by God and Nature given--
A people's right unto their soil from us unjustly riven.
We call upon the honoured brave--the free of every land--
For succour from the powerful--for aid from every strand:
We ask for every good man's prayer--we call for help on high;
Ye shades of Poland's slaughtered sons, look on propitiously.
We fight the fight of nations--bear witness field and storm
To our desert hereafter? Now we are but braggarts warm--
But by our honest cause, we swear, ere they our land retake,
Each town shall he a charnel tomb--each field a gory lake!
CYMBELINE.
* * * * *
THE NATURALIST.
* * * * *
ANECDOTES OF PARROTS.
(_For the Mirror._)
"Who taught the Parrot human notes to try?
'Twas witty want, fierce hunger to appease."
DRYDEN.
A parrot belonging to the sister of the Comte de Buffon (says Bingley,)
"would frequently speak to himself, and seem to fancy that some one
addressed him. He often asked for his paw, and answered by holding it
up. Though he liked to hear the voice of children, he seemed to have an
antipathy to them; he pursued them, and bit them till he drew blood.
He had also his objects of attachment; and though his choice was not
very nice, it was constant. He was excessively fond of the cook-maid;
followed her everywhere, sought for, and seldom missed finding her. If
she had been some time out of his sight, the bird climbed with his bill
and claws to her shoulders, and lavished on her caresses. His fondness
had all the marks of close and warm friendship. The girl happened to
have a very sore finger, which was tedious in healing, and so painful as
to make her scream. While she uttered her moans the parrot never left
her chamber. The first thing he did every day, was to pay her a visit;
and this tender condolence lasted the whole time of the cure, when he
again returned to his former calm and settled attachment. Yet this
strong predilection for the girl seems to have been more directed to her
office in the kitchen, than to her person; for, when another cook-maid
succeeded her, the parrot showed the same degree of fondness[3] to the
new comer, the very first day."
Bingley also says, "Willoughby tells us of a parrot, which when a person
said to it, 'laugh, Poll, laugh,' laughed accordingly, and the instant
after screamed out, 'What a fool to make me laugh.' Another which had
gro
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