<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108"></SPAN>[Pg 108]</span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII<br/> About Humming-Birds, and Some More Explanations</h2>
<p>Perhaps, when I was telling you about the Birds
of Paradise and how very, very beautiful they are, you
thought they were the most beautiful birds in the
whole world. They are nearly, but not quite. There
are the Humming-birds—<i>they</i> are even more beautiful.
At least they are more like jewels, and the Indians
who live in the countries where they are found call
them “living sunbeams.”</p>
<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">“By western Indians living sunbeams named.”</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>You can remember it by that line, which is from
a poem by Mrs. Hemans, a clever lady whom your
mother will tell you about. For the Indians, you
know, live in America, that great country—so large
that we call it “the new world”—which Columbus
discovered. They do not live in India, as you might
think. At least, when we talk of the Indians, it is
the ones that live in America and not India that we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109"></SPAN>[Pg 109]</span>
mean. The ones that live in India we call Hindoos.
It seems funny, but the reason of it is that when
Columbus discovered America, he thought it was
India; for it was India he had been trying to find,
and he thought he had found it. But it was
America, not India, and it is only in America that
the beautiful Humming-birds live—birds that are
so beautiful as they are want a world to themselves
to live in.</p>
<p>Now the birds that we have been talking about—the
Birds of Paradise—are not such very small birds.
The largest of them is nearly as large as a crow, and
even the very smallest is not so much smaller than a
thrush or a starling. But the largest Humming-bird
is not so large as a sparrow or chaffinch, and the
smaller ones are the very smallest birds in the
whole world, some of them being not so <i>very</i> much
larger than a large humble-bee, which is quite wonderful
to think of. Then they are wonderful fliers. The
Birds of Paradise fly very well—quite well enough—but
still there is nothing extraordinary in the way they
fly. But the little Humming-birds dart about quite
like lightning, and move their wings so fast that,
when you look at them, they do not seem to be wings
at all, but only two little hazy patches in the air, with
a bright jewel between them, which is the gleaming
breast of the Humming-bird. All the time their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110"></SPAN>[Pg 110]</span>
wings are moving so quickly, they make a humming
sound, just as a top does when it is spinning very fast,
which is why we call them Humming-birds, just
as we call tops that hum very much, humming-tops.</p>
<p>We have named the Humming-birds from the
sound they make when they fly, and the Indians from
their bright radiance and the speed at which they dart
about. It is from flower to flower that they dart, and
whilst you are looking at one sunbeam that is dancing
about one flower, all at once there is a ray of light
through the air, and another sunbeam is dancing about
another flower. That is what it looks like, only,
really, it is the same sunbeam that has flown from
one flower to another.</p>
<p>Sometimes when you are walking in the garden in
England and looking at the geraniums in your flowerbeds,
you will see a little brown moth hovering over
one of them, and putting a long, slender thread-like
thing that we call a proboscis (though we call an
elephant's trunk a proboscis too) right down into the
centre of the flower. <i>His</i> wings move so fast that
you can hardly see them, and in a second or two <i>he</i>
will dart away too, so quickly that you only know he
is gone, and then, all of a sudden, you will see him
again, hovering over another geranium and probing it
with his wonderful, long, thin proboscis. It is a
tube, that proboscis, and through it, the moth is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></SPAN>[Pg 111]</span>
sucking up the nectar of the flower, which is what it
lives on. That moth is the humming-bird hawk-moth,
and, if you have seen it, you have seen what
looks more like a Humming-bird than anything else
in England. It hovers over or under or in front of a
flower, as the Humming-birds do, it keeps moving
its wings in the same rapid way as they move theirs,
and making the same humming noise with them, and
it puts a long, slender, little brown thing, that looks
<i>something</i> like the beak of a Humming-bird, right
down into the flower, and sucks up the nectar that is
in it, which is just what a Humming-bird does. So
if the humming-bird moth were bright and gleaming,
as Humming-birds—sunbeams—are, it would seem to
be a Humming-bird and not a moth at all. But you
must not think that it really would be one. Oh no,
it never could be, because it is an insect, and an insect
is a very different thing to a bird.</p>
<p>The humming-bird moth and the Humming-bird
look like each other because they live in the
same way and do the same things. They both
fly, so they both have wings; and they both sip nectar,
so they both have a long thing to stick into the
flowers and suck it up with: so they look like each
other, but they are not a bit the same. A petticoat,
you know, looks a little like an upper skirt,
for they both have to be worn round the waist,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN>[Pg 112]</span>
which makes them the same kind of shape, and when
the skirt is part of a white dress then they are of the
same colour. But think how different they really are!
Why, one is a petticoat and the other is an upper skirt.
