Читать книгу Birds and all Nature, Vol. IV, No. 2, August 1898 - Various - Страница 3

THE SQUIRREL'S ROAD

Оглавление

It zigzags through the pastures brown,

And climbs old Pine Hill to its crown,

With many a broken stake and rail,

And gaps where beds of ivy trail.

In hollows of its mossy top

The pine-cone and the acorn drop;

While, here and there, aloft is seen

A timid, waving plume of green,

Where some shy seed has taken hold

With slender roots in moss and mold.


The squirrel, on his frequent trips

With corn and mast between his lips,

Glides in and out from rail to rail,

With ears erect and flashing tail.

Sometimes he stops, his spoil laid by,

To frisk and chatter merrily,

Or wash his little elfin face,

With many a flirt and queer grimace.

Anon he scolds a passing crow,

Jerking his pert tail to and fro,

Or scurries like a frightened thief

At shadow of a falling leaf.

All day along his fence-top road

He bears his harvest, load by load;

The acorn with its little hat;

The butternut, egg-shaped and fat;

The farmer's corn, from shock and wain;

Cheek-pouches-full of mealy grain;

Three-cornered beechnuts, thin of shell;

The chestnut, burred and armored well;

And walnuts, with their tight green coats

Close buttoned round their slender throats.


A busy little workman he,

Who loves his task, yet labors free,

Stops when he wills, to frisk and bark,

And never drudges after dark!

I love to hear his chirring cry,

When rosy sunrise stains the sky,

And see him flashing in his toil,

While frost like snow encrusts the soil.


With tail above his back, he sails

Along the angles of the rails,

Content to gain two rods in three,

And have sure highway from his tree.

Dear is the old-time squirrel way,

With mosses green and lichens gray, —

The straggling fence, that girds the hill,

And wanders through the pine woods still.

I loved it in my boyhood time,

I loved it in my manhood's prime,

Would in the corn-field I could lie,

And watch the squirrels zigzag by!


– James Buckham.

Birds and all Nature, Vol. IV, No. 2, August 1898

Подняться наверх