To lee to late to lee to see
to lines in the fountian to lines in the see
to wills it is to see to wills it is to E
and thats all i wanted to say i ain't in a tree
Two lines in a fountian to lines in a see
to lines in a fountian to lines in a tree
two lines in a fountian two lines in a see
I ain't in a fountian i ain't in a tree
tolate it is to see tolate it is for me
to land in a tri in and tolate it is for the see
In the end i was a little birdy
in the end i was a we to lines in a fountian
to lines in a see to late it is for me for i am a key
to land in a fountian to land in a see
To land in a fountian
to land in a see
to land in a fountian
tile in the end of the see
to mines i was to see and to mines i was to he.
Author notes
Welleein see
A contest entry
- Name That Bird 5 (Tufted Titmouse) by MagicLady.
300 points, ended April 28, 2008, 5 entries
• next poem in this contest, remove from contest
Comments
-
I would really like to know if there is a secret message in your poem somewhere.
Here is some info on the tufted titmouse:
Slightly larger than six inches long, this bird is easily identified. Male and female look alike, gray above and lighter below with rusty flanks. A black bill and forehead set off the gray crest. But the real give-away of the titmouse’s presence is the big black eye, made larger by the black ring around it.
Take note of the dominance hierarchy at your backyard feeder station this winter. In winter flocks, males always dominate females and juveniles. The alpha male and female usually have bred in the area last season.
Beyond that, titmice are well down the ladder. For example, hairy woodpeckers dominate downy woodpeckers, the downy dominates the white-breasted nuthatch and these dominate titmice.
Cheryl


