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I said to the sky-poised Lark :
"Hark-hark!

Thy note is more loud and free
Because there lies safe for thee

A little nest on the ground."

c. D. M. MULOCK—A Rhyme About Birds.

No more the mounting larks, while Daphne sings,

Shall, list'ning, in mid-air suspend their wings. d. POPE-Pastorals. Winter. L. 53.

O earliest singer! O care-charming bird! Married to morning, by a sweeter hymn Than priest e'er chanted from his cloister dim At midnight, or veiled virgin's holier word At sunrise or the paler evening heard.

e. ADELAIDE PROCTER-The Flood of

O happy skylark springing

Up to the broad, blue sky, Too fearless in thy winging, Too gladsome in thy singing, Thou also soon shalt lie

Where no sweet notes are ringing.

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f. CHRISTINA G. ROSSETTI-Gone Forever.

St. 2.

The sunrise wakes the lark to sing. g. CHRISTINA G. ROSSETTI-Bird Raptures.

surpass.

SHELLEY-To a Skylark.

Up springs the lark,

Shrill-voiced, and loud, the messenger of

morn;

Ere yet the shadows fly, he mounted sings Amid the dawning clouds, and from their

haunts

Calls up the tuneful nations.

p.

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THOMSON-The Seasons. Spring.

L. 587.

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L. 27.

It was the lark, the herald of the morn. j. Romeo and Juliet-Act III. Sc. 5.

L. 6.

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