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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Birds and Bees, by John Burroughs
+ </title>
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Birds and Bees, Sharp Eyes and, Other Papers, by
+John Burroughs
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Birds and Bees, Sharp Eyes and, Other Papers
+
+Author: John Burroughs
+
+Commentator: Mary E. Burt
+
+Release Date: January 17, 2009 [EBook #3163]
+Last Updated: February 1, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIRDS AND BEES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Patricia C. Franks, Lisa Carter, Danette Dulny,
+Charles Duvall, Cheri Ripley, Cheryl Sullivan, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ BIRDS AND BEES <br /><br /> SHARP EYES <br /><br /> AND OTHER PAPERS
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By John Burroughs
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ With An Introduction By Mary E. Burt
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ And A Biographical Sketch
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>BIRDS.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> BIRD ENEMIES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE TRAGEDIES OF THE NESTS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> <b>BEES.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> AN IDYL OF THE HONEY-BEE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE PASTORAL BEES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> <b>SHARP EYES AND OTHER PAPERS</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> SHARP EYES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE APPLE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> A TASTE OF MAINE BIRCH. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> WINTER NEIGHBORS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_NOTE"> <b>NOTES BY THE WAY.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> I. THE WEATHER-WISE MUSKRAT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> II. CHEATING THE SQUIRRELS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> III. FOX AND HOUND. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> IV. THE WOODCHUCK </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nature chose the spring of the year for the time of John Burroughs's
+ birth. A little before the day when the wake-robin shows itself, that the
+ observer might be on hand for the sight, he was born in Roxbury, Delaware
+ County, New York, on the western borders of the Catskill Mountains; the
+ precise date was April 3, 1837. Until 1863 he remained in the country
+ about his native place, working on his father's farm, getting his
+ schooling in the district school and neighboring academies, and taking his
+ turn also as teacher. As he himself has hinted, the originality,
+ freshness, and wholesomeness of his writings are probably due in great
+ measure to the unliterary surroundings of his early life, which allowed
+ his mind to form itself on unconventional lines, and to the later
+ companionships with unlettered men, which kept him in touch with the
+ sturdy simplicities of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the very beginnings of his taste for literature, the essay was his
+ favorite form. Dr. Johnson was the prophet of his youth, but he soon
+ transferred his allegiance to Emerson, who for many years remained his
+ "master enchanter." To cure himself of too close an imitation of the
+ Concord seer, which showed itself in his first magazine article,
+ Expression, he took to writing his sketches of nature, and about this time
+ he fell in with the writings of Thoreau, which doubtless confirmed and
+ encouraged him in this direction. But of all authors and of all men, Walt
+ Whitman, in his personality and as a literary force, seems to have made
+ the profoundest impression upon Mr. Burroughs, though doubtless Emerson
+ had a greater influence on his style of writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Expression appeared in The Atlantic Monthly in 1860, and most of his
+ contributions to literature have been in the form of papers first
+ published in the magazines, and afterwards collected into books. He more
+ than once paid tribute to his teachers in literature. His first book, now
+ out of print, was Notes on Walt Whitman, as Poet and Person, published in
+ 1867; and Whitman: A Study, which appeared in 1896, is a more extended
+ treatment of the man and his poetry and philosophy. Birds and Poets, too,
+ contains a paper on Whitman, entitled The Flight of the Eagle, besides an
+ essay on Emerson, whom he also treated incidentally in his paper, Matthew
+ Arnold on Emerson and Carlyle, in Indoor Studies; and the latter volume
+ contains his essay on Thoreau.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the autumn of 1863 he went to Washington, and in the following January
+ entered the Treasury Department. He was for some years an assistant in the
+ office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and later chief of the
+ organization division of that Bureau. For some time he was keeper of one
+ of the vaults, and for a great part of the day his only duty was to be at
+ his desk. In these leisure hours his mind traveled off into the country,
+ where his previous life had been spent, and with the help of his pen,
+ always a faithful friend and magician, he lived over again those happy
+ days, now happier still with the glamour of all past pleasures. In this
+ way he wrote Wake-Robin and a part of Winter Sunshine. It must not be
+ supposed, however, that he was deprived of outdoor pleasures while at
+ Washington. On the contrary, he enjoyed many walks in the suburbs of the
+ capital, and in those days the real country came up to the very edges of
+ the city. His Spring at the Capital, Winter Sunshine, A March Chronicle,
+ and other papers bear the fruit of his life on the Potomac. He went to
+ England in 1871 on business for the Treasury Department, and again on his
+ own account a dozen years later. The record of the two visits is to be
+ found mainly in his chapters on An October Abroad, contained in the volume
+ Winter Sunshine, and in the papers gathered into the volume Fresh Fields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He resigned his place in the Treasury in 1873, and was appointed receiver
+ of a broken national bank. Later, until 1885, his business occupation was
+ that of a National Bank Examiner. An article contributed by him to The
+ Century Magazine for March, 1881, on Broken Banks and Lax Directors, is
+ perhaps the only literary outcome of this occupation, but the keen powers
+ of observation, trained in the field of nature, could not fail to disclose
+ themselves in analyzing columns of figures. After leaving Washington Mr.
+ Burroughs bought a fruit farm at West Park, near Esopus, on the Hudson,
+ and there building his house from the stones found in his fields, has
+ given himself the best conditions for that humanizing of nature which
+ constitutes the charm of his books. He was married in 1857 to a lady
+ living in the New York village where he was at the time teaching. He keeps
+ his country home the year round, only occasionally visiting New York. The
+ cultivation of grapes absorbs the greater part of his time; but he has by
+ no means given over letters. His work, which has long found ready
+ acceptance both at home and abroad, is now passing into that security of
+ fame which comes from its entrance into the school-life of American
+ children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides his outdoor sketches and the other papers already mentioned, Mr.
+ Burroughs has written a number of critical essays on life and literature,
+ published in Indoor Studies, and other volumes. He has also taken his
+ readers into his confidence in An Egotistical Chapter, the final one of
+ his Indoor Studies; and in the Introduction to the Riverside Edition of
+ his writings he has given us further glimpses of his private intellectual
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably no other American writer has a greater sympathy with, and a
+ keener enjoyment of, country life in all its phases&mdash;farming,
+ camping, fishing, walking&mdash;than has John Burroughs. His books are
+ redolent of the soil, and have such "freshness and primal sweetness," that
+ we need not be told that the pleasure he gets from his walks and
+ excursions is by no means over when he steps inside his doors again. As he
+ tells us on more than one occasion, he finds he can get much more out of
+ his outdoor experiences by thinking them over, and writing them out
+ afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Numbers 28, 36, and 92 of the Riverside Literature Series consist of
+ selections from Mr. Burroughs's books. No. 28, which is entitled Birds and
+ Bees, is made up of Bird Enemies and The Tragedies of the Nests from the
+ volume Signs and Seasons, An Idyl of the Honey-Bee from Pepacton, and The
+ Pastoral Bees from Locusts and Wild Honey. The Introduction, by Miss Mary
+ E. Burt, gives an account of the use of Mr. Burroughs's writings in
+ Chicago schools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In No. 36, Sharp Eyes, and Other Papers, the initial paper, Sharp Eyes, is
+ drawn from Locusts and Wild Honey, The Apple comes from Winter Sunshine, A
+ Taste of Maine Birch and Winter Neighbors from Signs and Seasons, and
+ Notes by the Way (on muskrats, squirrels, foxes, and woodchucks) from
+ Pepacton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The collection called A Bunch of Herbs, and Other Papers, forming No. 92
+ of the Series, was designed with special reference to what the author has
+ to say of trees and flowers, and contains A Bunch of Herbs from Pepacton,
+ Strawberries from Locusts and Wild Honey, A March Chronicle and Autumn
+ Tides from Winter Sunshine, A Spray of Pine and A Spring Relish from Signs
+ and Seasons, and English Woods: A Contrast from Fresh Fields.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It is seldom that I find a book so far above children that I cannot share
+ its best thought with them. So when I first took up one of John
+ Burroughs's essays, I at once foresaw many a ramble with my pupils through
+ the enchanted country that is found within its breezy pages. To read John
+ Burroughs is to live in the woods and fields, and to associate intimately
+ with all their little timid inhabitants; to learn that&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "God made all the creatures and gave them our love and our fear,
+ To give sign, we and they are his children, one family here."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When I came to use Pepacton in my class of the sixth grade, I soon found,
+ not only that the children read better but that they came rapidly to a
+ better appreciation of the finer bits of literature in their regular
+ readers, while their interest in their new author grew quickly to an
+ enthusiasm. Never was a little brother or sister more real to them than
+ was "Peggy Mel" as she rushed into the hive laden with stolen honey, while
+ her neighbors gossiped about it, or the stately elm that played sly
+ tricks, or the log which proved to be a good bedfellow because it did not
+ grumble. Burroughs's way of investing beasts, birds, insects, and
+ inanimate things with human motives is very pleasing to children. They
+ like to trace analogies between the human and the irrational, to think of
+ a weed as a tramp stealing rides, of Nature as a tell-tale when taken by
+ surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quiet enthusiasm of John Burroughs's essays is much healthier than the
+ over-wrought dramatic action which sets all the nerves a-quiver,&mdash;nerves
+ already stimulated to excess by the comedies and tragedies forced upon the
+ daily lives of children. It is especially true of children living in
+ crowded cities, shut away from the woods and hills, constant witnesses of
+ the effects of human passion, that they need the tonic of a quiet
+ literature rather than the stimulant of a stormy or dramatic one,&mdash;a
+ literature which develops gentle feelings, deep thought, and a relish for
+ what is homely and homespun, rather than a literature which calls forth
+ excited feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The essays in this volume are those in which my pupils have expressed an
+ enthusiastic interest, or which, after careful reading, I have selected
+ for future use. I have found in them few pages so hard as to require over
+ much study, or a too frequent use of the dictionary. John Burroughs, more
+ than almost any other writer of the time, has a prevailing taste for
+ simple words and simple constructions. "He that runs may read" him. I have
+ found many children under eleven years of age who could read a whole page
+ without hesitating. If I discover some words which I foresee will cause
+ difficulty, I place such on the blackboard and rapidly pronounce and
+ explain them before the reading. Generally, however, I find the text the
+ best interpreter of its words. What follows explains what goes before, if
+ the child is led to read on to the end of the sentence. It is a mistake to
+ allow children to be frightened away from choice reading by an occasional
+ hard word. There is no better time than his reading lesson in which to
+ teach a child that the hard things of life are to be grappled with and
+ overcome. A mistake also, I think, is that toilsome process of explanation
+ which I sometimes find teachers following, under the impression that it
+ will be "parrot work" (as the stock phrase of the "institutes" has it) for
+ the pupils to read anything which they do not clearly and fully
+ comprehend. Teachers' definitions, in such cases, I have often noticed,
+ are no better than dictionary definitions, and surely everybody knows that
+ few more fruitless things than dictionary definitions are ever crammed
+ into the memory of a child. Better far give free play to the native
+ intelligence of the child, and trust it to apprehend, though it may not
+ yet comprehend nor be able to express its apprehension in definition. On
+ this subject I am glad to quote so high an authority as Sir Walter Scott:
+ "Indeed I rather suspect that children derive impulses of a powerful and
+ important kind from reading things which they do not comprehend, and
+ therefore that to write down to children's understanding is a mistake. Set
+ them on the scent and let them puzzle it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From time to time I have allowed my pupils to give me written reports from
+ memory of these essays, and have often found these little compositions
+ sparkling with pleasing information, or full of that childlike fun which
+ is characteristic of the author. I have marked the errors in these
+ exercises, and have given them back to the children to rewrite. Sometimes
+ the second papers show careful correction-and sometimes the mistakes are
+ partially neglected. Very often the child wishes to improve on the first
+ composition, and so adds new blunders as well as creates new interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a law of self-preservation in Nature, which takes care of
+ mistakes. Every human soul reaches toward the light in the most direct
+ path open to it, and will correct its own errors as soon as it is
+ developed far enough. There is no use in trying to force maturity;
+ teachers who trouble children beyond all reason, and worry over their
+ mistakes, are fumbling at the roots of young plants that will grow if they
+ are let alone long enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average mechanical work (spelling, construction of sentences, writing,
+ etc.) is better under this method than when more time is devoted to the
+ mechanics and less to the thought of composition. I have seen many reports
+ of Burroughs's essays from the pens of children more pleasing and reliable
+ than the essays of some professional reviewers; in these papers I often
+ find the children adding little suggestions of their own; as, "Do birds
+ dream?" One of the girls says her bird "jumps in its sleep." A little ten
+ year old writes, "Weeds are unuseful flowers," and, "I like this book
+ because there are real things in it." Another thinks she "will look more
+ carefully" if she ever gets out into the country again. For the
+ development of close observation and good feeling toward the common things
+ of life, I know of no writings better than those of John Burroughs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MARY E. BURT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JONES SCHOOL, CHICAGO, Sept. 1, 1887.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ BIRDS.
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BIRD ENEMIES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ How surely the birds know their enemies! See how the wrens and robins and
+ bluebirds pursue and scold the cat, while they take little or no notice of
+ the dog! Even the swallow will fight the cat, and, relying too confidently
+ upon its powers of flight, sometimes swoops down so near to its enemy that
+ it is caught by a sudden stroke of the cat's paw. The only case I know of
+ in which our small birds fail to recognize their enemy is furnished by the
+ shrike; apparently the little birds do not know that this modest-colored
+ bird is an assassin. At least, I have never seen them scold or molest him,
+ or utter any outcries at his presence, as they usually do at birds of
+ prey. Probably it is because the shrike is a rare visitant, and is not
+ found in this part of the country during the nesting season of our
+ songsters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the birds have nearly all found out the trick the jay, and when he
+ comes sneaking through the trees in May and June in quest of eggs, he is
+ quickly exposed and roundly abused. It is amusing to see the robins hustle
+ him out of the tree which holds their nest. They cry "Thief, thief!" to
+ the top of their voices as they charge upon him, and the jay retorts in a
+ voice scarcely less complimentary as he makes off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The jays have their enemies also, and need to keep an eye on their own
+ eggs. It would be interesting to know if jays ever rob jays, or crows
+ plunder crows; or is there honor among thieves even in the feathered
+ tribes? I suspect the jay is often punished by birds which are otherwise
+ innocent of nest-robbing. One season I found a jay's nest in a small cedar
+ on the side of a wooded ridge. It held five eggs, every one of which had
+ been punctured. Apparently some bird had driven its sharp beak through
+ their shells, with the sole intention of destroying them, for no part of
+ the contents of the eggs had been removed. It looked like a case of
+ revenge; as if some thrush or warbler, whose nest had suffered at the
+ hands of the jays, had watched its opportunity, and had in this way
+ retaliated upon its enemies. An egg for an egg. The jays were lingering
+ near, very demure and silent, and probably ready to join a crusade against
+ nest-robbers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great bugaboo of the birds is the owl. The owl snatches them from off
+ their roosts at night, and gobbles up their eggs and young in their nests.
+ He is a veritable ogre to them, and his presence fills them with
+ consternation and alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One season, to protect my early cherries I placed a large stuffed owl amid
+ the branches of the tree. Such a racket as there instantly began about my
+ grounds is not pleasant to think upon! The orioles and robins fairly
+ "shrieked out their affright." The news instantly spread in every
+ direction, and apparently every bird in town came to see that owl in the
+ cherry-tree, and every bird took a cherry, so that I lost more fruit than
+ if I had left the owl in-doors. With craning necks and horrified looks the
+ birds alighted upon the branches, and between their screams would snatch
+ off a cherry, as if the act was some relief to their outraged feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chirp and chatter of the young of birds which build in concealed or
+ inclosed places, like the woodpeckers, the house wren, the high-hole, the
+ oriole, is in marked contrast to the silence of the fledglings of most
+ birds that build open and exposed nests. The young of the sparrows,&mdash;unless
+ the social sparrow be an exception,&mdash;warblers, fly-catchers,
+ thrushes, never allow a sound to escape them; and on the alarm note of
+ their parents being heard, sit especially close and motionless, while the
+ young of chimney swallows, woodpeckers, and orioles are very noisy. The
+ latter, in its deep pouch, is quite safe from birds of prey, except
+ perhaps the owl. The owl, I suspect, thrusts its leg into the cavities of
+ woodpeckers and into the pocket-like nest of the oriole, and clutches and
+ brings forth the birds in its talons. In one case which I heard of, a
+ screech-owl had thrust its claw into a cavity in a tree, and grasped the
+ head of a red-headed woodpecker; being apparently unable to draw its prey
+ forth, it had thrust its own round head into the hole, and in some way
+ became fixed there, and had thus died with the woodpecker in its talons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life of birds is beset with dangers and mishaps of which we know
+ little. One day, in my walk, I came upon a goldfinch with the tip of one
+ wing securely fastened to the feathers of its rump, by what appeared to be
+ the silk of some caterpillar. The bird, though uninjured, was completely
+ crippled, and could not fly a stroke. Its little body was hot and panting
+ in my hands, as I carefully broke the fetter. Then it darted swiftly away
+ with a happy cry. A record of all the accidents and tragedies of bird life
+ for a single season would show many curious incidents. A friend of mine
+ opened his box-stove one fall to kindle a fire in it, when he beheld in
+ the black interior the desiccated forms of two bluebirds. The birds had
+ probably taken refuge in the chimney during some cold spring storm, and
+ had come down the pipe to the stove, from whence they were unable to
+ ascend. A peculiarly touching little incident of bird life occurred to a
+ caged female canary. Though unmated, it laid some eggs, and the happy bird
+ was so carried away by her feelings that she would offer food to the eggs,
+ and chatter and twitter, trying, as it seemed, to encourage them to eat!
+ The incident is hardly tragic, neither is it comic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain birds nest in the vicinity of our houses and outbuildings, or even
+ in and upon them, for protection from their enemies, but they often thus
+ expose themselves to a plague of the most deadly character.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I refer to the vermin with which their nests often swarm, and which kill
+ the young before they are fledged. In a state of nature this probably
+ never happens; at least I have never seen or heard of it happening to
+ nests placed in trees or under rocks. It is the curse of civilization
+ falling upon the birds which come too near man. The vermin, or the germ of
+ the vermin, is probably conveyed to the nest in hen's feathers, or in
+ straws and hairs picked up about the barn or hen-house. A robin's nest
+ upon your porch or in your summer-house will occasionally become an
+ intolerable nuisance from the swarms upon swarms of minute vermin with
+ which it is filled. The parent birds stem the tide as long as they can,
+ but are often compelled to leave the young to their terrible fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One season a phoebe-bird built on a projecting stone under the eaves of
+ the house, and all appeared to go well till the young were nearly fledged,
+ when the nest suddenly became a bit of purgatory. The birds kept their
+ places in their burning bed till they could hold no longer, when they
+ leaped forth and fell dead upon the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a delay of a week or more, during which I imagine the parent birds
+ purified themselves by every means known to them, the couple built another
+ nest a few yards from the first, and proceeded to rear a second brood; but
+ the new nest developed into the same bed of torment that the first did,
+ and the three young birds, nearly ready to fly, perished as they sat
+ within it. The parent birds then left the place as if it had been
+ accursed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I imagine the smaller birds have an enemy in our native white-footed
+ mouse, though I have not proof enough to convict him. But one season the
+ nest of a chickadee which I was observing was broken up in a position
+ where nothing but a mouse could have reached it. The bird had chosen a
+ cavity in the limb of an apple-tree which stood but a few yards from the
+ house. The cavity was deep, and the entrance to it, which was ten feet
+ from the ground, was small. Barely light enough was admitted, when the sun
+ was in the most favorable position, to enable one to make out the number
+ of eggs, which was six, at the bottom of the dim interior. While one was
+ peering in and trying to get his head out of his own light, the bird would
+ startle him by a queer kind of puffing sound. She would not leave her nest
+ like most birds, but really tried to blow or scare the intruder away; and
+ after repeated experiments I could hardly refrain from jerking my head
+ back when that little explosion of sound came up from the dark interior.
+ One night, when incubation was about half finished, the nest was harried.
+ A slight trace of hair or fur at the entrance led me to infer that some
+ small animal was the robber. A weasel might have done it, as they
+ sometimes climb trees, but I doubt if either a squirrel or a rat could
+ have passed the entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably few persons have ever suspected the cat-bird of being an
+ egg-sucker; I do not know that she has ever been accused of such a thing,
+ but there is something uncanny and disagreeable about her, which I at once
+ understood, when I one day caught her in the very act of going through a
+ nest of eggs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A pair of the least fly-catchers, the bird which says chebec, chebec, and
+ is a small edition of the pewee, one season built their nest where I had
+ them for many hours each day under my observation. The nest was a very
+ snug and compact structure placed in the forks of a small maple about
+ twelve feet from the ground. The season before, a red squirrel had harried
+ the nest of a wood-thrush in this same tree, and I was apprehensive that
+ he would serve the fly-catchers the same trick; so, as I sat with my book
+ in a summer-house near by, I kept my loaded gun within easy reach. One egg
+ was laid, and the next morning, as I made my daily inspection of the nest,
+ only a fragment of its empty shell was to be found. This I removed,
+ mentally imprecating the rogue of a red squirrel. The birds were much
+ disturbed by the event, but did not desert the nest, as I had feared they
+ would, but after much inspection of it and many consultations together,
+ concluded, it seems, to try again. Two more eggs were laid, when one day I
+ heard the birds utter a sharp cry, and on looking up I saw a cat-bird
+ perched upon the rim of the nest, hastily devouring the eggs. I soon
+ regretted my precipitation in killing her, because such interference is
+ generally unwise. It turned out that she had a nest of her own with five
+ eggs in a spruce-tree near my window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then this pair of little fly-catchers did what I had never seen birds do
+ before; they pulled the nest to pieces and rebuilt it in a peach-tree not
+ many rods away, where a brood was successfully reared. The nest was here
+ exposed to the direct rays of the noon-day sun, and to shield her young
+ when the heat was greatest, the mother-bird would stand above them with
+ wings slightly spread, as other birds have been know to do under like
+ circumstances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To what extent the cat-bird is a nest-robber I have no evidence, but that
+ feline mew of hers, and that flirting, flexible tail, suggest something
+ not entirely bird-like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably the darkest tragedy of the nest is enacted when a snake plunders
+ it. All birds and animals, so far I have observed, behave in a peculiar
+ manner toward a snake. They seem to feel something of the loathing toward
+ it that the human species experiences. The bark of a dog when he
+ encounters a snake is different from that which he gives out on any other
+ occasion; it is a mingled note of alarm, inquiry, and disgust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day a tragedy was enacted a few yards from where I was sitting with a
+ book; two song-sparrows trying to defend their nest against a black snake.
+ The curious, interrogating note of a chicken who had suddenly come upon
+ the scene in his walk caused me to look up from my reading. There were the
+ sparrows, with wings raised in a way peculiarly expressive of horror and
+ dismay, rushing about a low clump of grass and bushes. Then, looking more
+ closely, I saw the glistening form of the black snake and the quick
+ movement of his head as he tried to seize the birds. The sparrows darted
+ about and through the grass and weeds, trying to beat the snake off. Their
+ tails and wings were spread, and, panting with the heat and the desperate
+ struggle, they presented a most singular spectacle. They uttered no cry,
+ not a sound escaped them; they were plainly speechless with horror and
+ dismay. Not once did they drop their wings, and the peculiar expression of
+ those uplifted palms, as it were, I shall never forget. It occurred to me
+ that perhaps here was a case of attempted bird-charming on the part of the
+ snake, so I looked on from behind the fence. The birds charged the snake
+ and harassed him from every side, but were evidently under no spell save
+ that of courage in defending their nest. Every moment or two I could see
+ the head and neck of the serpent make a sweep at the birds, when the one
+ struck at would fall back, and the other would renew the assault from the
+ rear. There appeared to be little danger that the snake could strike and
+ hold one of the birds, though I trembled for them, they were so bold and
+ approached so near to the snake's head. Time and again he sprang at them,
+ but without success. How the poor things panted, and held up their wings
+ appealingly! Then the snake glided off to the near fence, barely escaping
+ the stone which I hurled at him. I found the nest rifled and deranged;
+ whether it had contained eggs or young I know not. The male sparrow had
+ cheered me many a day with his song, and I blamed myself for not having
+ rushed at once to the rescue, when the arch enemy was upon him. There is
+ probably little truth in the popular notion that snakes charm birds. The
+ black snake is the most subtle, alert, and devilish of our snakes, and I
+ have never seen him have any but young, helpless birds in his mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have one parasitical bird, the cow-bird, so-called because it walks
+ about amid the grazing cattle and seizes the insects which their heavy
+ tread sets going, which is an enemy of most of the smaller birds. It drops
+ its egg in the nest of the song-sparrow, the social sparrow, the
+ snow-bird, the vireos, and the wood-warblers, and as a rule it is the only
+ egg in the nest that issues successfully. Either the eggs of the rightful
+ owner of the nest are not hatched, or else the young are overridden and
+ overreached by the parasite and perish prematurely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the worst enemies of our birds are the so-called "collectors," men
+ who plunder nests and murder their owners in the name of science. Not the
+ genuine ornithologist, for no one is more careful of squandering bird life
+ than he; but the sham ornithologist, the man whose vanity or affectation
+ happens to take an ornithological turn. He is seized with an itching for a
+ collection of eggs and birds because it happens to be the fashion, or
+ because it gives him the air of a man of science. But in the majority of
+ cases the motive is a mercenary one; the collector expects to sell these
+ spoils of the groves and orchards. Robbing the nests and killing birds
+ becomes a business with him. He goes about it systematically, and becomes
+ expert in circumventing and slaying our songsters. Every town of any
+ considerable size is infested with one or more of these bird highwaymen,
+ and every nest in the country round about that the wretches can lay hands
+ on is harried. Their professional term for a nest of eggs is "a clutch," a
+ word that well expresses the work of their grasping, murderous fingers.
+ They clutch and destroy in the germ the life and music of the woodlands.
+ Certain of our natural history journals are mainly organs of communication
+ between these human weasels. They record their exploits at nest-robbing
+ and bird-slaying in their columns. One collector tells with gusto how he
+ "worked his way" through an orchard, ransacking every tree, and leaving,
+ as he believed, not one nest behind him. He had better not be caught
+ working his way through my orchard. Another gloats over the number of
+ Connecticut warblers&mdash;a rare bird&mdash;he killed in one season in
+ Massachusetts. Another tells how a mocking-bird appeared in southern New
+ England and was hunted down by himself and friend, its eggs "clutched,"
+ and the bird killed. Who knows how much the bird lovers of New England
+ lost by that foul deed? The progeny of the birds would probably have
+ returned to Connecticut to breed, and their progeny, or a part of them,
+ the same, till in time the famous songster would have become a regular
+ visitant to New England. In the same journal still another collector
+ describes minutely how he outwitted three humming birds and captured their
+ nests and eggs,&mdash;a clutch he was very proud of. A Massachusetts bird
+ harrier boasts of his clutch of the egg's of that dainty little warbler,
+ the blue yellow-back. One season he took two sets, the next five sets, the
+ next four sets, besides some single eggs, and the next season four sets,
+ and says he might have found more had he had more time. One season he
+ took, in about twenty days, three from one tree. I have heard of a
+ collector who boasted of having taken one hundred sets of the eggs of the
+ marsh wren, in a single day; of another, who took in the same time, thirty
+ nests of the yellow-breasted chat; and of still another, who claimed to
+ have taken one thousand sets of eggs of different birds in one season. A
+ large business has grown up under the influence of this collecting craze.
+ One dealer in eggs has those of over five hundred species. He says that
+ his business in 1883 was twice that of 1882; in 1884 it was twice that of
+ 1883, and so on. Collectors vie with each other in the extent and variety
+ of their cabinets. They not only obtain eggs in sets, but aim to have a
+ number of sets of the same bird so as to show all possible variations. I
+ hear of a private collection that contains twelve sets of kingbirds' eggs,
+ eight sets of house-wrens' eggs, four sets mocking-birds' eggs, etc.; sets
+ of eggs taken in low trees, high trees, medium trees; spotted sets, dark
+ sets, plain sets, and light sets of the same species of bird. Many
+ collections are made on this latter plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus are our birds hunted and cut off and all in the name of science; as
+ if science had not long ago finished with these birds. She has weighed and
+ measured, and dissected, and described them, and their nests, and eggs,
+ and placed them in her cabinet; and the interest of science and of
+ humanity now demands that this wholesale nest-robbing cease. These
+ incidents I have given above, it is true, are but drops in the bucket, but
+ the bucket would be more than full if we could get all the facts. Where
+ one man publishes his notes, hundreds, perhaps thousands, say nothing, but
+ go as silently about their nest-robbing as weasels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that the student of ornithology often feels compelled to take
+ bird-life. It is not an easy matter to "name all the birds without a gun,"
+ though an opera-glass will often render identification entirely certain,
+ and leave the songster unharmed; but once having mastered the birds, the
+ true ornithologist leaves his gun at home. This view of the case may not
+ be agreeable to that desiccated mortal called the "closet naturalist," but
+ for my own part the closet naturalist is a person with whom I have very
+ little sympathy. He is about the most wearisome and profitless creature in
+ existence. With his piles of skins, his cases of eggs, his laborious
+ feather-splitting, and his outlandish nomenclature, he is not only the
+ enemy of the birds but the enemy of all those who would know them rightly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the collectors alone are to blame for the diminishing numbers of our
+ wild birds, but a large share of the responsibility rests upon quite a
+ different class of persons, namely, the milliners. False taste in dress is
+ as destructive to our feathered friends as are false aims in science. It
+ is said that the traffic in the skins of our brighter plumaged birds,
+ arising from their use by the milliners, reaches to hundreds of thousands
+ annually. I am told of one middleman who collected from the shooters in
+ one district, in four months, seventy thousand skins. It is a barbarous
+ taste that craves this kind of ornamentation. Think of a woman or girl of
+ real refinement appearing upon the street with her head gear adorned with
+ the scalps of our songsters!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is probably true that the number of our birds destroyed by man is but a
+ small percentage of the number cut off by their natural enemies; but it is
+ to be remembered that those he destroys are in addition to those thus cut
+ off, and that it is this extra or artificial destruction that disturbs the
+ balance of nature. The operation of natural causes keeps the birds in
+ check, but the greed of the collectors and milliners tends to their
+ extinction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I can pardon a man who wishes to make a collection of eggs and birds for
+ his own private use, if he will content himself with one or two specimens
+ of a kind, though he will find any collection much less satisfactory and
+ less valuable than he imagines, but the professional nest-robber and skin
+ collector should be put down, either by legislation or with dogs and
+ shotguns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have remarked above that there is probably very little truth in the
+ popular notion that snakes can "charm" birds. But two of my correspondents
+ have each furnished me with an incident from his own experience, which
+ seems to confirm the popular belief. One of them writes from Georgia as
+ follows:&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some twenty-eight years ago I was in Calaveras County, California,
+ engaged in cutting lumber. One day in coming out of the camp or cabin, my
+ attention was attracted to the curious action of a quail in the air,
+ which, instead of flying low and straight ahead as usual, was some fifty
+ feet high, flying in a circle, and uttering cries of distress. I watched
+ the bird and saw it gradually descend, and following with my eye in a line
+ from the bird to the ground saw a large snake with head erect and some ten
+ or twelve inches above the ground, and mouth wide open, and as far as I
+ could see, gazing intently on the quail (I was about thirty feet from the
+ snake). The quail gradually descended, its circles growing smaller and
+ smaller and all the time uttering cries of distress, until its feet were
+ within two or three inches of the mouth of the snake; when I threw a
+ stone, and though not hitting the snake, yet struck the ground so near as
+ to frighten him, and he gradually started off. The quail, however, fell to
+ the ground, apparently lifeless. I went forward and picked it up and found
+ it was thoroughly overcome with fright, its little heart beating as if it
+ would burst through the skin. After holding it in my hand a few moments it
+ flew away. I then tried to find the snake, but could not. I am unable to
+ say whether the snake was venomous or belonged to the constricting family,
+ like the black snake. I can well recollect it was large and moved off
+ rather slow. As I had never seen anything of the kind before, it made a
+ great impression on my mind, and after the lapse of so long a time, the
+ incident appears as vivid to me as though it had occurred yesterday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not probable that the snake had its mouth open; its darting tongue
+ may have given that impression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other incident comes to me from Vermont. "While returning from church
+ in 1876," says the writer, "as I was crossing a bridge... I noticed a
+ striped snake in the act of charming a song-sparrow. They were both upon
+ the sand beneath the bridge. The snake kept his head swaying slowly from
+ side to side, and darted his tongue out continually. The bird, not over a
+ foot away, was facing the snake, hopping from one foot to the other, and
+ uttering a dissatisfied little chirp. I watched them till the snake seized
+ the bird, having gradually drawn nearer. As he seized it, I leaped over
+ the side of the bridge; the snake glided away and I took up the bird,
+ which he had dropped. It was too frightened to try to fly and I carried it
+ nearly a mile before it flew from my open hand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If these observers are quite sure of what they saw, then undoubtedly
+ snakes have the power to draw birds within their grasp. I remember that my
+ mother told me that while gathering wild strawberries she had on one
+ occasion come upon a bird fluttering about the head of a snake as if held
+ there by a spell. On her appearance, the snake lowered its head and made
+ off, and the panting bird flew away. A neighbor of mine killed a black
+ snake which had swallowed a full-grown red squirrel, probably captured by
+ the same power of fascination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE TRAGEDIES OF THE NESTS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The life of the birds, especially of our migratory song-birds, is a series
+ of adventures and of hair-breadth escapes by flood and field. Very few of
+ them probably die a natural death, or even live out half their appointed
+ days. The home instinct is strong in birds as it is in most creatures; and
+ I am convinced that every spring a large number of those which have
+ survived the Southern campaign return to their old haunts to breed. A
+ Connecticut farmer took me out under his porch, one April day, and showed
+ me a phoebe bird's nest six stories high. The same bird had no doubt
+ returned year after year; and as there was room for only one nest upon her
+ favorite shelf, she had each season reared a new superstructure upon the
+ old as a foundation. I have heard of a white robin&mdash;an albino&mdash;that
+ nested several years in succession in the suburbs of a Maryland city. A
+ sparrow with a very marked peculiarity of song I have heard several
+ seasons in my own locality. But the birds do not all live to return to
+ their old haunts: the bobolinks and starlings run a gauntlet of fire from
+ the Hudson to the Savannah, and the robins and meadow-larks and other
+ song-birds are shot by boys and pot-hunters in great numbers,&mdash;to say
+ nothing of their danger from hawks and owls. But of those that do return,
+ what perils beset their nests, even in the most favored localities! The
+ cabins of the early settlers, when the country was swarming with hostile
+ Indians, were not surrounded by such dangers. The tender households of the
+ birds are not only exposed to hostile Indians in the shape of cats and
+ collectors, but to numerous murderous and bloodthirsty animals, against
+ whom they have no defense but concealment. They lead the darkest kind of
+ pioneer life, even in our gardens and orchards, and under the walls of our
+ houses. Not a day or a night passes, from the time the eggs are laid till
+ the young are flown, when the chances are not greatly in favor of the nest
+ being rifled and its contents devoured,&mdash;by owls, skunks, minks, and
+ coons at night, and by crows, jays, squirrels, weasels, snakes, and rats
+ during the day. Infancy, we say, is hedged about by many perils; but the
+ infancy of birds is cradled and pillowed in peril. An old Michigan settler
+ told me that the first six children that were born to him died; malaria
+ and teething invariably carried them off when they had reached a certain
+ age; but other children were born, the country improved, and by and by the
+ babies weathered the critical period and the next six lived and grew up.
