<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">THE BIOGRAPHY OF A CANARY-BIRD</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Sing away, aye, sing away.<br/></span>
<span class="i6">Merry little bird,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Always gayest of the gay.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Though a woodland roundelay<br/></span>
<span class="i6">You ne'er sung nor heard;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Though your life from youth to age<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Passes in a narrow cage.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Near the window wild birds fly.<br/></span>
<span class="i6">Trees are waving round;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Fair things everywhere you spy<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Through the glass pane's mystery.<br/></span>
<span class="i6">Your small life's small bound;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Nothing hinders your desire<br/></span>
<span class="i0">But a little gilded wire.<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Mrs. Craik.</span></p>
</div>
<p>He didn't look very much like a bird, being mostly a big
little stomach, as bare of feathers as a beechnut just out of
the burr, with here and there on the head and back a tuft of
down. His eyelids bulged prominently, but did not open,
sight being unnecessary in consideration of the needs of his
large stomach. Said needs were partially satisfied every few
minutes with the nursing-bottle.</p>
<p>And a very primitive nursing-bottle it was, being no other
than the beak of the parent bird thrust far down the little
throat, as is the family custom of the rest of the finches.</p>
<p>From somewhere in the breast of the mother a supply
was always forthcoming, and found its way down the tiny
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[ 62 ]</SPAN></span>
throat of the baby and into the depths of its pudgy being.
This food, which was moist and smooth, was very nourishing
indeed, and sweet as well, for it tasted good, and left such
a relish in the mouth that said mouth always opened of itself
when the mother bird came near. But no more than its own
share of the victuals did Dicky get, though he did his very
best to have it all. There were other babies in the same
cradle to be looked after and fed. And they all five were as
much alike as five peas, excepting that Dicky was the smallest
of all and was kept pushed well down in the bottom of the
nest. This did not prevent his mother from noticing his open
mouth when it came his turn to be fed.</p>
<p>Canary mothers have sharp eyes; so have canary fathers,
as will be seen.</p>
<p>Now, when this particular pair of birds began to look about
the cage for a good place to fix upon for family affairs, some
kind hand from outside fastened a little round basket in one
corner, exactly of the right sort to stimulate nesting business.
It was an old-fashioned basket, with open-work sides and bottom,
airy and clean. Now, had this basket been a box instead,
we should have had no tragedy to record; or had the
mesh been closely woven, no fatal mistake (though well meant)
would have darkened the sky of this domestic affair. But
alas! the truth must be told, since the biography we are
writing admits of no reservations.</p>
<p>It all came about by the interference of the father bird,
whose presence in the nursery should have been forbidden at
the start. The mother was more than once alarmed by his
activity and misapplied zeal about the nest, and she had
scolded him away with emphatic tones.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 607px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/canary.png" width-obs="607" height-obs="449" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">CANARY.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[ 63 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Not having anything of importance to do save to eat all
day and sleep all night, he was on the alert for employment.
One dreadful morning, when the mother was attending to
breakfast, this father canary espied some, tatters sticking out
of the bottom meshes of the nest basket, bits of string ends
and threads, carelessly and innocently overlooked.</p>
<p>"Ah," thought he, "here is something that ought to be
attended to at once."</p>
<p>And he went to work! He thrust his sharp beak up between
the round meshes of the basket bottom and pulled at
every thread he could lay hold of, struggling beneath, fairly
losing his foothold in his eagerness to pull them out. Having
succeeded in dragging most of the material from beneath
the birdlings, he caught sight of a few more straight pink
strings lying across the meshes, and began tugging at them.
