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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
LINES TO A LADY-BIRD, by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN Poet's Biography First Line: Cow-lady, or sweet lady-bird Last Line: I bid thee hail, bright lady-bird! Alternate Author Name(s): Lancaster, William P.; Preston, George F.; De Tabley, 3d Baron; De Tabley, Lord Subject(s): Insects; Ladybirds; Bugs; Ladybugs | |||
Cow-lady, or sweet lady-bird, Of thee a song is seldom heard. What record of thy humble days Almost ignored in poets' lays, Salutes thy advent? Oversung Is Philomel by many lyres; And how the lark to heaven aspires, Is rumoured with abundant fame, While dim oblivion wraps thy name. Hail! then, thou unpresuming thing, A bright mosaic of the spring, Enamelled brooch upon the breast Of the rich-bosomed rose caressed. Thy wings the balmy zephyrs bear When woods unfold in vernal air, When crumpled buds around expand, Thou lightest on our very hand. Red as a robin thou dost come, Confiding, in entreaty dumb. Who would impede thy harmless track, Or crush thy wing or burnished back? 'Tis said, thy lighting and thy stay Bring luck: and few would brush away The small unbidden crawling guest, But let thee sheathe thy wings in rest, And take thy voluntary flight Uninjured to some flower's delight. For there is nothing nature through, Lovely and curious as you: A little dome-shaped insect round, With five black dots on a carmine ground. What art thou? I can hardly tell. A little tortoise of the dell With carapace or vaulted shell Of shining crimson? Or again, I picture thee, in fancy plain, A little spotted elfin cow, Of whose sweet milk a milkmaid fairy Makes syllabub in Oberon's dairy. Thou hast a legend-pedigree That gives thy race a high degree From the shed blood of Venus sweet, Thorn-wounded in her pearly feet, As thro' the dewy woods she went, Love-lorn, in utter discontent, Listening afar the echoing horn Of coy Adonis, in whose scorn The Love-queen languished, love-forlorn. He burned to hunt the boar at bay, And loathed the lover's idle play; So Venus followed in the chase And from her wounded heel a trace Of blood-drip tinged the dewy mead, And, from the ichor she did bleed, From Aphrodite's precious blood, Arose the lady-birds, a brood As gentle as the hurt of love, That gave them birth and parentage In legends of the golden age. But, coming to our modern day, Thee peevish children scare away, And speed thy flight with evil rhyme, Waving an idle hand meantime, To make thee spread thy wings in fear With rumours of disaster near, And tidings of thy home in flames, And all thy burning children's names, How all are scorched but Ann alone Who safely crept inside a stone; With many an old unlettered fable Of churlish lips inhospitable. And when these fancies all are past, I see thee as thou art at last, A welcome sign of genial spring, Awaited as a swallow's wing, The cuckoo's call, the drone of bee, The small gnat's dancing minstrelsy. Ere hawthorn buds are sweetly stirred I bid thee hail, bright lady-bird! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...TO THE LADY-BIRD by CATHERINE ANNE DORSET TRIVIAL DETAIL by VIOLET HELEN FRIEDLAENDER TO THE BURNIE BEE by ROBERT SOUTHEY NUPTIAL SONG by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN THE STUDY OF A SPIDER by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN A SIMPLE MAID by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN A SONG OF DUST by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN A SONG OF FAITH FORSWORN by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN A WOODLAND GRAVE by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN CHORUS, FR. MEDEA by JOHN BYRNE LEICESTER WARREN |
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