The Domineering Eagle And The Inventive Bratling

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O’er a small suburban borough
  Once an eagle used to fly,
Making observations thorough
  From his station in the sky,
And presenting the appearance
  Of an animated V,
Like the gulls that lend coherence
  Unto paintings of the sea.

Looking downward at a church in
  This attractive little shire,
He beheld a smallish urchin
  Shooting arrows at the spire;
In a spirit of derision,
  "Look alive!" the eagle said;
And, with infinite precision,
  Dropped a feather on his head.

Then the boy, annoyed distinctly
  By the freedom of the bird,
Voiced his anger quite succinctly
  In a single scathing word;
And he sat him on a barrow,
  And he fashioned of this same
Eagle’s feather such an arrow
  As was worthy of the name.

Then he tried his bow, and, stringing
  It with caution and with care,
Sent that arrow singing, winging
  Towards the eagle in the air.
Straight it went, without an error,
  And the target, bathed in blood,
Lurched, and lunged, and fell to terra
  Firma, landing with a thud.

"Bird of freedom," quoth the urchin,
  With an unrelenting frown,
"You shall decorate a perch in
  The menagerie in town;
But of feathers quite a cluster
  I shall first remove for Ma;
Thanks to you, she’ll have a duster
  For her precious objets d’art."

And THE MORAL is that pride is
  The precursor of a fall.
Those beneath you to deride is
  Not expedient at all.
Howsoever meek and humble
  Your inferiors may be,
They perchance may make you tumble,
  So respect them. QED.

© Guy Wetmore Carryl