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The Lost DoveOne Thousand Dollars ($1000) Reward
T
HAT is the prize that has been offered for a nesting
pair of Passenger Pigeons. No one has claimed the money
yet, and it would be a great adventure, don't you
think, to seek that nest? If you find it, you must not
disturb it, you know, or take the eggs or the young, or
frighten the father- or You see the news had got about that the dove that is called Passenger Pigeon was lost. No one could believe this at first, because there had been so very many—more than a thousand, more than a million, more than a billion. How could more than a billion doves be lost? They were such big birds, too—a foot and a half long from tip of beak to tip of tail, and sometimes even longer. Why, that is longer than the tame pigeons that walk about our city streets. How could doves as large as that be lost, so that no one could find a pair, not even for one thousand dollars to pay him for the time it took to hunt? Their colors were so pretty—head and back a soft, soft blue; neck glistening with violet, red, and gold; underneath, a wonderful purple red fading into violet shades, and then into bluish white. Who would not like to seek, for the love of seeing so beautiful a bird, even though no one paid a reward in money?
Shall we go, then, to Kentucky? For 'twas there the
man named Audubon once saw them come in flocks to roost
at night. They kept coming from sunset till after
midnight, and their numbers were so great that their
wings, even while still a long way off, made a sound
like a gale of wind; and when close to, the noise of
the birds was so loud that men could not hear one
another speak, even though they stood near and shouted.
The place where Audubon saw these pigeons was in a
forest near the Green River; and there were so many
that they filled the trees over a space forty miles
long and more than three miles wide. They perched so
thickly that the branches of the great trees broke
under their weight, and went crashing to the ground;
and their Must there not be wild pigeons, yet, roosting in Kentucky—some small flock, perhaps, descended from the countless thousands seen by Audubon? No, not one of all these doves is left, they tell us, in the woods in that part of the country. The rush of their wings has been stilled and their evening uproar has been silenced. Men may now walk beside the Green River, and hear each other though they speak in whispers. Would you like to seek the dove in Michigan in May? For there it was, and then it was, that these wild pigeons nested, so we are told by people who saw them, by hundreds of thousands, or even millions. They built in trees of every sort, and sometimes as many as one hundred nests were made in a single tree. Almost every tree on one hundred thousand acres would have at least one nest. The lowest ones were so near the ground that a man could reach them with his hand.
Suppose you should find, next May, just one pair
nesting. Sire Dove, we think from what we have read,
would help bring some twigs, and Dame Dove would lay
them together in a
So they would sit, turn and turn about, for fourteen
days. All this while they would be very gentle with
each other, saying softly, The father and mother of him would still have much to do, it seems; for hatching a dove out of an egg is only the easier half of the task. The wobbly baby must be brought up to become a dove of grace and beauty. That would take food.
But you must not think to see Sire and Dame Dove come
flying home with seeds or nuts or fruit or grain or
earthworms or insects in their beaks. What else, then,
could they bring? Well, nothing at all, indeed, in
their beaks; for the food of a baby dove requires
especial preparation. It has to be provided for him in
the crop of his parent. So
However, if you will watch a tame pigeon feed its
young, you can guess how a wild one would do it. A tame
Now, I think, don't you, because that is the way tame Father and Mother Pigeon serve breakfast and dinner and supper and luncheons in between whiles to their tame twins, that wild Dame and Sire Dove would give food in very much the same way to their one wild baby? It might not be exactly the same, because tame pigeons and wild Passenger Pigeons are not the same kind of doves; but they are cousins of a sort, which means that they must have some of the same family habits.
If you should find a nest in Michigan in May, perhaps
you can learn more about these matters, and watch to
see whether, when the baby dove is all feathered out,
Dame or Sire Dove pushes it out of the nest even before
it can fly, though it is fat enough to be all right
until it gets so hungry it learns to find food for
itself. Perhaps you can watch, too, to see why Dame and
Sire Dove seem to be in such a hurry to have their
first baby taking care of himself. Is it because they
are ready to build another nest right straight away, or
would Dame Dove lay another egg in the same nest? Tame
Mother Pigeon often lays two more eggs in the next
It would be very pleasant if you could watch a pair of
Passenger Pigeons and find out all these things about
them. If you could! But I said
only "perhaps," because
the people who know most about the matter say that
Michigan has lost more than a million, or possibly more
than a billion, doves. They say that, if you should
walk through all the woods in Michigan, you would not
hear one single Passenger Pigeon call,
Well, then, if we cannot find them at sunset in their roosting-place in Kentucky or in their nests in Michigan in May, shall we give up the quest for the lost doves? Or shall we still keep hold of our courage and our hope and try elsewhere?
Surely, if there are any of these birds anywhere, they
must eat food! Shall we seek them at some
Do you know where acorns grow, or beechnuts, or
chestnuts? Well, Passenger Pigeons used to come there
to eat, for they were very fond of nuts! Do you know
where elm trees grow wild along some riverway, or where
pine trees live? Oh! that is where these birds used
sometimes to get their breakfasts, when the trees had
scattered their seeds. Do you know a tree that has a
seed about the right size and shape for a knife at a
doll's Have you ever picked wild berries? Why, more than likely Passenger Pigeons have picked other berries there or thereabouts before your day! Do you know a place where the wild rice grows? Ah, so did the Passenger Pigeons, once upon a time! But if you know none of these places, even then you can stand near where the flocks used to fly when they were on their journeys. All of you who live between the Atlantic Ocean and the Great Plains can go to the door or a window of the house you live in and point to the sky and think: "Once so many Passenger Pigeons flew by that the sound of their wings was like the sound of thunder, and they went through the air faster than a train on a track, and the numbers in their flocks were so many that they hid the sun like great thick clouds." When you do that, some of you will doubtless see birds flying over; but we fear that not even one of you will see even one Passenger Pigeon in its flight. What happened to the countless millions is recorded in so many books that it need not be written again in this one. This story will tell you just one more thing about these strange and wonderful birds, and that is that no child who reads this story is in any way to blame because the dove is lost. What boy or girl is not glad to think, when some wrong has been done or some mistake has been made, "It's not my fault"?
Even though this bird is gone forever and forever and forever, there are many other kinds living among us. If old Mother Earth has been robbed of some of her children, she still has many more—many wonderful and beautiful living things. And that she may keep them safe, she needs your help; for boys and girls are her children, too, and the power lies in your strong hands and your courageous hearts and your wise brains to help save some of the most wonderful and fairest of other living things. And what one among you all, I wonder, will not be glad to think that you help keep the world beautiful, when you leave the water-lilies floating on the pond; that it is the same as if you sow the seeds in wild gardens, when you leave the cardinal flowers glowing on the banks and the fringed gentians lending their blue to the marshes. For the life of the world, whether it flies through the air or grows in the ground, is greatly in your care; and though you may never win a prize of money for finding the dove that other people lost, there is a reward of joy ready for anyone who can look at our good old Mother Earth and say, "It will not be my fault if, as the years go by, you lose your birds and flowers." And it would be, don't you think, one of the greatest of adventures to seek and find and help keep safe such of these as are in danger, that they may not, like the dove, be lost? |
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