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The Bashful Earthquake, & Other Fables and Verses

Chapter 3: The Lovesick Scarecrow
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About This Book

A compact collection of witty fables and light verses that personify animals, objects, and natural forces to produce playful moral and comic observations. The poems and short narratives range from brief epigrams to longer rhymed pieces, employing jaunty rhyme, absurd situations, and ironic twists to gently satirize human foibles and social pretensions. Illustrations accompany many pieces, reinforcing the whimsical tone and eccentric details while the overall mood alternates between sly humor, mild sentiment, and clever wordplay.

The Lovesick Scarecrow

A scarecrow in a field of corn,

A thing of tatters all forlorn,

Once felt the influence of Spring

And fell in love—a foolish thing,

And most particularly so

In his case—for he loved a crow!

“Alack-a-day! it’s wrong, I know,

It’s wrong for me to love a crow;

An all-wise man created me

To scare the crows away,” cried he;

“And though the music of her ‘Caw’

Thrills through and through this heart of straw,

“My passion I must put away

And do my duty, come what may!

Yet oh, the cruelty of fate!

I fear she doth reciprocate

My love, for oft at dusk I hear

Her in my cornfield hovering near.

“And once I dreamt—oh, vision blest!

That she alighted on my breast.

’T is very, very hard, I know,

But all-wise man decreed it so.”

He cried and flung his arm in air,

The very picture of despair.


Poor Scarecrow, if he could but know!

Even now his lady-love, the Crow,

Sits in a branch, just out of sight,

With her good husband, waiting night,

To pluck from out his sleeping breast

His heart of straw to line her nest.