Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Cricket's Song by Eugene Field
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The Cricket's Song

    By Eugene Field



    When all around from out the ground
    The little flowers are peeping,
    And from the hills the merry rills
    With vernal songs are leaping,
    I sing my song the whole day long
    In woodland, hedge, and thicket--
    And sing it, too, the whole night through,
    For I 'm a merry cricket.

    The children hear my chirrup clear
    As, in the woodland straying,
    They gather flow'rs through summer hours--
    And then I hear them saying:
    "Sing, sing away the livelong day,
    Glad songster of the thicket--
    With your shrill mirth you gladden earth,
    You merry little cricket!"

    When summer goes, and Christmas snows
    Are from the north returning,
    I quit my lair and hasten where
    The old yule-log is burning.
    And where at night the ruddy light
    Of that old log is flinging
    A genial joy o'er girl and boy,
    There I resume my singing.

    And, when they hear my chirrup clear,
    The children stop their playing--
    With eager feet they haste to greet
    My welcome music, saying:
    "The little thing has come to sing
    Of woodland, hedge, and thicket--
    Of summer day and lambs at play--
    Oh, how we love the cricket!"



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