The Pioneers

So prodigious was the number of the birds [passenger pigeons] that the scattering fire of the guns, with the hurling of missiles and the cries of the boys, had no other effect than to break off small flocks from the immense masses that continued to dart along the valley, as if the whole of the feathered tribe were pouring through that one pass. None pretended to collect the game, which lay scattered over the fields in such profusion as to cover the very ground with fluttering victims....

"This comes of settling a country!" he [Leather-Stocking] said. "Here have I known the pigeon to fly for forty long years, and, till you made your clearings, there was nobody to skeart or to hurt them, I loved to see them come into the woods, for they were company to a body, hurting nothing — being, as it was, as harmless as a garter-snake. But now it gives me sore thoughts when I hear the frighty things whizzing through the air, for I know it's only a motion to bring out all the brats of the village. Well, the Lord won't see the waste of his creatures for nothing, and right will be done to the pigeons, as well as others, by and by."

—James Fenimore Cooper, The Pioneers ©1823, ch22.

1 comment:

  1. I remember that section well. The stories of the Passenger Pigeons ring loud in bird worlds -- and it seems that some of the famous lines (darkening the skies) may have come from Cooper. So this is a quote to get my attention! We're expecting company shortly -- a recently hired biologist for the Game Commission also lives in Montgomery, so we've invited him (Mario) and his wife over for supper tonight. It was great seeing you on Monday -- thanks for taking time from your studies. Let us know how that tricky test came out for you.
    Love, Dad

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