A poem about discrimination...against sparrows and pigeons.... |
In mid-1950’s I was a young boy with a gun – a Daisy BB rifle with which I had great fun. At first I shot at paper targets, tin cans, and kitchen matchsticks, but all too soon I began to want ‘to hunt’, to face the challenge of stalking, of shooting something alive. My parents were willing for me to kill birds – not all birds, mind you, not the songbirds, not the ‘pretty ones’. “If the bird’s got pretty feathers – red, yellow, or blue – he’s not for you.” So I had license, approval to kill sparrows, pigeons too. And kill them I did! Watching a mortally wounded, poor pigeon fall, flopping and flailing, from the rooftop sure gave me a thrill. A head shot – what a great kill! As I acquired an older age, I became more sage. Now, fifty years later, I have an interest in birds still. Only today I watch and admire them coming to eat at five feeders found in my back yard. Sparrows are neat little birds, plucky, adaptable, altogether quite admirable. Today I regret the ignorance, the arrogance so remarkable that caused me to discriminate against the pigeon, the sparrow. Then I was young, with a mind both foolish and narrow. Now I understand to mistreat on the basis of how they sing or how pretty I find their feathers is a truly abhorrent thing. Please check out my ten books: http://www.amazon.com/Jr.-Harry-E.-Gilleland/e/B004SVLY02/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0 |