<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">THE MESSAGE OF A MOCKING-BIRD.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was in the year 1877, before any of the children
who read this book were born. We were living on
one of the great reservations in the Indian Territory.
Some one knocked at the door. When the door was
opened, there stood a little Indian girl, her head all
covered up in a bright shawl. She was shy, as Indian
girls were before they had seen many white people.
Very timidly she drew her hand from under her shawl
and gave to us a baby mocking-bird. Then she turned
and ran down the prairie toward her buffalo-skin lodge
not far away.</p>
<p>We understood. The little girl's name was Kitty-ka-tat.
She had been to our house often. She knew
that we liked pets of all kinds, and birds most of all, so
she had captured this one for us by a kind of snare or
trap. Of course we kept it, for we did not know where
its nest was. We allowed it to use the whole house
for a cage. It ate wherever we ate, and slept at night
on the curtain pole above the window.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[ 2 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<div id="fig_1" class="fig_center" style="width: 459px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig_1.png" width-obs="459" height-obs="294" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption"><span class="smcap">Mocking-bird.</span></div>
</div>
<p>But the perch it liked best by day was the top of its
master's head. As soon as this gentleman came in and
sat down in the rocking-chair and put on his skullcap,
the bird would fly to his shoulder. Sometimes it would
take a nip at his ear or his hair. Then it would give
a hop and a flutter, and land in the middle of the black
skullcap, where it would sit for an hour if no one disturbed
it. It liked to take crumbs from our hands, or
bits of apple from our lips, standing on our shoulders.
It bathed every day in a large pan of water placed in
the middle of the carpet. Then, too wet to fly farther,
it would flutter all dripping to a low stool, where it
would dry its clothes after the wash. If a door
chanced to be left open, the bird would fly to the top
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[ 3 ]</SPAN></span>
of it and preen its feathers and look about at us below
in a very pretty way. So you see the little thing really
washed and dried and ironed its clothes.</p>
<p>One day when it was perched on the top of the hall
door, as happy as could be, a gust of wind quickly blew
the door shut, with a loud noise. The bird gave a sharp
scream and flew to the window. We looked and saw a
strange sight,—a mocking-bird without a tail.</p>
<p>The little bundle of feathers had been shut in at the
top of the door when the wind closed it; and there sat
poor birdie, a mere chunk of a darling, turning its head
from side to side and looking sadly back at the place
where its tail had once been.</p>
<p>We opened the door, and down fluttered every one of
the beautiful feathers. Birdie eyed them with a puzzled
look, canting its head, as though it were saying,
"I don't understand it at all." Then it looked backward
again in a very pitiful way. We couldn't help
laughing, though we were so sorry for the bird. In a
short time the feathers grew again, and the little fellow
showed great care in preening them and placing them
just as it thought they ought to grow.</p>
<p>After a while there came to be a little baby in the
house, and the mocking-bird seemed to understand.
Two grown-up people had been its only friends before,
but it was never afraid of the stranger baby from the
first time it saw him. It would fly from any perch to
where the baby lay and peep into the baby's face in
the sweetest way, as if saying, "Glad to see you, little
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[ 4 ]</SPAN></span>
man." Then it would twitter a low song, which
sounded very much as if it were singing, "Little one,
when you grow up, be kind to the birds and love
them."</p>
<div id="fig_2" class="fig_center" style="width: 426px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig_2.png" width-obs="426" height-obs="483" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption"><span class="smcap">The Young Mocking-Bird<br/>
that lost its Tail in the Door.</span></div>
</div>
<p>"Be kind to the birds and love them" was the little
mocking-bird's message, or so it seemed to us.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[ 5 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The baby and his mother never forgot the message of
the mocking-bird. They have loved birds ever since.
That is why they are writing this book about birds for
the children.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 132px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/bar_dot.png" width-obs="132" height-obs="10" alt="bar with diamond" /></div>
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