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    Chapter 8 - Page 2

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    Then the newcomer answered:

    'Well, neighbour dear, in Jingleville
    We live by faith but we eat our fill;
    An' what w'u'd we do if it wa'n't fer prayer?
    Fer we can't raise a thing but whiskers an' hair.'

    'Cur'us how you can talk po'try,' said Uncle Eb. 'The only thing I've
    got agin you is them whiskers an' thet hair. 'Tain't Christian.'

    "Tain't what's on the head, but what's in it - thet's the important
    thing,' said the poet. 'Did I ever tell ye what I wrote about the
    birds?'

    'Don' know's ye ever did,' said Uncle Eb, stirring his fire.

    'The boy'll like it, mebbe,' said he, taking a dirty piece of paper out
    of his pocket and holding it to the light.

    The poem interested me, young as I was, not less than the strange
    figure of the old poet who lived unknown in the backwoods, and
    who died, I dare say, with many a finer song in his heart. I
    remember how he stood in the firelight and chanted the words in a
    sing-song tone. He gave us that rude copy of the poem, and here it
    is:

    THE ROBIN'S WEDDING

    Young robin red breast hed a beautiful nest an' he says to his love says he:
    It's ready now on a rocking bough
    In the top of a maple tree.
    I've lined it with down an' the velvet brown on the waist of a bumble-bee.

    They were married next day, in the land o' the hay, the lady bird an' he.
    The bobolink came an' the wife o' the same
    An' the lark an' the fiddle de dee.
    An' the crow came down in a minister gown - there was nothing
    that he didn't see.

    He fluttered his wing as they ast him to sing an' he tried fer t' clear
    out his throat;
    He hemmed an' he hawed an' be hawked an' he cawed
    But he couldn't deliver a note.
    The swallow was there an' he ushered each pair with his linsey an'
    claw hammer coat.

    The bobolink tried fer t' flirt with the bride in a way thet was sassy
    an' bold.
    An' the notes that he took as he shivered an' shook
    Hed a sound like the jingle of gold.
    He sat on a briar an' laughed at the choir an' said thet the music was old.

    The sexton he came - Mr Spider by name - a citizen hairy and grey.
    His rope in a steeple, he called the good people
    That live in the land o' the hay.
    The ants an' the squgs an' the crickets an' bugs - came out in a

    mighty array.

    Some came down from Barleytown an' the neighbouring city o' Rye.
    An' the little black people they climbed every steeple
    An' sat looking up at the sky.
    They came fer t' see what a wedding might be an' they
    furnished the cake an' the pie.

    I remember he turned to me when he had finished and took one of
    my small hands and held it in his hard palm and looked at it and
    then into my face.

    'Ah, boy!' he said, 'your way
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