E-text prepared by David Edwards, David Garcia,
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
()
from digital material generously made available by
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Note: Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive/American Libraries. See http://www.archive.org/details/foxgeesewonderfu00weiriala

 


 

 

 

THE
FOX AND THE GEESE;
AND THE
WONDERFUL HISTORY
OF
HENNY-PENNY.

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY HARRISON WEIR.

 

 

PORTLAND:
PUBLISHED BY FRANCIS BLAKE,
NO. 58 EXCHANGE STREET.

[1]





THE FOX AND THE GEESE.

There was once a Goose at the point of death,

So she called her three daughters near,

And desired them all, with her latest breath,

Her last dying words to hear.

“There’s a Mr. Fox,” said she, “that I know,

Who lives in a covert hard by;

To our race he has proved a deadly foe,

So beware of his treachery.

“Build houses, ere long, of stone or of bricks,

And get tiles for your roofs, I pray;

For I know, of old, Mr. Reynard’s tricks,

And I fear he may come any day.”

[2]

Thus saying, she died, and her daughters fair,—

Gobble, Goosey, and Ganderee,—

Agreed together, that they would beware

Of Mr. Fox, their enemy.

But Gobble, the youngest, I grieve to say,

Soon came to a very bad end,

Because she preferred her own silly way,

And would not to her mother attend.

For she made, with some boards, an open nest,

For a roof took the lid of a box;

Then quietly laid herself down to rest,

And thought she was safe from the Fox.

But Reynard, in taking an evening run,

Soon scented the goose near the pond;

Thought he, “Now I’ll have some supper and fun,

For of both I am really fond.”

...

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