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What the Sparrow Chirps - An 1871 Poem
By Pearl Rivers.
- I am only a little sparrow,
- A bird of low degree;
- My life is of little value,
- But the dear Lord careth for me.
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- He gave me a coat of feathers;
- It is very plain, I know,
- With never a speck of crimson,
- For it was not made for show.
-
- But it keeps me warm in winter,
- And it shields me from the rain;
- Were it bordered with gold or purple,
- Perhaps it would make me vain.
-
- And now that the spring-time cometh,
- I will build me a little nest,
- With many a chirp of pleasure,
- In the spot I love the best.
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- I have no barn or storehouse,
- I neither sow nor reap;
- God gives me a sparrow's portion,
- But never a seed to keep.
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- If my meal is sometimes scanty,
- Close picking makes it sweet;
- I have always enough to feed me,
- And "life is more than meat."
-
- I know there are many sparrows;
- All over the world we are found,
- But our heavenly Father knoweth
- When on of us falls to the ground.
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- Though small, we are never forgotten;
- Though weak, we are never afraid;
- For we know that the dear Lord keepeth
- The life of the creatures He made.
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- I fly through the thickest forest,
- I light on many a spray;
- I have to chart or compass,
- But I never lose my way.
-
- And I fold my wings at twilight,
- Wherever I happen to be;
- For the Father is always watching,
- And no harm will come to me.
December 12, 1871. Staunton Spectator 49(12): 1.