THE SINGING GARDEN

The Bronze Cuckoo

I come at caterpillar time
  While Spring lags in the air,
  And little caterpillars climb
  To strip the wattles bare.
  Then I, in my striped guernsey clad,
      High in the wattle-tree,
  Gorge deeply, and go singing mad,
  “Pee! Ree!” I call. “Pee! Ree!”

I wear an  air of innocence;
  And, while the green grubs last,
  My singing vigour is immense,
  My appetite is vast.
  But who would ever think that I,
      Garbed in my gaudy vest,
  Was all the time alert to spy
  Some unattended nest.

And, when  the nesting birds appear,
  I draw the hunt on me,
  And, with well-simulated fear,
  Incontinently flee.
  To lure them on, I act my best,
      And loud for mercy beg,
  The while my wife drops in their nest
  Her surreptitious egg.

We come at caterpillar time
  Calling. “Pee! Ree!”—“Pee! Ree!”
  And, while the grubs are fat and prime,
  Dodge domesticity.
  Then off, when scanty grows the fare,
      To richer fields afar,
  Leaving to others all our care
  Like vagabonds we are.