Robert Sherman said, "Songs have been written about a myriad of subjects. In "Feed The Birds," she expresses the importance of charity through the story of the elderly beggar woman who makes a living selling bird feed for twopence a bag. Let's feed the birds!"

And the dad is like, "hell no. "Feed the birds," that's what she cries, While overhead, her birds fill the skies.

The next day when the kids go to the bank and see the feed-the-birds woman outside, they're all like, "oh my gosh! It's that woman! The simple image makes for simple metaphors, whether the birds refer to the marginalized or the children. We have some money! Come feed the little birds, show them you care And you'll be glad if you do. The moral derives from the image of a destitute elderly woman at the steps of a church, asking for money to feed her birds. That woman has bird crap all over her." Songwriters Richard and Robert Sherman consider the hymn-like lullaby to be the heart of the film. "Come feed the little birds, show them you care And you'll be glad if you do Their young ones are hungry, their nests are so bare All it takes is tuppence from you" "Feed the birds, tuppence a bag Tuppence, tuppence, tuppence a bag Feed the birds", that's what she cries While overhead, her birds fill the skies

Their young ones are hungry, Their nests are so bare; All it takes is tuppence from you."

She pleads with them to feed the birds. Feed The Birds Lyrics: Feed the birds, tuppence a bag / Tuppence, tuppence, tuppence a bag / Feed the birds, tuppence a bag / Tuppence, tuppence, tuppence a bag / Early each day to the steps of Saint

However, “Feed the Birds” at first blush doesn’t entail any meaning. Feed the birds, tuppence a bag, Tuppence, tuppence, tuppence a bag.