Corvus

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Corvus

August 15
Birds have fascinated me for a long time. When I was a boy, we had a
pet mynah which we taught to pronounce clearly more then a
hundred Bengali words. I knew, of course, that although some birds
could talk, they didn't understand the meaning of what they said. But
one day our mynah did something so extraordinary that I was forced
to revise my opinion. I had got back from school, Mother had brought
me a plate of halwa, when the mynah suddenly screeched,
'Earthquake! Earthquake!' we had felt nothing but next the papers
reported that a slight tremor had indeed been recorded by the
seismograph.
Ever since then I have felt a curiosity about the intelligence of
birds, although in my preoccupation with various scientific projects,
I have not been able to pursue it in any way. My cat, Newton,
contributed to this neglect. Newton doesn't like birds and I don't wish
to do anything that would displease him. Lately, however perhaps
because of age Newton has grown increasingly indifferent to birds.
Which is probably why my laboratory is being regularly visited by
crows, sparrows and shaliks. I feed them in the morning, and in
anticipation of this they begin to clamour outside my window from
well before sunrise.
Every creature is born with skills peculiar to its species. I
believe such skills are more pronounced and more startling in birds
than in other creatures. Examine a weaver-bird's nest, and it will
make you gasp with astonishment, given the ingredients to construct
such a nest, a man would either throw up his hands in despair or take
months of ceaseless effort to do so.
There is a species of birds in Australia called the Malle Fowl
which builds its nest on the ground. Sand, earth and vegetable matter
go into the making of this hollow mound which is provided with a hole
for entry. The bird lays its eggs inside the mound but doesn't sit on
them to batch. Yet without heat the eggs won't hatch, so what is the
answer? Simply this: by some amazing and as yet unknown process,
the Malle Fowl maintains a constant temperature of seventy-eight
degrees Fahrenheit inside the mound regardless of whether it is hot or
cold outside.
Nobody knows why a bird called the Grebe should pluck out its
feathers to eat them and feed their young with them. The same Grebe
while floating in water can, by some unknown means, reduce its own
specific gravity at the sight of a predator so that it floats with only its
head above the water.
We all know of the amazing sense of direction of the migratory
birds, the hunting prowess of eagles and falcons, the vultures' keen
sense of smell, and the enchanting gift of singing possessed by
numerous birds. It is for this reason that I have been wanting for some
time to devote a little more time to the study of birds. How much can a
birth be taught beyond its innate skills? It is possible to instill human
knowledge and intelligence in one? Can a machine be constructed to
do this?

September 20
I believe in the simple method, so my machine will be a simple one. It
will consist of two sections: one will be a cage to house the bird; the
other will transmit intelligence to the bird's brain by means of
electrodes.
For the past month I have been carefully studying the birds
which come into my laboratory for food. Apart from the ubiquitous
crows and sparrows and shaliks, birds such as pigeons, doves,
parakeets, and bulbuls also come. Amongst all these, one particular
bird has caught my attention, a crow. Not the jet black raven, but the
ordinary crow. I can easily make him out from the other crows. Apart
from the tiny white spot below the right eye which makes him easily
recognizable, his behaviour, too, marks him out from other crows. For
instance, I have never seen a crow hold a pencil in its beak and make
marks on the table with it. Yesterday he did something which really
shook me. I was working on my machine when I heard a soft rasping
noise. I turned round and saw that the crow had taken a matchstick
from a half-open matchbox and, holding it in his beak, was scraping it
against the side of the box. When I shooed him away, he flew across,
sat on the window and proceeded to utter some staccato sounds
which bore no resemblance to the normal cawing of a crow. In fact, for
a minute I thought the crow was laughing!
September 27
I finished assembling my Ornithon machine today. The crow has been
in the lab since morning, eating breadcrumbs and hopping from
window to window. As soon as I placed the cage on the table and
opened the door, the crow flew over and hopped inside, a sure sign
that he is extremely eager to learn. Since a familiarity with language is
essential for the bird to follow my instructions, I have started with
simple Bengali lessons. All the lessons being pre-recorded, all I have
to do is press buttons. Different lessons are in different channels, and
each channel bears a different number. I have noticed a strange
thing; as soon as I press a button the crow's eyes close and his
movements cease. For a bird as restless as a crow this is unusual
indeed.
A conference of ornithologists is being held in November in
Santiago, the capital of Chile. I have written to my ornithologist friend
Rufus Grenfell in Minnesota. If my feathered friend is able to acquire
some human intelligence, I should like to take him to the conference
for a lecture-demonstration.

