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lications, consisting of narratives, essays, and sketches, most of which origi nally appeared in the Knickerbocker Magazine.]

1. THE happiest bird of our spring, however, and one that rivals the European lark in my estimation, is the boblincon, or bobolink, as he is commonly called. He arrives at that choice portion of our year which, in this latitude, answers to the description of the month of May, so often given by the poets.

middle of May, and lasts Earlier than this, winter

2. With us it begins about the until nearly the middle of June. is apt to return on its traces, and to blight the opening beauties of the year; and later than this, begin the parching, and panting, and dissolving heats of summer. But in this genial interval Nature is in all her freshness and fragrance: "the rains are over and gone, the flowers appear upon the earth, the time of the singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle1 is heard in the land."

3. The trees are now in their fullest foliage and brightest verdure; the woods are gay with the clustered flowers of the laurel; the air is perfumed by the sweet-brier and the wild rose; the meadows are enamelled with clover blossoms; while the young apple, the peach, and the plum begin to swell, and the cherry to glow among the green leaves.

4. This is the chosen season of revelry of the bobolink. He comes amidst the pomp and fragrance of the season; his life seems all sensibility and enjoyment, all song and sunshine. He is to be found in the soft bosoms of the freshest and sweetest meadows, and is most in song when the clover is in blossom. He perches on the topmost twig of a tree, or on some long, flaunting weed, and as he rises and sinks with the breeze, pours forth a succession of rich, tinkling notes, crowding one upon another, like the outpouring melody of the sky-lark, and possessing the same rapturous character.

5. Sometimes he pitches from the summit of a tree, begins his song as soon as he gets upon the wing, and flutters tremulously down to the earth, as if overcome with ecstasy at his own music. Sometimes he is in pursuit of his mate; always in full song, as if he would win her by his melody; and always with the same appearance of intoxication and delight.

6. Of all the birds of our groves and meadows the bobolink was the envy of my boyhood. He crossed my path in the sweetest weather, and the sweetest season of the year, when all nature called to the fields, and the rural feeling throbbed in every bosom; but when I, luckless urchin! was doomed to be mewed up, during the livelong day, in a school room. It seemed as if the little varlet1 mocked at me as he flew by in full song, and sought to taunt me with his happier lot.

7. O, how I envied him! No lessons, no task, no school; nothing but holiday, frolic, green fields, and fine weather. Had I been then more versed in poetry, I might have addressed him in the words of Logan to the cuckoo:

"Sweet bird, thy bower is ever green;

Thy sky is ever clear;

Thou hast no sorrow in thy song,

No winter in thy year.

"O, could I fly, I'd fly with thee;
We'd make, on joyful wing,
Our annual visit round the globe,
Companions of the spring."

8. Further observation and experience have given me a different idea of this feathered voluptuary, which I will venture to impart for the benefit of my young readers who may regard him with the same unqualified envy and admiration which I once indulged. I have shown him only as I saw him at first, in what I may call the poetical part of his career, when he in a manner devoted himself

to elegant pursuits and enjoyments, and was a bird of music, and song, and taste, and sensibility, and refinement. While this lasted he was sacred from injury; the very schoolboy would not fling a stone at him, and the merest rustic would pause to listen to his strain.

9. But mark the difference. As the year advances, as the clover-blossoms disappear, and the spring fades into summer, he gradually gives up his elegant tastes and habits, doffs' his poetical suit of black, assumes a russet, dusty garb, and sinks to the gross enjoyments of common, vulgar birds. His notes no longer vibrate on the ear; he is stuffing himself with the seeds of the tall weeds on which he lately swung and chanted so melodiously. He has become a "bon-vivant "," a "gourmand 10"; with him, now, there is nothing like the "joys of the table.” In a little while he grows tired of plain, homely fare, and is off on a gastronomical" tour in quest of foreign luxuries.

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10. We next hear of him, with myriads of his kind, banqueting among the reeds of the Delaware, and grown corpulent with good feeding. He has changed his name in travelling. Boblincon no more he is the reed-bird now, the much-sought-for tidbit of Pennsylvania epicures 13, the rival in unlucky fame of the ortolan! Wherever he goes, pop! pop! pop! every rusty firelock" in the country is blazing away. He sees his companions falling by thousands around him.

11. Does he take warning and reform? Alas! not he. Incorrigible" epicure! again he wings his flight. The rice swamps of the South invite him. He gorges himself among them almost to bursting; he can scarcely fly for corpulency. He has once more changed his name, and is now the famous rice-bird of the Carolinas. Last stage of his career: behold him spitted, with dozens of his corpu lent companions, and served up, a vaunted dish, on the table of some southern gastronome.

12. Such is the story of the bobolink once spiritual, musical, admired, the joy of the meadows, and the favorite bird of spring; finally, a gross little sensualist, who expiates his sensuality in the larder. His story contains a moral worthy the attention of all little birds and little boys; warning them to keep to those refined and intellectual pursuits which raised him to so high a pitch of popularity during the early part of his career, but to eschew 16 all tendency to that gross and dissipated indulgence which brought this mistaken little bird to an untimely end.

1 TUR/TLE. The turtle-dove.
2 EN-AM'ELLED. Overlaid with enam-
el, or adorned so as to resemble
enamel; variegated.

2 REV'EL RY. Festivity; jollity; ca-
rousal.

4 VÄR'LET. A servant or attendant;
also, a rogue; a scapegrace.
VO-LUPT'V-A-RY. One given to
pleasure and indulgence.

• RUSTIC. An inhabitant of the coun-
try; a peasant.

7 DŎFFS. Puts off; lays aside.
8 RUS'SET. A reddish-gray color.

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XXXI. -THE CHAMELEON.

MERRICK.

[James Merrick, the author of this popular poem, was an English clergy man, born in 1720, died in 1768.]

1. OFT has it been my lot to mark

A proud, conceited, talking spark',
With eyes that hardly served at most
To guard their master 'gainst a post;
Yet round the world the blade2 has been,
To see whatever could be seen.

2. Returning from his finished tour,
Grown ten times perter than before,
Whatever word you chance to drop,
The travelled fool your mouth will stop:
"Sir, if my judgment you'll allow -
I've seen and sure I ought to know."
So begs you'd pay a due submission,
And acquiesce' in his decision.

Two travellers of such a cast,
As o'er Arabia's wilds they passed,
And on their way, in friendly chat,
Now talked of this, and then of that,
Discoursed a while, 'mongst other matter,
Of the chameleon's form and nature.

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5. "Hold there," the other quick replies, ""Tis green; I saw it with these eyes, As late with open mouth it lay, And warmed it in the sunny ray: Stretched at its ease the beast I viewed, And saw it eat the air for food.".

6. "I've seen it, sir, as well as you, And must again affirm it blue;

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