The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 49 pages of information about The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction.

The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 49 pages of information about The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction.

Bingley also says, “Willoughby tells us of a parrot, which when a person said to it, ‘laugh, Poll, laugh,’ laughed accordingly, and the instant after screamed out, ‘What a fool to make me laugh.’  Another which had grown old with its master, shared with him the infirmities of age.  Being accustomed to hear scarcely anything but the words, ‘I am sick;’ when a person asked it, ‘How do you do, Poll? how d’ye do?’—­’I am sick,’ it replied, in a doleful tone, stretching itself along, ‘I am sick.’”

Goldsmith says, “That a parrot belonging to King Henry VIII. having been kept in a room next the Thames, in his palace at Westminster, had learned to repeat many sentences from the boatmen and passengers.  One day sporting on its perch, it unluckily fell into the water.  The bird had no sooner discovered its situation, than it called out aloud, ‘A boat, twenty pounds for a boat.’  A waterman happening to be near the place where the parrot was floating, immediately took it up, and restored it to the king; demanding, as the bird was a favourite, that he should be paid the reward that it had called out.  This was refused; but it was agreed, that as the parrot had offered a reward, the man should again refer to its determination for the sum he was to receive.  ’Give the knave a groat,’ the bird screamed aloud, the instant the reference was made.”

Mr. Locke, in his “Essay on the Human Understanding,” has related an anecdote concerning parrots, of which (says Bingley) however incredible it may appear to some, he seems to have had so much evidence, as at least to have believed it himself.  It is taken from a writer of some celebrity; the author of Memoirs of what passed in Christendom from 1672 to 1679.  The story is this:—­

“During the government of Prince Maurice, in Brazil, he had heard of an old parrot that was much celebrated for answering like a rational creature, many of the common questions that were put to it.  It was at a great distance; but so much had been said about it, that his curiosity was roused, and he directed it to be sent for.  When it was introduced into the room where the prince was sitting in company with several Dutchmen, it immediately exclaimed in the Brazilian language, ’What a company of white men are here.’  They asked it ‘Who is that man?’ (pointing to the prince) the parrot answered, ‘Some general or other.’  When the attendants carried it up to him, he asked it through the medium of an interpreter, (for he was ignorant of its language) ’From whence do you come?’ the parrot answered, ‘From Marignan.’  The prince asked, ‘To whom do you belong?’ it answered, ‘To a Portuguese.’  He asked again, ‘What do you do there?’ it answered, ‘I look after the chickens.’  The prince, laughingly, exclaimed, ‘You look after the chickens?’ the parrot in answer, said, ‘Yes, I; and I know well enough how to do it,’ clucking at the time, in imitation of the noise made by the hen to call together her young.

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The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.