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f calming the troubled waves during its period of incubation; hence the phrase "halcyon days." A pair of Kingfishers have had their residence in a bank at the south end of Washington Park, Chicago, for at least three seasons past. We have watched the Kingfisher from secluded spots on Long Island ponds and tidal streams, where his peculiar laughing note is the same as that which greets the ear of the fisherman on far inland streams on still summer days. THE BLACKBIRD. "I could not think so plain a bird Could sing so fine a song." One on another against the wall Pile up the books--I am done with them all; I shall be wise, if I ever am wise, Out of my own ears, and of my own eyes. One day of the woods and their balmy light-- One hour on the top of a breezy hill, There in the sassafras all out of sight The Blackbird is splitting his slender bill For the ease of his heart: Do you think if he said "I will sing like this bird with the mud colored back And the two little spots of gold over his eyes, Or like to this shy little creature that flies So low to the ground, with the amethyst rings About her small throat--all alive when she sings With a glitter of shivering green--for the rest, Gray shading to gray, with the sheen of her breast Half rose and half fawn-- Or like this one so proud, That flutters so restless, and cries out so loud, With stiff horny beak and a top-knotted head, And a lining of scarlet laid under his wings--" Do you think, if he said, "I'm ashamed to be black!" That he could have shaken the sassafras-tree As he does with the song he was born to? not he! --ALICE CARY. "Do you ne'er think what wondrous beings these? Do you ne'er think who made them--who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought? Whose household words are songs in many keys, Sweeter than instrument of man ere caught! Whose habitation in the tree-tops even Are half-way houses on the road to heaven! * * * * * "You call them thieves or pillagers; but know, They are the winged wardens of your farms, Who from the cornfields drive the insidious foe, And from your harvest keep a hundred harms; Even t
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