Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Once a turtle, finding plenty
In seclusion to bewitch,
Lived a dolce far niente
Kind of life within a ditch;
Rivers had no charm for him,
As he told his wife and daughter,
"Though my friends are in the swim,
Mud is thicker far than water."
One fine day, as was his habit,
He was dozing in the sun,
When a young and flippant rabbit
Happened by the ditch to run:
"Come and race me," he exclaimed,
"Fat inhabitant of puddles.
Sluggard! You should be ashamed.
Such a life the brain befuddles."
This, of course, was banter merely,
But it stirred the torpid blood
Of the turtle, and severely
Forth he issued from the mud.
"Done!" he cried. The race began,
But the hare resumed his banter,
Seeing how his rival ran
In a most unlovely canter.
Shouting, "Terrapin, you're bested!
You'd be wiser, dear old chap,
If you sat you down and rested
When you reach the second lap."
Quoth the turtle, "I refuse.
As for you, with all your talking,
Sit on any lap you choose.
I shall simply go on walking."
Now this sporting proposition
Was, upon its face, absurd;
Yet the hare, with expedition,
Took the tortoise at his word,
Ran until the final lap,
Then, supposing he'd outclassed him,
Laid him down and took a nap
And the patient turtle passed him!
Plodding on, he shortly made the
Line that marked the victor's goal;
Paused, and found he'd won, and laid the
Flattering unction to his soul.
Then in fashion grandiose,
Like an after-dinner speaker,
Touched his flipper to his nose,
And remarked, "Ahem! Eureka!"
And THE MORAL (lest you miss one)
Is: There's often time to spare,
And that races are (like this one)
Won not always by a hair.
© Gutenberg.org
A farmer built around his crop
A wall, and crowned his labors
By placing glass upon the top
To lacerate his neighbors,
Provided they at any time
Should feel disposed the wall to climb.
He also drove some iron pegs
Securely in the coping,
To tear the bare, defenceless legs
Of brats who, upward groping,
Might steal, despite the risk of fall,
The grapes that grew upon the wall.
One day a fox, on thieving bent,
A crafty and an old one,
Most shrewdly tracked the pungent scent
That eloquently told one
That grapes were ripe and grapes were good
And likewise in the neighborhood.
He threw some stones of divers shapes
The luscious fruit to jar off:
It made him ill to see the grapes
So near and yet so far off.
His throws were strong, his aim was fine,
But "Never touched me!" said the vine.
The farmer shouted, "Drat the boys!"
And, mounting on a ladder,
He sought the cause of all the noise;
No farmer could be madder,
Which was not hard to understand
Because the glass had cut his hand.
His passion he could not restrain,
But shouted out, "You're thievish!"
The fox replied, with fine disdain,
"Come, country, don't be peevish."
(Now "country" is an epithet
One can't forgive, nor yet forget.)
The farmer rudely answered back
With compliments unvarnished,
And downward hurled the bric-à-brac
With which the wall was garnished,
In view of which demeanor strange,
The fox retreated out of range.
"I will not try the grapes to-day,"
He said. "My appetite is
Fastidious, and, anyway,
I fear appendicitis."
(The fox was one of the élite
Who call it site instead of seet.)
The moral is that if your host
Throws glass around his entry
You know it isn't done by most
Who claim to be the gentry,
While if he hits you in the head
You may be sure he's underbred.
©gutenberg.org
THE AMBITIOUS FOX
AND
THE UNAPPROACHABLE GRAPES
Olatuja Oloyede
September 24, 2017

The Gander and the Geese
I use this adage more for it poetic import: "do not kill the goose that lay the golden egg" and that :"that which is good for the gander is good for the goose" but honestly, I'd never seen a goose or a gander before. I saw both today. Looks like a giant duck but believe me when I say giant. Ok... It looks innocent too but as the zoologist warned, don't underestimate the gander when he feels threatened, you may regret it. The male is gander and the female is goose. They feed on grains since they are herbivores
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The Geese
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

The Peacock
Actually the most colourful bird
I love to see the male and female peacock in their royal regalia of dazzling colours. Don't be surprise, I've not seen one before now except in books. But forget the fact that they say the peacock is proud... It is also a very beautiful bird.
The Peacock
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

The Vulture (Igunugun)
The vulture is a scavenger. It feels on dead animal and it can eat anything dead. Any meat goes for this bird. No one dear come near her cage and this shot is taken from a little close range because of my bravity you know. There is something about this bird, it has a kind if deadly stench around her.
Igunugun as the Yoruba will call it is considered a sacred bird of spiritual relevance. Maybe it an ancient superstition that whosoever kills a vulture dies within a year (eni na pa igunugun ki'n kadun, eni ba pa'kalamago ki'n kasu). That to me has no scientific footing.... But the question is why is this bird bard? Has she bathed in a boiling water just at the dawn of creation? Question for another day.
The Vulture
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

