of flame.
  He gathered a tip from the flaunting sign,
  And took his position the fourth in line,
  Until, as foreboded,
  By food incommoded,
  The dragon exploded
  At half-past nine.

  The king was delighted
  At first when he sighted
  The victor, but then in dismay
  Regretted his promise.
  The stripling was Thomas,
  His Majesty's valet-de-pied!
  He asked him at once: "Will you compromise?"
  But Thomas looked straight in his master's eyes,
  And answered severely:
  "I see your game clearly,
  And scorn it sincerely.
  Hand out the prize!"

  Not long did he linger
  Before on the finger
  Of Lucie he fitted a ring:
  A month or two later
  They made him dictator,
  In place of the elderly king:
  He was lauded by pulpit, and boomed by press,
  And no one had ever a chance to guess,
  Beholding this hero
  Who ruled like a Nero,
  His valor was zero,
  Or something less.


  The Moral: And still from Nice to Calais
  Discretion's the better part of--
  --valets!

© Guy Wetmore Carryl