Dallas Lore Sharp - A Watcher in The Woods
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- Book:A Watcher in The Woods
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- Publisher:Good Press
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- Year:2021
- Rating:4 / 5
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PAGE |
The feast is finished and the games are on |
The cheerful little goldfinches, that bend the dried ragweeds |
There she stood in the snow with head high, listening anxiously Anddreamed |
I shivered as the icy flakes fell thicker and faster |
The meadow-mouse |
It was Whitefoot |
From his leafless height he looks down into the Hollow |
Uncle Jethro limbered his stiffened knees and went chuckling down the bank |
The big moon was rising over the meadows |
Section of muskrat's house |
The snow has drifted over their house till only a tiny mound appears |
They rubbed noses |
Two little brown creatures washing calamus. |
They probe the lawns most diligently for worms |
Even he loves a listener |
She flew across the pasture |
A very ordinary New England "corner" |
They are the first to return in the spring |
Where the dams are hawking for flies |
They cut across the rainbow |
The barn-swallows fetch the summer |
From the barn to the orchard |
Across the road, in an apple-tree, built a pair of redstarts |
Gathered half the gray hairs of a dandelion into her beak |
In the tree next to the chebec's was a brood of robins. The crude nest was wedged carelessly into the lowest fork of the tree, so that the cats and roving boys could help themselves without trouble |
I soon spied him on the wires of a telegraph-pole |
He will come if May comes |
Within a few feet of me dropped the lonely frightened quail |
On they go to a fence-stake |
It was a love-song |
But the pair kept on together, chatting brightly |
In a dead yellow birch |
So close I can look directly into it |
"Spring! spring! spring!" |
A wretched little puddle |
Calamity is hot on his track |
Bunny, meantime, is watching just inside the next brier-patch |
The squat is a cold place |
The limp, lifeless one hanging over the neck of that fox |
His drop is swift and certain |
Seven young ones in the nest |
I knew it suited exactly |
With tail up, head cocked, very much amazed, and commenting vociferously |
In a solemn row upon the wire fence |
Young flying-squirrels |
The sentinel crows are posted |
She turned and fixed her big black eyes hard on me |
Wrapped up like little Eskimos |
It is no longer a sorry forest of battered, sunken stumps |
Even the finger-board is a living pillar of ivy |
In October they are building their winter lodges |
The glimpse of Reynard in the moonlight |
Whar wilt thou cow'r thy chittering wing,
An' close thy e'e?
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