The birds of London
There are more than two hundred different species and sub-species of birds in the London area, ranging from the magpie to the greenfinch, but perhaps the most ubiquitous is the pigeon. It has been suggested that the swarms of feral pigeons are all descended from birds which escaped from dovecotes in the early medieval period; they found a natural habitat in the crannies and ledges of buildings as did their ancestors, the rock doves, amid the sea-girt cliffs. βThey nest in small colonies,β one observer has written, βusually high up and inaccessibleβ above the streets of London as if the streets were indeed a sea. A man fell from the belfry of St Stephens Walbrook in 1277 while in quest of a pigeonβs nest, while the Bishop of London complained in 1385 of βmalignant personsβ who threw stones at the pigeons resting in the city churches. So pigeons were already a familiar presence, even if they were not treated with the same indulgence as their more recent successors. A modicum of kindness to these creatures seems to have been first shown in the late nineteenth century, when they were fed oats rather than the customary stale bread.
From the end of the nineteenth century, wood pigeons also migrated into the city; they were quickly urbanised, increasing both in numbers and in tameness. βWe have frequently seen them on die roofs of houses,β wrote the author of Bird Life in London in 1893, apparently as much at home as any dovecote pigeon.β Those who look up today may notice their βfly-linesβ in the sky. from Lincolnβs Inn Fields over Kingsway and Trafalgar Square to Battersea, with other lines to Victoria Park and to Kenwood. The air of London is filled with such βfly-linesβ, and to trace the paths of the birds would be to envisage the city in an entirely different form; then it would seem linked and unified by thousands of thoroughfares and small paths of energy, each with its own history of use.
The sparrows move quickly in public places, and they arc now so much part of London that they have been adopted by the native population as the sparred; a friend was known to Cockneys as a βcocksparrerβ in tribute to a bird which is sweet and yet watchful, blessed with a dusky plumage similar to that of the London dust, a plucky little bird darting in and out of the cityβs endless uproar. They are small birds which can lose body heat very quickly, so they are perfectly adapted to the βheat islandβ of London. They will live in any small cranny or cavity, behind drainpipes or ventilation shafts, or in public statues, or holes in buildings; in that sense diet are perfectly suited to a London topography. An ornithologist who described the sparrow as peculiarly attached to manβ said it never now breeds at any distance from an occupied buildingβ. This sociability, bred upon the fondness of the Londoner, is manifest in many ways. One naturalist, W.H. Hudson, has described how any stranger in a green space or public garden will soon find that βseveral sparrows are keeping him company β¦ watching his every movement, and if he sits down on a chair or a bench several of them will come close to him, and hop this way and that before him, uttering a little plaintive note of interrogation β Have you got nothing for us? They have also been described as die urchins of the streets β βthievish, self-assertive and pugnaciousβ β a condition which again may merit the attention and admiration of native Londoners. Remarkably attached to their surroundings, they rarely create βfly-linesβ across the city; where they are born, like other Londoners, they stay.
There are some birds, such as the robin and the chaffinch, which are less approachable and trustful in the city than in the country. Other species, such as the mallard, grow increasingly shyer as they leave London. There has been a severe diminution of the number of sparrows, while blackbirds are more plentiful. Swans and ducks have also increased in number. Some species, however, have all but vanished. The rooks of London are, perhaps, the most notable of the disappeared, their rookeries destroyed by building work or by tree-felling. Areas of London were continuously inhabited by rooks for many hundreds of years. The burial ground of St Deinstalls in the East and the college garden of the Ecclesiastical Court in Doctorsβ Commons, the turrets of the Tower of London and the gardens of Grays Inn, were once such localities. There was a rookery in the Inner Temple dating from at least 1666, mentioned by Oliver Goldsmith in 1774. Rooks nested on Bow Church and on St Olaveβs. TheyΒ were venerable London birds, preferring to cluster around ancient churches and the like as if they were their local guardians. Yet, in the words of the nineteenth-century song, βNow the old rooks have lost their placesβ. There was a grove in Kensington Gardens devoted to the rooks; it contained some seven hundred trees forming a piece of wild nature, a matter of delight and astonishment to those who walked among them and listened to the endless cawing that blotted out the cityβs noise. But the trees were torn down in 1880. The rooks have never returned.
Questions 1-4
Answer the questions below using NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each answer. Write your answers in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
1 What kind of birds are the London pigeons descended from?
2 What were pigeons given to eat before attitudes towards them changed?
3 What are the routes taken by wood pigeons known as?
4 What TWO activities have contributed to the drastic reduction in the number of rooks ?
Questions 5-9
Complete the notes below.
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 5-9 on your answer sheet.
SPARROWS Word meaning 5 is derived from the birdβs name suited to atmosphere of London because of tendency to rapidly 6 always likely to reproduce close to 7 characteristic noted: 8 because of attitude of people in London make a sound that seems to he a kind of 9 |
Question 10-13
Classify the following as being stated of
A pigeons
B wood pigeons
C sparrows
D chaffinches
E blackbirds
F rooks
Write the correct letter A-F in boxes 10-13 on your answer sheet.
10 ABCDEF They are happier with people when they are in rural areas. 11 ABCDEF They rapidly became comfortable being with people.12 ABCDEF They used to congregate particularly at old buildings.13 ABCDEF They used to be attacked by people. |