The Spring Call

    By Thomas Hardy



    Down Wessex way, when spring's a-shine,
    The blackbird's "pret-ty de-urr!"
    In Wessex accents marked as mine
    Is heard afar and near.

    He flutes it strong, as if in song
    No R's of feebler tone
    Than his appear in "pretty dear,"
    Have blackbirds ever known.

    Yet they pipe "prattie deerh!" I glean,
    Beneath a Scottish sky,
    And "pehty de-aw!" amid the treen
    Of Middlesex or nigh.

    While some folk say - perhaps in play -
    Who know the Irish isle,
    'Tis "purrity dare!" in treeland there
    When songsters would beguile.

    Well: I'll say what the listening birds
    Say, hearing "pret-ty de-urr!" -
    However strangers sound such words,
    That's how we sound them here.

    Yes, in this clime at pairing time,
    As soon as eyes can see her
    At dawn of day, the proper way
    To call is "pret-ty de-urr!"



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