The Hospitable Caledonian And The Thankless Viper

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A Caledonian piper
  Who was walking on the wold
  Nearly stepped upon a viper
  Rendered torpid by the cold;
  By the sight of her admonished,
  He forbore to plant his boot,
  But he showed he was astonished
  By the way he muttered "Hoot!"

  Now this simple-minded piper
  Such a kindly nature had
  That he lifted up the viper
  And bestowed her in his plaid.
  "Though the Scot is stern, at least he
  No unhappy creature spurns,
  'Sleekit, cowrin, tim'rous beastie,'"
  Quoth the piper (quoting Burns).

  This was unaffected kindness,
  But there was, to state the fact,
  Just a slight soupcon of blindness
  In his charitable act.
  If you'd watched the piper, shortly
  You'd have seen him leap aloft,
  As this snake, of ways uncourtly,
  Bit him suddenly and oft.

  There was really no excuse for
  This, the viper's cruel work,
  And the piper found a use for
  Words he'd never learned at kirk;
  But the biting was so thorough
  That although the doctors tried,
  Not the best in Edinburgh
  Could assist him, and he died.

  And THE MORAL is: The piper
  Of the matter made a botch;
  One can hardly blame the viper
  If she took a nip of Scotch,
  For she only did what he did,
  And his nippie wasn't small,
  Otherwise, you see, he needed
  Not have seen the snake at all.

© Guy Wetmore Carryl