The Pin

By Ann Taylor

"Dear me! what signifies a pin!

  I'll leave it on the floor;

My pincushion has others in,

  Mamma has plenty more:

A miser will I never be,"

Said little heedless Emily.

So tripping on to giddy play,

  She left the pin behind,

For Betty's broom to whisk away,

  Or some one else to find;

She never gave a thought, indeed,

To what she might to-morrow need.

Next day a party was to ride,

  To see an air-balloon!

And all the company beside

  Were dress'd and ready soon:

But she, poor girl, she could not stir,

For just a pin to finish her.

'Twas vainly now, with eye and hand,

  She did to search begin;

There was not one­not one, the band

  Of her pelisse to pin!

She cut her pincushion in two,

But not a pin had slidden through!

At last, as hunting on the floor,

  Over a crack she lay,

The carriage rattled to the door,

  Then rattled fast away.

Poor Emily! she was not in,

For want of just ­a single pin!

There's hardly anything so small,

  So trifling or so mean,

That we may never want at all,

  For service unforseen:

And those who venture wilful waste,

May woeful want expect to taste.