The Bobolinks

by Christopher Pearse Cranch

When nature had made all her birds,   With no more cares to think on, She gave a rippling laugh, and out   There flew a Bobolinkon. She laughed again; out flew a mate;   A breeze of Eden bore them Across the fields of Paradise,   The sunrise reddening o’er them. Incarnate sport and holiday,   They flew and sang forever; Their souls through June were all in tune,   Their wings were weary never. Their tribe, still drunk with air and light,   And perfume of the meadow, Go reeling up and down the sky,   In sunshine and in shadow. One springs from out the dew-wet grass;   Another follows after; The morn is thrilling with their songs   And peals of fairy laughter. From out the marshes and the brook,   They set the tall reeds swinging, And meet and frolic in the air,   Half prattling and half singing. When morning winds sweep meadowlands   In green and russet billows, And toss the lonely elm-tree’s boughs,   And silver all the willows, I see you buffeting the breeze,   Or with its motion swaying, Your notes half drowned against the wind,   Or down the current playing. When far away o’er grassy flats,   Where the thick wood commences, The white-sleeved mowers look like specks   Beyond the zigzag fences, And noon is hot, and barn-roofs gleam   White in the pale blue distance, I hear the saucy minstrels still   In chattering persistence. When Eve her domes of opal fire   Piles round the blue horizon, Or thunder rolls from hill to hill   A Kyrie Eleison, Still merriest of the merry birds,   Your sparkle is unfading,— Pied harlequins of June,—no end   Of song and masquerading. What cadences of bubbling mirth,   Too quick for bar and rhythm! What ecstasies, too full to keep   Coherent measure with them! O could I share, without champagne   Or muscadel, your frolic, The glad delirium of your joy,   Your fun unapostolic, Your drunken jargon through the fields,   Your bobolinkish gabble, Your fine Anacreontic glee,   Your tipsy reveller’s babble! Nay, let me not profane such joy   With similes of folly; No wine of earth could waken songs   So delicately jolly! O boundless self-contentment, voiced   In flying air-born bubbles! O joy that mocks our sad unrest,   And drowns our earth-born troubles! Hope springs with you: I dread no more   Despondency and dulness; For Good Supreme can never fail   That gives such perfect fulness. The life that floods the happy fields   With song and light and color Will shape our lives to richer states,   And heap our measures fuller.

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