The Song-Sparrow

There is a bird I know so well,
 It seems as if he must have sung
 Beside my crib when I was young;
Before I knew the way to spell
 The name of even the smallest bird,
 His gentle-joyful song I heard.
Now see if you can tell, my dear,
What bird it is that, every year,
Sings “ Sweet—sweet—sweet—very merry cheer .”

He comes in March, when winds are strong,
 And snow returns to hide the earth;
 But still he warms his heart with mirth,
And waits for May. He lingers long
 While flowers fade; and every day
 Repeats his small, contented lay;
As if to say, we need not fear
The season's change, if love is here
With “ Sweet—sweet—sweet—very merry cheer .”

He does not wear a Joseph's-coat
 Of many colours, smart and gay;
 His suit is Quaker brown and gray,
With darker patches at his throat.
 And yet of all the well-dressed throng
 Not one can sing so brave a song.
It makes the pride of looks appear
A vain and foolish thing, to hear
His “ Sweet—sweet—sweet—very merry cheer .”

A lofty place he does not love,
 But sits by choice, and well at ease,
 In hedges, and in little trees
That stretch their slender arms above
 The meadow-brook; and there he sings
 Till all the field with pleasure rings;
And so he tells in every ear,
That lowly homes to heaven are near
In “ Sweet—sweet—sweet—very merry cheer .”

I like the tune, I like the words;
 They seem so true, so free from art,
 So friendly, and so full of heart,
That if but one of all the birds
 Could be my comrade everywhere,
 My little brother of the air,
I'd choose the song-sparrow, my dear,
Because he'd bless me, every year,
With “ Sweet—sweet—sweet—very merry cheer .”
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