<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">OUR ROBIN REDBREAST.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Almost</span> every child knows the robin redbreast. He
is a great favorite wherever he goes. We have him
with us in Southern California only in winter time for
a few weeks after the rains have come. When our
ground is mellow with moisture, and the angle-worms
have worked their way to the top, leaving little loose
hillocks all about the yard, then we look out for a visit
from the robins.</p>
<p>They come in companies great enough to fill the
tree-tops, and their constant song reminds us of old
times when we lived in the New England States.</p>
<p>Robins are "water birds" in a way, although they
do not swim. They are perfectly at home in wet grass
or foliage, and even in a rain storm. They never seem
to have any use for umbrellas.</p>
<p>Once, while on a visit to some friends in the east,
we found two baby robins which were blown from their
nest in a storm. We fed them with bread soaked in
milk, and fresh beef, and they thrived. We shut them
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in an empty room upstairs, and they soon learned to
look for us and to know our step. They would fly to
the crack of the doorway and squeal when they heard
us coming. Before we dared open the door, we had to
push the birds away, for fear they would be caught and
hurt.</p>
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<div class="fig_caption"><span class="smcap">Robin.</span></div>
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<p>When we were ready to start for our California home,
we put the robins in a cage, taking as much food as we
thought they would need on the journey. In a day or
two the meat gave out, and they grew tired of bread
and water. They coaxed constantly for beef, so we
asked a porter on our car to get some for them.</p>
<p>By this time most of the passengers had become
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[ 109 ]</SPAN></span>
interested in our robins, and a gentleman offered to
keep them in beef for the rest of the journey. He
would go out once a day, when the train stopped long
enough, and buy some beef. Our pets came to be
quite an attraction in the car, and everybody was
anxious to do something for the little travellers.</p>
<p>We took the birds to the dressing-room each day to
clean the cage and to give them a bath. We washed
them one at a time, in our hands, holding them under
the gently flowing faucet. At first they objected, but
they soon grew to like it.</p>
<p>During the first year they never sang a note, for
their unmusical squeak could certainly not be called
singing. The second spring we gave them a large
cage in the yard, that they might make the acquaintance
of other birds. In a short time an old mocking-bird
came and gave them music lessons.</p>
<p>The teacher would twist his toes around the wires of
the cage, in this way holding himself close to the birds.
Then he would twitter softly, until the young birds
had learned to respond and to twitter too.</p>
<p>When at last the robins did have a song, it was a
mixture of robin and mocking-bird notes. They did
not speak pure robin all that year.</p>
<p>After they were grown-up birds, the mocker who had
taught them music took a great dislike to them. This
was very strange, for he had been so fond of his little
pupils, dropping berries down through the cage wires,
and calling them all sorts of pet names in his own
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[ 110 ]</SPAN></span>
language. Now he would scold them and peck at them
and scare them, until we were obliged to cover a part
of the cage.</p>
<p>In a year or two the male robin got out of the cage
and flew away. We could hear him far out of sight in
the trees, but he would not come back, though we
called to him in our kindest tones. He was out all
night, and we supposed he was dead, as he was at the
mercy of the mocking-birds.</p>
<p>What was our surprise early in the morning to find
him on the hitching-post near the house, with his bill
wide open, screaming for his breakfast. But he would
not let us put our hands on him.</p>
<p>Then we thought of a plan to catch him, the same
by which wild animals are sometimes caught. We
scattered some crumbs from the post where he sat to
the door of the cage, and Robin went to picking them
up, of course, being very hungry and not thinking
about the consequences. He followed the trail of the
crumbs until, before he knew it, he was safe within
the cage and the door was shut.</p>
<p>Once again he got away from us, but we knew he
would come back at meal-time, if the shrikes and the
mockers did not find him. Birds which have lived for
a while in a cage seem to be perfectly helpless when
out at liberty, not knowing how to find food for themselves,
and dying of hunger in the midst of plenty.</p>
<p>Sure enough, at supper time Robin came back, clamoring
for his share. There was a soft, moist place in
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the garden where we were in the habit of digging
worms for the robins at night. We took the cage and
set it down by this place, with the door tied back.</p>
<p>We went to work with the spade, pretending not to
notice the little runaway, who hopped close to us and
screamed at his little innocent mate in the cage. We
threw some worms in at the open door for the bird on
the inside, who ate them, taking no notice of her companion
on the outside.</p>
<p>Suddenly the outsider hopped to the hole where we
were digging and tried to grab the worms before we
had time to pick them up. But we cheated him, understanding
his little game, and dodged past him with the
coveted worms. He, standing on tiptoe, danced about
in the funniest fashion, still trying to snatch the
worms. All at once, taunting him with a good long-worm,
we threw it past him into the cage. Away the
bird ran after it, and the little fellow who loved so
well to "play hookie" was caught once more.</p>
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