312 ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES. 
Add the marvellous work of continual purification of everything 
dangerous and unclean, which some species accomplish. If this war 
and this work ceased but for one day, man would disappear from the 
earth. 
This daily victory of the beloved son of light over death, over a 
murderous and tenebrous life, is the fitting theme of his song, of 
that hymn of joy with which the bird salutes each Dawn. 
But, besides song, the bird has many other languages. Like 
man, he prattles, recites, converses. He and man are the only beings 
which have really a language. Man and the bird are the voice of 
the world. 
The bird, with its gift of augury, is ever drawing near to man, 
who is ever inflicting injury upon him. He undoubtedly divines, 
and has a presentiment of, what he will one day become when 
he emerges from the barbarism in which he is now unhappily 
plunged. 
He recognizes in him the creature unique, sanctified, and blessed, 
who ought to be the arbiter of all, who should accomplish the destiny 
of this globe by one supreme act of good—the union of all life and 
the reconciliation of all beings. 
This pacific union must after a time be effected by a great art of 
education and initiation, which man begins to comprehend. 
Page 64. Training for flight (see also p. 84).—Is it wrong for 
man, in his reveries, to beguile himself into a belief that he will one 
day be more than man, to attribute to himself wings? Dream or pre- 
sentiment, it matters not. 
It is certain that a power of flight such as the bird possesses is 
truly a stath sense. It would be absurd to see in it only an auxiliary 
