11 Metaphors for wren

Of all these, however, the Wren is the most remarkable, having a note that is singularly varied and animated.

For all other works of which Lassiter Wren is joint author SEE McKay, Randle. WREN, PERCIVAL CHRISTOPHER. Beau ideal.

The Wren is a very active bird, and one of the most restless of the feathered tribe.

To bed" To make your candles last for aye To market, to market, to buy a fat pig Tommy's tears and Mary's fears Tom, Tom, the piper's son Trip upon trenchers 'Twas once upon a time, when Jenny Wren was young Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee Twelve pairs hanging high Up at Piccadilly, oh!

To bed" To make your candles last for aye To market, to market, to buy a fat pig Tommy's tears and Mary's fears Tom, Tom, the piper's son Trip upon trenchers 'Twas once upon a time, when Jenny Wren was young Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee Twelve pairs hanging high Up at Piccadilly, oh!

The Wren, the gipsy waif, was once more Sylvia Harvey.

" "The wren," he says, "is an active songster among the hazel boughs.

"She is certain that The Wren is her daughter and gives a description of her that tallies in every particular.

WHEN JENNY WREN WAS YOUNG 'Twas once upon a time, when Jenny Wren was young, So daintily she danced and so prettily she sung, Robin Redbreast lost his heart, for he was a gallant bird.

The wren is a great fighting character, continually getting into broils with the other birds, and he has no notion of being driven off; and, although the kingbirds, with Sam's assistance, generally succeed in expelling the intruder, it is only after a hard fight.

"But the Wren that Rap says lives in the woodpile in the winter is not our House Wren, but another member of the same familythe smallest of all, called the Winter Wren.

11 Metaphors for  wren