So you must always remember that, though two
animals look the same, they may really be very
different.</p>
<p>Now although the Humming-birds, or living sunbeams,
are all of them small birds, yet they are not all
of the same size, and some are quite big compared to
others, just as a peacock butterfly is quite big, compared
to a tiny blue one, whilst even the tiny little
blue one may be big compared to some very small
moths. Then, again, their beaks are of all kinds of
different shapes and lengths. Some are quite straight,
whilst others are bent like a sabre or even a sickle, and
one Humming-bird has his so very much bent indeed,
that it looks like half of a black ring or bracelet or
something else that is quite round. As for length,
some are shorter than a quite short pin, whilst others
are longer than a very long darning-needle.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Illo_113" id="Illo_113"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_113.jpg" width-obs="507" height-obs="800" alt="" /> <div class="caption"><p class="center">RACQUET-TAILED HUMMING-BIRD</p> </div>
</div>
<p>Of course there is a reason for the beaks of
Humming-birds being so different, and the reason
is that they have to go into different flowers, and
must fit into them as a finger fits into a fingerstall
or a periwinkle into its shell. If the part of
the flower that holds the nectar is straight, then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN>[Pg 115]</span>
the beak of the Humming-bird that feeds on the
nectar of that flower must be straight too, but if it
is curved, then, of course, the beak must be curved,
or else how could it be pushed into it?</p>
<p>And if the nectary of any flower (for that is what
the place that the nectar is in is called) were shaped
like a corkscrew, then the beak of the Humming-bird
that sucked out the nectar from <i>that</i> flower would
have to be shaped like a corkscrew too. But there
are no flowers shaped like that, and so there are no
Humming-birds with corkscrew beaks, like the tail of
a periwinkle. But there <i>is</i> a flower that has its
nectary, or honey-tube, bent round into almost a half
circle, and it is just that one Humming-bird that has
its beak bent in the same way, that sips the nectar from
that flower. No other one is able to do it, and
there is no other flower that that Humming-bird can
sip the nectar from.</p>
<p>And there are more than 400 different kinds of
Humming-birds, and the beak of every one of them
must fit into some flower or another, and often into a
great many more than one. Oh then, what a lot
of different kinds of flowers there must be, for all
these beaks to fit into! Ah, there are indeed, for it
is in the great forests or plains of America—the
largest in the whole world—or on the slopes of the
great mountain ranges there—the highest in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN>[Pg 116]</span>
world except the Himalayas—that the Humming-birds
live, and everywhere there are wonderful trees
and wonderful flowers. As for the trees, I have told
you what some of them are like in the forests of the
Malay Archipelago, and in the great forests of Brazil;
I think they are still larger and more wonderful.
And as for the flowers that grow in those wonderful
forests or on the great plains or the slopes and sides
of those great, high mountains, how could I ever
give you an idea of what they are like, or how should
I know where to begin, when there are so many?
For there are some that are like great scarlet trumpets
on the outside of their petals, but when you look inside
them they are like the open mouths of fierce dragons
shooting out a lot of fiery-orange tongues, all forked
and cloven ever so many times over, each tongue
looking as if it were the tongues of twenty little
hissing snakes, all tied together in a bundle and ready
to dart at you. And there are some that are in
bunches, and each bunch looks as if a lot of oxen had
put their heads against each other and begun to grow
smaller and smaller and smaller till their horns were
no longer than honeysuckles, and then had disappeared
altogether, <i>except</i> their horns, which had turned pink
and stayed there. Bunches of little pink ox-horns
are what those flowers look like. Then there are
flowers that look as if they had almost changed into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN>[Pg 117]</span>
very beautiful butterflies, and others that seem to be
very beautiful butterflies just changing into flowers.
There are flowers that are all the colours that there
are, and others that have tried all the colours that
there are, and then found out new ones to be of.
And there are some, too, that are only white, but so
lovely that all the flowers of all the colours that there
are, gaze at them and envy them. Some are so soft
and delicate that, although you see them, you only
seem to be dreaming of them. They make you
think of heaven, and it is as if angels were kissing you.
Others are like golden stars, with a stem that is like
a long, long, very long piece of red string that goes
tying itself round and round a great many trees, and
climbing up and up them, and all the way up there
are bright green leaves and the beautiful golden stars.
