There was once a spider who lived in a cornfield. She was a big spider, and she had spun a beautiful web between the corn stalks. She got fat eating all the bugs that would get caught in her web. She liked this home and planned to stay there for the rest of her life.
One day, the spider caught a little bug in her web, and just as the spider was about to eat him, the bug said, "If you let me go I will tell you something important that will save your life."
The spider paused for a moment and listened because she was amused. "You better get out of this cornfield," the little bug said, "The harvest is coming!" The spider smiled and said, "What is this harvest you are talking about? I think you are just telling me a story."
But the little bug said, "Oh no, it is true. The owner of this field is coming to harvest it soon. All the stalks will be knocked down, and the corn will be gathered up. You will be killed by the giant machines if you stay here."
The spider said, "I don't believe in harvests and giant machines that knock down corn stalks. How can you prove this?" The little bug continued, "Just look at the corn. See how it is planted in rows? It proves this field was created by an intelligent designer."
The spider laughed and mockingly said, "This field has evolved and has nothing to do with a creator. Corn always grows that way." The bug went on to explain, "Oh no. This field belongs to the owner who planted it, and the harvest is coming soon." The spider grinned and said to the little bug, "I don't believe you," and then the spider ate the little bug for lunch.
A few days later, the spider was laughing about the story the little bug had told her. She thought to herself, "A harvest! What a silly idea. I have lived here all of my life, and nothing has ever disturbed me. I have been here since these stalks were just a foot off the ground, and I'll be here for the rest of my life, because nothing is ever going to change in this field. Life is good, and I have it made."
The next day was a beautiful sunny day in the cornfield. The sky above was clear, and there was no wind at all. That afternoon, as the spider was about to take a nap, she noticed some thick dusty clouds moving toward her. She could hear the roar of a great engine, and she said to herself, "I wonder what that could be?"
-Author Unknown-
Please leave a comment to share your response to this story which has many lessons for us. Thanks. Have a lovely evening! Do swing by later for the next sopo post.
2 comments to The Spider In The Cornfield
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Unknown Dear Angelina
Wow!! I have not heard of that poem before but it sounds eeeeeeeeeeew!!!!
Now I am really awake after imagining the wriggly sensation!
Take care and have a lovely day with Brad, Pingu and Ginger!
Salam
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Cat-from-Sydney Aunty Paula,
This reminds me of an old poem. It starts like this:
"There was an old woman who swallowed a spider
That wriggle and wiggle and tickle inside her"
...and then it went on and on until the last stanza...
"There was an old woman who swallowed a horse..."
Good material for choral recitation, my Mama said. purrr....meow!