The Two Old Bachelors
Two
old
Bachelors
were
living
in
one
house;
One
caught
a
Muffin,
the
other
caught
a
Mouse.
Said
he
who
caught
the
Muffin
to
him
who
caught
the
Mouse,--
'This
happens
just
in
time!
For
we've
nothing
in
the
house,
'Save
a
tiny
slice
of
lemon
nd
a
teaspoonful
of
honey,
'And
what
to
do
for
dinner
--
since
we
haven't
any
money?
'And
what
can
we
expect
if
we
haven't
any
dinner,
'But
to
loose
our
teeth
and
eyelashes
and
keep
on
growing
thinner?'
Said
he
who
caught
the
Mouse
to
him
who
caught
the
Muffin,--
'We
might
cook
this
little
Mouse,
if
we
had
only
some
Stuffin'!
'If
we
had
but
Sage
andOnion
we
could
do
extremely
well,
'But
how
to
get
that
Stuffin'
it
is
difficult
to
tell'--
Those
two
old
Bachelors
ran
quickly
to
the
town
And
asked
for
Sage
and
Onions
as
they
wandered
up
and
down;
They
borrowed
two
large
Onions,
but
no
Sage
was
to
be
found
In
the
Shops,
or
in
the
Market,
or
in
all
the
Gardens
round.
But
some
one
said,
--
'A
hill
there
is,
a
little
to
the
north,
'And
to
its
purpledicular
top
a
narrow
way
leads
forth;--
'And
there
among
the
rugged
rocks
abides
an
ancient
Sage,--
'An
earnest
Man,
who
reads
all
day
a
most
perplexing
page.
'Climb
up,
and
seize
him
by
the
toes!
--
all
studious
as
he
sits,--
'And
pull
him
down,
--
and
chop
him
into
endless
little
bits!
'Then
mix
him
with
your
Onion,
(cut
up
likewise
into
Scraps,)--
'When
your
Stuffin'
will
be
ready
--
and
very
good:
perhaps.'
Those
two
old
Bachelors
without
loss
of
time
The
nearly
purpledicular
crags
at
once
began
to
climb;
And
at
the
top,
among
the
rocks,
all
seated
in
a
nook,
They
saw
that
Sage,
a
reading
of
a
most
enormous
book.
'You
earnest
Sage!'
aloud
they
cried,
'your
book
you've
read
enough
in!--
'We
wish
to
chop
you
into
bits
to
mix
you
into
Stuffin'!'--
But
that
old
Sage
looked
calmly
up,
and
with
his
awful
book,
At
those
two
Bachelors'
bald
heads
a
certain
aim
he
took;--
and
over
crag
and
precipice
they
rolled
promiscuous
down,--
At
once
they
rolled,
and
never
stopped
in
lane
or
field
or
town,--
And
when
they
reached
their
house,
they
found
(besides
their
want
of
Stuffin',)
The
Mouse
had
fled;
--
and,
previously,
had
eaten
up
the
Muffin.
They
left
their
home
in
silence
by
the
once
convivial
door.
And
from
that
hour
those
Bachelors
were
never
heard
of
more.