THE SQUARE BOOK OF ANIMALS By William Nicholson. RHYMES BY ARTHUR WAUGH. [Illustration] Published by R. H. Russell. New York. 1900. _NOTE._ _The book of Animals was designed by Mr. Nicholson in 1896._ Copyright, 1899, by William Heinemann. All rights reserved. Entered at Stationers Hall, London, England. Entered at the Library of Congress, Washington, U.S.A. AN EXPLANATION Friend, seek not here (to feed the mind) Zoology's recondite feasts: Here you will find but common, kind, And unsophisticated beasts! Yet fresh the life of farm and grange As that which o'er the ocean roams: Take for a change a narrower range-- An English book for English homes! [Illustration] THE BRITISH BULL-DOG You swing the gate; and there he stands to greet you, With growl or grin, as you are strange or known: According to your merits will he treat you-- An Englishman who loves and guards his own. THE UN-COMMON CAT Nine lives they give the common cat? There's a rare one livelier yet than that! A cat that swings nine separate tails! And, when it's let out of the bag, it rails With so knotty a tongue that the culprit quails! [Illustration] [Illustration] THE FRIENDLY HEN Some birds lay eggs in towering trees, And some in fens conceal them; The hen seeks friendlier haunts than these, Where every child can steal them. THE LEARNED PIG The farm's philosophy, our eyes assure us, Is simpler than in Aristotle's day: The youngest pigling follows Epicurus, And Bacon's Essays take the primrose way. [Illustration] [Illustration] THE BEAUTIFUL SWAN All day she rules the pond from edge to edge, Exerting Beauty's easy privilege; Her world a mirror spread in each direction, Where she reflects upon her own reflection. THE VERY TAME LAMB All men, said the poet, are struck at a mint, And some coins ring flat that the coiners embellish: But the lamb is so tame he will pardon the hint-- He'd be best with a little mint-sauce for a relish! [Illustration] [Illustration] THE TOILSOME GOAT "You're a lively kid!" is the schoolboy jest: But the kid is driven to work one day, And the hours of harness know little rest For the stiff goat-carriage round the bay. THE LUCKY DUCK There was a Drake, my Duck, at Plymouth Hoe Played bowls, with Spain's Armada clear of Dover! A gamesome spirit! But to him we owe The peace your farm and all our homesteads know: For, ere the Spaniard reached our wickets, lo! Drake bowled him over! [Illustration] [Illustration] COCK O' THE NORTH Cock o' the North! The dawn is young, Grey-glimmering the pane; Yet you, with your discordant tongue, Have woken me again! Good beasts are silent in their pens. Hush! Leave the boasting to the hens! THE SIMPLE SHEEP The sheep's like the man in the street. She will follow, and blunder, and bleat, In pursuit of her fate At the slaughter-house gate, And she learns it too late to retreat. [Illustration] [Illustration] THE SERVILE COW When the cow's in the farmyard, her sense Of servility's simply immense; But you meet her again In the highway or lane, And she tosses you over the fence. THE GROWING COLT Rough, shaggy colt: the world is all before you: Blithe be your life, secure of oats and hay; A little crowd of people to adore you, And some green resting-place at shut of day! [Illustration] The sun is low behind the grey-green trees. And all the farm grows quiet by degrees. Among their many lessons this is best: The animals know when and how to rest! A. W.