+ The birds, too, would no doubt persevere six times and twice six times, if
+ the season were long enough, and finally rear their family, but the waning
+ summer cuts them short, and but a few species have the heart and strength
+ to make even the third trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first nest-builders in spring, like the first settlers near hostile
+ tribes, suffer the most casualties. A large portion of the nests of April
+ and May are destroyed; their enemies have been many months without eggs
+ and their appetites are keen for them. It is a time, too, when other food
+ is scarce, and the crows and squirrels are hard put. But the second nests
+ of June, and still more the nests of July and August, are seldom molested.
+ It is rarely that the nest of the goldfinch or the cedar-bird is harried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My neighborhood on the Hudson is perhaps exceptionally unfavorable as a
+ breeding haunt for birds, owing to the abundance of fish-crows and of red
+ squirrels; and the season of which this chapter is mainly a chronicle, the
+ season of 1881, seems to have been a black-letter one even for this place,
+ for at least nine nests out of every ten that I observed during that
+ spring and summer failed of their proper issue. From the first nest I
+ noted, which was that of a bluebird,&mdash;built (very imprudently I
+ thought at the time) in a squirrel-hole in a decayed apple-tree, about the
+ last of April, and which came to naught, even the mother-bird, I suspect,
+ perishing by a violent death,&mdash;to the last, which was that of a
+ snow-bird, observed in August, among the Catskills, deftly concealed in a
+ mossy bank by the side of a road that skirted a wood, where the tall
+ thimble blackberries grew in abundance, from which the last young one was
+ taken, when it was about half grown, by some nocturnal walker or daylight
+ prowler, some untoward fate seemed hovering about them. It was a season of
+ calamities, of violent deaths, of pillage and massacre, among our
+ feathered neighbors. For the first time I noticed that the orioles were
+ not safe in their strong, pendent nests. Three broods were started in the
+ apple-trees, only a few yards from the house, where, for previous seasons,
+ the birds had nested without molestation; but this time the young were all
+ destroyed when about half grown. Their chirping and chattering, which was
+ so noticeable one day, suddenly ceased the next. The nests were probably
+ plundered at night, and doubtless by the little red screech-owl, which I
+ know is a denizen of these old orchards, living in the deeper cavities of
+ the trees. The owl could alight on the top of the nest, and easily thrust
+ his murderous claw down into its long pocket and seize the young and draw
+ them forth. The tragedy of one of the nests was heightened, or at least
+ made more palpable, by one of the half-fledged birds, either in its
+ attempt to escape or while in the clutches of the enemy, being caught and
+ entangled in one of the horse-hairs by which the nest was stayed and held
+ to the limb above. There it hung bruised and dead, gibbeted to its own
+ cradle. This nest was the theatre of another little tragedy later in the
+ season. Some time in August a bluebird, indulging its propensity to peep
+ and pry into holes and crevices, alighted upon it and probably inspected
+ the interior; but by some unlucky move it got its wings entangled in this
+ same fatal horse-hair. Its efforts to free itself appeared only to result
+ in its being more securely and hopelessly bound; and there it perished;
+ and there its form, dried and embalmed by the summer heats, was yet
+ hanging in September, the outspread wings and plumage showing nearly as
+ bright as in life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A correspondent writes me that one of his orioles got entangled in a cord
+ while building her nest, and that though by the aid of a ladder he reached
+ and liberated her, she died soon afterward. He also found a "chippie"
+ (called also "hair bird") suspended from a branch by a horse-hair, beneath
+ a partly constructed nest. I heard of a cedar-bird caught and destroyed in
+ the same way, and of two young bluebirds, around whose legs a horse-hair
+ had become so tightly wound that the legs withered up and dropped off. The
+ birds became fledged, and left the nest with the others. Such tragedies
+ are probably quite common.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the advent of civilization in this country, the oriole probably
+ built a much deeper nest than it usually does at present. When now it
+ builds in remote trees and along the borders of the woods, its nest, I
+ have noticed, is long and gourd-shaped; but in orchards and near dwellings
+ it is only a deep cup or pouch. It shortens it up in proportion as the
+ danger lessens. Probably a succession of disastrous years, like the one
+ under review, would cause it to lengthen it again beyond the reach of
+ owl's talons or jay-bird's beak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first song-sparrow's nest I observed in the spring of 1881 was in the
+ field under a fragment of a board, the board being raised from the ground
+ a couple of inches by two poles. It had its full complement of eggs, and
+ probably sent forth a brood of young birds, though as to this I cannot
+ speak positively, as I neglected to observe it further. It was well
+ sheltered and concealed, and was not easily come at by any of its natural
+ enemies, save snakes and weasels. But concealment often avails little. In
+ May, a song-sparrow, that had evidently met with disaster earlier in the
+ season, built its nest in a thick mass of woodbine against the side of my
+ house, about fifteen feet from the ground. Perhaps it took the hint from
+ its cousin, the English sparrow. The nest was admirably placed, protected
+ from the storms by the overhanging eaves and from all eyes by the thick
+ screen of leaves. Only by patiently watching the suspicious bird, as she
+ lingered near with food in her beak, did I discover its whereabouts. That
+ brood is safe, I thought, beyond doubt. But it was not; the nest was
+ pillaged one night, either by an owl, or else by a rat that had climbed
+ into the vine, seeking an entrance to the house. The mother-bird, after
+ reflecting upon her ill-luck about a week, seemed to resolve to try a
+ different system of tactics and to throw all appearances of concealment
+ aside. She built a nest few yards from the house beside the drive, upon a
+ smooth piece of greensward. There was not a weed or a shrub or anything
+ whatever to conceal it or mark its site. The structure was completed and
+ incubation had begun before I discovered what was going on. "Well, well,"
+ I said, looking down upon the bird almost at my feet, "this is going to
+ the other extreme indeed; now, the cats will have you." The desperate
+ little bird sat there day after day, looking like a brown leaf pressed
+ down in the short green grass. As the weather grew hot, her position
+ became very trying. It was no longer a question of keeping the eggs warm,
+ but of keeping them from roasting. The sun had no mercy on her, and she
+ fairly panted in the middle of the day. In such an emergency the male
+ robin has been known to perch above the sitting female and shade her with
+ his outstretched wings. But in this case there was no perch for the male
+ bird, had he been disposed to make a sunshade of himself. I thought to
+ lend a hand in this direction myself, and so stuck a leafy twig beside the
+ nest. This was probably an unwise interference; it guided disaster to the
+ spot; the nest was broken up, and the mother-bird was probably caught, as
+ I never saw her afterward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For several previous summers a pair of kingbirds had reared, unmolested, a
+ brood of young in an apple-tree, only a few yards from the house; but
+ during this season disaster overtook them also. The nest was completed,
+ the eggs laid, and incubation had begun, when, one morning about sunrise,
+ I heard cries of distress and alarm proceed from the old apple-tree.
+ Looking out of the window I saw a crow, which I knew to be a fish-crow,
+ perched upon the edge of the nest, hastily bolting the eggs. The parent
+ birds, usually so ready for the attack, seemed over-come with grief and
+ alarm. They fluttered about in the most helpless and bewildered manner,
+ and it was not till the robber fled on my approach that they recovered
+ themselves and charged upon him. The crow scurried away with upturned,
+ threatening head, the furious kingbirds fairly upon his back. The pair
+ lingered around their desecrated nest for several days, almost silent, and
+ saddened by their loss, and then disappeared. They probably made another
+ trial elsewhere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fish-crow only fishes when it has destroyed all the eggs and young
+ birds it can find. It is the most despicable thief and robber among our
+ feathered creatures. From May to August, it is gorged with the fledglings
+ of the nest. It is fortunate that its range is so limited. In size it is
+ smaller than the common crow, and is a much less noble and dignified bird.
+ Its caw is weak and feminine&mdash;a sort of split and abortive caw, that
+ stamps it the sneak-thief it is. This crow is common farther south, but is
+ not found in this State, so far as I have observed, except in the valley
+ of the Hudson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One season a pair of them built a nest in a Norway Spruce that stood amid
+ a dense growth of other ornamental trees near a large unoccupied house.
+ They sat down amid plenty. The wolf established himself in the fold. The
+ many birds&mdash;robins, thrushes, finches, vireos, pewees&mdash;that seek
+ the vicinity of dwellings (especially of these large country residences
+ with their many trees and park-like grounds), for the greater safety of
+ their eggs and young, were the easy and convenient victims of these
+ robbers. They plundered right and left, and were not disturbed till their
+ young were nearly fledged, when some boys, who had long before marked them
+ as their prize, rifled the nest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The song-birds nearly all build low; their cradle is not upon the
+ tree-top. It is only birds of prey that fear danger from below more than
+ from above, and that seek the higher branches for their nests. A line five
+ feet from the ground would run above more than half the nests, and one ten
+ feet would bound more than three fourths of them. It is only the oriole
+ and the wood pewee that, as a rule, go higher than this. The crows and
+ jays and other enemies of the birds have learned to explore this belt
+ pretty thoroughly. But the leaves and the protective coloring of most
+ nests baffle them as effectually, no doubt as they do the professional
+ oölogist. The nest of the red-eyed vireo is one of the most artfully
+ placed in the wood. It is just beyond the point where the eye naturally
+ pauses in its search; namely, on the extreme end of the lowest branch of
+ the tree, usually four or five feet from the ground. One looks up and down
+ through the tree,&mdash;shoots his eye-beams into it as he might discharge
+ his gun at some game hidden there, but the drooping tip of that low
+ horizontal branch&mdash;who would think of pointing his piece just there?
+ If a crow or other marauder were to alight upon the branch or upon those
+ above it, the nest would be screened from him by the large leaf that
+ usually forms a canopy immediately above it. The nest-hunter standing at
+ the foot of the tree and looking straight before him, might discover it
+ easily, were it not for its soft, neutral gray tint which blends so
+ thoroughly with the trunks and branches of trees. Indeed, I think there is
+ no nest in the woods&mdash;no arboreal nest&mdash;so well concealed. The
+ last one I saw was a pendent from the end of a low branch of a maple, that
+ nearly grazed the clapboards of an unused hay-barn in a remote backwoods
+ clearing. I peeped through a crack and saw the old birds feed the nearly
+ fledged young within a few inches of my face. And yet the cow-bird finds
+ this nest and drops her parasitical egg in it. Her tactics in this as in
+ other cases are probably to watch the movements of the parent bird. She
+ may often be seen searching anxiously through the trees or bushes for a
+ suitable nest, yet she may still oftener be seen perched upon some good
+ point of observation watching the birds as they come and go about her.
+ There is no doubt that, in many cases, the cow-bird makes room for her own
+ illegitimate egg in the nest by removing one of the bird's own. When the
+ cow-bird finds two or more eggs in a nest in which she wishes to deposit
+ her own, she will remove one of them. I found a sparrow's nest with two
+ sparrow's eggs and one cow-bird's egg, another egg lying a foot or so
+ below it on the ground. I replaced the ejected egg, and the next day found
+ it again removed, and another cow-bird's egg in its place; I put it back
+ the second time, when it was again ejected, or destroyed, for I failed to
+ find it anywhere. Very alert and sensitive birds like the warblers often
+ bury the strange egg beneath a second nest built on top of the old. A
+ lady, living in the suburbs of an eastern city, one morning heard cries of
+ distress from a pair of house-wrens that had a nest in a honeysuckle on
+ her front porch. On looking out of the window, she beheld this little
+ comedy&mdash;comedy from her point of view, but no doubt grim-tragedy from
+ the point of view of the wrens; a cow-bird with a wren's egg in its beak
+ running rapidly along the walk with the outraged wrens forming a
+ procession behind it, screaming, scolding, and gesticulating as only these
+ voluble little birds can. The cow-bird had probably been surprised in the
+ act of violating the nest, and the wrens were giving her a piece of theirs
+ minds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every cow-bird is reared at the expense of two or more song-birds. For
+ every one of these dusky little pedestrians there amid the grazing cattle
+ there are two more sparrows, or vireos, or warblers, the less. It is a big
+ price to pay&mdash;two larks for a bunting-two sovereigns for a shilling;
+ but Nature does not hesitate occasionally to contradict herself in just
+ this way. The young of the cow-bird is disproportionately large and
+ aggressive, one might say hoggish. When disturbed it will clasp the nest
+ and scream, and snap its beak threateningly. One hatched out in a
+ song-sparrow's nest which was under my observation, and would soon have
+ overridden and overborne the young sparrow, which came out of the shell a
+ few hours later, had I not interfered from time to time and lent the young
+ sparrow a helping hand. Every day I would visit the nest and take the
+ sparrow out from under the pot-bellied interloper and place it on top so
+ that presently it was able to hold its own against its enemy. Both birds
+ became fledged and left the nest about the same time. Whether the race was
+ an even one after that, I know not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I noted but two warblers' nests during that season, one of the
+ black-throated blue-back and one of the redstart,&mdash;the latter built
+ in an apple-tree but a few yards from a little rustic summer-house where I
+ idle away many summer days. The lively little birds, darting and flashing
+ about, attracted my attention for a week before I discovered their nest.
+ They probably built it by working early in the morning, before I appeared
+ upon the scene, as I never saw them with material in their beaks. Guessing
+ from their movements that the nest was in a large maple that stood near
+ by, I climbed the tree and explored it thoroughly, looking especially in
+ the forks of the branches, as the authorities say these birds build in a
+ fork. But no nest could I find. Indeed, how can one by searching find a
+ bird's nest? I overshot the mark; the nest was much nearer me, almost
+ under my very nose, and I discovered it, not by searching but by a casual
+ glance of the eye, while thinking of other matters. The bird was just
+ settling upon it as I looked up from my book and caught her in the act.
+ The nest was built near the end of a long, knotty, horizontal branch of an
+ apple-tree, but effectually hidden by the grouping of the leaves; it had
+ three eggs, one of which proved to be barren. The two young birds grew
+ apace, and were out of the nest early in the second week; but something
+ caught one of them the first night. The other probably grew to maturity,
+ as it disappeared from the vicinity with its parents after some days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blue-back's nest was scarcely a foot from the ground, in a little bush
+ situated in a low, dense wood of hemlock and beech and maple, amid the
+ Catskills,&mdash;a deep, massive, elaborate structure, in which the
+ sitting bird sank till her beak and tail alone were visible above the
+ brim. It was a misty, chilly day when I chanced to find the nest, and the
+ mother-bird knew instinctively that it was not prudent to leave her four
+ half incubated eggs uncovered and exposed for a moment. When I sat down
+ near the nest she grew very uneasy, and after trying in vain to decoy me
+ away by suddenly dropping from the branches and dragging herself over the
+ ground as if mortally wounded, she approached and timidly and half
+ doubtingly covered her eggs within two yards of where I sat. I disturbed
+ her several times to note her ways. There came to be something almost
+ appealing in her looks and manner, and she would keep her place on her
+ precious eggs till my outstretched hand was within a few feet of her.
+ Finally, I covered the cavity of the nest with a dry leaf. This she did
+ not remove with her beak, but thrust her head deftly beneath it and shook
+ it off upon the ground. Many of her sympathizing neighbors, attracted by
+ her alarm note, came and had a peep at the intruder and then flew away,
+ but the male bird did not appear upon the scene. The final history of this
+ nest I am unable to give, as I did not again visit it till late in the
+ season, when, of course, it was empty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years pass without my finding a brown-thrasher's nest; it is not a nest
+ you are likely to stumble upon in your walk; it is hidden as a miser hides
+ his gold, and watched as jealously. The male pours out his rich and
+ triumphant song from the tallest tree he can find, and fairly challenges
+ you to come and look for his treasures in his vicinity. But you will not
+ find them if you go. The nest is somewhere on the outer circle of his
+ song; he is never so imprudent as to take up his stand very near it. The
+ artists who draw those cosy little pictures of a brooding mother-bird with
+ the male perched but a yard away in full song, do not copy from nature.
+ The thrasher's nest I found thirty or forty rods from the point where the
+ male was wont to indulge in his brilliant recitative. It was in an open
+ field under a low ground-juniper. My dog disturbed the sitting bird as I
+ was passing near. The nest could be seen only by lifting up and parting
+ away the branches. All the arts of concealment had been carefully studied.
+ It was the last place you would think of looking, and, if you did look,
+ nothing was visible but the dense green circle of the low-spreading
+ juniper. When you approached, the bird would keep her place till you had
+ begun to stir the branches, when she would start out, and, just skimming
+ the ground, make a bright brown line to the near fence and bushes. I
+ confidently expected that this nest would escape molestation, but it did
+ not. Its discovery by myself and dog probably opened the door for ill
+ luck, as one day, not long afterward, when I peeped in upon it, it was
+ empty. The proud song of the male had ceased from his accustomed tree, and
+ the pair were seen no more in that vicinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The phoebe-bird is a wise architect, and perhaps enjoys as great an
+ immunity from danger, both in its person and its nest, as any other bird.
+ Its modest, ashen-gray suit is the color of the rocks where it builds, and
+ the moss of which it makes such free use gives to its nest the look of a
+ natural growth or accretion. But when it comes into the barn or under the
+ shed to build, as it so frequently does, the moss is rather out of place.
+ Doubtless in time the bird will take the hint, and when she builds in such
+ places will leave the moss out. I noted but two nests, the summer I am
+ speaking of: one, in a barn, failed of issue, on account of the rats, I
+ suspect, though the little owl may have been the depredator; the other, in
+ the woods, sent forth three young. This latter nest was most charmingly
+ and ingeniously placed. I discovered it while in quest of pond-lilies, in
+ a long, deep level stretch of water in the woods. A large tree had blown
+ over at the edge of the water, and its dense mass of up-turned roots, with
+ the black, peaty soil filling the interstices, was like the fragment of a
+ wall several feet high, rising from the edge of the languid current. In a
+ niche in this earthy wall, and visible and accessible only from the water,
+ a phoebe had built her nest, and reared her brood. I paddled my boat up
+ and came alongside prepared to take the family aboard. The young, nearly
+ ready to fly, were quite undisturbed by my presence, having probably been
+ assured that no danger need be apprehended from that side. It was not a
+ likely place for minks, or they would not have been so secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I noted but one nest of the wood pewee, and that, too, like so many other
+ nests, failed of issue. It was saddled upon a small dry limb of a
+ plane-tree that stood by the roadside, about forty feet from the ground.
+ Every day for nearly a week, as I passed by I saw the sitting bird upon
+ the nest. Then one morning she was not in her place, and on examination
+ the nest proved to be empty&mdash;robbed, I had no doubt, by the red
+ squirrels, as they were very abundant in its vicinity, and appeared to
+ make a clean sweep of every nest. The wood pewee builds an exquisite nest,
+ shaped and finished as if cast in a mould. It is modeled without and
+ within with equal neatness and art, like the nest of the humming-bird and
+ the little gray gnat-catcher. The material is much more refractory than
+ that used by either of these birds, being, in the present case, dry, fine
+ cedar twigs; but these were bound into a shape as rounded and compact as
+ could be moulded out of the most plastic material. Indeed, the nest of
+ this bird looks precisely like a large, lichen-covered, cup-shaped
+ excrescence of the limb upon which it is placed. And the bird, while
+ sitting, seems entirely at ease. Most birds seem to make very hard work of
+ incubation. It is a kind of martyrdom which appears to tax all their
+ powers of endurance. They have such a fixed, rigid, predetermined look,
+ pressed down into the nest and as motionless as if made of cast-iron. But
+ the wood pewee is an exception. She is largely visible above the rim of
+ the nest. Her attitude is easy and graceful; she moves her head this way
+ and that, and seems to take note of whatever goes on about her; and if her
+ neighbor were to drop in for a little social chat, she could doubtless do
+ her part. In fact, she makes light and easy work of what, to most other
+ birds, is such a serious and engrossing matter. If it does not look like
+ play with her, it at least looks like leisure and quiet contemplation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no nest-builder that suffers more from crows and squirrels and
+ other enemies than the wood-thrush. It builds as openly and unsuspiciously
+ as if it thought the whole world as honest as itself. Its favorite place
+ is the fork of a sapling, eight or ten feet from the ground, where it
+ falls an easy prey to every nest-robber that comes prowling through the
+ woods and groves. It is not a bird that skulks and hides, like the
+ cat-bird, the brown-thrasher, the chat, or the cheewink, and its nest is
+ not concealed with the same art as theirs. Our thrushes are all frank,
+ open-mannered birds; but the veery and the hermit build upon the ground,
+ where they at least escape the crows, owls, and jays, and stand a better
+ chance to be overlooked, by the red squirrel and weasel also; while the
+ robin seeks the protection of dwellings and out-buildings. For years I
+ have not known the nest of a wood-thrush to succeed. During the season
+ referred to I observed but two, both apparently a second attempt, as the
+ season was well advanced, and both failures. In one case, the nest was
+ placed in a branch that an apple tree, standing near a dwelling, held out
+ over the highway. The structure was barely ten feet above the middle of
+ the road, and would just escape a passing load of hay. It was made
+ conspicuous by the use of a large fragment of newspaper in its foundation&mdash;an
+ unsafe material to build upon in most cases. Whatever else the press may
+ guard, this particular newspaper did not guard this nest from harm. It saw
+ the egg and probably the chick, but not the fledgeling. A murderous deed
+ was committed above the public highway, but whether in the open day or
+ under cover of darkness I have no means of knowing. The frisky red
+ squirrel was doubtless the culprit. The other nest was in a maple sapling,
+ within a few yards of the little rustic summer-house already referred to.
+ The first attempt of the season, I suspect, had failed in a more secluded
+ place under the hill; so the pair had come up nearer the house for
+ protection. The male sang in the trees near by for several days before I
+ chanced to see the nest. The very morning, I think, it was finished, I saw
+ a red squirrel exploring a tree but a few yards away; he probably knew
+ what the singing meant as well as I did. I did not see the inside of the
+ nest, for it was almost instantly deserted, the female having probably
+ laid a single egg, which the squirrel had devoured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I were a bird, in building my nest I should follow the example of the
+ bobolink, placing it in the midst of a broad meadow, where there was no
+ spear of grass, or flower or growth unlike another to mark its site. I
+ judge that the bobolink escapes the dangers to which I have adverted as
+ few or no other birds do. Unless the mowers come along at an earlier date
+ than she has anticipated, that is, before July lst, or a skunk goes nosing
+ through the grass, which is unusual, she is as safe as bird well can be in
+ the great open of nature. She selects the most monotonous and uniform
+ place she can find amid the daisies or the timothy and clover, and places
+ her simple structure upon the ground in the midst of it. There is no
+ concealment, except as the great conceals the little, as the desert
+ conceals the pebble, as the myriad conceals the unit. You may find the
+ nest once, if your course chances to lead you across it and your eye is
+ quick enough to note the silent brown bird as she darts quickly away; but
+ step three paces in the wrong direction, and your search will probably be
+ fruitless. My friend and I found a nest by accident one day, and then lost
+ it again one minute afterward. I moved away a few yards to be sure of the
+ mother-bird, charging my friend not to stir from his tracks. When I
+ returned, he had moved two paces, he said (he had really moved four), and
+ we spent a half hour stooping over the daisies and the buttercups, looking
+ for the lost clew. We grew desperate, and fairly felt the ground all over
+ with our hands, but without avail. I marked the spot with a bush, and came
+ the next day, and with the bush as a centre, moved about it in slowly
+ increasing circles, covering, I thought, nearly every inch of ground with
+ my feet, and laying hold of it with all the visual power that I could
+ command, till my patience was exhausted, and I gave up, baffled. I began
+ to doubt the ability of the parent birds themselves to find it, and so
+ secreted myself and watched. After much delay, the male bird appeared with
+ food in his beak, and satisfying himself that the coast was clear, dropped
+ into the grass which I had trodden down in my search. Fastening my eye
+ upon a particular meadow-lily, I walked straight to the spot, bent down,
+ and gazed long and intently into the grass. Finally my eye separated the
+ nest and its young from its surroundings. My foot had barely missed them
+ in my search, but by how much they had escaped my eye I could not tell.
+ Probably not by distance at all, but simply by unrecognition. They were
+ virtually invisible. The dark gray and yellowish brown dry grass and
+ stubble of the meadow-bottom were exactly copied in the color of the
+ half-fledged young. More than that, they hugged the nest so closely and
+ formed such a compact mass, that though there were five of them, they
+ preserved the unit of expression,&mdash;no single head or form was
+ defined; they were one, and that one was without shape or color, and not
+ separable, except by closest scrutiny, from the one of the meadow-bottom.
+ That nest prospered, as bobolinks' nests doubtless generally do; for,
+ notwithstanding the enormous slaughter of the birds during their fall
+ migrations by Southern sportsmen, the bobolink appears to hold its own,
+ and its music does not diminish in our Northern meadows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Birds with whom the struggle for life is the sharpest seem to be more
+ prolific than those whose nest and young are exposed to fewer dangers. The
+ robin, the sparrow, the pewee, etc., will rear, or make the attempt to
+ rear, two and sometimes three broods in a season; but the bobolink, the
+ oriole, the kingbird, the goldfinch, the cedar-bird, the birds of prey,
+ and the woodpeckers, that build in safe retreats, in the trunks of trees,
+ have usually but a single brood. If the boblink reared two broods, our
+ meadows would swarm with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I noted three nests of the cedar-bird in August in a single orchard, all
+ productive, but all with one or more unfruitful eggs in them. The
+ cedar-bird is the most silent of our birds having but a single fine note,
+ so far as I have observed, but its manners are very expressive at times.
+ No bird known to me is capable of expressing so much silent alarm while on
+ the nest as this bird. As you ascend the tree and draw near it, it
+ depresses its plumage and crest, stretches up its neck, and becomes the
+ very picture of fear. Other birds, under like circumstances, hardly change
+ their expression at all till they launch into the air, when by their voice
+ they express anger rather than alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have referred to the red squirrel as a destroyer of the eggs and young
+ of birds. I think the mischief it does in this respect can hardly be over
+ estimated. Nearly all birds look upon it as their enemy, and attack and
+ annoy it when it appears near their breeding haunts. Thus, I have seen the
+ pewee, the cuckoo, the robin, and the wood-thrush pursuing it with angry
+ voice and gestures. A friend of mine saw a pair of robins attack one in
+ the top of a tall tree so vigorously that they caused it to lose its hold,
+ when it fell to the ground, and was so stunned by the blow as to allow him
+ to pick it up. If you wish the birds to breed and thrive in your orchard
+ and groves, kill every red squirrel that infests the place; kill every
+ weasel also. The weasel is a subtle and arch enemy of the birds. It climbs
+ trees and explores them with great ease and nimbleness. I have seen it do
+ so on several occasions. One day my attention was arrested by the angry
+ notes of a pair of brown-thrashers that were flitting from bush to bush
+ along an old stone row in a remote field. Presently I saw what it was that
+ excited them&mdash;three large red weasels, or ermines coming along the
+ stone wall, and leisurely and half playfully exploring every tree that
+ stood near it. They had probably robbed the thrashers. They would go up
+ the trees with great ease, and glide serpent-like out upon the main
+ branches. When they descended the tree they were unable to come straight
+ down, like a squirrel, but went around it spirally. How boldly they thrust
+ their heads out of the wall, and eyed me and sniffed me, as I drew near,&mdash;their
+ round, thin ears, their prominent, glistening, bead-like eyes, and the
+ curving, snake-like motions of the head and neck being very noticeable.
+ They looked like blood-suckers and egg-suckers. They suggested something
+ extremely remorseless and cruel. One could understand the alarm of the
+ rats when they discover one of these fearless, subtle, and circumventing
+ creatures threading their holes. To flee must be like trying to escape
+ death itself. I was one day standing in the woods upon a flat stone, in
+ what at certain seasons was the bed of a stream, when one of these weasels
+ came undulating along and ran under the stone upon which I was standing.
+ As I remained motionless, he thrust his wedge-shaped head, and turned it
+ back above the stone as if half in mind to seize my foot; then he drew
+ back, and presently went his way. These weasels often hunt in packs like
+ the British stoat. When I was a boy, my father one day armed me with an
+ old musket and sent me to shoot chipmunks around the corn. While watching
+ the squirrels, a troop of weasels tried to cross a bar-way where I sat,
+ and were so bent on doing it that I fired at them, boy-like, simply to
+ thwart their purpose. One of the weasels was disabled by my shot, but the
+ troop was not discouraged, and, after making several feints to cross, one
+ of them seized the wounded one and bore it over, and the pack disappeared
+ in the wall on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let me conclude this chapter with two or three notes about this alert
+ enemy of the birds and the lesser animals, the weasel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A farmer one day heard a queer growling sound in the grass; on approaching
+ the spot he saw two weasels contending over a mouse; each had hold of the
+ mouse pulling in opposite directions, and were so absorbed in the struggle
+ that the farmer cautiously put his hands down and grabbed them both by the
+ back of the neck. He put them in a cage, and offered them bread and other
+ food. This they refused to eat, but in a few days one of them had eaten
+ the other up, picking his bones clean and leaving nothing but the
+ skeleton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same farmer was one day in his cellar when two rats came out of a hole
+ near him in great haste, and ran up the cellar wall and along its top till
+ they came to a floor timber that stopped their progress, when they turned
+ at bay, and looked excitedly back along the course they had come. In a
+ moment a weasel, evidently in hot pursuit of them, came out of the hole,
+ and seeing the farmer, checked his course and darted back. The rats had
+ doubtless turned to give him fight, and would probably have been a match
+ for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weasel seems to track its game by scent. A hunter of my acquaintance
+ was one day sitting in the woods, when he saw a red squirrel run with
+ great speed up a tree near him, and out upon a long branch, from which he
+ leaped to some rocks, and disappeared beneath them. In a moment a weasel
+ came in full course upon his trail, ran up the tree, then out along the
+ branch, from the end of which he leaped to the rocks as the squirrel did,
+ and plunged beneath them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubtless the squirrel fell a prey to him. The squirrel's best game would
+ have been to have kept to the higher tree-tops, where he could easily have
+ distanced the weasel. But beneath the rocks he stood a very poor chance. I
+ have often wondered what keeps such an animal as the weasel in check, for
+ weasels are quite rare. They never need go hungry, for rats and squirrels
+ and mice and birds are everywhere. They probably do not fall a prey to any
+ other animal, and very rarely to man. But the circumstances or agencies
+ that check the increase of any species of animal are, as Darwin says, very
+ obscure and but little known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BEES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AN IDYL OF THE HONEY-BEE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There is no creature with which man has surrounded himself that seems so
+ much like a product of civilization, so much like the result of
+ development on special lines and in special fields, as the honey-bee.
+ Indeed, a colony of bees, with their neatness and love of order, their
+ division of labor, their public spiritedness, their thrift, their complex
+ economies and their inordinate love of gain, seems as far removed from a
+ condition of rude nature as does a walled city or a cathedral town. Our
+ native bee, on the other hand, "the burly, dozing humble-bee," affects one
+ more like the rude, untutored savage. He has learned nothing from
+ experience. He lives from hand to mouth. He luxuriates in time of plenty,
+ and he starves in times of scarcity. He lives in a rude nest or in a hole
+ in the ground, and in small communities; he builds a few deep cells or
+ sacks in which he stores a little honey and bee-bread for his young, but
+ as a worker in wax he is of the most primitive and awkward. The Indian
+ regarded the honey-bee as an ill-omen. She was the white man's fly. In
+ fact she was the epitome of the white man himself. She has the white man's
+ craftiness, his industry, his architectural skill, his neatness and love
+ of system, his foresight; and above all his eager, miserly habits. The
+ honeybee's great ambition is to be rich, to lay up great stores, to
+ possess the sweet of every flower that blooms. She is more than provident.
