14 THE HUMAN SHDE OF BIRDS 



admit that they all give evidence of the greatest 

 artistic appreciation and possession. 



As Grant Allen truly says of the flower-hunting 

 and fruit-eating species, "Surrounded for genera- 

 tions and generations by gorgeous orchids and 

 trumpet-creepers, from which they suck the stored- 

 up nectar; by gleaming purple or golden fruits; by 

 burnished beetles, metallic butterflies, bronze- 

 scaled lizards, and coral snakes, their prey or their 

 enemies, exercising their eyes perpetually in the 

 search for food among the exquisite objects of their 

 environment, and safe from aU foes except those 

 of their own class, tropical birds have naturally 

 developed the most gorgeous and the most perfect 

 forms and colours in the whole animal creation. 

 And, above all, they have stamped the mark of their 

 peculiarly high esthetic feelings upon their own 

 shapes by the wonderful definiteness of their pat- 

 terns and their ornamental adjuncts, nowhere 

 equalled, save in the most perfect decorative handi- 

 craft of man himseK." 



But notwithstanding their beauty, their works of 

 art, and their other accomplishments, man has seen 

 in them only the helpless victims of his own de- 

 sires. With all the scientific knowledge and hu- 

 mane pretensions of to-day, we wage a ruthless 



