bars. What do we then
learn of their real natures and habits
in these prisons? What would be learned
of your real tastes, inclinations and
habits were you kept constantly in a cage?
Is the gratification of
this curiosity worth the misery it costs?
If a bird wooed by your
kindness comes and builds its nest in
a tree near your window, and there rears
its brood, is not the sight it affords
from day to day worth a hundred times
more than that of the same bird, deprived
of its mate and shut up in a cage? Will
you not, is in its freedom you study its
real habits and see its real and natural
life, feel more and more drawn to it by
the tie of a common sympathy, as you see
evidenced in that life so much that belongs
to your own? Like you, it builds a home;
like you, it has affection and care for
its mate; like you, it provides for its
family; like you, it is alarmed at the
approach of danger; like you, it nestles
in the thought of security.
Yet so crude and cruel
still is the instinct in our race, that
the ruin of the wild bird's home, or its
slaughter or capture, is the ruling desire
with nineteen boys out of twenty as they
roam the woods; and "cultured parents"
will see their children leave the house
equipped with the means for this destruction
without even the thought of protest.
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