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The Nightingale and the Glowworm

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a nightingale, that all day long

had cheered the village with his song,

nor had at eve his note suspended,

nor yet when eventide was ended

began to feel, as well he might,

the keen demands of appetite;

when, looking eagerly around,

he spied far off, upon the ground,

a something shining in the dark,

and knew the glowworm by his spark;

so stepping down from hawthorn top,

he thought to put him in his crop.

the worm, aware of his intent,

harangued him thus, right eloquent:

"did you admire my lamp," quoth he,

"as much as i your minstrelsy,

you would abhor to do me wrong,

as much as i to spoil your song;

for, 'twas the self-same power divine

taught you to sing and me to shine;

that you with music, i with light,

might beautify and cheer the night."

the songster heard his short oration,

and warbling out his approbation.

released him, as my story tells,

and found a supper somewhere else.

hence, jarring sectaries may learn

their real interest to discern,

that brother should not war with brother,

and worry and devour each other;

but sing and shine by sweet consent,

until life's poor transient night is spent.

respecting in each other's case.

the gifts of nature and of grace.

those christians best deserve the name

who studiously make peace their aim;

peace both the duty and the prize

of him that creeps and him that flies.

william cowper

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