THINGS TO HEAR THIS SPRING 



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r squil forest, speaking to you. After the thrush 



the brown thrasher, our finest, most gifted songster, N; 



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as great a singer, I think (and I have often heard,,- } 



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them both), as the Southern mockingbird. Then (3) 

 the operatic catbird. She sits lower down among 

 the bushes than the brown thrasher, as if she knew 

 (, that, compared with him, she must take a back seat; 

 but for variety of notes and length of song, she has 

 few rivals. I say she^ when really I ought to say he, 

 for it is the males of most birds that sing, but the cat- 

 bird seems so long and slender, so dainty and femi 

 nine, that I think of this singer as of some exquisite 

 operatic singer in a woman's role. Then (4) the 

 bobolink ; for his song is just like Bryant's bubbling 

 poem, only better ! Go to the meadows in. June an 



