Why is the cuckoo's melody preferred, And nightingale's rich songs so madly praised In poets' rhymes! Is there no other bird Of Nature's minstrelsy, that oft hath raised One's heart to ecstasy and mirth as well? I judge not how another's taste is caught, With mine are other birds that bear the bell, Whose song hath crowds of happy memories brought: -- Such the wood robin, singing in the dell; And little wren, that many a time hath sought Shelter from showers, in huts, where I did dwell In early spring, the tenant of the plain, Tending my sheep; and still they come to tell The happy stories of the past again. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SURFACE AND STRUCTURE: BONAVENTURE HOTEL, LOS ANGELES by KAREN SWENSON THE LAST BUCCANEER by CHARLES KINGSLEY AN EVOCATION by AUGUSTE ANGELLIER NATALITIUM: MARTIJ 13, 1643 by JOSEPH BEAUMONT PSALM 50 by OLD TESTAMENT BIBLE ADVENTURERS OF SCIENCE by BERTON BRALEY THE WINDS by SAMUEL EGERTON BRYDGES SPRING FANTASIES: 1. MAY DAY IN MARCH by RICHARD EUGENE BURTON |