October 4
Corvus is the Latin name for the genus crow. I have started calling my
pupil by that name. In the beginning he used to answer my call by a
turn of the head in my direction, new he responds vocally. For the first
time I heard a crow saying 'ki' (what?) instead of 'caw'. But I don't
expect speech will ever be his forte. Corvus will never turn into a
talking crow. Whatever intelligence he acquires will show in his
actions.
Corvus is learning English now; if I do go aboard for a
demonstration, English would help. Lessons last an hour between
eight and nine in the morning. The rest of the day he hangs around
the lab. In the evening he still prefers to go back to the mango tree in
the north-east corner of my garden.
Newton seems to have accepted Corvus. After what happened
today, I shouldn't be surprised if they end up friends. It happened in
the afternoon. Corvus for once was away somewhere, I sat in the
armchair scribbling in my notebook, and Newton was curled up on
the floor alongside when a flapping sound made me turn towards the
window. It was Corvus. He had just come in with a freshly cut piece of
fish in his beak. He dropped it in front of Newton, went back to the
window, and sat surveying the scene with little twists of his neck.
Grenfell has replied to my letter. He says he is arranging to have
me invited to the ornithologists' conference.

October 20
Unexpected progress in the last two weeks. With a pencil held in his
beak, Corvus is now writing English words and numerals. The paper
is placed on the table, and Corvus writes standing on it. He wrote his
own name in capital letters: C-O-R-V-U-S. He can do simple addition
and subtraction, write down the capital of England when asked to ,
and can even write my name. Three days ago I taught him the months,
days, and dates: when asked what day of the week it was today, he
wrote in clear letters: F-R-I-D-A-Y.
That Corvus is clever in his eating habits too was proved today.
I had kept some pieces of toast on one plate and some guava jelly on
another in front of him; each time he put a piece in his month, he
smeared some jelly on it first with his beak.

October 22
I had clear proof today that Corvus now wants to stay away from other
crows. There was a heavy shower and after an earsplitting
thunderclap I looked out of the window and saw the simul tree outside
my garden smouldering. In the afternoon, after the rain stopped,
there was a tremendous hue and cry set up by the neighbourhood
crows who had all gathered around the simul tree. I sent my servant
Prahlad to investigate. He came back and said, 'Sir, There's a deed
crow lying at the foot of the tree; that's why there is such excitement.' I
realized the crow had been struck lightning. But strangely enough,
Corvus didn't leave my room at all. He held a pencil in his beak and
was absorbed in writing the prime numbers: 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 11, 13 . . .

November 7
Corvus can now be proudly displayed in scientific circles. Birds can
be taught to do small things, but a bird as intelligent and educated as
Corvus is unique in history. The Ornithon has done its job well.
Questions which can be answered in a few words, or with the help of
numbers, on subjects as diverse as mathematics, history, geography
and the natural sciences, Corvus is now able to answer. Along with
that Corvus has spontaneously acquired what can only be termed
human intelligence, something which has never been associated with
birds. I shall give an example. I was packing my suitcase this morning
in preparation for my trip to Santiago. As I finished and closed the lid,
I found Corvus standing by with the key in his beak.
Another letter from Grenfell yesterday. He is already in
Santiago. The organizers of the conference are looking forward to my
visit. Till now these conferences have only dealt with birds in the
abstract; never has a live bird been used as an illustration. The paper
I have written is based on the priceless knowledge I have gathered in
the last two months about bird behaviour. Corvus will be there in
person to silence my critics.

November 10
I'm writing this on the plane to South America. I have only one
incident to relate. As we were about to leave the house, I found Corvus
greatly agitated and obviously anxious to get out of the cage. I couldn't
make out the reason for this; nevertheless, I opened the cage door.
Corvus hopped out, flew over to my desk and started pecking
furiously at the drawer. I opened it and found my passport still lying
in it.
I have had a new kind of cage built for Corvus. It maintains the
temperature that best suits the bird. For his food, I have prepared tiny
globules which are both tasty and nutritious. Corvus has aroused
everyone's curiosity on the plane as they have probably never seen a
pet crow before. I haven't told anyone about the uniqueness of my pet
I prefer to keep it secret. Corvus too, probably sensing this, is
behaving like any ordinary crow.

