[Citizen Bird by Mabel Osgood Wright and Elliott Coues]@TWC D-Link book
Citizen Bird

CHAPTER XIX
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CHAPTER XIX.
A FEATHERED FISHERMAN THE OSPREY Before the day was over the children were so in love with Olaf--with the beach where crabs were living, with the sea over which water birds were soaring--and wished to know so many things, that the Doctor told them the only way to satisfy them would be to camp on the shore in August, when the water would be warm enough for bathing; for to answer all the questions they asked would take a month.
"And then you can tell us another bookful about water and fish, and crabs and sky," said Dodo.

"So we shall have a bird book, and a butterfly book, and Olive's flower book!" "Yes, and a beast book, too!" said Nat, "about coons and bears, and squirrels and foxes, you know! Rap has seen foxes right on our Farm!" "I wish I knew something about the stars--and the rocks too," said Rap very earnestly.

"Was this earth ever young, Doctor ?" "Yes, my boy, everything that Heart of Nature guides had a beginning and was once young." "What is that?
An Eagle ?" cried Dodo suddenly, pointing up to a very large bird, with a white breast and brown-barred tail, who flew over the bay and dived into the water.
[Illustration: Osprey.] "It's the Fisherman Bird," said Olaf.

"Some call it the Fish Hawk and others the Osprey.

They say it lives all over North America, but it goes far south in winter, and when it conies back in spring we know the fish are running again; for it lives on the fish it catches, and won't come until they are plenty." "How does it catch fish ?" asked Dodo.
"It hovers overhead until it sees, with its sharp eye, a fish ripple the water; then it pounces down like a flash, and grabs the fish with, its long claws, that are made like grappling-irons.


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