His
First Flight By Liam O’Flaherty (Source TN Textbook)
The
young seagull was alone on his ledge. His two brothers and his sister had already flown away
the day before. He had been afraid to fly with them. Somehow, when he had taken
a little run forward to the brink of the ledge and attempted to flap his wings,
he became afraid. The great expanse of sea stretched down beneath, and it was
such a long way down – miles down. He felt certain that his wings would never support
him; so he bent his head and ran away back to the little hole under the ledge
where he slept at night.
Even
when each of his brothers and his little sister, whose wings were far shorter than
his own, ran to the brink, flapped their wings, and flew away, he failed to
muster up courage to take that plunge which appeared to him so desperate. His
father and mother had come around calling to him shrilly,
scolding him, threatening to let him starve on his ledge, unless he flew away.
But for the life of him, he could not move.
That was twenty-four hours ago. Since then,
nobody had come near him. The day before, all day long, he had watched his
parents flying about with his brothers and sister, perfecting them in the art
of flight, teaching them how to skim the waves and how to dive for fish. He
had, in fact, seen his older brother catch his first herring and devour it, standing on a
rock, while his parents circled around raising a proud cackle. And all the
morning, the whole family had walked about on the big plateau midway down the
opposite cliff, laughing at his cowardice.
The sun was now ascending the sky, blazing
warmly on his ledge that faced the south. He felt the heat because he had not eaten
since the previous nightfall. Then, he had found a dried piece of mackerel’s tail at the far end of his ledge. Now,
there was not a single scrap of
food left. He had searched every inch, rooting among the rough, dirt-caked straw nest where he
and his brothers and sister had been hatched. He even gnawed at the dried pieces
of eggshell. It was like eating a part of himself.
He then trotted
back and forth from one end of the ledge to the other, his long gray legs
stepping daintily, trying to find some means of reaching his parents without
having to fly. But on each side of him, the ledge ended in a sheer fall of
precipice, with the sea beneath. And between him and his parents,
there was a deep,
wide crack.
Surely he could reach them without flying
if he could only move northwards along the cliff face? But then, on what could
he walk? There was no ledge, and he was not a fly. And above him, he could see nothing.
The precipice was sheer, and the top of it was, perhaps, farther away than the
sea beneath him.
He
stepped slowly out to the brink of the ledge, and, standing on one leg with the
other leg hidden under his wing, he closed one eye, then the other, and
pretended to be falling asleep. Still, they took no notice of him. He saw his
two brothers and his sister lying on the plateau dozing, with their heads sunk
into their necks. His father was preening the feathers on his white
back. Only his mother was looking at him.
She was standing on a little high hump on
the plateau, her white breast thrust forward. Now and again, she tore at a
piece of fish that lay at her feet, and then scraped each side of her beak on
the rock.The sight of the food maddened him. How he loved to tear food that
way, scraping his beak now and again to whet it! He uttered a low cackle. His mother cackled too, and looked
at him.
‘Ga,
ga, ga,’ he cried, begging her to bring him over some food. ‘Gawl-ool-ah,’ she
screamed back mockingly. But he kept calling plaintively, and after a minute or so, he uttered
a joyful scream. His mother had picked up a piece of fish and was flying across
to him with it. He leaned out eagerly, tapping the rock with his feet, trying to
get nearer to her as she flew across. But when she was just opposite to him,
abreast of the ledge, she halted, her legs hanging limp, her wings motionless, the
piece of fish in her beak almost within reach of his beak.
He waited a moment in surprise, wondering
why she did not come nearer, and then maddened by hunger, he dived at the fish.
With a loud scream, he fell outwards and downwards into space. His mother had swooped upwards. As he passed
beneath her, he heard the swish of her wings.
Then a monstrous terror seized him and his
heart stood still. He could hear nothing. But it only lasted a moment. The next
moment, he felt his wings spread outwards. The wind rushed against his breast feathers,
then under his stomach and against his wings. He could feel the tips of his
wings cutting through the air. He was not falling headlong now. He was soaring
gradually, downwards and outwards. He was no longer afraid. He just felt a bit
dizzy. Then, he flapped his wings once and he soared upwards.
He uttered a joyous scream and flapped
them again. He soared higher. He raised his breast and banked against the wind.
‘Ga, ga, ga. Ga, ga, ga.’ ‘Gawloolah.’ His mother swooped past him, her wings making
a loud noise. He answered her with another scream. Then, his father flew over
him screaming. Then, he saw his two brothers and sister flying around him, soaring
and diving.
Then, he completely forgot that he had not
always been able to fly, and commenced to dive and soar, shrieking shrilly.
He was near the sea now, flying straight
over it, facing out over the ocean. He saw a vast green sea beneath him, with little
ridges moving over it; he turned his beak sideways and crowed amusedly. His
parents and his brothers and sister had landed on this green floor in front of him.
They were beckoning to
him, calling shrilly. He dropped his legs to stand on the green sea. His legs
sank into it. He screamed with fright and attempted to rise again, flapping his
wings. But he was tired and weak with hunger and he could not rise exhausted by
the strange exercise. His feet sank into the green sea, and then his belly touched
it and he sank no farther. He was floating on it. And around him, his family
was screaming, praising him, and their beaks were offering him scraps of
dog-fish.
He had made his first flight.
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