The Spider and the Fly
- Mary Botham Howitt
This poem explains how the innocent falls
prey to the plans of the cunning. The poem begins with the invitation of Spider to Fly. He describes his parlour as “the prettiest”. The Fly declines
the invitation saying that one could never return alive. Next, the Spider requests
the Fly to take rest upon his bed for a while. The Fly knows that it will be an sleep eternal and it declines. Again, the Spider makes a humble call to the Fly
to visit his pantry, but the Fly says that it do not wish to see it. Finally, the Spider starts praising the beauty of the Fly and invited to look in his mirror. Now, the Fly replies that it would visit some other day. The poor Fly has fallen for
the flattering words of the Spider. The Fly visited the Spider's "den" and lost her life. The poet advises the
children to close the heart, ear and eye for the temptations of evil company.
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