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Chapter 8 EAGLES

Word Count: 1825    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

with the wood teams some days since I saw a gray and a bald eagle sailing around, but could not get a shot at t

le in this country, the bald, or American, and the golden, or ring-tailed. The latter is very rare, for their majesties are not fond of society, even of their own kind, and two nests are sel

urtis, glad of a diversion from

a few moments the great birds sailed over my head. I devoted a barrel to each, and down they both came, fluttering, whirling, and uttering cries that Wilson describes as something like a maniacal laugh. One lodged in the top of a tall hemlock, and stuck; the other came flapping and crashing through another tree until stopped by the lower limbs, where it remained. I now saw that their distance had been so great that I had merely disabled them, and I began reloading, but I was so wild from excitement and exultation that I put in the shot first. Of course my caps only snapped, and the eagle in the hemlock top, recovering a brief renewal of strength after the shock of his wound, flew slowly and heavily away, and fell on the ice near the centre of the river. I afterward learned that it was carried off by some people on an ice-boat. The other eagle, whose wing I had broken, now reached the ground, and I ran toward it, determined that I should not lose both of my trophies. As I approached I saw that I had an ugly customer to deal with, for the bird, finding that he could not escape, threw himself on his back, with his tail doubled under him, and was prepared to strike blows with talons and beak that would make serious wounds, I resolved to take my game home alive, and after a little thought cut a crotched stick, with which I held his head down while I fastened his feet together. A man who now appeared walking down the track aided me in securing the fierce creature, which task we accomplished by tying some coarse bagging round hi

in this region. In the car business you certainly brought his majesty down to the

ly?" old Mrs. Clifford asked. "I think I remem

r food was not a pleasant spectacle. I bought several hundred live carp-a cheap, bony fish-and put them in a ditch where I could take them with a net as I wanted them. The eagle would spring upon a fish, take one of her long hops into a corner, and tear off its head with one stroke of her beak. While I was curing her broken wing the creature tolerated me after a fashion, but when she was well she grew more and more savage and dangerous. Once a Dutchman, who worked for us, came in with me, and the way the eagle chased that man around the room and out of the door, he swearing meanwhile in high German and in a high key, was a sight to remember. I was laughing immoderately, when the bird swooped down on my

und one of their

use for the substratum of the domicile quite respectable cord-wood sticks, thicker than one's wrist. The mother-bird mu

to protect their eggs and young in such

," replied the doctor, with a slight shrug.

tley, who had listened

ofitable bird, "I wish

does better by eagles an

Good-night

a sigh so low that only pitiful Mrs. Leonard heard i

ted my strongest emulation, and I shall never be

f eagles, and of me also, by this time. Remember, Miss Amy, I prescribe birds, but don't watch a ba

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Contents

Chapter 1 A COUNTRY HOME Chapter 2 AMY WINFIELD Chapter 3 A COUNTRY FIRESIDE Chapter 4 GUNNING BY MOONLIGHT Chapter 5 CHRISTMAS EVE AND MORNING Chapter 6 NATURE'S HALF-KNOWN SECRETS Chapter 7 NEIGHBORS DROP IN Chapter 8 EAGLES Chapter 9 SLEIGHING IN THE HIGHLANDS Chapter 10 A WINTER THUNDER-STORM Chapter 11 NATURE UNDER GLASS
Chapter 12 A MOUNTAINEER'S HOVEL
Chapter 13 ALMOST A TRAGEDY
Chapter 14 HINTS OF SPRING
Chapter 15 NATURE'S BUILDING MATERIALS
Chapter 16 GOSSIP ABOUT BIRD-NEIGHBORS
Chapter 17 FISHING THROUGH THE ICE
Chapter 18 PLANNING AND OPENING THE CAMPAIGN
Chapter 19 WINTER'S EXIT
Chapter 20 A ROYAL CAPTIVE
Chapter 21 SPRING'S HARBINGERS
Chapter 22 FIRST TIMES
Chapter 23 REGRETS AND DUCK-SHOOTING
Chapter 24 APRIL
Chapter 25 EASTER
Chapter 26 VERY MOODY
Chapter 27 SHAD-FISHING BY PROXY
Chapter 28 MAY AND GIRLHOOD
Chapter 29 XXIX NATURE'S WORKSHOP
Chapter 30 SPRING-TIME PASSION
Chapter 31 JUNE AND HONEY-BEES
Chapter 32 BURT BECOMES RATIONAL
Chapter 33 WEBB'S ROSES AND ROMANCE
Chapter 34 CHASED BY A THUNDER-SHOWER
Chapter 35 THE RESCUE OF A HOME
Chapter 36 A MIDNIGHT TEMPEST
Chapter 37 BURT'S ADVENTURE
Chapter 38 A FIRE IN THE MOUNTAINS
Chapter 39 CAMPING OUT
Chapter 40 AN OLD TENEMENT
Chapter 41 BUT HE RISKED HIS LIFE
Chapter 42 SUMMER'S WEEPING FAREWELL
Chapter 43 FATHER AND DAUGHTER
Chapter 44 DISQUIET WITHIN AND WITHOUT
Chapter 45 IDLEWILD
Chapter 46 ECHOES OF A PAST STORM
Chapter 47 IMPULSES OF THE HEART
Chapter 48 WEBB'S FATEFUL EXPEDITION
Chapter 49 BURT'S SORE DILEMMA
Chapter 50 BURT'S RESOLVE
Chapter 51 A GENTLE EXORCIST
Chapter 52 BURT TELLS HIS LOVE AGAIN
Chapter 53 WEBB'S FOUR-LEAVED CLOVER
Chapter 54 OCTOBER HUES AND HARVESTS
Chapter 55 THE MOONLIGHT OMEN
Chapter 56 THE HOSE REVEALS ITS HEART
Chapter 57 CHRISTMAS LIGHTS AND SHADOWS
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