Saved
A boy took away to Nantasket
A kitty-puss tied in a basket;
He thought, when he got her
Far out on the water,
She’d never get back, should she ask it.
So he shut up his eyes as he threw her
Far off where the water was bluer;
Then pulled for the shore,
With a very swift oar,
From a sight that he could not endure.
All the way he seemed seeing with pity
How sharks were devouring his kitty;
His eyes were a source full
Of tears so remorseful
He couldn’t tell rocks from a city!
He hurried away with his basket
Afar from the seas of Nantasket,
In the lap of his mother
His anguish to smother,
Or under her apron to mask it.
But when he had opened the door,
There meekly sat puss on the floor,
She was licking her fur,
All ready to purr,
And she never was drowned any more!
- Title
- Saved
- Alternative Title
- A boy took away to Nantasket
- Creator
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George Shepard Burleigh
- Bibliographic Citation
- George S. Burleigh Papers, 1825-1902. John Hay Library, Brown University. Large Scrapbook 233; Small Scrapbook LP 72
- Date
- Date tbd
- Subject
- Childhood
- Morality
- Cats
- Animal Cruelty
- note
- Both the act of dropping the cat into the sea, and finding her at home, are illustrated in the copy in the Large Scrapbook, but not reproduced here.
- One of the pages in the Large Scrapbook indicates a title for the collection, "Our Little Ones." There is a book under this title, edited by Elia Wilkinson Peattie, but it is not clear to me that this is the right one. There is only one copy of that book in WorldCat.
- Media
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Saved