November 14
Hotel Excelsior, Santiago, 11 pm. I have been too busy these last
couple of days to write. Let me first describe what happened at the
lecture, then I shall come to the disconcerting events of a little while
ago. To cut a long story short, my lecture has been another feather in
my cap. My paper took half an hour to read; then followed an hour's
demonstration with the crow. I had released Corvus from the cage and
put him down on the table as soon as I ascended the podium. It was a
long mahogany table behind which sat the organizers of the
conference, while I stood to one side speaking into the microphone. As
long as spoke, Corvus listened with the utmost attention, with
occasional nods to suggest that he was getting the drift of my talk. To
the applause that followed my speech, Corvus made his own
contribution by beating a tattoo with his beak on the surface of the
table.
The demonstration that followed gave Corvus no respite. All
that he had learnt in the past two months he now demonstrated to the
utter amazement of the delegates who all agreed that they had never
imagined a bird could be capable of such intelligent behaviour. The
evening edition of the local newspaper Correro de Santiago splashed
the news on the front page with a picture of Corvus holding a pencil in
his beak.
After the meeting, Grenfell and I went on a sight-seeing tour of
Santiago with the chairman Signor Covarrubias. It is a bustling,
elegant metropolis to the east of which the Andes range stands like a
wall between Chile and Argentina. After an hour's drive Covarrubias
turned to me and said, 'You must have noticed in our programme that
we have made various arrangements for the entertainment of our
delegates. I should particularly like to recommend the show this
evening by the Chilean magician Argus. His specialty is that he uses a
lot of trained birds in his repertory.'
I was intrigued, so Grenfell and I have been to the Plaza theatre
to watch Senor Argus. It is true that he uses a lot of birds. Ducks,
Parrots, Pigeons, hens, a four-foot-high crane, a flock of humming
birds all these Argus deploys with much evidence of careful training.
But none of these birds comes anywhere near Corvus. Frankly, I
found the magician himself far more interesting than his birds. Over
six feet tall, he has a parrot-like nose, and his hair, parted in the
middle, is slick and shiny as a new gramophone record. He wears
spectacles so high-powered that they turn his pupils into a pair of tiny
black dots, and out of the sleeves of his jet-black coat emerges a pair
of hands whose pale, tapering fingers cast a spell on the audience
with their sinuous movements. Not that the conjuring was of a high
order, but the conjuror's presence and personality were well worth
the price of admission. As I came out of the theatre, I remarked to
Grenfell that it wouldn't be a bad idea to show Senor Argus some of
Corrvus's tricks now that he had shown us his.
Dinner was followed by excellent Chilean coffee and a stroll in
the hotel garden with Grenfell. It was past ten when I returned to my
room. I changed into my nightclothes, put out the lamp and was
about to turn in when the phone rang.
'Senor Shonku?'
'Yes -'
'I'm calling from the reception. Sorry to trouble you at this hour,
sir, but there's a gentleman here who is most anxious to see you.'
I said I was too tired to see anybody, and that it would be better
if the gentleman could make an appointment over the phone next
morning. I was sure it was a reporter. I had already been interviewed
by four of them. Some of the questions they asked tried the patience of
even a placid person like me. For instance, one of them asked if crows
too, like cows, were held sacred in India!
The receptionist spoke to the caller and came back to me.
'Senor Shonku, the gentlemen says he wants only five minutes
of your time. He has another engagement tomorrow morning.'
'This person is he reporter?' I asked.
'No Sir. He is the famous Chilean Magician Argus.'
When I heard the name, I was left with no choice but to ask him
to come up. I turned on the bedside lamp. Three minutes later the
buzzer sounded.
The man who confronted me when I opened the door had
seemed like a six-footer on stage; now he looked a good six inches
taller. In fact, I had never seen anyone so tall before. Even when he
bowed he remained a foot taller than me.
I asked him in. He had discarded his stage costume and was
now dressed in an ordinary suit, but this one too was back. When he
entered, I saw the evening edition of the Correro sticking out of his
pocket. We took our seats after I had congratulated him on his
performance. “As far as I can recall, I said, 'there was a gifted person
in Greek mythology who had eyes all over his body and who was called
Argus. An apt name for a magician, I think.'
Argus smiled, 'Then I'm sure you also remember that this
person had some connection with birds.'
I nodded, 'The Greek goodness Hera had plucked out Argus's
eyes and planted them on the peacock's tail which is supposed to
account for the circular markings on the tail. But what I'm curious
about are your eyes. 'What is the power of your glasses?'
'Minus twenty', he replied. 'But that doesn't bother me . None of
my birds are short-sighted.'
Argus laughed loudly at his own joke, then suddenly froze
open-mouthed. His eyes had strayed to the plastic cage kept on a shelf
in a corner of the room. Corvus was asleep when I came in, but was
