Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Sparrow: I'd rather starve than bite you.

Sparrow: I'd rather starve than bite you.

When I saw off the last guest yesterday, I looked at my watch. The time was 5: 49. Dark, calm and warm; According to the weather forecast, dust and strong winds of magnitude 4 or 5 didn't come. Sometimes it's a bad thing not to see the weather forecast.

Dozens of sparrows are twittering on Parthenocissus tricuspidata, not as loud as in summer. But from the sound, these sparrows don't look hungry. They are just waiting to have a rest after dark.

Sparrows are the first bird known to almost everyone, and can be found everywhere on the earth. I have been to Xisha Islands in my early years. On the most remote island, I can also see it busy all day. I wonder how their ancestors crossed the ocean and settled here.

The first impression a sparrow gives is always a dusty face. In fact, it's quite handsome when you look closely: neutral skin color, round skull and stout figure. They joined in droves, roared and roared away; In the city, sparrows have the strongest adaptability when they meet people.

In primary school, there was no place to buy birds in Beijing. I have always wanted to catch a sparrow to play with. I built a laundry basket with a stick, threw the bait, and dragged the rope on the stick at a distance, imagining that the sparrow would jump into the trap. At this time, sparrows are more delicate than people, picking up rice grains around the laundry list and never crossing the line, which is disappointing. Then one day, I found that when the balcony door of the kitchen was opened, I could see sparrows sticking out through the glass of the kitchen door. I immediately set up a mechanism to carefully spread the rice grains into a line and lure the sparrows into the bait step by step. That day, when I opened the balcony door and caught a sparrow, I realized the significance that birds feed for the sky.

Sparrows are too angry to eat or drink. This is a hard bone. I am reluctant to let it go, because I am young and ignorant, and I expect it to yield and live parasitically. But I was wrong. Sparrows have their own philosophy of life, and they would rather die than surrender, which makes me think it is very moral.