
The procession starts off slow and steady, in the Brahmin way: day has broken over the Common, the stately houses of Beacon Hill are visible along Beacon Street, and – fittingly – a tortoise is inching its way across the foot-path. Nothing unusual – nothing uncommon – in any of this.

The procession proceeds through Boobook and Entellus and Galliwasp, as the citizens of Boston – in corsets and top-hats – turn out to watch in amazement.
The Hoopoe, it turns out, had an Isabelita in tow (in a bowl, with a spout – for the overflow), and the fish bowl pulled in tow a Jacare, to the wonderment of all:
I snapped a picture, to prove it was so.
And everyone said, “How uncommon!”
“Uncommon!” cried pigeon, squirrel, crow,
and sparrows lined up in a common row.
“Most uncommon!”
There was a Kiang and a Narwhale and a Sassaby and a Trogon, a Wapiti and a Yaguarudi, and at the very end, all tangled up in his own string, was the very fellow who started the day leading the procession! And round they went, and round, although:
the dusk of Boston began to glow.
The lamps gave light enough to show
the turn of events that was uncommon:
sweet and slow, a circular tow,
round as the moon that leaned to blow
its beams upon Boston Common.
Oh to have this book back in print! I've only got the one copy, would love to give it out to others. Glad somebody else out there knows of its existence!
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