PASSERIFORMES: Turdidae

Turdus merula  

Common Blackbird (Turdus merula)
click photo for larger image
© Larry Dunis 2007
Melbourne, VIC (Dec, 2007)

The English Blackbird

SWEET singer of an older land;
Thro' countless centuries
A greener and a colder land
Loved well by melodies;
And with her venturers came I
To seek beneath a sunny sky
A home, and croon my lullaby
Amid these alien trees.

No interloper, scorning here
The unfamiliar way;
No exile, ever mourning here
Joys of an older day;
The feathered folk have welcomed me
Into their joyous company
To join their chorus, fluting free
My ever liquid lay.

At dawning and at evening
Up from the gully floats
My song, a gentle leavening
To wilder woodland notes--
Up from the gully 'mid the gums
Where mountain torrents roll their drums
I join the chorusing that comes
From twice a hundred throats.

Alien no longer, merrily
My melodies I've brought;
The bushland offers cheerily
The sanctu'ry I've sought.
And, where the swift creek sings and turns
'Mid wattle-trees and nodding ferns,
My brood awakens and relearns
The songs old England taught.


The English Blackbird
by C J Dennis (1876-1938)
The Singing Garden (1935) p.45.

Common Blackbird (Turdus merula)

Common Blackbird

Common Blackbird (Turdus merula)

Leucistic pied Common Blackbird

Common Blackbird (Turdus merula)

Common Blackbird