+ Enough will not satisfy her, she must have all she can get by hook or by
+ crook. She comes from the oldest country, Asia, and thrives best in the
+ most fertile and long-settled lands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the fact remains that the honey-bee is essentially a wild creature,
+ and never has been and cannot be thoroughly domesticated. Its proper home
+ is the woods, and thither every new swarm counts on going; and thither
+ many do go in spite of the care and watchfulness of the bee-keeper. If the
+ woods in any given locality are deficient in trees with suitable cavities,
+ the bees resort to all sorts of makeshifts; they go into chimneys, into
+ barns and outhouses, under stones, into rocks, and so forth. Several
+ chimneys in my locality with disused flues are taken possession of by
+ colonies of bees nearly every season. One day, while bee-hunting, I
+ developed a line that went toward a farm-house where I had reason to
+ believe no bees were kept. I followed it up and questioned the farmer
+ about his bees. He said he kept no bees, but that a swarm had taken
+ possession of his chimney, and another had gone under the clapboards in
+ the gable end of his house. He had taken a large lot of honey out of both
+ places the year before. Another farmer told me that one day his family had
+ seen a number of bees examining a knot-hole in the side of his house; the
+ next day as they were sitting down to dinner their attention was attracted
+ by a loud humming noise, when they discovered a swarm of bees settling
+ upon the side of the house and pouring into the knot-hole. In subsequent
+ years other swarms came to the same place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently, every swarm of bees before it leaves the parent hive sends out
+ exploring parties to look up the future home. The woods and groves are
+ searched through and through, and no doubt the privacy of many a squirrel
+ and many a wood mouse is intruded upon. What cozy nooks and retreats they
+ do spy out, so much more attractive than the painted hive in the garden,
+ so much cooler in summer and so much warmer in winter!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bee is in the main an honest citizen; she prefers legitimate to
+ illegitimate business; she is never an outlaw until her proper sources of
+ supply fail; she will not touch honey as long as honey-yielding flowers
+ can be found; she always prefers to go to the fountain-head, and dislikes
+ to take her sweets at second hand. But in the fall, after the flowers have
+ failed, she can be tempted. The bee-hunter takes advantage of this fact;
+ he betrays her with a little honey. He wants to steal her stores, and he
+ first encourages her to steal his, then follows the thief home with her
+ booty. This is the whole trick of the bee-hunter. The bees never suspect
+ his game, else by taking a circuitous route they could easily baffle him.
+ But the honey-bee has absolutely no wit or cunning outside of her special
+ gifts as a gatherer and storer of honey. She is a simple-minded creature,
+ and can be imposed upon by any novice. Yet it is not every novice that can
+ find a bee-tree. The sportsman may track his game to its retreat by the
+ aid of his dog, but in hunting the honey-bee one must be his own dog, and
+ track his game through an element in which it leaves no trail. It is a
+ task for a sharp, quick eye, and may test the resources of the best
+ wood-craft. One autumn when I devoted much time to this pursuit, as the
+ best means of getting at nature and the open-air exhilaration, my eye
+ became so trained that bees were nearly as easy to it as birds. I saw and
+ heard bees wherever I went. One day, standing on a street corner in a
+ great city, I saw above the trucks and the traffic a line of bees carrying
+ off sweets from some grocery or confectionery shop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One looks upon the woods with a new interest when he suspects they hold a
+ colony of bees. What a pleasing secret it is; a tree with a heart of
+ comb-honey, a decayed oak or maple with a bit of Sicily or Mount Hymettus
+ stowed away in its trunk or branches; secret chambers where lies hidden
+ the wealth of ten thousand little freebooters, great nuggets and wedges of
+ precious ore gathered with risk and labor from every field and wood about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if you would know the delights of bee-hunting, and how many sweets
+ such a trip yields beside honey, come with me some bright, warm, late
+ September or early October day. It is the golden season of the year, and
+ any errand or pursuit that takes us abroad upon the hills or by the
+ painted woods and along the amber colored streams at such a time is
+ enough. So, with haversacks filled with grapes and peaches and apples and
+ a bottle of milk,&mdash;for we shall not be home to dinner,&mdash;and
+ armed with a compass, a hatchet, a pail, and a box with a piece of
+ comb-honey neatly fitted into it&mdash;any box the size of your hand with
+ a lid will do nearly as well as the elaborate and ingenious contrivance of
+ the regular bee-hunter&mdash;we sally forth. Our course at first lies
+ along the highway, under great chestnut-trees whose nuts are just
+ dropping, then through an orchard and across a little creek, thence gently
+ rising through a long series of cultivated fields toward some high,
+ uplying land, behind which rises a rugged wooded ridge or mountain, the
+ most sightly point in all this section. Behind this ridge for several
+ miles the country is wild, wooded, and rocky, and is no doubt the home of
+ many wild swarms of bees. What a gleeful uproar the robins, cedar-birds,
+ high-holes, and cow black-birds make amid the black cherry-trees as we
+ pass along. The raccoons, too, have been here after black cherries, and we
+ see their marks at various points. Several crows are walking about a newly
+ sowed wheat field we pass through, and we pause to note their graceful
+ movements and glossy coats. I have seen no bird walk the ground with just
+ the same air the crow does. It is not exactly pride; there is no strut or
+ swagger in it, though perhaps just a little condescension; it is the
+ contented, complaisant, and self-possessed gait of a lord over his
+ domains. All these acres are mine, he says, and all these crops; men plow
+ and sow for me, and I stay here or go there, and find life sweet and good
+ wherever I am. The hawk looks awkward and out of place on the ground; the
+ game birds hurry and skulk, but the crow is at home and treads the earth
+ as if there were none to molest him or make him afraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crows we have always with us, but it is not every day or every season
+ that one sees an eagle. Hence I must preserve the memory of one I saw the
+ last day I went bee-hunting. As I was laboring up the side of a mountain
+ at the head of a valley, the noble bird sprang from the top of a dry tree
+ above me and came sailing directly over my head. I saw him bend his eye
+ down upon me, and I could hear the low hum of his plumage, as if the web
+ off every quill in his great wings vibrated in his strong, level flight. I
+ watched him as long as my eye could hold him. When he was fairly clear of
+ the mountain he began that sweeping spiral movement in which he climbs the
+ sky. Up and up he went without once breaking his majestic poise till he
+ appeared to sight some far-off alien geography, when he bent his course
+ thitherward and gradually vanished in the blue depths. The eagle is a bird
+ of large ideas, he embraces long distances; the continent is his home. I
+ never look upon one without emotion; I follow him with my eye as long as I
+ can. I think of Canada, of the Great Lakes, of the Rocky Mountains, of the
+ wild and sounding sea-coast. The waters are his, and the woods and the
+ inaccessible cliffs. He pierces behind the veil of the storm, and his joy
+ is height and depth and vast spaces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We go out of our way to touch at a spring run in the edge of the woods,
+ and are lucky to find a single scarlet lobelia lingering there. It seems
+ almost to light up the gloom with its intense bit of color. Beside a ditch
+ in a field beyond we find the great blue lobelia (Lobelia syphilitica),
+ and near it amid the weeds and wild grasses and purple asters the most
+ beautiful of our fall flowers, the fringed gentian. What a rare and
+ delicate, almost aristocratic look the gentian has amid its coarse,
+ unkempt surroundings. It does not lure the bee, but it lures and holds
+ every passing human eye. If we strike through the corner of yonder woods,
+ where the ground is moistened by hidden springs and where there is a
+ little opening amid the trees, we shall find the closed gentian, a rare
+ flower in this locality. I had walked this way many times before I chanced
+ upon its retreat; and then I was following a line of bees. I lost the bees
+ but I got the gentians. How curiously this flower looks, with its deep
+ blue petals folded together so tightly&mdash;a bud and yet a blossom. It
+ is the nun among our wild flowers, a form closely veiled and cloaked. The
+ buccaneer bumble-bee sometimes tries to rifle it of its sweets. I have
+ seen the blossom with the bee entombed in it. He had forced his way into
+ the virgin corolla as if determined to know its secret, but he had never
+ returned with the knowledge he had gained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a refreshing walk of a couple of miles we reach a point where we
+ will make our first trial&mdash;a high stone wall that runs parallel with
+ the wooded ridge referred to, and separated from it by a broad field.
+ There are bees at work there on that goldenrod, and it requires but little
+ maneuvering to sweep one into our box. Almost any other creature rudely
+ and suddenly arrested in its career and clapped into a cage in this way
+ would show great confusion and alarm. The bee is alarmed for a moment, but
+ the bee has a passion stronger than its love of life or fear of death,
+ namely, desire for honey, not simply to eat, but to carry home as booty.
+ "Such rage of honey in their bosom beats," says Virgil. It is quick to
+ catch the scent of honey in the box, and as quick to fall to filling
+ itself. We now set the box down upon the wall and gently remove the cover.
+ The bee is head and shoulders in one of the half-filled cells, and is
+ oblivious to everything else about it. Come rack, come ruin, it will die
+ at work. We step back a few paces, and sit down upon the ground so as to
+ bring the box against the blue sky as a background. In two or three
+ minutes the bee is seen rising slowly and heavily from the box. It seems
+ loath to leave so much honey behind and it marks the place well. It mounts
+ aloft in a rapidly increasing spiral, surveying the near and minute
+ objects first, then the larger and more distant, till having circled about
+ the spot five or six times and taken all its bearings it darts away for
+ home. It is a good eye that holds fast to the bee till it is fairly off.
+ Sometimes one's head will swim following it, and often one's eyes are put
+ out by the sun. This bee gradually drifts down the hill, then strikes away
+ toward a farm-house half a mile away, where I know bees are kept. Then we
+ try another and another, and the third bee, much to our satisfaction, goes
+ straight toward the woods. We could see the brown speck against the darker
+ background for many yards. The regular bee-hunter professes to be able to
+ tell a wild bee from a tame one by the color, the former, he says, being
+ lighter. But there is no difference; they are both alike in color and in
+ manner. Young bees are lighter than old, and that is all there is of it.
+ If a bee lived many years in the woods it would doubtless come to have
+ some distinguishing marks, but the life of a bee is only a few months at
+ the farthest, and no change is wrought in this brief time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our bees are all soon back, and more with them, for we have touched the
+ box here and there with the cork of a bottle of anise oil, and this
+ fragrant and pungent oil will attract bees half a mile or more. When no
+ flowers can be found, this is the quickest way to obtain a bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a singular fact that when the bee first finds the hunter's box its
+ first feeling is one of anger; it is as mad as a hornet; its tone changes,
+ it sounds its shrill war trumpet and darts to and fro, and gives vent to
+ its rage and indignation in no uncertain manner. It seems to scent foul
+ play at once. It says, "Here is robbery; here is the spoil of some hive,
+ may be my own," and its blood is up. But its ruling passion soon comes to
+ the surface, its avarice gets the better of its indignation, and it seems
+ to say, "Well, I had better take possession of this and carry it home." So
+ after many feints and approaches and dartings off with a loud angry hum as
+ if it would none of it, the bee settles down and fills itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It does not entirely cool off and get soberly to work till it has made two
+ or three trips home with its booty. When other bees come, even if all from
+ the same swarm, they quarrel and dispute over the box, and clip and dart
+ at each other like bantam cocks. Apparently the ill feeling which the
+ sight of the honey awakens is not one of jealousy or rivalry, but wrath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bee will usually make three or four trips from the hunter's box before
+ it brings back a companion. I suspect the bee does not tell its fellows
+ what it has found, but that they smell out the secret; it doubtless bears
+ some evidence with it upon its feet or proboscis that it has been upon
+ honey-comb and not upon flowers, and its companions take the hint and
+ follow, arriving always many seconds behind. Then the quantity and quality
+ of the booty would also betray it. No doubt, also, there are plenty of
+ gossips about a hive that note and tell everything. "Oh, did you see that?
+ Peggy Mel came in a few moments ago in great haste, and one of the
+ up-stairs packers says she was loaded till she groaned with apple-blossom
+ honey which she deposited, and then rushed off again like mad.
+ Apple-blossom honey in October! Fee, fi, fo, fum! I smell something! Let's
+ after."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In about half an hour we have three well-defined lines of bees established&mdash;two
+ to farm-houses and one to the woods, and our box is being rapidly depleted
+ of its honey. About every fourth bee goes to the woods, and now that they
+ have learned the way thoroughly they do not make the long preliminary
+ whirl above the box, but start directly from it. The woods are rough and
+ dense and the hill steep, and we do not like to follow the line of bees
+ until we have tried at least to settle the problem as to the distance they
+ go into the woods-whether the tree is on this side of the ridge or in the
+ depth of the forest on the other side. So we shut up the box when it is
+ full of bees and carry it about three hundred yards along the wall from
+ which we are operating. When liberated, the bees, as they always will in
+ such cases, go off in the same directions they have been going; they do
+ not seem to know that they have been moved. But other bees have followed
+ our scent, and it is not many minutes before a second line to the woods is
+ established. This is called cross-lining the bees. The new line makes a
+ sharp angle with the other line, and we know at once that the tree is only
+ a few rods into the woods. The two lines we have established form two
+ sides of a triangle of which the wall is the base; at the apex of the
+ triangle, or where the two lines meet in the woods, we are sure to find
+ the tree. We quickly follow up these lines, and where they cross each
+ other on the side of the hill we scan every tree closely. I pause at the
+ foot of an oak and examine a hole near the root; now the bees are in this
+ tree and their entrance is on the upper side near the ground, not two feet
+ from the hole I peer into, and yet so quiet and secret is their going and
+ coming that I fail to discover them and pass on up the hill. Failing in
+ this direction, I return to the oak again, and then perceive the bees
+ going out in a small crack in the tree. The bees do not know they are
+ found out and that the game is in our hands, and are as oblivious of our
+ presence as if we were ants or crickets. The indications are that the
+ swarm is a small one, and the store of honey trifling. In "taking up" a
+ bee-tree it is usual first to kill or stupefy the bees with the fumes of
+ burning sulfur or with tobacco smoke. But this course is impracticable on
+ the present occasion, so we boldly and ruthlessly assault the tree with an
+ ax we have procured. At the first blow the bees set up a loud buzzing, but
+ we have no mercy, and the side of the cavity is soon cut away and the
+ interior with its white-yellow mass of comb-honey is exposed, and not a
+ bee strikes a blow in defense of its all. This may seem singular, but it
+ has nearly always been my experience. When a swarm of bees are thus rudely
+ assaulted with an ax, they evidently think the end of the world has come,
+ and, like true misers as they are, each one seizes as much of the treasure
+ as it can hold; in other words they all fall to and gorge themselves with
+ honey, and calmly await the issue. When in this condition they make no
+ defense and will not sting unless taken hold of. In fact they are as
+ harmless as flies. Bees are always to be managed with boldness and
+ decision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Any half-way measures, any timid poking about, any feeble attempts to
+ reach their honey, are sure to be quickly resented. The popular notion
+ that bees have a special antipathy toward certain persons and a liking for
+ certain others has only this fact at the bottom of it; they will sting a
+ person who is afraid of them and goes skulking and dodging about, and they
+ will not sting a person who faces them boldly and has no dread of them.
+ They are like dogs. The way to disarm a vicious dog is to show him you do
+ not fear him; it is his turn to be afraid then. I never had any dread of
+ bees and am seldom stung by them. I have climbed up into a large chestnut
+ that contained a swarm in one of its cavities and chopped them out with an
+ ax, being obliged at times to pause and brush the bewildered bees from my
+ hands and face, and not been stung once. I have chopped a swarm out of an
+ apple-tree in June and taken out the cards of honey and arranged them in a
+ hive, and then dipped out the bees with a dipper, and taken the whole home
+ with me in pretty good condition, with scarcely any opposition on the part
+ of the bees. In reaching your hand into the cavity to detach and remove
+ the comb you are pretty sure to get stung, for when you touch the
+ "business end" of a bee, it will sting even though its head be off. But
+ the bee carries the antidote to its own poison. The best remedy for bee
+ sting is honey, and when your hands are besmeared with honey, as they are
+ sure to be on such occasions, the wound is scarcely more painful than the
+ prick of a pin. Assault your bee-tree, then, boldly with your ax, and you
+ will find that when the honey is exposed every bee has surrendered and the
+ whole swarm is cowering in helpless bewilderment and terror. Our tree
+ yields only a few pounds of honey, not enough to have lasted the swarm
+ till January, but no matter; we have the less burden to carry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon we go nearly half a mile farther along the ridge to a
+ cornfield that lies immediately in front of the highest point of the
+ mountain. The view is superb; the ripe autumn landscape rolls away to the
+ east, cut through by the great placid river; in the extreme north the wall
+ of the Catskills stands out clear and strong, while in the south the
+ mountains of the Highlands bound the view. The day is warm and the bees
+ are very busy there in that neglected corner of the field, rich in asters,
+ flea-bane, and golden-rod. The corn has been cut, and upon a stout, but a
+ few rods from the woods, which here drop quickly down from the precipitous
+ heights, we set up our bee-box, touched again with the pungent oil. In a
+ few moments a bee has found it; she comes up to leeward, following the
+ scent. On leaving the box she goes straight toward the woods. More bees
+ quickly come, and it is not long before the line is well established. Now
+ we have recourse to the same tactics we employed before, and move along
+ the ridge to another field to get our cross line. But the bees still go in
+ almost the same direction they did from the corn stout. The tree is then
+ either on the top of the mountain or on the other or west side of it. We
+ hesitate to make the plunge into the woods and seek to scale those
+ precipices, for the eye can plainly see what is before us. As the
+ afternoon sun gets lower the bees are seen with wonderful distinctness.
+ They fly toward and under the sun and are in a strong light, while the
+ near woods which form the background are in deep shadow. They look like
+ large luminous motes. Their swiftly vibrating, transparent wings surround
+ their bodies with a shining nimbus that makes them visible for a long
+ distance. They seem magnified many times. We see them bridge the little
+ gulf between us and the woods, then rise up over the tree-tops with their
+ burdens, swerving neither to the right hand nor to the left. It is almost
+ pathetic to see them labor so, climbing the mountain and unwittingly
+ guiding us to their treasures. When the sun gets down so that his
+ direction corresponds exactly with the course of the bees, we make the
+ plunge. It proves even harder climbing than we had anticipated; the
+ mountain is faced by a broken and irregular wall of rock, up which we pull
+ ourselves slowly and cautiously by main strength. In half an hour, the
+ perspiration streaming from every pore, we reach the summit. The trees
+ here are all small, a second growth, and we are soon convinced the bees
+ are not here. Then down we go on the other side, clambering down the rocky
+ stairways till we reach quite a broad plateau that forms something like
+ the shoulder of the mountain. On the brink of this there are many large
+ hemlocks, and we scan them closely and rap upon them with our ax. But not
+ a bee is seen or heard; we do not seem as near the tree as we were in the
+ fields below; yet if some divinity would only whisper the fact to us we
+ are within a few rods of the coveted prize, which is not in one of the
+ large hemlocks or oaks that absorb our attention, but in an old stub or
+ stump not six feet high, and which we have seen and passed several times
+ without giving it a thought. We go farther down the mountain and beat
+ about to the right and left and get entangled in brush and arrested by
+ precipices, and finally as the day is nearly spent, give up the search and
+ leave the woods quite baffled, but resolved to return on the morrow. The
+ next day we come back and commence operations in an opening in the woods
+ well down on the side of the mountain, where we gave up the search. Our
+ box is soon swarming with the eager bees, and they go back toward the
+ summit we have passed. We follow back and establish a new line where the
+ ground will permit; then another and another, and yet the riddle is not
+ solved. One time we are south of them, then north, then the bees get up
+ through the trees and we cannot tell where they go. But after much
+ searching, and after the mystery seems rather to deepen than to clear up,
+ we chance to pause beside the old stump. A bee comes out of a small
+ opening, like that made by ants in decayed wood, rubs its eyes and
+ examines its antennae as bees always do before leaving their hive, then
+ takes flight. At the same instant several bees come by us loaded with our
+ honey and settle home with that peculiar low complacent buzz of the
+ well-filled insect. Here then is our idyl, our bit of Virgil and
+ Theocritus, in a decayed stump of a hemlock tree. We could tear it open
+ with our hands, and a bear would find it an easy prize, and a rich one
+ too, for we take from it fifty pounds of excellent honey. The bees have
+ been here many years, and have of course sent out swarm after swarm into
+ the wilds. They have protected themselves against the weather and
+ strengthened their shaky habitation by a copious use of wax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a bee-tree is thus "taken up" in the middle of the day, of course a
+ good many bees are away from home and have not heard the news. When they
+ return and find the ground flowing with honey, and piles of bleeding combs
+ lying about, they apparently do not recognize the place, and their first
+ instinct is to fall to and fill themselves; this done, their next thought
+ is to carry it home, so they rise up slowly through the branches of the
+ trees till they have attained an altitude that enables them to survey the
+ scene, when they seem to say, "Why, this is home," and down they come
+ again; beholding the wreck and ruins once more they still think there is
+ some mistake, and get up a second or a third time and then drop back
+ pitifully as before. It is the most pathetic sight of all, the surviving
+ and bewildered bees struggling to save a few drops of their wasted
+ treasures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, if there is another swarm in the woods, robber-bees appear. You
+ may know them by their saucy, chiding, devil-may-care hum. It is an ill
+ wind that blows nobody good, and they make the most of the misfortune of
+ their neighbors; and thereby pave the way for their own ruin. The hunter
+ marks their course and the next day looks them up. On this occasion the
+ day was hot and the honey very fragrant, and a line of bees was soon
+ established S. S. W. Though there was much refuse honey in the old stub,
+ and though little golden rills trickled down the hill from it, and the
+ near branches and saplings were besmeared with it where we wiped our
+ murderous hands, yet not a drop was wasted. It was a feast to which not
+ only honey-bees came, but bumble-bees, wasps, hornets, flies, ants. The
+ bumble-bees, which at this season are hungry vagrants with no fixed place
+ of abode, would gorge themselves, then creep beneath the bits of empty
+ comb or fragments of bark and pass the night, and renew the feast next
+ day. The bumble-bee is an insect of which the bee-hunter sees much. There
+ are all sorts and sizes of them. They are dull and clumsy compared with
+ the honey-bee. Attracted in the fields by the bee-hunter's box, they will
+ come up the wind on the scent and blunder into it in the most stupid,
+ lubberly fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The honey-bee that licked up our leavings on the old stub belonged to a
+ swarm, as it proved, about half a mile farther down the ridge, and a few
+ days afterward fate overtook them, and their stores in turn became the
+ prey of another swarm in the vicinity, which also tempted Providence and
+ were overwhelmed. The first mentioned swarm I had lined from several
+ points, and was following up the clew over rocks and through gulleys, when
+ I came to where a large hemlock had been felled a few years before and a
+ swarm taken from a cavity near the top of it; fragments of the old comb
+ were yet to be seen. A few yards away stood another short, squatty
+ hemlock, and I said my bees ought to be there. As I paused near it I
+ noticed where the tree had been wounded with an ax a couple of feet from
+ the ground many years before. The wound had partially grown over, but
+ there was an opening there that I did not see at the first glance. I was
+ about to pass on when a bee passed me making that peculiar shrill,
+ discordant hum that a bee makes when besmeared with honey. I saw it alight
+ in the partially closed wound and crawl home; then came others and others,
+ little bands and squads of them heavily freighted with honey from the box.
+ The tree was about twenty inches through and hollow at the butt, or from
+ the ax mark down. This space the bees had completely filled with honey.
+ With an ax we cut away the outer ring of live wood and exposed the
+ treasure. Despite the utmost care, we wounded the comb so that little
+ rills of the golden liquid issued from the root of the tree and trickled
+ down the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other bee-tree in the vicinity, to which I have referred, we found one
+ warm November day in less than half an hour after entering the woods. It
+ also was a hemlock, that stood in a niche in a wall of hoary, moss-covered
+ rocks thirty feet high. The tree hardly reached to the top of the
+ precipice. The bees entered a small hole at the root, which was seven or
+ eight feet from the ground. The position was a striking one. Never did
+ apiary have a finer outlook or more rugged surroundings. A black,
+ wood-embraced lake lay at our feet; the long panorama of the Catskills
+ filled the far distance, and the more broken outlines of the Shawangunk
+ range filled the rear. On every hand were precipices and a wild confusion
+ of rocks and trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cavity occupied by the bees was about three feet and a half long and
+ eight or ten inches in diameter. With an ax we cut away one side of the
+ tree and laid bare its curiously wrought heart of honey. It was a most
+ pleasing sight. What winding and devious ways the bees had through their
+ palace! What great masses and blocks of snow-white comb there were! Where
+ it was sealed up, presenting that slightly dented, uneven surface, it
+ looked like some precious ore. When we carried a large pail full of it out
+ of the woods, it seemed still more like ore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your native bee-hunter predicates the distance of the tree by the time the
+ bee occupies in making its first trip. But this is no certain guide. You
+ are always safe in calculating that the tree is inside of a mile, and you
+ need not as a rule look for your bee's return under ten minutes. One day I
+ picked up a bee in an opening in the woods and gave it honey, and it made
+ three trips to my box with an interval of about twelve minutes between
+ them; it returned alone each time; the tree, which I afterward found, was
+ about half a mile distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In lining bees through the woods, the tactics of the hunter are to pause
+ every twenty or thirty rods, lop away the branches or cut down the trees,
+ and set the bees to work again. If they still go forward, he goes forward
+ also and repeats his observations till the tree is found or till the bees
+ turn and come back upon the trail. Then he knows he has passed the tree,
+ and he retraces his steps to a convenient distance and tries again, and
+ thus quickly reduces the space to be looked over till the swarm is traced
+ home. On one occasion, in a wild rocky wood, where the surface alternated
+ between deep gulfs and chasms filled with thick, heavy growths of timber
+ and sharp, precipitous, rocky ridges like a tempest tossed sea, I carried
+ my bees directly under their tree, and set them to work from a high,
+ exposed ledge of rocks not thirty feet distant. One would have expected
+ them under such circumstances to have gone straight home, as there were
+ but few branches intervening, but they did not; they labored up through
+ the trees and attained an altitude above the woods as if they had miles to
+ travel, and thus baffled me for hours. Bees will always do this. They are
+ acquainted with the woods only from the top side, and from the air above
+ they recognize home only by land-marks here, and in every instance they
+ rise aloft to take their bearings. Think how familiar to them the
+ topography of the forest summits must be-an umbrageous sea or plain where
+ every mask and point is known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another curious fact is that generally you will get track of a bee-tree
+ sooner when you are half a mile from it than when you are only a few
+ yards. Bees, like us human insects, have little faith in the near at hand;
+ they expect to make their fortune in a distant field, they are lured by
+ the remote and the difficult, and hence overlook the flower and the sweet
+ at their very door. On several occasions I have unwittingly set my box
+ within a few paces of a bee-tree and waited long for bees without getting
+ them, when, on removing to a distant field or opening in the woods I have
+ got a clew at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have a theory that when bees leave the hive, unless there is some
+ special attraction in some other direction, they generally go against the
+ wind. They would thus have the wind with them when they returned home
+ heavily laden, and with these little navigators the difference is an
+ important one. With a full cargo, a stiff head-wind is a great hindrance,
+ but fresh and empty-handed they can face it with more ease. Virgil says
+ bees bear gravel stones as ballast, but their only ballast is their honey
+ bag. Hence, when I go bee-hunting, I prefer to get to windward of the
+ woods in which the swarm is supposed to have taken refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees, like the milkman, like to be near a spring. They do water their
+ honey, especially in a dry time. The liquid is then of course thicker and
+ sweeter, and will bear diluting. Hence, old bee-hunters look for bee-trees
+ along creeks and near spring runs in the woods. I once found a tree a long
+ distance from any water, and the honey had a peculiar bitter flavor
+ imparted to it, I was convinced, by rainwater sucked from the decayed and
+ spongy hemlock tree, in which the swarm was found. In cutting into the
+ tree, the north side of it was found to be saturated with water like a
+ spring, which ran out in big drops, and had a bitter flavor. The bees had
+ thus found a spring or a cistern in their own house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees are exposed to many hardships and many dangers. Winds and storms
+ prove as disastrous to them as to other navigators. Black spiders lie in
+ wait for them as do brigands for travelers. One day as I was looking for a
+ bee amid some golden-rod, I spied one partly concealed under a leaf. Its
+ baskets were full of pollen, and it did not move. On lifting up the leaf I
+ discovered that a hairy spider was ambushed there and had the bee by the
+ throat. The vampire was evidently afraid of the bee's sting, and was
+ holding it by the throat till quite sure of its death. Virgil speaks of
+ the painted lizard, perhaps a species of salamander, as an enemy of the
+ honey-bee. We have no lizard that destroys the bee; but our tree-toad,
+ ambushed among the apple and cherry blossoms, snaps them up wholesale.
+ Quick as lightning that subtle but clammy tongue darts forth, and the
+ unsuspecting bee is gone. Virgil also accuses the titmouse and the
+ woodpecker of preying upon the bees, and our kingbird has been charged
+ with the like crime, but the latter devours only the drones. The workers
+ are either too small and quick for it, or else it dreads their sting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Virgil, by the way, had little more than a child's knowledge of the
+ honey-bee. There is little fact and much fable in his fourth Georgic. If
+ he had ever kept bees himself, or even visited an apiary, it is hard to
+ see how he could have believed that the bee in its flight abroad carried a
+ gravel stone for ballast:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "And as when empty barks on billows float,
+ With Sandy ballast sailors trim the boat;
+ So bees bear gravel stones, whose poising weight
+ Steers through the whistling winds their steady flight;"
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ or that when two colonies made war upon each other they issued forth from
+ their hives led by their kings and fought in the air, strewing the ground
+ with the dead and dying:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Hard hailstones lie not thicker on the plain,
+ Nor shaken oaks such show'rs of acorns rain."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is quite certain he had never been bee-hunting. If he had, we should
+ have had a fifth Georgic. Yet he seems to have known that bees sometimes
+ escaped to the woods:&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Nor bees are lodged in hives alone, but found
+ In chambers of their own beneath the ground:
+ Their vaulted roofs are hung in pumices,
+ And in the rotten trunks of hollow trees."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Wild honey is as near like tame as wild bees are like their brothers in
+ hive. The only difference is that wild honey is flavored with your
+ adventure, which makes it a little more delectable than the domestic
+ article.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PASTORAL BEES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The honey-bee goes forth from the hive in spring like the dove from Noah's
+ ark, and it is not till after many days that she brings back the olive
+ leaf, which in this case is a pellet of golden pollen upon each hip,
+ usually obtained from the alder or the swamp willow. In a country where
+ maple sugar is made, the bees get their first taste of sweet from the sap
+ as it flows from the spiles, or as it dries and is condensed upon the
+ sides of the buckets. They will sometimes, in their eagerness, come about
+ the boiling place and be overwhelmed by the steam and the smoke. But bees
+ appear to be more eager for bread in the spring than for honey; their
+ supply of this article, perhaps, does not keep as well as their stores of
+ the latter, hence fresh bread, in the shape of new pollen, is diligently
+ sought for. My bees get their first supplies from the catkins of the
+ willows. How quickly they find them out. If but one catkin opens anywhere
+ within range, a bee is on hand that very hour to rifle it, and it is a
+ most pleasing experience to stand near the hive some mild April day and
+ see them come pouring in with their little baskets packed with this first
+ fruitage of the spring. They will have new bread now; they have been to
+ mill in good earnest; see their dusty coats, and the golden grist they
+ bring home with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a bee brings pollen into the hive, he advances to the cell in which
+ it is to be deposited and kicks it off as one might his overalls or rubber
+ boots, making one foot help the other; then he walks off without ever
+ looking behind him; another bee, one of the indoor hands, comes along and
+ rams it down with his head and packs it into the cell as the dairymaid
+ packs butter into a firkin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first spring wild-flowers, whose shy faces among the dry leaves and
+ rocks are so welcome, yield no honey. The anemone, the hepatica, the
+ bloodroot, the arbutus, the numerous violets, the spring beauty, the
+ corydalis, etc., woo lovers of nature, but do not woo the honey-loving
+ bee. It requires more sun and warmth to develop the saccharine element,
+ and the beauty of these pale striplings of the woods and groves is their
+ sole and sufficient excuse for being. The arbutus, lying low and keeping
+ green all winter, attains to perfume, but not to honey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first honey is perhaps obtained from the flowers of the red maple and
+ the golden willow. The latter sends forth a wild, delicious perfume. The
+ sugar maple blooms a little later, and from its silken tassels a rich
+ nectar is gathered. My bees will not label these different varieties for
+ me as I really wish they would. Honey from the maples, a tree so clean and
+ wholesome, and full of such virtues every way, would be something to put
+ one's tongue to. Or that from the blossoms of the apple, the peach, the
+ cherry, the quince, the currant,&mdash;one would like a card of each of
+ these varieties to note their peculiar qualities. The apple-blossom is
+ very important to the bees. A single swarm has been known to gain twenty
+ pounds in weight during its continuance. Bees love the ripened fruit, too,
+ and in August and September will suck themselves tipsy upon varieties such
+ as the sops-of-wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interval between the blooming of the fruit-trees and that of the
+ clover and the raspberry is bridged over in many localities by the honey
+ locust. What a delightful summer murmur these trees send forth at this
+ season. I know nothing about the quality of the honey, but it ought to
+ keep well. But when the red raspberry blooms, the fountains of plenty are
+ unsealed indeed; what a commotion about the hives then, especially in
+ localities where it is extensively cultivated, as in places along the
+ Hudson. The delicate white clover, which begins to bloom about the same
+ time, is neglected; even honey itself is passed by for this modest
+ colorless, all but odorless flower. A field of these berries in June sends
+ forth a continuous murmur like that of an enormous hive. The honey is not
+ so white as that obtained from clover but it is easier gathered; it is in
+ shallow cups while that of the clover is in deep tubes. The bees are up
+ and at it before sunrise, and it takes a brisk shower to drive them in.
