![]() When she starts training her own goshawk, Mabel, Helen realizes her reasons for choosing the gos, the wildest and most difficult to train bird (the way she chose to grieve for her father), are very similar to that of White. She comes to know his personality, character as she pursues to read about him. Her childhood admiration of White later turns into almost disgust as she learns how much he didn't know about training a hawk and how many mistakes he made while training his gos. She read his book about his goshawk when she was 8-9 yrs old, and then later again in life, when she becomes a falconer. ![]() The author feels falconers were the cause of saving the hawks from perishing.ΔΆ. Many falconers would order two birds from other European countries, one to train and the other to set it free in the wild. But in the case of hawks, it was the humans who turned around the dwindling population of the hawks in England. ![]() We know that humans are cause of destruction of eco system and of many species. ![]()
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