The Patrician Peacocks And The Overweening Jay

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Once a flock of stately peacocks
  Promenaded on a green,
  There were twenty-two or three cocks,
  Each as proud as seventeen,
  And a glance, however hasty,
  Showed their plumage to be tasty;
  Wheresoever one was placed, he
  Was a credit to the scene.

  Now their owner had a daughter
  Who, when people came to call,
  Used to say, "You'd reelly oughter
  See them peacocks on the mall."
  Now this wasn't to her credit,
  And her callers came to dread it,
  For the way the lady said it
  Wasn't recherche at all.

  But a jay that overheard it
  From his perch upon a fir
  Didn't take in how absurd it
  Was to every one but her;
  When they answered, "You don't tell us!"
  And to see the birds seemed zealous
  He became extremely jealous,
  Wishing, too, to make a stir.

  As the peacocks fed together
  He would join them at their lunch,
  Culling here and there a feather
  Till he'd gathered quite a bunch;
  Then this bird, of ways perfidious,
  Stuck them on him most fastidious
  Till he looked uncommon hideous,
  Like a Judy or a Punch.

  But the peacocks, when they saw him,
  One and all began to haul,
  And to harry and to claw him
  Till the creature couldn't crawl;
  While their owner's vulgar daughter,
  When her startled callers sought her,
  And to see the struggle brought her,
  Only said, "They're on the maul."

  It was really quite revolting
  When the tumult died away,
  One would think he had been moulting
  So dishevelled was the jay;
  He was more than merely slighted,
  He was more than disunited,
  He'd been simply dynamited
  In the fervor of the fray.

  And THE MORAL of the verses
  Is: That short men can't be tall.
  Nothing sillier or worse is
  Than a jay upon a mall.
  And the jay opiniative
  Who, because he's imitative,
  Thinks he's highly decorative
  Is the biggest jay of all.

© Guy Wetmore Carryl