Other strings are golden or green, and have pink or
crimson stars upon them, and some of these hang
down, like glowing lamps from a soft, cool, emerald
ceiling. Some flowers are like little bunches of
red counters that you play games with, and there is
one that is like a wonderful, scarlet, shining leaf,
with a thick little tail at the tip of it, twisted round
in a coil. This tail is orange with cream-white
spots upon it, but just at its <i>own</i> tip it is scarlet
again, like the rest of the leaf. Such a wonderful-looking
flower! There are creeping crimson nastur<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN>[Pg 118]</span>tiums
that make the air blush in spots, azaleas
with scarlet that has swooned into pink, and pink
that has blushed into scarlet, and calceolarias that
look like yellow flower-bubbles that fairies have
blown into the air and that have come down, softly,
upon delicate little stalks, and stayed there without
bursting. Not all of these wonderful flowers have
a scent, for scented flowers are commoner here in
England than in far-off tropical countries. But a
few of them have, and <i>their</i> scent is so exquisite
that you would think it was sent from heaven.</p>
<p>Some of the flowers have leaves that are even
more beautiful than themselves, and sometimes it is
the leaves that you look at and not the flowers at
all. Some of these leaves seem to be made of
velvet, or something even softer and more velvety <i>than</i>
velvet, whilst the colours in them are like the pattern
of a very beautiful Turkey carpet. Others look like
wonderful spear-heads or the tops of very ornamental
park railings, green and red and orange, and all
striped and spotted and speckled like the skin of
newts or lizards. There are some leaves so large,
too, that they would almost make a carpet for a
<i>very</i> small room, and so handsome that you might
go into all the haberdashers' shops in the world
without finding any carpet that would look nearly
so well. Some are still larger, and those are the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN>[Pg 119]</span>
leaves of palm-trees that bend down from high in
the air, at the end of long, bending stalks that
spring from the top of the small slender stem.
They are of such a soft, lovely green that it makes
you cool even to look up at them, and so graceful
and delicate that you think of the fairies, but so
big and strong that a giant might lie upon them
and go to sleep, without breaking them or crushing
them down. And there are wonderful cactuses—so
large that they are called trees—with trunks like
great, prickly, green caterpillars, and branches like
smaller, prickly, green caterpillars stuck on to them
by the tail. But on these ugly branches there are
flowers like beautiful purple stars, whilst in the pools
or the rivers, water-lilies are floating that look like
large, purple flakes of snow. It is amongst flowers
and leaves and trees like these that the Humming-birds
fly about. Those are the wonderful goblets
out of which they sip their nectar.</p>
<p>But now, about this sipping of nectar I have
something to tell you, and when I have told it you,
you will know more than a good many people do,
who think they know something about Humming-birds
and natural history. Well, it is this: the
Humming-birds do not live <i>only</i> on the nectar in
the flowers, as most people think they do, but on
the insects that have been drowned in it, and which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN>[Pg 120]</span>
they suck up at the same time. You see the
insects—of course I mean little insects—flies or
gnats, not large moths and butterflies—get into the
tubes of the flowers, to sip the nectar themselves,
and they often fall into it, and are not able to get
out again, but drown there; for to them it is like
a little lake or pond—a pond of nectar, and, of
course, very nice, but still, for all that, it drowns
them. There is hardly any flower-cup that has
not these drowned insects in it, and when the
Humming-birds drink the nectar, they swallow the
little insects at the same time. They could not
live upon nectar only—they want animal food (as
it is called) as well, and that is the way in which
they get it. That is why when people have caught
Humming-birds, and given them only nectar—or
sugar and water, which is something like it—to
live on, they have always died. There are no
insects in it, no animal food. They had gravy,
you see, but no meat, and they wanted meat as
well as gravy. So they died, the poor Humming-birds.
But I think it is almost better for a living
sunbeam to die than to be kept living in a
cage.</p>
<p>But now, why do the Indians call the Humming-birds
living sunbeams? Oh, but you will say I
have told you that, and, besides, anybody could guess.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN>[Pg 121]</span>
It is because they are so bright and gleaming, and
hover in the air as a sunbeam dances in it, or shoot
through it as quickly and as brightly as a sunbeam
shoots down from the sun. Well, yes, that is one
explanation; but why should there not be two (as
there were about the Birds of Paradise), so that you
can choose the one you like best?—for you know
you are not a clever person <i>yet</i>. Well, there <i>are</i>
two, for the Indians say that the Humming-birds
are called living sunbeams because they really <i>are</i>
living sunbeams, just as you are called a little
girl because you are a little girl; and how could
there be a simpler explanation of a thing than
that?</p>
<p>And this is how it happened, only you must
remember that it was a very, very long time ago.
In those old days the sun had not long sent his
beams to earth, and it was only after they came
there that the things upon the earth began to live.
There had been no life at all before, it had all
been dark and cold; it was only when the sun's
beams began to shine upon the cold, dark earth,
that they warmed it into life and love. Now as
first one beautiful thing and then another began
to live upon the earth, the sunbeams admired them
all very much, but they did not envy them, for
there was nothing there <i>quite</i> so beautiful as a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN>[Pg 122]</span>
sunbeam. But one day, as they were dancing upon
the waters of the sea, they heard the fishes saying
to each other: “How beautiful are the sunbeams!
