The
the
The bird will fight where its fear is at. Macduff’s wife asks her son how he will live since his father is dead. His son says he will live like a bird. Macduff’s wife makes a comment about birds that seem to be pitying and envying them at the same time. “Poor bird, thou’dst never fear the net nor lime, /
Then they saw the condition the pheasants were in, as the author puts it, "They looked like unborn birds glazed in egg whites.” Which made the boys believe that the pheasants were innocent and that they could not do such a thing to something as fragile. When they saw the pheasants condition they decided to give the pheasant their coats, “He covered two of the crouching pheasants with his coat, rounding the back of it over them like a shell.” The pheasants were too fragile to hurt them, and they thought that they couldn’t do