Larks as food Larks, commonly consumed with bones intact, have historically been considered wholesome, delicate, and light game. They can be used in a number of dishes; for example, they can be stewed, broiled, or used as filling in a meat pie. Lark's tongues are reputed to have been particularly highly valued as a delicacy. In modern times, shrinking habitats made lark meat rare and hard to come by, though it can still be found in restaurants in Italy and elsewhere in southern Europe. and
Shakespeare's
Sonnet 29, "the lark at break of day arising / From sullen earth, sings hymns at heaven's gate" (11–12). The lark is also (often simultaneously) associated with "lovers and lovers' observance" (as in
Bernart de Ventadorn's
Can vei la lauzeta mover) and with "church services". These meanings of daybreak and religious reference can be combined, as in
Blake's
Visions of the Daughters of Albion, into a "spiritual daybreak" to signify "passage from Earth to Heaven and from Heaven to Earth". With Renaissance painters such as
Domenico Ghirlandaio, the lark symbolizes
Christ, with reference to
John 16:16.
Literature Percy Bysshe Shelley's famed 1820 poem "
To a Skylark" was inspired by the melodious song of a skylark during an evening walk. English poet
George Meredith wrote a poem titled "
The Lark Ascending" in 1881. Gerard Manley Hopkins wrote a poem entitled “The Sea and the Skylark” in 1877. In
Mervyn Peake's
Titus Groan, first book of the
Gormenghast trilogy, "Swelter approache[s]
[Lord Sepulchrave] with a
salver of toasted larks" during the reception following newborn
Titus's christening. Canadian poet
John McCrae mentions larks in his poem "
In Flanders Fields".
Music English composer
Ralph Vaughan Williams wrote a musical setting of George Meredith's poem, completed in 1914. It was composed for violin and piano, and entitled
The Lark Ascending - A Romance. The work received its first performance in December 1920. Soon afterwards the composer arranged it for violin and orchestra, in which version it was first performed in June 1921, and this is how the work remains best-known today. The old Welsh folk song
Marwnad yr Ehedydd (The Lark's Elegy) refers to the death of "the Lark", possibly as a coded reference to the Welsh leader
Owain Glyndŵr. The French-Canadian folk song
Alouette refers to plucking feathers from a lark.
Pet Traditionally, larks are kept as
pets in China. In Beijing, larks are taught to mimic the voice of other songbirds and animals. A traditional habit of the Beijingers to teach their larks 13 kinds of sounds in a strict order (called "the 13 songs of a lark", Chinese: 百灵十三套). The larks that can sing the full 13 sounds in the correct order are highly valued, while any disruption in the songs will decrease their value significantly.
Early awakening Larks sing early in the day, often before dawn, leading to the expression "up with the lark" for a person who is awake early in the day, and the term
lark being applied to someone who habitually rises early in the morning. ==See also==