MUSCA DOMESTICA

By Bert Leston Taylor

Baby bye, here's a fly,

We will watch him, you and I;

Lest he fall in Baby's mouth,

Bringing germs from north and south.

In the world of things a-wing

There is not a nastier thing

Than this pesky little fly;—

So we'll watch him, you and I.

See him crawl up the wall,

And he'll never, never fall;

Save that, poisoned, he may drop

In the soup or on the chop.

Let us coax the cunning brute

To the tempting Tanglefoot,

Or invite his thirsty soul

To the poison-paper bowl.

I believe with six such legs

You or I could walk on eggs;

But he'd rather crawl on meat

With his microbe-laden feet.

Eggs would hardly do as well —

He could not get through the shell;

Better far, to spread disease,

Vegetables, meat, or cheese.

There he goes, on his toes,

Tickling, tickling Baby's nose.

Heaven knows where he has been,

And what filth he's wallowed in.

Drat the nasty little wretch!

He's the deuce and all to ketch.

Ah! He's settled on the wall.

Now the thunderbolt shall fall!

Baby bye, see that fly?

We will swat him, you and I.