The mother, feeding the babies from the edge of the nest
above, noticed the little ones each in its turn crouching
farther and farther into the bottom of the cradle, faintly opening
their mouths as if to cry, but being too young and weak
to utter a sound. It was a mystery, but the deepest mystery
of it all was the fact that little Dicky, the dwarf of the family,
came to the top as the rest worked down, and was getting
more than his share of the breakfast.</p>
<p>About this time the mistress of the canary-cage came to
see after her pets, and beheld a sight which made her scream
as hard as if she had seen a mouse. There, beneath the nest,
was the father bird tugging at protruding feet and legs of baby
birds with all his might, growing more and more excited as he
saw his supposed strings resisting his attempts to pull them
through.</p>
<p>When the affair was looked into, there was but one bird
left alive of the five little infants no more than five days old,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[ 64 ]</SPAN></span>
and they were released from their predicament to have a
decent burial in the garden at the foot of a motherly-looking
cabbage head that stood straight up in disgust of the cruel
affair, "as if she would ever have such a thing happen to her
little cabbages!" True, she had no little cabbages of her
own, but that made no difference.</p>
<p>Now that we have tucked away these four little canary-birds,
who never saw the light of day, and therefore never
could realize what they missed by not holding on harder to
what little they had by way of feet and legs, we will drop
the painful subject and attend to Dicky.</p>
<p>Of course the father bird was excluded from the nursery,
as he should have been weeks before, and there was only one
mouth to feed. And that mouth was never empty unless the
owner of it was sleeping. In fact, the babe was stuffed;
though, strange to say, his stomach grew no bigger, but less
and less, as the rest of his body filled out.</p>
<p>At the end of a couple of weeks he had a pretty fair shirt
on his back, of delicate down, softer than any shirt of wool
that ever warmed a human baby's body. And the mother
stood on the edge of the basket and admired it. She didn't
make it, of course, but she was in some way responsible for
it, and no doubt felt proud of the bit of fancy work. She
noticed, also, that the eyes of the little one did not bulge so
much as they did, and a tiny slit appeared at the center,
widening slowly, until one happy hour they opened fairly out,
and "the baby had eyes." But they were tired eyes to start
with, like the eyes of most young things, and they wearied
with just a glimpse of the light. So the lids closed, and it
was several days before Dicky actually took in the situation
as he ought.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[ 65 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There being no other baby to crowd, he kept to the nest
longer than birds commonly do, and when at last he got on
his feet he was pretty well fledged.</p>
<p>Now, when he had obtained his first youthful suit of
clothes, his mother looked surprised, as did also his father,
it is to be supposed, he in his solitary cage hanging close to
the other. Both parent birds were pure-bred Teneriffe
canaries, the male as green as emerald and the female more
dusky and lighter. By a strange freak of nature, which happens
sometimes by breeding these birds in captivity, the
young fellow was bright yellow, of the tint of a ripe lemon,
beak white, and eye black, while his feet and ankles retained
their original baby pinkness. Oh, he was a pretty bird! But
it was foreordained in his case, as in similar cases, that he
should not be so sweet a singer as though his color had been
like that of his parents. He was not conscious of this fact,
however, and it mattered not to him that he was yellow
instead of green. Nor did he care in the least that the price
of him was marked down to a dollar and a half when it should
have been double. Away he went in a new cage, after his
new mistress had paid the sum named into the hand of his
former owner. He peeked out of the bars as he was carried
along swinging at every step; that is, he peeped out as well
as he could, considering that a cloth was covered over the
cage. The wind blew the cloth aside now and then and
Dicky saw wonderful sights—sights that were familiar and
"so soul-appealing." Not that he, in his own short life, had
ever seen such sights, but that somehow in his little being
were vague memories or conceptions of what his ancestors
had seen. It is hard to explain it, but everything cannot be
explained. When we come to one of these things we call it
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[ 66 ]</SPAN></span>
"instinct," with a wise shake of our heads, just as we were
told to say "Jerusalem" when we came to a word we
couldn't pronounce when we were very young and read in
the Second Reader.</p>
<p>Well, Dicky had a good home of his own, and lived for a
purpose, although he never developed into a trained singer.
In the heart of him he longed for a mate, and often expressed
his desires in low, musical notes. But no mate came to him,
and he would sit for hours pondering on his bachelor's lot,
and singing more notes.</p>
<p>Now, wild birds are constantly having something "happen"
to them. They fly against a wire or get a wing hurt,
or the young fall out of the nest and can't find their mother.
Dicky's mistress was always on the lookout for such accidents,
and she brought such birds into the house and nursed
them and brought them back to health when possible. It
occurred to her to offer a "calling" or "vocation" to Dicky.
