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Pairing Time Anticipated. A Fable.

By William Cowper

Topics: classic

I shall not ask Jean Jaques Rousseau[1]     If birds confabulate or no;     Tis clear, that they were always able     To hold discourse, at least in fable;     And een the child who knows no better     Than to interpret, by the letter,     A story of a cock and bull,     Must have a most uncommon skull.     It chanced then on a winters day,     But warm, and bright, and calm as May,     The birds, conceiving a design     To forestall sweet St. Valentine,     In many an orchard, copse, and grove,     Assembled on affairs of love,     And with much twitter and much chatter     Began to agitate the matter.     At length a Bullfinch, who could boast     More years and wisdom than the most,     Entreated, opening wide his beak,     A moments liberty to speak;     And, silence publicly enjoind,     Deliverd briefly thus his mind:     My friends! be cautious how ye treat     The subject upon which we meet;     I fear we shall have winter yet.     A Finch, whose tongue knew no control,     With golden wing and satin poll,     A last years bird, who neer had tried     What marriage means, thus pert replied:     Methinks the gentleman, quoth she,     Opposite in the apple-tree,     By his good will would keep us single     Till yonder heaven and earth shall mingle,     Or (which is likelier to befall)     Till death exterminate us all.     I marry without more ado,     My dear Dick Redcap, what say you?     Dick heard, and tweedling, ogling, bridling,     Turning short round, strutting and sideling,     Attested, glad, his approbation     Of an immediate conjugation.     Their sentiments so well expressd     Influenced mightily the rest,     All paird, and each pair built a nest.     But, though the birds were thus in haste,     The leaves came on not quite so fast,     And destiny, that sometimes bears     An aspect stern on mans affairs,     Not altogether smiled on theirs.     The wind, of late breathed gently forth,     Now shifted east, and east by north;     Bare trees and shrubs but ill, you know,     Could shelter them from rain or snow,     Stepping into their nests, they paddled,     Themselves were chilld, their eggs were addled;     Soon every father bird and mother     Grew quarrelsome, and peckd each other,     Parted without the least regret,     Except that they had ever met,     And learnd in future to be wiser,     Than to neglect a good adviser.     moral.     Misses! the tale that I relate     This lesson seems to carry     Choose not alone a proper mate,     But proper time to marry.

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Author:William Cowper

"I shall not ask Jean Jaques Rousseau[1]..." by William Cowper

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

William Cowper

About William Cowper

William Cowper (1731–1800) was an English poet and hymnodist whose work bridges the gap between the Augustan age and Romanticism. His poems "The Task" and "John Gilpin" were enormously popular, and his hymn "God Moves in a Mysterious Way" remains widely sung.

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