Wings 



345 



like shafts, while the larger ciuills, as mentioned before, 

 are reduced to four or six horny sticks. 



If we watch an owl flying about its cage at night, or 

 if, in the woods, an owl passes near, his shadow in the 

 moonlight is all that warns us of his presence. The feathers 

 of an owl's wing are soft and downy, and the bird moves 

 as lightly as a falhiig leaf. Little warning, except by 



Fig. '27(k — 'rrumpeter Swan asleep. 



sight, the mice and l)irds have of its deadly i^resence. 

 Few birds have a flight as noiseless as that of owls, and 

 in some species the motion of the wings makes, as we 

 noticed in the pheasant, a very audible sound. When a 

 widgeon rises from the water, the whistling of its quills, 

 so dear to the ears of the sportsman, is quite shrill. A 

 dove claps its wings together above its back while gain- 

 ing im])etus for flight. The characteristic sound from 

 which a hummingbird takes its name is well known. 



