Poems (Jackson)/The Way to sing

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4579693Poems — The Way to singHelen Hunt Jackson

THE WAY TO SING.
THE birds must know. Who wisely sings
  Will sing as they;
The common air has generous wings
    Songs make their way.
No messenger to run before,
    Devising plan;
No mention of the place or hour
    To any man;
No waiting till some sound betrays
    A listening ear;
No different voice, no new delays,
    If steps draw near.

"What bird is that? Its song is good."
    And eager eyes
Go peering through the dusky wood,
    In glad surprise.
Then late at night, when by his fire
    The traveller sits,
Watching the flame grow brighter, higher,
    The sweet song flits
By snatches through his weary brain
    To help him rest;
When next he goes that road again,
    An empty nest
On leafless bough will make him sigh,
    "Ah me! last spring
Just here I heard, in passing by,
    That rare bird sing!"

But while he sighs, remembering
    How sweet the song,
The little bird on tireless wing,
    Is borne along
In other air, and other men
    With weary feet,
On other roads, the simple strain
    Are finding sweet.
The birds must know. Who wisely sings
    Will sing as they;
The common air has generous wings,
    Songs make their way.