Jump to content

Mother Goose for Grownups/The Embarrassing Episode of Little Miss Muffet

From Wikisource
For other versions of this work, see Little Miss Muffet.

This poem was published in Carryl’s 1900 anthology Mother Goose for Grownups, of poems that are parodies of Mother Goose nursery rhymes.

118564The Embarrassing Episode of Little Miss MuffetGuy Wetmore Carryl

Little Miss Muffet discovered a tuffet,
      (Which never occurred to the rest of us)
And, as ’twas a June day, and just about noonday,
      She wanted to eat—like the best of us:
Her diet was whey, and I hasten to say
      It is wholesome and people grow fat on it.
The spot being lonely, the lady not only
      Discovered the tuffet, but sat on it.

A rivulet gabbled beside her and babbled,
      As rivulets always are thought to do,
And dragon-flies sported around and cavorted,
      As poets say dragon-flies ought to do;
When, glancing aside for a moment, she spied
      A horrible sight that brought fear to her,
A hideous spider was sitting beside her
      And most unavoidably near to her!

Albeit unsightly, this creature politely
      Said: “Madam, I earnestly vow to you,
I’m penitent that I did not bring my hat. I
      Should otherwise certainly bow to you.”
Though anxious to please, he was so ill at ease
      That he lost all his sense of propriety,
And grew so inept that he clumsily stept
      In her plate—which is barred in Society.

This curious error completed her terror;
      She shuddered, and growing much paler, not
Only left tuffet, but dealt him a buffet
      Which doubled him up in a sailor-knot.
It should be explained that at this he was pained:
      He cried: “I have vexed you, no doubt of it!
Your fist’s like a truncheon.” “You’re still in my luncheon,”
      Was all that she answered. “Get out of it!”

And The moral is this: Be it madam or miss
      To whom you have something to say,
You are only absurd when you get in the curd
      But you’re rude when you get in the whey.