John Bunyan
Behold, how eager this our little
boy
Is for a butterfly, as if all joy,
All profits, honours, yea, and
lasting pleasures,
Were wrapped up in her, or the richest treasures
Found
in her would be bundled up together,
When all her all is lighter than a
feather.
He halloos, runs, and cries out, 'Here, boys, here!'
Nor doth
he brambles or the nettles fear:
He stumbles at the molehills, up he
gets,
And runs again, as one bereft of wits;
And all his labour and his
large outcry
Is only for a silly butterfly.
Comparison
This
little boy an emblem is of those
Whose hearts are wholly at the world's
dispose.
The butterfly doth represent to me
The world's best things at
best but fading be.
All are but painted nothings and false joys,
Like this
poor butterfly to these our boys.
His running through nettles, thorns,
and briers,
To gratify his boyish fond desires,
His tumbling over
molehills to attain
His end, namely, his butterfly to gain,
Doth plainly
show what hazards some men run
To get what will be lost as soon as won.