<h2><SPAN name="IV" id="IV"></SPAN>IV</h2><h3>SINGING FOR SOME ONE</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> first few days of early May had
passed and with them had flitted—somewhere—most
of the jolly company in
which Bobby Bobolink had journeyed
from the South. But a few of those merrymakers
had stayed—as Bobby did—in
Farmer Green's meadow. They had made
up their minds to spend the summer in
Pleasant Valley.</p>
<p>Even old Mr. Crow, who was no lover of
music, had to admit that he had never
heard such bursts of song during all the
summers he had spent in the neighborhood.
It seemed as if Bobby Bobolink and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_17" id="p_17"></SPAN></span>
his companions were trying their best to
out-sing one another, though nobody knew
why they should do that.</p>
<p>But at last somebody discovered the reason.
That rowdy of the woods, Jasper
Jay, spied upon the harum-scarum singers
one day, when they were all but bursting
themselves in a frenzy of song. And
he saw that they were giving what Jasper
called "a serenade."</p>
<p>They were singing not for themselves
but for a dull, yellowish-brown lady of
their own sort, who had not arrived from
the South until Bobby and his friends had
been frolicking about the meadow almost
a week.</p>
<p>She seemed a shy creature—this young
person—preferring to stay on the ground
during the serenade. But Bobby Bobolink
and his companions were bold as
brass. Often they alighted on the ground<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_18" id="p_18"></SPAN></span>
near her, as if they thought she could not
hear their songs well enough when they
skimmed through the air over the grassy
meadow. Amid such a jingling and tinkling
of notes it was no wonder that the
little lady acted somewhat confused.</p>
<p>Jasper Jay, who was almost as great
a gossip as Mr. Crow, told everybody in
the neighborhood that he had never heard
such a hubbub. But then, like his cousin
Mr. Crow, Jasper was not a lover of
music. And it was true that sprightly
Bobby Bobolink and his dashing friends
made no attempt to sing together. To be
sure, they sang all at the same time; but
each one of them sang his own song in his
own way, just as if his was the only one
that was being sung.</p>
<p>They never tired of entertaining the
lady. And whether the yellowish-brown
person decided that Bobby Bobolink sang<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_19" id="p_19"></SPAN></span>
louder than the others, or whether she
thought his singing was sweeter or gayer
than that of his friends, nobody ever found
out. Perhaps he managed to say something—in
his song—that especially
pleased her. Anyhow, it was only a short
time before Bobby Bobolink was making
such remarks as these to everybody in the
meadow:</p>
<p>"My wife says I have the quickest eye
for a caterpillar that she ever saw!" and
"Mrs. Bobolink and I expect to begin to
build a new house at once!"</p>
<p>Now, you might think that Bobby's
friends, after all their singing for the little
lady, would have felt quite glum. But
they were not in the least downcast. Of
course, Bobby Bobolink would not let them
serenade his wife. Indeed he promptly
chased them away as soon as he knew that
he had won her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_20" id="p_20"></SPAN></span>But they were so light-hearted that they
started right away to sing for another
lady in another part of the meadow.</p>
<p>She was as like the first one as two peas
in a pod. And Jasper Jay chuckled when
he found out what was going on.</p>
<p>He said he didn't believe they knew the
difference.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p class="chapter"><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="p_21" id="p_21"></SPAN></span></p>
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