Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Fable. by Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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A Fable.

    By Ella Wheeler Wilcox



            Some cawing Crows, a hooting Owl,
            A Hawk, a Canary, an old Marsh-Fowl,
        One day all meet together
            To hold a caucus and settle the fate
            Of a certain bird (without a mate),
        A bird of another feather.

            "My friends," said the Owl, with a look most wise,
            "The Eagle is soaring too near the skies,
        In a way that is quite improper;
            Yet the world is praising her, so I'm told,
            And I think her actions have grown so bold
        That some of us ought to stop her."

            "I have heard it said," quoth Hawk, with a sigh,
            "That young lambs died at the glance of her eye,
        And I wholly scorn and despise her.
            This, and more, I am told they say,
            And I think that the only proper way
        Is never to recognize her."

            "I am quite convinced," said Crow, with a caw,
            "That the Eagle minds no moral law,
        She's a most unruly creature."
            "She's an ugly thing," piped Canary Bird;
            "Some call her handsome - it's so absurd -
        She hasn't a decent feature."

            Then the old Marsh-Hen went hopping about,
            She said she was sure - she hadn't a doubt -
        Of the truth of each bird's story:
            And she thought it a duty to stop her flight,
            To pull her down from her lofty height,
        And take the gilt from her glory.

            But, lo! from a peak on the mountain grand
            That looks out over the smiling land
        And over the mighty ocean,
            The Eagle is spreading her splendid wings -
            She rises, rises, and upward swings,
        With a slow, majestic motion.

            Up in the blue of God's own skies,
            With a cry of rapture, away she flies,
        Close to the Great Eternal:
            She sweeps the world with her piercing sight;
            Her soul is filled with the infinite
        And the joy of things supernal.

            Thus rise forever the chosen of God,
            The genius-crowned or the power-shod,
        Over the dust-world sailing;
            And back, like splinters blown by the winds,
            Must fall the missiles of silly minds,
        Useless and unavailing.



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