So she made a small private hospital of his cage, into which
she placed the victims of accident or sickness as she found
them. Dicky was surprised, never having seen a bird save
his parents, and his lady-love in his dreams, and at first he
stood on tiptoe and was frightened.</p>
<p>But he learned to be kind after a while, and to show his
visitors where the food and water were kept, and to snuggle
up to them on the perch when it came bedtime. Many and
many a poor invalid did he aid in restoring to freedom and
flight, until he became pretty well acquainted with the birds
that nest in our grounds.</p>
<p>Year after year the good work went on, and Dicky developed
more musical talent, until he sang sweetly, imitating
the finches and linnets outside. In the fall of the year, when
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[ 67 ]</SPAN></span>
the wild birds were thinking of their annual migrations, Dicky
himself grew restless and quit his songs. Then his mistress
opened his door and told him he might "go." Not far
away, of course, but all about in the room, that seemed to
this caged bird as big as any world could be. In his quest
for new nooks he came by accident upon the mirror above
the fireplace. Standing on the edge of a little vase before
the glass, just in front of the beveled edge of it, he espied
two yellow birds, one in the glass itself and another in the
beveled edge, as a strict law of science had determined should
be the case.</p>
<p>In a second the whole bearing of the bird was changed.
His feathers lay close, his legs stood long and slim, and his
eyes bulged, as they never had bulged since the lids parted
when he was two weeks old. Then he found voice. He
sang as never a green bird sang sweeter. He turned his
head and the two birds in the glass turned their heads. He
preened his wing and the two birds preened each a wing. His
little throat swelled out in melody, the tip of his beak pointing
straight to the ceiling of the big room as if it were indeed
the blue sky, and the two birds sang with uplifted beaks and
swelling throats. They were of his own kind, his own race,
his own ancestral comrades. And they were not green! The
low mesas of the Canary Islands never resounded to such
melody.</p>
<p>But melody was not food, at least so thought Dicky's
mistress, as she tempted the bird in vain to eat. Not a
crumb would he touch until placed back in his cage, where
he straightway forgot his recent discoveries. As usual, he
took his bread and cooky to the water-dish and set it to soak
for dinner, and scattered his seeds about the cage floor in his
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[ 68 ]</SPAN></span>
eagerness to dispose of the non-essentials, the hemp only
being, in his opinion, suitable for his needs. Of course he
was obliged to pick up his crumbs after he had thus assorted
the varieties.</p>
<p>Every day when the door was open he flew straight to the
mirror. If we moved the vase to the middle, away from the
beveled edge, he found the place by himself and stood on
tiptoe exactly where the reflection accorded him the companionship
of two birds, and he would resume his melody.
It was real to him, this comradeship, and it lasted until
actual and personally responsible companions were provided
for him.</p>
<p>Now, let not the reader conjure up a picture of many birds
in a cage with Dicky as governor or presiding elder. It was
midsummer, when the sands are hot and inviting to the retiring
and modest family known by name as "lizards." The
particular branch of this family to which we refer, and to
which Dicky was referred, is known to scientists, who would
be precise of expression, as Gerrhonotus. But the familiar
name of "lizard" is sufficient for the creatures we placed in
a large wire cage on the upper balcony and designed for
Dicky's summer companions.</p>
<p>Now, it should not seem strange to any one that we chose
the lizard people to associate with this yellow-as-gold canary.
Were they not one and the same long ages ago? And this is
no legend, but fact. Have they not both to this day scales
on their legs and a good long backbone? To be sure, the
birds now have feathers on most of their bodies, so they may
be able to fly; but a long while ago the bird had only scales,
and not a single feather. And are not baby lizards hatched
from eggs laid by the mother lizard? Ah, it is a long story,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[ 69 ]</SPAN></span>
this, dating back too far to count. But long stories are quite
the accepted fashion in natural science, and from reading
them we resolved to make some observations of our own.
