Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Act The Fool Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Act The Fool poems. This is a select list of the best famous Act The Fool poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Act The Fool poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of act the fool poems.

Search and read the best famous Act The Fool poems, articles about Act The Fool poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Act The Fool poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Rg Gregory | Create an image from this poem

advice to a young sylv-i-an dragon on going to school

 when you step out of the wood and go first time to school
you have to be so specially careful if you're really a dragon
to put the most innocent expression on your face you can find
and not flip your flappers (unless the others don't mind)
you must be very strict with yourself - be sure not to act the fool
you'd be far happier i think to get your mother to tie a tag on

saying - this dragon is sweet no matter how fierce she seems
and letting everyone know you were born in a wood (well at least
a sylv-i-an creature) and not used to clatterings and bangings
that can set a dragon's scales on edge with their thwangings
schools never are you know the paradise of your dreams
they have a tendency in everyone to bring out the beast

or maybe when you get there you should do a dragon-dance
and get everyone hopping around the place breathing fire
or burn up a prince or two - to show how that game is played
taking their minds off the fact you have a back like a saw-blade
and a tail so fierce it would keep the bravest child at a distance
but whatever else you do dear dragon definitely do not perspire

a perspiring dragon will have the whole school holding its noses
dainty dragons do not sweat - the first lesson to be deeply learned
in any dragon's book of school-etiquette - a proper dragon-daughter
must always carry with her a large supply of odour-cologne-water
(for use ten times a day) to keep her sweeter than a bunch of roses -
so advised (o young sylv-i-an dragon) you will never be spurned


Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

When Dacey rode the Mule

 ’TWAS to a small, up-country town, 
When we were boys at school, 
There came a circus with a clown, 
Likewise a bucking mule. 
The clown announced a scheme they had 
Spectators for to bring— 
They’d give a crown to any lad 
Who’d ride him round the ring. 

And, gentle reader, do not scoff 
Nor think a man a fool— 
To buck a porous-plaster off 
Was pastime to that mule. 
The boys got on he bucked like sin; 
He threw them in the dirt. 
What time the clown would raise a grin 
By asking, “Are you hurt?” 
But Johnny Dacey came one night, 
The crack of all the school; 
Said he, “I’ll win the crown all right; 
Bring in your bucking mule.” 


The elephant went off his trunk, 
The monkey played the fool, 
And all the band got blazing drunk 
When Dacey rode the mule. 
But soon there rose a galling shout 
Of laughter, for the clown 
From somewhere in his pants drew out 
A little paper crown. 
He placed the crown on Dacey’s head 
While Dacey looked a fool; 
“Now, there’s your crown, my lad,” he said, 
“For riding of the mule!” 

The band struck up with “Killaloe”, 
And “Rule Britannia, Rule”, 
And “Young Man from the Country”, too, 
When Dacey rode the mule. 

Then Dacey, in a furious rage, 
For vengeance on the show 
Ascended to the monkeys’ cage 
And let the monkeys go; 
The blue-tailed ape and the chimpanzee 
He turned abroad to roam; 
Good faith! It was a sight to see 
The people step for home. 


For big baboons with canine snout 
Are spiteful, as a rule— 
The people didn’t sit it out, 
When Dacey rode the mule. 
And from the beasts he let escape, 
The bushmen all declare, 
Were born some creatures partly ape 
And partly native-bear. 
They’re rather few and far between, 
The race is nearly spent; 
But some of them may still be seen 
In Sydney Parliament. 


And when those legislators fight, 
And drink, and act the fool, 
Just blame it on that torrid night 
When Dacey rode the mule.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things