Doves? pigeons? Is there a difference? I've never been sure. Anyway, I love the sound they make. It's something between a croon and a hoot and it means that spring is on its way. I hear it- as I heard it first thing this morning- and I'm immediately 17 years old. Not that I want to be 17 - too much fear and uncertainty- but there's a certain blank-canvasy hopefulness about being 17 that never comes again- except insofar as you can capture it in memory. Doves/pigeons do it for me every time. It's 1968, I'm walking along a path beside the Lac de Neuchatel, the sun is shining, and I'm in love- have been for a couple of days and will be for a couple of days more- with Anne Cronk, the Canadian girl.
Tennyson- who was a whiz at onomatopoeia- got the effect of dove-song in the line that goes, "The moan of doves in immemorial elms". Only for him it's a melancholy noise, whereas for me it's the soundtrack of love's young dream.
Tennyson- who was a whiz at onomatopoeia- got the effect of dove-song in the line that goes, "The moan of doves in immemorial elms". Only for him it's a melancholy noise, whereas for me it's the soundtrack of love's young dream.
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Date: 2009-02-20 04:47 pm (UTC)Last year my cat was very interested in something by the sitting room window. When I looked I saw a dove who was perched on the outside sill of the same window. It looked like the two of them, cat and bird, were having a conversation. Teddy did not look either hungry or predatory, just interested, and the bird did not seem to be worried at all.
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Date: 2009-02-20 04:59 pm (UTC)