<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">UMBRELLAS AND OTHER THINGS.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is more fun than you can imagine in watching
the birds in your yard for just one single day. If
you are a sick child and cannot go to school, the day
will never seem long when once you have begun to get
acquainted with these dear little people. If you look
a bird straight in the eye when you have a chance to
hold one in your hand, you cannot hurt him if you have
a bit of a kind heart in your jacket.</p>
<p>Birds' faces are sweet and happy and beautiful, even
if they are covered with feathers. You will notice
that they have different expressions at different times.
But a bird's eye, whether it is black, or red, or white,
will tell the story of its fear or happiness as plainly as
your own. You may wonder how that can be, when
there are no wrinkles to be seen about the face.</p>
<p>We have seen birds do a great many bright things,
and we have seen them do stupid things as well.
There are wide cracks in our woodshed, and the towhees
go through these cracks to the inside in search of something
to eat, or just out of curiosity.</p>
<p>When we open the shed door suddenly, the birds are
in a great fright. They seem to have forgotten just
where they came in, and they flutter about to all the
cracks, trying to squeeze their way through, until they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[ 69 ]</SPAN></span>
find the right one. They do this almost every day,
never learning to count or to mark the crack in any
way. This is very stupid of the towhees, and we laugh
at their shrill squeaks, and their silly way of trying
every hole without regard to their size.</p>
<p>These towhees are full of curiosity. There is a rabbit's
cage in the yard, and the birds try all day to get
in. Sometimes we leave the door ajar, and in they hop.
Then what a time. Squealing and fluttering, they fly
about as if they were scared nearly to death. We let
them out again, and they will hop to a log near by
and preen themselves, and in five minutes they have
forgotten what happened. Back they fly to the cage
again, and are not satisfied till they find a way to
get in.</p>
<p>They wait coaxingly about the door, as if they would
give anything for a ticket of admission. Once a curious
little towhee squeezed itself into the owl's cage,
and we had hard work to get it out alive; and then
what should the stupid little thing do but go straight
for the canary's cage, hanging under a tree on the lawn.
If we want to hold a towhee in our hands for any reason,
we have but to set a cage on the grass with the door
open, and in a few minutes we have the bird.</p>
<p>We are reminded of something about birds which
John Webster wrote more than two hundred years ago.
He must have been a bird lover. When speaking of
a summer bird-cage in a garden, he observed, "The
birds that are without, despair to get in; and the birds
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[ 70 ]</SPAN></span>
that are within, despair for fear they will never get
out."</p>
<p>Did you ever stand at the window when it is raining
and wonder what the birds do without umbrellas? Of
course you have, but you are a little mistaken if you
suppose they do not have umbrellas and parasols.
Their umbrellas are all about, in the trees and fence
corners and bushes, just where they are needed.</p>
<p>See the birds cuddle under a bunch of leaves during
a smart shower. See them hunt for the shadiest places
when the sun shines warm. Of course they do not
carry their umbrellas about with them, tucked under
their arms, but they fly quickly to places where they
are sure the umbrellas are to be found.</p>
<p>Once in February a humming-bird built her frail
little nest close to the path on the low limb of a tree
in our yard. Now this eucalyptus tree was very nearly
a hundred feet high, and we wondered that the bird
built so near the ground, when she might have been so
far above. We liked to fancy that she suspected we
would not harm her, and that we might possibly help
her some if she should happen to be in trouble. She
was right, for we did help her in a way we could not
have done had she built her nest in the top of the tree.</p>
<p>A fierce hail storm came down from the mountains,
and we knew the eggs would be destroyed if we did
not protect them. There sat the tiny mother on her
frail nest, the great drops of water running off from
the point of her slender bill and down over her soft,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[ 71 ]</SPAN></span>
small sides. We felt very sorry, but you know that
just feeling sorry for those who are in trouble doesn't
help them very much. So we went to the attic and
found an old sunshade which we had put away under
the rafters at the close of the summer. We thought it
would be just the thing, and so it was.</p>
<p>We tied it to a twig just above the hummer's nest.
The mother flew off just for a moment, but came right
back. Then she looked at the black roof over the nest
and settled down on her eggs quite satisfied, while we
stood close by her, wet to the skin in the rain and
sleet. It was a long storm, lasting until the eggs were
hatched, but the mother was safe, and the baby birds
were never wet at all. Since then we have looked all
about the yard for humming-birds' nests just before a
storm, that we might shelter them.</p>
<p>You have noticed that there are different birds about
your yard at different times in the year. Birds are
like other people, they like to travel and see the world.
They like to visit their friends and get something to
eat different from what they have at home.</p>
<p>But birds are very sensible people. They do not
pack a valise or a great trunkful of clothes when they
go on a long journey. They have one good travelling
dress, and they keep that tidy. When they get to the
end of their trip, they do not have to annoy their friends
with baggage. Probably their visit is all the more
welcome. And their visits are usually short. It seems
as if they do not want to wear out their welcome.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[ 72 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Of course you have wondered how birds travel, never
needing a street, or a railroad track, or a bicycle, or a
boat. Perhaps the birds wonder, too, how it is that we
never take a flight up into the blue sky, or rest ourselves
in the trees, always keeping on the ground in
the grass or dust, or in our houses. Perhaps they
puzzle their tiny brains to know how it is that we can
walk so far without getting tired, and how it is that
we are obliged to climb a tree on all fours, like a bear
or a squirrel, if we wish to get the nuts which are far
up out of reach.</p>
<p>There is no telling what the birds think about us.
The same Great One who made the birds with hollow
bones and quills, and who filled many little cells of
their bodies with air, so that the little creatures might
be light of weight and buoyant to fly, also made us of
heavier weight and greater strength of muscle.</p>
<p>The birds are not inventors, but man has invented
the steam-engine, and the bicycle, and the sail-boat, so
that we have come as near flying as we possibly can
without being birds.</p>
<p>Almost every boy tries to fly, and he thinks there is
some secret about it which he can find out, if he is only
patient enough. He gets up on a high fence, and he
flaps his arms for wings, and he plays that he is going
to fly to the next town. The birds, looking on, must
laugh heartily.</p>
<p>Perhaps if the boy's body were boat-shaped, like a
bird's body, and if his legs were put midway between
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[ 73 ]</SPAN></span>
the two ends of his body like a bird's legs, the boy
would come nearer flying. But more than all, he would
need a good strong pair of wings. We have never
seen a boy yet who had wings of any sort.</p>
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