The Man Who Ran After Fortune And The Man Who Waited For Her In His Bed (prose Fable) Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: A B A C D E F G H I

Who does not run after FortuneA
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I would I were in some spot whence I could watch the eager crowds rushing from kingdom to kingdom in their vain chase after the daughter of ChanceB
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They are indeed but faithful followers of a phantom for when they think they have her lo she is gone Poor wretches One must pity rather than blame their foolishness That man they say with sanguine voice raised cabbages and now he is Pope Are we not as good as he Ah yes a hundred times as good perhaps but what of that Fortune has no eyes for all your merit Besides is Papacy after all worth peace which one must leave behind for it Peace a treasure that once was the possession of gods alone is seldom granted to the votaries of Dame Fortune Do not seek her and then she will seek you That is the way with womenA
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There once were two friends who lived comfortably and prospered moderately in a village but one of them was always wishing to do better One day he said to the other Suppose we left this place and tried our luck elsewhere You know that a prophet is never received in his own countryC
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You try by all means returned his friend but as for me I am contented where I am I desire neither better climate nor better possibilities You please yourself Follow your unquiet spirit You'll soon return and I shall sleep soundly enough awaiting youD
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So the man of ambition or the money grubber whichever you like to call him took to the road and arrived next day at a place where if anywhere Dame Fortune should be found namely the court He stayed at court for some long time never missing an opportunity to put himself in the way of favours He was in evidence when the king went to bed when he arose and on all other propitious occasionsE
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What's amiss he said at last Fortune I am convinced dwells here for I have seen her the guest now of this one and now of that one How is it that I cannot entertain the capricious creature I must try her elsewhere I have already been told that the people of this place are exceedingly ambitious Evidently there is no room for me here So adieu gentleman of the court and follow to the bitter end this will o' the wisp They tell me that Dame Fortune has temples in Surat Very well We will go thereF
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He embarked at once What hearts of bronze have humankind The man who first attempted this awful route and defied its terrors must have had a heart of adamant Often did our traveller turn his eyes towards his little home as first pirates then contrary winds then calms then rocks all agents of death in turn assailed him Strange it is that men should take such pains to meet death since it will come only too quickly to them in their homesG
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Our adventurer arrived in India There they told him that Japan was the place where Fortune dispensed her favours He hurried there The sea wearied of carrying him about In the end all the profit his long voyages brought him was the lesson which he learnt from savages and that was Stop in your own country and let Nature instruct you Japan India or anywhere else no one place was better than another as a hunting ground for Fortune so the conclusion was forced upon him that he had been wiser had he stayed in his own village At last he renounced all these ungrateful wanderings and returned to his own country and as he caught sight of his homestead from afar he wept for joy and cried Happy is the man who staying in his home finds constant occupation in adjusting his desires to his surroundings To him the court the sea and the land of Fortune are but hearsay Thou fickle Dame flaunting before our eyes dignities and wealth dost cause us to follow after these allurements to the ends of the earth only to find them empty shams Henceforth I wander no more for here at home a hundred times more success shall I findH
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Having registered this vow against Fortune the wanderer came to the door of his friend and lo there sat Fortune waiting on the threshold whilst his friend slumbered withinI

Jean De La Fontaine



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