now wide-awake and staring fixedly at the magician.
Argus, his mouth still open, left his chair and tiptoed towards
the cage. He stared at the crow for a full minute. Then he said, 'Ever
since I read about him in the evening papers, I've been anxious to
meet you. I haven't had the privilege of hearing you speak. I'm not an
ornithologist, you know, but I too train birds.'
The magician looked worried as he returned to his seat. 'I can
well appreciate how tired you must be,' he said, 'but if you could just
let your bird out of the cage. . . just one sample of his intelligence. . .'
I said, 'It's not just I who is tired; Corvus is too. I shall open the
cage door for you, but the rest is up to the bird. I can't force him to do
anything against his wish.'
'All right, fair enough.'
I opened the cage door. Corvus came out, flapped up to the
bedside table, and with an unerring peck of his beak, switched off the
lamp.
The room was plunged into darkness. Intermittent flashes of
pale green light from the neon sign of the Hotel Metropole across the
street glared through the open window. I sat silent. Corvus flew back
to his cage and pulled the door shut with his beak.
The green light played rhythmically across Argus's face making
his snake-like eyes look even more reptilian through the thick lenses
of his gold-rimmed spectacles. I could see that he was struck dumb
with amazement, and that he could read the meaning behind
Corvus's action. Corvus wanted to rest. He didn't want light in the
room. He wanted darkness; he wanted to sleep.
From under his thin moustache a soft whisper escaped his lips
'Magnifico!' He had brought his hands below his chin with his palms
pressed together in a gesture of frozen applause.
Now I noticed his nails. They were unusually long and shiny. He
had used nail polish silver nail polish the kind that would under
glaring stage lights heighten the play of his fingers. The green light
was now reflected again and again on those silver nails.
'I want that crow!'
Argus spoke in English in a hoarse whisper. All this time he had
been speaking in Spanish. Although, as I write this down, I realize
that it probably sounds like unashamed greed, but in fact Argus was
pleading with me.
'I want that crow!' Argus repeated.
I regarded him in silence. There was no need to say anything
just now. I waited instead to hear what else he had to say.
Argus had been looking out of the window. Now he turned to
me. I was fascinated by the alternation of darkness and light on his
face. Now he was there, now he wasn't. Like magic again.
Argus moved his fingers and pointed them at himself.
'Look at me, Professor. I am Argus, I am the world's greatest
magician. In every city of North and South America, anyone who
knows about magic knows me. Men, women and children they all
know me. Next month I go on a world tour. Rome, Madrid, Paris,
London, Athens. Stockholm, Tokyo. . . Every city will acclaim my
genius. But do you know what can make my wonderful magic a
thousand times more wonderful? It is that crow that Indian crow. I
want that bird, Professor, I want that bird! I do. . .'
As Argus spoke, he waved his hands before my eyes like snakes
swaying to a charmer's flute, his silver nails catching the green light
from the neon flashing on and off. I couldn't help being amused. If it
had been anyone else in my place, Argus would have accomplished
his object and got his hands on the bird. I now had to tell Argus that
his plan wouldn't work with me.
I said: 'Mr Argus, you're wasting your time. It is useless to try to
hypnotise me. I cannot accede to your request. Corvus is not only my
pupil, he is like a son to me, and a friend a product of my tireless
effort and experiment.'
'Professor!' Argus's voice was much sharper now, but he
softened it the very next moment and said, 'Professor, do you realise
that I am a millionaire? Do you know that I own a fifty room mansion
in the eastern end of this city? That I have twenty-six servants and
four Cadillacs? Nothing is too expensive for me, Professor. For that
bird I am willing to pay you ten thousand escudos right now.'
Ten thousand escudos meant about fifteen thousand rupees.
Argus did not know that just as expenses meant nothing to him,
money itself meant nothing to me. I told him so. Argus made one last
attempt.
“You're an Indian. Don't you believe in mystic connections?
Argus Corvus. . . how well the two names go together! Don't you
realise that the crow was fated to belong to me?'
I couldn't bear with him any more. I stood up and said, 'Mr.
Argus, you can keep your cars, houses, wealth and fame to yourself.
Corvus is staying with me. His training is not over yet, I still have
work left to do. I am extremely tired today. You had asked for five
minutes of my time, and I have given you twenty. I can't give you any
more. I want to sleep now and so does my bird. Therefore, good-night.'
I must say I felt faint stirrings of pity at the abject look on his
face; but I didn't let them surface. Argus bowed once again in
continental style and, muttering good-night in Spanish, left the room.
I closed the door and went to the cage to find Corvus still awake.
Looking at me, he uttered the single syllable 'kay' (who?) in a tone
which clearly suggested a question.
'A mad magician,' I told him, 'with more money than is good for
him. He wanted to buy you off, but I turned him down. So you may
sleep in peace.'

