THE BAT

                  By day the bat is cousin to the mouse.
                  He likes the attic of an aging house.
                
                  His fingers make a hat about his head.
                  His pulse beat is so slow we think him dead.

                  He loops in crazy figures half the night
                  Among the trees that face the corner light.

                  But when he brushes up against a screen,
                  We are afraid of what our eyes have seen:

                  For something is amiss or out of place
                  When mice with wings can wear a human face.


                                              By Theodore Roethke


                          THE PANTHER

                  The panther is like a leopard,
                  Except it hasn't been peppered.
                  Should you behold a panther crouch,
                  Prepare to say ouch.
                  Better yet, if called by a panter,
                  Don't anther.


                                             By Ogden Nash



                       THE HIPPOPOTOMUS

                  Behold the hippopotomus!
                  We laugh at how he looks to us,
                  And yet in moments dank and grim
                  I wonder how we look to him.
                  Peace, Peace, thou hippopotomus!
                  We really look all right to us,
                  As you no doubt delight the eye
                  Of other hippopotami.
 

                                             By Odgen Nash



                            LEOPARD

          Eons ago, when the earth was still yeasty,
          The leopard, my love, was an unspotted beastly,
          Unsullied as sunlight, not one spot or two spots.
          Alas! He was snared for simmering stew pots!
          But too many cooks shaking shakers of spices
          Created a much needed moment of crisis.
          He leaped for his life while the cooks were kerchooing
          And fled, all the fleet-footed natives persuing.
          He escaped! But his fur was still salted and peppered,
          And that's how there came to be spots on the leopard.


                                             By Gretchen Kreps



                    SOMETHING TOLD THE WILD GEESE
                    
                    Something told the wild geese
                    It was time to go.
                    Though the fields lay golden
                    Something whispered-"Snow"
                    Leaves were green and stirring,
                    Berries, luster-glossed,
                    But beneath warm feathers, 
                    Something cautioned-"Frost"
                    All the sagging orchards
                    Steamed with amber spice, 
                    But each wild breast stiffened
                    At remembered ice.
                    Something told the wild geese
                    It was time to fly-
                    Summer sun was on their wings,
                    Winter in their cry.
                     
                                           
                                             By Rachel Field



                        THE BAT

             Being a mammal, I have less care than birds,
             Being a flight-borne creature, need no home,
             So while the beaver builds its, robin its nest,
             I hook my hind feet into a wall or ceiling
             And hang there looking at the world made silly
             By being turned around and upside-down.
             Sleep, sleep is my nourishment, I sleep
             All day, all winter, and my young's but one.
             At first I fly with it at my breast, even hunting,
             But if it bores me I hang it on a wall
             And go alone, enjoying insects frankly.
             Tons, tons, I devour tons of insects, half
             Of my weight is insects eaten within one night,
             Yet cleverer than the swift or swallow, I deploy
             Twist, turn, dodge, catch mosquitoes one by one.
             And if the human family finds me odd,
             No older they, lock in their crazy yards.


                                           By Ruth Herschberger



                           THE EAGLE

               He clasps the crag with his crooked hands,
               Close to the sun in lonely lands,
               Ringed with the asure world he stands.

               The wrinkled sea beneath his crawls,
               He watched from his mountain walls,
               And like a thunderbolt, he falls.

      
                                        By Alfred Lord Tennyson 



                   SONG OF THE ROAD
        
               Man created cars, then bid
               Them multiply, and that they did.
               Now winding superhighways lead
               Our super-cars to super-speeds.
               And while our concrete glaciers grow,
               Where will the little creatures go?
               A small raccoon darts out, but dies
               Beside the roadside, where he lies.
               Dogs and cats and foxes soon
               End up just like that poor raccoon.
               Perhaps these simple little scenes
               Show best what Highway Robbery means.


                                             -Unknown



                        SUPRISE
               Why do they cuddle me that way?
               Why do they always want to play?
               They made me a fluffy bed. What for?
               I'd rather sleep on a concrete floor.
               They buy me toys-a sweater-a bone-
               I quite prefer being left alone.
               They feed me steak-but I like gruel.
               Do you believe me? April Fool!


                                           -Unknown



                       THE SPIDER

              With six small diamonds for his eyes
              He walks upon the Summer skies,
              Drawing from his silken blouse
              The lacework of his dwelling house.

              He lays his staircase as he goes
              Under his eight thoughtful toes
              And grows with the concentric flower
              Of his shadowless, thin bower.

              His back legs are a pair of hands,
              They can spindle out the strands
              Of a thread that is so small
              It stops the sunlight not at all.

              He spins himself to threads of dew
              Which will harden soon into
              Lines that cut like slender knives
              Across the insects' airy lives.

              He makes no motion but is right,
              He spreads out his appetite
              Into a network, twist on twist,
              This little ancient scientist.

              He does not know he is unkind,
              He has a jewel for a mind
              And logic deadly as dry bone,
              This small son of Euclid's own.


                                   By Robert P. Tristram Coffin



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