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  2. To a Mouse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/To_a_Mouse

    The first stanza of the poem is read by Ian Anderson in the beginning of the 2007 remaster of "One Brown Mouse" by Jethro Tull. Anderson adds the line "But a mouse is a mouse, for all that" at the end of the stanza, which is a reference to another of Burns's songs, " Is There for Honest Poverty ", commonly known as "A Man's a Man for A' That".

  3. The Weasel and Aphrodite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Weasel_and_Aphrodite

    The young man fell in love with the weasel, and soon they got married. As the woman sat in the nuptial bedroom, Aphrodite wished to test whether she truly was a human now or still retained an animal's nature at heart, so she released a mouse. Sure enough, the woman leapt out of the bed and caught the mouse to eat it.

  4. The Mouse Turned into a Maid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mouse_Turned_into_a_Maid

    The later version in La Fontaine's Fables, "The Mouse Metamorphosed into a Maid" (IX.7), acknowledges the story's Indian origin by making it a Brahmin who fosters the mouse and gives it back the body it had in a former birth. La Fontaine feigns shock at all this and finds at the story's culmination, in which the girl falls in love with the ...

  5. The 116 Best Kids Books of All Time - AOL

    www.aol.com/116-best-kids-books-time-212400552.html

    Bunnicula by James and Deborah Howe “Listen, this book by James Howe STILL makes me laugh out loud,” says Charlie Schumann, assistant manager and resident children’s lit enthusiast at City ...

  6. Fair Girls and Gray Horses: With Other Verses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_Girls_and_Gray_Horses:...

    The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature states: "The poems, a mixture of ballads and lyrics, celebrated all 'Fair Girls' and 'all Gray hourses', for Ogilvie believed that 'Golden and Gray are the loves to hold'...it is in lyrics such as 'A Telltale Tryst' and 'The Bush, My Lover', where the loveliness of fair girls blends with the ...

  7. The Taill of the Uponlandis Mous and the Burges Mous

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Taill_of_the_Upon...

    "The Taill of the Uponlandis Mous and the Burges Mous", also known as "The Twa Mice," [1] is a Middle Scots adaptation of Aesop's Fable The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse by the Scottish poet Robert Henryson. Written around the 1480s, it is the second poem in Henryson's collection called The Morall Fabillis of Esope the Phrygian.

  8. No one's sure exactly why this woman had a story to tell, because this woman lived as many as 6,000 years ago. We can still imagine her intoning scary scenes with foreign howls. A charming man's buttery voice might've won over a reluctant, longhaired princess; a beguiling forest creature's dry cackle a smoke signal for danger.

  9. Are Women People? - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Are_Women_People?

    Are Women People? A Book of Rhymes for Suffrage Times is the title of the collection of satirical poems published on June 12, 1915 [ 1 ] by suffragist Alice Duer Miller . [ 2 ] Many of the poems in this collection were originally released individually in the New York Tribune between February 4, 1913 to November 4, 1917.