November 16
I wanted to record the events of yesterday last night, but it took me the
better part of the night to get over the shock.
The way in which the day began held no hint of impending
danger. In the morning there was a session of the conference in which
the only notable event was the stupendously boring extempore
speech by the Japanese ornithologist Morimoto. After speaking for an
hour or so, Morimoto suddenly lost the thread of his argument and
started groping for words. It was at this point that Corvus, whom I had
taken with me, decided to start an applause by rapping with his beak
on the arm of my chair. This caused the entire audience to burst out
laughing, thus putting me in an acutely embarrassing position.
In he afternoon there was lunch in the hotel with some
delegates. Before going there, I went to my room, number 71, put
Corvus into the cage gave him some food and said, 'You stay here. I'm
going down to eat.'
The obedient Corvus didn't demur.
By the time I finished lunch and came up, it was two thirty. As I
inserted the key into the lock , cold fear gripped me. The door was
already open. I burst into the room and found my worst fears
confirmed: Corvus and his cage were gone.
I was back in the corridor in a flash. Two suites down was the
room-boys' enclosure. I rushed in there and found the two of them
standing mutely with glazed looks in their eyes. It was clear that they
had both been hypnotized.
I now ran to 107 Grenfell's room. I told him every thing and we
went down to the reception together. 'No one had asked us for your
room keys, sir,' said the clerk. 'The room-boys have the duplicate
keys. They might have given them to some one.'
The room-boys didn't have to give the keys to anyone. Argus
had cast his spell over them and helped himself to the keys. In the end
we got the real story from the concierge. He said Argus had arrived
half an hour earlier in a silver Cadillac and gone into the hotel. Ten
minutes later he had come out carrying a cellophane bag, got into his
car and driven off.
A silver Cadillac. But where had Argus gone from here? Home?
Or somewhere else?
We were now obliged to turn to Covarrubias for help. He said, 'I
can find out for you in a minute where Argus lives; but how will that
help? He is hardly likely to have gone home. He must have gone into
hiding somewhere with your crow. But if he wants to leave the city,
there's only one road leading out. I can fix up a good car and driver
and police personnel to go with you. But time is short. You must be
out in half an hour and take the highway. If you're lucky, you may still
find him.'
We were off by three fifteen. Before leaving I made a phone call
from the hotel and found out that Argus had not returned home. We
went in a police car with two armed policemen. One of them, a young
fellow named Carreras, turned out to be quite well-informed about
Argus. He said Argus had several hideouts in and around Santiago;
that he had at one time hobnobbed with gypsies, and that he had been
giving magic shows from the age of nineteen. About four years ago he
had decided to include birds in his repertory, and this had given his
popularity a great boost.
I asked Carreras if Argus was really a millionaire.
'So it would seem,' Carreras replied. 'But the man's a tightwad,
and trusts nobody. That's why he has few friends left.'
As we left the city and hit the highway we ran into a small
problem. The highway branched into two one led north to Los Andes,
and the other west to the port of Valparaiso. There was a petrol station
near the mouth of the fork. We asked one of the attendants there and
he said, 'A silver Cadillac? Senor Argus's Cadillac? Sure, I saw it take
the road to Valparaiso a little while ago.'
We shot off in pursuit. I knew Corvus would not come to any
harm as Argus needed him badly. But Corvus's behaviour last night
had clearly indicated that he hadn't liked the magician at all. So it
pained me to think how unhappy he must be in the clutches of his
captor.
We came across two more petrol stations on the way, and both
confirmed that they had seen Argus's Cadillac pass that way earlier.
I am an optimist. I have emerged unscathed from many a tight
corner in the past. To this day none of my ventures has ever been a
failure. But Grenfell, sitting by my side, kept shaking his head and
saying, 'Don't forget, Shonku, that you're up against a fiendishly
clever man. Now that he's got his hands on Corvus, it's not going to be
