If The Cap Fits Ware It [said The Rabbit To The Hair Poem by alan brown

If The Cap Fits Ware It [said The Rabbit To The Hair



It was on a hot and humid day
and the fields were full of scorn
When a small thin Rabbit met a Hare
as he walked by him in the corn.

Said the Rabbit to the Hare
your ears are long and weak
While mine are stout and upright
and yours are bent and sleek.

The Hare he looked despondent
as he looked down on his foe.
And wished he'd took another path
and started off real slow.

Where are you going with those floppy ears
the Rabbit did declare.
You look so stupid in that stance
with your ears trailing there.

At this the Hare stood upright
until his stance was full
And his ears towered over him
pointing up towards the Sun.

He looked down on the Rabbit
as he cowered in the dust.
And mocked his short clipped ears
until his ego bust.

Now the moral of this story
the moral of this poem.
Is if the cap fits wear it
and don't criticise your own.

Saturday, April 21, 2018
Topic(s) of this poem: moral teachings
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