+ But the clover blooms later and blooms everywhere, and is the staple
+ source of supply of the finest quality of honey. The red clover yields up
+ its stores only to the longer proboscis of the bumble-bee, else the bee
+ pasturage of our agricultural districts would be unequaled. I do not know
+ from what the famous honey of Chamouni in the Alps is made, but it can
+ hardly surpass our best products. The snow-white honey of Anatolia in
+ Asiatic Turkey, which is regularly sent to Constantinople for the use of
+ the grand seignior and the ladies of his seraglio, is obtained from the
+ cotton plant, which makes me think that the white clover does not flourish
+ these. The white clover is indigenous with us; its seeds seem latent in
+ the ground, and the application of certain stimulants to the soil, such as
+ wood ashes, causes them to germinate and spring up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rose, with all its beauty and perfume, yields no honey to the bee,
+ unless the wild species be sought by the bumble-bee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the humbler plants, let me not forget the dandelion that so early
+ dots the sunny slopes, and upon which the bee languidly grazes, wallowing
+ to his knees in the golden but not over-succulent pasturage. From the
+ blooming rye and wheat the bee gathers pollen, also from the obscure
+ blossoms of Indian corn. Among weeds, catnip is the great favorite. It
+ lasts nearly the whole season and yields richly. It could no doubt be
+ profitably cultivated in some localities, and catnip honey would be a
+ novelty in the market. It would probably partake of the aromatic
+ properties of the plant from which it was derived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among your stores of honey gathered before midsummer, you may chance upon
+ a card, or mayhap only a square inch or two of comb, in which the liquid
+ is as transparent as water, of a delicious quality, with a slight flavor
+ of mint. This is the product of the linden or basswood, of all the trees
+ in our forest the one most beloved by the bees. Melissa, the goddess of
+ honey, has placed her seal upon this tree. The wild swarms in the woods
+ frequently reap a choice harvest from it. I have seen a mountain side
+ thickly studded with it, its straight, tall, smooth, light-gray shaft
+ carrying its deep-green crown far aloft, like the tulip-tree or the maple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some of the Northwestern States there are large forests of it, and the
+ amount of honey reported stored by strong swarms in this section during
+ the time the tree is in bloom is quite incredible. As a shade and
+ ornamental tree the linden is fully equal to the maple, and if it were as
+ extensively planted and cared for, our supplies of virgin honey would be
+ greatly increased. The famous honey of Lithuania in Russia is the product
+ of the linden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a homely old stanza current among bee folk that&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "A swarm of bees in May
+ Is worth a load of hay;
+ A swarm of bees in June
+ Is worth a silver spoon;
+ But a swarm in July
+ Is not worth a fly."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A swarm in May is indeed a treasure; it is, like an April baby, sure to
+ thrive, and will very likely itself send out a swarm a month or two later;
+ but a swarm in July is not to be despised; it will store no clover or
+ linden honey for the "grand seignior and the ladies of his seraglio," but
+ plenty of the rank and wholesome poor man's nectar, the sun-tanned product
+ of the plebeian buckwheat. Buckwheat honey is the black sheep in this
+ white flock, but there is spirit and character in it. It lays hold of the
+ taste in no equivocal manner, especially when at a winter breakfast it
+ meets its fellow, the russet buckwheat cake. Bread with honey to cover it
+ from the same stalk is double good fortune. It is not black, either, but
+ nut-brown, and belongs to the same class of goods as Herrick's
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Nut-brown mirth and russet wit."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ How the bees love it, and they bring the delicious odor of the blooming
+ plant to the hive with them, so that in the moist warm twilight the apiary
+ is redolent with the perfume of buckwheat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet evidently it is not the perfume of any flower that attracts the bees;
+ they pay no attention to the sweet-scented lilac, or to heliotrope, but
+ work upon sumach, silkweed, and the hateful snapdragon. In September they
+ are hard pressed, and do well if they pick up enough sweet to pay the
+ running expenses of their establishment. The purple asters and the
+ golden-rod are about all that remain to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees will go three or four miles in quest of honey, but it is a great
+ advantage to move the hive near the good pasturage, as has been the custom
+ from the earliest times in the Old World. Some enterprising person, taking
+ a hint perhaps from the ancient Egyptians, who had floating apiaries on
+ the Nile, has tried the experiment of floating several hundred colonies
+ north on the Mississippi, starting from New Orleans and following the
+ opening season up, thus realizing a sort of perpetual May or June, the
+ chief attraction being the blossoms of the river willow, which yield honey
+ of rare excellence. Some of the bees were no doubt left behind, but the
+ amount of virgin honey secured must have been very great. In September
+ they should have begun the return trip, following the retreating summer
+ South.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the making of the wax that costs with the bee. As with the poet, the
+ form, the receptacle, gives him more trouble than the sweet that fills it,
+ though, to be sure, there is always more or less empty comb in both cases.
+ The honey he can have for the gathering, but the wax he must make himself&mdash;must
+ evolve from his own inner consciousness. When wax is to be made the
+ wax-makers fill themselves with honey and retire into their chamber for
+ private meditation; it is like some solemn religious rite; they take hold
+ of hands, or hook themselves together in long lines that hang in festoons
+ from the top of the hive, and wait for the miracle to transpire. After
+ about twenty-four hours their patience is rewarded, the honey is turned
+ into wax, minute scales of which are secreted from between the rings of
+ the abdomen of each bee; this is taken off and from it the comb is built
+ up. It is calculated that about twenty-five pounds of honey are used in
+ elaborating one pound of comb, to say nothing of the time that is lost.
+ Hence the importance in an economical point of view, of a recent device by
+ which the honey is extracted and the comb returned intact to the bees. But
+ honey without the comb is the perfume without the rose,&mdash;it is sweet
+ merely, and soon degenerates into candy. Half the delectableness is in
+ breaking down these frail and exquisite walls yourself, and tasting the
+ nectar before it has lost its freshness by the contact with the air. Then
+ the comb is a sort of shield or foil that prevents the tongue from being
+ overwhelmed by the shock of the sweet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drones have the least enviable time of it. Their foothold in the hive
+ is very precarious. They look like the giants, the lords of the swarm, but
+ they are really the tools. Their loud, threatening hum has no sting to
+ back it up, and their size and noise make them only the more conspicuous
+ marks for the birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward the close of the season, say in July or August, the fiat goes forth
+ that the drones must die; there is no further use for them. Then the poor
+ creatures, how they are huddled and hustled about, trying to hide in
+ corners and by-ways. There is no loud, defiant humming now, but abject
+ fear seizes them. They cower like hunted criminals. I have seen a dozen or
+ more of them wedge themselves into a small space between the glass and the
+ comb, where the bees could not get hold of them or where they seemed to be
+ overlooked in the general slaughter. They will also crawl outside and hide
+ under the edges of the hive. But sooner or later they are all killed or
+ kicked out. The drone makes no resistance, except to pull back and try to
+ get away; but (putting yourself in his place) with one bee a-hold of your
+ collar or the hair of your head, and another a-hold of each arm or leg,
+ and still another feeling for your waistbands with his sting, the odds are
+ greatly against you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a singular fact, also, that the queen is made, not born. If the
+ entire population of Spain or Great Britain were the offspring of one
+ mother, it might be found necessary to hit upon some device by which a
+ royal baby could be manufactured out of an ordinary one, or else give up
+ the fashion of royalty. All the bees in the hive have a common parentage,
+ and the queen and the worker are the same in the egg and in the chick; the
+ patent of royalty is in the cell and in the food; the cell being much
+ larger, and the food a peculiar stimulating kind of jelly. In certain
+ contingencies, such as the loss of the queen with no eggs in the royal
+ cells, the workers take the larva of an ordinary bee, enlarge the cell by
+ taking in the two adjoining ones, and nurse it and stuff it and coddle it,
+ till at the end of sixteen days it comes out a queen. But ordinarily, in
+ the natural course of events, the young queen is kept a prisoner in her
+ cell till the old queen has left with the swarm. Later on, the unhatched
+ queen is guarded against the reigning queen, who only wants an opportunity
+ to murder every royal scion in the hive. At this time both the queens, the
+ one a prisoner and the other at large, pipe defiance at each other, a
+ shrill, fine, trumpet-like note that any ear will at once recognize. This
+ challenge, not being allowed to be accepted by either party, is followed,
+ in a day or two by the abdication of the reigning queen; she leads out the
+ swarm, and her successor is liberated by her keepers, who, in her time,
+ abdicates in favor of the next younger. When the bees have decided that no
+ more swarms can issue, the reigning queen is allowed to use her stiletto
+ upon her unhatched sisters. Cases have been known where two queens issued
+ at the same time, when a mortal combat ensued, encouraged by the workers,
+ who formed a ring about them, but showed no preference, and recognized the
+ victor as the lawful sovereign. For these and many other curious facts we
+ are indebted to the blind Huber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is worthy of note that the position of the queen cells is always
+ vertical, while that of the drones and workers is horizontal; majesty
+ stands on its head, which fact may be a part of the secret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The notion has always very generally prevailed that the queen of the bees
+ is an absolute ruler, and issues her royal orders to willing subjects.
+ Hence Napoleon the First sprinkled the symbolic bees over the imperial
+ mantle that bore the arms of his dynasty; and in the country of the
+ Pharaohs the bee was used as the emblem of a people sweetly submissive to
+ the orders of its king. But the fact is, a swarm of bees is an absolute
+ democracy, and kings and despots can find no warrant in their example. The
+ power and authority are entirely vested in the great mass, the workers.
+ They furnish all the brains and foresight of the colony, and administer
+ its affairs. Their word is law, and both king and queen must obey. They
+ regulate the swarming, and give the signal for the swarm to issue from the
+ hive; they select and make ready the tree in the woods and conduct the
+ queen to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiar office and sacredness of the queen consists in the fact that
+ she is the mother of the swarm, and the bees love and cherish her as a
+ mother and not as a sovereign. She is the sole female bee in the hive, and
+ the swarm clings to her because she is their life. Deprived of their
+ queen, and of all brood from which to rear one, the swarm loses all heart
+ and soon dies, though there be an abundance of honey in the hive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The common bees will never use their sting upon the queen; if she is to be
+ disposed of they starve her to death; and the queen herself will sting
+ nothing but royalty&mdash;nothing but a rival queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The queen, I say, is the mother bee; it is undoubtedly complimenting her
+ to call her a queen and invest her with regal authority, yet she is a
+ superb creature, and looks every inch a queen. It is an event to
+ distinguish her amid the mass of bees when the swarm alights; it awakens a
+ thrill. Before you have seen a queen you wonder if this or that bee, which
+ seems a little larger than its fellows, is not she, but when you once
+ really set eyes upon her you do not doubt for a moment. You know that is
+ the queen. That long, elegant, shining, feminine-looking creature can be
+ none less than royalty. How beautifully her body tapers, how distinguished
+ she looks, how deliberate her movements! The bees do not fall down before
+ her, but caress her and touch her person. The drones or males, are large
+ bees too, but coarse, blunt, broad-shouldered, masculine-looking. There is
+ but one fact or incident in the life of the queen that looks imperial and
+ authoritative: Huber relates that when the old queen is restrained in her
+ movements by the workers, and prevented from destroying the young queens
+ in their cells, she assumes a peculiar attitude and utters a note that
+ strikes every bee motionless, and makes every head bow; while this sound
+ lasts not a bee stirs, but all look abashed and humbled, yet whether the
+ emotion is one of fear, or reverence, or of sympathy with the distress of
+ the queen mother, is hard to determine. The moment it ceases and she
+ advances again toward the royal cells, the bees bite and pull and insult
+ her as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I always feel that I have missed some good fortune if I am away from home
+ when my bees swarm. What a delightful summer sound it is; how they come
+ pouring out of the hive, twenty or thirty thousand bees each striving to
+ get out first; it is as when the dam gives way and lets the waters loose;
+ it is a flood of bees which breaks upward into the air, and becomes a maze
+ of whirling black lines to the eye and a soft chorus of myriad musical
+ sounds to the ear. This way and that way they drift, now contracting, now
+ expanding, rising, sinking, growing thick about some branch or bush, then
+ dispersing and massing at some other point, till finally they begin to
+ alight in earnest, when in a few moments the whole swarm is collected upon
+ the branch, forming a bunch perhaps as large as a two-gallon measure. Here
+ they will hang from one to three or four hours, or until a suitable tree
+ in the woods is looked up, when, if they have not been offered a hive in
+ the mean time, they are up and off. In hiving them, if any accident
+ happens to the queen the enterprise miscarries at once. One day I shook a
+ swarm from a small pear-tree into a tin pan, set the pan down on a shawl
+ spread beneath the tree, and put the hive over it. The bees presently all
+ crawled up into it, and all seemed to go well for ten or fifteen minutes,
+ when I observed that something was wrong; the bees began to buzz excitedly
+ and to rush about in a bewildered manner, then they took to the wing and
+ all returned to the parent stock. On lifting up the pan, I found beneath
+ it the queen with three or four other bees. She had been one of the first
+ to fall, had missed the pan in her descent, and I had set it upon her. I
+ conveyed her tenderly back to the hive, but either the accident terminated
+ fatally with her or else the young queen had been liberated in the
+ interim, and one of them had fallen in combat, for it was ten days before
+ the swarm issued a second time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one, to my knowledge, has ever seen the bees house-hunting in the
+ woods. Yet there can be no doubt that they look up new quarters either
+ before or on the day the swarm issues. For all bees are wild bees and
+ incapable of domestication; that is, the instinct to go back to nature and
+ take up again their wild abodes in the trees is never eradicated. Years
+ upon years of life in the apiary seems to have no appreciable effect
+ towards their final, permanent domestication. That every new swarm
+ contemplates migrating to the woods, seems confirmed by the fact that they
+ will only come out when the weather is favorable to such an enterprise,
+ and that a passing cloud or a sudden wind, after the bees are in the air,
+ will usually drive them back into the parent hive. Or an attack upon them
+ with sand or gravel, or loose earth or water, will quickly cause them to
+ change their plans. I would not even say but that, when the bees are going
+ off, the apparently absurd practice, now entirely discredited by regular
+ bee-keepers but still resorted to by unscientific folk, of beating upon
+ tin pans, blowing horns, and creating an uproar generally, might not be
+ without good results. Certainly not by drowning the "orders" of the queen,
+ but by impressing the bees as with some unusual commotion in nature. Bees
+ are easily alarmed and disconcerted, and I have known runaway swarms to be
+ brought down by a farmer ploughing in the field who showered them with
+ handfuls of loose soil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I love to see a swarm go off&mdash;if it is not mine, and if mine must go
+ I want to be on hand to see the fun. It is a return to first principles
+ again by a very direct route. The past season I witnessed two such
+ escapes. One swarm had come out the day before, and, without alighting,
+ had returned to the parent hive&mdash;some hitch in the plan, perhaps, or
+ may be the queen had found her wings too weak. The next day they came out
+ again, and were hived. But something offended them, or else the tree in
+ the woods&mdash;perhaps some royal old maple or birch holding its head
+ high above all others, with snug, spacious, irregular chambers and
+ galleries&mdash;had too many attractions; for they were presently
+ discovered filling the air over the garden, and whirling excitedly around.
+ Gradually they began to drift over the street; a moment more, and they had
+ become separated from the other bees, and, drawing together in a more
+ compact mass or cloud, away they went, a humming, flying vortex of bees,
+ the queen in the centre, and the swarm revolving around her as a pivot,&mdash;over
+ meadows, across creeks and swamps, straight for the heart of the mountain,
+ about a mile distant,&mdash;slow at first, so that the youth who gave
+ chase kept up with them, but increasing their speed till only a fox hound
+ could have kept them in sight. I saw their pursuer laboring up the side of
+ the mountain; saw his white shirt-sleeves gleam as he entered the woods;
+ but he returned a few hours afterward without any clew as to the
+ particular tree in which they had taken refuge out of the ten thousand
+ that covered the side of the mountain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other swarm came out about one o'clock of a hot July day, and at once
+ showed symptoms that alarmed the keeper, who, however, threw neither dirt
+ nor water. The house was situated on a steep side-hill. Behind it the
+ ground rose, for a hundred rods or so, at an angle of nearly forty-five
+ degrees, and the prospect of having to chase them up this hill, if chase
+ them we should, promised a good trial of wind at least; for it soon became
+ evident that their course lay in this direction. Determined to have a
+ hand, or rather a foot, in the chase, I threw off my coat and hurried on,
+ before the swarm was yet fairly organized and under way. The route soon
+ led me into a field of standing rye, every spear of which held its head
+ above my own. Plunging recklessly forward, my course marked to those
+ watching from below by the agitated and wriggling grain, I emerged from
+ the miniature forest just in time to see the runaways disappearing over
+ the top of the hill, some fifty rods in advance of me. Lining them as well
+ as I could, I soon reached the hill-top, my breath utterly gone and the
+ perspiration streaming from every pore of my skin. On the other side the
+ country opened deep and wide. A large valley swept around to the north,
+ heavily wooded at its head and on its sides. It became evident at once
+ that the bees had made good their escape, and that whether they had
+ stopped on one side of the valley or the other, or had indeed cleared the
+ opposite mountain and gone into some unknown forest beyond, was entirely
+ problematical. I turned back, therefore, thinking of the honey-laden tree
+ that some of these forests would hold before the falling of the leaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard of a youth in the neighborhood, more lucky than myself on a like
+ occasion. It seems that he had got well in advance of the swarm, whose
+ route lay over a hill, as in my case, and as he neared the summit, hat in
+ hand, the bees had just come up and were all about him. Presently he
+ noticed them hovering about his straw hat, and alighting on his arm; and
+ in almost as brief a time as it takes to relate it, the whole swarm had
+ followed the queen into his hat. Being near a stone wall, he coolly
+ deposited his prize upon it, quickly disengaged himself from the
+ accommodating bees, and returned for a hive. The explanation of this
+ singular circumstance no doubt is, that the queen, unused to such long and
+ heavy flights, was obliged to alight from very exhaustion. It is not very
+ unusual for swarms to be thus found in remote fields, collected upon a
+ bush or branch of a tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When a swarm migrates to the woods in this manner, the individual bees, as
+ I have intimated, do not move in right lines or straight forward, like a
+ flock of birds, but round and round, like chaff in a whirlwind. Unitedly
+ they form a humming, revolving, nebulous mass, ten or fifteen feet across,
+ which keeps just high enough to clear all obstacles, except in crossing
+ deep valleys, when, of course, it may be very high. The swarm seems to be
+ guided by a line of couriers, which may be seen (at least at the outset)
+ constantly going and coming. As they take a direct course, there is always
+ some chance of following them to the tree, unless they go a long distance,
+ and some obstruction, like a wood, or a swamp, or a high hill, intervenes&mdash;enough
+ chance, at any rate, to stimulate the lookers-on to give vigorous chase as
+ long as their wind holds out. If the bees are successfully followed to
+ their retreat, two plans are feasible: either to fell the tree at once,
+ and seek to hive them, perhaps bring them home in the section of the tree
+ that contains the cavity; or to leave the tree till fall, then invite your
+ neighbors, and go and cut it, and see the ground flow with honey. The
+ former course is more business-like; but the latter is the one usually
+ recommended by one's friends and neighbors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps nearly one third of all the runaway swarms leave when no one is
+ about, and hence are unseen and unheard, save, perchance, by some distant
+ laborers in the field, or by some youth ploughing on the side of the
+ mountain, who hears an unusual humming noise, and sees the swarm dimly
+ whirling by overhead, and, may be, gives chase; or he may simply catch the
+ sound, when he pauses, looks quickly around, but sees nothing. When he
+ comes in at night he tells how he heard or saw a swarm of bees go over;
+ and, perhaps from beneath one of the hives in the garden a black mass of
+ bees has disappeared during the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are not partial as to the kind of tree,&mdash;pine, hemlock, elm,
+ birch, maple, hickory,&mdash;any tree with a good cavity high up or low
+ down. A swarm of mine ran away from the new patent hive I gave them, and
+ took up their quarters in the hollow trunk of an old apple-tree across an
+ adjoining field. The entrance was a mouse-hole near the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another swarm in the neighborhood deserted their keeper and went into the
+ cornice of an out-house that stood amid evergreens in the rear of a large
+ mansion. But there is no accounting for the taste of bees, as Samson found
+ when he discovered the swarm in the carcass, or more probably the
+ skeleton, of the lion he had slain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In any given locality, especially in the more wooded and mountainous
+ districts, the number of swarms that thus assert their independence forms
+ quite a large per cent. In the Northern States these swarms very often
+ perish before spring; but in such a country as Florida they seem to
+ multiply, till bee-trees are very common. In the West, also, wild honey is
+ often gathered in large quantities. I noticed not long since, that some
+ wood-choppers on the west slope of the Coast Range felled a tree that had
+ several pailfuls in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One night on the Potomac a party of us unwittingly made our camp near the
+ foot of a bee-tree, which next day the winds of heaven blew down, for our
+ special delectation, at least so we read the sign. Another time while
+ sitting by a waterfall in the leafless April woods I discovered a swarm in
+ the top of a large hickory. I had the season before remarked the tree as a
+ likely place for bees, but the screen of leaves concealed them from me.
+ This time my former presentiment occurred to me, and, looking sharply,
+ sure enough there were the bees, going out and in a large, irregular
+ opening. In June a violent tempest of wind and rain demolished the tree,
+ and the honey was all lost in the creek into which it fell. I happened
+ along that way two or three days after the tornado, when I saw a remnant
+ of the swarm, those, doubtless, that escaped the flood and those that were
+ away when the disaster came, hanging in a small black mass to a branch
+ high up near where their home used to be. They looked forlorn enough. If
+ the queen was saved the remnant probably sought another tree; otherwise
+ the bees have soon died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen bees desert their hive in the spring when it was infested with
+ worms, or when the honey was exhausted; at such times the swarm seems to
+ wander aimlessly, alighting here and there, and perhaps in the end uniting
+ with some other colony. In case of such union, it would be curious to know
+ if negotiations were first opened between the parties, and if the
+ houseless bees are admitted at once to all the rights and franchises of
+ their benefactors. It would be very like the bees to have some preliminary
+ plan and understanding about the matter on both sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bees will accommodate themselves to almost any quarters, yet no hive seems
+ to please them so well as a section of a hollow tree&mdash;"gums" as they
+ are called in the South and West where the sweet gum grows. In some
+ European countries the hive is always made from the trunk of a tree, a
+ suitable cavity being formed by boring. The old-fashioned straw hive is
+ picturesque, and a great favorite with the bees also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life of a swarm of bees is like an active and hazardous campaign of an
+ army; the ranks are being continually depleted, and continually recruited.
+ What adventures they have by flood and field, and what hair-breadth
+ escapes! A strong swarm during the honey season loses, on an average,
+ about four or five thousand per month, or one hundred and fifty per day.
+ They are overwhelmed by wind and rain, caught by spiders, benumbed by
+ cold, crushed by cattle, drowned in rivers and ponds, and in many nameless
+ ways cut off or disabled. In the spring the principal mortality is from
+ the cold. As the sun declines they get chilled before they can reach home.
+ Many fall down outside the hive, unable to get in with their burden. One
+ may see them come utterly spent and drop hopelessly into the grass in
+ front of their very doors. Before they can rest the cold has stiffened
+ them. I go out in April and May and pick them up by the handfuls, their
+ baskets loaded with pollen, and warm them in the sun or in the house, or
+ by the simple warmth of my hand, until they can crawl into the hive. Heat
+ is their life, and an apparently lifeless bee may be revived by warming
+ him. I have also picked them up while rowing on the river and seen them
+ safely to shore. It is amusing to see them come hurrying home when there
+ is a thunderstorm approaching. They come piling in till the rain is upon
+ them. Those that are overtaken by the storm doubtless weather it as best
+ they can in the sheltering trees or grass. It is not probable that a bee
+ ever gets lost by wandering into strange and unknown parts. With their
+ myriad eyes they see everything; and then, their sense of locality is very
+ acute, is, indeed, one of their ruling traits. When a bee marks the place
+ of his hive, or of a bit of good pasturage in the fields or swamps, or of
+ the bee-hunter's box of honey on the hills or in the woods, he returns to
+ it as unerringly as fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Honey was a much more important article of food with the ancients than it
+ is with us. As they appear to have been unacquainted with sugar, honey, no
+ doubt, stood them instead. It is too rank and pungent for the modern
+ taste; it soon cloys upon the palate. It demands the appetite of youth,
+ and the strong, robust digestion of people who live much in the open air.
+ It is a more wholesome food than sugar, and modern confectionery is poison
+ beside it. Beside grape sugar, honey contains manna, mucilage, pollen,
+ acid, and other vegetable odoriferous substances and juices. It is a sugar
+ with a kind of wild natural bread added. The manna of itself is both food
+ and medicine, and the pungent vegetable extracts have rare virtues. Honey
+ promotes the excretions and dissolves the glutinous and starchy
+ impedimenta of the system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence it is not without reason that with the ancients a land flowing with
+ milk and honey should mean a land abounding in all good things; and the
+ queen in the nursery rhyme, who lingered in the kitchen to eat "bread and
+ honey" while the "king was in the parlor counting out his money," was
+ doing a very sensible thing. Epaminondas is said to have rarely eaten
+ anything but bread and honey. The Emperor Augustus one day inquired of a
+ centenarian how he had kept his vigor of mind and body so long; to which
+ the veteran replied that it was by "oil without and honey within." Cicero,
+ in his "Old Age," classes honey with meat and milk and cheese as among the
+ staple articles with which a well-kept farm-house will be supplied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Italy and Greece, in fact all the Mediterranean countries, appear to have
+ been famous lands for honey. Mount Hymettus, Mount Hybla, and Mount Ida
+ produced what may be called the classic honey of antiquity, an article
+ doubtless in nowise superior to our best products. Leigh Hunt's "Jar of
+ Honey" is mainly distilled from Sicilian history and literature,
+ Theocritus furnishing the best yield. Sicily has always been rich in bees.
+ Swinburne (the traveler of a hundred years ago) says the woods on this
+ island abounded in wild honey, and that the people also had many hives
+ near their houses. The idyls of Theocritus are native to the island in
+ this respect, and abound in bees&mdash;"Flat-nosed bees" as he calls them
+ in the Seventh Idyl&mdash;and comparisons in which comb-honey is the
+ standard of the most delectable of this world's goods. His goatherds can
+ think of no greater bliss than that the mouth be filled with honey-combs,
+ or to be inclosed in a chest like Daphnis and fed on the combs of bees;
+ and among the delectables with which Arsinoe cherishes Adonis are
+ "honey-cakes," and other tid-bits made of "sweet honey." In the country of
+ Theocritus this custom is said still to prevail: when a couple are married
+ the attendants place honey in their mouths, by which they would symbolize
+ the hope that their love may be as sweet to their souls as honey to the
+ palate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fabled that Homer was suckled by a priestess whose breasts
+ distilled honey; and that once when Pindar lay asleep the bees dropped
+ honey upon his lips. In the Old Testament the food of the promised
+ Immanuel was to be butter and honey (there is much doubt about the butter
+ in the original), that he might know good from evil; and Jonathan's eyes
+ were enlightened, by partaking of some wood or wild honey: "See, I pray
+ you, how mine eyes have been enlightened, because I tasted a little of
+ this honey." So far as this part of his diet was concerned, therefore,
+ John the Baptist, during his sojourn in the wilderness, his divinity
+ school-days in the mountains and plains of Judea, fared extremely well.
+ About the other part, the locusts, or, not to put too fine a point on it,
+ the grasshoppers, as much cannot be said, though they were among the
+ creeping and leaping things the children of Israel were permitted to eat.
+ They were probably not eaten raw, but roasted in that most primitive of
+ ovens, a hole in the ground made hot by building a fire in it. The locusts
+ and honey may have been served together, as the Bedas of Ceylon are said
+ to season their meat with honey. At any rate, as the locust is often a
+ great plague in Palestine, the prophet in eating them found his account in
+ the general weal, and in the profit of the pastoral bees; the fewer
+ locusts, the more flowers. Owing to its numerous wild-flowers and
+ flowering shrubs, Palestine has always been a famous country for bees.
+ They deposit their honey in hollow trees as our bees do when they escape
+ from the hive, and in holes in the rocks as ours do not. In a tropical or
+ semi-tropical climate bees are quite apt to take refuge in the rocks, but
+ where ice and snow prevail, as with us, they are much safer high up in the
+ trunk of a forest tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best honey is the product of the milder parts of the temperate zone.
+ There are too many rank and poisonous plants in the tropics. Honey from
+ certain districts of Turkey produces headache and vomiting, and that from
+ Brazil is used chiefly as medicine. The honey of Mount Hymettus owes its
+ fine quality to wild thyme. The best honey in Persia and in Florida is
+ collected from the orange blossom. The celebrated honey of Narbonne in the
+ south of France is obtained from a species of rosemary. In Scotland good
+ honey is made from the blossoming heather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ California honey is white and delicate and highly perfumed, and now takes
+ the lead in the market. But honey is honey the world over; and the bee is
+ the bee still. "Men may degenerate," says an old traveler, "may forget the
+ arts by which they acquired renown; manufactories may fail, and
+ commodities be debased, but the sweets of the wild-flowers of the
+ wilderness, the industry and natural mechanics of the bee, will continue
+ without change or derogation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. SHARP EYES AND OTHER PAPERS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_CONT" id="link2H_CONT">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CONTENTS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ SHARP EYES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE APPLE A TASTE OF MAINE BIRCH WINTER NEIGHBORS
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NOTES BY THE WAY.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ I. The Weather-wise Muskrat
+ II. Cheating the Squirrels
+ III. Fox and Hound
+ IV. The Woodchuck
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ SHARP EYES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Noting how one eye seconds and reinforces the other, I have often amused
+ myself by wondering what the effect would be if one could go on opening
+ eye after eye to the number say of a dozen or more. What would he see?
+ Perhaps not the invisible&mdash;not the odors of flowers nor the fever
+ germs in the air&mdash;not the infinitely small of the microscope nor the
+ infinitely distant of the telescope. This would require, not more eyes so
+ much as an eye constructed with more and different lenses; but would he
+ not see with augmented power within the natural limits of vision? At any
+ rate some persons seem to have opened more eyes than others, they see with
+ such force and distinctness; their vision penetrates the tangle and
+ obscurity where that of others fails like a spent or impotent bullet. How
+ many eyes did Gilbert White open? how many did Henry Thoreau? how many did
+ Audubon? how many does the hunter, matching his sight against the keen and
+ alert sense of a deer or a moose, or a fox or a wolf? Not outward eyes,
+ but inward. We open another eye whenever we see beyond the first general
+ features or outlines of things&mdash;whenever we grasp the special details
+ and characteristic markings that this mask covers. Science confers new
+ powers of vision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever you have learned to discriminate the birds, or the plants, or the
+ geological features of a country, it is as if new and keener eyes were
+ added.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course one must not only see sharply, but read aright what he sees. The
+ facts in the life of Nature that are transpiring about us are like written
+ words that the observer is to arrange into sentences. Or the writing is in
+ cipher and he must furnish the key. A female oriole was one day observed
+ very much preoccupied under a shed where the refuse from the horse stable
+ was thrown. She hopped about among the barn fowls, scolding them sharply
+ when they came too near her. The stable, dark and cavernous, was just
+ beyond. The bird, not finding what she wanted outside, boldly ventured
+ into the stable, and was presently captured by the farmer. What did she
+ want? was the query. What, but a horsehair for her nest which was in an
+ apple-tree near by; and she was so bent on having one that I have no doubt
+ she would have tweaked one out of the horse's tail had he been in the
+ stable. Later in the season I examined her nest and found it sewed through
+ and through with several long horse hairs, so that the bird persisted in
+ her search till the hair was found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little dramas and tragedies and comedies, little characteristic scenes,
+ are always being enacted in the lives of the birds, if our eyes are sharp
+ enough to see them. Some clever observer saw this little comedy played
+ among some English sparrows and wrote an account of it in his newspaper;
+ it is too good not to be true: A male bird brought to his box a large,
+ fine goose feather, which is a great find for a sparrow and much coveted.
