Alice and the pigeon.
One evening in winter as Alice,
a dear little girl whom everybody loved, pushed aside
the curtains of her bedroom window, she saw the moon
half hidden by great banks of clouds, and only a few
stars peeping out here and there. Below, the
earth lay dark, and cold. The trees looked like
great shadows.
There was at change in her sweet face
as she let fall the curtain and turned from the window.
“Poor birds!” she said.
“They are all safe,” answered
her mother, smiling. “God has provided
for every bird a place of rest and shelter, and each
one knows where it is and how to find it. Not
many stay here in the winter time, but fly away to
the sunny south, where the air is warm and the trees
green and fruitful.”
“God is very good,” said
the innocent child. Then she knelt with folded
hands, and prayed that her heavenly further would bless
everybody, and let his angels take care of her while
she slept. Her mother’s kiss was still
warm upon her lips as she passed into the world of
pleasant dreams.
In the morning, when Alice again pushed
back the curtains from her window, what a sight of
wonder and beauty met her eyes! Snow had fallen,
and everything wore a garment of dazzling whiteness.
In the clear blue sky, away in the cast, the sun was
rising; and as his beams fell upon the fields, and
trees, and houses, every object glittered as if covered
all over with diamonds.
But only for a moment or two did Alice
look upon this beautiful picture, for a slight movement
drew her eyes to a corner of the window-sill, on the
outside, and there sat a pigeon close against the
window-pane, with its head drawn down and almost hidden
among the feathers, and its body shivering with cold.
The pigeon did not seem to be afraid of her, though
she saw its little pink eyes looking right into her
own.
“O, poor, dear bird!”
she said in soft, pitying tones, raising the window
gently, so that it might not be frightened away.
Then she stepped back and waited to see if the bird
would not come in. Pigeon raised its brown head
in a half scared away; turned it to this side and
to that; and after looking first at the, comfortable
chamber and then away at the snow-covered earth, quietly
hopped upon the sill inside. Next he flew upon
the back of a chair, and then down upon the floor.
“Little darling,” said
Alice, softly. Then she dressed herself quickly,
and went down stairs for some crumbs of bread, which
she scattered on the floor. The pigeon picked
them up, with scarcely a sign of fear.
As soon as he had eaten up all the
crumbs, he flew back towards the window and resting
on the sill, swelled his glossy throat and cooed his
thanks to his little friend. After which darted
away, the morning sunshine glancing from wings.
A feeling of disappointment crept
into the heart of Alice as the bird swept out of sight.
“Poor little darling!” she sighed.
“If he had only known how kind I would have
been, and how safe he was here, what nice food and
pure water would have been given, he wouldn’t
have flown away.”
When Alice told about the visit of
pigeon, at breakfast time, a pleasant surprise was
felt by all at the table. And they talked of,
doves and wood-pigeons, her father telling her once
or two nice stories, with which she was delighted.
After breakfast, her mother took a volume from the
library containing Willis’s exquisite poem,
“The little Pigeon,” and gave it to Alice
to read. She soon knew it all by heart.
A great many times during the day
Alice stood at the open door, or looked from the windows,
in hope of seeing the pigeon again. On a distant
house-top, from which the snow had been melted or blown
away, or flying through the air, she would get sight
of a bird now and then; but she couldn’t tell
whether or not it was the white and brown pigeon she
had sheltered and fed in the morning. But just
before sundown, as she stood by the parlor window,
a cry of joy fell from her lips. There was the
pigeon sitting on a fence close by, and looking, it
seemed to her, quite forlorn.
Alice threw open the window, and then
ran into the kitchen for some crumbs of bread.
When she came back, pigeon was still on the fence.
Then she called to him, holding out her her hand scattering
a few crumbs on the window-sill. The bird was
hungry and had sharp eyes, and when he saw Alice he
no doubt remembered the nice meal she had given him
in the morning, in a few moments he flew to the window,
but seemed half afraid. So Alice stood a little
back in the room, when he began to pick up the crumbs.
Then she came nearer and nearer, holding out her hand
that was full of crumbs, and as soon as pigeon had
picked up all that was on the sill, he took the rest
of his evening meal from the dear little girl’s
hand. Every now and then he would stop and look
up at his kind friend, as much as to say, “Thank
you for my nice supper. You are so good!”
When he had eaten enough, he cooed a little, bobbed
his pretty head, and then lifted his wings and flew
away.
He did not come back again. At
first Alice, was disappointed, but this soon wore
off, and only a feeling of pleasure remained.
“I would like so much to see
him and feed him,” she said. “But
I know he’s better off and happier at his own
home, with a nice place to sleep in and plenty to
eat, than sitting on a window-sill all night in a
snow storm.” And then she would say over
that sweet poem, “The City Pigeon,” which
her mother had given her to get by heart. Here
it is, and I hope every one of my little readers will
get it by heart also:—
“Stoop to my window, thou beautiful dove!
Thy daily visits have touched my love.
I watch thy coming, and list the note
That stirs so low in thy mellow throat,
And my joy is high
To catch the glance of thy gentle eye.
“Why dost thou sit on the heated eaves,
And forsake the wood with its freshened leaves?
Why dost thou haunt the sultry street,
When the paths of the forest are cool and sweet?
How canst thou bear
This noise of people—this sultry air?
“Thou alone of the feathered race
Dost look unscared on the human face;
Thou alone, with a wing to flee,
Dost love with man in his haunts to be;
And the ‘gentle dove’
Has become a name for trust and love.
“A holy gift is thine, sweet bird!
Thou’rt named with childhood’s earliest
word!
Thou’rt linked with all that is fresh and wild
In the prisoned thoughts of the city child;
And thy glossy wings
Are its brightest image of moving things.
“It is no light chance. Thou art set apart,
Wisely by Him who has tamed thy heart,
To stir the love for the bright and fair
That else were sealed in this crowded air
I sometimes dream
Angelic rays front thy pinions stream.
“Come then, ever, when daylight leaves
The page I read, to my humble eaves,
And wash thy breast in the hollow spout,
And murmur thy low sweet music out!
I hear and see
Lessons of heaven, sweet bird, in thee!”