ON HEARING A WINTER WREN SING IN WINTER

When wintry winds through woodlands blow

And naked tree-tops shake and shiver;

While all the paths were bound in snow,

And thick ice chains the merry river,

One little feathered denizen,

A plump and nut-brown winter wren,

Sings of springtime even there—

“Tsip-twis-ch-e-e-e cheerily-cheerily-dare”—

Who could listen and despair?

Charmed with the sweetness of his strain,

My heart found cheer in winter’s bluster;

The leafless wood was fair again,

Its ice-gems sparkled with new lustre.

The tiny, trembling, tinkling throat

Poured forth despair’s sure antidote,

No leafy June hears sweeter note—

“Tsip-twis-ch-e-e-e cheerily-cheerily-dare”—

The essence of unspoken prayer.

—Lynn Tew Sprague, in Bird-Lore.