+ After he had deposited his prize and chattered his gratulations over it he
+ went away in quest of his mate. His next-door neighbor, a female bird,
+ seeing her chance, quickly slipped in and seized the feather,&mdash;and
+ here the wit of the bird came out, for instead of carrying it into her own
+ box she flew with it to a near tree and hid it in a fork of the branches,
+ then went home, and when her neighbor returned with his mate was
+ innocently employed about her own affairs. The proud male, finding his
+ feather gone, came out of his box in a high state of excitement, and, with
+ wrath in his manner and accusation on his tongue, rushed into the cot of
+ the female. Not finding his goods and chattels there as he had expected,
+ he stormed around a while, abusing everybody in general and his neighbor
+ in particular, and then went away as if to repair the loss. As soon as he
+ was out of sight, the shrewd thief went and brought the feather home and
+ lined her own domicile with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was much amused one summer day in seeing a bluebird feeding her young
+ one in the shaded street of a large town. She had captured a cicada or
+ harvest-fly, and after bruising it a while on the ground flew with it to a
+ tree and placed it in the beak of the young bird. It was a large morsel,
+ and the mother seemed to have doubts of her chick's ability to dispose of
+ it, for she stood near and watched its efforts with great solicitude. The
+ young bird struggled valiantly with the cicada, but made no head way in
+ swallowing it, when the mother took it from him and flew to the sidewalk,
+ and proceeded to break and bruise it more thoroughly. Then she again
+ placed it in his beak, and seemed to say, "There, try it now," and
+ sympathized so thoroughly with his efforts that she repeated many of his
+ motions and contortions. But the great fly was unyielding, and, indeed,
+ seemed ridiculously disproportioned to the beak that held it. The young
+ bird fluttered and fluttered and screamed, "I'm stuck, I'm stuck," till
+ the anxious parent again seized the morsel and carried it to an iron
+ railing, where she came down upon it for the space of a minute with all
+ the force and momentum her beak could command. Then she offered it to her
+ young a third time, but with the same result as before, except that this
+ time the bird dropped it; but she was at the ground as soon as the cicada
+ was, and taking it in her beak flew some distance to a high board fence
+ where she sat motionless for some moments. While pondering the problem how
+ that fly should be broken, the male bluebird approached her, and said very
+ plainly, and I thought rather curtly, "Give me that bug," but she quickly
+ resented his interference and flew farther away, where she sat apparently
+ quite discouraged when I last saw her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bluebird is a home bird, and I am never tired of recurring to him. His
+ coming or reappearance in the spring marks a new chapter in the progress
+ of the season; things are never quite the same after one has heard that
+ note. The past spring the males came about a week in advance of the
+ females. A fine male lingered about my grounds and orchard all the time,
+ apparently waiting the arrival of his mate. He called and warbled every
+ day, as if he felt sure she was within ear-shot, and could be hurried up.
+ Now he warbled half-angrily or upbraidingly, then coaxingly, then cheerily
+ and confidently, the next moment in a plaintive, far-away manner. He would
+ half open his wings, and twinkle them caressingly, as if beckoning his
+ mate to his heart. One morning she had come, but was shy and reserved. The
+ fond male flew to a knot-hole in an old apple-tree, and coaxed her to his
+ side. I heard a fine confidential warble,&mdash;the old, old story. But
+ the female flew to a near tree, and uttered her plaintive, homesick note.
+ The male went and got some dry grass or bark in his beak, and flew again
+ to the hole in the old tree, and promised unremitting devotion, but the
+ other said "nay," and flew away in the distance. When he saw her going, or
+ rather heard her distant note, he dropped his stuff, and cried out in a
+ tone that said plainly enough, "Wait a minute. One word, please," and flew
+ swiftly in pursuit. He won her before long, however, and early in April
+ the pair were established in one of the four or five boxes I had put up
+ for them, but not until they had changed their minds several times. As
+ soon as the first brood had flown, and while they were yet under their
+ parents' care, they began another nest in one of the other boxes, the
+ female, as usual, doing all the work, and the male all the complimenting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A source of occasional great distress to the mother-bird was a white cat
+ that sometimes followed me about. The cat had never been known to catch a
+ bird, but she had a way of watching them that was very embarrassing to the
+ bird. Whenever she appeared, the mother bluebird would set up that pitiful
+ melodious plaint. One morning the cat was standing by me, when the bird
+ came with her beak loaded with building material, and alighted above me to
+ survey the place before going into the box. When she saw the cat, she was
+ greatly disturbed, and in her agitation could not keep her hold upon all
+ her material. Straw after straw came eddying down, till not half her
+ original burden remained. After the cat had gone away, the bird's alarm
+ subsided, till, presently seeing the coast clear, she flew quickly to the
+ box and pitched in her remaining straws with the greatest precipitation,
+ and, without going in to arrange them, as was her wont, flew away in
+ evident relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the cavity of an apple-tree but a few yards off, and much nearer the
+ house than they usually build, a pair of high-holes, or golden-shafted
+ woodpeckers, took up their abode. A knot-hole which led to the decayed
+ interior was enlarged, the live wood being cut away as clean as a squirrel
+ would have done it. The inside preparations I could not witness, but day
+ after day, as I passed near, I heard the bird hammering away, evidently
+ beating down obstructions and shaping and enlarging the cavity. The chips
+ were not brought out, but were used rather to floor the interior. The
+ woodpeckers are not nest-builders, but rather nest-carvers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The time seemed very short before the voices of the young were heard in
+ the heart of the old tree,&mdash;at first feebly, but waxing stronger day
+ by day until they could be heard many rods distant. When I put my hand
+ upon the trunk of the tree, they would set up an eager, expectant
+ chattering; but if I climbed up it toward the opening, they soon detected
+ the unusual sound and would hush quickly, only now and then uttering a
+ warning note. Long before they were fully fledged they clambered up to the
+ orifice to receive their food. As but one could stand in the opening at a
+ time, there was a good deal of elbowing and struggling for this position.
+ It was a very desirable one aside from the advantages it had when food was
+ served; it looked out upon the great shining world, into which the young
+ birds seemed never tired of gazing. The fresh air must have been a
+ consideration also, for the interior of a high-hole's dwelling is not
+ sweet. When the parent birds came with food the young one in the opening
+ did not get it all, but after he had received a portion, either on his own
+ motion or on a hint from the old one, he would give place to the one
+ behind him. Still, one bird evidently outstripped his fellows, and in the
+ race of life, was two or three days in advance of them. His voice was
+ loudest and his head oftenest at the window. But I noticed that when he
+ had kept the position too long, the others evidently made it uncomfortable
+ in his rear, and, after "fidgeting" about a while, he would be compelled
+ to "back down." But retaliation was then easy, and I fear his mates spent
+ few easy moments at that lookout. They would close their eyes and slide
+ back into the cavity as if the world had suddenly lost all its charms for
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This bird was, of course, the first to leave the nest. For two days before
+ that event he kept his position in the opening most of the time and sent
+ forth his strong voice incessantly. The old ones abstained from feeding
+ him almost entirely, no doubt to encourage his exit. As I stood looking at
+ him one afternoon and noting his progress, he suddenly reached a
+ resolution,&mdash;seconded, I have no doubt, from the rear,&mdash;and
+ launched forth upon his untried wings. They served him well and carried
+ him about fifty yards up-hill the first heat. The second day after, the
+ next in size and spirit left in the same manner; then another, till only
+ one remained. The parent birds ceased their visits to him, and for one day
+ he called and called till our ears were tired of the sound. His was the
+ faintest heart of all. Then he had none to encourage him from behind. He
+ left the nest and clung to the outer bowl of the tree, and yelped and
+ piped for an hour longer; then he committed himself to his wings and went
+ his way like the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young farmer in the western part of New York, who has a sharp,
+ discriminating eye, sends me some interesting notes about a tame high-hole
+ he once had.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you ever notice," says he, "that the high-hole never eats anything
+ that he cannot pick up with his tongue? At least this was the case with a
+ young one I took from the nest and tamed. He could thrust out his tongue
+ two or three inches, and it was amusing to see his efforts to eat currants
+ from the hand. He would run out his tongue and try to stick it to the
+ currant; failing in that, he would bend his tongue around it like a hook
+ and try to raise it by a sudden jerk. But he never succeeded, the round
+ fruit would roll and slip away every time. He never seemed to think of
+ taking it in his beak. His tongue was in constant use to find out the
+ nature of everything he saw; a nail-hole in a board or any similar hole
+ was carefully explored. If he was held near the face he would soon be
+ attracted by the eye and thrust his tongue into it. In this way he gained
+ the respect of a number of half-grown cats that were around the house. I
+ wished to make them familiar to each other, so there would be less danger
+ of their killing him. So I would take them both on my knee, when the bird
+ would soon notice the kitten's eyes, and leveling his bill as carefully as
+ a marksman levels his rifle, he would remain so a minute when he would
+ dart his tongue into the cat's eye. This was held by the cats to be very
+ mysterious: being struck in the eye by something invisible to them. They
+ soon acquired such a terror of him that they would avoid him and run away
+ whenever they saw his bill turned in their direction. He never would
+ swallow a grasshopper even when it was placed in his throat; he would
+ shake himself until he had thrown it out of his mouth. His 'best hold' was
+ ants. He never was surprised at anything, and never was afraid of
+ anything. He would drive the turkey gobbler and the rooster. He would
+ advance upon them holding one wing up as high as possible, as if to strike
+ with it, and shuffle along the ground toward them, scolding all the while
+ in a harsh voice. I feared at first that they might kill him, but I soon
+ found that he was able to take care of himself. I would turn over stones
+ and dig into ant-hills for him, and he would lick up the ants so fast that
+ a stream of them seemed going into his mouth unceasingly. I kept him till
+ late in the fall, when he disappeared, probably going south, and I never
+ saw him again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My correspondent also sends me some interesting observations about the
+ cuckoo. He says a large gooseberry bush standing in the border of an old
+ hedgerow, in the midst of open fields, and not far from his house, was
+ occupied by a pair of cuckoos for two seasons in succession, and, after an
+ interval of a year, for two seasons more. This gave him a good chance to
+ observe them. He says the mother-bird lays a single egg, and sits upon it
+ a number of days before laying the second, so that he has seen one young
+ bird nearly grown, a second just hatched, and a whole egg all in the nest
+ at once. "So far as I have seen, this is the settled practice,&mdash;the
+ young leaving the nest one at a time to the number of six or eight. The
+ young have quite the look of the young of the dove in many respects. When
+ nearly grown they are covered with long blue pin-feathers as long as
+ darning-needles, without a bit of plumage on them. They part on the back
+ and hang down on each side by their own weight. With its curious feathers
+ and misshapen body the young bird is anything but handsome. They never
+ open their mouths when approached, as many young birds do, but sit
+ perfectly still, hardly moving when touched." He also notes the unnatural
+ indifference of the mother-bird when her nest and young are approached.
+ She makes no sound, but sits quietly on a near branch in apparent perfect
+ unconcern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These observations, together with the fact that the egg of the cuckoo is
+ occasionally found in the nests of other birds, raise the inquiry whether
+ our bird is slowly relapsing into the habit of the European species, which
+ always foists its egg upon other birds; or whether, on the other hand, it
+ is not mending its manners in this respect. It has but little to unlearn
+ or to forget in the one case, but great progress to make in the other. How
+ far is its rudimentary nest&mdash;a mere platform of coarse twigs and dry
+ stalks of weeds&mdash;from the deep, compact, finely woven and finely
+ modeled nest of the goldfinch or king-bird, and what a gulf between its
+ indifference toward its young and their solicitude! Its irregular manner
+ of laying also seems better suited to a parasite like our cow-bird, or the
+ European cuckoo, than to a regular nest-builder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This observer, like most sharp-eyed persons, sees plenty of interesting
+ things as he goes about his work. He one day saw a white swallow, which is
+ of rare occurrence. He saw a bird, a sparrow he thinks, fly against the
+ side of a horse and fill his beak with hair from the loosened coat of the
+ animal. He saw a shrike pursue a chickadee, when the latter escaped by
+ taking refuge in a small hole in a tree. One day in early spring he saw
+ two hen-hawks that were circling and screaming high in air, approach each
+ other, extend a claw, and, clasping them together, fall toward the earth
+ flapping and struggling as if they were tied together; on nearing the
+ ground they separated and soared aloft again. He supposed that it was not
+ a passage of war but of love, and that the hawks were toying fondly with
+ each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He further relates a curious circumstance of finding a humming-bird in the
+ upper part of a barn with its bill stuck fast in a crack of one of the
+ large timbers, dead, of course, with wings extended, and as dry as a chip.
+ The bird seems to have died as it had lived, on the wing, and its last act
+ was indeed a ghastly parody of its living career. Fancy this nimble,
+ flashing sprite, whose life was passed probing the honeyed depths of
+ flowers, at last thrusting its bill into a crack in a dry timber in a
+ hayloft, and, with spread wings, ending its existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the air is damp and heavy, swallows frequently hawk for insects about
+ cattle and moving herds in the field. My farmer describes how they
+ attended him one foggy day, as he was mowing in the meadow with a
+ mowing-machine. It had been foggy for two days, and the swallows were very
+ hungry, and the insects stupid and inert. When the sound of his machine
+ was heard, the swallows appeared and attended him like a brood of hungry
+ chickens. He says there was a continued rush of purple wings over the
+ "cut-bar," and just where it was causing the grass to tremble and fall.
+ Without his assistance the swallows would doubtless have gone hungry yet
+ another day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the hen-hawk, he has observed that both male and female take part in
+ incubation. "I was rather surprised," he says, "on one occasion, to see
+ how quickly they change places on the nest. The nest was in a tall beech,
+ and the leaves were not yet fully out. I could see the head and neck of
+ the hawk over the edge of the nest, when I saw the other hawk coming down
+ through the air at full speed. I expected he would alight near by, but
+ instead of that he struck directly upon the nest, his mate getting out of
+ the way barely in time to avoid being hit; it seemed almost as if he had
+ knocked her off the nest. I hardly see how they can make such a rush on
+ the nest without danger to the eggs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king-bird will worry the hawk as a whiffet dog will worry a bear. It
+ is by his persistence and audacity, not by any injury he is capable of
+ dealing his great antagonist. The king-bird seldom more than dogs the
+ hawk, keeping above and between his wings, and making a great ado; but my
+ correspondent says he once "saw a king-bird riding on a hawk's back. The
+ hawk flew as fast as possible, and the king-bird sat upon his shoulders in
+ triumph until they had passed out of sight,"&mdash;tweaking his feathers,
+ no doubt, and threatening to scalp him the next moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That near relative of the king-bird, the great crested fly-catcher, has
+ one well known peculiarity: he appears never to consider his nest finished
+ until it contains a cast-off snake-skin. My alert correspondent one day
+ saw him eagerly catch up an onion skin and make off with it, either
+ deceived by it or else thinking it a good substitute for the coveted
+ material.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day in May, walking in the woods, I came upon the nest of a
+ whippoorwill, or rather its eggs, for it builds no nest,&mdash;two
+ elliptical whitish spotted eggs lying upon the dry leaves. My foot was
+ within a yard of the mother-bird before she flew. I wondered what a sharp
+ eye would detect curious or characteristic in the ways of the bird, so I
+ came to the place many times and had a look. It was always a task to
+ separate the bird from her surroundings though I stood within a few feet
+ of her, and knew exactly where to look. One had to bear on with his eye,
+ as it were, and refuse to be baffled. The sticks and leaves, and bits of
+ black or dark-brown bark, were all exactly copied in the bird's plumage.
+ And then she did sit so close, and simulate so well a shapeless decaying
+ piece of wood or bark! Twice I brought a companion, and guiding his eye to
+ the spot, noted how difficult it was for him to make out there, in full
+ view upon the dry leaves, any semblance to a bird. When the bird returned
+ after being disturbed, she would alight within a few inches of her eggs,
+ and then, after a moment's pause, hobble awkwardly upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the young had appeared, all the wit of the bird came into play. I
+ was on hand the next day, I think. The mother-bird sprang up when I was
+ within a pace of her, and in doing so fanned the leaves with her wings
+ till they sprang up too; as the leaves started the young started, and,
+ being of the same color, to tell which was the leaf and which the bird was
+ a trying task to any eye. I came the next day, when the same tactics were
+ repeated. Once a leaf fell upon one of the young birds and nearly hid it.
+ The young are covered with a reddish down like a young partridge, and soon
+ follow their mother about. When disturbed, they gave but one leap, then
+ settled down, perfectly motionless and stupid, with eyes closed. The
+ parent bird, on these occasions made frantic efforts to decoy me away from
+ her young. She would fly a few paces and fall upon her breast, and a
+ spasm, like that of death, would run through her tremulous outstretched
+ wings and prostrate body. She kept a sharp eye out the meanwhile to see if
+ the ruse took, and if it did not, she was quickly cured, and moving about
+ to some other point tried to draw my attention as before. When followed
+ she always alighted upon the ground, dropping down in a sudden peculiar
+ way. The second or third day both old and young had disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whippoorwill walks as awkwardly as a swallow, which is as awkward as a
+ man in a bag, and yet she manages to lead her young about the woods. The
+ latter, I think, move by leaps and sudden spurts, their protective
+ coloring shielding them most effectively. Wilson once came upon the
+ mother-bird and her brood in the woods, and, though they were at his very
+ feet, was so baffled by the concealment of the young that he was about to
+ give up the search, much disappointed, when he perceived something "like a
+ slight moldiness among the withered leaves, and, on stooping down,
+ discovered it to be a young whippoorwill seemingly asleep." Wilson's
+ description of the young is very accurate, as its downy covering does look
+ precisely like a "slight moldiness." Returning a few moments afterward to
+ the spot to get a pencil he had forgotten, he could find neither old nor
+ young.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It takes an eye to see a partridge in the woods motionless upon the
+ leaves; this sense needs to be as sharp as that of smell in hounds and
+ pointers; and yet I know an unkempt youth that seldom fails to see the
+ bird and shoot it before it takes wing. I think he sees it as soon as it
+ sees him and before it suspects itself seen. What a training to the eye is
+ hunting! To pick out the game from its surroundings, the grouse from the
+ leaves, the gray squirrel from the mossy oak limb it hugs so closely, the
+ red fox from the ruddy or brown or gray field, the rabbit from the
+ stubble, or the white hare from the snow requires the best powers of this
+ sense. A woodchuck, motionless in the fields or upon a rock, looks very
+ much like a large stone or bowlder, yet a keen eye knows the difference at
+ a glance, a quarter of a mile away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man has a sharper eye than a dog, or a fox, or than any of the wild
+ creatures, but not so sharp an ear or nose. But in the birds he finds his
+ match. How quickly the old turkey discovers the hawk, a mere speck against
+ the sky, and how quickly the hawk discovers you if you happen to be
+ secreted in the bushes or behind the fence near which he alights! One
+ advantage the bird surely has, and that is, owing to the form, structure,
+ and position of the eye, it has a much larger field of vision&mdash;indeed,
+ can probably see in nearly every direction at the same instant, behind as
+ well as before. Man's field of vision embraces less than half a circle
+ horizontally, and still less vertically; his brow and brain prevent him
+ from seeing within many degrees of the zenith without a movement of the
+ head; the bird on the other hand, takes in nearly the whole sphere at a
+ glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I find I see almost without effort nearly every bird within sight in the
+ field or wood I pass through (a flit of the wing, a flirt of the tail are
+ enough, though the flickering leaves do all conspire to hide them), and
+ that with like ease the birds see me, though, unquestionably, the chances
+ are immensely in their favor. The eye sees what it has the means of
+ seeing, truly. You must have the bird in your heart before you can find it
+ in the bush. The eye must have purpose and aim. No one ever yet found the
+ walking fern who did not have the walking fern in his mind. A person whose
+ eye is full of Indian relics picks them up in every field he walks
+ through.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One season I was interested in the tree-frogs; especially the tiny piper
+ that one hears about the woods and brushy fields&mdash;the hyla of the
+ swamps become a denizen of the trees; I had never seen him in this new
+ role. But this season, having hylas in mind, or rather being ripe for
+ them, I several times came across them. One Sunday, walking amid some
+ bushes, I captured two. They leaped before me as doubtless they had done
+ many times before; but though I was not looking for or thinking of them,
+ yet they were quickly recognized, because the eye had been commissioned to
+ find them. On another occasion, not long afterward, I was hurriedly
+ loading my gun in the October woods in hopes of overtaking a gray squirrel
+ that was fast escaping through the tree-tops, when one of these lilliput
+ frogs, the color of the fast-yellowing leaves, leaped near me. I saw him
+ only out of the corner of my eye and yet bagged him, because I had already
+ made him my own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, the habit of observation is the habit of clear and decisive
+ gazing. Not by a first casual glance, but by a steady deliberate aim of
+ the eye are the rare and characteristic things discovered. You must look
+ intently and hold your eye firmly to the spot, to see more than do the
+ rank and file of mankind. The sharp-shooter picks out his man and knows
+ him with fatal certainty from a stump, or a rock, or a cap on a pole. The
+ phrenologists do well to locate, not only form, color, and weight, in the
+ region of the eye, but also a faculty which they call individuality&mdash;that
+ which separates, discriminates, and sees in every object its essential
+ character. This is just as necessary to the naturalist as to the artist or
+ the poet. The sharp eye notes specific points and differences,&mdash;it
+ seizes upon and preserves the individuality of the thing. Persons
+ frequently describe to me some bird they have seen or heard and ask me to
+ name it, but in most cases the bird might be any one of a dozen, or else
+ it is totally unlike any bird found in this continent. They have either
+ seen falsely or else vaguely. Not so the farm youth who wrote me one
+ winter day that he had seen a single pair of strange birds, which he
+ describes as follows: "They were about the size of the 'chippie,' the tops
+ of their heads were red, and the breast of the male was of the same color,
+ while that of the female was much lighter; their rumps were also faintly
+ tinged with red. If I have described them so that you would know them,
+ please write me their names." There can be little doubt but the young
+ observer had seen a pair of red-polls,&mdash;a bird related to the
+ goldfinch, and that occasionally comes down to us in the winter from the
+ far north. Another time, the same youth wrote that he had seen a strange
+ bird, the color of a sparrow, that alighted on fences and buildings as
+ well as upon the ground, and that walked. This last fact shoved the
+ youth's discriminating eye and settled the case. I knew it to be a species
+ of the lark, and from the size, color, season, etc., the tit-lark. But how
+ many persons would have observed that the bird walked instead of hopped?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some friends of mine who lived in the country tried to describe to me a
+ bird that built a nest in a tree within a few feet of the house. As it was
+ a brown bird, I should have taken it for a wood-thrush, had not the nest
+ been described as so thin and loose that from beneath the eggs could be
+ distinctly seen. The most pronounced feature in the description was the
+ barred appearance of the under side of the bird's tail. I was quite at
+ sea, until one day, when we were driving out, a cuckoo flew across the
+ road in front of us, when my friends exclaimed, "There is our bird!" I had
+ never known a cuckoo to build near a house, and I had never noted the
+ appearance the tail presents when viewed from beneath; but if the bird had
+ been described in its most obvious features, as slender, with a long tail,
+ cinnamon brown above and white beneath, with a curved bill, anyone who
+ knew the bird would have recognized the portrait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We think we have looked at a thing sharply until we are asked for its
+ specific features. I thought I knew exactly the form of the leaf of the
+ tulip-tree, until one day a lady asked me to draw the outline of one. A
+ good observer is quick to take a hint and to follow it up. Most of the
+ facts of nature, especially in the life of the birds and animals, are well
+ screened. We do not see the play because we do not look intently enough.
+ The other day I was sitting with a friend upon a high rock in the woods,
+ near a small stream, when we saw a water-snake swimming across a pool
+ toward the opposite bank. Any eye would have noted it, perhaps nothing
+ more. A little closer and sharper gaze revealed the fact that the snake
+ bore something in its mouth, which, as we went down to investigate, proved
+ to be a small cat-fish, three or four inches long. The snake had captured
+ it in the pool, and, like any other fisherman, wanted to get its prey to
+ dry land, although itself lived mostly in the water. Here, we said, is
+ being enacted a little tragedy, that would have escaped any but sharp
+ eyes. The snake, which was itself small, had the fish by the throat, the
+ hold of vantage among all creatures, and clung to it with great tenacity.
+ The snake knew that its best tactics was to get upon dry land as soon as
+ possible. It could not swallow its victim alive, and it could not strangle
+ it in the water. For a while it tried to kill its game by holding it up
+ out of the water, but the fish grew heavy, and every few moments its
+ struggles brought down the snake's head. This would not do. Compressing
+ the fish's throat would not shut off its breath under such circumstances,
+ so the wily serpent tried to get ashore with it, and after several
+ attempts succeeded in effecting a landing on a flat rock. But the fish
+ died hard. Cat-fish do not give up the ghost in a hurry. Its throat was
+ becoming congested, but the snake's distended jaws must have ached. It was
+ like a petrified gape. Then the spectators became very curious and close
+ in their scrutiny, and the snake determined to withdraw from the public
+ gaze and finish the business in hand to its own notions. But, when gently
+ but firmly remonstrated with by my friend with his walking-stick, it
+ dropped the fish and retreated in high dudgeon beneath a stone in the bed
+ of the creek. The fish, with a swollen and angry throat, went its way
+ also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Birds, I say, have wonderfully keen eyes. Throw a fresh bone or a piece of
+ meat upon the snow in winter, and see how soon the crows will discover it
+ and be on hand. If it be near the house or barn, the crow that first
+ discovers it will alight near it, to make sure he is not deceived; then he
+ will go away, and soon return with a companion. The two alight a few yards
+ from the bone, and after some delay, during which the vicinity is sharply
+ scrutinized, one of the crows advances boldly to within a few feet of the
+ coveted prize. Here he pauses, and if no trick is discovered, and the meat
+ be indeed meat, he seizes it and makes off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One midwinter I cleared away the snow under an apple-tree near the house
+ and scattered some corn there. I had not seen a blue-jay for weeks, yet
+ that very day one found my corn, and after that several came daily and
+ partook of it, holding the kernels under their feet upon the limbs of the
+ trees and pecking them vigorously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the woodpecker and his kind have sharp eyes; still I was
+ surprised to see how quickly Downy found out some bones that were placed
+ in a convenient place under the shed to be pounded up for the hens. In
+ going out to the barn I often disturbed him making a meal off the bite of
+ meat that still adhered to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Look intently enough at anything," said a poet to me one day, "and you
+ will see something that would otherwise escape you." I thought of the
+ remark as I sat on a stump in an opening of the woods one spring day. I
+ saw a small hawk approaching; he flew to a tall tulip-tree and alighted on
+ a large limb near the top. He eyed me and I eyed him. Then the bird
+ disclosed a trait that was new to me: he hopped along the limb to a small
+ cavity near the trunk, when he thrust in his head and pulled out some
+ small object and fell to eating it. After he had partaken of it for some
+ minutes he put the remainder back in his larder and flew away. I had seen
+ something like feathers eddying slowly down as the hawk ate, and on
+ approaching the spot found the feathers of a sparrow here and there
+ clinging to the bushes beneath the tree. The hawk then&mdash;commonly
+ called the chicken hawk&mdash;is as provident as a mouse or a squirrel,
+ and lays by a store against a time of need, but I should not have
+ discovered the fact had I not held my eye on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An observer of the birds is attracted by any unusual sound or commotion
+ among them. In May or June, when other birds are most vocal, the jay is a
+ silent bird; he goes sneaking about the orchards and the groves as silent
+ as a pickpocket; he is robbing bird's-nests and he is very anxious that
+ nothing should be said about it; but in the fall none so quick and loud to
+ cry "Thief, thief!" as he. One December morning a troop of jays discovered
+ a little screech-owl secreted in the hollow trunk of an old apple-tree
+ near my house. How they found the owl out is a mystery, since it never
+ ventures forth in the light of day; but they did, and proclaimed the fact
+ with great emphasis. I suspect the bluebirds first told them, for these
+ birds are constantly peeping into holes and crannies, both spring and
+ fall. Some unsuspecting bird had probably entered the cavity prospecting
+ for a place for next year's nest, or else looking out a likely place to
+ pass a cold night, and then had rushed out with important news. A boy who
+ should unwittingly venture into a bear's den when Bruin was at home could
+ not be more astonished and alarmed than a bluebird would be on finding
+ itself in the cavity of a decayed tree with an owl. At any rate the
+ bluebirds joined the jays in calling the attention of all whom it might
+ concern to the fact that a culprit of some sort was hiding from the light
+ of day in the old apple-tree. I heard the notes of warning and alarm and
+ approached to within eye-shot. The bluebirds were cautious and hovered
+ about uttering their peculiar twittering calls; but the jays were bolder
+ and took turns looking in at the cavity, and deriding the poor shrinking
+ owl. A jay would alight in the entrance of the hole and flirt and peer and
+ attitudinize, and then flyaway crying "Thief, thief, thief!" at the top of
+ his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I climbed up and peered into the opening, and could just descry the owl
+ clinging to the inside of the tree. I reached in and took him out, giving
+ little heed to the threatening snapping of his beak. He was as red as a
+ fox and as yellow-eyed as a cat. He made no effort to escape, but planted
+ his claws in my forefinger and clung there with a grip that soon grew
+ uncomfortable. I placed him in the loft of an out-house in hopes of
+ getting better acquainted with him. By day he was a very willing prisoner,
+ scarcely moving at all, even when approached and touched with the hand,
+ but looking out upon the world with half-closed, sleepy eyes. But at night
+ what a change; how alert, how wild, how active! He was like another bird;
+ he darted about with wide, fearful eyes, and regarded me like a cornered
+ cat. I opened the window, and swiftly, but as silent as a shadow, he
+ glided out into the congenial darkness, and perhaps, ere this, has
+ revenged himself upon the sleeping jay or bluebird that first betrayed his
+ hiding-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE APPLE.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Lo! sweetened with the summer light,
+ The full-juiced apple, waxing over-mellow,
+ Drops in a silent autumn night.&mdash;TENNYSON.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Not a little of the sunshine of our northern winters is surely wrapped up
+ in the apple. How could we winter over without it! How is life sweetened
+ by its mild acids! A cellar well filled with apples is more valuable than
+ a chamber filled with flax and wool. So much sound ruddy life to draw
+ upon, to strike one's roots down into, as it were.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Especially to those whose soil of life is inclined to be a little clayey
+ and heavy, is the apple a winter necessity. It is the natural antidote of
+ most of the ills the flesh is heir to. Full of vegetable acids and
+ aromatics, qualities which act as refrigerants and antiseptics, what an
+ enemy it is to jaundice, indigestion, torpidity of liver, etc. It is a
+ gentle spur and tonic to the whole biliary system. Then I have read that
+ it has been found by analysis to contain more phosphorus than any other
+ vegetable. This makes it the proper food of the scholar and the sedentary
+ man; it feeds his brain and it stimulates his liver. Nor is this all.
+ Besides its hygienic properties, the apple is full of sugar and mucilage,
+ which make it highly nutritious. It is said, "The operators of Cornwall,
+ England, consider ripe apples nearly as nourishing as bread, and far more
+ so than potatoes. In the year 1801&mdash;which was a year of much scarcity&mdash;apples,
+ instead of being converted into cider, were sold to the poor, and the
+ laborers asserted that they could 'stand their work' on baked apples
+ without meat; whereas a potato diet required either meat or some other
+ substantial nutriment. The French and Germans use apples extensively, so
+ do the inhabitants of all European nations. The laborers depend upon them
+ as an article of food, and frequently make a dinner of sliced apples and
+ bread."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet the English apple is a tame and insipid affair compared with the
+ intense, sun-colored and sun-steeped fruit our orchards yield. The English
+ have no sweet apple, I am told, the saccharine element apparently being
+ less abundant in vegetable nature in that sour and chilly climate than in
+ our own. It is well known that the European maple yields no sugar, while
+ both our birch and hickory have sweet in their veins. Perhaps this fact
+ accounts for our excessive love of sweets, which may be said to be a
+ national trait.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Russian apple has a lovely complexion, smooth and transparent, but the
+ Cossack is not yet all eliminated from it. The only one I have seen&mdash;the
+ Duchess of Oldenburg&mdash;is as beautiful as a Tartar princess, with a
+ distracting odor, but it is the least bit puckery to the taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The best thing I know about Chili is not its guano beds, but this fact
+ which I learn from Darwin's "Voyage," namely, that the apple thrives well
+ there. Darwin saw a town there so completely buried in a wood of
+ apple-trees, that its streets were merely paths in an orchard. The tree
+ indeed thrives so well, that large branches cut off in the spring and
+ planted two or three feet deep in the ground send out roots and develop
+ into fine full-bearing trees by the third year. The people know the value
+ of the apple too. They make cider and wine of it and then from the refuse
+ a white and finely flavored spirit; then by another process a sweet
+ treacle is obtained called honey. The children and the pigs eat little or
+ no other food. He does not add that the people are healthy and temperate,
+ but I have no doubt they are. We knew the apple had many virtues, but
+ these Chilians have really opened a deep beneath a deep. We had found out
+ the cider and the spirits, but who guessed the wine and the honey, unless
+ it were the bees? There is a variety in our orchards called the winesap, a
+ doubly liquid name that suggests what might be done with this fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apple is the commonest and yet the most varied and beautiful of
+ fruits. A dish of them is as becoming to the centre-table in winter as was
+ the vase of flowers in the summer,&mdash;a bouquet of spitzenbergs and
+ greenings and northern spies. A rose when it blooms, the apple is a rose
+ when it ripens. It pleases every sense to which it can be addressed, the
+ touch, the smell, the sight, the taste; and when it falls in the still
+ October days it pleases the ear. It is a call to a banquet, it is a signal
+ that the feast is ready. The bough would fain hold it, but it can now
+ assert its independence; it can now live a life of its own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Daily the stem relaxes its hold, till finally it lets go completely, and
+ down comes the painted sphere with a mellow thump to the earth, towards
+ which it has been nodding so long. It bounds away to seek its bed, to hide
+ under a leaf, or in a tuft of grass. It will now take time to meditate and
+ ripen! What delicious thoughts it has there nestled with its fellows under
+ the fence, turning acid into sugar, and sugar into wine!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How pleasing to the touch! I love to stroke its polished rondure with my
+ hand, to carry it in my pocket on my tramp over the winter hills, or
+ through the early spring woods. You are company, you red-cheeked spitz, or
+ you salmon-fleshed greening! I toy with you; press your face to mine, toss
+ you in the air, roll you on the ground, see you shine out where you lie
+ amid the moss and dry leaves and sticks. You are so alive! You glow like a
+ ruddy flower. You look so animated I almost expect to see you move. I
+ postpone the eating of you, you are so beautiful! How compact; how
+ exquisitely tinted! Stained by the sun and varnished against the rains. An
+ independent vegetable existence, alive and vascular as my own flesh;
+ capable of being wounded, bleeding, wasting away, and almost of repairing
+ damages!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How it resists the cold! holding out almost as long as the red cheeks of
+ the boys do. A frost that destroys the potatoes and other roots only makes
+ the apple more crisp and vigorous; it peeps out from the chance November
+ snows unscathed. When I see the fruit-vender on the street corner stamping
+ his feet and beating his hands to keep them warm, and his naked apples
+ lying exposed to the blasts, I wonder if they do not ache too to clap
+ their hands and enliven their circulation. But they can stand it nearly as
+ long as the vender can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noble common fruit, best friend of man and most loved by him, following
+ him like his dog or his cow, wherever he goes. His homestead is not
+ planted till you are planted, your roots intertwine with his; thriving
+ best where he thrives best, loving the limestone and the frost, the plow
+ and the pruning-knife, you are indeed suggestive of hardy, cheerful
+ industry, and a healthy life in the open air. Temperate, chaste fruit! you
+ mean neither luxury nor sloth, neither satiety nor indolence, neither
+ enervating heats nor the Frigid Zones. Uncloying fruit, fruit whose best
+ sauce is the open air, whose finest flavors only he whose taste is
+ sharpened by brisk work or walking knows; winter fruit, when the fire of
+ life burns brightest; fruit always a little hyperborean, leaning towards
+ the cold; bracing, sub-acid, active fruit. I think you must come from the
+ north, you are so frank and honest, so sturdy and appetizing. You are
+ stocky and homely like the northern races. Your quality is Saxon. Surely
+ the fiery and impetuous south is not akin to you. Not spices or olives or
+ the sumptuous liquid fruits, but the grass, the snow, the grains, the
+ coolness is akin to you. I think if I could subsist on you or the like of
+ you, I should never have an intemperate or ignoble thought, never be
+ feverish or despondent. So far as I could absorb or transmute your quality
+ I should be cheerful, continent, equitable, sweet-blooded, long-lived, and
+ should shed warmth and contentment around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Is there any other fruit that has so much facial expression as the apple?
