“The Late-Night Diner,” Friend, Jan. 1984, 9
The Late-Night Diner
When I awoke, there was a bear
Reclining by my bed.
He said, “It’s good to see you, dear;
It’s time that I was fed.”
I asked, “What would you like, good sir?”
Though it was plain to see,
The hungry glint that lit his eyes
Was gleaming straight at me.
He said, “Pray, pass this way, my dear,
A morsel, if you please.”
I reached beneath the coverlet
And drew out cottage cheese.
He said, “A salad, that, perhaps,
But where is the main course?”
I found a fig beneath the sheet
And threw it with great force.
He said, “A tasty fruit, the fig,
But I wish something more.”
I felt beneath the mattress then
And found an apple core.
He said, “A lovely meal, my dear,
But though it’s rather curt,
I think it’s time to end things now
With cold milk and dessert.”
I did not care to be dessert,
Though I am sweet, it’s true;
I thought and thought and thought and then
I knew just what to do.
I leaped from bed to face the beast;
My body shook in dread.
I flicked the light switch on—to find
The coward had just fled!