< Page:Seton-Thompson--Wild animals I Have Known.djvu
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
danger—a gun, a—gun; scatter for your lives,' at once caused them to scatter widely and tower
No. 6.
![{ \relative b' { b16-. b-. b-. b-. r8 b-. \bar "||" }
\addlyrics { ca ca ca ca Caw } }](../../I/94cd2e627007d0eec22fd772f5c5d09b.png.webp)
till far beyond range. Many others of his words of command I learned in the course of my long acquaintance, and found that sometimes a very little difference in the sound makes a very great difference in meaning. Thus while No. 5 means hawk, or any large, dangerous bird, this means 'wheel around,' evidently a
No. 7.
![{ \key e \major
\relative d' { dis2( cis4) r dis2( cis4) r |
gis'-. gis-. gis-. gis-. \bar "||" }
\addlyrics { Caw Caw ca ca ca ca } }](../../I/31a6d4458355b1078410c71627574b40.png.webp)
combination of No. 5, whose root idea is danger, and of No. 4, whose root idea is retreat, and this again is a mere 'good day,' to a far away
No. 8.
![{ \key bes \major \relative f' { f2( ees4) r | f2( ees4) r \bar "||" }
\addlyrics { Caw Caw } }](../../I/d9517eade6c19abff441ac4a164d2b60.png.webp)
68
This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.