"If an ostrich had but a woodcock's thigh

It would only be some three feet high.

If a woodcock had but an ostrich's jaw

It would have to be carved with a circular saw."

The foregoing lines clearly enforce the important lesson of contentment with the existing order. This moral is perhaps less implicit in the lines on the peacock:—

"If a peacock had but the nightingale's trill

It would make all prima donnas feel ill.

If the nightingale had but the peacock's tail

It would merit a headline in the Mail."

Contentment again is the keynote of the couplets on the owl:—