Lioness and dolphin
Couldn't have a clear picture here...
Actually, this female lion I saw and the dolphin too were dead animals embalm and kept for tourists to see. I touched the lionness and felt the fur around her ear with my palm. I wouldn't have come so close if it were alive actually. But all the same... I think I feel rather grateful that I could be among the elect that have ever caressed a lion before. This lion is not stinking or lean and if you have not been told, you would have thought it's actually sleeping.... And yes indeed it was, but the sleep of death from which there is no awaking.
Could not take good pictures because of too much excitement at its site that I forgot I should.... Just stood there admiring the beast of beast itself ... What will I do if I see a life one?
Lionness and Dolphin
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

The Horse
This is indeed a beautiful creature. I love horses actually and though this is not my first time of seeing them, it actually my first time of coming so close to feel her skin in my palm. I love to one day own a white royal horse...
The Donkey
My my.... This is probably one of the most beautiful creature I've ever seen. Looking so innocent and actually it is. We were told it is a very shy and remorseful animal. It obeys instructions and can literarily cry with obvious tears when beaten. Unfortunately, this animal won't let me touch her.... Of the three, I think I was attracted to the donkey the most
Donkey and the Horse
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

The Desert Carmal
I've never seen this before actually. The dazzling height of this gentle animal will make you feel like a toad really. We were told takes more of water than it feeds if it has an opportunity. Storing this water, he continually draws from it and can therefore survive months without water. That's why it is a very industrious animal especially in the desert.
Lovely, isn't?
The Desert Carmel
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

176 years old tortoise
Wait a moment, who is the oldest dude on earth now? Guess that Italian guy right?. Well whoever the lucky person may be. Tell him I've found an animal way other than him, I mean older than any human being on earth. Guess how old this tortoise may be. 176 years old. Really? Yeah, you heard right. 176.... The man said it is capable of reaching 700 years before it dies. Imagine that. 700? Almost a millennium. Meaning that the immediate father of a living tortoise could have possibly be on earth during the time of our Lord Jesus Christ. Well, that pretty crazy to imagine right now but seriously, I can't just stop imagining this stuff. I saw probably one of the oldest animals I will ever see today just few centimeters away from me
Do I touch it? No I didn't but I should cause their was nothing restraining me.
Tortoise of 176 years old
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

Quail (Aparo)
These are still kids actually
Quail
...the Yoruba call this aparo. Hahahahaha.... I remember I once used aparo as a symbolic bird of an angel in one of my poetic series titled My Beauty is my Doom (Part 1-5). But now that I've seen it myself, I may considering looking for another simple bird. Aparo is beautiful but not as innocent as the pigeon or beautiful as the peacock. I read in Exodus that God feed the Israelites with manner and quails in the wilderness. Well, I don't need to get to heaven before I get a glimpse of the historic bird. I have seen many of them maybe nothing less twenty myself today. Not kidding just excited with engrossing nature.
With the Quail
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

The Hawk (ASA) and the Falcon
Hawk
Then the hawk. Hawk is called Asa in my indigenous language (Yoruba). That bird is the one troubling the chickens of many African streets. Hey Mr hawk, I'd never thought I'll come this close to you before. I'd love to call it a criminal and a murderer because of how many mother hen that have been made barren by her ruthless raids but who am I to question the immutable laws of nature. In fact it won't be fair if I don't emphasize its distinct beauty. If you have only seen an hawk hovering in the sky, there is every probability that you will misjudge these birds in terms of their beauty. Well, may be I was blindfolded by too much of excitement that make me adore that creature, but I don't think I'm exaggerating here if I say that bird is prettier than I'd always thought. Ignorantly I have always misrepresent a hawk for an eagle. I'm still not convince because these birds look alike really.
Falcon
I saw the falcon too. A wild wise bird. I know Nigeria senior female football team is called the falconet. A strong large bird capable of tremendous speed and control in the air. The zoologist did mentioned that this birds can kill other birds for food right there in the air. A falco is a wise powerful bird.... Strictly carnivorous ok..
Falcon and Hawk
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017

The Monitor Lizard
(Just like an Alligator)
I forgot to mention that crocodiles are the largest reptiles walking this planet however, the alligator is also one of the dangerous reptiles you can find around.
Then I saw the monitor lizard. Monitor lizard bears a semblance of an alligator. There were quite a number of these guys in the cage. One dazzling thing that caught my attention is the golden colour sprinkled around their skin especially around their necks. Hey, these do not look like lizards at all. They are bigger and imposing. They have long tongues just like snakes and look more like a terrestrial alligator. How many of them do I see? Maybe four or so... Can't say but since most of them are in the pond, I wouldn't know.
Well, a sight of this creatures can create fear in any simple heart like mine and for just a little moment, I want to tank God for creating me human...
With the Monitor Lizard
Olatuja Oloyede
June 14, 2017
