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Theee is no one who will not have remarked that 

 buds kept in a cage in a drawing-room never fail, if 

 visitors arrive and the conversation grows animated, 

 to take a part in it, after their fashion, by chattering 

 or singing. 



It is their nniversal instinct, even in a condition 

 of fieedom. They are the echoes both of God and of 

 man. They associate themselves with all sounds and 

 voices, add their own poesy, their wild and simple 

 rhythms. By analogy, by contrast, they augment 

 ^- and complete the gi'and effects of nature. To the 

 hoarse beating of the waves the sea-bird opposes his shrill strident 

 notes ; with the monotonous murmuring of the agitated trees the turtle- 

 dove and a hundred birds blend a soft sad cadence ; to the awakening 



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