After Wings

by Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt

This was your butterfly, you see,—   His fine wings made him vain: The caterpillars crawl, but he   Passed them in rich disdain.— My pretty boy says, “Let him be   Only a worm again!” O child, when things have learned to wear   Wings once, they must be fain To keep them always high and fair:   Think of the creeping pain Which even a butterfly must bear   To be a worm again!

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