IN PRAISE OF THE PELICANS.

The pelicans in St. James's Park

On every day from dawn to dark

Pursue, inscrutable of mien,

A fixed unvarying routine.

Whatever be the wind or weather

They spend their time in peace together,

And plainly nothing can upset

The harmony of their quartet.

Most punctually by the clock

They roost upon or quit their rock,

Or swim ashore and hold their levée,

Lords of the mixed lacustrine bevy;

Or with their slow unwieldy gait

Their green domain perambulate,

Or with prodigious flaps and prances

Indulge in their peculiar dances,

Returning to their feeding-ground

What time the keeper goes his round

With fish and scraps for their nutrition

After laborious deglutition.

Calm, self-sufficing, self-possessed,

They never mingle with the rest,

Watching with not unfriendly eye

The antics of the lesser fry,

Save when bold sparrows draw too near

Their mighty beaks—and disappear.

Outlandish birds, at times grotesque,

And yet superbly picturesque,

Although resignedly we mourn

A Park dismantled and forlorn,

Long may it be ere you forsake

Your quarters on the minished Lake;

For there, with splendid plumes and hues

And ways that startle and amuse,

You constantly refresh the eye

And cheer the heart of passers-by,

Untouched by years of shock and strain,

Undeviatingly urbane,

And lending London's commonplace

A touch of true heraldic grace.