Is there anything so beautiful as they? Our scales
flash out brightly, but compared to them they are
dull, even on the sunniest day. We should envy
them, were they alive like us, but of course, as it is,
it is different.” “Are we not alive?” said the
sunbeams, and they felt sad and did not dance on
the waves any more that day. Then, another day,
they were dancing on the leaves, and falling through
them on to the shady ground underneath, chequering
it with gold. “How glorious are the sunbeams!”
said the leaves to each other, “more
glorious even than the birds or the butterflies that
perch amongst us. Would that we were as
beautiful!” “Do you envy them?” said a butterfly,
who had overheard and felt annoyed; “they
have neither sense nor breath, are neither born nor
die. Envy us, if you will, who have all these
advantages, and are so beautiful as well—much more
so than yourselves—but do not, however plain you
may be, envy what is not alive.” “Are we not
alive?” said the sunbeams, and they were discontented
and the clouds hid them, so that neither
the trees nor the birds and butterflies within them
seemed to be alive any more. And, again, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN>[Pg 123]</span>
sunbeams were shining through a small window,
where, in a wretched garret, on a still more wretched
bed, lay a man who had care and sorrow—yes, and
worse even than those—in his heart. “Would that
I were dead!” he cried, as he clasped his hands on
his forehead. “Ah, how I envy the sunbeams! But
no, I will not envy <i>them</i>, for <i>they</i> are not alive,
they are inanimate merely.” “Are we not alive?”
said the sunbeams; “and does nobody envy us
on that account?” And the wretched room that
had seemed quite cheerful whilst they were there,
became dark and dismal again, as they withdrew.</p>
<p>And now it was the sunbeams who envied everything—bird
or beast, or plant or leaf or flower
(even the man in the garret)—because they were
alive. “It is hard that we alone should be without
life,” thought they, and they complained to the
sun. “Give us life,” they cried; “we are more
beautiful than anything here on earth, but nothing
envies us because we are not alive. It is dreadful
not to be envied.” “And do you really think,”
said the sun,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN>[Pg 124]</span> “that you, who have given life to
others, have no life yourselves? Before I sent you
to the earth, it was dark and cold and lifeless. It
needed you, to give it that for which you now ask.
Do not, then, be discontented any more, but be
assured that you have life, as much as anything that
lives and grows upon the earth, though, to be sure,
it is of another kind. Be satisfied, therefore, and rejoice
in your loveliness.” This answer of the sun's
satisfied most of the sunbeams, but there were some
who were foolish and whom it did not satisfy.
“Give us such life as the children of the earth
enjoy!” cried these; “the life that breathes and
grows, that has a shape, that is born and dies.
That is the life that we would have. Be good to
us, and give us that.” Then the sun said to the
foolish sunbeams: “I can give you such life as
you ask for, and, if you persist in asking it, I must;
for you are my children and I cannot bear to see
you unhappy. But remember, if I once grant you
this wish, and give you the life that earth's children
enjoy, you can nevermore be as you now are, or
enter into my palace—my golden palace—again.
Now you fly from me to the earth and from the
earth back to me, but when once you have earth's
life, on earth you must remain and on earth you
must die. You are immortal now: when you
become children of the earth you will be mortal as
they are.”</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="Illo_125" id="Illo_125"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/illo_125.jpg" width-obs="571" height-obs="800" alt="" /> <div class="caption"><p class="center">PLOVER CREST HUMMING-BIRD</p> </div>
</div>
<p>But the foolish sunbeams, who could not understand
what death should be, persisted, and the sun,
who loved them because they were his children, had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN>[Pg 127]</span>
to do what they asked. So one night, when all the
other sunbeams had flown back to him, he sent these
foolish ones to sleep on the earth (which had never
happened to them before), and there they lay all night—some
in the flower-cups, some under the leaves of
the trees—without giving any light at all, for when a
sunbeam <i>is</i> asleep it can give no light. But in the
morning, when their brother and sister sunbeams flew
back to earth, they woke up, but the two did not
know each other again, for the foolish sunbeams were
not sunbeams any more—not real ones, that is to say.
They flew about, still, in the forests, and glanced
through the trees, and hovered over the flowers, in
almost the same way as they had done before; but
now they had a shape and wings, and they sipped
the nectar out of the flower-cups, which was a thing
that they had never even dreamed about. They
were Humming-birds, and though their feathers were
as bright as <i>they</i> had ever been, and though they had
all of them long Latin names and a scientific description
in books, still it was not quite the same, for it
would take a lot of Latin and a lot of scientific
description, to make up for not being a sunbeam.
But when the Indians came to know of the occurrence,
they called them “living sunbeams,” and it is
easy to understand what they meant. And now you
know (until you are a clever person) how Humming-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN>[Pg 128]</span>birds
came into the world. But you must not think
that the other sunbeams—the real ones that have
never changed into anything—are dead. Oh no,
indeed! How could they dance and play about as
they do, if they were?</p>
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