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The Lapwing's Eggs
12 September 2001 (Version 1.2 on 17 July 2008) ' Four Lapwing's eggs were lying in front of my feet, on the short grass. Broken! It looked like someone had accidentally stepped on them, only moments ago. So well were they camouflaged, that you would not know they were the Sprinkled brown patches on dark green, outlined into shapes of somewhat pointed eggs. They have the same light-absorbing quality as the grass surrounding them, a soggy pasture that had no cows grazing on it in this late day of spring. But I knew the eggs should be there ...exactly there. ' Four freshly planted bird lives: Gracious and charming Lapwings as they prance in the air; Pewits, as they are also called - by their music - 'Pea ...hwit!' ' What would their parents 'in spe' feel, [French 'in spe' - "in hope" - hoping to become parents] when they find their joy of creating new life, their offspring, aborted so crushingly? ' A compassionate feeling of loss overcame me, as the loss of a beloved pet animal would bring, by my experiencing the irreversible destruction of these future lives. ' The Lapwings - or Pewits *(0) - making their summersaults in the air, had always been the companions of happy memories, throughout the many warm springs and summers that I spent sailing - like the birds were too, surrounded by the sun and the clouds - on the lakes by the flat grassland, the low dikes, the slowly turning windmills and the calmly munching cows. ' ' The warm sunlight made the grass of the pasture smell differently. I had landed my sailing boat there, to find a Pewit's nest. This is what I knew: The brooding Pewit lands far away from his nest to keep its location hidden, and then he does not fly back to it, but he WALKS back to it. And he does only walk back to his nest, when any hunter has disappeared out of sight. But the bird flies up immediately when he sees danger appearing from far - he is not walking away from it, but he is directly flying up from the location of the nest, to be away as soon as possible, and thus not to show the location of the nest to still distant predators, to hunters. ' I hid behind the dike, that runs like a stretched-out hill to stop the lake from flushing the land, and I waited for the Lapwing to declare his brooding area safe, and for him to walk back to his nest. ' And then, when suddenly I raised my head above the dike, indeed the bird shot up into the air - I marked the imaginary line to the nest's location. The line showed exactly the direction to walk, to the nest. Following it, inevitably would bring me there. ' And along that line I walked. All the way to the dike enclosing the grassland of the 'polder' on the other side (a 'polder,' as it is called in Holland when a dike surrounds the land, so that you can pump the water out and have dry land). All along the imaginary line I walked... but no nest! ' I returned to my original point, checked that I had indeed followed my line correctly, and walked it again, keeping my eyes firmly on the grass directly in front of me. This time, the nest WAS there. But the eggs were stepped on, broken very recently, and there were no cows around to have done so. I had wanted to find a Pewit's nest but saw it only the second time, too late... The eggs were so well camouflaged: Hidden even from keen and loving eyes that knew where to look. * ' Koos Nolst Trenite "Cause Trinity" human rights philosopher and poet Show me, O thou whom my soul loveth, where thou feedest, where thou liest in the midday. Solomon 1:6 Canticle of Canticles ________ Footnote: (0) In some other languages, the bird is called Kievit (Dutch) Vanneau huppe (French) Avefria (Spanish) Pavoncella (Italian) Tseehbees (Russian) Kiebitz (German) The scientific name of the Lapwing or Pewit, is 'Vanellus vanellus.' ' __________ References: 'Love On The Bridges Of Holland' (18 Sept 2002 - Version 2.3 on 5 July 2007) http://groups.google.com/group/nl.po...3355282ca6682b 'Learning, Teaching and Schools' (Taken from 'Koos Nolst Trenite Anecdotes - Zero Tolerance for Evil Impulses - etc.') {HRI 20060815-V4.1.1} (15 August 2006 - Version 4.1.1 on 29 Jun 2008) http://groups.google.com/group/rec.a...9bc579d1897628 {HRI 20060815-V1.1.1-UAA} http://groups.google.com/group/alt.e...8f10997784fe0a 'Three Anecdotes about Koos Nolst Trenite - Intending others to be decent to each other - What is 'Zero Tolerance' actually' {HRI 20060305-V2.3} (ZTA) (5 March 2006 - Issued 7 Dec 2007 - Version 2.3 on 30 May 2008) http://groups.google.com/group/sci.m...0b09110e1ad5d6 'A Poem Of Love And Adventure' {HRI 20020717-V4.1} (17 July 2002 - Version 4.1 on 27 June 2008) http://groups.google.com/group/sci.m...b3eb3116639a22 ' __________ Issue Note: (*) From autobiographical notes of Koos Nolst Trenite. ' ____________ Verification: http://www.angelfire.com/space/platoworld Copyright 2001-2008 by Koos Nolst Trenite - human rights philosopher and poet This is 'learnware' - it may not be altered, and it is free for anyone who learns from it and (even if he can not learn from it) who passes it on unaltered, and with this message included, to others who might be able to learn from it (but not to sociopaths, who vehemently oppose any true knowledge of life and of themselves). None of my writings may be used, ever, to support any political or religious or scientific 'agenda,' but only to educate, and to encourage people to judge un-dominated and for themselves, about any organizations or individuals. Send free-of-Envy and free-of-Hate, Beautiful e-mails to: PlatoWorld at Lycos.com |
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