easy for you to get your bird back.'
'And Senor Argus may be armed,' added Carreras. 'I've known
him use real revolvers in his acts.”
The highway sloped downwards. From Santiago's elevation of
1,600 feet we were now down to a thousand. Behind us the mountain
range was becoming progressively hazier. We had already done forty
miles; another forty and we would be in Valparaiso. Grenfell's glum
countenance was already beginning to make a dent in my armour of
optimism. If we did not find Argus on the highway, we would have to
look for him in the city, and it would then be a hundred times more
difficult to track him down.
The road now rose sharply. Nothing could be seen beyond the
hump. We sped along, topped the rise, and saw the road ahead dipped
gently down as far as the eye could see. A few trees dotted its sides; a
village could be made out in the distance; buffaloes grazed in a field.
Not a human being in sight anywhere. But what was that up ahead? It
was still quite far away, whatever it was. At least a quarter? It was still
quite far away, whatever it was. At least a quarter of a mile.
Not more than four hundred yards away now. A car gleaming in
the sunlight, parked at an angle by the roadside.
We drew nearer.
A Cadillac! A silver Cadillac!
Our Mercedes drew up alongside. Now we could see what had
happened: the car had swerved and dashed against a tree. Its front
was all smashed up.
'It is Senor Argus's car,' said Carreras. 'There is only one other
silver Cadillac in Santiago. It belongs to the banker, Senor Galdames.
I can recognize this one by its number.'
The car was there; but where was Argus?
What was that next to the driver's seat?
I poked my head through the window. It was Corvus's cage. Its
key was in my pocket. I hadn't locked it that afternoon merely put the
door to. Corvus had obviously come out of the cage by himself. But
after that?
Suddenly we heard someone scream in the distance. Carreras
and the other policeman raised their weapons, but our driver turned
out to be a milksop. He dropped on his knees and started to pray.
Grenfell's face had fallen too. 'Magicians as a tribe make me most
uncomfortable,' he groaned. I said, 'I think you'd better stay in the
car.'
The screams came closer. They seemed to be coming from
behind some bushes a little way ahead to the left of the road. It took
me some time to recognize the voice, because last night it had been
dropped to a hoarse whisper. It was the voice of Argus. He was
pouring out a string of abuse in Spanish. I clearly heard 'devil' in
Spanish a couple of times along with the name of my bird.
'Where is that devil of a bird? Corvus! Corvus! Damn that bird
to hell! Damn him!'
Suddenly Argus stopped, for he had seen us. We could see him
too. He stood with a revolver in each hand near some bushes some
thirty yards away.
Carreras shouted, 'Lower your weapons, Senor Argus, or '
With an earsplitting sound a bullet came crashing into the door
of our Mercedes. This was followed by three more shots, the bullets
whizzing over our heads. Carreras now raised his voice threateningly.
'Senor Argus, we are fully armed. We are the police. If you don't drop
your guns, will be forced to hurt you.'
'Hurt me?' moaned Argus in a hoarse voice. 'You are the police?
I can't see anything!'
Argus was now within ten yards of us. Now I realized his plight.
He had lost his spectacles, and that is why he was shooting at
random.
Argus now threw down his weapons and came stumbling
forward. The policemen advanced towards him. I knew that none of
Argus' tricks would work in this crisis. He was in a pitiful state.
Carreras retrieved the revolvers from the ground, while Argus kept
groaning, 'That bird is gone that Indian crow! That devil of a bird! But
how damnably clever!'
Grenfell had been trying to say something for some time. Now at
last I could make out what he was saying.
'Shonku, that bird is here.'
what did he mean? I couldn't see Corvus anywhere.
Grenfell pointed to the top of a bare acacia tree across the road.
I looked up - and sure enough there he was: my friend, my
pupil, my dear old Corvus, perched on the topmost branch of the tree
and looking down at us calmly.
I beckoned, and he swooped gracefully down like a free-floating
kite and alighted on the roof Mercedes. Then, carefully, as if he was
fully aware of its worth, he placed before us the object he had been
carrying in his beak: Argus's high powered, gold-rimmed spectacles.

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