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THE TWO MEN AND THE TREASURE. Jean de La Fontaine

THE TWO MEN AND THE TREASURE. Fable by Jean de La Fontaine. Illustration by Grandville

THE TWO MEN AND THE TREASURE. Fable by Jean de La Fontaine. Illustration by Grandville

A Man of cash and credit shorn
(The Devil only in his purse),
Resolved to hang himself one morn,
Since death by hunger might be worse:

A king of death which pleases not
Those curious in their final taste.
A rope and nail he quickly got,
And fixed them to a wall in haste.

The wall was weak and very old,
With the man′s weight it crumbling fell;
When out there came a stream of gold,
The Treasure that he loved so well.

He did not stay to count, but ran;
Pale Penury no more he feared.
When in the miser came—poor man!
To find his wealth had disappeared.

"Gold gone! This cord′s my only wealth!"
He cried; "now I have lost all hope:"
And so straightway he hanged himself.
How changed the fortunes of that rope!

The miser saves his wealth for those
Who may be prudent, may be thieves;
Into the grave perhaps it goes:
Who knows the changes Fortune weaves?

For Lady Fortune mocks outright
At human nature′s dying pangs;
And if by you or me made tight
The rope, she laughs that some one hangs!

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