+ What boy does not more than half believe they can see with that single eye
+ of theirs? Do they not look and nod to him from the bough? The swaar has
+ one look, the rambo another, the spy another. The youth recognizes the
+ seek-no-further buried beneath a dozen other varieties, the moment he
+ catches a glance of its eye, or the bonny-cheeked Newtown pippin, or the
+ gentle but sharp-nosed gilliflower. He goes to the great bin in the cellar
+ and sinks his shafts here and there in the garnered wealth of the
+ orchards, mining for his favorites, sometimes coming plump upon them,
+ sometimes catching a glimpse of them to the right or left, or uncovering
+ them as keystones in an arch made up of many varieties. In the dark he can
+ usually tell them by the sense of touch. There is not only the size and
+ shape, but there is the texture and polish. Some apples are coarse grained
+ and some are fine; some are thin-skinned and some are thick. One variety
+ is quick and vigorous beneath the touch; another gentle and yielding. The
+ pinnock has a thick skin with a spongy lining, a bruise in it becomes like
+ a piece of cork. The tallow apple has an unctuous feel, as its name
+ suggests. It sheds water like a duck. What apple is that with a fat curved
+ stem that blends so prettily with its own flesh,&mdash;the wine-apple?
+ Some varieties impress me as masculine,&mdash;weather-stained, freckled,
+ lasting and rugged; others are indeed lady apples, fair, delicate,
+ shining, mild-flavored, white-meated, like the egg-drop and the
+ lady-finger. The practiced hand knows each kind by the touch. Do you
+ remember the apple hole in the garden or back of the house, Ben Bolt? In
+ the fall after the bins in the cellar had been well stocked, we excavated
+ a circular pit in the warm, mellow earth, and covering the bottom with
+ clean rye straw, emptied in basketful after basketful of hardy choice
+ varieties, till there was a tent-shaped mound several feet high of shining
+ variegated fruit. Then wrapping it about with a thick layer of long rye
+ straw, and tucking it up snug and warm, the mound was covered, with a thin
+ coating of earth, a flat stone on the top holding down the straw. As
+ winter set in, another coating of earth was put upon it, with perhaps an
+ overcoat of coarse dry stable manure, and the precious pile was left in
+ silence and darkness till spring. No marmot hibernating under-ground in
+ his nest of leaves and dry grass, more cosy and warm. No frost, no wet,
+ but fragrant privacy and quiet. Then how the earth tempers and flavors the
+ apples! It draws out all the acrid unripe qualities, and infuses into them
+ a subtle refreshing taste of the soil. Some varieties perish; but the
+ ranker, hardier kinds, like the northern spy, the greening, or the black
+ apple, or the russet, or the pinnock, how they ripen and grow in grace,
+ how the green becomes gold, and the bitter becomes sweet!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the supply in the bins and barrels gets low and spring approaches, the
+ buried treasures in the garden are remembered. With spade and axe we go
+ out and penetrate through the snow and frozen earth till the inner
+ dressing of straw is laid bare. It is not quite as clear and bright as
+ when we placed it there last fall, but the fruit beneath, which the hand
+ soon exposes, is just as bright and far more luscious. Then, as day after
+ day you resort to the hole, and, removing the straw and earth from the
+ opening, thrust your arm into the fragrant pit, you have a better chance
+ than ever before to become acquainted with your favorites by the sense of
+ touch. How you feel for them, reaching to the right and left! Now you have
+ got a Tolman sweet; you imagine you can feel that single meridian line
+ that divides it into two hemispheres. Now a greening fills your hand, you
+ feel its fine quality beneath its rough coat. Now you have hooked a swaar,
+ you recognize its full face; now a Vandevere or a King rolls down from the
+ apex above, and you bag it at once. When you were a school-boy you stowed
+ these away in your pockets and ate them along the road and at recess, and
+ again at noon time; and they, in a measure, corrected the effects of the
+ cake and pie with which your indulgent mother filled your lunch-basket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy is indeed the true apple-eater, and is not to be questioned how he
+ came by the fruit with which his pockets are filled. It belongs to
+ him...His own juicy flesh craves the juicy flesh of the apple. Sap draws
+ sap. His fruit-eating has little reference to the state of his appetite.
+ Whether he be full of meat or empty of meat he wants the apple just the
+ same. Before meal or after meal it never comes amiss. The farm-boy munches
+ apples all day long. He has nests of them in the hay-mow, mellowing, to
+ which he makes frequent visits. Sometimes old Brindle, having access
+ through the open door, smells them out and makes short work of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In some countries the custom remains of placing a rosy apple in the hand
+ of the dead that they may find it when they enter paradise. In northern
+ mythology the giants eat apples to keep off old age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apple is indeed the fruit of youth. As we grow old we crave apples
+ less. It is an ominous sign. When you are ashamed to be seen eating them
+ on the street; when you can carry them in your pocket and your hand not
+ constantly find its way to them; when your neighbor has apples and you
+ have none, and you make no nocturnal visits to his orchard; when your
+ lunch-basket is without them, and you can pass a winter's night by the
+ fireside with no thought of the fruit at your elbow, then be assured you
+ are no longer a boy, either in heart or years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The genuine apple-eater comforts himself with an apple in their season as
+ others with a pipe or cigar. When he has nothing else to do, or is bored,
+ he eats an apple. While he is waiting for the train he eats an apple,
+ sometimes several of them. When he takes a walk, he arms himself with
+ apples. His traveling bag is full of apples. He offers an apple to his
+ companion, and takes one himself. They are his chief solace when on the
+ road. He sows their seed all along the route. He tosses the core from the
+ car-window and from the top of the stage-coach. He would, in time, make
+ the land one vast orchard. He dispenses with a knife. He prefers that his
+ teeth shall have the first taste. Then he knows the best flavor is
+ immediately beneath the skin, and that in a pared apple this is lost. If
+ you will stew the apple, he says, instead of baking it, by all means leave
+ the skin on. It improves the color and vastly heightens the flavor of the
+ dish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apple is a masculine fruit; hence women are poor apple-eaters. It
+ belongs to the open air, and requires an open-air taste and relish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I instantly sympathized with that clergyman I read of, who on pulling out
+ his pocket-handkerchief in the midst of his discourse, pulled out two
+ bouncing apples with it that went rolling across the pulpit floor and down
+ the pulpit stairs. These apples were, no doubt, to be eaten after the
+ sermon on his way home, or to his next appointment. They would take the
+ taste of it out of his mouth. Then, would a minister be apt to grow
+ tiresome with two big apples in his coat-tail pockets? Would he not
+ naturally hasten along to "lastly," and the big apples? If they were the
+ dominie apples, and it was April or May, he certainly....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the early settlers prized the apple! When their trees broke down or
+ were split asunder by the storms, the neighbors turned out, the divided
+ tree was put together again and fastened with iron bolts. In some of the
+ oldest orchards one may still occasionally see a large dilapidated tree
+ with the rusty iron bolt yet visible. Poor, sour fruit, too, but sweet in
+ those early pioneer days. My grandfather, who was one of these heroes of
+ the stump, used every fall to make a journey of forty miles for a few
+ apples, which he brought home in a bag on horseback. He frequently started
+ from home by two or three o'clock in the morning, and at one time both he
+ and his horse were much frightened by the screaming of panthers in a
+ narrow pass in the mountains through which the road led.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Emerson, I believe, has spoken of the apple as the social fruit of New
+ England. Indeed, what a promoter or abettor of social intercourse among
+ our rural population the apple has been, the company growing more merry
+ and unrestrained as soon as the basket of apples was passed round! When
+ the cider followed, the introduction and good understanding were complete.
+ Then those rural gatherings that enlivened the autumn in the country,
+ known as "apple cuts," now, alas! nearly obsolete, where so many things
+ were cut and dried besides apples! The larger and more loaded the orchard,
+ the more frequently the invitations went round and the higher the social
+ and convivial spirit ran. Ours is eminently a country of the orchard.
+ Horace Greeley said he had seen no land in which the orchard formed such a
+ prominent feature in the rural and agricultural districts. Nearly every
+ farmhouse in the Eastern and Northern States has its setting or its
+ background of apple-trees, which generally date back to the first
+ settlement of the farm. Indeed, the orchard, more than almost any other
+ thing, tends to soften and humanize the country, and to give the place of
+ which it is an adjunct, a settled, domestic look. The apple-tree takes the
+ rawness and wildness off any scene. On the top of a mountain, or in remote
+ pastures, it sheds the sentiment of home. It never loses its domestic air,
+ or lapses into a wild state. And in planting a homestead, or in choosing a
+ building site for the new house, what a help it is to have a few old,
+ maternal apple-trees near by; regular old grandmothers, who have seen
+ trouble, who have been sad and glad through so many winters and summers,
+ who have blossomed till the air about them is sweeter than elsewhere, and
+ borne fruit till the grass beneath them has become thick and soft from
+ human contact, and who have nourished robins and finches in their branches
+ till they have a tender, brooding look. The ground, the turf, the
+ atmosphere of an old orchard, seem several stages nearer to man than that
+ of the adjoining field, as if the trees had given back to the soil more
+ than they had taken from it; as if they had tempered the elements and
+ attracted all the genial and beneficent influences in the landscape
+ around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An apple orchard is sure to bear you several crops beside the apple. There
+ is the crop of sweet and tender reminiscences dating from childhood and
+ spanning the seasons from May to October, and making the orchard a sort of
+ outlying part of the household. You have played there as a child, mused
+ there as a youth or lover, strolled there as a thoughtful, sad-eyed man.
+ Your father, perhaps, planted the trees, or reared them from the seed, and
+ you yourself have pruned and grafted them, and worked among them, till
+ every separate tree has a peculiar history and meaning in your mind. Then
+ there is the never-failing crop of birds&mdash;robins, goldfinches,
+ king-birds, cedar-birds, hair-birds, orioles, starlings&mdash;all nesting
+ and breeding in its branches, and fitly described by Wilson Flagg as
+ "Birds of the Garden and Orchard." Whether the pippin and sweetbough bear
+ or not, the "punctual birds" can always be depended on. Indeed, there are
+ few better places to study ornithology than in the orchard. Besides its
+ regular occupants, many of the birds of the deeper forest find occasion to
+ visit it during the season. The cuckoo comes for the tent-caterpillar, the
+ jay for frozen apples, the ruffed grouse for buds, the crow foraging for
+ birds' eggs, the woodpecker and chickadees for their food, and the
+ high-hole for ants. The red-bird comes too, if only to see what a friendly
+ covert its branches form; and the wood-thrush now and then comes out of
+ the grove near by, and nests alongside of its cousin, the robin. The
+ smaller hawks know that this is a most likely spot for their prey; and in
+ spring the shy northern warblers may be studied as they pause to feed on
+ the fine insects amid its branches. The mice love to dwell here also, and
+ hither comes from the near woods the squirrel and the rabbit. The latter
+ will put his head through the boy's slipper-noose any time for taste of
+ the sweet apple, and the red squirrel and chipmunk esteem its seeds a
+ great rarity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the domestic animals love the apple, but none so much so as the cow.
+ The taste of it wakes her up as few other things do, and bars and fences
+ must be well looked after. No need to assort them or pick out the ripe
+ ones for her. An apple is an apple, and there is no best about it. I heard
+ of a quick-witted old cow that learned to shake them down from the tree.
+ While rubbing herself she had observed that an apple sometimes fell. This
+ stimulated her to rub a little harder, when more apples fell. She then
+ took the hint and rubbed her shoulder with such vigor that the farmer had
+ to check her and keep an eye on her to save his fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the cow is the friend of the apple. How many trees she has planted
+ about the farm, in the edge of the woods, and in remote fields and
+ pastures. The wild apples, celebrated by Thoreau, are mostly of her
+ planting. She browses them down to be sure, but they are hers, and why
+ should she not?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What an individuality the apple-tree has, each variety being nearly as
+ marked by its form as by its fruit. What a vigorous grower, for instance,
+ is the Ribston pippin, an English apple. Wide branching like the oak, and
+ its large ridgy fruit, in late fall or early winter, is one of my
+ favorites. Or the thick and more pendent top of the belleflower, with its
+ equally rich, sprightly uncloying fruit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sweet apples are perhaps the most nutritious, and when baked are a feast
+ in themselves. With a tree of the Jersey sweet or of Tolman's sweeting in
+ bearing, no man's table need be devoid of luxuries and one of the most
+ wholesome of all deserts. Or the red astrachan, an August apple, what a
+ gap may be filled in the culinary department of a household at this
+ season, by a single tree of this fruit! And what a feast is its shining
+ crimson coat to the eye before its snow-white flesh has reached the
+ tongue. But the apple of apples for the household is the spitzenberg. In
+ this casket Pomona has put her highest flavors. It can stand the ordeal of
+ cooking and still remain a spitz. I recently saw a barrel of these apples
+ from the orchard of a fruit-grower in the northern part of New York, who
+ has devoted special attention to this variety. They were perfect gems. Not
+ large, that had not been the aim, but small, fair, uniform, and red to the
+ core. How intense, how spicy and aromatic!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all the excellences of the apple are not confined to the cultivated
+ fruit. Occasionally a seedling springs up about the farm that produces
+ fruit of rare beauty and worth. In sections peculiarly adapted to the
+ apple, like a certain belt along the Hudson River, I have noticed that
+ most of the wild unbidden trees bear good, edible fruit. In cold and
+ ungenial districts, the seedlings are mostly sour and crabbed, but in more
+ favorable soils they are oftener mild and sweet. I know wild apples that
+ ripen in August, and that do not need, if it could be had, Thoreau's sauce
+ of sharp November air to be eaten with. At the foot of a hill near me and
+ striking its roots deep in the shale, is a giant specimen of native tree
+ that bears an apple that has about the clearest, waxiest, most transparent
+ complexion I ever saw. It is good size, and the color of a tea-rose. Its
+ quality is best appreciated in the kitchen. I know another seedling of
+ excellent quality and so remarkable for its firmness and density, that it
+ is known on the farm where it grows as the "heavy apple."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have alluded to Thoreau, to whom all lovers of the apple and its tree
+ are under obligation. His chapter on Wild Apples is a most delicious piece
+ of writing. It has a "tang and smack" like the fruit it celebrates, and is
+ dashed and streaked with color in the same manner. It has the hue and
+ perfume of the crab, and the richness and raciness of the pippin. But
+ Thoreau loved other apples than the wild sorts and was obliged to confess
+ that his favorites could not be eaten in-doors. Late in November he found
+ a blue-pearmain tree growing within the edge of a swamp, almost as good as
+ wild. "You would not suppose," he says, "that there was any fruit left
+ there on the first survey, but you must look according to system. Those
+ which lie exposed are quite brown and rotten now, or perchance a few still
+ show one blooming cheek here and there amid the wet leaves. Nevertheless,
+ with experienced eyes I explore amid the bare alders, and the huckleberry
+ bushes, and the withered sedge, and in the crevices of the rocks, which
+ are full of leaves, and pry under the fallen and decayed ferns which, with
+ apple and alder leaves, thickly strew the ground. For I know that they lie
+ concealed, fallen into hollows long since, and covered up by the leaves of
+ the tree itself&mdash;a proper kind of packing. From these lurking places,
+ everywhere within the circumference of the tree, I draw forth the fruit
+ all wet and glossy, maybe nibbled by rabbits and hollowed out by crickets,
+ and perhaps a leaf or two cemented to it (as Curzon an old manuscript from
+ a monastery's mouldy cellar), but still with a rich bloom on it, and at
+ least as ripe and well kept, if no better than those in barrels, more
+ crisp and lively than they. If these resources fail to yield anything, I
+ have learned to look between the leaves of the suckers which spring
+ thickly from some horizontal limb, for now and then one lodges there, or
+ in the very midst of an alder-clump, where they are covered by leaves,
+ safe from cows which may have smelled them out. If I am sharp-set, for I
+ do not refuse the blue-pearmain, I fill my pockets on each side; and as I
+ retrace my steps, in the frosty eve being perhaps four or five miles from
+ home, I eat one first from this side, and then from that, to keep my
+ balance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A TASTE OF MAINE BIRCH.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The traveler and camper-out in Maine, unless he penetrates its more
+ northern portions, has less reason to remember it as a pine-tree State
+ than a birch-tree State. The white-pine forests have melted away like snow
+ in the spring and gone down stream, leaving only patches here and there in
+ the more remote and inaccessible parts. The portion of the State I saw&mdash;the
+ valley of the Kennebec and the woods about Moxie Lake&mdash;had been shorn
+ of its pine timber more than forty years before, and is now covered with a
+ thick growth of spruce and cedar and various deciduous trees. But the
+ birch abounds. Indeed, when the pine goes out the birch comes in; the race
+ of men succeeds the race of giants. This tree has great stay-at-home
+ virtues. Let the sombre, aspiring, mysterious pine go; the birch has
+ humble every-day uses. In Maine, the paper or canoe birch is turned to
+ more account than any other tree. I read in Gibbon that the natives of
+ ancient Assyria used to celebrate in verse or prose the three hundred and
+ sixty uses to which the various parts and products of the palm-tree were
+ applied. The Maine birch is turned to so many accounts that it may well be
+ called the palm of this region. Uncle Nathan, our guide, said it was made
+ especially for the camper-out; yes, and for the wood-man and frontiersman
+ generally. It is a magazine, a furnishing store set up in the wilderness,
+ whose goods are free to every comer. The whole equipment of the camp lies
+ folded in it, and comes forth at the beck of the woodman's axe; tent,
+ waterproof roof, boat, camp utensils, buckets, cups, plates, spoons,
+ napkins, table cloths, paper for letters or your journal, torches,
+ candles, kindling-wood, and fuel. The canoe-birch yields you its vestments
+ with the utmost liberality. Ask for its coat, and it gives you its
+ waistcoat also. Its bark seems wrapped about it layer upon layer, and
+ comes off with great ease. We saw many rude structures and cabins shingled
+ and sided with it, and haystacks capped with it. Near a maple-sugar camp
+ there was a large pile of birch-bark sap-buckets,&mdash;each bucket made
+ of a piece of bark about a yard square, folded up as the tinman folds up a
+ sheet of tin to make a square vessel, the corners bent around against the
+ sides and held by a wooden pin. When, one day, we were overtaken by a
+ shower in traveling through the woods, our guide quickly stripped large
+ sheets of the bark from a near tree, and we had each a perfect umbrella as
+ by magic. When the rain was over, and we moved on, I wrapped mine about me
+ like a large leather apron, and it shielded my clothes from the wet
+ bushes. When we came to a spring, Uncle Nathan would have a birch-bark cup
+ ready before any of us could get a tin one out of his knapsack, and I
+ think water never tasted so sweet as from one of these bark cups. It is
+ exactly the thing. It just fits the mouth and it seems to give new virtues
+ to the water. It makes me thirsty now when I think of it. In our camp at
+ Moxie we made a large birch-bark box to keep the butter in; and the butter
+ in this box, covered with some leafy boughs, I think improved in flavor
+ day by day. Maine butter needs something to mollify and sweeten it a
+ little, and I think birch bark will do it. In camp Uncle Nathan often
+ drank his tea and coffee from a bark cup; the china closet in the
+ birch-tree was always handy, and our vulgar tin ware was generally a good
+ deal mixed, and the kitchen-maid not at all particular about dish-washing.
+ We all tried the oatmeal with the maple syrup in one of these dishes, and
+ the stewed mountain cranberries, using a birch-bark spoon, and never found
+ service better. Uncle Nathan declared he could boil potatoes in a bark
+ kettle, and I did not doubt him. Instead of sending our soiled napkins and
+ table-spreads to the wash, we rolled them up into candles and torches, and
+ drew daily upon our stores in the forest for new ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the great triumph of the birch is of course the bark canoe. When Uncle
+ Nathan took us out under his little wood-shed, and showed us, or rather
+ modestly permitted us to see, his nearly finished canoe, it was like a
+ first glimpse of some new and unknown genius of the woods or streams. It
+ sat there on the chips and shavings and fragments of bark like some shy
+ delicate creature just emerged from its hiding-place, or like some wild
+ flower just opened. It was the first boat of the kind I had ever seen, and
+ it filled my eye completely. What woodcraft it indicated, and what a wild
+ free life, sylvan life, it promised! It had such a fresh, aboriginal look
+ as I had never before seen in any kind of handiwork. Its clear yellow-red
+ color would have become the cheek of an Indian maiden. Then its supple
+ curves and swells, its sinewy stays and thwarts, its bow-like contour, its
+ tomahawk stem and stern rising quickly and sharply from its frame, were
+ all vividly suggestive of the race from which it came. An old Indian had
+ taught Uncle Nathan the art, and the soul of the ideal red man looked out
+ of the boat before us. Uncle Nathan had spent two days ranging the
+ mountains looking for a suitable tree, and had worked nearly a week on the
+ craft. It was twelve feet long, and would seat and carry five men nicely.
+ Three trees contribute to the making of a canoe besides the birch, namely,
+ the white cedar for ribs and lining, the spruce for roots and fibres to
+ sew its joints and bind its frame, and the pine for pitch or rosin to stop
+ its seams and cracks. It is hand-made and home-made, or rather wood-made,
+ in a sense that no other craft is, except a dug-out, and it suggests a
+ taste and a refinement that few products of civilization realize. The
+ design of a savage, it yet looks like the thought of a poet, and its grace
+ and fitness haunt the imagination. I suppose its production was the
+ inevitable result of the Indian's wants and surroundings, but that does
+ not detract from its beauty. It is, indeed, one of the fairest flowers the
+ thorny plant of necessity ever bore. Our canoe, as I have intimated, was
+ not yet finished when we first saw it, nor yet when we took it up, with
+ its architect, upon our metaphorical backs and bore it to the woods. It
+ lacked part of its cedar lining and the rosin upon its joints, and these
+ were added after we reached our destination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though we were not indebted to the birch-tree for our guide, Uncle Nathan,
+ as he was known in all the country, yet he matched well these woodsy
+ products and conveniences. The birch-tree had given him a large part of
+ his tuition, and kneeling in his canoe and making it shoot noiselessly
+ over the water with that subtle yet indescribably expressive and athletic
+ play of the muscles of the back and shoulders, the boat and the man seemed
+ born of the same spirit. He had been a hunter and trapper for over forty
+ years; he had grown gray in the woods, had ripened and matured there, and
+ everything about him was as if the spirit of the woods had had the
+ ordering of it; his whole make-up was in a minor and subdued key, like the
+ moss and the lichens, or like the protective coloring of the game,&mdash;everything
+ but his quick sense and penetrative glance. He was as gentle and modest as
+ a girl; his sensibilities were like plants that grow in the shade. The
+ woods and the solitudes had touched him with their own softening and
+ refining influence; had indeed shed upon his soil of life a rich deep leaf
+ mould that was delightful, and that nursed, half concealed, the tenderest
+ and wildest growths. There was grit enough back of and beneath it all, but
+ he presented none of the rough and repelling traits of character of the
+ conventional backwoods-man. In the spring he was a driver of logs on the
+ Kennebec, usually having charge of a large gang of men; in the winter he
+ was a solitary trapper and hunter in the forests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our first glimpse of Maine waters was Pleasant Pond, which we found by
+ following a white, rapid, musical stream from the Kennebec three miles
+ back into the mountains. Maine waters are for the most part
+ dark-complexioned, Indian-colored streams, but Pleasant Pond is a
+ pale-face among them both in name and nature. It is the only strictly
+ silver lake I ever saw. Its waters seem almost artificially white and
+ brilliant, though of remarkable transparency. I think I detected minute
+ shining motes held in suspension in it. As for the trout they are
+ veritable bars of silver until you have cut their flesh, when they are the
+ reddest of gold. They have no crimson or other spots, and the straight
+ lateral line is but a faint pencil mark. They appeared to be a species of
+ lake trout peculiar to these waters, uniformly from ten to twelve inches
+ in length. And these beautiful fish, at the time of our visit (last of
+ August) at least, were to be taken only in deep water upon a hook baited
+ with salt pork. And then you needed a letter of introduction to them. They
+ were not to be tempted or cajoled by strangers. We did not succeed in
+ raising a fish, although instructed how it was to be done, until one of
+ the natives, a young and obliging farmer living hard by, came and lent his
+ countenance to the enterprise. I sat in one end of the boat and he in the
+ other; my pork was the same as his, and I maneuvered it as directed, and
+ yet those fish knew his hook from mine in sixty feet of water, and
+ preferred it four times in five. Evidently they did not bite because they
+ were hungry, but solely for old acquaintance' sake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pleasant Pond is an irregular sheet of water, two miles or more in its
+ greatest diameter, with high, rugged mountains rising up from its western
+ shore, and low rolling hills sweeping back from its eastern and northern,
+ covered by a few sterile farms. I was never tired, when the wind was
+ still, of floating along its margin and gazing down into its marvelously
+ translucent depths. The boulders and fragments of rocks were seen, at a
+ depth of twenty-five or thirty feet, strewing its floor, and apparently as
+ free from any covering of sediment as when they were dropped there by the
+ old glaciers aeons ago. Our camp was amid a dense grove of second growth
+ of white pine on the eastern shore, where, for one, I found a most
+ admirable cradle in a little depression, outside of the tent, carpeted
+ with pine needles, in which to pass the night. The camper-out is always in
+ luck if he can find, sheltered by the trees, a soft hole in the ground,
+ even if he has a stone for a pillow. The earth must open its arms a little
+ for us even in life, if we are to sleep well upon its bosom. I have often
+ heard my grand-father, who was a soldier of the Revolution, tell with
+ great gusto how he once bivouacked in a little hollow made by the
+ overturning of a tree, and slept so soundly that he did not wake up till
+ his cradle was half full of water from a passing shower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What bird or other creature might represent the divinity of Pleasant Pond
+ I do not know, but its demon, as of most northern inland waters, is the
+ loon, and a very good demon he is too, suggesting something not so much
+ malevolent, as arch, sardonic, ubiquitous, circumventing, with just a
+ tinge of something inhuman and uncanny. His fiery red eyes gleaming forth
+ from that jet-black head are full of meaning. Then his strange horse
+ laughter by day and his weird, doleful cry at night, like that of a lost
+ and wandering spirit, recall no other bird or beast. He suggests something
+ almost supernatural in his alertness and amazing quickness, cheating the
+ shot and the bullet of the sportsman out of their aim. I know of but one
+ other bird so quick, and that is the humming-bird, which I have never been
+ able to kill with a gun. The loon laughs the shot-gun to scorn, and the
+ obliging young farmer above referred to told me he had shot at them
+ hundreds of times with his rifle, without effect,&mdash;they always dodged
+ his bullet. We had in our party a breach-loading rifle, which weapon is
+ perhaps an appreciable moment of time quicker than the ordinary
+ muzzleloader, and this the poor loon could not or did not dodge. He had
+ not timed himself to that species of fire-arm, and when, with his fellow,
+ he swam about within rifle range of our camp, letting off volleys of his
+ wild ironical ha-ha, he little suspected the dangerous gun that was
+ matched against him. As the rifle cracked both loons made the gesture of
+ diving, but only one of them disappeared beneath the water; and when he
+ came to the surface in a few moments, a hundred or more yards away, and
+ saw his companion did not follow, but was floating on the water where he
+ had last seen him, he took the alarm and sped away in the distance. The
+ bird I had killed was a magnificent specimen, and I looked him over with
+ great interest. His glossy checkered coat, his banded neck, his snow-white
+ breast, his powerful lance-shaped beak, his red eyes, his black, thin,
+ slender, marvelously delicate feet and legs, issuing from his muscular
+ thighs, and looking as if they had never touched the ground, his strong
+ wings well forward while his legs were quite at the apex, and the neat,
+ elegant model of the entire bird, speed and quickness and strength stamped
+ upon every feature,&mdash;all delighted and lingered in the eye. The loon
+ appears like anything but a silly bird, unless you see him in some
+ collection, or in the shop of the taxidermist, where he usually looks very
+ tame and goose-like. Nature never meant the loon to stand up, or to use
+ his feet and legs for other purposes than swimming. Indeed, he cannot
+ stand except upon his tail in a perpendicular attitude, but in the
+ collections he is poised upon his feet like a barn-yard fowl, all the
+ wildness and grace and alertness goes out of him. My specimen sits upon a
+ table as upon the surface of the water, his feet trailing behind him, his
+ body low and trim, his head elevated and slightly turned as if in the act
+ of bringing that fiery eye to bear upon you, and vigilance and power
+ stamped upon every lineament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loon is to the fishes what the hawk is to the birds; he swoops down to
+ unknown depths upon them, and not even the wary trout can elude him. Uncle
+ Nathan said he had seen the loon disappear and in a moment come up with a
+ large trout, which he would cut in two with his strong beak, and swallow
+ piecemeal. Neither the loon nor the otter can bolt a fish under the water;
+ he must come to the surface to dispose of it. (I once saw a man eat a cake
+ under water in London.) Our guide told me he had seen the parent loon
+ swimming with a single young one upon its back. When closely pressed it
+ dove, or "div" as he would have it, and left the young bird sitting upon
+ the water. Then it too disappeared, and when the old one returned and
+ called, it came out from the shore. On the wing overhead, the loon looks not
+ unlike a very large duck, but when it alights it ploughs into the water
+ like a bombshell. It probably cannot take flight from the land, as the one
+ Gilbert White saw and describes in his letters was picked up in a field,
+ unable to launch itself into the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Pleasant Pond we went seven miles through the woods to Moxie Lake,
+ following an overgrown lumberman's "tote" road, our canoe and supplies,
+ etc., hauled on a sled by the young farmer with his three-year-old steers.
+ I doubt if birch-bark ever made rougher voyage than that. As I watched it
+ above the bushes, the sled and the luggage being hidden, it appeared as if
+ tossed in the wildest and most tempestuous sea. When the bushes closed
+ above it I felt as if it had gone down, or been broken into a hundred
+ pieces. Billows of rocks and logs, and chasms of creeks and spring runs,
+ kept it rearing and pitching in the most frightful manner. The steers went
+ at a spanking pace; indeed, it was a regular bovine gale; but their driver
+ clung to their side amid the brush and boulders with desperate tenacity,
+ and seemed to manage them by signs and nudges, for he hardly uttered his
+ orders aloud. But we got through without any serious mishap, passing
+ Mosquito Creek and Mosquito Pond, and flanking Mosquito Mountain, but
+ seeing no mosquitoes, and brought up at dusk at a lumberman's old
+ hay-barn, standing in the midst of a lonely clearing on the shores of
+ Moxie Lake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here we passed the night, and were lucky in having a good roof over our
+ heads, for it rained heavily. After we were rolled in our blankets and
+ variously disposed upon the haymow, Uncle Nathan lulled us to sleep by a
+ long and characteristic yarn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had asked him, half jocosely, if he believed in "spooks"; but he took my
+ question seriously, and without answering it directly, proceeded to tell
+ us what he himself had known and witnessed. It was, by the way, extremely
+ difficult either to surprise or to steal upon any of Uncle Nathan's
+ private opinions and beliefs about matters and things. He was as shy of
+ all debatable subjects as a fox is of a trap. He usually talked in a
+ circle, just as he hunted moose and caribou, so as not to approach his
+ point too rudely and suddenly. He would keep on the lee side of his
+ interlocutor in spite of all one could do. He was thoroughly good and
+ reliable, but the wild creatures of the woods, in pursuit of which he had
+ spent so much of his life, had taught him a curious gentleness and
+ indirection, and to keep himself in the back-ground; he was careful that
+ you should not scent his opinions upon any subject at all polemic, but he
+ would tell you what he had seen and known. What he had seen and known
+ about spooks was briefly this:&mdash;In company with a neighbor he was
+ passing the night with an old recluse who lived somewhere in these woods.
