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Lays of Ancient Babyland / to which are added Small Divers Histories not known to the Ancients cover

Lays of Ancient Babyland / to which are added Small Divers Histories not known to the Ancients

Chapter 14: Cock Robin and Jenny Wren.
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About This Book

A lively miscellany of short narrative poems and moral fables aimed at children, collecting verse retellings of well-known fairy tales alongside brief animal allegories. The pieces range from ballad-like narratives that follow youthful protagonists through trials and domestic adventures to compact parables featuring birds, beasts, and everyday creatures; many close with explicit moral observations about industry, charity, and humility. Language is playful and accessible, varying between rollicking storytelling and didactic couplets, and the arrangements present a warm, domestic tone suited to early childhood amusement.

Cock Robin and Jenny Wren.

“GOOD morning, dear Robin!” said sweet Jenny Wren:
“Good morning, sweet Jenny!” said Robin again.
Then chirping and flirting and hopping and bobbing
Together sat down Jenny Wren and Cock Robin.
Then Jenny broke silence:—“Ah me! if you knew,
Dear Robin, how this little heart beats for you,
It hardly would happen that poor Jenny Wren
Must always give place to Dame Robin your hen.”
“Sweet Jenny!” said he, “you don’t surely suppose
That Robins can trifle like jackdaws and crows!
You know birds of my quality must be decorous;
Though between you and me, sweet, it may sometimes bore us.”
“Then come, my dear Robin! then come to my bower,
Now the trees are all leaf and the fields are all flower:
The world may tell stories,—I don’t care a fig,
While pretty Cock Robin is perch’d on my twig.”
Cock Robin was tickled, and thrice chirp’d aloud,
And thrice wagg’d his tail and thrice graciously bow’d:
Then he bustled and rustled and whittled so high,
That he woke a dull owl who was dozing close by.
“Whit-a-whoo!” cried the owl, as he blink’d with surprise:
“Where is he?—this sun is too bright for my eyes.”
But a cloud passing over, as if fate was in it,
He pounced upon Robin at that very minute.
Poor Cock Robin! alas, that he should be so frail!
How could he give ear to her flattering tale!
The Owl minced him for supper: but, had he been wise,
He had still supp’d himself on Dame Robin’s mince-pies.