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He hailed the bird in Spanish speech,
The bird in Spanish speech replied;
Flapped round the cage with joyous screech,
Dropt down, and died.
T. CAMPBELL.

THE COMMON QUESTION.

Behind us at our evening meal
The gray bird ate his fill,
Swung downward by a single claw,
And wiped his hooked bill.

He shook his wings and crimson tail,
And set his head aslant,

And, in his sharp, impatient way,

Asked, "What does Charlie want?"

"Fie, silly bird!" I answered, "tuck Your head beneath your wing,

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The boy with whip and top and drum,
The girl with hoop and doll,
And men with lands and houses, ask
The question of Poor Poll.

However full, with something more

We fain the bag would cram;

We sigh above our crowded nets

For fish that never swam.

No bounty of indulgent Heaven
The vague desire can stay;
Self-love is still a Tartar mill
For grinding prayers alway.

The dear God hears and pities all;
He knoweth all our wants;
And what we blindly ask of Him
His love withholds or grants.

And so I sometimes think our prayers
Might well be merged in one;

And nest and perch and hearth and church
Repeat, "Thy will be done."

JOHN GREENLEAF WHITTIER.

WHY NOT DO IT, SIR, TO-DAY?

"Why, so I will, you noisy bird,

This very day I'll advertise

you,

Perhaps some busy ones may prize you.

A fine-tongued parrot as was ever heard, I'll word it thus set forth all charms about you, And say no family should be without you."

Thus far a gentleman addressed a bird; Then to his friend: "An old procrastinator, Sir, I am do you wonder that I hate her? Though she but seven words can say, Twenty and twenty times a day

She interferes with all my dreams,
My projects, plans, and airy schemes,
Mocking my foible to my sorrow:
I'll advertise this bird to-morrow."

To this the bird seven words did say : "Why not do it, sir, to-day?

CHARLES AND MARY LAMB.

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Daily near my table steal,

While I pick my scanty meal:
Doubt not, little though there be,
But I'll cast a crumb to thee;
Well rewarded, if I spy
Pleasure in thy glancing eye;
See thee, when thou 'st eat thy fill,
Plume thy breast and wipe thy bill.
Come, my feathered friend, again?
Well thou know'st the broken pane:
Ask of me thy daily store.

J. LANGHORNE.

PHOBE.

Ere pales in heaven the morning star,

A bird, the loneliest of its kind,

Hears dawn's faint footfall from afar,

While all its mates are dumb and blind.

It is a wee, sad-colored thing,
As shy and secret as a maid,
That, ere in choir the robins ring,
Pipes its own name like one afraid.

It seems pain-prompted to repeat
The story of some ancient ill,
But Phœbe! Phoebe! sadly sweet,
Is all it says, and then is still.

It calls and listens earth and sky,
Hushed by the pathos of its fate,
Listen no whisper of reply

Comes from the doom-dissevered mate.

Phœbe! it calls and calls again,

And Ovid, could he but have heard,

Had hung a legendary pain

About the memory of the bird ;

A pain articulate so long

In penance of some mouldered crime,
Whose ghost still flies the furies' thong
Down the waste solitudes of time;

Phoebe is all it has to say

In plaintive cadence o'er and o'er,
Like children that have lost their way

And know their names, but nothing more.

Is it in type, since Nature's lyre
Vibrates to every note in man,
Of that insatiable desire

Meant to be so, since life began?

I, in strange lands at gray of dawn,
Wakeful, have heard that fruitless plaint
Through memory's chambers deep withdrawn
Renew its iterations faint.

So nigh! yet from remotest years
It seems to draw its magic, rife
With longings unappeased, and tears
Drawn from the very source of life.

JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL: in Scribner.

TO THE STORK.

Welcome, O Stork! that dost wing
Thy flight from the far-away!
Thou hast brought us the signs of Spring,
Thou hast made our sad hearts gay.

Descend, O Stork! descend

Upon our roof to rest;

In our ash-tree, O my friend,
My darling, make thy nest.

To thee, O Stork, I complain,
O Stork, to thee I impart
The thousand sorrows, the pain
And aching of my heart.

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