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Roof and Meadow 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Roof and Meadow, by Dallas Lore 
Sharp This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with 
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Title: Roof and Meadow 
Author: Dallas Lore Sharp 
Release Date: January 16, 2005 [EBook #14701] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROOF AND 
MEADOW *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Melissa Er-Raqabi and the PG Online 
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[Transcriber's Note: In this text, the spelling racoon is used consistently 
instead of raccoon. I have kept this and any other unusual spellings, 
retaining the character of the original.]
Roof and Meadow 
By Dallas Lore Sharp 
Author of "A Watcher in the Woods" 
With Illustrations By Bruce Horsfall 
SCHOOL EDITION 
 
[Illustration] 
NEW YORK 
The Century Co. 
1911 
 
Copyright, 1903, 1904, by THE CENTURY CO. 
Copyright, 1902, 1903, by HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND 
COMPANY. 
Copyright, 1903, by THE CHAPPLE PUBLISHING CO. (Ltd.). 
Copyright, 1902, 1903, by W.W. POTTER CO. (Ltd.). 
Copyright, 1902, 1903, by PERRY MASON COMPANY 
_Published April, 1904._ 
 
TO 
MY MOTHER
CONTENTS 
PAGE 
BIRDS FROM A CITY ROOF 1 THE HUNTING OF THE 
WOODCHUCK 19 THREE SERMONS 31 THE MARSH 45 CALICO 
AND THE KITTENS 77 THE SPARROW ROOST 91 "MUX" 107 
RACOON CREEK 121 THE DRAGON OF THE SWALE 147 
 
BIRDS FROM A CITY ROOF 
 
[Illustration] 
ROOF AND MEADOW 
 
BIRDS FROM A CITY ROOF 
I laid down my book and listened. It was only the choking gurgle of a 
broken rain-pipe outside: then it was the ripple and swish of a meadow 
stream. To make out the voices of redwings and marsh-wrens in the 
rasping notes of the city sparrows behind the shutter required much 
more imagination. But I did it. I wanted to hear, and the splash of the 
water helped me. 
The sounds of wind and water are the same everywhere. Here at the 
heart of the city I can forget the tarry pebbles and painted tin whenever 
my rain-pipes are flooded. I can never be wholly shut away from the 
open country and the trees so long as the winds draw hard down the 
alley past my window. 
But I have more than a window and a broken rain-pipe. Along with my 
five flights goes a piece of roof, flat, with a wooden floor, a fence, and 
a million acres of sky. I couldn't possibly use another acre of sky,
except along the eastern horizon, where the top floors of some 
twelve-story buildings intercept the dawn. 
With such a roof and such a sky, when I must, I can, with effort, get 
well out of the city. I have never fished nor botanized here, but I have 
been a-birding many times. 
Stone walls do not a prison make, 
nor city streets a cage--if one have a roof. 
A roof is not an ideal spot for bird study. I would hardly, out of 
preference, have chosen this with its soot and its battlement of gaseous 
chimney-pots, even though it is a university roof with the great gilded 
dome of a state house shining down upon it. One whose feet have 
always been in the soil does not take kindly to tar and tin. But anything 
open to the sky is open to some of the birds, for the paths of many of 
the migrants lie close along the clouds. 
Other birds than the passing migrants, however, sometimes come 
within range of my look-out. The year around there are English 
sparrows and pigeons; and all through the summer scarcely an evening 
passes when a few chimney-swallows are not in sight. 
With the infinite number and variety of chimneys hedging me in, I 
naturally expected to find the sky alive with swallows. Indeed, I 
thought that some of the twenty-six pots at the corners of my roof 
would be inhabited by the birds. Not so. While I can nearly always find 
a pair of swallows in the air, they are surprisingly scarce, and, so far as 
I know, they rarely build in the heart of the city. There are more 
canaries in my block than chimney-swallows in all my sky. 
The swallows are not urban birds. The gas, the smoke, the shrieking 
ventilators, and the ceaseless sullen roar of the city are hardly to their 
liking. Perhaps the flies and gnats which they feed upon cannot live in 
the air above the roofs. The swallows want a sleepy old town with big 
thunderful chimneys, where there are wide fields and a patch of quiet 
water.
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