+ Their host was an Englishman, who had the reputation of having murdered
+ his wife some years before in another part of the country, and, deserted
+ by his grown-up children, was eking out his days in poverty amid these
+ solitudes. The three men were sleeping upon the floor, with Uncle Nathan
+ next to a rude partition that divided the cabin into two rooms. At his
+ head there was a door that opened into this other apartment. Late at
+ night, Uncle Nathan said, he awoke and turned over, and his mind was
+ occupied with various things, when he heard somebody behind the partition.
+ He reached over and felt that both of his companions were in their places
+ beside him, and he was somewhat surprised. The person, or whatever it was,
+ in the other room moved about heavily, and pulled the table from its place
+ beside the wall to the middle of the floor. "I was not dreaming," said
+ Uncle Nathan; "I felt of my eyes twice to make sure, and they were wide
+ open." Presently the door opened; he was sensible of the draught upon his
+ head, and a woman's form stepped heavily past him; he felt the "swirl" of
+ her skirts as she went by. Then there was a loud noise in the room as if
+ some one had fallen their whole length upon the floor. "It jarred the
+ house," said he, "and woke everybody up. I asked old Mr. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ if he heard that noise. 'Yes,' said he, 'it was thunder.' But it was not
+ thunder, I know that;" and then added, "I was no more afraid than I am
+ this minute. I never was the least mite afraid in my life. And my eyes
+ were wide open," he repeated; "I felt of them twice; but whether that was
+ the speret of that man's murdered wife or not I cannot tell. They said she
+ was an uncommon heavy woman." Uncle Nathan was a man of unusually quick
+ and acute senses, and he did not doubt their evidence on this occasion any
+ more than he did when they prompted him to level his rifle at a bear or a
+ moose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moxie Lake lies much lower than Pleasant Pond, and its waters compared
+ with those of the latter are as copper compared with silver. It is very
+ irregular in shape; now narrowing to the dimensions of a slow moving
+ grassy creek, then expanding into a broad deep basin with rocky shores,
+ and commanding the noblest mountain scenery. It is rarely that the
+ pond-lily and the speckled trout are found together,&mdash;the fish the
+ soul of the purest spring water, the flower the transfigured spirit of the
+ dark mud and slime of sluggish summer streams and ponds; yet in Moxie they
+ were both found in perfection. Our camp was amid the birches, poplars, and
+ white cedars near the head of the lake, where the best fishing at this
+ season was to be had. Moxie has a small oval head, rather shallow, but
+ bumpy with rocks; a long, deep neck, full of springs, where the trout lie;
+ and a very broad chest, with two islands tufted with pine-trees for
+ breasts. We swam in the head, we fished in the neck, or in a small section
+ of it, a space about the size of the Adam's apple, and we paddled across
+ and around the broad expanse below. Our birch bark was not finished and
+ christened till we reached Moxie. The cedar lining was completed at
+ Pleasant Pond, where we had the use of a bateau, but the rosin was not
+ applied to the seams till we reached this lake. When I knelt down in it
+ for the first time and put its slender maple paddle into the water, it
+ sprang away with such quickness and speed that it disturbed me in my seat.
+ I had spurred a more restive and spirited steed than I was used to. In
+ fact, I had never been in a craft that sustained so close a relation to my
+ will, and was so responsive to my slightest wish. When I caught my first
+ large trout from it, it sympathized a little too closely, and my
+ enthusiasm started a leak, which, however, with a live coal and a piece of
+ rosin, was quickly ended. You cannot perform much of a war-dance in a
+ birch-bark canoe: better wait till you get on dry land. Yet as a boat it
+ is not so shy and "ticklish" as I had imagined. One needs to be on the
+ alert, as becomes a sportsman and an angler, and in his dealings with it
+ must charge himself with three things,&mdash;precision, moderation, and
+ circumspection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trout weighing four and five pounds have been taken at Moxie, but none of
+ that size came to our hand. I realized the fondest hopes I had dared to
+ indulge in when I hooked the first two-pounder of my life, and my extreme
+ solicitude lest he get away I trust was pardonable. My friend, in relating
+ the episode in camp, said I implored him to row me down in the middle of
+ the lake that I might have room to manoeuver my fish. But the slander has
+ barely a grain of truth in it. The water near us showed several old stakes
+ broken off just below the surface, and my fish was determined to wrap my
+ leader about one of these stakes; it was only for the clear space a few
+ yards farther out that I prayed. It was not long after that my friend
+ found himself in an anxious frame of mind. He hooked a large trout, which
+ came home on him so suddenly that he had not time to reel up his line, and
+ in his extremity he stretched his tall form into the air and lifted up his
+ pole to an incredible height. He checked the trout before it got under the
+ boat, but dared not come down an inch, and then began his amusing further
+ elongation in reaching for his reel with one hand while he carried it ten
+ feet into the air with the other. A step-ladder would perhaps have been
+ more welcome to him just then than at any other moment during his life.
+ But the trout was saved, though my friend's buttons and suspenders
+ suffered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We learned a new trick in fly-fishing here, worth disclosing. It was not
+ one day in four that the trout would take the fly on the surface. When the
+ south wind was blowing and the clouds threatened rain, they would at
+ times, notably about three o'clock, rise handsomely. But on all other
+ occasions it was rarely that we could entice them up through the twelve or
+ fifteen feet of water. Earlier in the season they are not so lazy and
+ indifferent, but the August languor and drowsiness were now upon them. So
+ we learned by a lucky accident to fish deep for them, even weighting our
+ leaders with a shot, and allowing the flies to sink nearly to the bottom.
+ After a moment's pause we would draw them slowly up, and when half or two
+ thirds of the way to the top the trout would strike, when the sport became
+ lively enough. Most of our fish were taken in this way. There is nothing
+ like the flash and the strike at the surface, and perhaps only the need of
+ food will ever tempt the genuine angler into any more prosaic style of
+ fishing; but if you must go below the surface, a shotted leader is the
+ best thing to use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our camp-fire at night served more purposes than one; from its embers and
+ flickering shadows, Uncle Nathan read us many a tale of his life in the
+ woods. They were the same old hunter's stories, except that they evidently
+ had the merit of being strictly true, and hence were not very thrilling or
+ marvelous. Uncle Nathan's tendency was rather to tone down and belittle
+ his experiences than to exaggerate them. If he ever bragged at all (and I
+ suspect he did just a little, when telling us how he outshot one of the
+ famous riflemen of the American team, whom he was guiding through these
+ woods), he did it in such a sly, round-about way that it was hard to catch
+ him at it. His passage with the rifleman referred to shows the difference
+ between the practical off-hand skill of the hunter in the woods and the
+ science of the long-range target hitter. Mr. Bull's Eye had heard that his
+ guide was a capital shot and had seen some proof of it, and hence could
+ not rest till he had had a trial of skill with him. Uncle Nathan, being
+ the challenged party, had the right to name the distance and the
+ conditions. A piece of white paper the size of a silver dollar was put
+ upon a tree twelve rods off, the contestants to fire three shots each
+ off-hand. Uncle Nathan's first bullet barely missed the mark, but the
+ other two were planted well into it. Then the great rifleman took his
+ turn, and missed every time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By hemp!" said Uncle Nathan, "I was sorry I shot so well, Mr. &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
+ took it so to heart; and I had used his own rifle, too. He did not get
+ over it for a week."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But far more ignominious was the failure of Mr. Bull's Eye when he saw his
+ first bear. They were paddling slowly and silently down Dead River, when
+ the guide heard a slight noise in the bushes just behind a little bend. He
+ whispered to the rifleman, who sat kneeling in the bow of the boat, to
+ take his rifle. But instead of doing so he picked up his two-barreled
+ shot-gun. As they turned the point, there stood a bear not twenty yards
+ away, drinking from the stream. Uncle Nathan held the canoe, while the man
+ who had come so far in quest of this very game was trying to lay down his
+ shot-gun and pick up his rifle. "His hand moved like the hand of a clock,"
+ said Uncle Nathan, "and I could hardly keep my seat. I knew the bear would
+ see us in a moment more, and run." Instead of laying his gun by his side,
+ where it belonged, he reached it across in front of him and laid it upon
+ his rifle, and in trying to get the latter from under it a noise was made;
+ the bear heard it and raised his head. Still there was time, for as the
+ bear sprang into the woods he stopped and looked back,&mdash;"as I knew he
+ would," said the guide; yet the marksman was not ready. "By hemp! I could
+ have shot three bears," exclaimed Uncle Nathan, "while he was getting that
+ rifle to his face!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poor Mr. Bull's Eye was deeply humiliated. "Just the chance I had been
+ looking for," he said, "and my wits suddenly left me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a hunter Uncle Nathan always took the game on its own terms, that of
+ still-hunting. He even shot foxes in this way, going into the fields in
+ the fall just at break of day, and watching for them about their mousing
+ haunts. One morning, by these tactics, he shot a black fox; a fine
+ specimen, he said, and a wild one, for he stopped and looked and listened
+ every few yards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had killed over two hundred moose, a large number of them at night on
+ the lakes. His method was to go out in his canoe and conceal himself by
+ some point or island, and wait till he heard the game. In the fall the
+ moose comes into the water to eat the large fibrous roots of the
+ pond-lilies. He splashes along till he finds a suitable spot, when he
+ begins feeding, sometimes thrusting his bead and neck several feet under
+ water. The hunter listens, and when the moose lifts his head and the rills
+ of water run from it, and he hears him "swash" the lily roots about to get
+ off the mud, it is his time to start. Silently as a shadow he creeps up on
+ the moose, who by the way, it seems, never expects the approach of danger
+ from the water side. If the hunter accidentally makes a noise the moose
+ looks toward the shore for it. There is always a slight gleam on the
+ water, Uncle Nathan says, even in the darkest night, and the dusky form of
+ the moose can be distinctly seen upon it. When the hunter sees this darker
+ shadow he lifts his gun to the sky and gets the range of its barrels, then
+ lowers it till it covers the mark, and fires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The largest moose Uncle Nathan ever killed is mounted in the State House
+ at Augusta. He shot him while hunting in winter on snow-shoes. The moose
+ was reposing upon the ground, with his head stretched out in front of him,
+ as one may sometimes see a cow resting. The position was such that only a
+ quartering shot through the animal's hip could reach its heart. Studying
+ the problem carefully, and taking his own time, the hunter fired. The
+ moose sprang into the air, turned, and came with tremendous strides
+ straight toward him. "I knew he had not seen or scented me," said Uncle
+ Nathan, "but, by hemp, I wished myself somewhere else just then; for I was
+ lying right down in his path." But the noble animal stopped, a few yards
+ short, and fell dead with a bullet-hole through his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the moose yard in the winter, that is, restrict their wanderings to a
+ well-defined section of the forest or mountain, trampling down the snow
+ and beating paths in all directions, they browse off only the most dainty
+ morsels first; when they go over the ground a second time they crop a
+ little cleaner; the third time they sort still closer, till by and by
+ nothing is left. Spruce, hemlock, poplar, the barks of various trees,
+ everything within reach, is cropped close. When the hunter comes upon one
+ of these yards the problem for him to settle is, Where are the moose? for
+ it is absolutely necessary that he keep on the lee side of them. So he
+ considers the lay of the land, the direction of the wind, the time of day,
+ the depth of the snow, examines the spoor, the cropped twigs, and studies
+ every hint and clew like a detective. Uncle Nathan said he could not
+ explain to another how he did it, but he could usually tell in a few
+ minutes in what direction to look for the game. His experience had ripened
+ into a kind of intuition or winged reasoning that was above rules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said that most large game, deer, caribou, moose, bear, when started by
+ the hunter and not much scared, were sure to stop and look back before
+ disappearing from sight: he usually waited for this last and best chance
+ to fire. He told us of a huge bear he had seen one morning while
+ still-hunting foxes in the fields; the bear saw him, and got into the
+ woods before he could get a good shot. In her course some distance up the
+ mountain was a bald, open spot, and he felt sure when she crossed this
+ spot she would pause and look behind her; and sure enough, like Lot's
+ wife, her curiosity got the better of her; she stopped to have a final
+ look, and her travels ended there and then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Uncle Nathan had trapped and shot a great many bears, and some of his
+ experiences revealed an unusual degree of sagacity in this animal. One
+ April, when the weather began to get warm and thawy, an old bear left her
+ den in the rocks and built a large, warm nest of grass, leaves, and the
+ bark of the white cedar, under a tall balsam fir that stood in a low,
+ sunny, open place amid the mountains. Hither she conducted her two cubs,
+ and the family began life in what might be called their spring residence.
+ The tree above them was for shelter, and for refuge for the cubs in case
+ danger approached, as it soon did in the form of Uncle Nathan. He happened
+ that way soon after the bear had moved. Seeing her track in the snow, he
+ concluded to follow it. When the bear had passed, the snow had been soft
+ and sposhy, and she had "slumped," he said, several inches. It was now
+ hard and slippery. As he neared the tree the track turned and doubled, and
+ tacked this way and that, and led through the worst brush and brambles to
+ be found. This was a shrewd thought of the old bear; she could thus hear
+ her enemy coming a long time before he drew very near. When Uncle Nathan
+ finally reached the nest, he found it empty, but still warm. Then he began
+ to circle about and look for the bear's footprints or nail-prints upon the
+ frozen snow. Not finding them the first time, he took a larger circle,
+ then a still larger; finally he made a long detour, and spent nearly an
+ hour searching for some clew to the direction the bear had taken, but all
+ to no purpose. Then he returned to the tree and scrutinized it. The
+ foliage was very dense, but presently he made out one of the cubs near the
+ top, standing up amid the branches, and peering down at him. This he
+ killed. Further search only revealed a mass of foliage apparently more
+ dense than usual, but a bullet sent into it was followed by loud
+ whimpering and crying, and the other baby bear came tumbling down. In
+ leaving the place, greatly puzzled as to what had become of the mother
+ bear, Uncle Nathan followed another of her frozen tracks, and after about
+ a quarter of a mile saw beside it, upon the snow, the fresh trail he had
+ been in search of. In making her escape the bear had stepped exactly in
+ her old tracks that were hard and icy, and had thus left no mark till she
+ took to the snow again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During his trapping expeditions into the woods in midwinter, I was curious
+ to know how Uncle Nathan passed the nights, as we were twice pinched with
+ the cold at that season in our tent and blankets. It was no trouble to
+ keep warm, he said, in the coldest weather. As night approached, he would
+ select a place for his camp on the side of a hill. With one of his
+ snow-shoes he would shovel out the snow till the ground was reached,
+ carrying the snow out in front, as we scrape the earth out of the side of
+ a hill to level up a place for the house and yard. On this level place,
+ which, however, was made to incline slightly toward the hill, his bed of
+ boughs was made. On the ground he had uncovered he built his fire. His bed
+ was thus on a level with the fire, and the heat could not thaw the snow
+ under him and let him down, or the burning logs roll upon him. With a
+ steep ascent behind it the fire burned better, and the wind was not so apt
+ to drive the smoke and blaze in upon him. Then, with the long, curving
+ branches of the spruce stuck thickly around three sides of the bed, and
+ curving over and uniting their tops above it, a shelter was formed that
+ would keep out the cold and the snow, and that would catch and retain the
+ warmth of the fire. Rolled in his blanket in such a nest, Uncle Nathan had
+ passed hundreds of the most frigid winter nights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day we made an excursion of three miles through the woods to Bald
+ Mountain, following a dim trail. We saw, as we filed silently along,
+ plenty of signs of caribou, deer, and bear, but were not blessed with a
+ sight of either of the animals themselves. I noticed that Uncle Nathan, in
+ looking through the woods, did not hold his head as we did, but thrust it
+ slightly forward, and peered under the branches like a deer or other wild
+ creature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The summit of Bald Mountain was the most impressive mountain-top I had
+ ever seen, mainly, perhaps, because it was one enormous crown of nearly
+ naked granite. The rock had that gray, elemental, eternal look which
+ granite alone has. One seemed to be face to face with the gods of the
+ fore-world. Like an atom, like a breath of to-day, we were suddenly
+ confronted by abysmal geologic time,&mdash;the eternities past and the
+ eternities to come. The enormous cleavage of the rocks, the appalling
+ cracks and fissures, the rent boulders, the smitten granite floors, gave
+ one a new sense of the power of heat and frost. In one place we noticed
+ several deep parallel grooves, made by the old glaciers. In the
+ depressions on the summit there was a hard, black, peaty-like soil that
+ looked indescribably ancient and unfamiliar. Out of this mould, that might
+ have come from the moon or the interplanetary spaces, were growing
+ mountain cranberries and blueberries or huckleberries. We were soon so
+ absorbed in gathering the latter that we were quite oblivious of the
+ grandeurs about us. It is these blueberries that attract the bears. In
+ eating them, Uncle Nathan said, they take the bushes in their mouths, and
+ by an upward movement strip them clean of both leaves and berries. We were
+ constantly on the lookout for the bears, but failed to see any. Yet a few
+ days afterward, when two of our party returned here and encamped upon the
+ mountain, they saw five during their stay, but failed to get a good shot.
+ The rifle was in the wrong place each time. The man with the shot-gun saw
+ an old bear and two cubs lift themselves from behind a rock and twist
+ their noses around for his scent, and then shrink away. They were too far
+ off for his buckshot. I must not forget the superb view that lay before
+ us, a wilderness of woods and waters stretching away to the horizon on
+ every band. Nearly a dozen lakes and ponds could be seen, and in a clearer
+ atmosphere the foot of Moosehead Lake would have been visible. The highest
+ and most striking mountain to be seen was Mount Bigelow, rising above Dead
+ River, far to the west, and its two sharp peaks notching the horizon like
+ enormous saw-teeth. We walked around and viewed curiously a huge boulder
+ on the top of the mountain that had been split in two vertically, and one
+ of the halves moved a few feet out of its bed. It looked recent and
+ familiar, but suggested gods instead of men. The force that moved the rock
+ had plainly come from the north. I thought of a similar boulder I had seen
+ not long before on the highest point of the Shawangunk Mountains in New
+ York, one side of which is propped up with a large stone, as wall-builders
+ prop up a rock to wrap a chain around it. The rock seems poised lightly,
+ and has but a few points of bearing. In this instance, too, the power had
+ come from the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prettiest botanical specimen my trip yielded was a little plant that
+ bears the ugly name of horned bladderwort (Utricularia cornuta), and which
+ I found growing in marshy places along the shores of Moxie Lake. It has a
+ slender, naked stem nearly a foot high, crowned by two or more large deep
+ yellow flowers,&mdash;flowers the shape of little bonnets or hoods. One
+ almost expected to see tiny faces looking out of them. This illusion is
+ heightened by the horn or spur of the flower, which projects from the hood
+ like a long tapering chin,&mdash;some masker's device. Then the cape
+ behind,&mdash;what a smart upward curve it has, as if spurned by the fairy
+ shoulders it was meant to cover! But perhaps the most notable thing about
+ the flower was its fragrance,&mdash;the richest and strongest perfume I
+ have ever found in a wild flower. This our botanist, Gray, does not
+ mention; as if one should describe the lark and forget its song. The
+ fragrance suggested that of white clover, but was more rank and spicy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woods about Moxie Lake were literally carpeted with Linnæa. I had
+ never seen it in such profusion. In early summer, the period of its bloom,
+ what a charming spectacle the mossy floors of these remote woods must
+ present! The flowers are purple rose-color, nodding and fragrant. Another
+ very abundant plant in these woods was the Clintonia borealis. Uncle
+ Nathan said it was called "bear's corn," though he did not know why. The
+ only noticeable flower by the Maine roadsides at this season that is not
+ common in other parts of the country is the harebell. Its bright blue,
+ bell-shaped corolla shone out from amid the dry grass and weeds all along
+ the route. It was one of the most delicate roadside flowers I had ever
+ seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only new bird I saw in Maine was the pileated woodpecker, or black
+ "log cock," called by Uncle Nathan "wood cock." I had never before seen or
+ heard this bird, and its loud cackle in the woods about Moxie was a new
+ sound to me. It is the wildest and largest of our northern woodpeckers,
+ and the rarest. Its voice and the sound of its hammer are heard only in
+ the depths of the northern woods. It is about as large as a crow, and
+ nearly as black.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We stayed a week at Moxie, or until we became surfeited with its trout,
+ and had killed the last Merganser duck that lingered about our end of the
+ lake. The trout that had accumulated on our hands we had kept alive in a
+ large champagne basket submerged in the lake, and the morning we broke
+ camp the basket was towed to the shore and opened; and after we had
+ feasted our eyes upon the superb spectacle, every trout, twelve or fifteen
+ in number, some of them two-pounders, was allowed to swim back into the
+ lake. They went leisurely, in couples and in trios, and were soon kicking
+ up their heels in their old haunts. I expect that the divinity who
+ presides over Moxie will see to it that every one of those trout, doubled
+ in weight, comes to our basket in the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WINTER NEIGHBORS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The country is more of a wilderness, more of a wild solitude, in the
+ winter than in the summer. The wild comes out. The urban, the cultivated,
+ is hidden or negatived. You shall hardly know a good field from a poor, a
+ meadow from a pasture, a park from a forest. Lines and boundaries are
+ disregarded; gates and bar-ways are unclosed; man lets go his hold upon
+ the earth; title-deeds are deep buried beneath the snow; the best-kept
+ grounds relapse to a state of nature; under the pressure of the cold all
+ the wild creatures become outlaws, and roam abroad beyond their usual
+ haunts. The partridge comes to the orchard for buds; the rabbit comes to
+ the garden and lawn; the crows and jays come to the ash-heap and
+ corn-crib, the snow-buntings to the stack and to the barn-yard; the
+ sparrows pilfer from the domestic fowls; the pine grosbeak comes down from
+ the north and shears your maples of their buds; the fox prowls about your
+ premises at night, and the red squirrels find your grain in the barn or
+ steal the butternuts from your attic. In fact, winter, like some great
+ calamity, changes the status of most creatures and sets them adrift.
+ Winter, like poverty, makes us acquainted with strange bedfellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For my part, my nearest approach to a strange bedfellow is the little gray
+ rabbit that has taken up her abode under my study floor. As she spends the
+ day here and is out larking at night, she is not much of a bedfellow after
+ all. It is probable that I disturb her slumbers more than she does mine. I
+ think she is some support to me under there-a silent wild-eyed witness and
+ backer; a type of the gentle and harmless in savage nature. She has no
+ sagacity to give me or lend me, but that soft, nimble foot of hers, and
+ that touch as of cotton wherever she goes, are worthy of emulation. I
+ think I can feel her good-will through the floor, and I hope she can mine.
+ When I have a happy thought I imagine her ears twitch, especially when I
+ think of the sweet apple I will place by her doorway at night. I wonder if
+ that fox chanced to catch a glimpse of her the other night when he
+ stealthily leaped over the fence near by and walked along between the
+ study and the house? How clearly one could read that it was not a little
+ dog that had passed there. There was something furtive in the track; it
+ shied off away from the house and around it, as if eying it suspiciously;
+ and then it had the caution and deliberation of the fox&mdash;bold, bold,
+ but not too bold; wariness was in every footprint. If it had been a little
+ dog that had chanced to wander that way, when he crossed my path he would
+ have followed it up to the barn and have gone smelling around for a bone;
+ but this sharp, cautious track held straight across all others, keeping
+ five or six rods from the house, up the hill, across the highway towards a
+ neighboring farmstead, with its nose in the air and its eye and ear alert,
+ so to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A winter neighbor of mine in whom I am interested, and who perhaps lends
+ me his support after his kind, is a little red owl, whose retreat is in
+ the heart of an old apple-tree just over the fence. Where he keeps himself
+ in spring and summer I do not know, but late every fall, and at intervals
+ all winter, his hiding-place is discovered by the jays and nut-hatches,
+ and proclaimed from the tree-tops for the space of half an hour or so,
+ with all the powers of voice they can command. Four times during one
+ winter they called me out to behold this little ogre feigning sleep in his
+ den, sometimes in one apple-tree, sometimes in another. Whenever I heard
+ their cries, I knew my neighbor was being berated. The birds would take
+ turns at looking in upon him and uttering their alarm-notes. Every jay
+ within hearing would come to the spot and at once approach the hole in the
+ trunk or limb, and with a kind of breathless eagerness and excitement take
+ a peep at the owl, and then join the outcry. When I approached they would
+ hastily take a final look and then withdraw and regard my movements
+ intently. After accustoming my eye to the faint light of the cavity for a
+ few moments, I could usually make out the owl at the bottom feigning
+ sleep. Feigning, I say, because this is what he really did, as I first
+ discovered one day when I cut into his retreat with the axe. The loud
+ blows and the falling chips did not disturb him at all. When I reached in
+ a stick and pulled him over on his side, leaving one of his wings spread
+ out, he made no attempt to recover himself, but lay among the chips and
+ fragments of decayed wood, like a part of themselves. Indeed, it took a
+ sharp eye to distinguish him. Nor till I had pulled him forth by one wing,
+ rather rudely, did he abandon his trick of simulated sleep or death. Then,
+ like a detected pickpocket, he was suddenly transformed into another
+ creature. His eyes flew wide open, his talons clutched my finger, his ears
+ were depressed, and every motion and look said, "Hands off, at your
+ peril." Finding this game did not work, he soon began to "play 'possum"
+ again. I put a cover over my study wood-box and kept him captive for a
+ week. Look in upon him any time, night or day, and he was apparently
+ wrapped in the profoundest slumber; but the live mice which I put into his
+ box from time to time found his sleep was easily broken; there would be a
+ sudden rustle in the box, a faint squeak, and then silence. After a week
+ of captivity I gave him his freedom in the full sunshine: no trouble for
+ him to see which way and where to go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just at dusk in the winter nights, I often hear his soft bur-r-r-r, very
+ pleasing and bell-like. What a furtive, woody sound it is in the winter
+ stillness, so unlike the harsh scream of the hawk. But all the ways of the
+ owl are ways of softness and duskiness. His wings are shod with silence,
+ his plumage is edged with down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another owl neighbor of mine, with whom I pass the time of day more
+ frequently than with the last, lives farther away. I pass his castle every
+ night on my way to the post-office, and in winter, if the hour is late
+ enough, am pretty sure to see him standing in his doorway, surveying the
+ passers-by and the landscape through narrow slits in his eyes. For four
+ successive winters now have I observed him. As the twilight begins to
+ deepen he rises out of his cavity in the apple-tree, scarcely faster than
+ the moon rises from behind the hill, and sits in the opening, completely
+ framed by its outlines of gray bark and dead wood, and by his protective
+ coloring virtually invisible to every eye that does not know he is there.
+ Probably my own is the only eye that has ever penetrated his secret, and
+ mine never would have done so had I not chanced on one occasion to see him
+ leave his retreat and make a raid upon a shrike that was impaling a
+ shrew-mouse upon a thorn in a neighboring tree and which I was watching.
+ Failing to get the mouse, the owl returned swiftly to his cavity, and ever
+ since, while going that way, I have been on the lookout for him. Dozens of
+ teams and foot-passengers pass him late in the day, but he regards them
+ not, nor they him. When I come alone and pause to salute him, he opens his
+ eyes a little wider, and, appearing to recognize me, quickly shrinks and
+ fades into the background of his door in a very weird and curious manner.
+ When he is not at his outlook, or when he is, it requires the best powers
+ of the eye to decide the point, as the empty cavity itself is almost an
+ exact image of him. If the whole thing had been carefully studied it could
+ not have answered its purpose better. The owl stands quite perpendicular,
+ presenting a front of light mottled gray; the eyes are closed to a mere
+ slit, the ear-feathers depressed, the beak buried in the plumage, and the
+ whole attitude is one of silent, motionless waiting and observation. If a
+ mouse should be seen crossing the highway, or scudding over any exposed
+ part of the snowy surface in the twilight, the owl would doubtless swoop
+ down upon it. I think the owl has learned to distinguish me from the rest
+ of the passers-by; at least, when I stop before him, and he sees himself
+ observed, he backs down into his den, as I have said, in a very amusing
+ manner. Whether bluebirds, nut-hatches, and chickadees&mdash;birds that
+ pass the night in cavities of trees&mdash;ever run into the clutches of
+ the dozing owl, I should be glad to know. My impression is, however, that
+ they seek out smaller cavities. An old willow by the roadside blew down
+ one summer, and a decayed branch broke open, revealing a brood of
+ half-fledged owls, and many feathers and quills of bluebirds, orioles, and
+ other songsters, showing plainly enough why all birds fear and berate the
+ owl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English house sparrows, that are so rapidly increasing among us, and
+ that must add greatly to the food supply of the owls and other birds of
+ prey, seek to baffle their enemies by roosting in the densest evergreens
+ they can find, in the arbor-vitæ, and in hemlock hedges. Soft-winged as
+ the owl is, he cannot steal in upon such a retreat without giving them
+ warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These sparrows are becoming about the most noticeable of my winter
+ neighbors, and a troop of them every morning watch me put out the hens'
+ feed, and soon claim their share. I rather encouraged them in their
+ neighborliness, till one day I discovered the snow under a favorite
+ plum-tree where they most frequently perched covered with the scales of
+ the fruit-buds. On investigating I found that the tree had been nearly
+ stripped of its buds&mdash;a very unneighborly act on the part of the
+ sparrows, considering, too, all the cracked corn I had scattered for them.
+ So I at once served notice on them that our good understanding was at an
+ end. And a hint is as good as a kick with this bird. The stone I hurled
+ among them, and the one with which I followed them up, may have been taken
+ as a kick; but they were only a hint of the shot-gun that stood ready in
+ the corner. The sparrows left in high dungeon, and were not back again in
+ some days, and were then very shy. No doubt the time is near at hand when
+ we shall have to wage serious war upon these sparrows, as they long have
+ had to do on the continent of Europe. And yet it will be hard to kill the
+ little wretches, the only Old World bird we have. When I take down my gun
+ to shoot them I shall probably remember that the Psalmist said, "I watch,
+ and am as a sparrow alone upon the house-top," and maybe the recollection
+ will cause me to stay my hand. The sparrows have the Old World hardiness
+ and prolificness; they are wise and tenacious of life, and we shall find
+ it by and by no small matter to keep them in check. Our native birds are
+ much different, less prolific, less shrewd, less aggressive and
+ persistent, less quick-witted and able to read the note of danger or
+ hostility&mdash;in short, less sophisticated. Most of our birds are yet
+ essentially wild, that is, little changed by civilization. In winter,
+ especially, they sweep by me and around me in flocks,&mdash;the Canada
+ sparrow, the snow-bunting, the shore-lark, the pine grosbeak, the
+ red-poll, the cedar-bird,&mdash;feeding upon frozen apples in the orchard,
+ upon cedar-berries, upon maple-buds, and the berries of the mountain ash,
+ and the celtis, and upon the seeds of the weeds that rise above the snow
+ in the field, or upon the hay-seed dropped where the cattle have been
+ foddered in the barn-yard or about the distant stack; but yet taking no
+ heed of man, in no way changing their habits so as to take advantage of
+ his presence in nature. The pine grosbeak will come in numbers upon your
+ porch, to get the black drupes of the honeysuckle or the woodbine, or
+ within reach of your windows to get the berries of the mountain-ash, but
+ they know you not; they look at you as innocently and unconcernedly as at
+ a bear or moose in their native north, and your house is no more to them
+ than a ledge of rocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only ones of my winter neighbors that actually rap at my door are the
+ nut-hatches and woodpeckers, and these do not know that it is my door. My
+ retreat is covered with the bark of young chestnut-trees, and the birds, I
+ suspect, mistake it for a huge stump that ought to hold fat grubs (there
+ is not even a bookworm inside of it), and their loud rapping often makes
+ me think I have a caller indeed. I place fragments of hickory-nuts in the
+ interstices of the bark, and thus attract the nut-hatches; a bone upon my
+ window-sill attracts both nut-hatches and the downy woodpecker. They peep
+ in curiously through the window upon me, pecking away at my bone, too
+ often a very poor one. A bone nailed to a tree a few feet in front of the
+ window attracts crows as well as lesser birds. Even the slate-colored
+ snow-bird, a seed-eater, comes and nibbles it occasionally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bird that seems to consider he has the best right to the bone both
+ upon the tree and upon the sill is the downy woodpecker, my favorite
+ neighbor among the winter birds, to whom I will mainly devote the
+ remainder of this chapter. His retreat is but a few paces from my own, in
+ the decayed limb of an apple-tree which he excavated several autumns ago.
+ I say "he" because the red plume on the top of his head proclaims the sex.
