THE SINGING GARDEN

The Pink-Breasted Robin

A fairy out of fairyland, I flit
      On visits rare
  Into your garden and your heart, to sit
      And charm you there.
  Tiny and trusting for one winter day;
      And then away.

You count  me not amid your singing friends
      Of bush and bough;
  But every little while I make amends.
      Behold me now,
  Claiming attention with quaint little clicks,
      Like snapping sticks.

Your ear  I may not charm with tuneful note,
      Yet do my best
  To charm your eye. Behold my ebon coat,
      My rich, rose breast!
  Straight out of elfland surely. Elfin too
      All things I do.

They say  my coming brings good luck to men.
      On fragile wings
  I am no sooner here than gone again,
      Like all good things—
  Gone with my trustful air, my curious clicks
      Like snapping sticks.

None but  the birds’ elect may know me well.
      And understand
  I come to bring you an enchanter’s spell
      From some charmed land,
  From some green Arcady that men have known
      In dreams alone.

A fairy out of fairyland, I flit
      For one brief day,
  Like all good fortune, here a while to sit,
      And then away,
  Leaving but memories of elfin tricks
      And broken sticks.