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Stephen Vincent Benet - SparrowStephen Vincent Benet - Sparrow
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Lord, may I be A sparrow in a tree. No ominous and splendid bird of prey But something that is fearful every day Yet keeps its small flesh full of heat and lightness. Pigeons are better dressed and robins stouter, The white owl has all winter in his whiteness And the blue heron is a kingly dream At evening, by the pale stream, But, even in the lion s cage, in Zoos, You`ll find a sparrow, picking up the crumbs And taking life precisely as it comes With the black, wary eye that marks the doubter; Squabbling in crowds, dust-bathing in the sun, Small, joyous, impudent, a gutter-child In Lesbia`s bosom or December`s chill, Full of impertinence and hard to kill As Queen Anne`s lace and poppies in the wheat— 1 won`t pretend the fellow has a Muse But that he has advice, and good advice, All lovers know who`ve walked the city`s street And wished the stones were bread. Peacocks are handsomer and owls more wise. (At least, by all repute.) And parrots live on flattery and fruit, Live to great age. The sparrow`s none of these. The sparrow is a humorist, and dies. There are so many things that he is not. He will not tear the stag nor sweep the seas Nor fall, majestical, to a king`s arrow. Yet how he lives, and how he loves in living Up to the dusty tip of every feather! How he endures oppression and the weather And asks for neither justice nor forgiving! Lord, in your mercy, let me be a sparrow! His rapid heart`s so hot. And some can sing song-sparrows, so they say— And, one thing, Lord the times are iron, now. Perhaps you have forgot. They shoot the wise and brave on every bough. But sparrows are the last things that get shot.
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