THERE was one little Jim,
‘Tis reported of him,
And must be to his lasting disgrace,
That he never was seen
With hands at all clean,
Nor yet ever clean was his face.
His friends were much hurt
To see so much dirt,
And often they made him quite clean;
But all was in vain,
He got dirty again,
And not at all fit to be seen.
It gave him no pain
To hear them complain,
Nor his own dirty clothes to survey:
His indolent mind
No pleasure could find
In tidy and wholesome array.
The idle and bad,
Like this little lad,
May love dirty ways, to be sure;
But good boys are seen
To be decent and clean,
Although they are ever so poor.
(Ann Taylor)
More Poetry from Ann Taylor:
Ann Taylor Poems based on Topics: Faces, Friendship, Pleasure, Idleness- Careless Mathilda (Ann Taylor Poems)
- The Wooden Doll And The Wax Doll (Ann Taylor Poems)
- Frances Keeps Her Promise (Ann Taylor Poems)
- Meddlesome Matty (Ann Taylor Poems)
- Greedy Richard (Ann Taylor Poems)
- James And The Shoulder Of Mutton (Ann Taylor Poems)