Misunderstandings
If such a thing had been my thought,
I should have told you so before,
But as I didn't, then you ought
To ask for such a thing
no more,
For to teach one who has been taught
Is always thought an awful bore.
Now to commence my argument,
I shall
premise an
observation,
On which the greatest kings have leant
When striving to subdue a
nation,
And e'en the
wretch who pays no rent
By it can
solve a hard
equation.
Its truth is such, the force of reason
Can not avail to shake its power,
Yet e'en the sun in
summer season
Doth not dispel so mild a
shower
As this, and he who sees it, sees on
Beyond it to a sunny
bower--
No more, when
ignorance is treason,
Let wisdom's brows be cold and
sour.
Lewis Carroll, 1850