Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Our Vanishing Wild Life eBook

William Temple Hornaday
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 632 pages of information about Our Vanishing Wild Life.

Mr. Buckland’s green-covered pamphlet is a powerful document, and both his facts and his conclusions seem to be unassailable.  The author’s address is Royal Colonial Institute, Northumberland Ave., London, W.C.

The duty of the civilized nations of Europe is perfectly plain.  The savage and bloody business in feathers torn from wild birds should be stopped, completely and forever.  If the commons will not arise and reform the odious business out of existence, then the kings and queens and presidents should do their plain duty.  In the suppression of a world crime like this it is clearly a case of noblesse oblige!

* * * * *

CHAPTER XIV.

THE BIRD TRAGEDY ON LAYSAN ISLAND

This chapter is a curtain-dropper to the preceding chapter.  As a clearly-cut, concrete case, the reader will find it unique and unsurpassed.  It should be of lively interest to every American because the tragedy occurred on American territory.

In the far-away North Pacific Ocean, about seven hundred miles from Honolulu west-b’-north, lies the small island of Laysan.  It is level, sandy, poorly planted by nature, and barren of all things likely to enlist the attention of predatory man.  To the harassed birds of mid-ocean, it seemed like a secure haven, and for ages past it has been inhabited only by them.  There several species of sea birds, large and small, have found homes and breeding places.  Until 1909, the inhabitants consisted of the Laysan albatross, black-footed albatross, sooty tern, gray-backed tern, noddy tern, Hawaiian tern, white tern, Bonin petrel, two shearwaters, the red-tailed tropic bird, two boobies and the man-of-war bird.

Laysan Island is two miles long by one and one-half miles broad, and at times it has been literally covered with birds.  Its bird life was first brought prominently to notice in 1891, by Henry Palmer, the agent of Hon. Walter Rothschild, and in 1902 and 1903 Walter K. Fisher and W.A.  Bryan made further observations.

Ever since 1891 the bird life on Laysan has been regarded as one of the wonders of the bird world.  One of the photographs taken prior to 1909 shows a vast plain, apparently a square mile in area, covered and crowded with Laysan albatrosses.  They stand there on the level sand, serene, bulky and immaculate.  Thousands of birds appear in one view—­a very remarkable sight.

Naturally man, the ever-greedy, began to cast about for ways by which to convert some product of that feathered host into money.  At first guano and eggs were collected.  A tramway was laid down and small box-cars were introduced, in which the collected material was piled and pushed down to the packing place.

For several years this went on, and the birds themselves were not molested.  At last, however, a tentacle of the feather-trade octopus reached out to Laysan.  In an evil moment in the spring of 1909, a predatory individual of Honolulu and elsewhere, named Max Schlemmer, decided that the wings of those albatross, gulls and terns should be torn off and sent to Japan, whence they would undoubtedly be shipped to Paris, the special market for the wings of sea-birds slaughtered in the North Pacific.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Our Vanishing Wild Life from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.