Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Make-Believe by George MacDonald
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A Make-Believe

    By George MacDonald



    I will think as thinks the rabbit:--

        Oh, delight
        In the night
        When the moon
        Sets the tune
        To the woods!
        And the broods
        All run out,
        Frisk about,
        Go and come,
        Beat the drum--
        Here in groups,
        There in troops!
        Now there's one!
        Now it's gone!
        There are none!
    And now they are dancing like chaff!
    I look, and I laugh,
    But sit by my door, and keep to my habit--
    A wise, respectable, clean-furred old rabbit!

        Now I'm going,
                Business calls me out--
        Going, going,
        Very knowing,
                Slow, long-heeled, and stout,
                Loping, lumbering,
        Nipping, numbering,
        Head on this side and on that,
        Along the pathway footed flat,
        Through the meadow, through the heather,
        Through the rich dusky weather--
                Big stars and little moon!

        Dews are lighting down in crowds,
        Odours rising in thin clouds,
            Night has all her chords in tune--
        The very night for us, God's rabbits,
        Suiting all our little habits!
    Wind not loud, but playful with our fur,
    Just a cool, a sweet, a gentle stir!
    And all the way not one rough bur,
    But the dewiest, freshest grasses,
    That whisper thanks to every foot that passes!

        I, the king the rest call Mappy,
        Canter on, composed and happy,
        Till I come where there is plenty
        For a varied meal and dainty.
        Is it cabbage, I grab it;
        Is it parsley, I nab it;
        Is it carrot, I mar it;
        The turnip I turn up
        And hollow and swallow;
        A lettuce? Let us eat it!
        A beetroot? Let's beat it!
        If you are juicy,
        Sweet sir, I will use you!
        For all kinds of corn-crop
        I have a born crop!
        Are you a green top?
        You shall be gleaned up!
        Sucking and feazing,
        Crushing and squeezing
        All that is feathery,
        Crisp, not leathery,
        Juicy and bruisy--
        All comes proper
        To my little hopper
        Still on the dance,
            Driven by hunger and drouth!

    All is welcome to my crunching,
    Finding, grinding,
    Milling, munching,
    Gobbling, lunching,
    Fore-toothed, three-lipped mouth--
    Eating side way, round way, flat way,
    Eating this way, eating that way,
    Every way at once!

    Hark to the rain!--
    Pattering, clattering,
    The cabbage leaves battering,
    Down it comes amain!--
    Home we hurry
    Hop and scurry,
    And in with a flurry!
    Hustling, jostling
    Out of the airy land
    Into the dry warm sand;
    Our family white tails,
    The last of our vitals,
    Following hard with a whisk to them,
    And with a great sense of risk to them!

    Hear to it pouring!
    Hear the thunder roaring
    Far off and up high,
    While we all lie
    So warm and so dry
    In the mellow dark,
    Where never a spark,
    White or rosy or blue,
    Of the sheeting, fleeting,
    Forking, frightening,
    Lashing lightning
    Ever can come through!

    Let the wind chafe
    In the trees overhead,
    We are quite safe
    In our dark, yellow bed!
    Let the rain pour!
    It never can bore
    A hole in our roof--
    It is waterproof!
    So is the cloak
    We always carry,
    We furry folk,
    In sandhole or quarry!
    It is perfect bliss
    To lie in a nest
    So soft as this,
    All so warmly drest!
    No one to flurry you!
    No one to hurry you!
    No one to scurry you!
    Holes plenty to creep in!
    All day to sleep in!
    All night to roam in!
    Gray dawn to run home in!
    And all the days and nights to come after--
    All the to-morrows for hind-legs and laughter!

    Now the rain is over,
    We are out again,
    Every merry, leaping rover,
    On his right leg and his wrong leg,
    On his doubled, shortened long leg,
    Floundering amain!
    Oh, it is merry
    And jolly--yes, very!

    But what--what is that?
    What can he be at?
    Is it a cat?
    Ah, my poor little brother,
    He's caught in the trap
    That goes-to with a snap!
    Ah me! there was never,
    Nor will be for ever--
    There was never such another,
    Such a funny, funny bunny,
    Such a frisking, such a whisking,
    Such a frolicking brother!
    He's screeching, beseeching!
    They're going to--

    Ah, my poor foot,
    It is caught in a root!
    No, no! 'tis a trap
    That goes-to with a snap!
    Ah me, I'm forsaken!
    Ah me, I am taken!
    I am screeching, beseeching!
    They are going to--

    No more! no more! I must stop this play,
    Be a boy again, and kneel down and pray
    To the God of sparrows and rabbits and men,
    Who never lets any one out of his ken--
    It must be so, though it be bewild'ring--
    To save his dear beasts from his cruel children!



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