Tongue Tied
The human is inclined to preach
 The merits of his mode of speech
 Over those of us who choose
 The languages of baas and moos;
 And, ipso facto, is inclined
 To think his quality of mind
 Outshines all animals and birds,
 By virtue of this use of words.
Yet, in so doing, he ignores
 The message of his metaphors;
 Which, you may notice, seldom find
 Much inspiration from mankind.
 Their writers, for the most part, feast
 On nature, botany and beast,
 Of which their literature is full,
 Not people – infinitely dull.
Thus Wordsworth wanders like a cloud,
 Or talks of daffodils aloud;
 Budding poets tell their tales
 In terms of larks or nightingales.
 Not one would choose to waste his pen
 On boring similes of men,
 Nor find his inspiration tending
 Towards metaphors of man ascending.
For all his elegance of phrase,
 There’s little that his language says
 To rival how the blackbirds sing
 Their perfect consonance of spring;
 Nor how the waking robin gives,
 Without recourse to adjectives,
 Such evocation of the dawn,
 In one short cadence on the lawn.
What animals and flowers hear
 Defeats man’s onomatopoea,
 While pyramids of words conceal
 Some lost capacity to feel.
 For every new-born lamb well knows,
 Without the benefits of prose,
 That singing in creation’s song
 Needs feeling deeper than the tongue.
( from Bertie and the Younger Set..)