+ It seems not to be generally known to our writers upon ornithology that
+ certain of our woodpeckers&mdash;probably all the winter residents&mdash;each
+ fall excavate a limb or the trunk of a tree in which to pass the winter,
+ and that the cavity is abandoned in the spring, probably for a new one in
+ which nidification takes place. So far as I have observed, these cavities
+ are drilled out only by the males. Where the females take up their
+ quarters I am not so well informed, though I suspect that they use the
+ abandoned holes of the males of the previous year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The particular woodpecker to which I refer drilled his first hole in my
+ apple-tree one fall four or five years ago. This he occupied till the
+ following spring when he abandoned it. The next fall he began a hole in an
+ adjoining limb, later than before, and when it was about half completed a
+ female took possession of his old quarters. I am sorry to say that this
+ seemed to enrage the male, very much, and he persecuted the poor bird
+ whenever she appeared upon the scene. He would fly at her spitefully and
+ drive her off. One chilly November morning, as I passed under the tree, I
+ heard the hammer of the little architect in his cavity, and at the same
+ time saw the persecuted female sitting at the entrance of the other hole
+ as if she would fain come out. She was actually shivering, probably from
+ both fear and cold. I understood the situation at a glance; the bird was
+ afraid to come forth and brave the anger of the male. Not till I had
+ rapped smartly upon the limb with my stick did she come out and attempt to
+ escape; but she had not gone ten feet from the tree before the male was in
+ hot pursuit, and in a few moments had driven her back to the same tree,
+ where she tried to avoid him among the branches. A few days after, he rid
+ himself of his unwelcome neighbor in the following ingenious manner: he
+ fairly scuttled the other cavity; he drilled a hole into the bottom of it
+ that let in the light and the cold, and I saw the female there no more. I
+ did not see him in the act of rendering this tenement uninhabitable; but
+ one morning, behold it was punctured at the bottom, and the circumstances
+ all seemed to point to him as the author of it. There is probably no
+ gallantry among the birds except at the mating season. I have frequently
+ seen the male woodpecker drive the female away from the bone upon the
+ tree. When she hopped around to the other end and timidly nibbled it, he
+ would presently dart spitefully at her. She would then take up her
+ position in his rear and wait till he had finished his meal. The position
+ of the female among the birds is very much the same as that of woman among
+ savage tribes. Most of the drudgery of life falls upon her, and the
+ leavings of the males are often her lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My bird is a genuine little savage, doubtless, but I value him as a
+ neighbor. It is a satisfaction during the cold or stormy winter nights to
+ know he is warm and cosy there in his retreat. When the day is bad and
+ unfit to be abroad in; he is there too. When I wish to know if he is at
+ home, I go and rap upon his tree, and, if he is not too lazy or
+ indifferent, after some delay he shows his head in his round doorway about
+ ten feet above, and looks down inquiringly upon me&mdash;sometimes
+ latterly I think half resentfully, as much as to say, "I would thank you
+ not to disturb me so often." After sundown, he will not put his head out
+ any more when I call, but as I step away I can get a glimpse of him inside
+ looking cold and reserved. He is a late riser, especially if it is a cold
+ or disagreeable morning, in this respect being like the fowls; it is
+ sometimes near nine o'clock before I see him leave his tree. On the other
+ hand, he comes home early, being in if the day is unpleasant by four P. M.
+ He lives all alone; in this respect I do not commend his example. Where
+ his mate is I should like to know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have discovered several other woodpeckers in adjoining orchards, each of
+ which has a like home and leads a like solitary life. One of them has
+ excavated a dry limb within easy reach of my hand, doing the work also in
+ September. But the choice of tree was not a good one; the limb was too
+ much decayed, and the workman had made the cavity too large; a chip had
+ come out, making a hole in the outer wall. Then he went a few inches down
+ the limb and began again, and excavated a large, commodious chamber, but
+ had again come too near the surface; scarcely more than the bark protected
+ him in one place, and the limb was very much weakened. Then he made
+ another attempt still farther down the limb, and drilled in an inch or
+ two, but seemed to change his mind; the work stopped, and I concluded the
+ bird had wisely abandoned the tree. Passing there one cold, rainy November
+ day, I thrust in my two fingers and was surprised to feel something soft
+ and warm: as I drew away my hand the bird came out, apparently no more
+ surprised than I was. It had decided, then, to make its home in the old
+ limb; a decision it had occasion to regret, for not long after, on a
+ stormy night, the branch gave way and fell to the ground.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "When the bough breaks the cradle will fall,
+ and down will come baby, cradle and all."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Such a cavity makes a snug, warm home, and when the entrance is on the
+ under side if the limb, as is usual, the wind and snow cannot reach the
+ occupant. Late in December, while crossing a high, wooded mountain, lured
+ by the music of fox-hounds, I discovered fresh yellow chips strewing the
+ new-fallen snow, and at once thought of my woodpeckers. On looking around
+ I saw where one had been at work excavating a lodge in a small yellow
+ birch. The orifice was about fifteen feet from the ground, and appeared as
+ round as if struck with a compass. It was on the east side of the tree, so
+ as to avoid the prevailing west and northeast winds. As it was nearly two
+ inches in diameter, it could not have been the work of the downy, but must
+ have been that of the hairy, or else the yellow-bellied woodpecker. His
+ home had probably been wrecked by some violent wind, and he was thus
+ providing himself another. In digging out these retreats the woodpeckers
+ prefer a dry, brittle, trunk, not too soft. They go in horizontally to the
+ centre and then turn downward, enlarging the tunnel as they go, till when
+ finished it is the shape of a long, deep pear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another trait our woodpeckers have that endears them to me, and that has
+ never been pointedly noticed by our ornithologists, is their habit of
+ drumming in the spring. They are songless birds, and yet all are
+ musicians; they make the dry limbs eloquent of the coming change. Did you
+ think that loud, sonorous hammering which proceeded from the orchard or
+ from the near woods on that still March or April morning was only some
+ bird getting its breakfast? It is downy, but he is not rapping at the door
+ of a grub; he is rapping at the door of spring, and the dry limb thrills
+ beneath the ardor of his blows. Or, later in the season, in the dense
+ forest or by some remote mountain lake, does that measured rhythmic beat
+ that breaks upon the silence, first three strokes following each other
+ rapidly, succeeded by two louder ones with longer intervals between them,
+ and that has an effect upon the alert ear as if the solitude itself had at
+ last found a voice&mdash;does that suggest anything less than a deliberate
+ musical performance? In fact, our woodpeckers are just as
+ characteristically drummers as is the ruffed grouse, and they have their
+ particular limbs and stubs to which they resort for that purpose. Their
+ need of expression is apparently just as great as that of the song-birds,
+ and it is not surprising that they should have found out that there is
+ music in a dry, seasoned limb which can be evoked beneath their beaks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few seasons ago a downy woodpecker, probably the individual one who is
+ now my winter neighbor, began to drum early in March in a partly decayed
+ apple-tree that stands in the edge of a narrow strip of woodland near me.
+ When the morning was still and mild I would often hear him through my
+ window before I was up, or by half-past six o'clock, and he would keep it
+ up pretty briskly till nine or ten o'clock, in this respect resembling the
+ grouse, which do most of their drumming in the forenoon. His drum was the
+ stub of a dry limb about the size of one's wrist. The heart was decayed
+ and gone, but the outer shell was hard and resonant. The bird would keep
+ his position there for an hour at a time. Between his drummings he would
+ preen his plumage and listen as if for the response of the female, or for
+ the drum of some rival. How swift his head would go when he was delivering
+ his blows upon the limb! His beak wore the surface perceptibly. When he
+ wished to change the key, which was quite often, he would shift his
+ position an inch or two to a knot which gave out a higher, shriller note.
+ When I climbed up to examine his drum he was much disturbed. I did not
+ know he was in the vicinity, but it seems he saw me from a near tree, and
+ came in haste to the neighboring branches, and with spread plumage and a
+ sharp note demanded plainly enough what my business was with his drum. I
+ was invading his privacy, desecrating his shrine, and the bird was much
+ put out. After some weeks the female appeared; he had literally drummed up
+ a mate; his urgent and oft-repeated advertisement was answered. Still the
+ drumming did not cease, but was quite as fervent as before. If a mate
+ could be won by drumming she could be kept and entertained by more
+ drumming; courtship should not end with marriage. If the bird felt musical
+ before, of course he felt much more so now. Besides that, the gentle
+ deities needed propitiating in behalf of the nest and young as well as in
+ behalf of the mate. After a time a second female came, when there was war
+ between the two. I did not see them come to blows, but I saw one female
+ pursuing the other about the place, and giving her no rest for several
+ days. She was evidently trying to run her out of the neighborhood. Now and
+ then she, too, would drum briefly as if sending a triumphant message to
+ her mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woodpeckers do not each have a particular dry limb to which they
+ resort at all times to drum, like the one I have described. The woods are
+ full of suitable branches, and they drum more or less here and there as
+ they are in quest of food; yet I am convinced each one has its favorite
+ spot, like the grouse, to which it resorts, especially in the morning. The
+ sugar-maker in the maple-woods may notice that their sound proceeds from
+ the same tree or trees about his camp with great regularity. A woodpecker
+ in my vicinity has drummed for two seasons on a telegraph pole, and he
+ makes the wires and glass insulators ring. Another drums on a thin board
+ on the end of a long grape-arbor, and on still mornings can be heard a
+ long distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A friend of mine in a Southern city tells me of a red-headed woodpecker
+ that drums upon a lightning-rod on his neighbor's house. Nearly every
+ clear, still morning at certain seasons, he says, this musical rapping may
+ be heard. "He alternates his tapping with his stridulous call, and the
+ effect on a cool, autumn-like morning is very pleasing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The high-hole appears to drum more promiscuously than does the downy. He
+ utters his long, loud spring call, whick&mdash;whick&mdash;whick&mdash;whick,
+ and then begins to rap with his beak upon his perch before the last note
+ has reached your ear. I have seen him drum sitting upon the ridge of the
+ barn. The log cock, or pileated woodpecker, the largest and wildest of our
+ Northern species, I have never heard drum. His blows should wake the
+ echoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the woodpecker is searching for food, or laying siege to some hidden
+ grub, the sound of his hammer is dead or muffled, and is heard but a few
+ yards. It is only upon dry, seasoned timber, freed of its bark, that he
+ beats his reveille to spring and wooes his mate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wilson was evidently familiar with this vernal drumming of the
+ woodpeckers, but quite misinterprets it. Speaking of the red-bellied
+ species, he says: "It rattles like the rest of the tribe on the dead
+ limbs, and with such violence as to be heard in still weather more than
+ half a mile off; and listens to hear the insect it has alarmed." He
+ listens rather to hear the drum of his rival or the brief and coy response
+ of the female; for there are no insects in these dry limbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one occasion I saw downy at his drum when a female flew quickly through
+ the tree and alighted a few yards beyond him. He paused instantly, and
+ kept his place, apparently without moving a muscle. The female, I took it,
+ had answered his advertisement. She flitted about from limb to limb (the
+ female may be known by the absence of the crimson spot on the back of the
+ head), apparently full of business of her own, and now and then would drum
+ in a shy, tentative manner. The male watched her a few moments and,
+ convinced perhaps that she meant business, struck up his liveliest tune,
+ then listened for her response. As it came back timidly but promptly, he
+ left his perch and sought a nearer acquaintance with the prudent female.
+ Whether or not a match grew out of this little flirtation I cannot say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our smaller woodpeckers are sometimes accused of injuring the apple and
+ other fruit trees, but the depredator is probably the larger and rarer
+ yellow-bellied species. One autumn I caught one of these fellows in the
+ act of sinking long rows of his little wells in the limb of an apple-tree.
+ There were series of rings of them, one above another, quite around the
+ stem, some of them the third of an inch across. They are evidently made to
+ get at the tender, juicy bark, or cambium layer, next to the hard wood of
+ the tree. The health and vitality of the branch are so seriously impaired
+ by them that it often dies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the following winter the same bird (probably) tapped a maple-tree in
+ front of my window in fifty-six places; and when the day was sunny, and
+ the sap oozed out, he spent most of his time there. He knew the good
+ sap-days, and was on hand promptly for his tipple; cold and cloudy days he
+ did not appear. He knew which side of the tree to tap, too, and avoided
+ the sunless northern exposure. When one series of well-holes failed to
+ supply him, he would sink another, drilling through the bark with great
+ ease and quickness. Then, when the day was warm, and the sap ran freely,
+ he would have a regular sugar-maple debauch, sitting there by his wells
+ hour after hour, and as fast as they became filled sipping out the sap.
+ This he did in a gentle, caressing manner that was very suggestive. He
+ made a row of wells near the foot of the tree, and other rows higher up,
+ and he would hop up and down the trunk as these became filled. He would
+ hop down the tree backward with the utmost ease, throwing his tail outward
+ and his head inward at each hop. When the wells would freeze or his thirst
+ become slaked, he would ruffle his feathers, draw himself together, and
+ sit and doze in the sun on the side of the tree. He passed the night in a
+ hole in an apple-tree not far off. He was evidently a young bird not yet
+ having the plumage of the mature male or female, and yet he knew which
+ tree to tap and where to tap it. I saw where he had bored several maples
+ in the vicinity, but no oaks or chestnuts. I nailed up a fat bone near his
+ sap-works: the downy woodpecker came there several times a day to dine;
+ the nut-hatch came, and even the snow-bird took a taste occasionally; but
+ this sap-sucker never touched it; the sweet of the tree sufficed for him.
+ This woodpecker does not breed or abound in my vicinity; only stray
+ specimens are now and then to be met with in the colder months. As spring
+ approached, the one I refer to took his departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I must bring my account of my neighbor in the tree down to the latest
+ date; so after the lapse of a year I add the following notes. The last day
+ of February was bright and springlike. I heard the first sparrow sing that
+ morning and the first screaming of the circling hawks, and about seven
+ o'clock the first drumming of my little friend. His first notes were
+ uncertain and at long intervals, but by and by he warmed up and beat a
+ lively tattoo. As the season advanced he ceased to lodge in his old
+ quarters. I would rap and find nobody at home. Was he out on a lark, I
+ said, the spring fever working in his blood? After a time his drumming
+ grew less frequent, and finally, in the middle of April, ceased entirely.
+ Had some accident befallen him, or had he wandered away to fresh fields,
+ following some siren of his species? Probably the latter. Another bird
+ that I had under observation also left his winter-quarters in the spring.
+ This, then, appears to be the usual custom. The wrens and the nut-hatches
+ and chickadees succeed to these abandoned cavities, and often have amusing
+ disputes over them. The nut-hatches frequently pass the night in them, and
+ the wrens and chickadees nest in them. I have further observed that in
+ excavating a cavity for a nest the downy woodpecker makes the entrance
+ smaller than when he is excavating his winter-quarters. This is doubtless
+ for the greater safety of the young birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next fall, the downy excavated another limb in the old apple-tree, but
+ had not got his retreat quite finished, when the large hairy woodpecker
+ appeared upon the scene. I heard his loud click, click, early one frosty
+ November morning. There was something impatient and angry in the tone that
+ arrested my attention. I saw the bird fly to the tree where downy had been
+ at work, and fall with great violence upon the entrance to his cavity. The
+ bark and the chips flew beneath his vigorous blows, and before I fairly
+ woke up to what he was doing, he had completely demolished the neat, round
+ doorway of downy. He had made a large ragged opening large enough for
+ himself to enter. I drove him away and my favorite came back, but only to
+ survey the ruins of his castle for a moment and then go away. He lingered
+ about for a day or two and then disappeared. The big hairy usurper passed
+ a night in the cavity, but on being hustled out of it the next night by
+ me, he also left, but not till he had demolished the entrance to a cavity
+ in a neighboring tree where downy and his mate had reared their brood that
+ summer, and where I had hoped the female would pass the winter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_NOTE" id="link2H_NOTE_">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NOTES BY THE WAY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE WEATHER-WISE MUSKRAT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I am more than half persuaded that the muskrat is a wise little animal,
+ and that on the subject of the weather, especially, he possesses some
+ secret that I should be glad to know. In the fall of 1878 I noticed that
+ he built unusually high and massive nests. I noticed them in several
+ different localities. In a shallow, sluggish pond by the roadside, which I
+ used to pass daily in my walk, two nests were in process of construction
+ throughout the month of November. The builders worked only at night, and I
+ could see each day that the work had visibly advanced. When there was a
+ slight skim of ice over the pond, this was broken up about the nests, with
+ trails through it in different directions where the material had been
+ brought. The houses were placed a little to one side of the main channel,
+ and were constructed entirely of a species of coarse wild grass that grew
+ all about. So far as I could see, from first to last they were solid
+ masses of grass, as if the interior cavity or nest was to be excavated
+ afterward, as doubtless it was. As they emerged from the pond they
+ gradually assumed the shape of a miniature mountain, very bold and steep
+ on the south side, and running down a long gentle grade to the surface of
+ the water on the north. One could see that the little architect hauled all
+ his material up this easy slope, and thrust it out boldly around the other
+ side. Every mouthful was distinctly defined. After they were two feet or
+ more above the water, I expected each day to see that the finishing stroke
+ had been given and the work brought to a close. But higher yet, said the
+ builder. December drew near, the cold became threatening, and I was
+ apprehensive that winter would suddenly shut down upon those unfinished
+ nests. But the wise rats knew better than I did; they had received private
+ advices from headquarters that I knew not of. Finally, about the 6th of
+ December, the nests assumed completion; the northern incline was absorbed
+ or carried up, and each structure became a strong massive cone, three or
+ four feet high, the largest nest of the kind I had ever seen. Does it mean
+ a severe winter? I inquired. An old farmer said it meant "high water," and
+ he was right once, at least, for in a few days afterward we had the
+ heaviest rainfall known in this section for half a century. The creeks
+ rose to an almost unprecedented height. The sluggish pond became a
+ seething, turbulent watercourse; gradually the angry element crept up the
+ sides of these lake dwellings, till, when the rain ceased, about four
+ o'clock they showed above the flood no larger than a man's hat. During the
+ night the channel shifted till the main current swept over them, and next
+ day not a vestige of the nests was to be seen; they had gone down-stream,
+ as had many other dwellings of a less temporary character. The rats had
+ built wisely, and would have been perfectly secure against any ordinary
+ high water, but who can foresee a flood? The oldest traditions of their
+ race did not run back to the time of such a visitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nearly a week afterward another dwelling was begun, well away from the
+ treacherous channel, but the architects did not work at it with much
+ heart; the material was very scarce, the ice hindered, and before the
+ basement-story was fairly finished, winter had the pond under his lock and
+ key.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In other localities I noticed that where the nests were placed on the
+ banks of streams, they were made secure against the floods by being built
+ amid a small clump of bushes. When the fall of 1879 came, the muskrats
+ were very tardy about beginning their house, laying the corner-stone&mdash;or
+ the corner-sod-about December 1st, and continuing the work slowly and
+ indifferently. On the 15th of the month the nest was not yet finished.
+ This, I said, indicates a mild winter; and, sure enough, the season was
+ one of the mildest known for many years. The rats had little use for their
+ house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, in the fall of 1880, while the weather-wise were wagging their
+ heads, some forecasting a mild, some a severe winter, I watched with
+ interest for a sign from my muskrats. About November 1st, a month earlier
+ than the previous year, they began their nest, and worked at it with a
+ will. They appeared to have just got tidings of what was coming. If I had
+ taken the hint so palpably given, my celery would not have been frozen in
+ the ground, and my apples caught in unprotected places. When the cold wave
+ struck us, about November 20th, my four-legged "I-told-you-so's" had
+ nearly completed their dwelling; it lacked only the ridge-board, so to
+ speak; it needed a little "topping out," to give it a finished look. But
+ this it never got. The winter had come to stay, and it waxed more and more
+ severe, till the unprecedented cold of the last days of December must have
+ astonished even the wise muskrats in their snug retreat. I approached
+ their nest at this time, a white mound upon the white, deeply frozen
+ surface of the pond, and wondered if there was any life in that apparent
+ sepulchre. I thrust my walking-stick sharply into it, when there was a
+ rustle and a splash into the water, as the occupant made his escape. What
+ a damp basement that house has, I thought, and what a pity to rout out a
+ peaceful neighbor out of his bed in this weather and into such a state of
+ things as this! But water does not wet the muskrat; his fur is charmed,
+ and not a drop penetrates it. Where the ground is favorable, the muskrats
+ do not build these mound-like nests, but burrow into the bank a long
+ distance, and establish their winter-quarters there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shall we not say, then, in view of the above facts, that this little
+ creature is weather-wise? The hitting of the mark twice might be mere good
+ luck; but three bull's-eyes in succession is not a mere coincidence; it is
+ a proof of skill. The muskrat is not found in the Old World, which is a
+ little singular, as other rats so abound there, and as those slow-going
+ English streams especially, with their grassy banks, are so well suited to
+ him. The water-rat of Europe is smaller, but of similar nature and habits.
+ The muskrat does not hibernate like some rodents, but is pretty active all
+ winter. In December I noticed in my walk where they had made excursions of
+ a few yards to an orchard for frozen apples. One day, along a little
+ stream, I saw a mink track amid those of the muskrat; following it up, I
+ presently came to blood and other marks of strife upon the snow beside a
+ stone wall. Looking in between the stones, I found the carcass of the
+ luckless rat, with its head and neck eaten away. The mink had made a meal
+ of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II. CHEATING THE SQUIRRELS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ FOR the largest and finest chestnuts I had last fall I was indebted to the
+ gray squirrels. Walking through the early October woods one day, I came
+ upon a place where the ground was thickly strewn with very large unopened
+ chestnut burs. On examination I found that every bur had been cut square
+ off with about an inch of the stem adhering, and not one had been left on
+ the tree. It was not accident, then, but design. Whose design? The
+ squirrels'. The fruit was the finest I had ever seen in the woods, and
+ some wise squirrel had marked it for his own. The burs were ripe, and had
+ just begun to divide, not "threefold," but fourfold, "to show the fruit
+ within." The squirrel that had taken all this pains had evidently reasoned
+ with himself thus: "Now, these are extremely fine chestnuts, and I want
+ them; if I wait till the burs open on the tree the crows and jays will be
+ sure to carry off a great many of the nuts before they fall; then, after
+ the wind has rattled out what remain, there are the mice, the chipmunks,
+ the red squirrels, the raccoons, the grouse, to say nothing of the boys
+ and the pigs, to come in for their share; so I will forestall events a
+ little; I will cut off the burs when they have matured, and a few days of
+ this dry October weather will cause everyone of them to open on the
+ ground; I shall be on hand in the nick of time to gather up my nuts." The
+ squirrel, of course, had to take the chances of a prowler like myself
+ coming along, but he had fairly stolen a march on his neighbors. As I
+ proceeded to collect and open the burs, I was half prepared to hear an
+ audible protest from the trees about, for I constantly fancied myself
+ watched by shy but jealous eyes. It is an interesting inquiry how the
+ squirrel knew the burs would open if left to know, but thought the
+ experiment worth trying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gray squirrel is peculiarly an American product, and might serve very
+ well as a national emblem. The Old World can beat us on rats and mice, but
+ we are far ahead on squirrels, having five or six species to Europe's one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III. FOX AND HOUND.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ I STOOD on a high hill or ridge one autumn day and saw a hound run a fox
+ through the fields far beneath me. What odors that fox must have shaken
+ out of himself, I thought, to be traced thus easily, and how great their
+ specific gravity not to have been blown away like smoke by the breeze! The
+ fox ran a long distance down the hill, keeping within a few feet of a
+ stone wall; then turned a right angle and led off for the mountain, across
+ a plowed field and a succession of pasture lands. In about fifteen minutes
+ the hound came in full blast with her nose in the air, and never once did
+ she put it to the ground while in my sight. When she came to the stone
+ wall she took the other side from that taken by the fox, and kept about
+ the same distance from it, being thus separated several yards from his
+ track, with the fence between her and it. At the point where the fox
+ turned sharply to the left, the hound overshot a few yards, then wheeled,
+ and feeling the air a moment with her nose, took up the scent again and
+ was off on his trail as unerringly as fate. It seemed as if the fox must
+ have sowed himself broadcast as he went along, and that his scent was so
+ rank and heavy that it settled in the hollows and clung tenaciously to the
+ bushes and crevices in the fence. I thought I ought to have caught a
+ remnant of it as I passed that way some minutes later, but I did not. But
+ I suppose it was not that the light-footed fox so impressed himself upon
+ the ground he ran over, but that the sense of the hound was so keen. To
+ her sensitive nose these tracks steamed like hot cakes, and they would not
+ have cooled off so as to be undistinguishable for several hours. For the
+ time being she had but one sense: her whole soul was concentrated in her
+ nose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is amusing when the hunter starts out of a winter morning to see his
+ hound probe the old tracks to determine how recent they are. He sinks his
+ nose down deep in the snow so as to exclude the air from above, then draws
+ a long full breath, giving sometimes an audible snort. If there remains
+ the least effluvium of the fox the hound will detect it. If it be very
+ slight it only sets his tail wagging; if it be strong it unloosens his
+ tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such things remind one of the waste, the friction that is going on all
+ about us, even when the wheels of life run the most smoothly. A fox cannot
+ trip along the top of a stone wall so lightly but that he will leave
+ enough of himself to betray his course to the hound for hours afterward.
+ When the boys play "hare and hounds" the hare scatters bits of paper to
+ give a clew to the pursuers, but he scatters himself much more freely if
+ only our sight and scent were sharp enough to detect the fragments. Even
+ the fish leave a trail in the water, and it is said the otter will pursue
+ them by it. The birds make a track in the air, only their enemies hunt by
+ sight rather than by scent. The fox baffles the hound most upon a hard
+ crust of frozen snow; the scent will not hold to the smooth, bead-like
+ granules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Judged by the eye alone, the fox is the lightest and most buoyant creature
+ that runs. His soft wrapping of fur conceals the muscular play and effort
+ that is so obvious in the hound that pursues him, and he comes bounding
+ along precisely as if blown by a gentle wind. His massive tail is carried
+ as if it floated upon the air by its own lightness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hound is not remarkable for his fleetness, but how he will hang!&mdash;often
+ running late into the night and sometimes till morning, from ridge to
+ ridge, from peak to peak; now on the mountain, now crossing the valley,
+ now playing about a large slope of uplying pasture fields. At times the
+ fox has a pretty well-defined orbit, and the hunter knows where to
+ intercept him. Again he leads off like a comet, quite beyond the system of
+ hills and ridges upon which he was started, and his return is entirely a
+ matter of conjecture; but if the day be not more than half spent, the
+ chances are that the fox will be back before night, though the sportsman's
+ patience seldom holds out that long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hound is a most interesting dog. How solemn and long-visaged he is&mdash;how
+ peaceful and well-disposed! He is the Quaker among dogs. All the
+ viciousness and currishness seem to have been weeded out of him; he seldom
+ quarrels, or fights, or plays, like other dogs. Two strange hounds,
+ meeting for the first time, behave as civilly toward each other as if two
+ men. I know a hound that has an ancient, wrinkled, human, far-away look
+ that reminds one of the bust of Homer among the Elgin marbles. He looks
+ like the mountains toward which his heart yearns so much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hound is a great puzzle to the farm dog; the latter, attracted by his
+ baying, comes barking and snarling up through the fields bent on picking a
+ quarrel; he intercepts the hound, snubs and insults and annoys him in
+ every way possible, but the hound heeds him not; if the dog attacks him he
+ gets away as best he can, and goes on with the trail; the cur bristles and
+ barks and struts about for a while, then goes back to the house, evidently
+ thinking the hound a lunatic, which he is for the time being&mdash;a
+ monomaniac, the slave and victim of one idea. I saw the master of a hound
+ one day arrest him in full course to give one of the hunters time to get
+ to a certain runaway; the dog cried and struggled to free himself and
+ would listen neither to threats nor caresses. Knowing he must be hungry, I
+ offered him my lunch, but he would not touch it. I put it in his mouth,
+ but he threw it contemptuously from him. We coaxed and petted and
+ reassured him, but he was under a spell; he was bereft of all thought or
+ desire but the one passion to pursue that trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE WOODCHUCK
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Writers upon rural England and her familiar natural history make no
+ mention of the marmot or woodchuck. In Europe this animal seems to be
+ confined to high mountainous districts, as on our Pacific slope, burrowing
+ near the snow line. It is more social or gregarious than the American
+ species, living in large families like our prairie-dog. In the Middle and
+ Eastern States our woodchuck takes the place, in some respects, of the
+ English rabbit, burrowing in every hillside and under every stone wall and
+ jutting ledge and large bowlder, from whence it makes raids upon the grass
+ and clover and sometimes upon the garden vegetables. It is quite solitary
+ in its habits, seldom more than one inhabiting the same den, unless it be
+ a mother and her young. It is not now so much a wood chuck as a field
+ chuck. Occasionally, however, one seems to prefer the woods, and is not
+ seduced by the sunny slopes and the succulent grass, but feeds, as did his
+ fathers before him, upon roots and twigs, the bark of young trees, and
+ upon various wood plants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One summer day, as I was swimming across a broad, deep pool in the creek
+ in a secluded place in the woods, I saw one of these sylvan chucks amid
+ the rocks but a few feet from the edge of the water where I proposed to
+ touch. He saw my approach, but doubtless took me for some water-fowl, or
+ for some cousin of his of the muskrat tribe; for he went on with his
+ feeding, and regarded me not till I paused within ten feet of him and
+ lifted myself up. Then he did not know me; having, perhaps, never seen
+ Adam in his simplicity, but he twisted his nose around to catch my scent;
+ and the moment he had done so he sprang like a jumping-jack and rushed
+ into his den with the utmost precipitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woodchuck is the true serf among our animals; he belongs to the soil,
+ and savors of it. He is of the earth, earthy. There is generally a decided
+ odor about his dens and lurking-places, but it is not at all disagreeable
+ in the clover-scented air, and his shrill whistle, as he takes to his hole
+ or defies the farm dog from the interior of the stone wall, is a pleasant
+ summer sound. In form and movement the woodchuck is not captivating. His
+ body is heavy and flabby. Indeed, such a flaccid, fluid, pouchy carcass, I
+ have never before seen. It has absolutely no muscular tension or rigidity,
+ but is as baggy and shaky as a skin filled with water. Let the rifleman
+ shoot one while it lies basking on a sidelong rock, and its body slumps
+ off, and rolls and spills down the hill, as if it were a mass of bowels
+ only. The legs of the woodchuck are short and stout, and made for digging
+ rather than running. The latter operation he performs by short leaps, his
+ belly scarcely clearing the ground. For a short distance he can make very
+ good time, but he seldom trusts himself far from his hole, and when
+ surprised in that predicament, makes little effort to escape, but, grating
+ his teeth, looks the danger squarely in the face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I knew a farmer in New York who had a very large bob-tailed churn-dog by
+ the name of Cuff. The farmer kept a large dairy and made a great deal of
+ butter, and it was the business of Cuff to spend nearly the half of each
+ summer day treading the endless round of the churning-machine. During the
+ remainder of the day he had plenty of time to sleep, and rest, and sit on
+ his hips and survey the landscape. One day, sitting thus, he discovered a
+ woodchuck about forty rods from the house, on a steep side-hill, feeding
+ about near his hole, which was beneath a large rock. The old dog,
+ forgetting his stiffness, and remembering the fun he had had with
+ woodchucks in his earlier days, started off at his highest speed, vainly
+ hoping to catch this one before he could get to his hole. But the
+ woodchuck, seeing the dog come laboring up the hill, sprang to the mouth
+ of his den, and, when his pursuer was only a few rods off, whistled
+ tauntingly and went in. This occurred several times, the old dog marching
+ up the hill, and then marching down again, having had his labor for his
+ pains. I suspect that he revolved the subject in his mind while he
+ revolved the great wheel of the churning-machine, and that some turn or
+ other brought him a happy thought, for next time he showed himself a
+ strategist. Instead of giving chase to the woodchuck when first
+ discovered, he crouched down to the ground, and, resting his head on his
+ paws, watched him. The woodchuck kept working away from the hole, lured by
+ the tender clover, but, not unmindful of his safety, lifted himself up on
+ his haunches every few moments and surveyed the approaches. Presently,
+ after the woodchuck had let himself down from one of these attitudes of
+ observation, and resumed his feeding, Cuff started swiftly but stealthily
+ up the hill, precisely in the attitude of a cat when she is stalking a
+ bird. When the woodchuck rose up again, Cuff was perfectly motionless and
+ half hid by the grass. When he again resumed his clover, Cuff sped up the
+ hill as before, this time crossing a fence, but in a low place, and so
+ nimbly that he was not discovered. Again the wood chuck was on the
+ outlook, again Cuff was motionless and hugging the ground. As the dog
+ nears his victim he is partially hidden by a swell in the earth, but still
+ the woodchuck from his outlook reports "all right," when Cuff, having not
+ twice as far to run as the 'chuck, throws all stealthiness aside and
+ rushes directly for the hole. At that moment the woodchuck discovers his
+ danger, and, seeing that it is a race for life, leaps as I never saw
+ marmot leap before. But he is two seconds too late, his retreat is cut
+ off, and the powerful jaws of the old dog close upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next season Cuff tried the same tactics again with like success; but
+ when the third woodchuck had taken up his abode at the fatal hole, the old
+ churner's wits and strength had begun to fail him, and he was baffled in
+ each attempt to capture the animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woodchuck always burrows on a side-hill. This enables him to guard
+ against being drowned out, by making the termination of the hole higher
+ than the entrance. He digs in slantingly for about two or three feet, then
+ makes a sharp upward turn and keeps nearly parallel with the surface of
+ the ground for a distance of eight or ten feet farther, according to the
+ grade. Here he makes his nest and passes the winter, holing up in October
+ or November and coming out again in April. This is a long sleep, and is
+ rendered possible only by the amount of fat with which the system has
+ become stored during the summer. The fire of life still burns, but very
+ faintly and slowly, as with the draughts all closed and the ashes heaped
+ up. Respiration is continued, but at longer intervals, and all the vital
+ processes are nearly at a standstill. Dig one out during hibernation
+ (Audubon did so), and you find it a mere inanimate ball, that suffers
+ itself to be moved and rolled about without showing signs of awakening.
+ But bring it in by the fire, and it presently unrolls and opens its eyes,
+ and crawls feebly about, and if left to itself will seek some dark hole or
+ corner, roll itself up again, and resume its former condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
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