Ben King's Verse/The Owl and the Crow

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
125097Ben King's Verse — The Owl and the CrowBenjamin Franklin King

There was an old owl,
   With eyes big and bright,
Who sung in a treetop
   One calm summer night.
And the song that he sung
   I will now sing to you--
  "To whit! To whoo, hoo!
   To whit! To whoo, hoo!"

He sand there all night
   Till early next morn,
When a crow came along
   That was looking for corn.
The crow heard him singing,
   "To whit! To whoo, hoo!"
And offered to sing
   A few notes that he knew.

Just then the old owl
   In the treetop so high,
With his classical shape
   And his big staring eye,
Rquested the crow,
   In the deepest of scorn,
To sing his old chestnut
   About stealing corn.

"Caw! Caw!" said the crow,
   "Well--my deeds are by light.
I don't steal young chickens
   And sit up all night,
With dew on my feathers;
   When I break the laws
In looking through cornfields
   It's not without caws"