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Home  »  library  »  poem  »  The Woman and her Maid-Servants

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

The Woman and her Maid-Servants

By Babrius (c. Second Century A.D.)

Translation of James Davies

A VERY careful dame, of busy way,

Kept maids at home, and these, ere break of day,

She used to raise as early as cock-crow.

They thought ’twas hard to be awakened so,

And o’er wool-spinning be at work so long;

Hence grew within them all a purpose strong

To kill the house-cock, whom they thought to blame

For all their wrongs. But no advantage came;

Worse treatment than the former them befell:

For when the hour their mistress could not tell

At which by night the cock was wont to crow,

She roused them earlier, to their work to go.

A harder lot the wretched maids endured.

BAD judgment oft hath such results procured.