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FITTE THE THIRD

Eugene Field

She whistled gayly to the pup

And called him by his name,

And presently the guileless thing

All unsuspecting came.

 

But when she shut the bath-room door,

And caught him as catch-can,

And hove him in that odious tub,

His sorrows then began.

 

How did that callow, yallow thing

Regret that Aprile morn--

Alas! how bitterly he rued

The day that he was born!

 

Twice and again, but all in vain

He lifted up his wail;

His voice was all the pup could lift,

For thereby hangs this tale.

 

'Twas by that tail she held him down,

And presently she spread

The creamy lather on his back,

His stomach, and his head.

 

His ears hung down in sorry wise,

His eyes were, oh! so sad--

He looked as though he just had lost

The only friend he had.

 

And higher yet the water rose,

The lather still increased,

And sadder still the countenance

Of that poor martyred beast!

 

Yet all the time his mistress spoke

Such artful words of cheer

As "Oh, how nice!" and "Oh, how clean!"

And "There's a patient dear!"

 

At last the trial had an end,

At last the pup was free;

She threw aside the bath-room door--

"Now get you gone!" quoth she.