There is more to be gained sometimes in making observations
on one's own account than by adopting those of others.</p>
<p>We captured half a dozen lizards and gave them the names
of Lizbeth, Liza, Liz, and Lize. That is, four of them, being
of the same order, received these names; there were two little
ones besides, with peacock-blue trimmings, which have nothing
to do with this story. The four named were about eight inches
in length, speckled above and silver beneath. Their other
beauties and characteristics will not be discussed except as it
becomes necessary in treating of Dicky's further development.</p>
<p>From the day when these five creatures became fellow-captives
they were friends. The lizards took to sleeping in
the canary's food-box, so that in getting at his meals he was
obliged to peck between them, and sometimes to step over
them and crowd them with his head after hidden seeds. As
the afternoon sunshine slanted across the cage the five took
their dry bath all in a heap, bird on top with wings outspread,
lizards in a tangle, each and all thankful that there was such
a thing as a sun bath or family descent. Later, as the sun
was going down and the lizards became drowsy, as lizards will,
Dicky sang them a low lullaby, now on the perch above them,
now on the rim of the feed-box. At times another comrade
joined them, especially at this choral hour.</p>
<p>One of those red and white striped snakes seen in ferns
and brakes along watercourses made a home in the cage with
the bird and the lizards. This snake had an ear for music;
at the first notes he emerged from his lair slowly and cautiously,
lifted his graceful head toward the singer, and glided
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[ 70 ]</SPAN></span>
in his direction. If the bird were on the perch the snake
would crawl up the end posts, taking hold with his scales,
which, of course, were his feet, and lie at length on the perch
at Dicky's feet, watching out of its beautiful eyes. At other
times it would merely glide toward the bird, lift its head erect
some five or six inches, and remain motionless until the song
was finished. A big, warty hop-toad, also an inmate of this
asylum, was a friend of Dicky's, as indeed was every creature,
even to the big grasshopper. This toad and the bird were
often seen in the bath together, the toad simply squatting, as
is the custom of toads, the bird splashing and spattering the
water over everything, including, of course, the toad. The
toad blinked and squatted flatter to the bottom of the bath,
hopping out when the bird was done, and the two sunning
themselves after nature's own way of using a bath-towel.</p>
<p>It would be too long a story were one to tell of the songs
Dicky sang to the drone of the drones bumming away against
the wire, sorry perhaps that they were to become dinner to
lizards before summer was half over. But we must bring the
biography to an end, hoping that these few reminiscences
will tend to interest people in the "Dickies" that are about
them in wire cages, too often neglected and never half comprehended.</p>
<p>But we should by all means give an account of the last we
ever saw of this particular Dicky.</p>
<p>During his stay on the balcony he had become acquainted
with the finches and linnets and mocking-birds of the yard,
holding quiet talks with them in the twilight, and growing
more thoughtful at times, even to the extent of watching for
opportunities to escape. One evening, just as we lifted the
door to set in a fresh pan of water, out darted Dicky. Straight
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[ 71 ]</SPAN></span>
to a tree near by he flew, and called himself over and over
again. We cried to him, "Dicky, O Dicky, come back."</p>
<p>Ah, but here was a taste of freedom—the freedom which
his ancestral relatives had enjoyed on the low slopes of Teneriffe
before ever a foreign ship had carried them away captive.
And Dicky had never read a word about his ancestors and
their freedom! Therefore, what did he know about it?
Scientists call it "instinct." It is a word too hard for us,
and we will say "Jerusalem" and let it pass. Away across
the street flew Dicky, the bird of prison birth, the bird of
only two comrades of his kind and color, and these but shadows
in a mirror.</p>
<p>The lizards heard us call, and peeped lazily over the edge
of the hammock seed-box, blinking sleepily, and then cuddled
down again without sense of their loss.</p>
<p>Running after the bird did not bring him back, as everybody
knows to his sorrow who has once tried it. A glint of
gold in the pine-tree, a radiance as of lemon streamers in and
out of the cypress hedge, and we saw Dicky no more.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i8">My bird has flown away,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Far out of sight has flown, I know not where.<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Look in your lawn, I pray,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Ye maidens kind and fair,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And see if my beloved bird be there.<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i8">Find him, but do not dwell<br/></span>
<span class="i0">With eyes too fond on the fair form you see,<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Nor love his song too well;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Send him at once to me,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Or leave him to the air and liberty.<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><i>From the Spanish.</i></p>
</div>
<p>Some day a budding ornithologist, more eager than wise,
with note-book and pencil, will possibly record a "new
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[ 72 ]</SPAN></span>
species" among the foothill trees—a species that resembles
both yellow warbler and goldfinch. And the young man will
look very knowing, all alone out in the woods; and he will
send his specimen to the National Museum for identification.
And the museum people will shake their wiser heads and
inform the "ornithologist" that, in their opinion, there is
more of the ordinary tame canary "let loose" in the individual
than goldfinch or warbler.</p>
<p>Let it pass.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">A bird for thee in silken bonds I hold,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Whose yellow plumage shines like polished gold;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">From distant isles the lovely stranger came,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And bears the far-away Canary's name.<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Lyttleton.</span></p>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[ 73 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />