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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65132 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65132)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Wild Pastures, by Winthrop Packard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Wild Pastures
-
-Author: Winthrop Packard
-
-Illustrator: Charles Copeland
-
-Release Date: April 22, 2021 [eBook #65132]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Steve Mattern, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILD PASTURES ***
-
-
-
-
-WILD PASTURES
-
-
-[Illustration: He was still sitting on his perch greeting the gold of
- the morning sun with melodious uproar [_Page 31_]
-
-
-
-
- WILD PASTURES
-
- BY
-
- WINTHROP PACKARD
-
- ILLUSTRATED BY
-
- CHARLES COPELAND
-
- [Illustration]
-
- BOSTON
-
- SMALL, MAYNARD AND COMPANY
-
- PUBLISHERS
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1909
-
- By Small, Maynard & Company
-
- (INCORPORATED)
-
- _Entered at Stationers’ Hall_
-
- THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- MY WIFE AND THE WEE BOY
-
- WHO HAVE MADE AND SHARED
- THE PASTURE SUNSHINE
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- WAYLAYING THE DAWN 1
-
- STALKING THE WILD GRAPE 25
-
- THE FROG RENDEZVOUS 47
-
- A BUTTERFLY CHASE 69
-
- DOWN STREAM 89
-
- BROOK MAGIC 109
-
- IN THE PONKAPOAG BOGS 131
-
- SOME BUTTERFLY FRIENDS 151
-
- THE RESTING TIME OF THE BIRDS 173
-
- THE POND AT LOW TIDE 193
-
- HOW THE RAIN CAME 215
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- He was still sitting on his perch greeting the gold of
- the morning sun with melodious uproar _Frontispiece_
-
- OPPOSITE PAGE
-
- The fox may slink for an hour unscared, waiting with
- watchful eye on the neighboring chicken coop 6
-
- The mother bird, dancing and mincing along 38
-
- Out from among the birches she sails gracefully, a
- veritable queen of the fairies 64
-
- There was the swish of wings, the snip-snap of a
- bird’s beak, and it was all over 86
-
- The way of the “kiver” is this. There is a single,
- snappy, business-like bob, then another, then
- three in quick succession 96
-
- That such things are not seen oftener is simply
- because people are dull and go to bed instead
- of sitting out under the witch-hazel at midnight
- of a full moon 114
-
- Of a clear midsummer evening you may hear the
- muskrat grubbing roots there ... and hear his
- snort and splash when he dives at sudden sight
- of you 142
-
- Every boy who knows the country in summer knows
- him by his rich, red coloration, his strong, black-bordered
- wings with their black veins 160
-
- The English sparrow has the true instincts of the
- browbeating coward 180
-
- The skunk doesn’t know where he is going and he
- isn’t even on his way 198
-
- My lone quail sat on a rock in the pasture, tipped
- his head back a little, swelled his white throat,
- and whistled 222
-
-
-
-
-WAYLAYING THE DAWN
-
-
-
-
-WAYLAYING THE DAWN
-
-
-The most beautiful place which can be found on earth of a June morning
-is a New England pasture, and fortunate are we New Englanders who love
-the open in the fact that, whatever town or city may be our home, the
-old-time pastures lie still at our very doors.
-
-The way to the one that I know best lies through the yard of an old,
-old house, a yard that stands hospitably always open. It swings along
-by the ancient barn and turns a right angle by a worn-out field. Then
-you enter an old lane leading to what has been for more than a century
-a cow pasture. Here the close-cropped turf is like a lawn between the
-gray and mossy old stone fences that the farmer of a century and more
-gone grubbed from the rocky fields and made into metes and bounds.
-There they stand to-day, just as he set them, grim mementos of toil
-which the softening hand of time has made beautiful. Where cattle still
-travel such lanes day by day these walls are undecorated, but many of
-the lanes are untraveled and have been so these fifty years. Such are
-garlanded with woodbine, sentineled by red cedars, and fragrant with
-the breath of wild rose, azalea, and clethra.
-
-Side by side with this lawn-like lane is another which was once
-traversed by the cattle of the next farm, but which has not been used
-for a lifetime. In this the wild things of the wood are untrammeled,
-save by one another, and they hold it in riotous possession. Just as
-the first lane is tame and sleek this other is wild and unkempt. The
-raspberry and blackberry tangle catches you by the leg if you enter,
-as if to hold you until birch and alder, cedar and sassafras, look you
-over and decide whether or not you are of their lodge. If you give them
-the right grip you may pass. If not, you will be well switched and
-scratched before you are allowed to go on.
-
-Here the wild grape climbs unpruned from wall to cedar, from cedar to
-birch and from birch to oak, whence it sends its witching fragrance
-far on the morning air. You may stalk a wild grape in bloom a mile by
-the scent and be well rewarded by finding the very place where the air
-tingles with it.
-
-This lane is wild, and the wild things of the woods that come on fleet
-wing and nimble foot frequent it. You may never see a partridge in
-the sleek lane, and if by chance the red fox crosses it he does so
-gingerly and as if it were hot under foot. In the other, however, the
-fox may slink for an hour unscared, waiting with watchful eye on the
-neighboring chicken coop, the red squirrel builds his nest in the
-cedar, and the partridge leads her young brood among the blackberry
-bushes of an early morning.
-
-The azalea sends out its white fragrance from the one lane, and never a
-buttercup, even, nods to the wind in the other; yet you love the smooth
-shorn one best. It talks to you of the homely life of the farm, the
-lazy cattle drowsing contentedly to the barn at milking time while the
-farmer’s boy sings as he puts up the bars behind them. You love it best
-because, however much you may love the wild things, the lure of the
-home-leading and well-trodden paths is strong upon you. It is more than
-a sturdy, rough-built stone wall that separates the two lanes; there is
-all the long road from the wilderness down to civilization between them.
-
-[Illustration: The fox may slink for an hour unscared, waiting with
- watchful eye on the neighboring chicken coop]
-
-For the story the pasture teaches us, more than anything else is the
-story of how the fathers wrested the dominion of the New England earth
-from the wilderness and of the way in which the wilderness still hems
-their world about and not only waits the opportunity to spring upon us
-and regain possession, but invests our fields like an invading army and
-takes by stealth what it may not win by force.
-
-The pasture bars divide the world of the smooth-trodden lane and
-the close-shorn fields from the picket line of the wilderness. Let
-us pause a moment upon the line of demarcation. Behind us are the
-entrenchments of civilization, the farmhouse and barn and other
-buildings,--its fort. The town road is the military way leading from
-fortified camp to fortified camp, the mowing field its glacis, and
-the stone walls its outer entrenchments. These the cohorts of the
-wilderness continually dare, and are kept from carrying only by the
-vigilance of the farmer and his men.
-
-Let but this vigilance relax for a year, a spring month even, and
-bramble and bayberry, sweet-fern and wild rose, daring scouts that they
-are, will have a foothold that they will yield only with death. Close
-upon these will follow the birches, the light infantry which rushes to
-the advance line as soon as the scouts have found the foothold. These
-intrench and hold the field desperately until pine and hickory, maple
-and oak, sturdy men of the main line of battle, arrive, and almost
-before you know it the farm is reclaimed. The wilderness has regained
-its lost ground and the cosmos of the wild has wiped out that curious
-chaos which we call civilization.
-
-In this debatable land of the pasture, this Tom Tiddler’s ground where
-the fight between man and the encroaching wilderness goes yearly in
-favor of the wilderness, dwell the pasture people. The woodchuck, the
-rabbit, and even the fox have their burrows here, the woodchuck and the
-rabbit finding the farmer’s clover field and garden patch a convenient
-foraging ground, the fox finding the chicken coop and the rabbit
-equally convenient.
-
-The pasture is the happy hunting-ground of the hawks and owls, though
-they dwell by preference in the deep wood, the nearer approaching to
-the forest primeval the better, but the crow often nests in a pine
-among a group of several in the pasture. The pasture is peculiarly the
-home of scores of varieties of what one might term the half wild birds,
-the thrushes from honest robin down to the catbird, warblers, finches,
-and a host of others who are as shy of the deep woods as they are of
-the highway; and here, in those magic hours that come between the first
-faint flush of dawn and sunrise, you may hear the full chorus of their
-matins swell in triumphant jubilation.
-
-Here in Eastern Massachusetts the dawn comes early, very early, in
-June. It will be a little before three that if you watch the east
-you will see it flush a bit like the coming of color on the face of a
-dark-tressed maiden who has had sudden news of the coming of her lover.
-This flush of color fades again soon, and it is evident that it is all
-a mistake, for the darkness grows thicker than ever, and night, like
-that of the Apocalypse, is upon the face of the world. The dawn is long
-coming when you wait for it. Joshua evidently has arisen and is holding
-the sun in Syria as of old, that he may have time further to confound
-his enemies.
-
-No one believes that there will be dawn at all. You cannot prove it by
-the wood thrush. He sings best, indeed he sings only, in the shadow,
-and often even in the darkest night he will send out a bell-like note
-or two that has a soothing, sleepy tintinnabulation as of cow-bells
-shaken afar off by drowsy cattle. No, the wood thrush is not a reliable
-witness, but if you are wise in the ways of field and pasture before
-dawn, you may take evidence from the chipping sparrow. He is the
-earliest as he is one of the smallest of the morn-waking birds. In his
-case the least shall be first. I do not know if he really sees the
-dawn or if he smells it. There is a change in the air before there is
-in the sky, and perhaps he notes it. Perhaps, too, being smaller, he
-needs less sleep than the other birds, and his gentle inquiring note
-is a plaint that the night is long rather than a prophecy that it is
-ending. But it is he that first predicts with certainty the coming day,
-and it will be many minutes after his first call before the growing
-luminosity, a sort of pale halo that looms slowly about all things,
-tells you that the sun is indeed coming. Even then you are likely to
-hear no other bird note for what seems a long time.
-
-Then from a treetop in the open comes a sort of surprised ejaculation,
-as if some one said, “Why, bless me! It is morning already,” and then a
-burst of song from the full throat of a robin. It is as if he were the
-chorister of a choir invisible, for he pipes but a single strain before
-from treetop to treetop, near and heaven only knows how far, bursts
-forth the mingled melody of a great chorus of robins ringing clarion
-notes of jubilee.
-
-They have the overture to themselves all along in the open, for there
-the song sparrow does not sing till some ten minutes later. Of these
-again you shall hear a single bird, followed by a chorus in the
-next breath, and close upon the heels of the sparrow voice come the
-notes of innumerable warblers of many kinds whose songs you shall not
-distinguish one from another and name unless you are an expert. Behind
-these again come the chewinks and thrashers, not so early risers by any
-means, and very late the catbird. The catbird is clever but, like many
-clever people, he is lazy.
-
-Over to the other side of the pasture, a mile from the lane as the crow
-flies, is a swamp which is part of the pasture, indeed, but a part of
-the wilderness beyond, also. It was on the edge of this that I had
-chosen to meet the dawn, picking my way to it through the darkness in
-part by scent, for the swamp has a musky fragrance of its own, which
-it sends far on the night air. Coming down the slope to it you pass
-through a tangle of scrub oak that leads you to a lower region of
-alders snarled with greenbrier--“horse brier” we call it familiarly.
-
-Here the ground begins to be soft, with occasional clumps of sphagnum
-moss, which is like a gray-brown carpet of velvet, not yet made up,
-but tacked together with yellow bastings of the goldthread. Among
-the scrub oaks a stately pine here and there shoulders up, sending
-you a reassuring sniff of pitchy aroma. The scrub oaks know their
-allotted ground and cease wandering when their toes touch swamp water,
-but the pines are more venturesome, and often lift with their roots
-little mounds of firm brown carpeted ground in the midst of the quaky
-sphagnum. Slender cedars crowd in from the swamp toward these pines,
-plumed like vassal knights that rally to the support of their overlord.
-
-On one of these pine islands on the edge of the swamp an oven bird had
-built her nest, and on this particular night in June she was in much
-distress because she could not get into it. The oven bird builds a
-nest on the ground among low bushes and vines, choosing often a spot
-where pine needles are scattered among the dead leaves. She roofs this
-nest with care--and dried grass--and builds a tunnel-like entrance to
-it so that you may see neither the eggs nor the bird sitting on them.
-You may step on an oven bird’s nest before you will see it, even when
-looking for it, and you may know for a certainty that it is within a
-definite small patch of ground, and yet hunt long before you find it.
-The mother bird had been frightened from her nest by the crush of my
-foot at its side in the darkness, and she did not dare come back, for I
-had unwittingly sat down beneath the pine almost across the entrance.
-Frightened for her nest as well as herself, she fluttered about like
-a bird ghost, now dozing in the thicket for a time, then waking to
-strangeness and fear, and making her plaint again.
-
-The wood thrush, brooding her eggs in the thicket near by, heard it and
-was wakeful, and her mate, never far off, now and again lifted his head
-from beneath his wing and drowsily tintinnabulated a reassuring note
-or two, but I did not stir. I was not sure that I was the cause of the
-oven bird’s trouble, and if so to move about in the darkness might well
-bring her worse disaster.
-
-The false dawn reddened and vanished, the gray of the real dawn was
-streaked and then flushed with rosy light shot through with gold, and
-a thousand voices of jubilee rang from treetop to treetop the whole
-pasture through and far out into the wood beyond, and still I waited,
-stretched motionless. A man might have thought me dead, the victim of
-some midnight tragedy, but the denizens of the pasture are wiser in
-their own province than that.
-
-In the gray of that first dusk, that was hardly streaked with the
-reassuring red of dawn, a crow slipped silent and bat-like from the
-top of a neighboring pine. In that twilight of early dawn you could
-not see him continually as he flapped along. The motions of his wings
-gave him strange appearances and disappearances as if he dodged back
-and forth, flitting up under cover of pillars of mist, yet there was
-no mist there, only the uncertainties of early light which seems to
-come in squads rather than in company front. This crow turned suddenly
-in his flight as he neared my pine island in the swamp and lighted
-in noiseless excitement on a dead limb. A moment he craned his neck,
-peering sharply at my motionless figure. The crow is at times a
-scavenger, and if there were dead men about he wanted to know it. For
-that matter if there was anything else about he wanted to know it, for
-the crow is likewise a gossip. A moment then he gazed at the motionless
-figure, then he vaulted from the limb and the vigor of his call
-resounded far and near as he flapped away eastward into the crimson.
-
-“Hi! Hi! Hi!” he shouted. “Fellow citizens, there’s a man in the woods
-here. He is motionless, but he is only making believe dead. Look out
-for him!”
-
-Far and near the cry rang and was taken up by others of his tribe who
-passed the word along. “There’s a man in the woods!” they shouted,
-“look out for him.” The birds singing near by ceased their songs for a
-moment that they might have a look at the man, for they understand the
-crow’s note of warning as well as if they too spoke his language.
-
-The thrushes were singing now, and after a while the catbird, lazy
-reprobate, awoke. He too, like the crow, is a gossip, and more than
-that he is a tease. He shook his head a little to straighten the
-ruffled feathers of the neck, disturbed by their position for the
-night. He stretched one leg and the wing on that side simultaneously,
-then the other leg and the other wing, a bird yawn as expressive as
-the human one. Then he cocked his head on one side with a gesture of
-pleased surprise and excitement and said, “Mi-a-aw!” He too had seen
-the invader of the swamp.
-
-The catbird is a good singer, that is, a good mimic. His taste is good,
-too, for he imitates only the best. Here in the North he imitates the
-brown thrush, no doubt, all things considered, our best vocalist.
-So well does he imitate him that you shall not say of a surety that
-this is the catbird singing and yonder is the thrush. In the South he
-imitates the mocking-bird with equal fidelity. You would say on casual
-acquaintance that he was our ablest singer and most exemplary bird as
-he masquerades in the voices of others, but let him once be frightened,
-or angered, or over-excited about anything and the reprobate part of
-him reasserts itself and he says “Mi-a-aw!” Hence his name, the catbird.
-
-The catbird, however, has the courage of his convictions, and one of
-these convictions is that he has the right to the satisfaction of
-an ungovernable and enormous curiosity. Bait your bird trap in the
-woods with something which strikes a bird as a curiosity that courts
-immediate investigation and you will catch a catbird. Other birds
-might start for it but the catbird would distance them. So, after
-saying “Mi-a-aw!” a few times and drawing no response to his challenge,
-he flew up to a twig within a foot of my head, sat there a moment,
-motionless except his beady black eyes which traversed my form from
-foot to head, finally resting on my eyes. Inadvertently I winked; that
-was the only motion I made, but it was enough. With a flirt of his tail
-and a flip of his wings the catbird was through the thicket and out
-on the other side like a gray flash, scolding away at the top of his
-voice and seeming to shout as the crow had, “There’s a man in the wood!
-There’s a man in the wood! Look out for him!”
-
-The crimson and gold of the dawn had softened and diffused into
-diaphanous mother-of-pearl mists of early day. The June morning miracle
-was complete and it was high time I allowed the oven bird to come back
-and be assured that her nest and eggs were safe.
-
-
-
-
-STALKING THE WILD GRAPE
-
-
-
-
-STALKING THE WILD GRAPE
-
-
-It was to be a moonlight night, yet the moon was on the wane and
-would not rise until eleven. It seemed as if the pasture birds missed
-the moon, or expected it, for beginning with the June dusk at eight
-o’clock one after another made brief queries from red cedar shelter
-or greenbrier thicket. One or two indeed insisted on pouring forth
-snatches of morning song, sending them questing through the darkness
-for several minutes, then ceasing as if ashamed of having been misled.
-
-The cuckoo, of course, you may hear often on any warm night, springing
-his watchman’s rattle chuckle from the denser part of the thicket. But
-for the brown thrush to be announcing morning every half-hour through
-the darkness was an absurdity to be accounted for only on the theory
-that here was a gay young blood who was practising for a moonlight
-serenade. And when the moon did come, touching the tops of the pines
-first with a fine edging of gold, dropping a luminous benediction to
-the birches and diffusing it lower and lower till the whole pasture was
-gold and dusk, the ecstasy of the thrush knew no limit. He poured forth
-a perfect uproar of liquid melody, punctuated with such hurroos and
-whoops of delight that he made me wonder if his lady love would like
-such college-song methods of serenading.
-
-I sat up from my couch on the green moss under the huckleberry bush to
-listen. The people of the pasture seemed to have trooped up to the
-call of the music. The red cedars, the birches, the huckleberry bushes
-in the daytime have individuality indeed, but in the night-time they
-have personality. They loom up in spots where by day you did not notice
-them at all. Some red cedars stand erect and stiff as military men
-might on sentinel duty, others gowned in black like monks of old group
-together and seem to consult, while all about them mingling in gracious
-beauty are the birches and the berry bushes,--the birches slender,
-dainty aristocrats gowned in the thinnest of whispering silk, the berry
-bushes sturdy and comfortable in homespun. You are half afraid of the
-cedars, they are so black and seem to watch you so intently, more than
-half in love with the birches, so graceful and enticing, as they lean
-toward you in their diaphanous drapery, but it is the berry bushes
-shouldering up to greet you in hearty bourgeois welcome that make you
-feel at home.
-
-I listened to the thrush, but soon I found that I had only one ear to
-do it with, for on the other side of me a bird was rapidly approaching
-with greater and equally persistent clamor. It was a whip-poor-will,
-seemingly roused to rivalry by the challenge of the thrush. So far as
-I know the thrush paid no attention to him but simply kept up his song
-in the birch near by, but the whip-poor-will came up little by little
-till he seemed almost over my head, and I could hear plainly the hoarse
-intake of breath between each call. Very brief gasps these intakes
-were, for the whip-poor-wills fairly tumbled over one another without
-cessation.
-
-Now the bird went away for a distance, again he came back, but always
-he kept up his call, while the thrush never wavered from his perch in
-the birch. A dozen times I waked in the night to find them still at
-it, and when the gray of dawn finally silenced the whip-poor-will,
-the thrush let out like a tenor that has just got his second wind. He
-sang up the dawn and the grand matutinal bird chorus, and the last I
-heard of him he was still sitting on his perch greeting the gold of the
-morning sun with melodious uproar.
-
-A blind man who knows the pasture should know what part of it he is
-in and the pasture people that are about him of a June morning simply
-by the use of his other senses. The birds he would know by sound, the
-shrubs and trees by smell. Each has its distinctive set of odors
-differing with differing circumstances, but never varying under the
-same conditions. The barberry fruit when fully ripe, especially if
-the frost has mellowed it, has a faint, pleasant, vinous smell which,
-with the crimson beauty of the clustered berries, might well tempt our
-grandmothers to make barberry sauce, however much the men folk might
-declare that it was but shoe-pegs and molasses.
-
-The blossoms are equally beautiful in their pendant yellow racemes
-which seem to flood the bush with golden light, but the odor of the
-blossoms, though the first sniff is sweet, has an after touch which is
-not pleasant. Crush the leaves as you pass and you shall get a smell
-as of cheap vinegar with something of the back kick of a table d’hôte
-claret. Crush the leaves of the swamp azalea and get a strawberry-musk
-flavor that is faint but delightful.
-
-Sniff as you shoulder your way through the high blueberry bushes and
-you may note that the crushed leaves have a certain vinous odor like
-one of the flavors of a good salad. The blossoms of the high-bush
-blackberry, whose thorns tear your hands, have a faint and endearing
-smell as of June roses that are so far away that you get just a whiff
-of them in a dream. The azalea that a month later will make the moist
-air swoon with sticky sweetness now gives out from its leaves something
-that reminds you of wild strawberries that you tasted years ago. It is
-as delicate and as reminiscent as that.
-
-Under your foot the sweet-fern breathes a resin that is “like pious
-incense from a censer old,” the bayberry sniffs of the wax of altar
-candles lighted at high mass in fairy land, and over by the brook the
-sweet-gale gives a finer fragrance even than these. There are but three
-members of this family,--the Myrica or Sweet-Gale family,--yet it is
-one that the pasture could least afford to miss. The fragrance of their
-spirits descends like a benediction on all about them, and I have a
-fancy that it is steadily influencing the lives of the other pasture
-folk. I know that the low-bush black huckleberry, the kind of the
-sweet, glossy black fruit that crisps under your teeth because of the
-seeds in it, grows right amongst sweet-fern whenever it can. Now if you
-crush the leaves of the low-bush black huckleberry you shall get from
-them a faint ghost of resinous aroma which is very like that of the
-sweet-fern. Thus do sweet lives pass their fragrance on to those about
-them.
-
-Many of these familiar odors had come to me during the night as I half
-slept and half listened to the vocal duel between the thrush and the
-whip-poor-will, but as I sprang to my feet at sunrise from my dent in
-the pasture moss I got a whiff of another which seemed more subtly
-elusive, more faintly fine than these, perhaps because, though I seemed
-to recognize it, I could not name it.
-
-Many things I could name as I have named them here, but this escaped
-me. It had in it some of that real fragrance, a joy without alloy,
-which you get in late July or August from the clethra, the white alder
-which lines the brook and the pond shore with its beautiful clusters of
-odoriferous white spikes. But by no stretch of the imagination could I
-bring the white alder to bloom in early June. Moreover, it had only a
-suggestion of that in its purity of fragrance. There was more to this.
-There was a spicy, teasing titillation that made me think of bubbles in
-a tall glass, and it is a wonder that that thought did not name it for
-me, but it didn’t.
-
-The sun was tipping the dew-wet bush tops with opal scintillations
-that soak you to the skin as you shoulder through them, but that did
-not matter; I was dressed for it, and so on I went, taking continual
-shower-baths cheerfully, but always with that teasing, alluring scent
-in my nostrils. Now and then I lost it; often it was confused and
-overridden by other stronger odors. Once I forgot it.
-
-That was when I sprang over a stone wall and landed fairly in the
-middle of a covey of partridges made up of a mother bird and what
-seemed a small whirlwind of young ones no bigger than my thumb. My
-plunge startled the mother so that she thundered away through the
-bushes, a thing that a mother partridge, surprised with her young, will
-rarely do. At the same moment the young scurried into the air. It was
-like a gust among a dozen brown leaves, whirling them breast high for a
-moment and then letting them settle to earth again. You go to pick them
-up and they surely are brown leaves! It is as if some woodland Merlin
-had waved his wand. They were young partridges, they are brown leaves.
-It is as quick as that.
-
-Yet this was my lucky morning, for one of these little birds failed
-to dematerialize, and I noted him wriggling down under a clump of
-woodland grass and picked him up. He made pretense of keeping still
-for a moment, then wriggled in fright in my hand, a pathetically
-silent, frightened, bright-eyed little chick, mostly down. How his few
-feathers helped him to make as much of a flight as he had is beyond my
-conception. He must have mental-scienced himself up into the air and
-down again.
-
-Holding him gently, I pursed my lips and drew the air sharply in
-between lips and teeth. The result was a peculiar squeaking chirp which
-I have often used on similar occasions with many different birds and
-almost always with success. Then there came a sudden materialization.
-Out of the atmosphere, apparently, appeared the mother bird, dancing
-and mincing along toward me till she was very near, her head up, her
-eyes blazing with excitement, her wings half spread and her feathers
-fluttering.
-
-[Illustration: The mother bird, dancing and mincing along]
-
-It was a sort of pyrrhic dance by a creature as different from the
-usual partridge as may be conceived. It lasted but a moment; at a
-sudden, indescribable note from the mother bird the fledgling gave
-an answering jump and slipped from my relaxed hold, fluttered and
-dematerialized before my eyes just as the mother bird went into
-nothingness in the same way. Truly, there are bogies in the wood, for
-that morning I saw them at their work. It was the illusion and evasion
-of old Merlin; no less.
-
-Going on down the pasture, I picked up the musky scent of the swamp I
-was approaching, instead of the thing I sought. The scent of the swamp
-is cool with humid humus, musky with the breath of the skunk-cabbage,
-woodsy with that quaint exhalation which you get from the ferns, our
-oldest form of plant life, still retaining and lending to you as you
-pass the odor of the very forest primeval. These are the base, and they
-carry the lighter and daintier odors as ambergris, a vile and dreadful
-but very strong smell, carries the dainty scents of the perfumer, and
-just as they in turn give you no hint of the ambergris which is their
-base, so the odor of the swamp gives you little hint of these three but
-is a delight of its own.
-
-Beyond the little corner which I must cross in the straight line I had
-taken was a small hillock of open pasture, fringed on the farther side
-with alder and button bush which stand ankle deep in the water of the
-pond. Here on the little knoll daisies sent out that faint, hay-like
-smell which is common to most of the compositæ. The squaw weed in the
-meadowy edge between the swamp and the knoll had given me the same
-fragrance. But standing on the top of the knoll while the soft morning
-wind swept the daisy fragrance by me knee high, I caught, head high,
-the elusive, alluring odor that I was seeking. It led me down to the
-pond side and called me, dared me, to come on. Why not? I was dressed
-for it, and I was wet to the skin with the drench of the morning dew
-already.
-
-The cove was but a hundred yards across, and I stood on the bank
-wishing to note carefully the direction I must take. The lazy morning
-wind drifted across, just kissing the water here and there, leaving
-the surface for the most part smooth. I wet my finger and held it
-up, dropping it cool side down till it was level. It pointed exactly
-toward the opposite point at the other side of the cove and between it
-and the next one. There a low, sloping, broad flat rock hung with a
-canopy of green leaves was the dock at which I might land conveniently,
-and I splashed resolutely into the water, scaring almost to death
-with my plunge a big green frog that was sunning himself on a little
-foot-square cranberry bog island. He gave a shrill little yelp of
-terror and dived before I could.
-
-Singular thing that little half squeak, half screech, of alarm. I have
-heard a girl make an almost identical sound when coming suddenly on a
-particularly fuzzy and well-developed caterpillar. Rabbit, dog, and
-bird have it as well; indeed, it seems to be the one word which is
-common to all races and to all articulate creatures. Like the scent of
-brakes it began with the beginning of things and has survived all the
-changes of creation.
-
-The muskrat ferry is a pleasant one. Little dancing sprites of mist,
-the height of your head above water, tiptoe off the surface and slip
-away as you swim toward them. You may see these only of a morning when
-you take the muskrat ferry. They are invisible from the shore or from
-the height of a canoe seat.
-
-It is probable that just as some of the pasture people make sounds too
-shrill or too soft for our human ears to hear them, so there are other
-things about the pasture less visible even than the little mist folk
-that we might see were our sight fine enough or soft enough.
-
-Two-thirds of the way across a little puff of wind sparkled its way
-out from the shore to meet me. It brought with it, full and rich,
-the fragrance which had led me so long; and as I looked at the broad
-leaves overhanging my rock port, their under sides and the young shoots
-covered with a soft, cottony down, I laughed to think that I should
-not have known what it was I sought. For it was there in plain sight;
-indeed the rock was canopied with it.
-
-A long time I sat on that rock on the farther side of the cove, the
-June sun warming me, the fragrance of the fox-grape blooms over my head
-alluring, soothing, wrapping my senses in a dreamy delight.
-
-He who would attempt to classify and define the perfume that drifts
-through the pasture from the bloom of the fox-grape may. I only know
-that it makes me dream of pipes of Pan playing in the morning of the
-world, while all the wonder creatures of the old Greek myths dance in
-rhythm and sing in soft undertones, and the riot of young life bubbles
-within them.
-
-The pasture, indeed, could ill afford to lose the pious incense from
-the sweet-fern’s censer, the fragrance of the altar candles of the
-bayberry, and the subtle essence of the sweet-gale. These are the holy
-incense of the church of out-of-doors, and it is well that we should
-always find them when we come to worship; yet he who would dare all
-to steal for one elusive moment the fragrance of the deep heart of
-delight, let him come to the pasture on just that rare, brief period of
-all the year when the fox-grape sends forth its perfume.
-
-
-
-
-THE FROG RENDEZVOUS
-
-
-
-
-THE FROG RENDEZVOUS
-
-
-The pasture meets the pond all along for a mile or so. It lays its lip
-to it and drinks only here and there. It drinks deepest of all in a
-cove. You will hardly know where pasture leaves off and cove begins,
-the two mingle so gently. The pasture creatures here slip down into the
-cove, and those of the pond make their way well up into the pasture.
-You yourself, approaching the cove from the pasture side on foot, will
-be splashing ankle deep in it before you know you are coming to it at
-all, so well do the pasture bushes, standing to their knees in the cool
-water, screen it from you.
-
-Coming from the pond side you might think you saw the margin in this
-same screen of bushes, but there are roods of cove beyond and behind
-them. The shrubs of the pasture love to come down and dabble their feet
-in the warm pond water and sun themselves in the sheltered, fragrant
-air.
-
-The afternoon sun has more resilience here than elsewhere. It bounds
-with fervent flashes of elasticity from the glossy leaves of the
-bushes that have waded out farthest and made islands of themselves.
-The high-bush blueberries are the most daring of all, and stand in the
-largest clumps farthest out. These, late in May with an off-shore wind,
-shower the whole surface of the water with their fallen corollas. More
-than once have I seen the cove white with them on Memorial Day, as if
-the bushes, standing with bowed heads, strewed the waves with memorial
-flowers for the pasture people who have died at sea.
-
-Earlier in the year the elms have made the whole surface of the cove
-brown with their round, wing-margined seeds, and after the memorial
-flowers of the blueberry bushes are gone the maples will send out
-millions of two-sailed seed boats, reddening the whole surface with
-their argosies as they go out to sea, wing and wing. Now all these
-things have passed and the surface of the water is clean again to
-dimple with the under-water swirl of a minnow-hunting pickerel or lap
-lazily against your canoe with the dying undulations of the waves from
-outside.
-
-After the bold blueberry bushes, less daring but still eager pasture
-people have waded in and formed lesser island clumps of their own.
-These were led by the sweet-gale, holding her dark-green silken skirt
-daintily up, so fragrant-souled that she fears no evil, trailed by the
-saucy wild rose, cheerful spiræa, gloomy cassandra, and chubby baby
-alders. If you watch these you will note that they shiver in the lazy
-breeze as if they feared the pass to which their temerity may have
-brought them. Yet there they stand, and the miniature tides swirl about
-their pink toes and die in the pools behind them, so closely grow the
-sedges and little marsh plants that fill them until the fishes from the
-cove nose about their stalks in vain attempt to enter.
-
-Just outside the bush fringe, where the maples are mirrored in
-undulations, whirl and skip, each according to his kind, the surface
-insects of the cove. Of these I hail with greatest joy, as any boy
-should, the “lucky bug.” You know the one I mean. He is a third of
-an inch long, almost as broad, oval, a sort of whaleback monitor
-without any turret. He is hard shelled and a Baptist, judged from the
-pertinacity with which he sticks to deep water, but a Baptist gone
-sadly wrong, for he waltzes continually with his fellows. Round and
-round they go in a mazy whirl that would make you dizzy if at the last
-gasp they did not reverse.
-
-All boys who fish know that these bugs carry stores of luck within
-their hard shells, and for one even to approach your line in his mad
-waltz is a sign of coming success, and should he actually touch the
-line and cling, it presages a big fish. But if you would propitiate
-the gods in most definite fashion before you cast line you should
-catch several lucky bugs, the more the better, bury them on the bank
-with their heads to the shore, and recite over them an incantation as
-follows:
-
- “Bug, bug, bug,
- I’ve spit on the worms I dug;
- Bug, bug, give me my wish,
- A great big string of great big fish.”
-
-Properly managed this was never known to fail; if it does it is because
-you have buried one or more of your bugs bottom up.
-
-It is not so easy to catch a lucky bug, however. He is a very modern
-type of monitor, for his engine power is of the highest, steam is
-always at the top notch, and he can dart away in a straight line
-with all the concentrated fury of a torpedo boat. Moreover, he is
-convertible, and I have seen him when completely surrounded by enemies
-become a submarine and dive straight for the bottom and stay there.
-He may have an oxygen tank; anyway, he doesn’t come up until he gets
-ready, when he appears fresh and hearty and ready for another waltz.
-
-A fellow surface sailor of his, or rather skipper, is a different type
-of bug. This is the water-strider, a veritable Cassius of the cove,
-with the lean and hungry look of an overgrown, underfed mosquito. There
-is no merry waltz with his fellows about this piratical-looking chap.
-He spreads his four long legs like a Maltese cross, and the tips of
-them are all that touch the water. These dent it into minute dimples,
-but do not penetrate, and his bug-ship skips energetically about on
-the four dents, hopping at times like a veritable flea. Sometimes he
-jumps a half-inch high and skitters along the surface as a boy skips a
-stone; again he poises, lowers his body till it all but rests on the
-water, then raises it till he is high on four stilts, and all the time
-not even his toes are wet.
-
-Entering the cove in mid-afternoon you might think the swooning
-heat had left it no life awake other than the water insects and the
-dragon-flies that race them in airship fashion above. Yet you have but
-to ground your canoe on a sedgy shallow, sit motionless, and wait. Nor
-have you to wait long. There is a breathless pause as if all things
-waited to see what this leviathan of the outer deep meant to do next;
-then a voice at your very elbow says reassuringly, “Tu-g-g-g!” That is
-as near as you can come to it with type. There are no characters that
-will express its guttural vehemence which strikes you like a blow on
-the chest, or its sympathetic resonance. Take your violin, drop the G
-string to a tension so low that it will hardly vibrate musically, then
-twang it. That suggests the tone. But you know it well enough without
-description.
-
-Immediately there comes an answering chorus of “tu-g-gs,” here, there,
-in a score of places all along the shore line and among the island
-clumps of bushes, prelude of frog talk galore for a moment or two,
-followed by brief silence. Then, taking advantage of the oratorical
-pause, an old-timer sets up a tremendously hoarse and vibrant bellow.
-“A-hr-r-h-h-u-m-mm!” he says, “A-hr-r-h-h-u-m-mm!” with the accent
-on the rum. You can hear him half a mile, and immediately there is a
-“chug-squeak-splash” from a little fellow, as if, unable to furnish
-the beverage at short notice, he became affrighted and without delay
-decided that a sequestered nook on bottom between two stones was for
-him. Then the cove goes to sleep again; you can almost hear the silence
-snore.
-
-Little by little, if you look about you shall see them, some right
-within reach of your paddle. I never know whether they slip under when
-the canoe approaches and bob up again noiselessly after all is still,
-or whether they are there all the time, only so well concealed by
-nature that the eye does not note them at first; but I do know that you
-never see them until you have waited a bit. Their brown backs are just
-under water, their green-brown heads just enough above the surface so
-that the nostrils will get air; and there they wait, motionless, for
-hours and hours, for time and tide to serve luncheon. Even with only
-the tops of their heads visible they make you laugh, for their pop eyes
-are popped so high above the tops of their flat heads that they make
-you think of automobile bug lights set well up above the motor hood.
-
-I note a shipwrecked June beetle clinging half drowned to a spear
-of grass and I toss him over within six inches of a frog. There
-is a splash, a gulp, and the beetle with his frantically clawing,
-thorny-toed legs is passed on to kingdom come without a crunch. Once or
-twice after that this frog stirred as if he had an uneasy conscience,
-but he seemed to suffer no internal pangs, indeed he winked the
-circular yellow lining of his eye at me these times as if he enjoyed
-it. It had all the effects of smacking the lips.
-
-The afternoon dreams down from its pinnacle of hazy heat to the soft
-level of eventide. Under the pines of the west side of the cove the
-level sun slips in and seems to caress the green trunks, and the tops
-above sing a little sighing song of contentment. Strange you have not
-heard this before, for the wind has been there all the afternoon. But
-it is toward nightfall that the cove wakes up and you hear many lisping
-elfin sounds that you have never noticed during the mid-afternoon heat.
-You hear the sedges talking in the undulations now. You did not hear
-them before, yet the undulations have been gliding dreamily among the
-sedges all day. The pasture birds are waking up their preludes of
-evensong, and the sun across the cove to the west is glorifying all
-the quivering canopy of green leaves through which it shines with a
-luminous, diaphanous quality which makes magic all along that side of
-the cove.
-
-You are on the borderland between the clear definition of reality and
-the mystic haze of nightfall. To the west, looking away from the glow,
-all is gently but clearly defined; to the east, looking into the golden
-rose of the sunset through the shimmering illusion of leaves, lies the
-pathway to the land that the king’s son saw in the Arabian Night’s tale.
-
-The nightly entertainment, the evening minstrel show, is about to begin
-in the cove, an entertainment in which the frogs are the minstrels, an
-all star performance, for every one of them is capable of being an end
-man or interlocutor or soloist as the case may require.
-
-Already the audience is beginning to gather. First comes a gray
-squirrel scratching down a maple trunk, his strong clawed hind feet
-digging into the bark and holding him wherever he wishes them to, as
-if he were an inverted lineman. Suddenly he sights the canoe and its
-occupant and--blows up. Nothing else will express his sudden outpouring
-of scolding and denunciation of this creature that has usurped a
-front seat. The sounds burst out of him like the escaping steam from
-a great mogul engine waiting on a siding for its freight, and he
-quivers from head to foot, like the engine, with the intensity of the
-ebullition. Suddenly there is a “quawk!” directly over his head, a
-single cry shot out from the catarrhal throat of a night heron that is
-just sailing down. The gray squirrel shoots three feet into the air,
-lands on another maple, flashes up a birch and goes crashing through
-the birch tops off into the woods, where you faintly hear him jawing
-still. The night heron whirls with a great flapping and puts to sea
-with more quawks of alarm. But these two were not especially wanted
-at the concert. The night heron particularly is an unlovely bird in
-appearance, voice, and manner. The skippers and the lucky bugs crowd
-in together, each among its kind, close to the reedy margin, to be as
-near the performers as possible, and behold, there come sailing in from
-sea tiny argosies of dainty people, the loveliest free swimmers of the
-pond. Golden heads nodding in gracious recognition, they come, slender
-bodied and graceful, trailing long robes of filmy lace beneath them in
-the water.
-
-The botanists, who shall be hung some day for their literalness,
-have named these lovely denizens of the cove bladder-worts, or
-_Utricularia_, if you wish the Latin form, because they float on their
-air-inflated leaves and trail their roots beneath them, free in the
-water, scorning the contaminating touch of earth. The off-shore wind of
-noon had sailed these out well beyond the mouth of the cove, now the
-evening breeze is bringing them in again for the concert.
-
-They should have been named after some dainty lady of the old Greek
-mythology, some fair sailor lass who crossed the wake of Ulysses,
-perchance, and lingers on placid seas waiting his return to this day,
-for you will see their golden heads nodding along on the little
-waves of the cove all summer.
-
-[Illustration: Out from among the birches she sails gracefully, a
- veritable queen of the fairies]
-
-These are the patricians of the concert. There is a great tuning of
-instruments going on already and a trying out of voices, yet for some
-reason there is delay. Then comes the queen herself. The golden shimmer
-on the eastern shore has faded and dusk dances up from the undergrowth
-on the west. It is time, and out from among the birches she sails
-gracefully, a veritable queen of the fairies, clad in ostrich plumes
-and softest of white velvet, with the most beautiful trailing and
-undulating opera cloak of softest, delicate green, trimmed with brown
-and white. You may call her a luna moth if you will. The thing which
-somewhat resembles her, stuck on a pin in your collection, may be that,
-but this graceful, soaring creature, pulsing and quivering with life,
-floating through perfumed dusk, is the queen of the fairies--no less.
-
-Her arrival is a signal for the olio to begin. Then, indeed, you learn
-the astonishing number and variety of the frog performers within the
-cove. The basso profundos sing “Ah-r-h-u-m-m” with amazing gusto.
-Surely that waiter frog has got over his fright and brought it in
-quantity. “T-u-g-gs” resound all about like the rattle of a drum corps.
-There are altos whose voices sound like rasping a stick cheerfully
-on a picket fence, others whose strain hath a dying fall of internal
-agony outwardly expressed. A lone belated hyla pipes his plaintive
-soprano, but the tenors are the strongest of all. The tree toad flutes
-a fluttering, liquid tremolo, and the toad, the common toad, sits on
-the grassy margin and swells his throat and sings “Wha-a-a-a-” in
-long-drawn, dreamy cadence.
-
-You may imitate this sound after a fashion if you wish. Purse your lips
-and say the French “Eu” in a long drawl once or twice, then the next
-time you do it whistle at the same time. You will have a very tolerable
-imitation of this dreamy note. It invites to slumber and it is time to
-paddle home, for the dusk has deepened to darkness and there is little
-more for you to see in the cove.
-
-
-
-
-A BUTTERFLY CHASE
-
-
-
-
-A BUTTERFLY CHASE
-
-
-It was a great purple butterfly which led me over the brow of the
-hill, one of the “white admirals,” curiously enough so called, though
-this one had but four minute spots of white on him near the tips of
-his wings. Some members of his genus have a right to the name for they
-have broad bands of white across all four wings, but this one, the
-_Basilarchia astyanax_, is a black sheep.
-
-Nevertheless he is a beautiful creature, well worth following under any
-circumstances to note the ease and sureness of his floating flight and
-admire the beauty of his velvety rufous-black, shoaling into lustrous
-blue in the rounded crenulations of the after wings. This one I
-thought worth following for another reason, however, for he seemed to
-have something on his mind. Not that his flight was direct. A bird with
-something to do goes to his work in a straight line; but a butterfly
-must dance along, even if it were to a funeral in the family. And yet
-with all this my blue and rufous-black white admiral carried in his
-dancing progress something which told me he was troubled and led me to
-follow him over the brow of the hill.
-
-The hill itself is worth noting. Here the glaciers which some thousands
-of years ago planed off the rougher surface of eastern New England
-dropped their chips in a vast terminal moraine of sand and gravel,
-whose northern declivity is so steep that you may throw a stone from
-its rim to the top of a pine growing on the level, eighty or ninety
-feet below. I know many terminal moraines in New England; but I know no
-other at once so high and so abrupt in its declivity. A few rods back
-from its summit the trolley car clangs incessantly, and the speed-mad
-automobilist tears hooting through.
-
-Along the crest, in spite of this, sleep peacefully the forefathers
-of the hamlet. I like to feel that they neither note nor heed the
-uproar of the highway; that they now and then cock a pleased ear to
-the rumble of a passing hay-cart or the jog of a farmer’s horse, but
-that the bedlam of modern hurry whangs by them unperceived. Rather they
-turn their faces to the sough of the summer winds in the century-old
-pines which shade the steep and sleep on, happy in the benediction
-that descends from the spreading branches. Wonderful pines, these, so
-shading the whole declivity that not more than a dapple of sunlight has
-touched the ground beneath them for a century.
-
-Here the hepatica finds the cool, dry seclusion that it loves and lifts
-shy blue eyes to you while yet the winter ice nestles beside it among
-the pine roots. Here while the July sun distills pitchy aroma from the
-great trees the partridge berry carpets favored spots with the rich
-green of its little round leaves,--leaves no bigger than the pink nail
-of your sweetheart’s little finger, a green figured with the scarlet
-of last year’s berries and the white of its wee starry twin flowers.
-Here, too, in July the pyrola lifts its spike of bells like a woodland
-lily-of-the-valley and the pipsissewa shows its waxy flowers to the
-questing bee.
-
-A butterfly, especially a large butterfly, rarely bothers with these
-low-growing herbs, though each has its own delicious fragrance--and a
-butterfly’s scent is keen. So my black white admiral alternately danced
-and soared on down through the richly perfumed areas of the wood while
-I plunged eagerly after, glissading the needle-carpeted slope, making
-station from trunk to trunk lest a too headlong flight plunge me to
-oblivion in what I knew was at the foot of the hill.
-
-Without, the perfervid July sun beat upon the landscape till the dust
-of its concussion rose in a blue haze that loomed the nearby hills
-into misty mountain tops and glamoured the whole world with tropical
-illusion. To our hard-cornered, clear-cut New England it is the
-midsummer which brings the atmosphere of romance. The swoon of Arabian
-Nights is upon the landscape, and it is through such heat and through
-such misty evasion that the Caliph of Bagdad was accustomed to set
-forth incognito to meet strange adventures.
-
-At the foot of the hill, almost at the borderland which separates
-this under-pine world from another far different, the resinous air is
-shut in like the genie in the bottle. You feel the oppression of its
-restraint and wonder, if like the fisherman you might uncork it, if it
-would loom aloft in a dense cloud that would speak to you in a mighty
-voice. Here my butterfly paused for the first time and lighted upon the
-trunk of a pine, head high.
-
-Quietly I drew near. His wings were rising and falling in rhythmic
-unconscious motion that was tremulous with what seemed eagerness. One
-of them, I noted, had a little triangular bit snipped out of it with a
-clean cut. Some insect-eating bird had snapped at him not long before,
-and he had come within a half-inch of death. Yet this did not trouble
-him; very likely he never knew it. It was something else which absorbed
-him so that he took no notice of my close approach. And now I could see
-that his proboscis was uncoiled and apparently he was eating rapidly.
-Now the proboscis of any butterfly is simply a double-barrelled
-tube through which he sucks honey or other moist nutriment. That a
-_Basilarchia astyanax_, or any other butterfly for that matter, should
-be able to draw nourishment from the dry, rough bark of a pine-tree was
-sufficient cause for astonishment, and I drew eagerly nearer to see
-what he was getting.
-
-It was a humid day and I was thirsty myself. What woodland brew could
-be on tap here? In Ireland it used to be true that the Leprechauns,
-the little men of the hedge, could make good beer of heath, and if you
-could only catch and hold one he would tell you how. Here might be a
-similar chance. My nose was within six inches of the white admiral’s
-now and my eyes were bulging out with surprise as much as his do
-naturally, for behold he had what butterfly never had before,--a little
-red tongue on the tip of his proboscis, and with it he was nervously
-licking the bark in its roughest places as hard as he could.
-
-I might have seen more had not my foot slipped on the glossy pine
-needles, and while I clutched the trunk of the pine to save myself the
-butterfly danced away, thinking, I dare say, that I was an abnormally
-developed wood peewee and had just missed getting him for luncheon.
-Evidently the south wind had blown up from the gulf more than an
-Arabian Night’s atmosphere; it had sent along portions of the fauna as
-well. A butterfly with a tongue on the end of his proboscis belongs in
-the land where rocs pick up elephants in their talons and soar away
-with them!
-
-Eagerly I sought to follow my _Basilarchia astyanax_ and learn more,
-but it was not so easy. To follow his flight without care as to the
-setting of my feet might well be to reach a country undiscovered
-indeed, for from the very bottom of the northern declivity of the
-terminal moraine well the springs of the fountain head, and out across
-these he lightly floated, toward the sphagnum-bottom pasture swamp
-beyond.
-
-I suppose it is well settled, geologically, that a river of pure water
-flows from some distant northern point, Labrador perhaps, under the
-eastern portion of Massachusetts. Driven wells find this water almost
-everywhere. In places it rises to the surface in clear ponds which have
-no apparent inlet, and from which little water flows, but which are
-clear and sparkling at a good level the year round. Houghton’s Pond, in
-the Blue Hill Reservation, is one of these nearest Boston. Walden Pond
-is another, and there are plenty more.
-
-In other places still the water boils out of springs through quicksands
-of unknown depths, flowing in clear streams through surrounding swamps
-where trees have made firm ground alternating with bits of quaking
-bog and open pools, where a misstep will drop you over your head in a
-clinging mud that never gives up what it once gets.
-
-Such is the fountain head, and you would know you were coming to it
-of a hot day even were your eyes shut, for the ice-cold water makes
-its own atmosphere. We read of bodies of ice that have lasted since
-the glacial age buried under these terminal moraines whence well such
-cooling springs; I do not know about the ice, but I can testify to the
-cold, sparkling water and the grateful atmosphere which it disseminates
-on these our Arabian days. Yet you must mark well your going. Just
-under the slope the water boils up through fine sand that dances in the
-up current. A few feet farther down it wells more silently, and the
-decayed vegetation of centuries has made a mud bank over the quicksand.
-You may sink to the knee here and find bottom. A few steps farther on
-you may drive a twenty-foot pole down through mud and sand and find
-nothing to obstruct it.
-
-Yet Nature always provides the remedy. Mosses and swamp grass have
-grown on the surface of this liquid mud and alders and swamp maple have
-rooted in these and encouraged wild rose and elder and many another
-shrub, till their intertwined roots have formed a surface which is in
-part safe to the foot. And here is a world of itself in this hidden
-pasture corner, for here linger the trout and the water-cress, and
-many another shy woodland thing, driven to bay by the encroachments of
-surrounding civilization.
-
-In early July you will find the water-cress in bloom in the open pools,
-surrounded by quaking bog and alder shade. Toward this my butterfly
-had gone, and I followed, balancing warily from clump to clump in the
-grateful coolness, testing each foothold lest it drop me into the
-clinging depths below whence nothing but a derrick might lift me. The
-arethusa, daintiest of orchids, nodded its pink head at me from the
-quaking sphagnum, daintily bowing me on, but I paused a moment.
-
-In the water right between my feet was a spotted turtle that had just
-captured an appetizing, but by no means dainty morsel. This was a
-terrapin-like bug that was more than a mouthful. His body, indeed, was
-already out of sight, but claw-like legs protruded from both sides
-of that isosceles triangle which a turtle’s mouth makes when it is
-closed, and waved a frantic farewell to the passing under-water world.
-The turtle was a long time in masticating his terrapin, but it was
-a happy time. His whole body blinked contentedly, and he waved his
-forelegs with a caressing out-push, a motion exactly like that of a
-child at the breast. Then he wagged his head solemnly from side to side
-as a wise turtle might who feels that such good lunches are put up by
-fate only for the knowing ones of this watery world, and pushed himself
-half way under the roots of a tussock for a nap. Soon the nether half
-circle of his shell was motionless, with his hind legs drawn up within.
-Only his little spike tail protruded, waving to a wee passing trout
-the news that the millennium was at hand, and the turtle and the
-bug-terrapin had lain down together in peace and prosperity, with the
-bug-terrapin inside.
-
-I looked up for the butterfly. He was nowhere to be seen. Yet my trip
-was to be worth while, for right in front of me was an open pool
-surrounded by a quaking bog, a pool twenty feet across packed almost
-solid with the white panicled heads of water-cress blooms in which
-swarmed a myriad of bees. Their drone was like that at the front door
-of a hive on a hot July day, yet it was not a monotone as that is. It
-was rather like a grand chorus singing many parts, for these were all
-wildwood bees of a dozen varieties. There was not a hive tender among
-them.
-
-Lifting my admiring gaze from the pool with its white panicles and
-swarming bees I saw further beauty beyond. On firmer ground nestling
-lovingly against an old chestnut post was a great, glorious spike
-of habenaria, the purple-fringed orchis. It is not uncommon, the
-habenaria, in peaty meadows, but no man sees it for the first time in
-the season without a great glow of delight, and I hastened over to give
-it nearer greeting. Just as I reached it the butterfly came dancing
-up, but not to sip the sweets of the wonderful great orchid. Instead
-he lighted, right under my nose, on the roughest part of the old fence
-post and began to lick this as he had the pine trunk.
-
-[Illustration: There was the swish of wings, the snip-snap of a bird’s
- beak, and it was all over]
-
-I watched him again, hearing subconsciously the voice of a great
-crested flycatcher over on a nearby tree, crying “Grief,” “Grief.” A
-moment and the little red tongue which I had noted before seemed to
-catch on the roughest part of the old fence post, and with a sudden
-scrape the Basilarchia scraped it off. I looked in amaze, for now I saw
-what it was. From the honey heart of some flower a little red worm had
-become attached to the tip of the butterfly’s proboscis, and all this
-licking of rough surfaces had been merely to get rid of him.
-
-Up into the bright sunshine danced my black white admiral. There was
-the swish of wings, the snip-snip of a bird’s beak, and it was all
-over. The cry of the great crested flycatcher had been a prophecy
-indeed, and the white admiral had danced blithely out of existence.
-
-But the equatorial haze had more tropical enchantment in store, for
-the midday sun was suddenly wiped out by an ominous figure. Some one
-had uncorked that bottle which held the heat genie confined, and he
-was looming from a black nimbus below into white piles of cumulus at
-the zenith. His eyes flashed red lightnings and he spoke in thunder
-tones. Somewhere over yonder I heard the great crested flycatcher
-crying “Grief,” “Grief,” again. It might be my turn next, and I patted
-the great orchid good-by and tiptoed through the sphagnum and climbed
-the hill again. It had been a brief but pleasant trip. A butterfly
-that found a tongue and a turtle that ate terrapin with a happy smile
-may belong with the genie in the Arabian Nights, or with Alice in
-Wonderland, or both. I know that I found them at the fountain head,
-under the grove of immemorial pines, below the brow of the terminal
-moraine where sleep the fathers of the hamlet.
-
-
-
-
-DOWN STREAM
-
-
-
-
-DOWN STREAM
-
-
-If you have ever known fishing, real fishing, not the guide-book
-kind, where you “whip” streams for fancy fish that bite mainly in
-fancy--there will come a day in late July when it will be necessary for
-you to go down stream. The excessive heat and humidity which has been
-killing you off by inches and other people by wholesale for weeks will
-suddenly vanish before a cool, dry northwester, a gladsome reminder to
-the New Englander that there is such a thing as winter after all; thank
-Heaven!
-
-You know that the drought diminished waters still fizz out from under
-the dam and purl into the pool below the roadside where the sunfish
-congregate under the water weeds. Beyond this they prattle down the
-meadow under banks where the hard-hack stands pink and prim, where the
-meadow-sweet loves the stream so much that it bends toward it and half
-caresses, and where the meadow grasses in complete abandonment whisper
-of it in every wind and bend down and surreptitiously kiss it as it
-dimples by. Farther down where the woodland maples troop up to meet
-it and the willows sit and bathe pink toes in the current is the big
-rock, under which the current has dug a sandy cave in which linger big
-yellow perch, ready to rush out and snatch the worm that comes floating
-down stream. Here you will hesitate but finally pass on, for there is a
-lure which you cannot withstand in the deep pool farther down.
-
-Because you are wise with the remembered wisdom of boyhood, you have
-left at home the expensive rod and reel. Just back from the swamp edge
-is a birch jungle where young trees stand as thick as canes in a Cuban
-brake. Here you find your pole; as large as your thumb at the butt,
-tapering, straight, clean and strong, fifteen feet to the tip. Cut it
-and trim the limbs from it and bend to it your ten feet of stout line
-at the end of which is a hook whose curve is as big as that of your
-little finger nail. A cork that would fit a quart bottle will fit your
-line if you gash it with your pocket-knife and slip the line in the
-gash. It will hold wherever you put it, yet you may slide it up and
-down at will. For the pool you should put it three feet from your
-hook, for you will wish to “sink” that deep. Wind a wee bit of lead
-about your line an inch above the hook, then pull out your bait box and
-select a fat angle-worm. Break him in two in the middle and string him
-on the hook so that the point is just inside the tip of his nose. Now
-you are ready for what adventure may lurk under the bubbly foam of the
-surface.
-
-A willow and a maple lean together in loving embrace over the entrance
-to the deep pool. Above, their arms stretch toward one another and
-intertwine; below, their roots meet under water and sway down stream,
-forming a slippery steep down which the amber yellow water, singing
-a happy little song to itself, coasts into the amber black depths of
-the pool. Black alders stand cooling their feet all about the edge.
-Crowding them into the water are the great oaks and maples whose
-limbs yearn above the pool till they shut out the sun. Along one
-side the current has cut deep to the rough rocks and the water flows
-black and swift. On the other the back-wash circles leisurely and the
-bottom shallows to a bank of sand where the sunfish build their nests
-and the fresh-water clams burrow and put up suppliant mouths to the
-food-bearing current. Inshore it lifts to a sand bar, where you may
-stand and swing your pole without interference from the surrounding
-trees.
-
-All day long the brook sings itself to sleep as it slips down the
-slide into the slumberous depths of the pool. All day long the vivid
-green dragon-flies flutter by with vivid black wings to bring luck
-to your fishing, and the red-eyed vireo pipes his sleepy note in the
-trees above. And all day long you shall catch fish if you will but
-bait your hook and drop it in. First you will thin out the sunfish,
-for they are the most alert and gamy of all. Talk about trout! You
-should try landing a half-pound sunfish on a gossamer tackle and
-a very slender pole. The sunfish is the _Lepomis gibbosus_ of the
-ichthyologists and is a close relative of the rock bass, and just as
-game. He has been irreverently dubbed “pumpkin seed” in some places,
-from his shape, which is that of a pumpkin seed set up on edge. Here in
-eastern Massachusetts he is just plain “kiver,” which is the old-time
-uneducated New Englander’s pronunciation of the word “cover,” given
-him, no doubt, because he is round and flat. He is as freckled as a
-street urchin and as lively. He has business with your bait the moment
-it drops near him, and the bobbing cork will show that it is he by the
-jaunty vigor of its bobs.
-
-[Illustration: The way of the “kiver” is this. There is a single,
- snappy, business-like bob, then another, then three in quick
- succession]
-
-In fact, if you have learned the ways of the down-stream country you
-will know every fish that takes your bait long before you have brought
-him to the surface from the amber depths, just by the way in which he
-bobs that floating cork. The way of the “kiver” is this. There is a
-single, snappy, business-like bob, then another, then three in quick
-succession in which he drags the cork half under. If you strike just
-at the right time during the succession of three, when the line below
-is taut with the strain of the float against the pull of the fish, you
-shall have him. Otherwise your cork will lift from the water with a
-humorous snort and you will hear little trills of derisive laughter in
-the song of the stream cascading down the willow root chute. It will be
-safer not to try him on the three bobs, but wait till the cork begins
-to bore into the water and glide off across stream, showing that the
-sunfish has made up his mind that it is a worm, a good one, and one
-that he really wants.
-
-The mother sunfish just at this time of year has her nest in the
-sand at the upper end of the bar, in shallow water. It is a circular
-depression which she has scooped out and from which she has carefully
-removed all pebbles and sticks. Here she has laid her eggs, and here,
-day and night, she stands guard over them. If any other fish comes
-along, even of her own kind, she will chase it away with a brustling
-courage which is like that of a mother hen defending her chicks. So,
-after you have caught the freelance sunfish of the pool, those which
-have no family cares, do not drop your bait near her nest, for if
-you do she will dart out and take it, and it is a pity to have the
-brook lose her. She has made her nest in the one shallow spot where
-the bright sunlight plays, and you may see every dapple of her lovely
-sides as the light glances on them. Her every fin quivers as she floats
-there, slowly turning from side to side, her bright eyes roving in
-search of enemies to her offspring. She is a whole torpedo boat of
-mother love and pent-up energy, and so let us leave her, for she makes
-the whole pool seem homelike and hospitable.
-
-The yellow perch will come next to your hook, his tawny yellow sides
-marked by bands of dark green, his back a darker green yet, and his
-fins a rich red. He is the aristocrat of the pool, his family being one
-of the very oldest in the fish domesday book. He lies in deeper water
-than the sunfish, and his bite varies from a gentle nibble to a good
-strong succession of pulls which finally end in the cork going down out
-of sight altogether. Yet when he is at the bait you shall not mistake
-any motion of that bob for the ones made by the sunfish. The perch has
-a daintier, more gentlemanly touch. It is sure and strong, but it lacks
-the roistering vitality of the sunfish. It is an aristocratic bite,
-and you will recognize it as such without clearly knowing why,--which
-is proof of his aristocracy. You will recognize it, too, from the
-elegance of his figure and the chaste beauty of his attire. He gleams
-in the sunlight. His yellow and green markings are as vivid as those of
-the sunfish, yet arranged in exquisite taste, and he is dapper where
-the other is bourgeois.
-
-Sink a little deeper now, for it is time you caught horn-pouts. The
-horn-pout is also “bull-head,” and, irreverently I fear, “minister,”
-because of the severity of his black attire, which is relieved only
-by a white vest. But horn-pout is the best name, for his horns stick
-out fierce and straight from either side of his gills like the waxed
-mustachios of a stage Frenchman. They are sharp as needles and set as
-firm as daggers in their sockets. When you outrage the dignity of a
-horn-pout by pulling him out of the water he waggles these fins of
-dagger-bone and makes a peculiar grumbling sound with them. It is as if
-he said, “What! what! What’s all this? Who dares disturb my comfort?”
-Then when you reach to take him off the hook he flips that nimble black
-tail of his and jabs his dagger into your hand. It makes an ugly wound,
-and the boys claim that it conceals venom; a sort of poisoned dagger.
-The horn-pout bobs your floating cork usually twice or three times,
-a very different bob from either that of the sunfish or the yellow
-perch. It is a steady, solid down pull each time, taking the cork half
-under water. Then he takes hold in earnest, and the float goes steadily
-down and out, as if this were a matter of no child’s play, but meaning
-something that is solid and substantial on the other end of the line.
-Oftentimes this is true indeed, for the black-coated one may weigh a
-pound or two and double your birch rod into a good half-circle before
-he lets go his grip on the water.
-
-When you get down to the horn-pouts you have fishing indeed, but
-all the time the climax of your day’s career is lurking down in the
-cavernous depths where the stream has gullied far beneath the ledge,
-for there, as thick as your wrist and three feet long, weighing a pound
-to the foot of solid white flesh and muscle, is an eel.
-
-The eel is the strange misanthrope of the brooks and fresh-water ponds.
-You may peer into the sunlit shallows and see the other fishes at their
-work or play. They are companionable. If you will live on the pond
-edge you may train the minnows, the sunfish, the yellow perch even,
-to come up and eat out of your hand. I have watched a big horn-pout
-lumbering about in the shady depths for an hour and seen him carefully
-inspect a hookless worm which I had dropped to him, before he ate it,
-noting with glee the gravity and self-importance with which he finally
-decided that it was all right and that he would confer a favor upon it
-by swallowing it whole. Yet never once have I seen or laid hands on an
-eel in fresh water. There he goes his own mysterious way among the rock
-crevices and along the mud of the ultimate depths. The other fishes
-of the brook travel in schools; he goes alone. They were spawned up
-stream; he was born on the sands of the fishing banks, a hundred miles
-off shore. He came up stream as a young eel squirming through dams that
-shut out other fishes. When the time comes for him to go back he will
-go back the same way, waxed fat indeed, but still unseen, devious,
-self-possessed, and uncannily shrewd.
-
-That he may live to go back he inspects carefully the worms which may
-drop into the cool shadows where he lurks. When he is about to take
-your bait you need to be keen to know what is going on, for he suspects
-you, and your least untoward motion of rod or line will cause him to
-slip back like a shadow into his cavern, and there will be no bite
-from him on that hook after that. You will say that it cannot possibly
-be a bite; the bob simply stops and the hook has no doubt caught on
-a snag on bottom. If you are not wise enough to know better you will
-pull up here lest you lose your hook, and in so doing you will lose
-your eel, for he is simply testing you. He has hold of the very bottom
-of that hook, below point and barb, and if you pull you pull it out of
-his mouth without hooking him. Then in cynical glee he’ll wag himself
-deeper into his cavern beneath the stones, and that is the last of him.
-You may fish the pool for a week before he will forget his caution and
-try another angle-worm. If, however, nothing rouses his suspicions the
-bob will gradually sink lower till it is more than half submerged,
-hang there for a little, give another sag downward, and so by degrees
-be drawn cautiously under. Your eel is cannily carrying the hook down
-into his cavern, where he may finish his meal at leisure. Now is the
-crucial moment. He must not be allowed to get in among the stones, for
-even if your strike hooks him he will twist himself desperately around
-them and then twist the hook out. A steady quick pull and you feel
-him on. Then indeed you “give him the butt,” as the fly fishermen say
-gloryingly. Your lithe birch rod bends in your hands till the tip is
-near your wrist as you lean desperately back with all your strength.
-The hold of a three-foot eel on the water is tremendous. Until he tires
-a bit it is almost as good as yours on the birch pole, but steadily,
-inch by inch, you draw him away out into the pool, where the fight
-is a fair one. Now his head is above water and his great lithe body
-whirls like a propeller beneath. Again look out; for when he leaves the
-water it will be as if he shot out, and you are liable to go with him,
-backward into the bushes, where he will tie your line into ten thousand
-knots, break out the hook, and run for the brook as a snake might.
-
-At the moment he leaves the surface you slow up. Up into the air he
-shoots and drops till his tail welts the ground at your feet. Here let
-him wriggle at the end of the taut line while you break a stout alder
-switch with one hand, and as you drop him to earth belabor him with it.
-This will stun him quicker than anything else, and you may then deal
-with him as you will, only be quick about it, for he is very tenacious
-of life.
-
-Then, if you are a true fisherman, you will wind up what line is left
-you and go your way, for the pool has no more foemen worthy of your
-steel. There will be but one eel to a pool, and to go on catching
-sunfish would be insipid indeed.
-
-
-
-
-BROOK MAGIC
-
-
-
-
-BROOK MAGIC
-
-
-Brook magic does not begin until you have passed the deep fishing-pool
-and traversed the reedy meadow where the flagroot loves to go swimming
-and the muskrats come to spice their midnight lunches with its pungent
-root and pile the broad flags for winter nests. You may, if you are
-alert, feel a touch of its witchery as you wind among the rocks and
-black alders of the level swamp beyond, for here the ostrich-feather
-fern lifts its regal plumes as high as your head, and if by any chance
-you duck under these you have been near the portals of a world where
-sorcery is rife, for fern seed has a mysterious power of its own, and
-the ferns of the alder swamp are decorations on the road to the realm
-of the witch-hazel, where all sorts of strange things may come to pass.
-
-The ferns and the witch-hazel are themselves mysterious and promoters
-of mystery, and it is hard to tell which leads in waywardness and
-subornation of sorcery. The ferns are the lingering representatives of
-an elder world,--a world that was old before the first pine dropped
-its cones or the leaves of the first deciduous tree fell on the first
-greensward. Their ways are not the ways of modern plant life.
-
-Take the cinnamon fern, for instance, one of the commonest of our
-woods. It grows up each spring like a tender and succulent herb, to
-wither and die down in the fall as the grass does. But take a spade
-into the woods with you and try to transplant a good-sized cinnamon
-fern. You will fail, unless you have brought an axe along too, for the
-seemingly herbaceous plant has an underground trunk, sometimes two or
-three feet in diameter, almost as solid and firm in texture as that of
-a tree.
-
-The fern shows no blossom to the world of butterfly or moth, no fruit
-for the delectation of fox or field mouse. The curious little dots
-growing along the margins of the leaves, which we call “fern seed”
-by courtesy, grow no fern when planted. They simply grow a little
-primitive leaf form which curiously imitates a blossom in its functions
-and produces a new fern.
-
-But the witch-hazel is stranger yet in its ways. In the spring, when it
-should by all tokens of the plant world be putting out blossoms, it is
-busy growing nuts which are the product of last year’s blossoms. Then
-in the late autumn, even November, you will find it in bloom, twisting
-yellow petal fingers in mourning at the fall of its own leaves.
-
-[Illustration: That such things are not seen oftener is simply because
- people are dull and go to bed instead of sitting out under the
- witch-hazel at midnight of a full moon]
-
-Pluck one of the nuts of a midsummer evening and look it intently in
-the face. Note the little shrewd pig eyes of the witch far ingrown in
-it, the funny shrewish tip-tilted nose, the puffy cheeks and eyelids.
-See that slender horn in the forehead, the sure mark of the witch.
-No wonder that it has the name witch-hazel with such ways and such
-faces growing all over it at a time when most other trees and shrubs
-have but finished blossoming. But if you want further proof that this
-shrub harbors witches you need but to examine its oval, wavy-toothed
-leaves just at this time of the year and see the little conical red
-witch-caps hung on them. There need be but little doubt that, sitting
-under it at midnight of a full moon, you may see the witch faces detach
-themselves from the limbs, put on these red caps and sail off across
-the great yellow disk. That such things are not seen oftener is simply
-because people are dull and go to bed instead of sitting out under the
-witch-hazel at midnight of a full moon.
-
-To be sure there are scientific men, gray-bearded entomologists, who
-will tell us that these little red caps are galls, the rearing-place of
-plant aphids, caused by the laying of the mother insect’s egg within
-the tissue of the leaf, but one might as well believe that the witches
-hang their hats on the witch-hazel over night as to believe that the
-laying of a minute egg in the tissue of a leaf could cause the plant
-to grow a witch hat.
-
-No doubt these same wise men would explain to you that it is not
-possible to become invisible by sprinkling fern seed on your head
-during the dark of the moon and saying the right words, but did one of
-them ever try it?
-
-It is appropriate that the witch-hazel should shade the portals through
-which the brook enters the glen at the foot of the pasture, for the
-path here enters you into a world of witchery where the glamour of the
-place will hold you long of a summer afternoon.
-
-At the foot of the glen an ancient mill-dam once blocked the free
-passage of the water and a mill-wheel vexed its current. Now only the
-rude embankment remains with half-century old hickories and maples
-growing on it, arching in and shading the glen with their imbricated
-branches. No rust of mill-wheel, no trace of building remains, and
-the very tradition of the mill and its owners is gone. No one to-day
-knows whether it ground corn or sawed boards for the pioneer who built
-it, who laid the sill of its dam so firm and level that the wear of
-two centuries of swift water has not entirely obliterated it. At the
-very bottom of the glen it forms a shallow pool where brook magic and
-witch-hazel glamour shall show you many midsummer fantasies if you will
-but look for them.
-
-It was in the glen that I found the first real relief from the heat of
-midday. The grasses of the sun-parched pasture had crisped under foot
-and broken off, so dry were they, all the way down to the sweet-flag
-meadow. Here the brook water keeps all growing things lush and green,
-but the glare of the sun is only the more intense. It follows you
-into the alder swamp, and you may sit under the arching fronds of the
-ostrich-plume ferns in vain.
-
-But after you have scrambled through them and ducked under the mock
-benediction of the witch-hazel limbs that stretch above your head
-while the witch-hazel faces grin a cynical “Bless you, my child,” you
-feel that you are willing to take your chances with swamp witchery and
-brook magic. For in the glen cool waters crisp over cold stones and the
-breeze sighs up stream and fans you as you sit on the brink of the pool
-and lean your head against the ledge from whose crannies drip the fairy
-fronds of the rock fern.
-
-These are but little fellows of our fern world, and the magic which
-distills from their fern seed is no doubt less potent than that from
-greater ferns, but added to the witch-hazel glamour it makes brook
-magic which will initiate you into many mysteries of the pasture world
-if you are but patient. Sitting there with the tiny brown spores of the
-rock fern dripping upon your shoulders with infinitesimal rattle, you
-seem to see more clearly the glen life and to know the meaning of many
-sounds hitherto only half understood.
-
-Always there is the sleepy song which the brook sings to itself in
-summer,--a song to which the warble of the vireo in the overhead
-leafage adds but a dreamy staccato. But if you listen through this
-you shall presently hear the water goblins grumbling to themselves in
-their abodes under flat stones. They are old and grumpy, these water
-goblins, and they never cease to mumble to themselves about their
-troubles.
-
-Very likely they complain incessantly because they are hungry and the
-supply of demoiselle nymphs is running short. There are plenty of
-demoiselles, flitting back and forth across the pools on glittering
-black wings, which they fold closely to their iridescent green bodies
-when they light. They are such ladylike dragon-flies that it is no
-wonder that the name “demoiselle,” which French scientists with
-admirable gallantry have given them, has stuck. With all their ladylike
-short and modest flights and the saintly way in which they fold their
-wings when they light on some leaf beside the pool, a folding as of
-hands in prayer, the demoiselles are dragon-flies, and each prayer may
-well be for the soul of some midge or other wee insect captured in the
-short flight.
-
-The true dragon-fly--the one which rests with wings widespread--hunts
-like a hawk, but the demoiselles seem to take their prey with a gentle
-grace and charm of manner which ought to make the midge’s last moments
-his happiest ones. I always suspect them of folding him in a perfumed
-napkin and eating him with salad dressing and a spoon after they get
-back to their boudoir, but I cannot prove this any more than I can that
-it is really a water goblin that grumbles under the flat stone.
-
-Many a time I have turned the stones over suddenly, but I never yet
-was quick enough to surprise the goblin. I have found him there, mind
-you, but never in his true shape. Always he has managed to transform
-himself into something different,--perhaps into a spotted turtle or
-a grouchy horn-pout. I have even known him to turn into an ugly,
-many-legged helgramite worm, not having time to make the more reputable
-transformation. It is hard to catch a grumbling goblin asleep,
-especially in a pool below the witch-hazels, where the brook magic is
-strong.
-
-It is easier to see the demoiselle nymphs. They are not very beautiful
-or seemingly very savory, and if the water goblins do eat them it
-is no wonder they grumble. You may have seen a hawk-like dragon-fly
-skimming about over an open pool dip in swallow fashion to the surface.
-These sudden and repeated dips are not for a bath nor yet for a drink.
-What you see is a female dragon-fly laying eggs which shall later
-hatch and become under-water nymphs, the larvæ of the dragon-fly. But
-the demoiselles, still rightly named, do nothing so brazen as that.
-Instead, they pick out some nodding water weed, fold their wings a
-little more tightly to their iridescent bodies and crawl down it into
-the water. Here, in proper seclusion beneath the surface, they pierce
-the reed’s stem with keen ovipositor and lay their eggs. Then they
-saunter forth again and discreetly eat more midges with salad dressing
-and a spoon.
-
-If you look closely among the water weeds in the transparent water
-at the pool margin you may see the demoiselle nymphs crawling about,
-breathing through feathers in their tails, and scooping up food with a
-big shovel which sticks out under their chins. They show little traces
-of their coming beauty. It is the awkward age of the demoiselle, and I
-fancy each is right glad to do up the hair, get into long black skirts
-with iridescent green bodices, and join the afternoon tea flitters.
-
-What the magic is in the brook, whereby these strange, awkward,
-crawling creatures, living beneath the water, some day crawl up the
-stem of a water weed, burst, stretch their wings and fly away the
-saintly and demure demoiselles of the pool, I do not know--whether it
-be distilled from the witch-hazel by the summer sun, or whether it
-slips more mysteriously from beneath the breast-plate of the spore of
-the polypody growing just above my head in the rock crevice. It must
-be the same magic whereby the many-legged, crawling helgramite worm,
-after living that sort of life sometimes for several years, one day
-crawls ashore, goes to sleep beneath a stone, and in another month
-wakes up and finds himself a _Corydalus cornutus_, a three-inch-long
-bug with extraordinary wings and great horns,--a bug that might well
-make one of those witches, met face to face on the moon’s disk, shriek
-and fall off her broomstick. If he can be that thing, changed from a
-helgramite worm, why can he not be a helgramite worm, changed from the
-water goblin which you can hear grumbling beneath the flat stone at the
-entrance to the pool beneath the witch-hazels?
-
-The answer is to be found neither in the rhyme of the poet nor in the
-reason of the scientific man.
-
-Musing on these things I suddenly sat up from my quiet seat beneath the
-rock ferns, for more magic yet was being displayed before my eyes.
-Over on the further side, in the shallow eddy, the pool was troubled
-a second, then there rose from it a wee sunfish, not more than three
-inches long, rose from it tail first and began balancing across the
-pool surface toward me, on his head. His tail quivered in the air, and
-I could see his freckles growing in the yellow transparency of his
-skin, yet, though I watched with wide eyes, he was two-thirds the way
-across the pool toward me before I noticed beneath him the tip of the
-nose and the wicked little dark eye of a water snake. At sight of him
-the demoiselles should have shrieked and flown away, but they made no
-move. I, however, indignant, arose, and seizing broken fragments of
-rock was about to lacerate him and loose his prey when I quite suddenly
-thought better of it. Had not I a few days before come down stream to
-the deep pool above and carried off a string of perch, sunfish, pouts,
-and an eel? Had not the water snake also a right to his dinner?
-
-I dropped my rock fragments, but there was no longer pleasure in
-waiting to woo the demure coquetry of the demoiselles. The serpent had
-entered Eden and the man was driven forth. I lingered only long enough
-to see the grace and strength of the snake as he glided over the sill
-of the old dam, now black and sinuous, now giving me a glimpse of the
-vivid red of the under parts of his body, but always keeping his grip
-secure on the little sunfish whom he was taking away to luncheon with
-him.
-
-I climbed out of the glen, glad to go for once, but at the top of
-the rock where the sunburnt pasture path begins again I was in for
-another shudder, for here the dragon had entered fairy land. He came,
-writhing his horrid length along the path, his scales shining in the
-sun, his great mouth gaping, and up near his abnormally great head two
-little impotent forelegs wriggling. Who wouldn’t turn and run before
-such a creature as this? To be sure he was scarce three feet long, and
-his curiously mottled-brown back was that of the common adder, one of
-our harmless snakes, though he looks ugly enough to be stuffed with
-venom. But this great gaping head and the wriggling forelegs; never did
-flat-head adder have such a front as this!
-
-My compassion for snakes that had a right to their dinner vanished
-before this creature. It is different when it seems as if you might be
-the dinner. Those forelegs beckoned, and how could I tell but, in this
-land of witch-hazel, fern seed, and brook magic, I might not shrink
-sufficiently to be taken in by that huge mouth in that misapplied head?
-Death were better,--that is, death for the dragon,--and I caught up a
-jagged piece of the top of the glen and hurled it at him. It struck
-the beast fair amidships. The dragon whirled and writhed for a second
-or two and lay motionless, and behold! the head separated from the
-body and began to limp away. Then first was the spell broken and I saw
-clearly. It was simply a flat-head adder that had taken a good-sized
-garden toad for his dinner, had swallowed him whole as far as the
-forelegs, but failed to engulf these. It was the combination which made
-the dragon.
-
-Somehow I haven’t cared for the glen since. The early glamour of brook
-magic is pleasant, but I fear that, like the hasheesh of the Orient,
-its end is very bad dreams.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE PONKAPOAG BOGS
-
-
-
-
-IN THE PONKAPOAG BOGS
-
-
-I do not find in all my wanderings, afield or afloat, a more quaintly
-delightful plant than the floating-heart. In my pasture world it grows
-in one place only,--along the shallow edges of the bogs of Ponkapoag
-Pond. I think no other pond or stream in this immediate region has
-it, and so sweetly shy is it that you may pass it year after year
-without noting its existence. It waits until the summer has marked
-its meridian before it ventures to send up its dainty little _crêpe
-de chine_ petals, each fairy-like bloom appearing for one day only in
-the very throb of the mottled olive and bronze heart, which is a leaf.
-The leaf itself is barely an inch across, the exquisite bloom less
-than half that; yet once you know it you love it beyond all other bog
-plants as being the most fairy-like of water-lilies, though it is not a
-water-lily at all when it comes to botanical classification, being of
-the gentian family.
-
-However, not to be a water-lily is not so bad if one may be classed
-with the fringed and closed gentians which are to bloom later on the
-landward edges of the bog. As the little blossom fades at nightfall,
-its short stalk curls back beneath the water to ripen the seeds there,
-hung just beneath the leaf from a peculiar bulb-like nodule just an
-inch or so down on the petiole. The next morning another wee white bud
-shoots up in the heart angle of the leaf and opens fragile petals in
-the sun.
-
-I recall no other plant that sends up blooms from the leaf stalk in
-this way. When the seeds have ripened I suspect the plant of setting
-this bulb-like nodule free to float away to another shore, take root as
-a real corm or tuber might, and produce more floating-hearts.
-
-This bog on the westerly shore of Ponkapoag Pond was not long ago made
-a part of Boston’s park system, which thus moves ever sedately toward
-the Berkshire hills, yet it is a bit of nature as wild and untrammeled
-as it was in the days when Myles Standish may have looked down upon
-it from the top of great Blue Hill, as it had stood unchanged in his
-day for many and many a long century. So I fancy it will remain for
-centuries to come, for Nature holds her own here well. Indeed, she
-encroaches, for a bog grows wherever it has free water to grow into.
-So, after many centuries, frequenters of the Blue Hill Reservation
-will note a broad expanse of swamp land where once sparkled the waters
-of this hundred-acre pond. For the way of the bog is this.
-
-All along its under-water front the obscure under-water weeds grow up
-and die year after year, generation after generation, forming fertile
-banks of beautiful soft mud, into whose lower depths the great thick
-rootstocks of the pond-lilies push, and in which the fibrous roots of
-the tape grass, the fresh-water eel grass, find a hold. The growth
-and decay of these, with the water shield, with its jelly-protected
-foliage, the yellow dog-lily, and in lesser depths the bulrush, add to
-the growing bank as coral insects grow and die in tropic seas, until it
-is near enough to the surface for the pickerel weed to find roothold.
-Then indeed the bog steps forward with vigor, for the pickerel weed is
-its firing line. All summer you shall see its blue banners flaunting
-gayly in the southern breezes, tempting the land-loving bumble-bee to
-sea, calling the honey-bee from the mile-distant hive, and offering
-rest and luncheon to a myriad lesser insects, all with genial
-hospitality. Its serried millions in close ranks breast the waves in a
-broad blue line from one end of the bog to the other, a half-mile or so.
-
-Behind these are shallow pools, where again you find the white
-water-lilies. Here they bloom in enormous profusion from late June
-until early September, reaching their grand climax during late July.
-On such a day, standing in the boat at the southerly end of the bog,
-counting those within a given space and multiplying, I estimated that
-there were ten thousand of the fragrant white blooms in sight. Twice
-as many more were hidden by bulrush and pickerel weed. On Sundays
-and holidays boatloads of trolley trippers paddle and push among
-them and carry them off by the hundred, yet they make no mark on the
-visible supply. The decay of the leaves and stems of these add to the
-under-water foothold of the bog, but after all it must be the reedy
-stems, sagittate leaves, and interwoven roots of the pickerel weed that
-are its main foundation.
-
-Steadily seaward over the foundation thus laid progresses the long,
-definite front of the saw-edged marsh grass. Once it interlocks its
-roots along the mud surface formed for it, it leaves no room for the
-freer-growing denizens of the shallows. In among the marsh grass grows
-no flaunting flag of pickerel weed, no pure white nymphæa sends forth
-its rich odor.
-
-Only the bog cranberry may hold its own in any quantity against the
-throttling squeeze of those grass roots. Where these grow is the high
-sea of the bog, its waves rising and falling in the free winds. Yet,
-just as pickerel weed and water-lily give way before the advance of
-the marsh grass, so it in turn falls on the landward side before the
-advancing hosts of the swamp.
-
-A steady phalanx of swamp cedars pushes its foothold farther and
-farther out upon it, year by year, scouting with button bush and black
-alder and holding every inch that they obtain for it. Now and then
-something happens to a brief area of marsh grass and cranberries so
-that their dense packed minions faint and release their root grip on
-the quaking mud. Every such opening is seized by the alder or the
-button bush, and the cedars follow them; indeed, sometimes the cedars,
-favored by the right wind or the right bird carriers at seeding time,
-slip in first, and little island clumps of their dark bronze green
-stand here and there over against the cadet blue of Blue Hill which
-hangs like a beautiful drop-curtain always on the westerly sky.
-
-Once, a half-century ago or more, a farmer and his men came down from
-the pastures, and for purposes of their own cut a ditch straight
-through the middle of the bog to the open water. The hundreds of
-scrawny night herons, sitting on pale blue eggs in scraggly nests in
-the cedar swamp must have heard the cedars laugh as this went on.
-It was the swamp’s opportunity. Where the farmer and his men with
-incredible labor cut and tore away the marsh-grass roots the cedars
-planted their seeds, and called upon the alders and the swamp maples
-and the thoroughwort, the Joe Pye weed, and a host of other good
-citizens of the swamp, to help them.
-
-So vigorous was the sortie and so well did they hold their ground that
-you may trace the farmer’s wide ditch to-day only as a causeway down
-which the swamp has come to build a great wooded area in the midst of
-the bog, accomplishing in half a century what it might not have done in
-five times that had it not been for human aid. Thus, slowly as you and
-I count time, only an inch or two a year perhaps, yet all too rapidly
-for the joy of future generations, the bog encroaches upon the pond and
-the swamp follows towards complete possession, which as the centuries
-go by will make the quaking sphagnum firm meadow land.
-
-For all you and I know, the Metropolitan Park Commission of the year
-3908 will be fixing up a second Franklin Field here for the camping
-ground of visiting Pythians. Meanwhile let us hasten to enjoy our bog
-and its reedy borders.
-
-It is the home and the occasional resting place of many a wild free
-creature. Of a clear midsummer evening you may hear the muskrat
-grubbing roots there, see, perhaps, the moonlight glint on the long
-V-shaped ripple which he makes as he swims, and hear his snort and
-splash when he dives at sudden sight of you. You may chance upon a
-disconsolate bittern sitting clumsily in dumpy patience as he waits for
-food to splash up to him, and you may even hear him work his wheezy,
-dislocated wooden pump, a cry as awkward and disconsolate as the bird.
-
-[Illustration: Of a clear midsummer evening you may hear the muskrat
- grubbing roots there ... and hear his snort and splash when he dives
- at sudden sight of you]
-
-The muskrats breed in the bog, the bittern had his grassy nest there,
-and a myriad blackbirds have made the low bushes vocal with their
-cheery whistles all summer. They are flocking now, getting the young
-birds in training for the long flight south, but they still hang about
-the bog and they still whistle merrily. Surely it is not environment
-that makes temperament. Bittern and blackbird both frequent bogs, yet
-the bittern is a lonely misanthrope, whom I more than half suspect of
-being melancholy mad, while the blackbird is as cheery and as fond of
-his fellows as a candidate. When you hear his whistle you half expect
-him to light on a thwart, hand you a cigar, and ask after the baby.
-But the blackbird’s election is sure anyway.
-
-Another loved and lovely denizen of these bogs is the wood duck. These
-breed in the swamp, the mother bird building a grassy nest in a hollow
-tree, where she lays from eight to fourteen buff-white eggs, and leads
-her yellow fluffy ducklings to a nearby secluded pool for their first
-swim. Later they come out into the bog, and ultimately make the pond,
-where they learn to forage for themselves. By the first of August the
-mother bird has sent them adrift, in the main, to paddle and flap their
-way about as best they may. They are “flappers,” as the boys call them.
-That is, they can make good speed along the surface by half running and
-flapping vigorously, but they cannot yet fly enough to rise into the
-air.
-
-One of these young wood ducks came out of the bog the other morning,
-just at the gray of dawn, and swam over toward the boat landing. He
-was quite near the shore when I took ship and rowed to seaward of
-him, thus shutting him off from the open pond and from the bog. Then
-for an hour or two followed what was to me the most interesting duck
-hunting I have done for a long time. I could row as fast as he could
-swim, and I continually edged him along the south shore, getting
-nearer every minute. I have read much of the marvelous intelligence of
-wild creatures. Yet I saw little of it in this chase. The duck knew
-me for an enemy, on general principles, for I was a man, and I was
-evidently coming after him. Even rudimentary intelligence should have
-told him to flap for the bog as fast as he could. He did nothing of
-the sort. He just edged along down the shore, evidently hoping that I
-was light-minded, and would forget all about him in a minute or two
-if let alone. But I kept at it until I was so near I could see every
-one of his already handsome feathers and note the coloring of those
-parts which had not yet reached the beauty of maturity. I could see the
-yellow rim of his eye, and still he swam east and swam west but made no
-real move to escape.
-
-Two things I wished to learn from my wood duck. One was how much
-general intelligence and real quickness of wit he would show in
-escaping. The other was how he carried his wings under water if, by
-any fortunate chance, I should be able to see him swim after he went
-down to escape me. But at first he was so irresolute that he neither
-dived nor made any vigorous attempt to escape. I got so near, that to
-avoid driving him up the bank into the woods I had to ease away a bit.
-Finally, at my second approach, he did try to flap by the end of the
-boat, but I spurted and headed him off.
-
-It was a long time, and it took much manœuvring to make him dive, but
-it finally entered his head that he might avoid being cornered and
-badgered by going under water. This he did, going on a slant just a
-very little below the surface, probably because he was in too shallow
-water to go much deeper, and coming up well to seaward. There he
-preened his feathers, took a sip or two of water and, seemingly, waited
-to be surrounded a second time.
-
-I rowed out, got on the off-shore side of him, and again began boating
-him in toward the shore. He showed less uneasiness this time, but
-dived and swam out again after considerable more pressing. Again and
-again I repeated this, sometimes getting no sight of him under water,
-again seeing him move along very plainly. At no time did I notice any
-motion of the wings under water. I have been told that wild ducks when
-swimming beneath the surface make most of their progress with their
-wings, quite literally flying under water. This may be, but I have no
-evidence of it in the under-water action of this one.
-
-Again, it has been sagely impressed upon me by old duck hunters that
-you could tell in what direction from your boat a bird would rise by
-noting the way in which his bill pointed when he went under. I think
-it was Adirondack Murray in that famous loon-hunting chapter who
-first made the point, and it has been insisted upon by many another
-successor. But, bless you, my half-grown wood duck made no difficulty
-of going down with his head toward the morning and coming up in
-the sunset portion of the view. He took slants under water and cut
-semicircles at will. But I couldn’t see him use his wings while beneath
-the wave.
-
-Little by little he got over being excited by my presence. He began to
-eat bugs off the lily pads as he went by, and now and then tip up for
-an under-water search. Thus we coquetted with one another all along the
-southern shore of the pond, and when I finally cornered him for a last
-time in behind Loon Island he dove without embarrassment and began his
-feeding as soon as he had again reached the surface. The chase was no
-longer exciting, and I turned my attention to something else. Then he
-swam out quite a little further into the pond, preened his feathers
-carefully, tucked his head under his wing and went to sleep!
-
-Evidently he had decided that I was eccentric, but harmless, and the
-best way to escape my attentions would be to leave me severely alone.
-
-And there you have it. I think the wood duck is beautiful, but not
-very bright. Yet it occurs to me that some Sherlock Holmes of the
-woods may prove, to the satisfaction of Dr. Watson anyway, that he is
-preternaturally clever, in that this one, though still young, was keen
-enough to see that from the first I had no evil intentions toward him.
-
-
-
-
-SOME BUTTERFLY FRIENDS
-
-
-
-
-SOME BUTTERFLY FRIENDS
-
-
-At dusk all the edges of the pond are lighted with the white candles
-of the clethra. Its fragrance has in it that fine essence which goes
-to the making of the nectar and ambrosia of the gods. He who would sup
-with them may do so by taking canoe of an early August twilight when
-the purple arras of the coves glow softly golden with the reflected
-light of the sunset’s afterglow. Then the coarser air seems to have
-let the light slip from between its clumsy particles, leaving its more
-ethereal essence still clinging to a more subtle interatomic fluid.
-
-The fragrance of the clethra seems always to me as fine as this spirit
-of light in the ambrosial twilight of the ripened summer. It is no
-air-borne delight like the resinous scent of the forest pines or the
-pasture sweet-fern when the hot sun of midday distills them and the hot
-wind of midday sends them far to you across the quivering fields. It is
-something finer, softer, more silkily subtle, which, like the rose gold
-of the afterglow of the sunset, tints the dusk of the cove between the
-air atoms, not by way of them.
-
-Then, as the gold glimmers and fades and the pink faints in the cooling
-purple of the dusk, and the outline of the cove shore slips from the
-front of your eye to the chambers of memory behind it, so that you else
-might see it best with the eyes shut, the white candles are lighted
-and the eager moth sees by them to sup with you and me and the gods on
-this essence of ambrosia, to tipple on this spirit of nectar which the
-night reserves for those that love it.
-
-I do not know why the clethra which gleams so white in the dusk should
-need anything more than its own white beauty to call the moth to its
-wooing. Perhaps it does not need more. Perhaps all this fine fragrance
-is but the overflow of its soul’s delight at being young and chastely
-beautiful, and trembling in the ultra violet darkness on that delicious
-verge of life that waits the wooer. I half fancy that this is true of
-all perfume of flowers, that it is less a call to butterfly or bee to
-come to their winning than it is a radiation of delight from their own
-pure hearts at the dawning of the full joy of living. I am not always
-willing to take the word of the scientific investigator on these points
-as final. The scientists of the not very remote past have known so
-much that is not so!
-
-It is possible that, just as a hunting-dog picks up a scent that is
-strong in his nostrils and has no power in ours, so the flowers that we
-call scentless send out an odor too faintly fine for our senses, yet
-one that the antennæ of moth or bee may entangle as it passes and hold
-for a certain clue. Perhaps the scents that are only faint to us carry
-far for the butterfly, but if so, and if flower perfumes are made only
-for the calling of insects, why need they be made so intoxicating to
-the human senses? The scent of carnations is as pleasing to the soul
-as a strain of beautiful music, and equally arouses high aspirations
-and noble longings. So to me the odor of the clethra at nightfall is
-a tenuous thread of ethereality that reaches far toward a realm of
-spiritual ideals. It ought to go with a ritual and a vested choir.
-
-I do not find the odor of the pasture milkweed speaking thus to any
-inner sense. It is just a gentle, lovable, stay-at-home smell that
-surely does not float farther than the pasture bars. Yet of all the
-plants that have bloomed within my world of garden and pasture this
-summer it has been by far the most popular among insects. It is not
-that it is the most attractive to the eye, in any of its forms, for
-there are many flowers of colors more vivid and to be seen farther,
-as well as of much stronger scent. Yet all day long you will find
-it besieged by bees, from the aristocratic Italian worker from the
-farmer’s best hive down to those scallawag bees that make no honey for
-themselves but lead a vagabond life and lay their eggs in other bees’
-nests, leaving their young to grow up in unendowed orphan asylums.
-
-Many varieties of ants seek the milkweed blooms, and you shall find
-about a large clump more sorts of wasps than you would believe existed,
-yet it is the butterflies who most of all make it their rallying place.
-Every butterfly in the whole region makes it his business to know each
-large clump of milkweed, and to make the rounds at least daily.
-
-There, if you watch, you may see the pretty little pearl crescent,
-whose range is from Labrador to Texas. The shy meadow browns flit
-out from the shadow of the brook alders and feed for a moment before
-they take fright at the fact that they are out in society and flit
-desperately back again. The angle wings flip about like animated
-question-marks, and fulvous fritillaries soar sedately, now and then
-lighting to feed and fold their wings that you may see the big silver
-spots of the under parts. And so you might name them all, almost every
-butterfly of early August, all besieging the milkweed so eagerly that
-you may hardly drive them away.
-
-The fact is they come neither for scent nor sight; they come for good
-taste--which they find in the honey glands of the peculiarly shaped
-bloom, which are obvious and sticky and within reach of all. I do not
-think it is half so much the odor of the flower which draws them, be
-it never so sweet or so strong, but memory of the honey dew sipped
-there yesterday or last week. No doubt the love of the milkweed bloom
-is an inherited tendency, also, bred in the bones from a line of
-milkweed-frequenting ancestors infinitely long.
-
-Indeed, one of our most splendid butterflies is the _Anosia plexippus_,
-otherwise known as the milkweed butterfly, rightly named also the
-monarch. Every boy who knows the country in summer knows him by his
-rich, red coloration, his strong, black-bordered wings with their black
-veins. Every bird knows him too and lets him alone. On the first median
-nervule of the hind wings of the butterfly is a scent bag whence he
-dispenses an odor so disagreeable to the bird who would eat him that he
-goes free, and is not afterward troubled.
-
-[Illustration: Every boy who knows the country in summer knows him by
- his rich, red coloration, his strong, black-bordered wings with their
- black veins]
-
-Along with the monarch sipping honey with eager industry from the
-meadow milkweed, you will often see the viceroy, who, as a viceroy
-should, closely imitates, but does not equal, the monarch. He
-has neither the monarch’s vigor of flight nor his means of defence
-from predatory birds, but his safety--so the students tell us--lies
-in looking so much like his superior that he also is let alone. The
-students go on to say that his is a good example of the imitative power
-of insects whereby they escape destruction by seeming to the casual eye
-to be something else.
-
-The viceroy, which is a _Basilarchia disippus_, thus looks not the
-least like other members of his family, but consciously mimics the
-coloring of the monarch for safety. Thus many tropical beetles contrive
-to look like wasps that they may not be molested, and some insects look
-like brown leaves and others like green ones.
-
-But do they contrive, imitate, mimic? It is no doubt true that because
-of the resemblance they escape, but to say that they imitate or
-contrive or mimic seems to me to be to assume a knowledge of the
-workings of the inner consciousness of an insect that not even the
-most careful student can have. I am more inclined to believe that the
-so-called mimics are fortunate in an accidental resemblance and so
-escape the destruction of their species which has fallen upon many a
-less fortunate type.
-
-Yet no butterfly, however exquisite his coloring, or however strong
-and graceful his flight, twangs with his fluttering wings the fine
-heartstrings of romance as does the monarch. The first one that came
-dancing down the sunlight to the sweet rocket in bloom in my garden
-this spring brought to me a spicy odor of tropic isles. The beating of
-his wings shed, as he passed, faint fragrance of Mexican jasmine, and
-I thought I saw slip from them the infinitesimal dust of the pollen
-of stephanotis lately blooming in the glades of Panama. Three months
-before he floated serenely beneath my cherry tree he may well have
-soared through the tropic glades where crumble the ruins of the palaces
-of the Incas.
-
-His flight, seemingly as frail as that of a red autumn leaf sliding
-down the October zephyr to carpet the nearby field with rustling
-fragrance, has matched that of that rifle-ball of bird life, the
-ruby-throated humming-bird. Together they sip the sweets of my sweet
-rocket in the spring. Together they wing their way south to the region
-of perpetual summer when the winds of late September promise frost.
-Sometimes in this annual flight the monarchs pass the sandy stretches
-of the New Jersey coast in swarms that, stopping at nightfall for rest,
-refoliate with their folded wings the shrubs left bare by the autumn
-gales.
-
-It may be that, like the birds, the knowledge of the route they must
-follow is bred in the marrow of their butterfly bones by the constant
-use of a million generations. It may be that they simply drift away
-from the cool wind from the North toward the Southern sun that shines
-so serenely in the bright autumn days. But whether through the
-guiding hand of Providence, or inherited wisdom, or a fortunate tact
-that acting from day to day produces the happy result, this Southern
-movement in winter is the sole salvation of the species here in the
-North.
-
-If they did not make these long flights we should have no Anosias with
-us each summer, for unlike other butterflies the frost kills them in
-whatever form they remain to brave it. All summer long their long, red
-wings bear them bravely from one clump of milkweed to another. They
-sip the honey which each floret of the umbels holds forth, the sticky
-mass the size of a pinhead. They lay their eggs upon its leaves and the
-black and yellow caterpillars hatch and feed there. Then they hang in a
-green and gold chrysalis from a nearby twig till the imago, the perfect
-butterfly, bursts its bonds and sails away to find more milkweed. There
-may be several broods of a summer, but the frost stops all that. The
-monarch may not winter here, nor may his eggs or chrysalids survive the
-cold.
-
-Many butterflies, frail though they seem, do pass the New England
-winter successfully. The _Antiopa vanessa_, otherwise known as
-mourning-cloak or Camberwell beauty, a handsome brown fellow with blue
-spots and a pale-yellow margin, well known to every one, flits joyously
-through the woods with the very first warm days of spring. He has been
-snugged up in some dry crevice, numbed and torpid, but very much alive,
-all winter. The first genial warmth sets him free, and later I always
-find his children browsing on the willow twigs over in the cove. They
-are rough chaps, horrid with bristling black spines and with dull
-red spots relieving their otherwise plain black hides. But they grow
-fast, and by and by go out upon a twig and hang themselves, head down,
-by a little silken rope, swinging there in the wind, simply a dead
-caterpillar that has imitated Judas.
-
-One day the caterpillar part sloughs off. It is a fairly sudden
-process. You may paddle by the willows in the morning and see all
-your little Judases hanging in a row. Paddle back at noon and their
-skins have shrivelled and slipped off, and you have chrysalids, queer,
-impish-looking things, swinging there still, head down. You know they
-are alive; indeed, if you poke them they will wiggle impatiently, but
-they swing in the wind and give no other sign for a week or ten days.
-Then they cast a second skin, and pop out full-grown butterflies that
-stretch their wings for a time leisurely, then suddenly dash into the
-air and go off over the hill like mad. The whole thing is so sudden!
-The change, when it does come, is as if some woodland magician had
-waved a willow wand and said “Abra-ca-dabra; presto, change!” Time and
-again I have watched to see that caterpillar skin fall off, and again
-to see the vanessa step forth from the domino in which it has been
-masquerading, but they have always been too quick for me.
-
-Other butterflies survive in the chrysalis all winter and come forth
-full-grown and fit in the spring. Such may speak to your listening
-imagination through their beauty, which is often great, or through
-their resurrection from seeming death, though if you will observe
-them closely in the chrysalid form you will see that they are not
-even seemingly dead. Evangelists who have held up the butterfly to us
-as a prototype of that resurrection which we may expect if we are
-good, evidently never closely observed the chrysalis of a good healthy
-butterfly, else they had not been so sure of their corpse.
-
-Lately I have had chrysalids of the _Papilio asterias_, the common
-eastern swallowtail, in my study. I found the fat black and yellow
-worms on my parsley and caged them. They soon hitched themselves to the
-wire netting by their tails, hanging from overhead on a slant, their
-shoulders (so to speak) being supported by a single loop of silk. If
-you did but tap on the wire netting or scratch it these chrysalids
-would wiggle and jerk quite angrily, their action saying plainly,
-“Can’t you let me alone? I’m just having a nap!” No; it is plainly
-no death and resurrection which makes a butterfly. It is merely a
-caterpillar who was dressed for the fancy ball all the time. He came
-to the woodland hall in his greatcoat. This he sheds for a domino, in
-which he masquerades for a time. Then he bursts forth for the final
-festivities in a robe of princely beauty.
-
-My chrysalids did this only the other day. Wonderful creatures of
-black and yellow came forth, stretched their wings till I could see
-the dainty shading of blue and the peacock-feather eye of red and
-black on the lower part of the secondary wings; then, as I opened the
-window they dashed madly away as the vanessas do from willow twigs
-in the cove. The butterfly has been held up to us as an example of
-lazy dalliance. I have never watched one that was not as busy as a
-politician on election day. Especially do those just wakened from the
-chrysalis form rush away as if they knew all their work was before
-them and they longed to be at it.
-
-Of them all the monarch is not the most beautiful, but I rank him as
-surely the ablest. His annual migration shows him to have wonderful
-strength of wing, and either much wisdom or an extraordinarily
-developed instinct. Very likely he has both. Further, through accident
-pure and simple, or else a spirit of adventure fostered by the joys of
-long annual journey, he is steadily extending his habitat to embrace
-the known world. Originally of North America only, he has within the
-last dozen years taken ship for Australia, where he has multiplied
-greatly in the warmer regions, and has wandered again over sea to
-Java, Sumatra, and followed the flag into the Philippines. He is well
-established at the Cape de Verde Islands, and is doing his best to be
-happy in the pale sunshine of the south of England, whence specimens
-are reported yearly.
-
-
-
-
-THE RESTING TIME OF THE BIRDS
-
-
-
-
-THE RESTING TIME OF THE BIRDS
-
-
-This morning I heard the bluebirds again for the first time for weeks.
-They came up from the pasture to the apple trees and sang their modest
-little snatches of song in that shyly sweet, reserved yet fond, manner
-which makes the bluebird the best loved of all our pasture birds. There
-have been no bluebirds about my garden since the yegg raid of late May
-and its resulting tragedy. Now they are back, but there is in their
-call a note of sadness which indeed comes into the voice of every
-bluebird as autumn approaches, though I think it is accentuated in mine
-this year.
-
-When I say yegg I mean English sparrow, and if I could think of a worse
-name, equally descriptive of him, I would give it. This is the story
-of the foul deed, only one of many, no doubt, perpetrated by this
-cowardly crew. In late March I put out in my garden three bird boxes
-such as bluebirds love to inhabit. These were immediately inspected
-by the neighborhood flock of English sparrows, just beginning to pair
-off, and finally decided upon as undesirable, perhaps because I had
-intentionally placed no perch before the door.
-
-The English sparrow will build his nest in any impossible place to
-which he takes a fancy, but he greatly prefers, in choosing a new
-site, one that has a convenient perch close by the entrance. So these
-undesirable citizens decided that they did not care for my bird boxes
-and let them alone, much to my delight. Then came the bluebirds,
-bringing to our cold, raw spring their flashes of blue like bits of
-a heaven that is fairer than ours, a blue that is hope and dreams of
-happiness and all things noble yet gentle. There is no color like it as
-it glints across pale April skies and blooms on trees that have been
-bare and gray so long. So, too, no bird song is so dear as theirs. It
-is but a wee, melodious phrase which says again and again, “Cheerily;
-cheerily.” Yet it voices hope and contentment, and is so purely the
-expression of the joy of gentle, kindly lives that it touches all that
-is fond and kindly in the listener.
-
-Bluebirds will nest in the hollow of the pasture apple tree or in a
-last year’s flicker’s abandoned hole in a decayed stump, but of all
-places they most love a bird box near a dwelling, and, as I had hoped,
-a pair came early in April to inspect mine. They looked them all over
-appreciatively, seeming with delightful courtesy to the builder to find
-it hard to choose, but finally settled upon one in the pear tree, and
-began to build.
-
-Meanwhile the yeggs had been watching with jealous eyes, lurking in the
-shrubbery, sneaking about the eaves and making sallies in small numbers
-from around the barn. The English sparrow has been called pugnacious.
-He is nothing of the kind. He does not love a fight. Bird to bird,
-there is nothing too small to whip him. I have seen a chipping sparrow,
-which is the least among the pasture sparrows, send the poltroon
-scurrying to shelter with all his feathers standing on end. A cock
-bluebird, fighting like a gentleman, and like a gentleman fighting
-only when he must, will drive a half-dozen of them. The English sparrow
-has the true instincts of the browbeating coward, and loves to fight
-only when in overwhelming numbers he may attack a lone pasture bird
-without danger to himself.
-
-So trouble began with the building, and for a week or so the warfare
-raged from box to box, the cock bluebird boldly defeating superior
-numbers again and again, only to have his gentle wife annoyed by other
-villains while he drove the first away, and his nesting material
-stolen in spite of him. Finally he resorted to what looked to me like
-well-planned and carefully executed strategy, though it may have
-been merely that fortune which favors the brave and persistent. The
-pair abandoned the box in the pear tree and started building in the
-one nailed against the side of the barn. The sparrows followed, of
-course. Then the bluebirds went back to the pear-tree box. The sparrows
-followed. The bluebirds then started building in the third box and
-daily brought material to each of the three, though ostensibly, I
-thought, to the second and third. At any rate the sparrows seemed
-to concentrate their attention more on these boxes. Meanwhile the
-bluebirds quietly completed the nest in the pear tree and later laid
-their eggs there, in comparative peace.
-
-The sparrows did not build in either of the other boxes. They did not
-want to. Neither did they care particularly about the material which
-they stole, for they did not continue to take it after the bluebirds
-had finished the pear-tree nest and were in a position to defend it.
-Their action was simply hoodlumism of the lowest and most despicable
-kind.
-
-[Illustration: The English sparrow has the true instincts of the
- browbeating coward]
-
-This was bad enough, yet it was merely petty annoyance compared to
-the deed without a name of which they were later to be guilty. The
-two young birds in the bluebird box were more than half grown. The
-blue was beginning to show in their wings along with the white of
-the conspicuous, growing quills, and the fuscous margin was already
-touching the breast feathers. The old birds, working with tremendous
-energy to feed these hearty youngsters, were both busy and often away
-from the nest together.
-
-At one such time the English sparrows descended upon this nest,
-entered, drove the young birds out to die upon the ground, unnoticed in
-the long grass, and started to take full possession. The bluebirds,
-returning too late, drove them away with more than usual despatch. This
-first called the affair to my attention. But I was too late.
-
-The young birds were dead and the sparrows were chattering in raucous
-jubilation over it, now and then giving a squeak of fright or pain as
-the male bluebird singled out an individual and attacked him with a
-fury of which I had not believed him capable. Soon, however, he ceased,
-and the two twittered mournfully about the tree for hours, again and
-again poising in fluttering flight before the door of their despoiled
-home and looking eagerly in, as if they could not believe that the
-young were indeed gone. Later they went silently away. No doubt they
-found another home in some hollow tree of the remote pasture and raised
-another brood. But my boxes have stood tenantless ever since.
-
-The worst of it is there is little I could do either in the way of
-prevention or revenge. I did get out my big old ten-bore duck gun,
-which I have not had the heart to use on a bird, even a coot, for a
-dozen years, and began cannonading the miscreants, but this was more
-disturbing to the neighbors than to the sparrows.
-
-One of the gentlest nature lovers I ever knew, wise in bird ways and
-very fond of all birds, used to say that he wished all the English
-sparrows in the world had but one neck, and that he might have that
-neck in his hands. I wish he might, too.
-
-So, after weeks of absence, the bluebirds have come back. Their
-speckle-breasted young, which they would have brought up among my
-apple trees and in the cloistered seclusion of the lilac bushes, have
-grown up in the pasture instead, and very likely their plans for next
-year will include the pasture wild-apple tree rather than my bird box,
-and they are far shyer and less responsive to my advances than they
-would have been. Their song has in it a plaint of autumnal regret. In
-the spring they sang, “Cheerily; cheerily.” Now they say, “Going away;
-going away.” It has in it something of the quality of “Lochaber no
-more.”
-
-But it is not merely the bluebirds which have been silent for some
-weeks and are now beginning to sing again. The time between early July
-and mid-August is a period of retirement for all birddom. The mating
-season, with its soul-stirring ecstasies, the labor of nest building,
-the anxieties of brooding, have been followed by the tremendous
-exertion of caring for that nestful of young birds. A healthy fledgling
-will eat almost his own weight of food in a day, and by the time he
-is able to fly and chase the old birds around for more the father and
-mother are worn to a frazzle. I really believe the youngsters are
-weaned only when their demand for food becomes so enormous with their
-completed growth that the parents cease to supply it through sheer
-physical exhaustion.
-
-I once reared a pair of young crows by hand, taking them from the home
-nest in a big pine, leaving three others--quite enough I afterward
-thought--for the parent birds. They were negroid, naked, pod-bodied
-creatures at the time, with long clutchy claws, ridiculous stubs of
-wings, and, ye gods, what mouths! When I fed them I used to clutch
-something with one hand lest I fall in. And I was incessantly feeding
-them. Anxious to treat them kindly and finding that frogs were a most
-acceptable diet to them I depopulated the township of _Rana virescens_
-and allied species. Then I found that fish would do about as well,
-and I fished until there began to be a shortage of angle-worms in the
-community. Yet still the creatures grew apace and demanded more food.
-
-By and by they got big enough to use their wings and, recognizing me
-as their undoubted parent, came flapping and clawing after me wherever
-I went, yelling, “Caw, caw, ca-aw-aw,” in most heartrending crescendo.
-Then did I realize to the full the responsibility of being a father
-bird. Stuff those clamorous creatures as I might, they still pleaded
-in agonizing tones for more, and no one not cognizant of the facts
-would have believed that they were ever fed. The lamb that loved Mary
-so, and followed her also, was not a circumstance to the clamorous
-devotion of those two young crows toward me, their foster parent.
-
-My one fear for weeks was that the resident agent for the S. P. C. A.,
-who was a vigilant and tender-hearted lady of undoubted indiscretion,
-would hear their evidently unanswered appeals and proceed against me.
-She could have convicted me on the evidence in any district court in
-Norfolk County; and yet those young birds were eating everything there
-was in the place outside of cold storage.
-
-Such is the appetite of the growing bird. Yet there comes a time in
-the passing of the summer when the youngsters are taught, or learn
-through necessity, to forage for themselves and cease their fritinancy.
-Then the thickets are strangely silent. The youngsters no longer yearn
-noisily and they have not yet learned to sing. The old birds have
-ceased singing. Indeed, there is nothing left of them but their bones
-and feathers, and that atmosphere of conscious rectitude which comes
-with successful completion of a noble and herculean task. And then even
-their feathers begin to go, for the moulting season is at hand.
-
-No longer does the male scarlet tanager sit like a lambent flame in
-the top of a tree and warble, “Look-up, way-up, look-at-me, treetop,”
-His scarlet suit begins to fade, grow dingy, show signs of wear, and
-finally go all to pieces while he sits mute and dumpy in the shadow. By
-and by the scarlet will have changed completely to a dull olive-green,
-like that of his inconspicuous mate, and though he still retains the
-black of his wings and tail you would not know him.
-
-So the bobolink who swung so conspicuously on the meadow grass in June
-in his black and white suit comes through the moulting season brown
-as a sparrow. The vivid blue of the indigo bunting falls from him in
-patches and is replaced by grayish brown in a large measure.
-
-No wonder that, utterly tired out and their brilliant plumage scattered
-and changed to dull and rusty colors, the birds are silent for a time,
-waiting for strength to recuperate. Some of them seem to retain enough
-courage and vitality to sing mornings through the moulting season,
-notably the robins. I suspect, though, that these faithful few--for the
-robin singers of the morning of the first day of August will be as one
-to twenty to those of the first day of June--are gay young sports who
-did not care to marry, or who, disappointed in love, still sing to keep
-their courage up. It is the best singers who are most strangely silent
-now, as they have been for weeks; nor will most of them be heard until
-next spring, hereabouts.
-
-My catbird was so sorrowfully unseen and unheard that I began to think
-the cat had got him, till I hunted him up, down the hill among the
-scrub oaks. He was as dilapidated and passé-looking as his nest in the
-lilacs; as if, like it, the young birds had kicked him pretty nearly
-to pieces before they got through with him. But he perked up a bit
-when he saw me, flipped an apology for a tail, and miaued in a manner
-that was humorously unlike him, it was so deprecatory. But that was a
-week or ten days ago. Yesterday I heard some bird cooing a little song
-to himself out in the arbor-vitæ trees at the foot of the garden, and
-slipping quietly up found that it was the catbird again. He was quite
-sleek in his new coat, and he was practising his song in a delightful
-undertone, as if to be sure that he should not forget it altogether.
-
-In four or five weeks more he will begin to flip saucily across the
-miles of country that separate him from his winter home in Southern
-Florida, or perhaps farther yet in some stretch of primeval forest that
-I myself have seen and loved in the heart of Santo Domingo. He will
-not sing his song there, high on some giant ceiba or swinging on the
-plume of some royal palm. He may not sing it again here on the tip of
-the tallest white lilac bush, but I know that, there or here, he will
-practise it now and then in that soft, sweet undertone which you would
-not believe of a catbird, and be ready to send it forth in jubilant
-peals when his strong wings bring him back again next May. My bluebirds
-may winter with him; and if they do I have hopes that he may persuade
-them to try my pear-tree box once more next spring.
-
-
-
-
-THE POND AT LOW TIDE
-
-
-
-
-THE POND AT LOW TIDE
-
-
-All about the pond the woodland folk are enjoying shore dinners, for
-it is the time of ebb tide, and a wonderfully low ebb at that. Not
-for a score of years do I recall such low water. Where, on the ebb of
-ordinary years, the crow has been able to find one fresh-water clam, he
-may now feed till he can hold no more, for the drought has been long
-and severe, and the pond has been drained to the very dregs.
-
-I say fresh-water clams, for that is the name commonly applied to
-the creatures, though I know that I might more properly call them
-river mussels, and if I wished to be severely scientific I should
-say _Unio margaritifera_, though it is difficult to be sure of your
-margaritifera, as there are about fifteen hundred species of unios
-known to people who classify creatures, and most of these are found in
-the rivers of this country.
-
-Little do the crows care for that. In the sunny coves they have their
-clam-bakes, and as I slip slyly up I fancy I hear them smack their
-mandibles. As I round the screen of shore-loving button bushes, I know
-I shall come upon them, and I expect to find them seated in riotous
-fellowship, with napkins spread across broad waistcoats, dipping
-delicious mouthfuls in melted butter and tucking them away behind
-the white napkins. I have always missed the napkins and the butter
-dishes, but the shells are proof enough of what has been going on. If
-the mother crow carries the table furnishings away with her when she
-flies, that is no more than human picnickers do when driven from the
-sea beach.
-
-The pond when full is ten feet deeper than it is now. In May the water
-lapped the forest roots on its edges; now from the forest to the mud
-of the very bottom where still the water lingers a strip of slanting
-beach stretches for a hundred yards. The crows are not the only
-creatures which have made tracks on this. Close by the edge in the soft
-mud the heron has walked with dignity, leaving footmarks that proceed
-precisely. The heron may not have large ambitions, but he is purposeful
-and does not turn aside. The crows gurgled and ha-haed over their
-clambake; the heron takes his fish course as solemnly as if he were
-taking the pledge.
-
-All along you will see where the squirrels have come down to drink,
-skipping vivaciously, taking a sip here, bouncing away to examine
-something there, remembering that they came for a drink after all and
-taking a good one, then hurrying back with long leaps in a straight
-line for the trees. The squirrel is not solemn, far from it, but he
-is business-like, and though there is humorous good fellowship in his
-every hop, he nevertheless does not linger long from his work.
-
-[Illustration: The skunk doesn’t know where he is going and he isn’t
- even on his way]
-
-Very different from this is the track of mister skunk. He wanders
-aimlessly along, often as much sidewise as straight ahead. The skunk
-doesn’t know where he is going and he isn’t even on his way. I never
-see his tracks, whether on the pond shore or elsewhere, but I renew my
-doubts as to his habits. He is out much too late at night. His tracks
-show it. I think he had his drink before he came to the water.
-Probably he too knows how toothsome are the unios and is searching for
-them in his maudlin fashion.
-
-Then there are the muskrats. They do not have to wait for their clam
-banquets till the water is low. They are expert divers and gather the
-unios at such times as suit their fancy. You will see their tracks in
-regular runways in the shallow water of the muddy coves, whence they
-are apt to follow some trickling streamlet to the bank where the summer
-burrows are at high water.
-
-Later, along the marshy edges you will find their winter teepees, piled
-to conical heights with sods and roots, with a warm refuge above the
-ice and an exit below, whence they may swim in search of food. The
-tracks of the muskrats show every mark of the industrious villager.
-They stick close to well-traveled paths, and though the muskrats are
-out nights no one would for a moment question their temperance and
-industry. Their characters are excellent ones, beyond suspicion, and
-their tracks show it.
-
-On the pond shore at ebb tide the glaciers, too, have left their
-tracks, though it is probably several hundred thousand years since any
-have been this way. Where there are granite ledges you may know that
-these were here before even the glaciers stalked solemnly by, for they
-show where the ice in grumbling grandeur ground small stones against
-them and gradually wore out ruts in the enduring granite by force of
-attrition.
-
-The track of the glacier is like the trail of the serpent,--it leaves
-no toe-marks, but its sliding progress is unmistakable. Side by side
-with the ledge which shows these striæ you may see on the soft mud
-imprints of this year’s leaves, dropped a moment there by the wind,
-then whirled away again, but leaving their tracks behind them. This
-mark of the season may be obliterated by a breath, or it may be covered
-with sifting silt and finally harden into sandstone and bear the trail
-of the leaf as far down the ages as has come that of the glacier. Here
-are moments and æons elbowing one another for place.
-
-Other interesting records of past time may be read in Stumpy Cove,
-which is still the wildest and most secluded of spots, though the
-trolley tripper has found the pond and builds his bungalows on its
-shore, sinks his tin cans in its waters, and scares the bullfrogs
-with his phonograph. The tin cans will not last long, however. Fresh
-water in motion is continually giving up oxygen, and this with the
-humic acid of the mud bottom will soon scatter these disfigurations in
-scales of brown oxide. But all these solvent forces, acting through two
-centuries, have had little effect on the stumps of Stumpy Cove.
-
-The heart-wood is still sound, their interlaced roots tell the story
-of what happened on the spot in the rich muck of the swamp, as Stumpy
-Cove was then, before Myles Standish had set foot on Plymouth Rock or
-the first white man had spied inland from the summit of Blue Hill. For
-the pond as it is now is only about a hundred years old. For a hundred
-years before that it was a meadow, flowed occasionally by the farmers
-of the region about it.
-
-Before that Stumpy Cove was a great white-cedar swamp and the great
-white cedars stood in it, two feet in diameter, their clean straight
-trunks running up fifty feet or more without a knob or limb. This
-natural meadow with hay for their cattle for the cutting, these cedar
-swamps with their century-old growth, were what attracted the first
-settlers to this region, and hardly had the dawn of the sixteenth
-century come over the Blue Hills before their axes were at work in
-Stumpy Cove and similar swamps all about, getting out shingle stuff for
-the Boston market. But whereas in all the other swamps the young cedars
-were allowed to grow in again for succeeding generations of woodsmen,
-here new conditions arose.
-
-The meadow was flowed intermittently for a century; then the pond grew
-out of it. Not only might no seedlings find roothold there, but the
-very black muck in which they might grow was washed away from the
-roots of the great stumps. These, in the main, have endured, losing
-their bark and sap-wood, but with the heart-wood still firm after the
-lapse of two centuries.
-
-Here at this ebb tide I read the record of growth of trees that had
-their beginnings more than three centuries ago. These roots so twine
-and intertwine that the original sap, drawn from the tender tips, must
-have nourished any one of several trees indifferently, for heart-wood
-joins heart-wood in scores of places near the stump and far from it,
-showing that each tree stood not only on its own roots, but on those
-of its neighbors all about it; not only was it nourished by its own
-rootlets, but by those of trees near by. No gale could uproot these
-swamp cedars. United they stood and divided they might not fall. It is
-a curious method of growth, and I dare say it obtains in many swamps
-where the white cedars stand close, but under no other circumstances
-could it have been revealed to me, casually strolling that way three
-centuries after it happened.
-
-At high water all these curious roots are submerged and you see only
-the butts of the trees, numerous miniature islands on which many an
-alien growth has made port. Here in June the dour and melancholy
-cassandra disputes the footing of the wild rose, and the huckleberry
-and sweet-fern twine in loving companionship, afloat as ashore. Here
-intertwine the sheep laurel and the hard-hack, the meadow-sweet and the
-marsh St. John’s-wort, garlanding the white skeletons of the ancient
-trees and making them young again with the odorous promises of spring.
-
-In midsummer, among patches of green and gray moss, you will find tiny,
-diamond-like globules glistening. These are the clear, dew-like drops
-of glutinous liquid which gem the leaves of the _Drosera_, northern
-representative of the Venus’s fly-trap. This, the _Dionaea_, catches
-flies by means of a steel-trap leaf which closes on them when they
-light on it. This other, the _Drosera_, is not so active. It attracts
-insects with its honey dew, holds them with sticky glands, and grips
-them, little by little, with bristles. It is a curious and beautiful
-little plant, and one would hardly think it carnivorous to see it
-adding its diamond ornaments to the floral decorations which beautify
-the ancient stumps all summer long.
-
-Yet of all the life histories revealed by the pond at low tide I still
-think that of the _Unionidæ_ the most interesting. You find them all
-along above and below the margin of the shallow water, their shells
-most wonderfully streaked with olive-green and pale-yellow in alternate
-bands, till one might think he had found nodules of malachite which
-the long-ago glacier had culled from some Labrador ledge and ground
-to unsymmetrical ovoids before it dropped them on the old-time meadow
-marge. In certain individuals and certain lights the shells of these
-obscure creatures send out gleams of green and gold, like gems that
-have soft fires within them. It is as if an opalescent soul dwelt
-within, and the thin shell which a crow with his bill may puncture
-with a blow was so constructed as to hold in the reds and blues of the
-opalescence, but transmit the greens and gold.
-
-You find many with only the backs of their shells sticking out of the
-mud. This may be the creature’s natural position, but I find far more
-of them lying quietly on their sides in the shallow water, rocking
-gently to and fro in the placid undulations as if they were there but
-to show me their shining colors. But if you watch one intently for a
-time you will see him open his shell cautiously and put out one foot.
-This is his best, for it is all he has and he puts it foremost. It is
-very white and clean, and it might as well be called his tongue, for
-with it he licks his food. It is half as long as he is, and when he has
-put it out as far as he can, or as far as he dares, a fine white fringe
-grows on its outer margin. Thus he gathers in minute animalculæ or
-refuse matter from the surface of the mud, for his stomach’s sake.
-
-It is a rather interesting thing to stand by and watch a _Unio
-margaritifera_ daintily putting away his own particular brand of little
-necks and mock turtle. At the least untoward sign of interest in the
-affair, however, he shuts up like a clam, and you will need your
-pocket-knife if you wish to see more of him.
-
-Where the water is only an inch deep or so over the soft ooze of the
-bottom you will see where the unio has used this so-called foot as
-a foot should be used, for he not only stands on it, but walks with
-its help. These signs are curiously erratic marks drawn as with a
-sharpened stick for a distance sometimes of yards. If you will inspect
-the seaward end of this trail you will find a unio in it, generally
-a young one, for it is he that has left the mark behind him in his
-travels. For the unio at a certain age is a great traveller; that is,
-when he is very young. The adults foot it, but the young before they
-reach their full growth ride, some of them by what you might call the
-lightning expresses of the pond world.
-
-If you will split a big one at this time of year you will be likely to
-find within an astonishing number of eggs. These are carried in brood
-pouches that seem to occupy pretty nearly all the space between the
-shells. In seeing them you wonder vaguely where there was room for
-the bearer of this amazing progeny. Just where they are these young
-unios grow to maturity of a certain sort, forming minute shells which
-have hooks, forming also peculiar organs of sense. The hooks and the
-sense organs are provided that they may not miss that free ride which
-is the privilege of every young unio if he is to reach the period of
-adolescence.
-
-At the moment of being sent forth from the home shell the golchidium,
-for that is what the scientific men call the unio at this stage
-of the affair, begins to hunt, aided by his sense organs, for a
-thoroughfare. Here he takes the first conveyance, whether the slow
-coach of the sluggish horn-pout, the bream automobile, or the pickerel
-flying-machine. To the first fish that comes by he attaches himself,
-oftentimes to the gills, and there he rides and, like most travelers,
-continues to develop.
-
-By and by, being “finished” by travel, he gets off his vehicle at some
-convenient station, drops into the mud, and is ready to lecture, or
-so I fancy it, before any of the unio women’s clubs on the world as he
-has seen it. Not until then does the unio, and then only if he is a
-margaritifera, begin to accumulate pearls.
-
-By what mystery of sunlight and shallow water the unio has acquired
-the lucent green and gold of the epidermis of his outer shell I do not
-know, any more than I know what pigments paint or what naiad fingers
-hold the brush that paints the gold in the heart or the pinky green in
-the outer sepals of the water-lily. The two find their sustenance in
-the same mud.
-
-But even if I could tell this I might well pause in wonder over the
-beauty of the inner shell of this pulseless creature of the ooze.
-Perhaps the golchidium, darting back and forth beneath the ripples of
-the surface during its days of travel, catches the radiant blue of the
-sky, the rosy flush of dawn, and the glory of the rainbow all shivered
-together in exultant light to make the nacre of the inner surface of
-its growing shell. For nowhere else in nature may we find such softness
-of coloring holding such gleams of azure and of fire. The opal beside
-it is garish and crude. Mother-of-pearl we call it, for out of the same
-source is born the gem which may be worth the price of a king’s ransom.
-
-The unio is the good girl of the fairy tale, for from its lips fall
-pearls that confound the divers of the Orient. Not from Ceylon nor Sulu
-nor the Straits of Sunda nor the Gulf of California have come such
-pearls of bewildering color and fascinating shapes as have been taken
-from the river mussels of our American streams. For all I know the
-shallows of my pond may hold a necklace of such value that its fellow
-has never yet circled the throat of a queen. If so I hope no one will
-ever find it out, for an ebb tide such as this comes only once in a
-score or so of years, and when the next one is here I want still to
-find the beach beautiful with the green and gold and mother-of-pearl of
-the unios.
-
-
-
-
-HOW THE RAIN CAME
-
-
-
-
-HOW THE RAIN CAME
-
-
-The _Spiranthes gracilis_ is commonly called ladies’ tresses, which is
-a very polite name for it, for nothing can be more beautiful than the
-tresses of ladies. It is like its name in that it is beautiful, but not
-otherwise, for it is a flower not of tresses, but of fine eyelashes
-of pearl set in a spiral on jade. The rain this morning dropped
-transparent, colorless pearl tears on the tips of these eyelashes, and
-as they twinkled toward shy smiles the tears ran down the spiral to be
-eagerly kissed away by the small grasses that always cling about the
-feet of the spiranthes in mute adoration.
-
-Near by slender varieties of gerardia held up rosy cups to drink these
-clear pearls, finding in them a medicine that shall cure all ills.
-In the rain the fountain of youth wells up in the cup of every flower
-that waits in the soft pasture grasses and the grasses themselves drink
-eagerly. The cedars deck themselves in these clear pearls, wearing
-garments fringed with them and ropes and necklaces without number, and
-letting their prim propriety be so softened that they are no longer
-firm and erect but take on curves of soft roundness that should go with
-pearl-embroidered garments.
-
-Yesterday there was in all the pasture people a certain puritanical
-sternness of demeanor, a set holding fast to the narrowing good of
-life, a tightening of the muscles that are weary with a long strain but
-may not for the good of the soul loose their firm grip, for yesterday
-the pasture was dry and hard with the leanness of the long summer
-drought.
-
-To-day has come the first of the fall rains and these puritans are
-stern and set no longer, but relax into swaying curves of lissome
-beauty that entrance you. It is as if, after coming as you thought to a
-Sunday service of the old Calvinists, you found it transformed into a
-grange picnic of wood nymphs.
-
-The pines indeed, which always stretch out their arms in Sabbath-like
-benediction, seem asking a pious blessing on all these, their pasture
-children; and they fold their slim leaves together like hands in a
-soft prayer of thankfulness. But the soft rain cuddles them as well,
-and before they know it they are decked with the clear pearls as for a
-bridal and their plumes nod in reverence, yet are so beautiful in gems
-and there is such a soft grace in their curves--they that stood so
-grim and sombre before--that each tree seems like some bounteous and
-beautiful woman, arrayed for wedding festivities, who yet bows a moment
-at a sanctuary in prayer, even as she joins the guests.
-
-The rain had been long coming. A solitary quail predicted it; the first
-I have heard since the severe cold and deep snows of three winters in
-succession not long ago. I had thought every quail smothered in the
-white depths or frozen by the bitter cold. Three years is a long time
-not to hear a quail whistle, and this I believe to be no survivor of
-the old stock, but one that has worked up from Southern fields where
-the snows were less deadly during those rigid winters.
-
-It is pretty hard to tell whether a quail is simply announcing his own
-name for all who care to hear, or making a weather prediction. Jotham,
-one of the farmer’s men who knows all, says it is simple enough. In
-an announcement he says, “Bob, Bob White.” The weather prediction is
-different. Then he says, “Wet, more wet.” All you have to do is listen.
-
-This is like Jotham’s grandmother’s recipe for making soap. You
-collected potash from the hearth, added water in an iron kettle, and
-boiled till a certain thickness was reached. You would know this point
-by placing an egg on the surface, and if the concoction was right the
-egg would either sink or swim, the old lady was blessed if she could
-remember which. This is a way that successful oracles have. That one at
-Delphos did it.
-
-So, when my lone quail sat on a rock in the pasture, tipped his head
-back a little, swelled his white throat and whistled, round and clear,
-I went out to meet him, scanning the sky meanwhile for a change of
-weather. The sky of the day before had been like a brass bowl shut
-down over the gasping land. Shrubs of the upland hung their leaves
-piteously, the tougher herbs wilted, and the tenderer ones dried up and
-died.
-
-[Illustration: My lone quail sat on a rock in the pasture, tipped his
- head back a little, swelled his white throat, and whistled]
-
-On such days when the long summer drought has wreaked its worst, when
-the parched pasture lies on its back, open-mouthed, gasping for water,
-when even the pond which has given so freely for the refreshment of
-the pasture people has shrunk back upon itself till a rod-wide rim of
-gravel and rough stones forbids them to come down and drink, I love
-to go down to the water’s edge and marvel at the hedge hyssop. All
-along the shore the summer drought forbids the water weeds to grow.
-This rod-wide space is not for them. The flood of the winter and spring
-denies other land plants a roothold; yet, just when you think the shore
-is to be bare and barren for always, troops forth the hedge hyssop and
-clothes it with verdure, lighted with a golden smile.
-
-The common name of the plant seems to me to express ingenuity rather
-than purpose. It has nothing to do with hedges and is not a hyssop,
-which is a garden plant belonging with thyme and lavender and other
-sweet herbs beloved of old ladies in kerchief caps and figured gowns.
-The hedge hyssop is none of these. Nine months of the twelve it bides
-its time under water. During the other three it glows in golden
-contentment on the sandy stretches left bare by this yearly receding
-tide, climbing along the rocky shore and filling every crevice, lifting
-its yellow cups to the glare of the brazen sky and distilling subtle
-perfume to the antennæ of the little low-flying insects that are its
-friends. Yet if its common name means little, that given it by the
-botanists fits. _Gratiola aurea_ may well mean a plant that is golden
-grace or a golden benediction, as you choose to take the Latin.
-
-The day before, then, I had no heart for the upland pasture, but
-Jotham’s reading of the quail had been the right one, for yesterday the
-brazen look was all blown out of the sky by the south wind. It did not
-leave it clear blue, for that would have meant cooler and still dry,
-but put into it a pallor that seemed to well up from all the horizon
-round. It was not the pallor of clouds, for there was not even a
-cumulus thunder head in sight, but the pallor that comes with the wind
-that has a storm behind it, yet is to blow itself out before the storm
-arrives.
-
-The cuckoo, flitting jerkily from one thicket to the next, noted this
-pallor from the corner of his eye and thenceforth through the day
-croaked to himself as he went his caterpillar-hunting rounds. “Clackity
-clack; tut, tut; cow, cow, cow,” he clucked musically, which is his way
-of saying, “Oh dear, it is going to rain and the caterpillars will be
-all soggy.” Jotham says the early settlers out here in the Dorchester
-backwoods taught the cuckoo to work for them, but that he was so lazy
-that their descendants, getting better help, gave it up, and that the
-cuckoo soon forgot all he knew about farm work except calling the cows.
-
-Every bluejay is a born tease, and in the late August drought goes
-about crying “Rain, rain,” because he knows there will be no rain.
-He does it merely to fool the pasture people and then chuckle in his
-phonograph twang over their misery when no rain comes.
-
-Yesterday when he smelt the south wind and saw that sky pallor he
-stopped calling “Rain, rain,” for he knew it was coming. Instead he
-fluttered round and round the pasture, ducking in among the boughs
-of the pines and ejaculating, as if he were surprised to find it so,
-“Clear, clear.” I fancy all the wild creatures of wood and pasture
-know the signs better than I do and could announce the rain if they
-would long before I know that it is coming. All the outdoor world was
-sure of it yesterday. With the very first show of that paleness in the
-sky--or was it something in the touch of the wind?--the drooping plants
-lifted their leaves to be ready for it. I could smell it in the falling
-of the wind at sunset; they seemed to smell it in mid-forenoon while
-yet the wind was rising.
-
-On such days looking across the pond toward wind and sun there is a
-peculiar blink in the light reflected from the surface of the waves
-which you do not see if fair weather is ahead of you. The pale sky
-seems to reflect blackly in the water. Down to leeward the shore
-poplars stand silvery white, a quivering, flashing silver under the
-lash of the wind. The swamp maples lose their green and turn pale and
-the willows lighten up in color.
-
-It is the turning of the leaves in the wind. You may say that they
-would turn in any wind and show their lighter under sides, and this
-is true, yet there is a difference in the appearance when it is a
-rain-bringing wind. I cannot tell you why this should be, but the
-difference is there. It may be that a moist wind relaxes the tension of
-the petioles more than a dry one and thus lets the leaf lie flatter,
-giving a little different look to the tree as a whole. The weather-wise
-older people grew up on the land instead of within walls and they were
-wont to say, “The leaves are turning in the wind and it is going to
-rain.” Like the pasture people they knew.
-
-By nightfall the weather bureau suspected something but was not quite
-sure what. They hung out the “possible rain” flag, and all the crows
-in the pinewood, congregating now in bigger and bigger flocks,
-practising, I take it, for their labor-day parade, went into fits of
-laughter. “Haw, haw, haw!” they shouted, and whirled up into the sky
-and took a look about and dashed down again, convulsed. “Haw, haw, haw!
-Possible rain; here’s the sky just ready to spill out a twenty-four
-hour soaker!”
-
-The wind went down with the sun, and the willow and maple leaves were
-green again for a little before they faded into the growing purple of
-the dusk, but with every faint sigh of the failing breeze the poplars
-loomed white again with a radiant ghostliness which seemed to people
-the rustling dusk with softly phosphorescent spooks. You will see these
-other-world visitors to the pond shore only on such a night when the
-wind is right.
-
-There was no glow of rich color in the sky at sunset. Instead the dusk
-hung violet gray draperies all about the horizon,--curtains that veiled
-but did not hide the evening stars, shutting them almost out near the
-horizon and leaving them comparatively clear at the zenith. In such
-dusk stars do not twinkle, they blink, and that is a sign of rain which
-all the pasture people that have eyes know well.
-
-Those that have ears and no eyes may know what sort of a night it is
-as well, for there is some quality in such an atmosphere which makes
-sounds carry far. The rap of a paddle on a canoe seat a mile away up
-the pond sounds right in your ear. A train roaring through the wood
-three miles distant seems so near that you involuntarily look around
-lest it be coming behind and run over you. On such nights speak low
-if you do not wish the whole world to hear, for the air all about you
-is a wireless telephone receiver tuned to your pitch. Those gray rain
-curtains which the dusk has hung all about the horizon have made the
-whole world a whispering gallery.
-
-Sometime in the night the wind dies. It passes away so peacefully that
-no mirror held to its lips would note that last sigh. But the stars
-have known it all the evening, and that is why their eyes blinked so.
-It was to keep back the tears. Then the stars vanish and the night is
-dark indeed.
-
-Scents carry far on such a night, not only those of the pasture world,
-which are pleasant, but those of the more distant town, which sometimes
-are not. The air is not only telephonic but telefumic. The distant
-leather factory sends out a faint but characteristic odor by which
-you might hunt it across country for a lustrum of miles. The sooty
-emanation from my neighbors’ chimneys is pungent in my nostrils, though
-their houses are a mile away. I think I can tell which is which, for
-the fireplace smell differs from that of the furnace, as does that of
-the parlor stove from the range. Agreeably these are forgotten, for
-something has crushed sassafras leaves over on the pasture knoll and
-the fine fragrance comes to drive away thoughts of the others.
-
-As the night was gray, which foretells rain, so the morning breaks
-crimson, which announces it. No bird heralds this dawn, no chirping
-insect sends its voice questing through its shades. The sky hardly
-lightens up; it is rather that the darkness turns red. Nor does the
-light come from the sky when it does come. It wells up from the earth
-instead, for when the crimson is gone the sky is still black with
-shadows, while the pasture grows distinct in a gray outline wherein is
-no color.
-
-A stillness of expectation broods all things,--a stillness so intense
-that the first rain-drop sounds like a pistol-shot as it strikes a
-leaf near you. Then there is a volley and further silence for a brief
-space, followed by a crepitation all about you. Those first heavy drops
-have been followed by lighter ones, and this crepitation merges into a
-steady drumming, which becomes a low roar to your ears made sensitive
-by silence and faint sounds. The first of the fall rains has come, and
-the summer suffering of the pasture people is at an end.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- A
-
- Adder, flat-head, 128, 129
-
- Admiral, white, 71, 72, 75, 78, 81
-
- Alder, 5, 15, 40, 52, 82, 94, 108, 111, 112, 118, 140, 141, 158
- black, 139
- white, 35
-
- Alice-in-Wonderland, 88
-
- Ambergris, 40
-
- Angle-worm, 94, 105, 106, 186
-
- Ant, 158
-
- Antiopa vanessa, 166
-
- Aphids, 115
-
- Arabian days, 81
-
- Arabian Nights, 61, 79, 88
-
- Arethusa, 83
-
- Azalia, 4, 6, 33
-
-
- B
-
- Bagdad, Caliph of, 76
-
- Baptist, 53
-
- Barberry, 32
-
- Basilarchia astyanax, 71, 77, 79, 87
-
- Basilarchia disippus, 161
-
- Bass, rock, 96
-
- Bayberry, 8, 33, 45
-
- Bee, 85, 86, 137, 155, 156, 157, 158
- bumble, 137
-
- Beetles, 161
-
- Berkshire hills, 135
-
- Birch, 5, 8, 28, 29, 30, 93
-
- Bittern, 142, 143
-
- Blackberry, 56
- high-bush, 33
-
- Blackbird, 143
-
- Bladderwort, 64
-
- Blueberry, high-bush, 50, 51
-
- Bluebird, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 184, 192
-
- Blue Hill, 135, 140, 202, 203
-
- Blue Hill Reservation, 80, 136
-
- Bluejay, 226
-
- Bobolink, 189
-
- Brake, 43
-
- Bream, 211
-
- Bullhead, 101
-
- Bulrush, 136, 138
-
- Bunting, indigo, 189
-
- Butterfly, angle-wing, 158
- Anosia plexippus, 160, 165
- Antiopa vanessa, 166
- fritillaries, 159
- meadow-brown, 158
- monarch, 160, 161, 162, 171
- mourning-cloak, 166
- pearl crescent, 158
- white admiral, 71, 72, 75, 78, 81
-
- Button bush, 41, 140
-
-
- C
-
- California, Gulf of, 213
-
- Calvinists, 219
-
- Camberwell beauty, 166
-
- Carnations, 156
-
- Cassandra, 52, 205
-
- Cassius, 155
-
- Catbird, 10, 14, 20, 21, 22, 23, 190, 191, 192
-
- Caterpillar, 43
-
- Cedar, 4, 5, 6, 15, 27, 29, 139, 140, 141, 202, 204, 205, 218
-
- Ceylon, 213
-
- Chewink, 14
-
- Clams, fresh-water, 95, 196
-
- Clethra, 4, 35, 153, 155, 156
-
- Compositæ, 41
-
- Coot, 183
-
- Corydalus cornutus, 125
-
- Cranberries, 139
-
- Crow, 14, 18, 19, 20, 185, 187, 196, 197, 228
-
- Cuckoo, 27, 225
-
-
- D
-
- Daisy, 41
-
- Delphos, 221
-
- Demoiselles, 120, 121, 122, 124, 126, 127
-
- Dionaea, 206
-
- Dorchester backwoods, 225
-
- Dragon, 128, 129
-
- Dragon-flies, 56, 95, 120, 121, 122, 123
-
- Drosera, 206
-
- Duck, wood, 144, 145, 146, 149, 150
-
-
- E
-
- Eel, 103, 104, 106, 107, 108, 127
-
- Eden, 127
-
- Elm, 51
-
-
- F
-
- Fern, 40, 112, 119
- cinnamon, 112, 113
- ostrich-plume, 118
- rock, 118, 119
-
- Fern seed, 111, 113, 116, 119
-
- Field mouse, 113
-
- Finches, 10
-
- Flag, sweet, 117
-
- Flagroot, 111
-
- Flappers, 144
-
- Flea, 56
-
- Floating-heart, 133, 135
-
- Florida, 191
-
- Fly-catcher, great crested, 86, 87, 88
-
- Flicker, 177
-
- Fountain head, 81
-
- Fox, 6, 9, 13
-
- Franklin Field, 142
-
- Frog, 57, 59, 61, 66, 186
- green, 42
- Rana virescens, 186
-
-
- G
-
- Gall, 115
-
- Genie, 76, 88
-
- Gentian, 134
-
- Gerardia, 217
-
- Goblin, water, 119, 120, 122, 125
-
- Golchidium, 211, 212
-
- Goldthread, 15
-
- Grape, fox, 44, 45, 46
- wild, 5
-
- Grass, fresh-water eel, 136
- marsh, 138, 139, 141
- tape, 136
-
- Gratiola aurea, 224
-
- Greenbrier, 15
-
-
- H
-
- Habenaria, 86
-
- Hardhack, 92, 205
-
- Hasheesh, 130
-
- Hawk, 10
-
- Helgramite worm, 124, 125
-
- Hepatica, 74
-
- Heron, 197
- night, 140
-
- Hickory, 9, 116
-
- Holmes, Sherlock, 150
-
- Horn-pout, 101, 102, 103, 104, 122, 127, 211
-
- Horse brier, 15
-
- Houghton’s pond, 80
-
- Huckleberry, 28, 29, 205
- low-bush black, 34
-
- Humming-bird, ruby-throated, 163
-
- Hyla, 66
-
- Hyssop, hedge, 223
-
-
- I
-
- Incas, 163
-
-
- J
-
- Jasmine, Mexican, 163
-
- Joe Pye weed, 141
-
- Jotham, 221, 224
-
- Judas, 167
-
- June beetle, 59
-
-
- K
-
- “Kiver,” 96, 97
-
-
- L
-
- Labrador, 80
-
- Ladies’ tresses, 217
-
- Laurel, sheep, 205
-
- Lepomis gibbosus, 96
-
- Leprechaun, 78
-
- Lilacs, 190
-
- Lily, dog, 136
- water, 134, 136, 137, 139, 212
-
- Lily-of-the-valley, 74
-
- Lucky bug, 53, 54, 63
-
-
- M
-
- Malachite, 207
-
- Maple, 9, 51, 52, 62, 82, 92, 94, 116, 141, 227, 229
-
- Meadow-sweet, 205
-
- Memorial Day, 50
-
- Merlin, 37, 39
-
- Metropolitan Park Commission, 142
-
- Milkweed, 157, 158, 159, 160
-
- “Minister,” 101
-
- Minnow, 103
-
- Mocking-bird, 21
-
- Monarch butterfly, 160, 161, 162, 171
-
- Monitor, 54
-
- Moss, sphagnum, 15, 80, 83, 88, 142
-
- Moth, 155
- luna, 65
-
- Mourning-cloak butterfly, 166
-
- Murray, “Adirondack,” 148
-
- Muskrat, 43, 111, 142, 143, 199, 200
-
- Myrica, 34
-
-
- N
-
- Night heron, 140
-
- Nymphæa, 139
-
- Nymphs, 120, 122
-
-
- O
-
- Oak, 5, 8, 9, 92
- scrub, 15, 190
-
- Orchis, purple-fringed, 86
-
- Oven bird, 16, 17, 23
-
- Owl, 10
-
-
- P
-
- Pan, 45
-
- Panama, 163
-
- Papilio asterias, 169
-
- Partridge, 6, 37
-
- Partridge berry, 74
-
- Perch, yellow, 92, 99, 100, 102, 103, 127
-
- Pickerel, 51, 211
-
- Pickerel weed, 136, 137, 138, 139
-
- Pine, 9, 15, 16, 28, 60, 73, 74, 77, 88, 112, 154, 219, 228
-
- Pipsissewa, 74
-
- Plymouth Rock, 202
-
- Polypody, 124
-
- Ponkapoag pond, 133, 135
-
- Poplars, 227, 229
-
- Pumpkin seed, 96
-
- Pyrola, 74
-
-
- Q
-
- Quail, 220, 222
-
-
- R
-
- Rana virescens, 186
-
- Raspberry, 5
-
- Robin, 10, 13, 189
-
- Rocket, sweet, 162, 163
-
- Rose, wild, 4, 8, 52, 205
-
-
- S
-
- Santo Domingo, 191
-
- Sassafras, 5, 232
-
- Sedges, 56, 60
-
- Skipper, 63
-
- Skunk, 198
-
- Skunk-cabbage, 40
-
- Snake, water, 126, 127
-
- Sparrow, chipping, 12, 178
- English, 176, 178, 179, 180, 181, 183
- song, 13
-
- Sphagnum moss, 15, 80, 83, 88, 142
-
- Spiræa, 52
-
- Spiranthes gracilis, 217
-
- Squirrel, 197, 198
- gray, 62, 63
- red, 6
-
- Standish, Myles, 135, 202
-
- Stephanotis, 163
-
- St. John’s-wort, marsh, 206
-
- Strawberries, wild, 33
-
- Stumpy Cove, 201, 202
-
- Submarine, 54
-
- Sulu, 213
-
- Sunda, straits of, 213
-
- Sunfish, 92, 95, 96, 98, 99, 100, 103, 126, 127
-
- Sweet-fern, 8, 33, 35, 45, 154, 205
-
- Sweet-gale, 34, 45, 52
-
-
- T
-
- Tanager, scarlet, 188
-
- Terrapin, 84, 85, 88
-
- Texas, 158
-
- Thoroughwort, 141
-
- Thrasher, 14
-
- Thrush, 10, 20, 30, 31, 35
- brown, 21, 28
- wood, 11, 12, 17
-
- Toad, 66, 129
-
- Torpedo boat, 54, 99
-
- Trout, 82, 84, 96, 122
-
- Turtle, spotted, 83, 84, 85, 88
-
-
- U
-
- Ulysses, 64
-
- Unio, 196, 199, 209, 210
-
- Unio margaritifera, 195, 209, 14
-
- Unionidæ, 207
-
- Utricularia, 64
-
-
- V
-
- Venus’s fly-trap, 206
-
- Viceroy butterfly, 161
-
- Vireo, 119
-
-
- W
-
- Walden pond, 80
-
- Warblers, 10, 14
-
- Wasps, 161
-
- Watercress, 82, 83, 86
-
- Water shield, 136
-
- Water-strider, 55
-
- Watson, Doctor, 150
-
- Whip-poor-will, 30, 31, 35
-
- Wild rose, 4, 8, 52, 205
-
- Willows, 92, 94, 98, 227, 229
-
- Witch, 114, 125
-
- Witch-caps, 115
-
- Witch-hazel, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 124, 125, 129
-
- Woodbine, 4
-
- Woodchuck, 9
-
-
-
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Wild Pastures, by Winthrop Packard</div>
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Wild Pastures</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Winthrop Packard</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Charles Copeland</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: April 22, 2021 [eBook #65132]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Steve Mattern, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILD PASTURES ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>WILD PASTURES</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i001_frontis.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">He was still sitting on his perch greeting the gold of the<br />
-morning sun with melodious uproar<br />
-
-<span class="indent">[<i>Page <a href="#Page_31">31</a></i>]</span>
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i002_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="xlarge">WILD PASTURES</span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="large">WINTHROP PACKARD</span></p>
-
-<p>ILLUSTRATED BY<br />
-
-CHARLES COPELAND</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i002_titlelogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="large">BOSTON</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">SMALL, MAYNARD AND COMPANY</span><br />
-
-PUBLISHERS</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1909</span><br />
-
-<span class="antiqua">By Small, Maynard &amp; Company</span><br />
-
-(INCORPORATED)<br />
-<br />
-<i>Entered at Stationers&#8217; Hall</i><br />
-<br />
-THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U.S.A.<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-TO<br />
-<br />
-MY WIFE AND THE WEE BOY<br />
-<br />
-WHO HAVE MADE AND SHARED<br />
-THE PASTURE SUNSHINE</p></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Page</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Waylaying the Dawn</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Stalking the Wild Grape</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_25"> 25</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Frog Rendezvous</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_47"> 47</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Butterfly Chase</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_69"> 69</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Down Stream</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89"> 89</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Brook Magic</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_109"> 109</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Ponkapoag Bogs</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_131"> 131</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Some Butterfly Friends</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151"> 151</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Resting Time of the Birds</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_173"> 173</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Pond at Low Tide</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193"> 193</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">How the Rain Came</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_215"> 215</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">He was still sitting on his perch greeting the gold of<br />
-the morning sun with melodious uproar</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_0"> <i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>OPPOSITE PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">The fox may slink for an hour unscared, waiting with<br />
-watchful eye on the neighboring chicken coop</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_6"> 6</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">The mother bird, dancing and mincing along</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_38"> 38</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">Out from among the birches she sails gracefully, a<br />
-veritable queen of the fairies</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_64"> 64</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">There was the swish of wings, the snip-snap of a<br />
-bird&#8217;s beak, and it was all over</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_86"> 86</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">The way of the &#8220;kiver&#8221; is this. There is a single,<br />
-snappy, business-like bob, then another, then<br />
-three in quick succession</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_96"> 96</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">That such things are not seen oftener is simply<br />
-because people are dull and go to bed instead<br />
-of sitting out under the witch-hazel at midnight<br />
-of a full moon</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_114"> 114</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">Of a clear midsummer evening you may hear the<br />
-muskrat grubbing roots there ... and hear his<br />
-snort and splash when he dives at sudden sight<br />
-of you</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_142"> 142</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">Every boy who knows the country in summer knows<br />
-him by his rich, red coloration, his strong, black-bordered<br />
-wings with their black veins</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_160"> 160</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">The English sparrow has the true instincts of the<br />
-browbeating coward</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_180"> 180</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">The skunk doesn&#8217;t know where he is going and he<br />
-isn&#8217;t even on his way</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_198"> 198</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">My lone quail sat on a rock in the pasture, tipped<br />
-his head back a little, swelled his white throat,<br />
-and whistled</td><td class="tdr" valign="bottom"><a href="#Page_222"> 222</a></td></tr>
-
-</table>
-
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">WAYLAYING THE DAWN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
-<p class="ph1">WAYLAYING THE DAWN</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HE most beautiful place which can
-be found on earth of a June morning is
-a New England pasture, and fortunate
-are we New Englanders who love the
-open in the fact that, whatever town or
-city may be our home, the old-time pastures
-lie still at our very doors.</p>
-
-<p>The way to the one that I know best
-lies through the yard of an old, old
-house, a yard that stands hospitably always
-open. It swings along by the ancient
-barn and turns a right angle by a
-worn-out field. Then you enter an old
-lane leading to what has been for more
-than a century a cow pasture. Here the
-close-cropped turf is like a lawn between
-the gray and mossy old stone fences that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
-the farmer of a century and more gone
-grubbed from the rocky fields and made
-into metes and bounds. There they stand
-to-day, just as he set them, grim mementos
-of toil which the softening hand
-of time has made beautiful. Where
-cattle still travel such lanes day by day
-these walls are undecorated, but many
-of the lanes are untraveled and have
-been so these fifty years. Such are garlanded
-with woodbine, sentineled by red
-cedars, and fragrant with the breath of
-wild rose, azalea, and clethra.</p>
-
-<p>Side by side with this lawn-like lane
-is another which was once traversed by
-the cattle of the next farm, but which
-has not been used for a lifetime. In
-this the wild things of the wood are
-untrammeled, save by one another, and
-they hold it in riotous possession. Just
-as the first lane is tame and sleek this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span>
-other is wild and unkempt. The raspberry
-and blackberry tangle catches you
-by the leg if you enter, as if to hold you
-until birch and alder, cedar and sassafras,
-look you over and decide whether
-or not you are of their lodge. If you
-give them the right grip you may pass.
-If not, you will be well switched and
-scratched before you are allowed to
-go on.</p>
-
-<p>Here the wild grape climbs unpruned
-from wall to cedar, from cedar to birch
-and from birch to oak, whence it sends
-its witching fragrance far on the morning
-air. You may stalk a wild grape
-in bloom a mile by the scent and be well
-rewarded by finding the very place
-where the air tingles with it.</p>
-
-<p>This lane is wild, and the wild things
-of the woods that come on fleet wing
-and nimble foot frequent it. You may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
-never see a partridge in the sleek lane,
-and if by chance the red fox crosses it
-he does so gingerly and as if it were
-hot under foot. In the other, however,
-the fox may slink for an hour unscared,
-waiting with watchful eye on the neighboring
-chicken coop, the red squirrel
-builds his nest in the cedar, and the
-partridge leads her young brood among
-the blackberry bushes of an early
-morning.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i006.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The fox may slink for an hour unscared, waiting with watchful<br />
-eye on the neighboring chicken coop</p>
-
-<p>The azalea sends out its white fragrance
-from the one lane, and never a
-buttercup, even, nods to the wind in the
-other; yet you love the smooth shorn
-one best. It talks to you of the homely
-life of the farm, the lazy cattle drowsing
-contentedly to the barn at milking time
-while the farmer&#8217;s boy sings as he puts
-up the bars behind them. You love it
-best because, however much you may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
-love the wild things, the lure of the
-home-leading and well-trodden paths is
-strong upon you. It is more than a
-sturdy, rough-built stone wall that separates
-the two lanes; there is all the
-long road from the wilderness down to
-civilization between them.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>For the story the pasture teaches us,
-more than anything else is the story
-of how the fathers wrested the dominion
-of the New England earth from
-the wilderness and of the way in which
-the wilderness still hems their world
-about and not only waits the opportunity
-to spring upon us and regain possession,
-but invests our fields like an
-invading army and takes by stealth
-what it may not win by force.</p>
-
-<p>The pasture bars divide the world of
-the smooth-trodden lane and the close-shorn
-fields from the picket line of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span>
-wilderness. Let us pause a moment
-upon the line of demarcation. Behind
-us are the entrenchments of civilization,
-the farmhouse and barn and other
-buildings,&mdash;its fort. The town road is
-the military way leading from fortified
-camp to fortified camp, the mowing field
-its glacis, and the stone walls its outer
-entrenchments. These the cohorts of
-the wilderness continually dare, and are
-kept from carrying only by the vigilance
-of the farmer and his men.</p>
-
-<p>Let but this vigilance relax for a
-year, a spring month even, and bramble
-and bayberry, sweet-fern and wild rose,
-daring scouts that they are, will have
-a foothold that they will yield only
-with death. Close upon these will follow
-the birches, the light infantry
-which rushes to the advance line as soon
-as the scouts have found the foothold.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-These intrench and hold the field desperately
-until pine and hickory, maple
-and oak, sturdy men of the main line
-of battle, arrive, and almost before you
-know it the farm is reclaimed. The
-wilderness has regained its lost ground
-and the cosmos of the wild has wiped
-out that curious chaos which we call
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>In this debatable land of the pasture,
-this Tom Tiddler&#8217;s ground where the
-fight between man and the encroaching
-wilderness goes yearly in favor of the
-wilderness, dwell the pasture people.
-The woodchuck, the rabbit, and even
-the fox have their burrows here, the
-woodchuck and the rabbit finding the
-farmer&#8217;s clover field and garden patch
-a convenient foraging ground, the fox
-finding the chicken coop and the rabbit
-equally convenient.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>The pasture is the happy hunting-ground
-of the hawks and owls, though
-they dwell by preference in the deep
-wood, the nearer approaching to the
-forest primeval the better, but the crow
-often nests in a pine among a group of
-several in the pasture. The pasture is
-peculiarly the home of scores of varieties
-of what one might term the half
-wild birds, the thrushes from honest
-robin down to the catbird, warblers,
-finches, and a host of others who are
-as shy of the deep woods as they are
-of the highway; and here, in those
-magic hours that come between the first
-faint flush of dawn and sunrise, you
-may hear the full chorus of their matins
-swell in triumphant jubilation.</p>
-
-<p>Here in Eastern Massachusetts the
-dawn comes early, very early, in June.
-It will be a little before three that if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
-you watch the east you will see it flush
-a bit like the coming of color on the
-face of a dark-tressed maiden who has
-had sudden news of the coming of her
-lover. This flush of color fades again
-soon, and it is evident that it is all a
-mistake, for the darkness grows thicker
-than ever, and night, like that of the
-Apocalypse, is upon the face of the
-world. The dawn is long coming when
-you wait for it. Joshua evidently has
-arisen and is holding the sun in Syria
-as of old, that he may have time further
-to confound his enemies.</p>
-
-<p>No one believes that there will be
-dawn at all. You cannot prove it by the
-wood thrush. He sings best, indeed he
-sings only, in the shadow, and often
-even in the darkest night he will send
-out a bell-like note or two that has a
-soothing, sleepy tintinnabulation as of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-cow-bells shaken afar off by drowsy cattle.
-No, the wood thrush is not a reliable
-witness, but if you are wise in the ways
-of field and pasture before dawn, you
-may take evidence from the chipping
-sparrow. He is the earliest as he is
-one of the smallest of the morn-waking
-birds. In his case the least shall be
-first. I do not know if he really sees
-the dawn or if he smells it. There is a
-change in the air before there is in the
-sky, and perhaps he notes it. Perhaps,
-too, being smaller, he needs less sleep
-than the other birds, and his gentle inquiring
-note is a plaint that the night
-is long rather than a prophecy that it
-is ending. But it is he that first predicts
-with certainty the coming day, and
-it will be many minutes after his first
-call before the growing luminosity, a
-sort of pale halo that looms slowly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-about all things, tells you that the sun
-is indeed coming. Even then you are
-likely to hear no other bird note for
-what seems a long time.</p>
-
-<p>Then from a treetop in the open
-comes a sort of surprised ejaculation, as
-if some one said, &#8220;Why, bless me! It
-is morning already,&#8221; and then a burst
-of song from the full throat of a robin.
-It is as if he were the chorister of a
-choir invisible, for he pipes but a single
-strain before from treetop to treetop,
-near and heaven only knows how far,
-bursts forth the mingled melody of a
-great chorus of robins ringing clarion
-notes of jubilee.</p>
-
-<p>They have the overture to themselves
-all along in the open, for there the
-song sparrow does not sing till some
-ten minutes later. Of these again you
-shall hear a single bird, followed by a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-chorus in the next breath, and close
-upon the heels of the sparrow voice
-come the notes of innumerable warblers
-of many kinds whose songs you shall
-not distinguish one from another and
-name unless you are an expert. Behind
-these again come the chewinks and
-thrashers, not so early risers by any
-means, and very late the catbird. The
-catbird is clever but, like many clever
-people, he is lazy.</p>
-
-<p>Over to the other side of the pasture,
-a mile from the lane as the crow flies,
-is a swamp which is part of the pasture,
-indeed, but a part of the wilderness
-beyond, also. It was on the edge
-of this that I had chosen to meet the
-dawn, picking my way to it through the
-darkness in part by scent, for the swamp
-has a musky fragrance of its own, which
-it sends far on the night air. Coming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-down the slope to it you pass through
-a tangle of scrub oak that leads you to
-a lower region of alders snarled with
-greenbrier&mdash;&#8220;horse brier&#8221; we call it
-familiarly.</p>
-
-<p>Here the ground begins to be soft,
-with occasional clumps of sphagnum
-moss, which is like a gray-brown carpet
-of velvet, not yet made up, but tacked
-together with yellow bastings of the
-goldthread. Among the scrub oaks a
-stately pine here and there shoulders
-up, sending you a reassuring sniff of
-pitchy aroma. The scrub oaks know
-their allotted ground and cease wandering
-when their toes touch swamp water,
-but the pines are more venturesome,
-and often lift with their roots little
-mounds of firm brown carpeted ground
-in the midst of the quaky sphagnum.
-Slender cedars crowd in from the swamp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
-toward these pines, plumed like vassal
-knights that rally to the support of
-their overlord.</p>
-
-<p>On one of these pine islands on the
-edge of the swamp an oven bird had
-built her nest, and on this particular
-night in June she was in much distress
-because she could not get into it. The
-oven bird builds a nest on the ground
-among low bushes and vines, choosing
-often a spot where pine needles are
-scattered among the dead leaves. She
-roofs this nest with care&mdash;and dried
-grass&mdash;and builds a tunnel-like entrance
-to it so that you may see neither the
-eggs nor the bird sitting on them. You
-may step on an oven bird&#8217;s nest before
-you will see it, even when looking for
-it, and you may know for a certainty
-that it is within a definite small patch
-of ground, and yet hunt long before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-you find it. The mother bird had been
-frightened from her nest by the crush
-of my foot at its side in the darkness,
-and she did not dare come back, for I
-had unwittingly sat down beneath the
-pine almost across the entrance. Frightened
-for her nest as well as herself,
-she fluttered about like a bird ghost,
-now dozing in the thicket for a time,
-then waking to strangeness and fear,
-and making her plaint again.</p>
-
-<p>The wood thrush, brooding her eggs
-in the thicket near by, heard it and
-was wakeful, and her mate, never far
-off, now and again lifted his head from
-beneath his wing and drowsily tintinnabulated
-a reassuring note or two, but
-I did not stir. I was not sure that I
-was the cause of the oven bird&#8217;s trouble,
-and if so to move about in the darkness
-might well bring her worse disaster.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>The false dawn reddened and vanished,
-the gray of the real dawn was
-streaked and then flushed with rosy
-light shot through with gold, and a
-thousand voices of jubilee rang from
-treetop to treetop the whole pasture
-through and far out into the wood beyond,
-and still I waited, stretched motionless.
-A man might have thought
-me dead, the victim of some midnight
-tragedy, but the denizens of the pasture
-are wiser in their own province than
-that.</p>
-
-<p>In the gray of that first dusk, that
-was hardly streaked with the reassuring
-red of dawn, a crow slipped silent and
-bat-like from the top of a neighboring
-pine. In that twilight of early dawn
-you could not see him continually as he
-flapped along. The motions of his
-wings gave him strange appearances<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span>
-and disappearances as if he dodged back
-and forth, flitting up under cover of
-pillars of mist, yet there was no mist
-there, only the uncertainties of early
-light which seems to come in squads
-rather than in company front. This
-crow turned suddenly in his flight as he
-neared my pine island in the swamp and
-lighted in noiseless excitement on a dead
-limb. A moment he craned his neck,
-peering sharply at my motionless figure.
-The crow is at times a scavenger, and
-if there were dead men about he wanted
-to know it. For that matter if there
-was anything else about he wanted to
-know it, for the crow is likewise a gossip.
-A moment then he gazed at the
-motionless figure, then he vaulted from
-the limb and the vigor of his call resounded
-far and near as he flapped
-away eastward into the crimson.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>&#8220;Hi! Hi! Hi!&#8221; he shouted. &#8220;Fellow
-citizens, there&#8217;s a man in the woods
-here. He is motionless, but he is only
-making believe dead. Look out for
-him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Far and near the cry rang and was
-taken up by others of his tribe who
-passed the word along. &#8220;There&#8217;s a man
-in the woods!&#8221; they shouted, &#8220;look out
-for him.&#8221; The birds singing near by
-ceased their songs for a moment that
-they might have a look at the man, for
-they understand the crow&#8217;s note of
-warning as well as if they too spoke
-his language.</p>
-
-<p>The thrushes were singing now, and
-after a while the catbird, lazy reprobate,
-awoke. He too, like the crow, is
-a gossip, and more than that he is a
-tease. He shook his head a little to
-straighten the ruffled feathers of the neck,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
-disturbed by their position for the
-night. He stretched one leg and the
-wing on that side simultaneously, then
-the other leg and the other wing, a bird
-yawn as expressive as the human one.
-Then he cocked his head on one side
-with a gesture of pleased surprise and
-excitement and said, &#8220;Mi-a-aw!&#8221; He
-too had seen the invader of the swamp.</p>
-
-<p>The catbird is a good singer, that is,
-a good mimic. His taste is good, too,
-for he imitates only the best. Here in
-the North he imitates the brown thrush,
-no doubt, all things considered, our best
-vocalist. So well does he imitate him
-that you shall not say of a surety that
-this is the catbird singing and yonder
-is the thrush. In the South he imitates
-the mocking-bird with equal fidelity. You
-would say on casual acquaintance that
-he was our ablest singer and most exemplary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-bird as he masquerades in the
-voices of others, but let him once be
-frightened, or angered, or over-excited
-about anything and the reprobate part
-of him reasserts itself and he says &#8220;Mi-a-aw!&#8221;
-Hence his name, the catbird.</p>
-
-<p>The catbird, however, has the courage
-of his convictions, and one of these convictions
-is that he has the right to the
-satisfaction of an ungovernable and
-enormous curiosity. Bait your bird trap
-in the woods with something which
-strikes a bird as a curiosity that courts
-immediate investigation and you will
-catch a catbird. Other birds might start
-for it but the catbird would distance
-them. So, after saying &#8220;Mi-a-aw!&#8221; a
-few times and drawing no response to
-his challenge, he flew up to a twig
-within a foot of my head, sat there a
-moment, motionless except his beady<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>
-black eyes which traversed my form
-from foot to head, finally resting on my
-eyes. Inadvertently I winked; that was
-the only motion I made, but it was
-enough. With a flirt of his tail and a
-flip of his wings the catbird was through
-the thicket and out on the other side
-like a gray flash, scolding away at the
-top of his voice and seeming to shout
-as the crow had, &#8220;There&#8217;s a man in
-the wood! There&#8217;s a man in the wood!
-Look out for him!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The crimson and gold of the dawn
-had softened and diffused into diaphanous
-mother-of-pearl mists of early day.
-The June morning miracle was complete
-and it was high time I allowed the oven
-bird to come back and be assured that
-her nest and eggs were safe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">STALKING THE WILD GRAPE</h2>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span>
-<p class="ph1">STALKING THE WILD GRAPE</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">I</span>T was to be a moonlight night, yet
-the moon was on the wane and would
-not rise until eleven. It seemed as if the
-pasture birds missed the moon, or expected
-it, for beginning with the June
-dusk at eight o&#8217;clock one after another
-made brief queries from red cedar shelter
-or greenbrier thicket. One or two
-indeed insisted on pouring forth snatches
-of morning song, sending them questing
-through the darkness for several minutes,
-then ceasing as if ashamed of having
-been misled.</p>
-
-<p>The cuckoo, of course, you may hear
-often on any warm night, springing his
-watchman&#8217;s rattle chuckle from the denser
-part of the thicket. But for the brown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-thrush to be announcing morning every
-half-hour through the darkness was an
-absurdity to be accounted for only on
-the theory that here was a gay young
-blood who was practising for a moonlight
-serenade. And when the moon
-did come, touching the tops of the pines
-first with a fine edging of gold, dropping
-a luminous benediction to the
-birches and diffusing it lower and lower
-till the whole pasture was gold and
-dusk, the ecstasy of the thrush knew
-no limit. He poured forth a perfect
-uproar of liquid melody, punctuated with
-such hurroos and whoops of delight that
-he made me wonder if his lady love
-would like such college-song methods of
-serenading.</p>
-
-<p>I sat up from my couch on the green
-moss under the huckleberry bush to
-listen. The people of the pasture seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-to have trooped up to the call of the
-music. The red cedars, the birches, the
-huckleberry bushes in the daytime have
-individuality indeed, but in the night-time
-they have personality. They loom
-up in spots where by day you did not
-notice them at all. Some red cedars
-stand erect and stiff as military men
-might on sentinel duty, others gowned
-in black like monks of old group together
-and seem to consult, while all
-about them mingling in gracious beauty
-are the birches and the berry bushes,&mdash;the
-birches slender, dainty aristocrats
-gowned in the thinnest of whispering
-silk, the berry bushes sturdy and comfortable
-in homespun. You are half
-afraid of the cedars, they are so black
-and seem to watch you so intently,
-more than half in love with the birches,
-so graceful and enticing, as they lean<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-toward you in their diaphanous drapery,
-but it is the berry bushes shouldering
-up to greet you in hearty bourgeois
-welcome that make you feel at home.</p>
-
-<p>I listened to the thrush, but soon I
-found that I had only one ear to do it
-with, for on the other side of me a bird
-was rapidly approaching with greater
-and equally persistent clamor. It was
-a whip-poor-will, seemingly roused to
-rivalry by the challenge of the thrush.
-So far as I know the thrush paid no
-attention to him but simply kept up his
-song in the birch near by, but the whip-poor-will
-came up little by little till he
-seemed almost over my head, and I
-could hear plainly the hoarse intake of
-breath between each call. Very brief
-gasps these intakes were, for the whip-poor-wills
-fairly tumbled over one another
-without cessation.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>Now the bird went away for a distance,
-again he came back, but always
-he kept up his call, while the thrush
-never wavered from his perch in the
-birch. A dozen times I waked in the
-night to find them still at it, and when
-the gray of dawn finally silenced the
-whip-poor-will, the thrush let out like
-a tenor that has just got his second
-wind. He sang up the dawn and the
-grand matutinal bird chorus, and the
-last I heard of him he was still sitting
-on his perch greeting the gold of the
-morning sun with melodious uproar.</p>
-
-<p>A blind man who knows the pasture
-should know what part of it he is in
-and the pasture people that are about
-him of a June morning simply by the
-use of his other senses. The birds he
-would know by sound, the shrubs and
-trees by smell. Each has its distinctive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
-set of odors differing with differing circumstances,
-but never varying under
-the same conditions. The barberry
-fruit when fully ripe, especially if the
-frost has mellowed it, has a faint,
-pleasant, vinous smell which, with the
-crimson beauty of the clustered berries,
-might well tempt our grandmothers to
-make barberry sauce, however much the
-men folk might declare that it was but
-shoe-pegs and molasses.</p>
-
-<p>The blossoms are equally beautiful in
-their pendant yellow racemes which
-seem to flood the bush with golden
-light, but the odor of the blossoms,
-though the first sniff is sweet, has an
-after touch which is not pleasant.
-Crush the leaves as you pass and you
-shall get a smell as of cheap vinegar
-with something of the back kick of a
-table d&#8217;h&ocirc;te claret. Crush the leaves of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-the swamp azalea and get a strawberry-musk
-flavor that is faint but delightful.</p>
-
-<p>Sniff as you shoulder your way
-through the high blueberry bushes and
-you may note that the crushed leaves
-have a certain vinous odor like one of
-the flavors of a good salad. The blossoms
-of the high-bush blackberry, whose
-thorns tear your hands, have a faint and
-endearing smell as of June roses that
-are so far away that you get just a
-whiff of them in a dream. The azalea
-that a month later will make the moist
-air swoon with sticky sweetness now
-gives out from its leaves something that
-reminds you of wild strawberries that
-you tasted years ago. It is as delicate
-and as reminiscent as that.</p>
-
-<p>Under your foot the sweet-fern
-breathes a resin that is &#8220;like pious incense
-from a censer old,&#8221; the bayberry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
-sniffs of the wax of altar candles
-lighted at high mass in fairy land,
-and over by the brook the sweet-gale
-gives a finer fragrance even than these.
-There are but three members of this
-family,&mdash;the Myrica or Sweet-Gale family,&mdash;yet
-it is one that the pasture
-could least afford to miss. The fragrance
-of their spirits descends like a
-benediction on all about them, and I
-have a fancy that it is steadily influencing
-the lives of the other pasture folk.
-I know that the low-bush black huckleberry,
-the kind of the sweet, glossy
-black fruit that crisps under your teeth
-because of the seeds in it, grows right
-amongst sweet-fern whenever it can.
-Now if you crush the leaves of the low-bush
-black huckleberry you shall get
-from them a faint ghost of resinous
-aroma which is very like that of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
-sweet-fern. Thus do sweet lives pass
-their fragrance on to those about them.</p>
-
-<p>Many of these familiar odors had
-come to me during the night as I half
-slept and half listened to the vocal duel
-between the thrush and the whip-poor-will,
-but as I sprang to my feet at sunrise
-from my dent in the pasture moss
-I got a whiff of another which seemed
-more subtly elusive, more faintly fine
-than these, perhaps because, though I
-seemed to recognize it, I could not
-name it.</p>
-
-<p>Many things I could name as I have
-named them here, but this escaped me.
-It had in it some of that real fragrance,
-a joy without alloy, which you get in
-late July or August from the clethra,
-the white alder which lines the brook
-and the pond shore with its beautiful
-clusters of odoriferous white spikes.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-But by no stretch of the imagination
-could I bring the white alder to bloom
-in early June. Moreover, it had only a
-suggestion of that in its purity of fragrance.
-There was more to this. There
-was a spicy, teasing titillation that
-made me think of bubbles in a tall
-glass, and it is a wonder that that
-thought did not name it for me, but it
-didn&#8217;t.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was tipping the dew-wet
-bush tops with opal scintillations that
-soak you to the skin as you shoulder
-through them, but that did not matter;
-I was dressed for it, and so on I went,
-taking continual shower-baths cheerfully,
-but always with that teasing, alluring
-scent in my nostrils. Now and then I
-lost it; often it was confused and overridden
-by other stronger odors. Once
-I forgot it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>That was when I sprang over a
-stone wall and landed fairly in the middle
-of a covey of partridges made up of
-a mother bird and what seemed a small
-whirlwind of young ones no bigger
-than my thumb. My plunge startled
-the mother so that she thundered away
-through the bushes, a thing that a
-mother partridge, surprised with her
-young, will rarely do. At the same
-moment the young scurried into the
-air. It was like a gust among a dozen
-brown leaves, whirling them breast
-high for a moment and then letting
-them settle to earth again. You go to
-pick them up and they surely are brown
-leaves! It is as if some woodland
-Merlin had waved his wand. They
-were young partridges, they are brown
-leaves. It is as quick as that.</p>
-
-<p>Yet this was my lucky morning, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-one of these little birds failed to dematerialize,
-and I noted him wriggling
-down under a clump of woodland grass
-and picked him up. He made pretense
-of keeping still for a moment, then
-wriggled in fright in my hand, a
-pathetically silent, frightened, bright-eyed
-little chick, mostly down. How
-his few feathers helped him to make as
-much of a flight as he had is beyond
-my conception. He must have mental-scienced
-himself up into the air and down
-again.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i038.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The mother bird, dancing and mincing along</p>
-
-<p>Holding him gently, I pursed my lips
-and drew the air sharply in between lips
-and teeth. The result was a peculiar
-squeaking chirp which I have often
-used on similar occasions with many
-different birds and almost always with
-success. Then there came a sudden
-materialization. Out of the atmosphere,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-apparently, appeared the mother bird,
-dancing and mincing along toward me
-till she was very near, her head up, her
-eyes blazing with excitement, her wings
-half spread and her feathers fluttering.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p>It was a sort of pyrrhic dance by a
-creature as different from the usual
-partridge as may be conceived. It
-lasted but a moment; at a sudden, indescribable
-note from the mother bird
-the fledgling gave an answering jump
-and slipped from my relaxed hold, fluttered
-and dematerialized before my eyes
-just as the mother bird went into nothingness
-in the same way. Truly, there
-are bogies in the wood, for that morning
-I saw them at their work. It was
-the illusion and evasion of old Merlin;
-no less.</p>
-
-<p>Going on down the pasture, I picked
-up the musky scent of the swamp I was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-approaching, instead of the thing I
-sought. The scent of the swamp is
-cool with humid humus, musky with the
-breath of the skunk-cabbage, woodsy
-with that quaint exhalation which you
-get from the ferns, our oldest form of
-plant life, still retaining and lending to
-you as you pass the odor of the very
-forest primeval. These are the base, and
-they carry the lighter and daintier odors
-as ambergris, a vile and dreadful but
-very strong smell, carries the dainty
-scents of the perfumer, and just as they
-in turn give you no hint of the ambergris
-which is their base, so the odor of
-the swamp gives you little hint of these
-three but is a delight of its own.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the little corner which I must
-cross in the straight line I had taken
-was a small hillock of open pasture,
-fringed on the farther side with alder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-and button bush which stand ankle deep
-in the water of the pond. Here on the
-little knoll daisies sent out that faint,
-hay-like smell which is common to most
-of the composit&aelig;. The squaw weed in
-the meadowy edge between the swamp
-and the knoll had given me the same
-fragrance. But standing on the top of
-the knoll while the soft morning wind
-swept the daisy fragrance by me knee
-high, I caught, head high, the elusive,
-alluring odor that I was seeking. It led
-me down to the pond side and called me,
-dared me, to come on. Why not? I
-was dressed for it, and I was wet to the
-skin with the drench of the morning
-dew already.</p>
-
-<p>The cove was but a hundred yards
-across, and I stood on the bank wishing
-to note carefully the direction I must
-take. The lazy morning wind drifted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-across, just kissing the water here and
-there, leaving the surface for the most
-part smooth. I wet my finger and held
-it up, dropping it cool side down till it
-was level. It pointed exactly toward
-the opposite point at the other side of
-the cove and between it and the next
-one. There a low, sloping, broad flat
-rock hung with a canopy of green
-leaves was the dock at which I might
-land conveniently, and I splashed resolutely
-into the water, scaring almost to
-death with my plunge a big green frog
-that was sunning himself on a little
-foot-square cranberry bog island. He
-gave a shrill little yelp of terror and
-dived before I could.</p>
-
-<p>Singular thing that little half squeak,
-half screech, of alarm. I have heard a
-girl make an almost identical sound
-when coming suddenly on a particularly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-fuzzy and well-developed caterpillar.
-Rabbit, dog, and bird have it as well;
-indeed, it seems to be the one word
-which is common to all races and to all
-articulate creatures. Like the scent of
-brakes it began with the beginning of
-things and has survived all the changes
-of creation.</p>
-
-<p>The muskrat ferry is a pleasant one.
-Little dancing sprites of mist, the height
-of your head above water, tiptoe off
-the surface and slip away as you swim
-toward them. You may see these only
-of a morning when you take the muskrat
-ferry. They are invisible from the
-shore or from the height of a canoe
-seat.</p>
-
-<p>It is probable that just as some of
-the pasture people make sounds too
-shrill or too soft for our human ears to
-hear them, so there are other things<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
-about the pasture less visible even than
-the little mist folk that we might see
-were our sight fine enough or soft
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>Two-thirds of the way across a little
-puff of wind sparkled its way out from
-the shore to meet me. It brought with
-it, full and rich, the fragrance which
-had led me so long; and as I looked
-at the broad leaves overhanging my
-rock port, their under sides and the
-young shoots covered with a soft,
-cottony down, I laughed to think that
-I should not have known what it was
-I sought. For it was there in plain
-sight; indeed the rock was canopied
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>A long time I sat on that rock on the
-farther side of the cove, the June sun
-warming me, the fragrance of the fox-grape
-blooms over my head alluring,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span>
-soothing, wrapping my senses in a
-dreamy delight.</p>
-
-<p>He who would attempt to classify and
-define the perfume that drifts through
-the pasture from the bloom of the fox-grape
-may. I only know that it makes
-me dream of pipes of Pan playing in
-the morning of the world, while all the
-wonder creatures of the old Greek
-myths dance in rhythm and sing in soft
-undertones, and the riot of young life
-bubbles within them.</p>
-
-<p>The pasture, indeed, could ill afford to
-lose the pious incense from the sweet-fern&#8217;s
-censer, the fragrance of the altar
-candles of the bayberry, and the subtle
-essence of the sweet-gale. These are
-the holy incense of the church of out-of-doors,
-and it is well that we should always
-find them when we come to worship;
-yet he who would dare all to steal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-for one elusive moment the fragrance of
-the deep heart of delight, let him come
-to the pasture on just that rare, brief
-period of all the year when the fox-grape
-sends forth its perfume.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE FROG RENDEZVOUS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-<p class="ph1">THE FROG RENDEZVOUS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HE pasture meets the pond all along
-for a mile or so. It lays its lip to it
-and drinks only here and there. It
-drinks deepest of all in a cove. You
-will hardly know where pasture leaves
-off and cove begins, the two mingle so
-gently. The pasture creatures here slip
-down into the cove, and those of the
-pond make their way well up into
-the pasture. You yourself, approaching
-the cove from the pasture side on
-foot, will be splashing ankle deep in it
-before you know you are coming to it
-at all, so well do the pasture bushes,
-standing to their knees in the cool
-water, screen it from you.</p>
-
-<p>Coming from the pond side you might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-think you saw the margin in this same
-screen of bushes, but there are roods of
-cove beyond and behind them. The
-shrubs of the pasture love to come down
-and dabble their feet in the warm pond
-water and sun themselves in the sheltered,
-fragrant air.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon sun has more resilience
-here than elsewhere. It bounds
-with fervent flashes of elasticity from
-the glossy leaves of the bushes that
-have waded out farthest and made
-islands of themselves. The high-bush
-blueberries are the most daring of all,
-and stand in the largest clumps
-farthest out. These, late in May with
-an off-shore wind, shower the whole
-surface of the water with their fallen
-corollas. More than once have I seen
-the cove white with them on Memorial
-Day, as if the bushes, standing with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-bowed heads, strewed the waves with
-memorial flowers for the pasture people
-who have died at sea.</p>
-
-<p>Earlier in the year the elms have
-made the whole surface of the cove
-brown with their round, wing-margined
-seeds, and after the memorial
-flowers of the blueberry bushes are
-gone the maples will send out millions
-of two-sailed seed boats, reddening the
-whole surface with their argosies as
-they go out to sea, wing and wing.
-Now all these things have passed and
-the surface of the water is clean again
-to dimple with the under-water swirl of
-a minnow-hunting pickerel or lap lazily
-against your canoe with the dying undulations
-of the waves from outside.</p>
-
-<p>After the bold blueberry bushes, less
-daring but still eager pasture people
-have waded in and formed lesser<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-island clumps of their own. These were
-led by the sweet-gale, holding her dark-green
-silken skirt daintily up, so fragrant-souled
-that she fears no evil,
-trailed by the saucy wild rose, cheerful
-spir&aelig;a, gloomy cassandra, and chubby
-baby alders. If you watch these you
-will note that they shiver in the lazy
-breeze as if they feared the pass to
-which their temerity may have brought
-them. Yet there they stand, and the
-miniature tides swirl about their pink
-toes and die in the pools behind them, so
-closely grow the sedges and little marsh
-plants that fill them until the fishes from
-the cove nose about their stalks in vain
-attempt to enter.</p>
-
-<p>Just outside the bush fringe, where
-the maples are mirrored in undulations,
-whirl and skip, each according to his
-kind, the surface insects of the cove.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-Of these I hail with greatest joy, as any
-boy should, the &#8220;lucky bug.&#8221; You
-know the one I mean. He is a third of
-an inch long, almost as broad, oval, a
-sort of whaleback monitor without any
-turret. He is hard shelled and a Baptist,
-judged from the pertinacity with
-which he sticks to deep water, but a
-Baptist gone sadly wrong, for he
-waltzes continually with his fellows.
-Round and round they go in a mazy
-whirl that would make you dizzy if at
-the last gasp they did not reverse.</p>
-
-<p>All boys who fish know that these
-bugs carry stores of luck within their
-hard shells, and for one even to approach
-your line in his mad waltz is a
-sign of coming success, and should he
-actually touch the line and cling, it presages
-a big fish. But if you would propitiate
-the gods in most definite fashion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-before you cast line you should catch
-several lucky bugs, the more the better,
-bury them on the bank with their heads
-to the shore, and recite over them an
-incantation as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">&#8220;Bug, bug, bug,</div>
-<div class="verse">I&#8217;ve spit on the worms I dug;</div>
-<div class="verse">Bug, bug, give me my wish,</div>
-<div class="verse">A great big string of great big fish.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Properly managed this was never known
-to fail; if it does it is because you have
-buried one or more of your bugs bottom
-up.</p>
-
-<p>It is not so easy to catch a lucky bug,
-however. He is a very modern type
-of monitor, for his engine power is of
-the highest, steam is always at the top
-notch, and he can dart away in a
-straight line with all the concentrated
-fury of a torpedo boat. Moreover, he is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-convertible, and I have seen him when
-completely surrounded by enemies become
-a submarine and dive straight for
-the bottom and stay there. He may
-have an oxygen tank; anyway, he
-doesn&#8217;t come up until he gets ready,
-when he appears fresh and hearty and
-ready for another waltz.</p>
-
-<p>A fellow surface sailor of his, or
-rather skipper, is a different type of
-bug. This is the water-strider, a veritable
-Cassius of the cove, with the lean
-and hungry look of an overgrown, underfed
-mosquito. There is no merry
-waltz with his fellows about this
-piratical-looking chap. He spreads his
-four long legs like a Maltese cross, and
-the tips of them are all that touch the
-water. These dent it into minute dimples,
-but do not penetrate, and his bug-ship
-skips energetically about on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
-four dents, hopping at times like a
-veritable flea. Sometimes he jumps a
-half-inch high and skitters along the
-surface as a boy skips a stone; again he
-poises, lowers his body till it all but
-rests on the water, then raises it till he
-is high on four stilts, and all the time
-not even his toes are wet.</p>
-
-<p>Entering the cove in mid-afternoon
-you might think the swooning heat had
-left it no life awake other than the
-water insects and the dragon-flies that
-race them in airship fashion above.
-Yet you have but to ground your canoe
-on a sedgy shallow, sit motionless, and
-wait. Nor have you to wait long.
-There is a breathless pause as if all
-things waited to see what this leviathan
-of the outer deep meant to do next;
-then a voice at your very elbow says
-reassuringly, &#8220;Tu-g-g-g!&#8221; That is as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
-near as you can come to it with type.
-There are no characters that will express
-its guttural vehemence which
-strikes you like a blow on the chest, or
-its sympathetic resonance. Take your
-violin, drop the G string to a tension so
-low that it will hardly vibrate musically,
-then twang it. That suggests the tone.
-But you know it well enough without
-description.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately there comes an answering
-chorus of &#8220;tu-g-gs,&#8221; here, there, in
-a score of places all along the shore line
-and among the island clumps of bushes,
-prelude of frog talk galore for a
-moment or two, followed by brief
-silence. Then, taking advantage of the
-oratorical pause, an old-timer sets up a
-tremendously hoarse and vibrant bellow.
-&#8220;A-hr-r-h-h-u-m-mm!&#8221; he says,
-&#8220;A-hr-r-h-h-u-m-mm!&#8221; with the accent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-on the rum. You can hear him half a
-mile, and immediately there is a
-&#8220;chug-squeak-splash&#8221; from a little
-fellow, as if, unable to furnish the
-beverage at short notice, he became
-affrighted and without delay decided
-that a sequestered nook on bottom between
-two stones was for him. Then
-the cove goes to sleep again; you can
-almost hear the silence snore.</p>
-
-<p>Little by little, if you look about you
-shall see them, some right within reach
-of your paddle. I never know whether
-they slip under when the canoe approaches
-and bob up again noiselessly
-after all is still, or whether they are
-there all the time, only so well concealed
-by nature that the eye does not note
-them at first; but I do know that you
-never see them until you have waited a
-bit. Their brown backs are just under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
-water, their green-brown heads just
-enough above the surface so that the
-nostrils will get air; and there they
-wait, motionless, for hours and hours,
-for time and tide to serve luncheon.
-Even with only the tops of their heads
-visible they make you laugh, for their
-pop eyes are popped so high above the
-tops of their flat heads that they make
-you think of automobile bug lights set
-well up above the motor hood.</p>
-
-<p>I note a shipwrecked June beetle
-clinging half drowned to a spear of
-grass and I toss him over within six
-inches of a frog. There is a splash, a
-gulp, and the beetle with his frantically
-clawing, thorny-toed legs is passed
-on to kingdom come without a crunch.
-Once or twice after that this frog
-stirred as if he had an uneasy conscience,
-but he seemed to suffer no internal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
-pangs, indeed he winked the circular
-yellow lining of his eye at me
-these times as if he enjoyed it. It had
-all the effects of smacking the lips.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon dreams down from its
-pinnacle of hazy heat to the soft level
-of eventide. Under the pines of the
-west side of the cove the level sun slips
-in and seems to caress the green trunks,
-and the tops above sing a little sighing
-song of contentment. Strange you have
-not heard this before, for the wind has
-been there all the afternoon. But it is
-toward nightfall that the cove wakes
-up and you hear many lisping elfin
-sounds that you have never noticed
-during the mid-afternoon heat. You
-hear the sedges talking in the undulations
-now. You did not hear them before,
-yet the undulations have been gliding
-dreamily among the sedges all day.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-The pasture birds are waking up their
-preludes of evensong, and the sun across
-the cove to the west is glorifying all the
-quivering canopy of green leaves through
-which it shines with a luminous, diaphanous
-quality which makes magic all
-along that side of the cove.</p>
-
-<p>You are on the borderland between
-the clear definition of reality and the
-mystic haze of nightfall. To the west,
-looking away from the glow, all is
-gently but clearly defined; to the east,
-looking into the golden rose of the sunset
-through the shimmering illusion of
-leaves, lies the pathway to the land that
-the king&#8217;s son saw in the Arabian
-Night&#8217;s tale.</p>
-
-<p>The nightly entertainment, the evening
-minstrel show, is about to begin in
-the cove, an entertainment in which the
-frogs are the minstrels, an all star performance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-for every one of them is capable
-of being an end man or interlocutor
-or soloist as the case may require.</p>
-
-<p>Already the audience is beginning to
-gather. First comes a gray squirrel
-scratching down a maple trunk, his
-strong clawed hind feet digging into the
-bark and holding him wherever he wishes
-them to, as if he were an inverted lineman.
-Suddenly he sights the canoe and
-its occupant and&mdash;blows up. Nothing
-else will express his sudden outpouring
-of scolding and denunciation of this
-creature that has usurped a front seat.
-The sounds burst out of him like the
-escaping steam from a great mogul engine
-waiting on a siding for its freight,
-and he quivers from head to foot, like
-the engine, with the intensity of the
-ebullition. Suddenly there is a &#8220;quawk!&#8221;
-directly over his head, a single cry shot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-out from the catarrhal throat of a night
-heron that is just sailing down. The
-gray squirrel shoots three feet into the
-air, lands on another maple, flashes up
-a birch and goes crashing through the
-birch tops off into the woods, where
-you faintly hear him jawing still. The
-night heron whirls with a great flapping
-and puts to sea with more quawks
-of alarm. But these two were not especially
-wanted at the concert. The
-night heron particularly is an unlovely
-bird in appearance, voice, and manner.
-The skippers and the lucky bugs crowd
-in together, each among its kind, close
-to the reedy margin, to be as near the
-performers as possible, and behold, there
-come sailing in from sea tiny argosies
-of dainty people, the loveliest free swimmers
-of the pond. Golden heads nodding
-in gracious recognition, they come,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
-slender bodied and graceful, trailing long
-robes of filmy lace beneath them in the
-water.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i064.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Out from among the birches she sails gracefully, a veritable<br />
-queen of the fairies</p>
-
-<p>The botanists, who shall be hung some
-day for their literalness, have named
-these lovely denizens of the cove bladder-worts,
-or <i>Utricularia</i>, if you wish the
-Latin form, because they float on their
-air-inflated leaves and trail their roots
-beneath them, free in the water, scorning
-the contaminating touch of earth.
-The off-shore wind of noon had sailed
-these out well beyond the mouth of the
-cove, now the evening breeze is bringing
-them in again for the concert.</p>
-
-<p>They should have been named after
-some dainty lady of the old Greek mythology,
-some fair sailor lass who
-crossed the wake of Ulysses, perchance,
-and lingers on placid seas waiting his
-return to this day, for you will see their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-golden heads nodding along on the little
-waves of the cove all summer.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p>These are the patricians of the concert.
-There is a great tuning of instruments
-going on already and a trying
-out of voices, yet for some reason
-there is delay. Then comes the queen
-herself. The golden shimmer on the
-eastern shore has faded and dusk dances
-up from the undergrowth on the west.
-It is time, and out from among the
-birches she sails gracefully, a veritable
-queen of the fairies, clad in ostrich
-plumes and softest of white velvet, with
-the most beautiful trailing and undulating
-opera cloak of softest, delicate green,
-trimmed with brown and white. You
-may call her a luna moth if you will.
-The thing which somewhat resembles
-her, stuck on a pin in your collection,
-may be that, but this graceful, soaring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
-creature, pulsing and quivering with life,
-floating through perfumed dusk, is the
-queen of the fairies&mdash;no less.</p>
-
-<p>Her arrival is a signal for the olio
-to begin. Then, indeed, you learn the
-astonishing number and variety of the
-frog performers within the cove. The
-basso profundos sing &#8220;Ah-r-h-u-m-m&#8221;
-with amazing gusto. Surely that waiter
-frog has got over his fright and brought
-it in quantity. &#8220;T-u-g-gs&#8221; resound all
-about like the rattle of a drum corps.
-There are altos whose voices sound like
-rasping a stick cheerfully on a picket
-fence, others whose strain hath a dying
-fall of internal agony outwardly expressed.
-A lone belated hyla pipes his
-plaintive soprano, but the tenors are the
-strongest of all. The tree toad flutes a
-fluttering, liquid tremolo, and the toad,
-the common toad, sits on the grassy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
-margin and swells his throat and sings
-&#8220;Wha-a-a-a-&#8221; in long-drawn, dreamy
-cadence.</p>
-
-<p>You may imitate this sound after a
-fashion if you wish. Purse your lips and
-say the French &#8220;Eu&#8221; in a long drawl
-once or twice, then the next time you
-do it whistle at the same time. You
-will have a very tolerable imitation of
-this dreamy note. It invites to slumber
-and it is time to paddle home, for the
-dusk has deepened to darkness and there
-is little more for you to see in the cove.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">A BUTTERFLY CHASE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
-<p class="ph1">A BUTTERFLY CHASE</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">I</span>T was a great purple butterfly which
-led me over the brow of the hill, one of
-the &#8220;white admirals,&#8221; curiously enough
-so called, though this one had but four
-minute spots of white on him near the
-tips of his wings. Some members of
-his genus have a right to the name for
-they have broad bands of white across
-all four wings, but this one, the <i>Basilarchia
-astyanax</i>, is a black sheep.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless he is a beautiful creature,
-well worth following under any
-circumstances to note the ease and sureness
-of his floating flight and admire
-the beauty of his velvety rufous-black,
-shoaling into lustrous blue in the rounded
-crenulations of the after wings. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
-one I thought worth following for another
-reason, however, for he seemed to
-have something on his mind. Not that
-his flight was direct. A bird with something
-to do goes to his work in a
-straight line; but a butterfly must dance
-along, even if it were to a funeral in
-the family. And yet with all this my
-blue and rufous-black white admiral carried
-in his dancing progress something
-which told me he was troubled and led
-me to follow him over the brow of the
-hill.</p>
-
-<p>The hill itself is worth noting. Here
-the glaciers which some thousands of
-years ago planed off the rougher surface
-of eastern New England dropped
-their chips in a vast terminal moraine
-of sand and gravel, whose northern declivity
-is so steep that you may throw
-a stone from its rim to the top of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
-pine growing on the level, eighty or
-ninety feet below. I know many terminal
-moraines in New England; but I
-know no other at once so high and so
-abrupt in its declivity. A few rods back
-from its summit the trolley car clangs
-incessantly, and the speed-mad automobilist
-tears hooting through.</p>
-
-<p>Along the crest, in spite of this, sleep
-peacefully the forefathers of the hamlet.
-I like to feel that they neither note nor
-heed the uproar of the highway; that they
-now and then cock a pleased ear to the
-rumble of a passing hay-cart or the jog
-of a farmer&#8217;s horse, but that the bedlam
-of modern hurry whangs by them
-unperceived. Rather they turn their
-faces to the sough of the summer winds
-in the century-old pines which shade the
-steep and sleep on, happy in the benediction
-that descends from the spreading<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-branches. Wonderful pines, these, so
-shading the whole declivity that not
-more than a dapple of sunlight has
-touched the ground beneath them for a
-century.</p>
-
-<p>Here the hepatica finds the cool, dry
-seclusion that it loves and lifts shy blue
-eyes to you while yet the winter ice
-nestles beside it among the pine roots.
-Here while the July sun distills pitchy
-aroma from the great trees the partridge
-berry carpets favored spots with the rich
-green of its little round leaves,&mdash;leaves
-no bigger than the pink nail of your
-sweetheart&#8217;s little finger, a green figured
-with the scarlet of last year&#8217;s berries and
-the white of its wee starry twin flowers.
-Here, too, in July the pyrola lifts its
-spike of bells like a woodland lily-of-the-valley
-and the pipsissewa shows its waxy
-flowers to the questing bee.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>A butterfly, especially a large butterfly,
-rarely bothers with these low-growing
-herbs, though each has its own
-delicious fragrance&mdash;and a butterfly&#8217;s
-scent is keen. So my black white admiral
-alternately danced and soared on
-down through the richly perfumed areas
-of the wood while I plunged eagerly
-after, glissading the needle-carpeted slope,
-making station from trunk to trunk lest
-a too headlong flight plunge me to oblivion
-in what I knew was at the foot
-of the hill.</p>
-
-<p>Without, the perfervid July sun beat
-upon the landscape till the dust of its
-concussion rose in a blue haze that
-loomed the nearby hills into misty
-mountain tops and glamoured the whole
-world with tropical illusion. To our
-hard-cornered, clear-cut New England it
-is the midsummer which brings the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-atmosphere of romance. The swoon
-of Arabian Nights is upon the landscape,
-and it is through such heat and
-through such misty evasion that the
-Caliph of Bagdad was accustomed to
-set forth incognito to meet strange
-adventures.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the hill, almost at the
-borderland which separates this under-pine
-world from another far different,
-the resinous air is shut in like the genie
-in the bottle. You feel the oppression
-of its restraint and wonder, if like the
-fisherman you might uncork it, if it
-would loom aloft in a dense cloud that
-would speak to you in a mighty voice.
-Here my butterfly paused for the first
-time and lighted upon the trunk of a
-pine, head high.</p>
-
-<p>Quietly I drew near. His wings were
-rising and falling in rhythmic unconscious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
-motion that was tremulous with
-what seemed eagerness. One of them,
-I noted, had a little triangular bit snipped
-out of it with a clean cut. Some insect-eating
-bird had snapped at him not long
-before, and he had come within a half-inch
-of death. Yet this did not trouble
-him; very likely he never knew it. It
-was something else which absorbed him
-so that he took no notice of my close
-approach. And now I could see that his
-proboscis was uncoiled and apparently
-he was eating rapidly. Now the proboscis
-of any butterfly is simply a
-double-barrelled tube through which he
-sucks honey or other moist nutriment.
-That a <i>Basilarchia astyanax</i>, or any
-other butterfly for that matter, should
-be able to draw nourishment from the
-dry, rough bark of a pine-tree was sufficient
-cause for astonishment, and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-drew eagerly nearer to see what he
-was getting.</p>
-
-<p>It was a humid day and I was thirsty
-myself. What woodland brew could be
-on tap here? In Ireland it used to be
-true that the Leprechauns, the little men
-of the hedge, could make good beer of
-heath, and if you could only catch and
-hold one he would tell you how. Here
-might be a similar chance. My nose was
-within six inches of the white admiral&#8217;s
-now and my eyes were bulging out with
-surprise as much as his do naturally,
-for behold he had what butterfly never
-had before,&mdash;a little red tongue on the
-tip of his proboscis, and with it he was
-nervously licking the bark in its roughest
-places as hard as he could.</p>
-
-<p>I might have seen more had not my
-foot slipped on the glossy pine needles,
-and while I clutched the trunk of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-pine to save myself the butterfly danced
-away, thinking, I dare say, that I was
-an abnormally developed wood peewee
-and had just missed getting him for
-luncheon. Evidently the south wind
-had blown up from the gulf more than
-an Arabian Night&#8217;s atmosphere; it had
-sent along portions of the fauna as
-well. A butterfly with a tongue on the
-end of his proboscis belongs in the land
-where rocs pick up elephants in their
-talons and soar away with them!</p>
-
-<p>Eagerly I sought to follow my <i>Basilarchia
-astyanax</i> and learn more, but it
-was not so easy. To follow his flight
-without care as to the setting of my
-feet might well be to reach a country
-undiscovered indeed, for from the very
-bottom of the northern declivity of the
-terminal moraine well the springs of
-the fountain head, and out across these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-he lightly floated, toward the sphagnum-bottom
-pasture swamp beyond.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose it is well settled, geologically,
-that a river of pure water flows
-from some distant northern point, Labrador
-perhaps, under the eastern portion
-of Massachusetts. Driven wells
-find this water almost everywhere. In
-places it rises to the surface in clear
-ponds which have no apparent inlet,
-and from which little water flows, but
-which are clear and sparkling at a
-good level the year round. Houghton&#8217;s
-Pond, in the Blue Hill Reservation, is
-one of these nearest Boston. Walden
-Pond is another, and there are plenty
-more.</p>
-
-<p>In other places still the water boils
-out of springs through quicksands of
-unknown depths, flowing in clear
-streams through surrounding swamps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-where trees have made firm ground alternating
-with bits of quaking bog and
-open pools, where a misstep will drop
-you over your head in a clinging mud
-that never gives up what it once gets.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the fountain head, and you
-would know you were coming to it of a
-hot day even were your eyes shut, for
-the ice-cold water makes its own atmosphere.
-We read of bodies of ice
-that have lasted since the glacial age
-buried under these terminal moraines
-whence well such cooling springs; I do
-not know about the ice, but I can testify
-to the cold, sparkling water and the
-grateful atmosphere which it disseminates
-on these our Arabian days. Yet
-you must mark well your going. Just
-under the slope the water boils up
-through fine sand that dances in the up
-current. A few feet farther down it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-wells more silently, and the decayed
-vegetation of centuries has made a mud
-bank over the quicksand. You may
-sink to the knee here and find bottom.
-A few steps farther on you may drive a
-twenty-foot pole down through mud
-and sand and find nothing to obstruct it.</p>
-
-<p>Yet Nature always provides the
-remedy. Mosses and swamp grass
-have grown on the surface of this
-liquid mud and alders and swamp
-maple have rooted in these and encouraged
-wild rose and elder and many
-another shrub, till their intertwined
-roots have formed a surface which is
-in part safe to the foot. And here is a
-world of itself in this hidden pasture
-corner, for here linger the trout and
-the water-cress, and many another shy
-woodland thing, driven to bay by the encroachments
-of surrounding civilization.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>In early July you will find the water-cress
-in bloom in the open pools, surrounded
-by quaking bog and alder
-shade. Toward this my butterfly had
-gone, and I followed, balancing warily
-from clump to clump in the grateful
-coolness, testing each foothold lest it
-drop me into the clinging depths below
-whence nothing but a derrick might
-lift me. The arethusa, daintiest of
-orchids, nodded its pink head at me
-from the quaking sphagnum, daintily
-bowing me on, but I paused a moment.</p>
-
-<p>In the water right between my feet
-was a spotted turtle that had just captured
-an appetizing, but by no means
-dainty morsel. This was a terrapin-like
-bug that was more than a mouthful.
-His body, indeed, was already out
-of sight, but claw-like legs protruded
-from both sides of that isosceles triangle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-which a turtle&#8217;s mouth makes
-when it is closed, and waved a frantic
-farewell to the passing under-water
-world. The turtle was a long time in
-masticating his terrapin, but it was a
-happy time. His whole body blinked
-contentedly, and he waved his forelegs
-with a caressing out-push, a motion exactly
-like that of a child at the breast.
-Then he wagged his head solemnly
-from side to side as a wise turtle might
-who feels that such good lunches are
-put up by fate only for the knowing
-ones of this watery world, and pushed
-himself half way under the roots of a
-tussock for a nap. Soon the nether
-half circle of his shell was motionless,
-with his hind legs drawn up within.
-Only his little spike tail protruded,
-waving to a wee passing trout the news
-that the millennium was at hand, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-the turtle and the bug-terrapin had
-lain down together in peace and prosperity,
-with the bug-terrapin inside.</p>
-
-<p>I looked up for the butterfly. He
-was nowhere to be seen. Yet my trip
-was to be worth while, for right in
-front of me was an open pool surrounded
-by a quaking bog, a pool
-twenty feet across packed almost solid
-with the white panicled heads of water-cress
-blooms in which swarmed a
-myriad of bees. Their drone was like
-that at the front door of a hive on a
-hot July day, yet it was not a monotone
-as that is. It was rather like a
-grand chorus singing many parts, for
-these were all wildwood bees of a
-dozen varieties. There was not a hive
-tender among them.</p>
-
-<p>Lifting my admiring gaze from the
-pool with its white panicles and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-swarming bees I saw further beauty
-beyond. On firmer ground nestling
-lovingly against an old chestnut post
-was a great, glorious spike of habenaria,
-the purple-fringed orchis. It is
-not uncommon, the habenaria, in peaty
-meadows, but no man sees it for the
-first time in the season without a great
-glow of delight, and I hastened over to
-give it nearer greeting. Just as I
-reached it the butterfly came dancing up,
-but not to sip the sweets of the wonderful
-great orchid. Instead he lighted,
-right under my nose, on the roughest
-part of the old fence post and began to
-lick this as he had the pine trunk.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i086.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">There was the swish of wings, the snip-snap of a bird&#8217;s beak,<br />
-and it was all over</p>
-
-<p>I watched him again, hearing subconsciously
-the voice of a great crested
-flycatcher over on a nearby tree, crying
-&#8220;Grief,&#8221; &#8220;Grief.&#8221; A moment and
-the little red tongue which I had noted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
-before seemed to catch on the roughest
-part of the old fence post, and with a
-sudden scrape the Basilarchia scraped
-it off. I looked in amaze, for now I
-saw what it was. From the honey
-heart of some flower a little red worm
-had become attached to the tip of the
-butterfly&#8217;s proboscis, and all this licking
-of rough surfaces had been merely to
-get rid of him.</p>
-
-<p>Up into the bright sunshine danced
-my black white admiral. There was the
-swish of wings, the snip-snip of a bird&#8217;s
-beak, and it was all over. The cry of
-the great crested flycatcher had been a
-prophecy indeed, and the white admiral
-had danced blithely out of existence.</p>
-
-<p>But the equatorial haze had more
-tropical enchantment in store, for the
-midday sun was suddenly wiped out by
-an ominous figure. Some one had uncorked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-that bottle which held the heat
-genie confined, and he was looming
-from a black nimbus below into white
-piles of cumulus at the zenith. His
-eyes flashed red lightnings and he spoke
-in thunder tones. Somewhere over yonder
-I heard the great crested flycatcher
-crying &#8220;Grief,&#8221; &#8220;Grief,&#8221; again. It
-might be my turn next, and I patted
-the great orchid good-by and tiptoed
-through the sphagnum and climbed the
-hill again. It had been a brief but
-pleasant trip. A butterfly that found a
-tongue and a turtle that ate terrapin with
-a happy smile may belong with the
-genie in the Arabian Nights, or with
-Alice in Wonderland, or both. I know
-that I found them at the fountain head,
-under the grove of immemorial pines,
-below the brow of the terminal moraine
-where sleep the fathers of the hamlet.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">DOWN STREAM</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-<p class="ph1">DOWN STREAM</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">I</span>F you have ever known fishing, real
-fishing, not the guide-book kind, where
-you &#8220;whip&#8221; streams for fancy fish that
-bite mainly in fancy&mdash;there will come a
-day in late July when it will be necessary
-for you to go down stream. The
-excessive heat and humidity which has
-been killing you off by inches and
-other people by wholesale for weeks
-will suddenly vanish before a cool, dry
-northwester, a gladsome reminder to
-the New Englander that there is such
-a thing as winter after all; thank
-Heaven!</p>
-
-<p>You know that the drought diminished
-waters still fizz out from under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
-the dam and purl into the pool below
-the roadside where the sunfish congregate
-under the water weeds. Beyond
-this they prattle down the meadow under
-banks where the hard-hack stands pink
-and prim, where the meadow-sweet loves
-the stream so much that it bends
-toward it and half caresses, and where
-the meadow grasses in complete abandonment
-whisper of it in every wind
-and bend down and surreptitiously kiss
-it as it dimples by. Farther down
-where the woodland maples troop up
-to meet it and the willows sit and
-bathe pink toes in the current is the
-big rock, under which the current has
-dug a sandy cave in which linger big
-yellow perch, ready to rush out and
-snatch the worm that comes floating
-down stream. Here you will hesitate
-but finally pass on, for there is a lure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-which you cannot withstand in the deep
-pool farther down.</p>
-
-<p>Because you are wise with the remembered
-wisdom of boyhood, you have
-left at home the expensive rod and reel.
-Just back from the swamp edge is a
-birch jungle where young trees stand
-as thick as canes in a Cuban brake.
-Here you find your pole; as large as
-your thumb at the butt, tapering,
-straight, clean and strong, fifteen feet to
-the tip. Cut it and trim the limbs from
-it and bend to it your ten feet of stout
-line at the end of which is a hook
-whose curve is as big as that of your
-little finger nail. A cork that would fit
-a quart bottle will fit your line if you
-gash it with your pocket-knife and slip
-the line in the gash. It will hold
-wherever you put it, yet you may slide
-it up and down at will. For the pool<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-you should put it three feet from your
-hook, for you will wish to &#8220;sink&#8221; that
-deep. Wind a wee bit of lead about
-your line an inch above the hook, then
-pull out your bait box and select a fat
-angle-worm. Break him in two in the
-middle and string him on the hook so
-that the point is just inside the tip of
-his nose. Now you are ready for what
-adventure may lurk under the bubbly
-foam of the surface.</p>
-
-<p>A willow and a maple lean together in
-loving embrace over the entrance to the
-deep pool. Above, their arms stretch
-toward one another and intertwine; below,
-their roots meet under water and
-sway down stream, forming a slippery
-steep down which the amber yellow
-water, singing a happy little song to itself,
-coasts into the amber black depths
-of the pool. Black alders stand cooling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-their feet all about the edge.
-Crowding them into the water are the
-great oaks and maples whose limbs
-yearn above the pool till they shut out
-the sun. Along one side the current
-has cut deep to the rough rocks and
-the water flows black and swift. On
-the other the back-wash circles leisurely
-and the bottom shallows to a bank of
-sand where the sunfish build their nests
-and the fresh-water clams burrow and
-put up suppliant mouths to the food-bearing
-current. Inshore it lifts to a
-sand bar, where you may stand and
-swing your pole without interference
-from the surrounding trees.</p>
-
-<p>All day long the brook sings itself to
-sleep as it slips down the slide into the
-slumberous depths of the pool. All day
-long the vivid green dragon-flies flutter
-by with vivid black wings to bring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-luck to your fishing, and the red-eyed
-vireo pipes his sleepy note in the trees
-above. And all day long you shall catch
-fish if you will but bait your hook and
-drop it in. First you will thin out the
-sunfish, for they are the most alert and
-gamy of all. Talk about trout! You
-should try landing a half-pound sunfish
-on a gossamer tackle and a very slender
-pole. The sunfish is the <i>Lepomis gibbosus</i>
-of the ichthyologists and is a close
-relative of the rock bass, and just as
-game. He has been irreverently dubbed
-&#8220;pumpkin seed&#8221; in some places, from
-his shape, which is that of a pumpkin
-seed set up on edge. Here in eastern
-Massachusetts he is just plain &#8220;kiver,&#8221;
-which is the old-time uneducated New
-Englander&#8217;s pronunciation of the word
-&#8220;cover,&#8221; given him, no doubt, because
-he is round and flat. He is as freckled
-as a street urchin and as lively. He
-has business with your bait the moment
-it drops near him, and the bobbing cork
-will show that it is he by the jaunty
-vigor of its bobs.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i096.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The way of the &#8220;kiver&#8221; is this. There is a single, snappy, business-like<br />
-bob, then another, then three in quick succession</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span>In fact, if you have learned the ways
-of the down-stream country you will
-know every fish that takes your bait
-long before you have brought him to
-the surface from the amber depths, just
-by the way in which he bobs that floating
-cork. The way of the &#8220;kiver&#8221; is
-this. There is a single, snappy, business-like
-bob, then another, then three
-in quick succession in which he drags
-the cork half under. If you strike just
-at the right time during the succession
-of three, when the line below is taut
-with the strain of the float against the
-pull of the fish, you shall have him.
-Otherwise your cork will lift from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-water with a humorous snort and you
-will hear little trills of derisive laughter
-in the song of the stream cascading
-down the willow root chute. It will be
-safer not to try him on the three bobs,
-but wait till the cork begins to bore
-into the water and glide off across
-stream, showing that the sunfish has
-made up his mind that it is a worm, a
-good one, and one that he really wants.</p>
-
-<p>The mother sunfish just at this time
-of year has her nest in the sand at the
-upper end of the bar, in shallow water.
-It is a circular depression which she
-has scooped out and from which she
-has carefully removed all pebbles and
-sticks. Here she has laid her eggs, and
-here, day and night, she stands guard
-over them. If any other fish comes
-along, even of her own kind, she will
-chase it away with a brustling courage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>
-which is like that of a mother hen defending
-her chicks. So, after you have
-caught the freelance sunfish of the
-pool, those which have no family
-cares, do not drop your bait near her
-nest, for if you do she will dart out and
-take it, and it is a pity to have the
-brook lose her. She has made her nest
-in the one shallow spot where the
-bright sunlight plays, and you may
-see every dapple of her lovely sides as
-the light glances on them. Her every
-fin quivers as she floats there, slowly
-turning from side to side, her bright
-eyes roving in search of enemies to her
-offspring. She is a whole torpedo boat
-of mother love and pent-up energy, and
-so let us leave her, for she makes the
-whole pool seem homelike and hospitable.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow perch will come next to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
-your hook, his tawny yellow sides
-marked by bands of dark green, his
-back a darker green yet, and his fins a
-rich red. He is the aristocrat of the
-pool, his family being one of the very
-oldest in the fish domesday book. He
-lies in deeper water than the sunfish,
-and his bite varies from a gentle nibble
-to a good strong succession of pulls
-which finally end in the cork going
-down out of sight altogether. Yet
-when he is at the bait you shall not
-mistake any motion of that bob for the
-ones made by the sunfish. The perch
-has a daintier, more gentlemanly touch.
-It is sure and strong, but it lacks the
-roistering vitality of the sunfish. It is
-an aristocratic bite, and you will recognize
-it as such without clearly knowing
-why,&mdash;which is proof of his aristocracy.
-You will recognize it, too, from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-the elegance of his figure and the
-chaste beauty of his attire. He gleams
-in the sunlight. His yellow and green
-markings are as vivid as those of the
-sunfish, yet arranged in exquisite taste,
-and he is dapper where the other is
-bourgeois.</p>
-
-<p>Sink a little deeper now, for it is
-time you caught horn-pouts. The horn-pout
-is also &#8220;bull-head,&#8221; and, irreverently
-I fear, &#8220;minister,&#8221; because of the
-severity of his black attire, which is relieved
-only by a white vest. But horn-pout
-is the best name, for his horns
-stick out fierce and straight from either
-side of his gills like the waxed mustachios
-of a stage Frenchman. They
-are sharp as needles and set as firm as
-daggers in their sockets. When you
-outrage the dignity of a horn-pout by
-pulling him out of the water he waggles<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-these fins of dagger-bone and
-makes a peculiar grumbling sound with
-them. It is as if he said, &#8220;What!
-what! What&#8217;s all this? Who dares
-disturb my comfort?&#8221; Then when you
-reach to take him off the hook he flips
-that nimble black tail of his and jabs his
-dagger into your hand. It makes an ugly
-wound, and the boys claim that it conceals
-venom; a sort of poisoned dagger.
-The horn-pout bobs your floating
-cork usually twice or three times, a
-very different bob from either that of
-the sunfish or the yellow perch. It is a
-steady, solid down pull each time, taking
-the cork half under water. Then he
-takes hold in earnest, and the float goes
-steadily down and out, as if this were a
-matter of no child&#8217;s play, but meaning
-something that is solid and substantial
-on the other end of the line. Oftentimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-this is true indeed, for the black-coated
-one may weigh a pound or two
-and double your birch rod into a good
-half-circle before he lets go his grip on
-the water.</p>
-
-<p>When you get down to the horn-pouts
-you have fishing indeed, but all
-the time the climax of your day&#8217;s career
-is lurking down in the cavernous depths
-where the stream has gullied far beneath
-the ledge, for there, as thick as
-your wrist and three feet long, weighing
-a pound to the foot of solid white flesh
-and muscle, is an eel.</p>
-
-<p>The eel is the strange misanthrope of
-the brooks and fresh-water ponds. You
-may peer into the sunlit shallows and
-see the other fishes at their work or
-play. They are companionable. If
-you will live on the pond edge you may
-train the minnows, the sunfish, the yellow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-perch even, to come up and eat out
-of your hand. I have watched a big
-horn-pout lumbering about in the shady
-depths for an hour and seen him carefully
-inspect a hookless worm which I
-had dropped to him, before he ate it,
-noting with glee the gravity and self-importance
-with which he finally decided
-that it was all right and that he would
-confer a favor upon it by swallowing it
-whole. Yet never once have I seen or
-laid hands on an eel in fresh water.
-There he goes his own mysterious way
-among the rock crevices and along the
-mud of the ultimate depths. The other
-fishes of the brook travel in schools; he
-goes alone. They were spawned up
-stream; he was born on the sands of
-the fishing banks, a hundred miles off
-shore. He came up stream as a young
-eel squirming through dams that shut<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
-out other fishes. When the time comes
-for him to go back he will go back the
-same way, waxed fat indeed, but still
-unseen, devious, self-possessed, and uncannily
-shrewd.</p>
-
-<p>That he may live to go back he inspects
-carefully the worms which may
-drop into the cool shadows where he
-lurks. When he is about to take your
-bait you need to be keen to know what
-is going on, for he suspects you, and
-your least untoward motion of rod or
-line will cause him to slip back like a
-shadow into his cavern, and there will
-be no bite from him on that hook after
-that. You will say that it cannot possibly
-be a bite; the bob simply stops and
-the hook has no doubt caught on a snag
-on bottom. If you are not wise enough
-to know better you will pull up here lest
-you lose your hook, and in so doing you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
-will lose your eel, for he is simply testing
-you. He has hold of the very bottom
-of that hook, below point and barb, and
-if you pull you pull it out of his mouth
-without hooking him. Then in cynical
-glee he&#8217;ll wag himself deeper into his
-cavern beneath the stones, and that is
-the last of him. You may fish the pool
-for a week before he will forget his
-caution and try another angle-worm. If,
-however, nothing rouses his suspicions
-the bob will gradually sink lower till it
-is more than half submerged, hang there
-for a little, give another sag downward,
-and so by degrees be drawn cautiously
-under. Your eel is cannily carrying the
-hook down into his cavern, where he
-may finish his meal at leisure. Now is
-the crucial moment. He must not be allowed
-to get in among the stones, for
-even if your strike hooks him he will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-twist himself desperately around them
-and then twist the hook out. A steady
-quick pull and you feel him on. Then
-indeed you &#8220;give him the butt,&#8221; as the
-fly fishermen say gloryingly. Your lithe
-birch rod bends in your hands till the tip
-is near your wrist as you lean desperately
-back with all your strength. The
-hold of a three-foot eel on the water is
-tremendous. Until he tires a bit it is
-almost as good as yours on the birch
-pole, but steadily, inch by inch, you draw
-him away out into the pool, where the
-fight is a fair one. Now his head is
-above water and his great lithe body
-whirls like a propeller beneath. Again
-look out; for when he leaves the water
-it will be as if he shot out, and you
-are liable to go with him, backward into
-the bushes, where he will tie your line
-into ten thousand knots, break out the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
-hook, and run for the brook as a snake
-might.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment he leaves the surface
-you slow up. Up into the air he shoots
-and drops till his tail welts the ground
-at your feet. Here let him wriggle at
-the end of the taut line while you break
-a stout alder switch with one hand, and
-as you drop him to earth belabor him
-with it. This will stun him quicker than
-anything else, and you may then deal
-with him as you will, only be quick
-about it, for he is very tenacious of
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Then, if you are a true fisherman, you
-will wind up what line is left you and
-go your way, for the pool has no more
-foemen worthy of your steel. There will
-be but one eel to a pool, and to go on
-catching sunfish would be insipid indeed.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">BROOK MAGIC</h2>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-<p class="ph1">BROOK MAGIC</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">B</span>ROOK magic does not begin until
-you have passed the deep fishing-pool
-and traversed the reedy meadow where
-the flagroot loves to go swimming and
-the muskrats come to spice their midnight
-lunches with its pungent root and
-pile the broad flags for winter nests.
-You may, if you are alert, feel a touch
-of its witchery as you wind among the
-rocks and black alders of the level
-swamp beyond, for here the ostrich-feather
-fern lifts its regal plumes as
-high as your head, and if by any chance
-you duck under these you have been
-near the portals of a world where sorcery
-is rife, for fern seed has a mysterious
-power of its own, and the ferns of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
-the alder swamp are decorations on the
-road to the realm of the witch-hazel,
-where all sorts of strange things may
-come to pass.</p>
-
-<p>The ferns and the witch-hazel are
-themselves mysterious and promoters of
-mystery, and it is hard to tell which
-leads in waywardness and subornation
-of sorcery. The ferns are the lingering
-representatives of an elder world,&mdash;a
-world that was old before the first pine
-dropped its cones or the leaves of the
-first deciduous tree fell on the first
-greensward. Their ways are not the
-ways of modern plant life.</p>
-
-<p>Take the cinnamon fern, for instance,
-one of the commonest of our woods. It
-grows up each spring like a tender and
-succulent herb, to wither and die down
-in the fall as the grass does. But take
-a spade into the woods with you and try<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-to transplant a good-sized cinnamon fern.
-You will fail, unless you have brought
-an axe along too, for the seemingly
-herbaceous plant has an underground
-trunk, sometimes two or three feet in
-diameter, almost as solid and firm in
-texture as that of a tree.</p>
-
-<p>The fern shows no blossom to the
-world of butterfly or moth, no fruit for
-the delectation of fox or field mouse.
-The curious little dots growing along the
-margins of the leaves, which we call
-&#8220;fern seed&#8221; by courtesy, grow no fern
-when planted. They simply grow a little
-primitive leaf form which curiously imitates
-a blossom in its functions and
-produces a new fern.</p>
-
-<p>But the witch-hazel is stranger yet in
-its ways. In the spring, when it should
-by all tokens of the plant world be putting
-out blossoms, it is busy growing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-nuts which are the product of last
-year&#8217;s blossoms. Then in the late autumn,
-even November, you will find it
-in bloom, twisting yellow petal fingers
-in mourning at the fall of its own
-leaves.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i114.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">That such things are not seen oftener is simply because people<br />
-are dull and go to bed instead of sitting out under the<br />
-witch-hazel at midnight of a full moon</p>
-
-<p>Pluck one of the nuts of a midsummer
-evening and look it intently in the
-face. Note the little shrewd pig eyes of
-the witch far ingrown in it, the funny
-shrewish tip-tilted nose, the puffy cheeks
-and eyelids. See that slender horn in
-the forehead, the sure mark of the
-witch. No wonder that it has the name
-witch-hazel with such ways and such
-faces growing all over it at a time
-when most other trees and shrubs have
-but finished blossoming. But if you
-want further proof that this shrub harbors
-witches you need but to examine
-its oval, wavy-toothed leaves just at this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
-time of the year and see the little conical
-red witch-caps hung on them. There
-need be but little doubt that, sitting
-under it at midnight of a full moon,
-you may see the witch faces detach
-themselves from the limbs, put on these
-red caps and sail off across the great
-yellow disk. That such things are not
-seen oftener is simply because people are
-dull and go to bed instead of sitting
-out under the witch-hazel at midnight
-of a full moon.</p>
-
-<p>To be sure there are scientific men,
-gray-bearded entomologists, who will tell
-us that these little red caps are galls,
-the rearing-place of plant aphids, caused
-by the laying of the mother insect&#8217;s egg
-within the tissue of the leaf, but one
-might as well believe that the witches
-hang their hats on the witch-hazel over
-night as to believe that the laying of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-minute egg in the tissue of a leaf could
-cause the plant to grow a witch hat.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt these same wise men would
-explain to you that it is not possible to
-become invisible by sprinkling fern seed
-on your head during the dark of the
-moon and saying the right words, but
-did one of them ever try it?</p>
-
-<p>It is appropriate that the witch-hazel
-should shade the portals through which
-the brook enters the glen at the foot of
-the pasture, for the path here enters
-you into a world of witchery where the
-glamour of the place will hold you long
-of a summer afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the glen an ancient
-mill-dam once blocked the free passage
-of the water and a mill-wheel vexed its
-current. Now only the rude embankment
-remains with half-century old hickories
-and maples growing on it, arching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
-in and shading the glen with their imbricated
-branches. No rust of mill-wheel,
-no trace of building remains, and
-the very tradition of the mill and its
-owners is gone. No one to-day knows
-whether it ground corn or sawed boards
-for the pioneer who built it, who laid the
-sill of its dam so firm and level that the
-wear of two centuries of swift water
-has not entirely obliterated it. At the
-very bottom of the glen it forms a shallow
-pool where brook magic and witch-hazel
-glamour shall show you many
-midsummer fantasies if you will but
-look for them.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the glen that I found the
-first real relief from the heat of midday.
-The grasses of the sun-parched pasture
-had crisped under foot and broken off,
-so dry were they, all the way down to
-the sweet-flag meadow. Here the brook<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-water keeps all growing things lush and
-green, but the glare of the sun is only
-the more intense. It follows you into
-the alder swamp, and you may sit under
-the arching fronds of the ostrich-plume
-ferns in vain.</p>
-
-<p>But after you have scrambled through
-them and ducked under the mock benediction
-of the witch-hazel limbs that
-stretch above your head while the witch-hazel
-faces grin a cynical &#8220;Bless you,
-my child,&#8221; you feel that you are willing
-to take your chances with swamp witchery
-and brook magic. For in the glen
-cool waters crisp over cold stones and
-the breeze sighs up stream and fans
-you as you sit on the brink of the pool
-and lean your head against the ledge
-from whose crannies drip the fairy
-fronds of the rock fern.</p>
-
-<p>These are but little fellows of our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
-fern world, and the magic which distills
-from their fern seed is no doubt less
-potent than that from greater ferns, but
-added to the witch-hazel glamour it
-makes brook magic which will initiate
-you into many mysteries of the pasture
-world if you are but patient. Sitting
-there with the tiny brown spores of the
-rock fern dripping upon your shoulders
-with infinitesimal rattle, you seem to see
-more clearly the glen life and to know
-the meaning of many sounds hitherto
-only half understood.</p>
-
-<p>Always there is the sleepy song which
-the brook sings to itself in summer,&mdash;a
-song to which the warble of the vireo
-in the overhead leafage adds but a
-dreamy staccato. But if you listen
-through this you shall presently hear
-the water goblins grumbling to themselves
-in their abodes under flat stones.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
-They are old and grumpy, these water
-goblins, and they never cease to mumble
-to themselves about their troubles.</p>
-
-<p>Very likely they complain incessantly
-because they are hungry and the supply
-of demoiselle nymphs is running short.
-There are plenty of demoiselles, flitting
-back and forth across the pools on glittering
-black wings, which they fold
-closely to their iridescent green bodies
-when they light. They are such ladylike
-dragon-flies that it is no wonder
-that the name &#8220;demoiselle,&#8221; which
-French scientists with admirable gallantry
-have given them, has stuck. With
-all their ladylike short and modest flights
-and the saintly way in which they fold
-their wings when they light on some
-leaf beside the pool, a folding as of
-hands in prayer, the demoiselles are
-dragon-flies, and each prayer may well<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-be for the soul of some midge or
-other wee insect captured in the short
-flight.</p>
-
-<p>The true dragon-fly&mdash;the one which
-rests with wings widespread&mdash;hunts like
-a hawk, but the demoiselles seem to take
-their prey with a gentle grace and charm
-of manner which ought to make the
-midge&#8217;s last moments his happiest ones.
-I always suspect them of folding him
-in a perfumed napkin and eating him
-with salad dressing and a spoon after
-they get back to their boudoir, but I
-cannot prove this any more than I can
-that it is really a water goblin that
-grumbles under the flat stone.</p>
-
-<p>Many a time I have turned the stones
-over suddenly, but I never yet was quick
-enough to surprise the goblin. I have
-found him there, mind you, but never
-in his true shape. Always he has managed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
-to transform himself into something
-different,&mdash;perhaps into a spotted turtle
-or a grouchy horn-pout. I have even
-known him to turn into an ugly, many-legged
-helgramite worm, not having time
-to make the more reputable transformation.
-It is hard to catch a grumbling
-goblin asleep, especially in a pool below
-the witch-hazels, where the brook magic
-is strong.</p>
-
-<p>It is easier to see the demoiselle
-nymphs. They are not very beautiful
-or seemingly very savory, and if the
-water goblins do eat them it is no wonder
-they grumble. You may have seen
-a hawk-like dragon-fly skimming about
-over an open pool dip in swallow fashion
-to the surface. These sudden and repeated
-dips are not for a bath nor yet
-for a drink. What you see is a female
-dragon-fly laying eggs which shall later<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>
-hatch and become under-water nymphs,
-the larv&aelig; of the dragon-fly. But the
-demoiselles, still rightly named, do nothing
-so brazen as that. Instead, they
-pick out some nodding water weed, fold
-their wings a little more tightly to their
-iridescent bodies and crawl down it into
-the water. Here, in proper seclusion
-beneath the surface, they pierce the
-reed&#8217;s stem with keen ovipositor and lay
-their eggs. Then they saunter forth
-again and discreetly eat more midges
-with salad dressing and a spoon.</p>
-
-<p>If you look closely among the water
-weeds in the transparent water at the
-pool margin you may see the demoiselle
-nymphs crawling about, breathing
-through feathers in their tails, and
-scooping up food with a big shovel
-which sticks out under their chins. They
-show little traces of their coming beauty.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-It is the awkward age of the demoiselle,
-and I fancy each is right glad to do up
-the hair, get into long black skirts with
-iridescent green bodices, and join the
-afternoon tea flitters.</p>
-
-<p>What the magic is in the brook,
-whereby these strange, awkward, crawling
-creatures, living beneath the water,
-some day crawl up the stem of a water
-weed, burst, stretch their wings and fly
-away the saintly and demure demoiselles
-of the pool, I do not know&mdash;whether it
-be distilled from the witch-hazel by the
-summer sun, or whether it slips more
-mysteriously from beneath the breast-plate
-of the spore of the polypody
-growing just above my head in the rock
-crevice. It must be the same magic
-whereby the many-legged, crawling helgramite
-worm, after living that sort of
-life sometimes for several years, one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-day crawls ashore, goes to sleep beneath
-a stone, and in another month wakes up
-and finds himself a <i>Corydalus cornutus</i>, a
-three-inch-long bug with extraordinary
-wings and great horns,&mdash;a bug that
-might well make one of those witches,
-met face to face on the moon&#8217;s disk,
-shriek and fall off her broomstick. If
-he can be that thing, changed from a
-helgramite worm, why can he not be
-a helgramite worm, changed from the
-water goblin which you can hear grumbling
-beneath the flat stone at the entrance
-to the pool beneath the witch-hazels?</p>
-
-<p>The answer is to be found neither in
-the rhyme of the poet nor in the reason
-of the scientific man.</p>
-
-<p>Musing on these things I suddenly sat
-up from my quiet seat beneath the rock
-ferns, for more magic yet was being displayed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
-before my eyes. Over on the
-further side, in the shallow eddy, the
-pool was troubled a second, then there
-rose from it a wee sunfish, not more
-than three inches long, rose from it tail
-first and began balancing across the pool
-surface toward me, on his head. His
-tail quivered in the air, and I could see
-his freckles growing in the yellow transparency
-of his skin, yet, though I watched
-with wide eyes, he was two-thirds the
-way across the pool toward me before I
-noticed beneath him the tip of the nose
-and the wicked little dark eye of a water
-snake. At sight of him the demoiselles
-should have shrieked and flown away,
-but they made no move. I, however,
-indignant, arose, and seizing broken
-fragments of rock was about to lacerate
-him and loose his prey when I quite
-suddenly thought better of it. Had not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>
-I a few days before come down stream
-to the deep pool above and carried off a
-string of perch, sunfish, pouts, and an
-eel? Had not the water snake also a
-right to his dinner?</p>
-
-<p>I dropped my rock fragments, but
-there was no longer pleasure in waiting
-to woo the demure coquetry of the demoiselles.
-The serpent had entered Eden
-and the man was driven forth. I lingered
-only long enough to see the grace
-and strength of the snake as he glided
-over the sill of the old dam, now black
-and sinuous, now giving me a glimpse
-of the vivid red of the under parts of
-his body, but always keeping his grip
-secure on the little sunfish whom he
-was taking away to luncheon with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>I climbed out of the glen, glad to go
-for once, but at the top of the rock<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
-where the sunburnt pasture path begins
-again I was in for another shudder, for
-here the dragon had entered fairy land.
-He came, writhing his horrid length
-along the path, his scales shining in the
-sun, his great mouth gaping, and up near
-his abnormally great head two little impotent
-forelegs wriggling. Who wouldn&#8217;t
-turn and run before such a creature as
-this? To be sure he was scarce three
-feet long, and his curiously mottled-brown
-back was that of the common
-adder, one of our harmless snakes, though
-he looks ugly enough to be stuffed with
-venom. But this great gaping head
-and the wriggling forelegs; never did
-flat-head adder have such a front as
-this!</p>
-
-<p>My compassion for snakes that had a
-right to their dinner vanished before this
-creature. It is different when it seems<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span>
-as if you might be the dinner. Those
-forelegs beckoned, and how could I tell
-but, in this land of witch-hazel, fern
-seed, and brook magic, I might not
-shrink sufficiently to be taken in by that
-huge mouth in that misapplied head?
-Death were better,&mdash;that is, death for
-the dragon,&mdash;and I caught up a jagged
-piece of the top of the glen and hurled
-it at him. It struck the beast fair amidships.
-The dragon whirled and writhed
-for a second or two and lay motionless,
-and behold! the head separated from the
-body and began to limp away. Then
-first was the spell broken and I saw
-clearly. It was simply a flat-head adder
-that had taken a good-sized garden toad
-for his dinner, had swallowed him whole
-as far as the forelegs, but failed to engulf
-these. It was the combination
-which made the dragon.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>Somehow I haven&#8217;t cared for the glen
-since. The early glamour of brook
-magic is pleasant, but I fear that, like
-the hasheesh of the Orient, its end is
-very bad dreams.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">IN THE PONKAPOAG BOGS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-<p class="ph1">IN THE PONKAPOAG BOGS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">I</span> DO not find in all my wanderings,
-afield or afloat, a more quaintly delightful
-plant than the floating-heart. In my
-pasture world it grows in one place only,&mdash;along
-the shallow edges of the bogs
-of Ponkapoag Pond. I think no other
-pond or stream in this immediate region
-has it, and so sweetly shy is it that you
-may pass it year after year without noting
-its existence. It waits until the
-summer has marked its meridian before
-it ventures to send up its dainty little
-<i>cr&ecirc;pe de chine</i> petals, each fairy-like
-bloom appearing for one day only in the
-very throb of the mottled olive and
-bronze heart, which is a leaf. The leaf
-itself is barely an inch across, the exquisite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span>
-bloom less than half that; yet
-once you know it you love it beyond all
-other bog plants as being the most fairy-like
-of water-lilies, though it is not a
-water-lily at all when it comes to botanical
-classification, being of the gentian
-family.</p>
-
-<p>However, not to be a water-lily is not
-so bad if one may be classed with the
-fringed and closed gentians which are to
-bloom later on the landward edges of the
-bog. As the little blossom fades at
-nightfall, its short stalk curls back beneath
-the water to ripen the seeds there,
-hung just beneath the leaf from a peculiar
-bulb-like nodule just an inch or so
-down on the petiole. The next morning
-another wee white bud shoots up in the
-heart angle of the leaf and opens fragile
-petals in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>I recall no other plant that sends up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-blooms from the leaf stalk in this way.
-When the seeds have ripened I suspect
-the plant of setting this bulb-like nodule
-free to float away to another shore, take
-root as a real corm or tuber might, and
-produce more floating-hearts.</p>
-
-<p>This bog on the westerly shore of
-Ponkapoag Pond was not long ago made
-a part of Boston&#8217;s park system, which
-thus moves ever sedately toward the
-Berkshire hills, yet it is a bit of nature
-as wild and untrammeled as it was in
-the days when Myles Standish may have
-looked down upon it from the top of
-great Blue Hill, as it had stood unchanged
-in his day for many and many a long
-century. So I fancy it will remain for
-centuries to come, for Nature holds her
-own here well. Indeed, she encroaches,
-for a bog grows wherever it has free
-water to grow into. So, after many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-centuries, frequenters of the Blue Hill
-Reservation will note a broad expanse
-of swamp land where once sparkled the
-waters of this hundred-acre pond. For
-the way of the bog is this.</p>
-
-<p>All along its under-water front the
-obscure under-water weeds grow up and
-die year after year, generation after
-generation, forming fertile banks of
-beautiful soft mud, into whose lower
-depths the great thick rootstocks of the
-pond-lilies push, and in which the fibrous
-roots of the tape grass, the fresh-water
-eel grass, find a hold. The growth and
-decay of these, with the water shield,
-with its jelly-protected foliage, the yellow
-dog-lily, and in lesser depths the
-bulrush, add to the growing bank as
-coral insects grow and die in tropic seas,
-until it is near enough to the surface
-for the pickerel weed to find roothold.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
-Then indeed the bog steps forward with
-vigor, for the pickerel weed is its firing
-line. All summer you shall see its blue
-banners flaunting gayly in the southern
-breezes, tempting the land-loving bumble-bee
-to sea, calling the honey-bee from
-the mile-distant hive, and offering rest
-and luncheon to a myriad lesser insects,
-all with genial hospitality. Its serried
-millions in close ranks breast the waves
-in a broad blue line from one end of the
-bog to the other, a half-mile or so.</p>
-
-<p>Behind these are shallow pools, where
-again you find the white water-lilies.
-Here they bloom in enormous profusion
-from late June until early September,
-reaching their grand climax during late
-July. On such a day, standing in the
-boat at the southerly end of the bog,
-counting those within a given space and
-multiplying, I estimated that there were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
-ten thousand of the fragrant white blooms
-in sight. Twice as many more were
-hidden by bulrush and pickerel weed.
-On Sundays and holidays boatloads of
-trolley trippers paddle and push among
-them and carry them off by the hundred,
-yet they make no mark on the visible
-supply. The decay of the leaves and
-stems of these add to the under-water
-foothold of the bog, but after all it must
-be the reedy stems, sagittate leaves, and
-interwoven roots of the pickerel weed
-that are its main foundation.</p>
-
-<p>Steadily seaward over the foundation
-thus laid progresses the long, definite
-front of the saw-edged marsh grass.
-Once it interlocks its roots along the
-mud surface formed for it, it leaves no
-room for the freer-growing denizens of
-the shallows. In among the marsh grass
-grows no flaunting flag of pickerel weed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
-no pure white nymph&aelig;a sends forth its
-rich odor.</p>
-
-<p>Only the bog cranberry may hold its
-own in any quantity against the throttling
-squeeze of those grass roots. Where
-these grow is the high sea of the bog,
-its waves rising and falling in the free
-winds. Yet, just as pickerel weed and
-water-lily give way before the advance
-of the marsh grass, so it in turn falls
-on the landward side before the advancing
-hosts of the swamp.</p>
-
-<p>A steady phalanx of swamp cedars
-pushes its foothold farther and farther
-out upon it, year by year, scouting with
-button bush and black alder and holding
-every inch that they obtain for it. Now
-and then something happens to a brief
-area of marsh grass and cranberries so
-that their dense packed minions faint
-and release their root grip on the quaking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-mud. Every such opening is seized
-by the alder or the button bush, and the
-cedars follow them; indeed, sometimes
-the cedars, favored by the right wind or
-the right bird carriers at seeding time,
-slip in first, and little island clumps of
-their dark bronze green stand here and
-there over against the cadet blue of Blue
-Hill which hangs like a beautiful drop-curtain
-always on the westerly sky.</p>
-
-<p>Once, a half-century ago or more, a
-farmer and his men came down from
-the pastures, and for purposes of their
-own cut a ditch straight through the
-middle of the bog to the open water.
-The hundreds of scrawny night herons,
-sitting on pale blue eggs in scraggly nests
-in the cedar swamp must have heard the
-cedars laugh as this went on. It was
-the swamp&#8217;s opportunity. Where the
-farmer and his men with incredible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
-labor cut and tore away the marsh-grass
-roots the cedars planted their
-seeds, and called upon the alders and the
-swamp maples and the thoroughwort, the
-Joe Pye weed, and a host of other good
-citizens of the swamp, to help them.</p>
-
-<p>So vigorous was the sortie and so
-well did they hold their ground that you
-may trace the farmer&#8217;s wide ditch to-day
-only as a causeway down which the
-swamp has come to build a great
-wooded area in the midst of the bog,
-accomplishing in half a century what it
-might not have done in five times that
-had it not been for human aid. Thus,
-slowly as you and I count time, only an
-inch or two a year perhaps, yet all too
-rapidly for the joy of future generations,
-the bog encroaches upon the pond
-and the swamp follows towards complete
-possession, which as the centuries<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
-go by will make the quaking sphagnum
-firm meadow land.</p>
-
-<p>For all you and I know, the Metropolitan
-Park Commission of the year
-3908 will be fixing up a second Franklin
-Field here for the camping ground
-of visiting Pythians. Meanwhile let us
-hasten to enjoy our bog and its reedy
-borders.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i142.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Of a clear midsummer evening you may hear the muskrat<br />
-grubbing roots there ... and hear his snort and splash<br />
-when he dives at sudden sight of you</p>
-
-<p>It is the home and the occasional resting
-place of many a wild free creature.
-Of a clear midsummer evening you may
-hear the muskrat grubbing roots there,
-see, perhaps, the moonlight glint on the
-long V-shaped ripple which he makes as
-he swims, and hear his snort and splash
-when he dives at sudden sight of you.
-You may chance upon a disconsolate
-bittern sitting clumsily in dumpy patience
-as he waits for food to splash
-up to him, and you may even hear him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-work his wheezy, dislocated wooden
-pump, a cry as awkward and disconsolate
-as the bird.</p>
-
-<p>The muskrats breed in the bog, the
-bittern had his grassy nest there, and a
-myriad blackbirds have made the low
-bushes vocal with their cheery whistles
-all summer. They are flocking now,
-getting the young birds in training for
-the long flight south, but they still hang
-about the bog and they still whistle
-merrily. Surely it is not environment
-that makes temperament. Bittern and
-blackbird both frequent bogs, yet the
-bittern is a lonely misanthrope, whom I
-more than half suspect of being melancholy
-mad, while the blackbird is as
-cheery and as fond of his fellows as a
-candidate. When you hear his whistle
-you half expect him to light on a
-thwart, hand you a cigar, and ask after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span>
-the baby. But the blackbird&#8217;s election
-is sure anyway.</p>
-
-<p>Another loved and lovely denizen of
-these bogs is the wood duck. These
-breed in the swamp, the mother bird
-building a grassy nest in a hollow tree,
-where she lays from eight to fourteen
-buff-white eggs, and leads her yellow
-fluffy ducklings to a nearby secluded
-pool for their first swim. Later they
-come out into the bog, and ultimately
-make the pond, where they learn to forage
-for themselves. By the first of
-August the mother bird has sent them
-adrift, in the main, to paddle and flap
-their way about as best they may. They
-are &#8220;flappers,&#8221; as the boys call them.
-That is, they can make good speed along
-the surface by half running and flapping
-vigorously, but they cannot yet fly
-enough to rise into the air.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>One of these young wood ducks came
-out of the bog the other morning, just
-at the gray of dawn, and swam over
-toward the boat landing. He was quite
-near the shore when I took ship and
-rowed to seaward of him, thus shutting
-him off from the open pond and from
-the bog. Then for an hour or two followed
-what was to me the most interesting
-duck hunting I have done for a
-long time. I could row as fast as he
-could swim, and I continually edged him
-along the south shore, getting nearer
-every minute. I have read much of the
-marvelous intelligence of wild creatures.
-Yet I saw little of it in this
-chase. The duck knew me for an
-enemy, on general principles, for I was a
-man, and I was evidently coming after
-him. Even rudimentary intelligence
-should have told him to flap for the bog<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span>
-as fast as he could. He did nothing of
-the sort. He just edged along down the
-shore, evidently hoping that I was light-minded,
-and would forget all about him
-in a minute or two if let alone. But I
-kept at it until I was so near I could see
-every one of his already handsome
-feathers and note the coloring of those
-parts which had not yet reached the
-beauty of maturity. I could see the yellow
-rim of his eye, and still he swam
-east and swam west but made no real
-move to escape.</p>
-
-<p>Two things I wished to learn from
-my wood duck. One was how much
-general intelligence and real quickness
-of wit he would show in escaping. The
-other was how he carried his wings under
-water if, by any fortunate chance, I
-should be able to see him swim after he
-went down to escape me. But at first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
-he was so irresolute that he neither
-dived nor made any vigorous attempt to
-escape. I got so near, that to avoid
-driving him up the bank into the woods
-I had to ease away a bit. Finally, at my
-second approach, he did try to flap by
-the end of the boat, but I spurted and
-headed him off.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long time, and it took much
-man&#339;uvring to make him dive, but it
-finally entered his head that he might
-avoid being cornered and badgered by
-going under water. This he did, going
-on a slant just a very little below the
-surface, probably because he was in too
-shallow water to go much deeper, and
-coming up well to seaward. There he
-preened his feathers, took a sip or two
-of water and, seemingly, waited to be
-surrounded a second time.</p>
-
-<p>I rowed out, got on the off-shore side<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-of him, and again began boating him in
-toward the shore. He showed less uneasiness
-this time, but dived and swam
-out again after considerable more pressing.
-Again and again I repeated this,
-sometimes getting no sight of him under
-water, again seeing him move along
-very plainly. At no time did I notice
-any motion of the wings under water.
-I have been told that wild ducks when
-swimming beneath the surface make
-most of their progress with their wings,
-quite literally flying under water. This
-may be, but I have no evidence of it in
-the under-water action of this one.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it has been sagely impressed
-upon me by old duck hunters that you
-could tell in what direction from your
-boat a bird would rise by noting the
-way in which his bill pointed when he
-went under. I think it was Adirondack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
-Murray in that famous loon-hunting chapter
-who first made the point, and it has
-been insisted upon by many another successor.
-But, bless you, my half-grown
-wood duck made no difficulty of going
-down with his head toward the morning
-and coming up in the sunset portion of
-the view. He took slants under water
-and cut semicircles at will. But I
-couldn&#8217;t see him use his wings while
-beneath the wave.</p>
-
-<p>Little by little he got over being excited
-by my presence. He began to eat
-bugs off the lily pads as he went by, and
-now and then tip up for an under-water
-search. Thus we coquetted with one
-another all along the southern shore of
-the pond, and when I finally cornered
-him for a last time in behind Loon
-Island he dove without embarrassment
-and began his feeding as soon as he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
-again reached the surface. The chase
-was no longer exciting, and I turned my
-attention to something else. Then he
-swam out quite a little further into the
-pond, preened his feathers carefully,
-tucked his head under his wing and
-went to sleep!</p>
-
-<p>Evidently he had decided that I was
-eccentric, but harmless, and the best way
-to escape my attentions would be to
-leave me severely alone.</p>
-
-<p>And there you have it. I think the
-wood duck is beautiful, but not very
-bright. Yet it occurs to me that some
-Sherlock Holmes of the woods may
-prove, to the satisfaction of Dr. Watson
-anyway, that he is preternaturally
-clever, in that this one, though still
-young, was keen enough to see that
-from the first I had no evil intentions
-toward him.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">SOME BUTTERFLY FRIENDS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span></p>
-<p class="ph1">SOME BUTTERFLY FRIENDS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">A</span>T dusk all the edges of the pond
-are lighted with the white candles of
-the clethra. Its fragrance has in it that
-fine essence which goes to the making
-of the nectar and ambrosia of the gods.
-He who would sup with them may do
-so by taking canoe of an early August
-twilight when the purple arras of the
-coves glow softly golden with the reflected
-light of the sunset&#8217;s afterglow.
-Then the coarser air seems to have let
-the light slip from between its clumsy
-particles, leaving its more ethereal
-essence still clinging to a more subtle
-interatomic fluid.</p>
-
-<p>The fragrance of the clethra seems
-always to me as fine as this spirit of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
-light in the ambrosial twilight of the
-ripened summer. It is no air-borne delight
-like the resinous scent of the forest
-pines or the pasture sweet-fern when
-the hot sun of midday distills them and
-the hot wind of midday sends them far
-to you across the quivering fields. It is
-something finer, softer, more silkily
-subtle, which, like the rose gold of the
-afterglow of the sunset, tints the dusk
-of the cove between the air atoms, not
-by way of them.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as the gold glimmers and fades
-and the pink faints in the cooling purple
-of the dusk, and the outline of the cove
-shore slips from the front of your eye
-to the chambers of memory behind it, so
-that you else might see it best with the
-eyes shut, the white candles are lighted
-and the eager moth sees by them to sup
-with you and me and the gods on this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-essence of ambrosia, to tipple on this
-spirit of nectar which the night reserves
-for those that love it.</p>
-
-<p>I do not know why the clethra which
-gleams so white in the dusk should
-need anything more than its own white
-beauty to call the moth to its wooing.
-Perhaps it does not need more. Perhaps
-all this fine fragrance is but the
-overflow of its soul&#8217;s delight at being
-young and chastely beautiful, and trembling
-in the ultra violet darkness on that
-delicious verge of life that waits the
-wooer. I half fancy that this is true of
-all perfume of flowers, that it is less a
-call to butterfly or bee to come to their
-winning than it is a radiation of delight
-from their own pure hearts at the dawning
-of the full joy of living. I am not
-always willing to take the word of the
-scientific investigator on these points as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
-final. The scientists of the not very remote
-past have known so much that is
-not so!</p>
-
-<p>It is possible that, just as a hunting-dog
-picks up a scent that is strong in
-his nostrils and has no power in ours,
-so the flowers that we call scentless
-send out an odor too faintly fine for our
-senses, yet one that the antenn&aelig; of
-moth or bee may entangle as it passes
-and hold for a certain clue. Perhaps
-the scents that are only faint to us carry
-far for the butterfly, but if so, and if
-flower perfumes are made only for the
-calling of insects, why need they be made
-so intoxicating to the human senses?
-The scent of carnations is as pleasing
-to the soul as a strain of beautiful
-music, and equally arouses high aspirations
-and noble longings. So to me the
-odor of the clethra at nightfall is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-tenuous thread of ethereality that
-reaches far toward a realm of spiritual
-ideals. It ought to go with a ritual and
-a vested choir.</p>
-
-<p>I do not find the odor of the pasture
-milkweed speaking thus to any inner
-sense. It is just a gentle, lovable, stay-at-home
-smell that surely does not float
-farther than the pasture bars. Yet of
-all the plants that have bloomed within
-my world of garden and pasture this
-summer it has been by far the most
-popular among insects. It is not that it
-is the most attractive to the eye, in any
-of its forms, for there are many flowers
-of colors more vivid and to be seen
-farther, as well as of much stronger
-scent. Yet all day long you will find it
-besieged by bees, from the aristocratic
-Italian worker from the farmer&#8217;s best
-hive down to those scallawag bees that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-make no honey for themselves but lead
-a vagabond life and lay their eggs in
-other bees&#8217; nests, leaving their young to
-grow up in unendowed orphan asylums.</p>
-
-<p>Many varieties of ants seek the milkweed
-blooms, and you shall find about a
-large clump more sorts of wasps than
-you would believe existed, yet it is the
-butterflies who most of all make it their
-rallying place. Every butterfly in the
-whole region makes it his business to
-know each large clump of milkweed,
-and to make the rounds at least daily.</p>
-
-<p>There, if you watch, you may see
-the pretty little pearl crescent, whose
-range is from Labrador to Texas. The
-shy meadow browns flit out from the
-shadow of the brook alders and feed for
-a moment before they take fright at the
-fact that they are out in society and
-flit desperately back again. The angle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-wings flip about like animated question-marks,
-and fulvous fritillaries soar sedately,
-now and then lighting to feed
-and fold their wings that you may see
-the big silver spots of the under parts.
-And so you might name them all, almost
-every butterfly of early August,
-all besieging the milkweed so eagerly
-that you may hardly drive them away.</p>
-
-<p>The fact is they come neither for
-scent nor sight; they come for good
-taste&mdash;which they find in the honey
-glands of the peculiarly shaped bloom,
-which are obvious and sticky and within
-reach of all. I do not think it is half
-so much the odor of the flower which
-draws them, be it never so sweet or so
-strong, but memory of the honey dew
-sipped there yesterday or last week.
-No doubt the love of the milkweed
-bloom is an inherited tendency, also,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span>
-bred in the bones from a line of milkweed-frequenting
-ancestors infinitely long.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, one of our most splendid butterflies
-is the <i>Anosia plexippus</i>, otherwise
-known as the milkweed butterfly,
-rightly named also the monarch. Every
-boy who knows the country in summer
-knows him by his rich, red coloration,
-his strong, black-bordered wings with
-their black veins. Every bird knows
-him too and lets him alone. On the
-first median nervule of the hind wings
-of the butterfly is a scent bag whence
-he dispenses an odor so disagreeable to
-the bird who would eat him that he goes
-free, and is not afterward troubled.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i160.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">Every boy who knows the country in summer knows him by<br />
-his rich, red coloration, his strong, black-bordered wings<br />
-with their black veins</p>
-
-
-<p>Along with the monarch sipping
-honey with eager industry from the
-meadow milkweed, you will often see
-the viceroy, who, as a viceroy should,
-closely imitates, but does not equal, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
-monarch. He has neither the monarch&#8217;s
-vigor of flight nor his means of
-defence from predatory birds, but his
-safety&mdash;so the students tell us&mdash;lies
-in looking so much like his superior
-that he also is let alone. The students
-go on to say that his is a good example
-of the imitative power of insects whereby
-they escape destruction by seeming
-to the casual eye to be something else.</p>
-
-<p>The viceroy, which is a <i>Basilarchia
-disippus</i>, thus looks not the least like
-other members of his family, but consciously
-mimics the coloring of the
-monarch for safety. Thus many tropical
-beetles contrive to look like wasps
-that they may not be molested, and
-some insects look like brown leaves and
-others like green ones.</p>
-
-<p>But do they contrive, imitate, mimic?
-It is no doubt true that because of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-resemblance they escape, but to say that
-they imitate or contrive or mimic seems
-to me to be to assume a knowledge of
-the workings of the inner consciousness
-of an insect that not even the most careful
-student can have. I am more inclined
-to believe that the so-called
-mimics are fortunate in an accidental
-resemblance and so escape the destruction
-of their species which has fallen
-upon many a less fortunate type.</p>
-
-<p>Yet no butterfly, however exquisite
-his coloring, or however strong and
-graceful his flight, twangs with his
-fluttering wings the fine heartstrings of
-romance as does the monarch. The
-first one that came dancing down the
-sunlight to the sweet rocket in bloom in
-my garden this spring brought to me a
-spicy odor of tropic isles. The beating
-of his wings shed, as he passed, faint<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
-fragrance of Mexican jasmine, and I
-thought I saw slip from them the infinitesimal
-dust of the pollen of stephanotis
-lately blooming in the glades of
-Panama. Three months before he
-floated serenely beneath my cherry tree
-he may well have soared through the
-tropic glades where crumble the ruins
-of the palaces of the Incas.</p>
-
-<p>His flight, seemingly as frail as that
-of a red autumn leaf sliding down the
-October zephyr to carpet the nearby
-field with rustling fragrance, has
-matched that of that rifle-ball of bird
-life, the ruby-throated humming-bird.
-Together they sip the sweets of my
-sweet rocket in the spring. Together
-they wing their way south to the region
-of perpetual summer when the winds of
-late September promise frost. Sometimes
-in this annual flight the monarchs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-pass the sandy stretches of the New Jersey
-coast in swarms that, stopping at
-nightfall for rest, refoliate with their
-folded wings the shrubs left bare by the
-autumn gales.</p>
-
-<p>It may be that, like the birds, the
-knowledge of the route they must follow
-is bred in the marrow of their butterfly
-bones by the constant use of a
-million generations. It may be that
-they simply drift away from the cool
-wind from the North toward the Southern
-sun that shines so serenely in the bright
-autumn days. But whether through
-the guiding hand of Providence, or inherited
-wisdom, or a fortunate tact that
-acting from day to day produces the
-happy result, this Southern movement
-in winter is the sole salvation of the
-species here in the North.</p>
-
-<p>If they did not make these long<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-flights we should have no Anosias with
-us each summer, for unlike other butterflies
-the frost kills them in whatever
-form they remain to brave it. All summer
-long their long, red wings bear
-them bravely from one clump of milkweed
-to another. They sip the honey
-which each floret of the umbels holds
-forth, the sticky mass the size of a pinhead.
-They lay their eggs upon its
-leaves and the black and yellow caterpillars
-hatch and feed there. Then
-they hang in a green and gold chrysalis
-from a nearby twig till the imago, the
-perfect butterfly, bursts its bonds and
-sails away to find more milkweed.
-There may be several broods of a summer,
-but the frost stops all that. The
-monarch may not winter here, nor may
-his eggs or chrysalids survive the
-cold.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>Many butterflies, frail though they
-seem, do pass the New England winter
-successfully. The <i>Antiopa vanessa</i>,
-otherwise known as mourning-cloak or
-Camberwell beauty, a handsome brown
-fellow with blue spots and a pale-yellow
-margin, well known to every one, flits
-joyously through the woods with the
-very first warm days of spring. He has
-been snugged up in some dry crevice,
-numbed and torpid, but very much alive,
-all winter. The first genial warmth
-sets him free, and later I always find
-his children browsing on the willow
-twigs over in the cove. They are rough
-chaps, horrid with bristling black spines
-and with dull red spots relieving their
-otherwise plain black hides. But they
-grow fast, and by and by go out upon a
-twig and hang themselves, head down,
-by a little silken rope, swinging there in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
-the wind, simply a dead caterpillar that
-has imitated Judas.</p>
-
-<p>One day the caterpillar part sloughs
-off. It is a fairly sudden process. You
-may paddle by the willows in the morning
-and see all your little Judases hanging
-in a row. Paddle back at noon and
-their skins have shrivelled and slipped
-off, and you have chrysalids, queer,
-impish-looking things, swinging there
-still, head down. You know they are
-alive; indeed, if you poke them they will
-wiggle impatiently, but they swing in
-the wind and give no other sign for a
-week or ten days. Then they cast a
-second skin, and pop out full-grown butterflies
-that stretch their wings for a
-time leisurely, then suddenly dash into
-the air and go off over the hill like
-mad. The whole thing is so sudden!
-The change, when it does come, is as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
-if some woodland magician had waved a
-willow wand and said &#8220;Abra-ca-dabra;
-presto, change!&#8221; Time and again I
-have watched to see that caterpillar
-skin fall off, and again to see the vanessa
-step forth from the domino in
-which it has been masquerading, but
-they have always been too quick for
-me.</p>
-
-<p>Other butterflies survive in the
-chrysalis all winter and come forth full-grown
-and fit in the spring. Such may
-speak to your listening imagination
-through their beauty, which is often
-great, or through their resurrection
-from seeming death, though if you will
-observe them closely in the chrysalid
-form you will see that they are not
-even seemingly dead. Evangelists who
-have held up the butterfly to us as a
-prototype of that resurrection which we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
-may expect if we are good, evidently
-never closely observed the chrysalis of a
-good healthy butterfly, else they had not
-been so sure of their corpse.</p>
-
-<p>Lately I have had chrysalids of the
-<i>Papilio asterias</i>, the common eastern
-swallowtail, in my study. I found the
-fat black and yellow worms on my parsley
-and caged them. They soon hitched
-themselves to the wire netting by their
-tails, hanging from overhead on a slant,
-their shoulders (so to speak) being supported
-by a single loop of silk. If you
-did but tap on the wire netting or scratch
-it these chrysalids would wiggle and
-jerk quite angrily, their action saying
-plainly, &#8220;Can&#8217;t you let me alone? I&#8217;m
-just having a nap!&#8221; No; it is plainly
-no death and resurrection which makes
-a butterfly. It is merely a caterpillar
-who was dressed for the fancy ball all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-the time. He came to the woodland
-hall in his greatcoat. This he sheds
-for a domino, in which he masquerades
-for a time. Then he bursts forth for
-the final festivities in a robe of princely
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>My chrysalids did this only the other
-day. Wonderful creatures of black
-and yellow came forth, stretched their
-wings till I could see the dainty shading
-of blue and the peacock-feather eye
-of red and black on the lower part of
-the secondary wings; then, as I opened
-the window they dashed madly away
-as the vanessas do from willow twigs in
-the cove. The butterfly has been held
-up to us as an example of lazy dalliance.
-I have never watched one that
-was not as busy as a politician on election
-day. Especially do those just
-wakened from the chrysalis form rush<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
-away as if they knew all their work
-was before them and they longed to be
-at it.</p>
-
-<p>Of them all the monarch is not the
-most beautiful, but I rank him as surely
-the ablest. His annual migration shows
-him to have wonderful strength of
-wing, and either much wisdom or an
-extraordinarily developed instinct. Very
-likely he has both. Further, through
-accident pure and simple, or else a spirit
-of adventure fostered by the joys of
-long annual journey, he is steadily extending
-his habitat to embrace the
-known world. Originally of North
-America only, he has within the last
-dozen years taken ship for Australia,
-where he has multiplied greatly in the
-warmer regions, and has wandered again
-over sea to Java, Sumatra, and followed
-the flag into the Philippines. He is well<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
-established at the Cape de Verde Islands,
-and is doing his best to be happy in
-the pale sunshine of the south of England,
-whence specimens are reported
-yearly.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE RESTING TIME OF THE
-BIRDS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>
-<p class="ph1">THE RESTING TIME OF THE
-BIRDS</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HIS morning I heard the bluebirds
-again for the first time for weeks.
-They came up from the pasture to the
-apple trees and sang their modest little
-snatches of song in that shyly sweet, reserved
-yet fond, manner which makes
-the bluebird the best loved of all our
-pasture birds. There have been no bluebirds
-about my garden since the yegg
-raid of late May and its resulting
-tragedy. Now they are back, but there
-is in their call a note of sadness which
-indeed comes into the voice of every
-bluebird as autumn approaches, though
-I think it is accentuated in mine this
-year.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>When I say yegg I mean English
-sparrow, and if I could think of a
-worse name, equally descriptive of him,
-I would give it. This is the story of the
-foul deed, only one of many, no doubt,
-perpetrated by this cowardly crew. In
-late March I put out in my garden three
-bird boxes such as bluebirds love to
-inhabit. These were immediately inspected
-by the neighborhood flock of
-English sparrows, just beginning to pair
-off, and finally decided upon as undesirable,
-perhaps because I had intentionally
-placed no perch before the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The English sparrow will build his
-nest in any impossible place to which he
-takes a fancy, but he greatly prefers, in
-choosing a new site, one that has a convenient
-perch close by the entrance. So
-these undesirable citizens decided that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-they did not care for my bird boxes and
-let them alone, much to my delight.
-Then came the bluebirds, bringing to
-our cold, raw spring their flashes of
-blue like bits of a heaven that is fairer
-than ours, a blue that is hope and
-dreams of happiness and all things noble
-yet gentle. There is no color like it as
-it glints across pale April skies and
-blooms on trees that have been bare and
-gray so long. So, too, no bird song is
-so dear as theirs. It is but a wee,
-melodious phrase which says again and
-again, &#8220;Cheerily; cheerily.&#8221; Yet it
-voices hope and contentment, and is so
-purely the expression of the joy of
-gentle, kindly lives that it touches all
-that is fond and kindly in the listener.</p>
-
-<p>Bluebirds will nest in the hollow of
-the pasture apple tree or in a last year&#8217;s
-flicker&#8217;s abandoned hole in a decayed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-stump, but of all places they most love a
-bird box near a dwelling, and, as I had
-hoped, a pair came early in April to inspect
-mine. They looked them all over
-appreciatively, seeming with delightful
-courtesy to the builder to find it hard to
-choose, but finally settled upon one in
-the pear tree, and began to build.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the yeggs had been watching
-with jealous eyes, lurking in the
-shrubbery, sneaking about the eaves and
-making sallies in small numbers from
-around the barn. The English sparrow
-has been called pugnacious. He is nothing
-of the kind. He does not love a
-fight. Bird to bird, there is nothing too
-small to whip him. I have seen a chipping
-sparrow, which is the least among
-the pasture sparrows, send the poltroon
-scurrying to shelter with all his feathers
-standing on end. A cock bluebird, fighting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-like a gentleman, and like a gentleman
-fighting only when he must, will
-drive a half-dozen of them. The English
-sparrow has the true instincts of the
-browbeating coward, and loves to fight
-only when in overwhelming numbers he
-may attack a lone pasture bird without
-danger to himself.</p>
-
-<p>So trouble began with the building,
-and for a week or so the warfare raged
-from box to box, the cock bluebird boldly
-defeating superior numbers again and
-again, only to have his gentle wife annoyed
-by other villains while he drove
-the first away, and his nesting material
-stolen in spite of him. Finally he resorted
-to what looked to me like well-planned
-and carefully executed strategy,
-though it may have been merely that
-fortune which favors the brave and persistent.
-The pair abandoned the box in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-the pear tree and started building in the
-one nailed against the side of the barn.
-The sparrows followed, of course. Then
-the bluebirds went back to the pear-tree
-box. The sparrows followed. The bluebirds
-then started building in the third
-box and daily brought material to each
-of the three, though ostensibly, I thought,
-to the second and third. At any rate
-the sparrows seemed to concentrate their
-attention more on these boxes. Meanwhile
-the bluebirds quietly completed the
-nest in the pear tree and later laid their
-eggs there, in comparative peace.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i180.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The English sparrow has the true instincts of the browbeating
-coward</p>
-
-<p>The sparrows did not build in either
-of the other boxes. They did not want
-to. Neither did they care particularly
-about the material which they stole, for
-they did not continue to take it after
-the bluebirds had finished the pear-tree
-nest and were in a position to defend<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-it. Their action was simply hoodlumism
-of the lowest and most despicable
-kind.</p>
-
-
-<p>This was bad enough, yet it was merely
-petty annoyance compared to the deed
-without a name of which they were later
-to be guilty. The two young birds in
-the bluebird box were more than half
-grown. The blue was beginning to show
-in their wings along with the white of
-the conspicuous, growing quills, and the
-fuscous margin was already touching the
-breast feathers. The old birds, working
-with tremendous energy to feed these
-hearty youngsters, were both busy and
-often away from the nest together.</p>
-
-<p>At one such time the English sparrows
-descended upon this nest, entered,
-drove the young birds out to die upon
-the ground, unnoticed in the long grass,
-and started to take full possession. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
-bluebirds, returning too late, drove them
-away with more than usual despatch.
-This first called the affair to my attention.
-But I was too late.</p>
-
-<p>The young birds were dead and the
-sparrows were chattering in raucous
-jubilation over it, now and then giving
-a squeak of fright or pain as the male
-bluebird singled out an individual and
-attacked him with a fury of which I
-had not believed him capable. Soon,
-however, he ceased, and the two twittered
-mournfully about the tree for
-hours, again and again poising in fluttering
-flight before the door of their despoiled
-home and looking eagerly in, as
-if they could not believe that the young
-were indeed gone. Later they went silently
-away. No doubt they found another
-home in some hollow tree of the
-remote pasture and raised another brood.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
-But my boxes have stood tenantless ever
-since.</p>
-
-<p>The worst of it is there is little I
-could do either in the way of prevention
-or revenge. I did get out my big old
-ten-bore duck gun, which I have not had
-the heart to use on a bird, even a coot,
-for a dozen years, and began cannonading
-the miscreants, but this was more
-disturbing to the neighbors than to the
-sparrows.</p>
-
-<p>One of the gentlest nature lovers I
-ever knew, wise in bird ways and very
-fond of all birds, used to say that he
-wished all the English sparrows in the
-world had but one neck, and that he
-might have that neck in his hands. I
-wish he might, too.</p>
-
-<p>So, after weeks of absence, the bluebirds
-have come back. Their speckle-breasted
-young, which they would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-brought up among my apple trees and
-in the cloistered seclusion of the lilac
-bushes, have grown up in the pasture
-instead, and very likely their plans for
-next year will include the pasture wild-apple
-tree rather than my bird box, and
-they are far shyer and less responsive
-to my advances than they would have
-been. Their song has in it a plaint of
-autumnal regret. In the spring they
-sang, &#8220;Cheerily; cheerily.&#8221; Now they
-say, &#8220;Going away; going away.&#8221; It
-has in it something of the quality of
-&#8220;Lochaber no more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But it is not merely the bluebirds
-which have been silent for some weeks
-and are now beginning to sing again.
-The time between early July and mid-August
-is a period of retirement for all
-birddom. The mating season, with its
-soul-stirring ecstasies, the labor of nest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
-building, the anxieties of brooding, have
-been followed by the tremendous exertion
-of caring for that nestful of young
-birds. A healthy fledgling will eat almost
-his own weight of food in a day, and by
-the time he is able to fly and chase the
-old birds around for more the father and
-mother are worn to a frazzle. I really
-believe the youngsters are weaned only
-when their demand for food becomes so
-enormous with their completed growth
-that the parents cease to supply it
-through sheer physical exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p>I once reared a pair of young crows
-by hand, taking them from the home nest
-in a big pine, leaving three others&mdash;quite
-enough I afterward thought&mdash;for
-the parent birds. They were negroid,
-naked, pod-bodied creatures at the time,
-with long clutchy claws, ridiculous stubs
-of wings, and, ye gods, what mouths!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
-When I fed them I used to clutch something
-with one hand lest I fall in. And
-I was incessantly feeding them. Anxious
-to treat them kindly and finding
-that frogs were a most acceptable diet
-to them I depopulated the township of
-<i>Rana virescens</i> and allied species. Then
-I found that fish would do about as well,
-and I fished until there began to be a
-shortage of angle-worms in the community.
-Yet still the creatures grew
-apace and demanded more food.</p>
-
-<p>By and by they got big enough to use
-their wings and, recognizing me as their
-undoubted parent, came flapping and
-clawing after me wherever I went, yelling,
-&#8220;Caw, caw, ca-aw-aw,&#8221; in most
-heartrending crescendo. Then did I
-realize to the full the responsibility of
-being a father bird. Stuff those clamorous
-creatures as I might, they still pleaded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-in agonizing tones for more, and no one
-not cognizant of the facts would have
-believed that they were ever fed. The
-lamb that loved Mary so, and followed
-her also, was not a circumstance to the
-clamorous devotion of those two young
-crows toward me, their foster parent.</p>
-
-<p>My one fear for weeks was that the
-resident agent for the S. P. C. A., who
-was a vigilant and tender-hearted lady
-of undoubted indiscretion, would hear
-their evidently unanswered appeals and
-proceed against me. She could have
-convicted me on the evidence in any district
-court in Norfolk County; and yet
-those young birds were eating everything
-there was in the place outside of cold
-storage.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the appetite of the growing
-bird. Yet there comes a time in the
-passing of the summer when the youngsters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
-are taught, or learn through necessity,
-to forage for themselves and
-cease their fritinancy. Then the thickets
-are strangely silent. The youngsters no
-longer yearn noisily and they have not
-yet learned to sing. The old birds have
-ceased singing. Indeed, there is nothing
-left of them but their bones and feathers,
-and that atmosphere of conscious rectitude
-which comes with successful completion
-of a noble and herculean task.
-And then even their feathers begin to
-go, for the moulting season is at hand.</p>
-
-<p>No longer does the male scarlet tanager
-sit like a lambent flame in the top
-of a tree and warble, &#8220;Look-up, way-up,
-look-at-me, treetop,&#8221; His scarlet suit
-begins to fade, grow dingy, show signs
-of wear, and finally go all to pieces while
-he sits mute and dumpy in the shadow.
-By and by the scarlet will have changed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-completely to a dull olive-green, like that
-of his inconspicuous mate, and though he
-still retains the black of his wings and
-tail you would not know him.</p>
-
-<p>So the bobolink who swung so conspicuously
-on the meadow grass in June
-in his black and white suit comes through
-the moulting season brown as a sparrow.
-The vivid blue of the indigo bunting
-falls from him in patches and is replaced
-by grayish brown in a large measure.</p>
-
-<p>No wonder that, utterly tired out and
-their brilliant plumage scattered and
-changed to dull and rusty colors, the
-birds are silent for a time, waiting for
-strength to recuperate. Some of them
-seem to retain enough courage and vitality
-to sing mornings through the moulting
-season, notably the robins. I suspect,
-though, that these faithful few&mdash;for the
-robin singers of the morning of the first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-day of August will be as one to twenty
-to those of the first day of June&mdash;are
-gay young sports who did not care to
-marry, or who, disappointed in love, still
-sing to keep their courage up. It is the
-best singers who are most strangely silent
-now, as they have been for weeks; nor
-will most of them be heard until next
-spring, hereabouts.</p>
-
-<p>My catbird was so sorrowfully unseen
-and unheard that I began to think the
-cat had got him, till I hunted him up,
-down the hill among the scrub oaks.
-He was as dilapidated and pass&eacute;-looking
-as his nest in the lilacs; as if, like it,
-the young birds had kicked him pretty
-nearly to pieces before they got through
-with him. But he perked up a bit when
-he saw me, flipped an apology for a tail,
-and miaued in a manner that was humorously
-unlike him, it was so deprecatory.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
-But that was a week or ten days ago.
-Yesterday I heard some bird cooing a
-little song to himself out in the arbor-vit&aelig;
-trees at the foot of the garden, and
-slipping quietly up found that it was the
-catbird again. He was quite sleek in his
-new coat, and he was practising his song
-in a delightful undertone, as if to be sure
-that he should not forget it altogether.</p>
-
-<p>In four or five weeks more he will
-begin to flip saucily across the miles of
-country that separate him from his winter
-home in Southern Florida, or perhaps
-farther yet in some stretch of primeval
-forest that I myself have seen and loved
-in the heart of Santo Domingo. He will
-not sing his song there, high on some
-giant ceiba or swinging on the plume
-of some royal palm. He may not sing
-it again here on the tip of the tallest
-white lilac bush, but I know that, there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-or here, he will practise it now and then
-in that soft, sweet undertone which you
-would not believe of a catbird, and be
-ready to send it forth in jubilant peals
-when his strong wings bring him back
-again next May. My bluebirds may
-winter with him; and if they do I have
-hopes that he may persuade them to try
-my pear-tree box once more next spring.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">THE POND AT LOW TIDE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-<p class="ph1">THE POND AT LOW TIDE</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">A</span>LL about the pond the woodland
-folk are enjoying shore dinners, for it
-is the time of ebb tide, and a wonderfully
-low ebb at that. Not for a score
-of years do I recall such low water.
-Where, on the ebb of ordinary years, the
-crow has been able to find one fresh-water
-clam, he may now feed till he can
-hold no more, for the drought has been
-long and severe, and the pond has been
-drained to the very dregs.</p>
-
-<p>I say fresh-water clams, for that is
-the name commonly applied to the creatures,
-though I know that I might more
-properly call them river mussels, and if
-I wished to be severely scientific I should
-say <i>Unio margaritifera</i>, though it is difficult<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
-to be sure of your margaritifera, as
-there are about fifteen hundred species
-of unios known to people who classify
-creatures, and most of these are found
-in the rivers of this country.</p>
-
-<p>Little do the crows care for that. In
-the sunny coves they have their clam-bakes,
-and as I slip slyly up I fancy I
-hear them smack their mandibles. As I
-round the screen of shore-loving button
-bushes, I know I shall come upon them,
-and I expect to find them seated in
-riotous fellowship, with napkins spread
-across broad waistcoats, dipping delicious
-mouthfuls in melted butter and tucking
-them away behind the white napkins. I
-have always missed the napkins and the
-butter dishes, but the shells are proof
-enough of what has been going on. If
-the mother crow carries the table furnishings
-away with her when she flies,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
-that is no more than human picnickers
-do when driven from the sea beach.</p>
-
-<p>The pond when full is ten feet deeper
-than it is now. In May the water
-lapped the forest roots on its edges; now
-from the forest to the mud of the very
-bottom where still the water lingers a
-strip of slanting beach stretches for a
-hundred yards. The crows are not the
-only creatures which have made tracks
-on this. Close by the edge in the soft
-mud the heron has walked with dignity,
-leaving footmarks that proceed precisely.
-The heron may not have large ambitions,
-but he is purposeful and does not turn
-aside. The crows gurgled and ha-haed
-over their clambake; the heron takes his
-fish course as solemnly as if he were
-taking the pledge.</p>
-
-<p>All along you will see where the squirrels
-have come down to drink, skipping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-vivaciously, taking a sip here, bouncing
-away to examine something there, remembering
-that they came for a drink
-after all and taking a good one, then
-hurrying back with long leaps in a
-straight line for the trees. The squirrel
-is not solemn, far from it, but he is
-business-like, and though there is humorous
-good fellowship in his every hop, he
-nevertheless does not linger long from
-his work.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i198.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">The skunk doesn&#8217;t know where he is going and he isn&#8217;t even<br />
-on his way</p>
-
-<p>Very different from this is the track
-of mister skunk. He wanders aimlessly
-along, often as much sidewise as straight
-ahead. The skunk doesn&#8217;t know where
-he is going and he isn&#8217;t even on his
-way. I never see his tracks, whether
-on the pond shore or elsewhere, but I
-renew my doubts as to his habits. He
-is out much too late at night. His tracks
-show it. I think he had his drink before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
-he came to the water. Probably he too
-knows how toothsome are the unios and
-is searching for them in his maudlin
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>Then there are the muskrats. They
-do not have to wait for their clam banquets
-till the water is low. They are
-expert divers and gather the unios at
-such times as suit their fancy. You will
-see their tracks in regular runways in
-the shallow water of the muddy coves,
-whence they are apt to follow some
-trickling streamlet to the bank where the
-summer burrows are at high water.</p>
-
-<p>Later, along the marshy edges you will
-find their winter teepees, piled to conical
-heights with sods and roots, with a
-warm refuge above the ice and an exit
-below, whence they may swim in search
-of food. The tracks of the muskrats
-show every mark of the industrious villager.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
-They stick close to well-traveled
-paths, and though the muskrats are out
-nights no one would for a moment
-question their temperance and industry.
-Their characters are excellent ones, beyond
-suspicion, and their tracks show it.</p>
-
-<p>On the pond shore at ebb tide the glaciers,
-too, have left their tracks, though
-it is probably several hundred thousand
-years since any have been this way.
-Where there are granite ledges you may
-know that these were here before even
-the glaciers stalked solemnly by, for
-they show where the ice in grumbling
-grandeur ground small stones against
-them and gradually wore out ruts in the
-enduring granite by force of attrition.</p>
-
-<p>The track of the glacier is like the
-trail of the serpent,&mdash;it leaves no toe-marks,
-but its sliding progress is unmistakable.
-Side by side with the ledge<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
-which shows these stri&aelig; you may see on
-the soft mud imprints of this year&#8217;s
-leaves, dropped a moment there by the
-wind, then whirled away again, but
-leaving their tracks behind them. This
-mark of the season may be obliterated
-by a breath, or it may be covered with
-sifting silt and finally harden into sandstone
-and bear the trail of the leaf as
-far down the ages as has come that of
-the glacier. Here are moments and &aelig;ons
-elbowing one another for place.</p>
-
-<p>Other interesting records of past time
-may be read in Stumpy Cove, which is
-still the wildest and most secluded of
-spots, though the trolley tripper has found
-the pond and builds his bungalows on its
-shore, sinks his tin cans in its waters,
-and scares the bullfrogs with his phonograph.
-The tin cans will not last long,
-however. Fresh water in motion is continually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-giving up oxygen, and this with
-the humic acid of the mud bottom will
-soon scatter these disfigurations in scales
-of brown oxide. But all these solvent
-forces, acting through two centuries,
-have had little effect on the stumps of
-Stumpy Cove.</p>
-
-<p>The heart-wood is still sound, their
-interlaced roots tell the story of what
-happened on the spot in the rich muck
-of the swamp, as Stumpy Cove was
-then, before Myles Standish had set foot
-on Plymouth Rock or the first white
-man had spied inland from the summit
-of Blue Hill. For the pond as it is now
-is only about a hundred years old. For
-a hundred years before that it was a
-meadow, flowed occasionally by the
-farmers of the region about it.</p>
-
-<p>Before that Stumpy Cove was a great
-white-cedar swamp and the great white<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-cedars stood in it, two feet in diameter,
-their clean straight trunks running up
-fifty feet or more without a knob or
-limb. This natural meadow with hay
-for their cattle for the cutting, these
-cedar swamps with their century-old
-growth, were what attracted the first
-settlers to this region, and hardly had
-the dawn of the sixteenth century come
-over the Blue Hills before their axes
-were at work in Stumpy Cove and similar
-swamps all about, getting out shingle
-stuff for the Boston market. But
-whereas in all the other swamps the
-young cedars were allowed to grow in
-again for succeeding generations of
-woodsmen, here new conditions arose.</p>
-
-<p>The meadow was flowed intermittently
-for a century; then the pond grew out
-of it. Not only might no seedlings find
-roothold there, but the very black muck<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-in which they might grow was washed
-away from the roots of the great
-stumps. These, in the main, have endured,
-losing their bark and sap-wood,
-but with the heart-wood still firm after
-the lapse of two centuries.</p>
-
-<p>Here at this ebb tide I read the record
-of growth of trees that had their
-beginnings more than three centuries ago.
-These roots so twine and intertwine
-that the original sap, drawn from the
-tender tips, must have nourished any
-one of several trees indifferently, for
-heart-wood joins heart-wood in scores of
-places near the stump and far from it,
-showing that each tree stood not only
-on its own roots, but on those of its
-neighbors all about it; not only was it
-nourished by its own rootlets, but by
-those of trees near by. No gale could
-uproot these swamp cedars. United they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
-stood and divided they might not fall.
-It is a curious method of growth, and
-I dare say it obtains in many swamps
-where the white cedars stand close, but
-under no other circumstances could it
-have been revealed to me, casually strolling
-that way three centuries after it
-happened.</p>
-
-<p>At high water all these curious roots
-are submerged and you see only the
-butts of the trees, numerous miniature
-islands on which many an alien growth
-has made port. Here in June the dour
-and melancholy cassandra disputes the
-footing of the wild rose, and the huckleberry
-and sweet-fern twine in loving
-companionship, afloat as ashore. Here intertwine
-the sheep laurel and the hard-hack,
-the meadow-sweet and the marsh
-St. John&#8217;s-wort, garlanding the white
-skeletons of the ancient trees and making<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span>
-them young again with the odorous
-promises of spring.</p>
-
-<p>In midsummer, among patches of
-green and gray moss, you will find tiny,
-diamond-like globules glistening. These
-are the clear, dew-like drops of glutinous
-liquid which gem the leaves of the
-<i>Drosera</i>, northern representative of the
-Venus&#8217;s fly-trap. This, the <i>Dionaea</i>,
-catches flies by means of a steel-trap
-leaf which closes on them when they
-light on it. This other, the <i>Drosera</i>, is
-not so active. It attracts insects with
-its honey dew, holds them with sticky
-glands, and grips them, little by little,
-with bristles. It is a curious and beautiful
-little plant, and one would hardly
-think it carnivorous to see it adding its
-diamond ornaments to the floral decorations
-which beautify the ancient stumps
-all summer long.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>Yet of all the life histories revealed
-by the pond at low tide I still think that
-of the <i>Unionid&aelig;</i> the most interesting.
-You find them all along above and below
-the margin of the shallow water, their
-shells most wonderfully streaked with
-olive-green and pale-yellow in alternate
-bands, till one might think he had found
-nodules of malachite which the long-ago
-glacier had culled from some Labrador
-ledge and ground to unsymmetrical ovoids
-before it dropped them on the old-time
-meadow marge. In certain individuals
-and certain lights the shells of these obscure
-creatures send out gleams of green
-and gold, like gems that have soft fires
-within them. It is as if an opalescent
-soul dwelt within, and the thin shell
-which a crow with his bill may puncture
-with a blow was so constructed as to
-hold in the reds and blues of the opalescence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>
-but transmit the greens and
-gold.</p>
-
-<p>You find many with only the backs
-of their shells sticking out of the mud.
-This may be the creature&#8217;s natural position,
-but I find far more of them lying
-quietly on their sides in the shallow water,
-rocking gently to and fro in the placid
-undulations as if they were there but to
-show me their shining colors. But if
-you watch one intently for a time you
-will see him open his shell cautiously
-and put out one foot. This is his best,
-for it is all he has and he puts it foremost.
-It is very white and clean, and
-it might as well be called his tongue, for
-with it he licks his food. It is half as
-long as he is, and when he has put it
-out as far as he can, or as far as he
-dares, a fine white fringe grows on its
-outer margin. Thus he gathers in minute<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
-animalcul&aelig; or refuse matter from
-the surface of the mud, for his stomach&#8217;s
-sake.</p>
-
-<p>It is a rather interesting thing to
-stand by and watch a <i>Unio margaritifera</i>
-daintily putting away his own particular
-brand of little necks and mock
-turtle. At the least untoward sign of
-interest in the affair, however, he shuts
-up like a clam, and you will need your
-pocket-knife if you wish to see more of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Where the water is only an inch deep
-or so over the soft ooze of the bottom
-you will see where the unio has used
-this so-called foot as a foot should be
-used, for he not only stands on it, but
-walks with its help. These signs are
-curiously erratic marks drawn as with a
-sharpened stick for a distance sometimes
-of yards. If you will inspect the seaward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
-end of this trail you will find a
-unio in it, generally a young one, for it
-is he that has left the mark behind him
-in his travels. For the unio at a certain
-age is a great traveller; that is, when
-he is very young. The adults foot it,
-but the young before they reach their
-full growth ride, some of them by what
-you might call the lightning expresses of
-the pond world.</p>
-
-<p>If you will split a big one at this time
-of year you will be likely to find within
-an astonishing number of eggs. These
-are carried in brood pouches that seem
-to occupy pretty nearly all the space between
-the shells. In seeing them you
-wonder vaguely where there was room
-for the bearer of this amazing progeny.
-Just where they are these young unios
-grow to maturity of a certain sort,
-forming minute shells which have hooks,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-forming also peculiar organs of sense.
-The hooks and the sense organs are
-provided that they may not miss that
-free ride which is the privilege of every
-young unio if he is to reach the period
-of adolescence.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment of being sent forth
-from the home shell the golchidium, for
-that is what the scientific men call the
-unio at this stage of the affair, begins
-to hunt, aided by his sense organs, for
-a thoroughfare. Here he takes the first
-conveyance, whether the slow coach of
-the sluggish horn-pout, the bream automobile,
-or the pickerel flying-machine.
-To the first fish that comes by he attaches
-himself, oftentimes to the gills,
-and there he rides and, like most travelers,
-continues to develop.</p>
-
-<p>By and by, being &#8220;finished&#8221; by travel,
-he gets off his vehicle at some convenient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-station, drops into the mud, and is ready
-to lecture, or so I fancy it, before any
-of the unio women&#8217;s clubs on the world
-as he has seen it. Not until then does
-the unio, and then only if he is a margaritifera,
-begin to accumulate pearls.</p>
-
-<p>By what mystery of sunlight and shallow
-water the unio has acquired the lucent
-green and gold of the epidermis of his
-outer shell I do not know, any more
-than I know what pigments paint or
-what naiad fingers hold the brush that
-paints the gold in the heart or the pinky
-green in the outer sepals of the water-lily.
-The two find their sustenance in
-the same mud.</p>
-
-<p>But even if I could tell this I might
-well pause in wonder over the beauty of
-the inner shell of this pulseless creature
-of the ooze. Perhaps the golchidium,
-darting back and forth beneath the ripples<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-of the surface during its days of
-travel, catches the radiant blue of the sky,
-the rosy flush of dawn, and the glory of
-the rainbow all shivered together in exultant
-light to make the nacre of the
-inner surface of its growing shell. For
-nowhere else in nature may we find such
-softness of coloring holding such gleams
-of azure and of fire. The opal beside it
-is garish and crude. Mother-of-pearl we
-call it, for out of the same source is
-born the gem which may be worth the
-price of a king&#8217;s ransom.</p>
-
-<p>The unio is the good girl of the fairy
-tale, for from its lips fall pearls that
-confound the divers of the Orient. Not
-from Ceylon nor Sulu nor the Straits of
-Sunda nor the Gulf of California have
-come such pearls of bewildering color
-and fascinating shapes as have been
-taken from the river mussels of our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-American streams. For all I know the
-shallows of my pond may hold a necklace
-of such value that its fellow has
-never yet circled the throat of a queen.
-If so I hope no one will ever find it out,
-for an ebb tide such as this comes only
-once in a score or so of years, and when
-the next one is here I want still to find
-the beach beautiful with the green and
-gold and mother-of-pearl of the unios.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="HOW_THE_RAIN_CAME">HOW THE RAIN CAME</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>
-<p class="ph1">HOW THE RAIN CAME</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HE <i>Spiranthes gracilis</i> is commonly
-called ladies&#8217; tresses, which is a very
-polite name for it, for nothing can be
-more beautiful than the tresses of ladies.
-It is like its name in that it is beautiful,
-but not otherwise, for it is a flower
-not of tresses, but of fine eyelashes of
-pearl set in a spiral on jade. The rain
-this morning dropped transparent, colorless
-pearl tears on the tips of these eyelashes,
-and as they twinkled toward shy
-smiles the tears ran down the spiral to
-be eagerly kissed away by the small
-grasses that always cling about the feet
-of the spiranthes in mute adoration.</p>
-
-<p>Near by slender varieties of gerardia
-held up rosy cups to drink these clear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span>
-pearls, finding in them a medicine that
-shall cure all ills. In the rain the fountain
-of youth wells up in the cup of
-every flower that waits in the soft pasture
-grasses and the grasses themselves
-drink eagerly. The cedars deck themselves
-in these clear pearls, wearing
-garments fringed with them and ropes
-and necklaces without number, and letting
-their prim propriety be so softened
-that they are no longer firm and erect
-but take on curves of soft roundness
-that should go with pearl-embroidered
-garments.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday there was in all the pasture
-people a certain puritanical sternness of
-demeanor, a set holding fast to the narrowing
-good of life, a tightening of the
-muscles that are weary with a long
-strain but may not for the good of the
-soul loose their firm grip, for yesterday<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span>
-the pasture was dry and hard with the
-leanness of the long summer drought.</p>
-
-<p>To-day has come the first of the fall
-rains and these puritans are stern and
-set no longer, but relax into swaying
-curves of lissome beauty that entrance
-you. It is as if, after coming as you
-thought to a Sunday service of the old
-Calvinists, you found it transformed into
-a grange picnic of wood nymphs.</p>
-
-<p>The pines indeed, which always stretch
-out their arms in Sabbath-like benediction,
-seem asking a pious blessing on all
-these, their pasture children; and they
-fold their slim leaves together like hands
-in a soft prayer of thankfulness. But
-the soft rain cuddles them as well, and
-before they know it they are decked with
-the clear pearls as for a bridal and their
-plumes nod in reverence, yet are so
-beautiful in gems and there is such a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
-soft grace in their curves&mdash;they that
-stood so grim and sombre before&mdash;that
-each tree seems like some bounteous and
-beautiful woman, arrayed for wedding
-festivities, who yet bows a moment at
-a sanctuary in prayer, even as she joins
-the guests.</p>
-
-<p>The rain had been long coming. A
-solitary quail predicted it; the first I
-have heard since the severe cold and
-deep snows of three winters in succession
-not long ago. I had thought every
-quail smothered in the white depths or
-frozen by the bitter cold. Three years
-is a long time not to hear a quail
-whistle, and this I believe to be no survivor
-of the old stock, but one that has
-worked up from Southern fields where
-the snows were less deadly during those
-rigid winters.</p>
-
-<p>It is pretty hard to tell whether a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-quail is simply announcing his own name
-for all who care to hear, or making a
-weather prediction. Jotham, one of the
-farmer&#8217;s men who knows all, says it is
-simple enough. In an announcement he
-says, &#8220;Bob, Bob White.&#8221; The weather
-prediction is different. Then he says,
-&#8220;Wet, more wet.&#8221; All you have to do
-is listen.</p>
-
-<p>This is like Jotham&#8217;s grandmother&#8217;s
-recipe for making soap. You collected
-potash from the hearth, added water in
-an iron kettle, and boiled till a certain
-thickness was reached. You would know
-this point by placing an egg on the surface,
-and if the concoction was right the
-egg would either sink or swim, the old
-lady was blessed if she could remember
-which. This is a way that successful
-oracles have. That one at Delphos
-did it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>So, when my lone quail sat on a rock
-in the pasture, tipped his head back a
-little, swelled his white throat and
-whistled, round and clear, I went out
-to meet him, scanning the sky meanwhile
-for a change of weather. The sky of
-the day before had been like a brass
-bowl shut down over the gasping land.
-Shrubs of the upland hung their leaves
-piteously, the tougher herbs wilted, and
-the tenderer ones dried up and died.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i222.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">My lone quail sat on a rock in the pasture, tipped his head back<br />
-a little, swelled his white throat, and whistled</p>
-
-<p>On such days when the long summer
-drought has wreaked its worst, when the
-parched pasture lies on its back, open-mouthed,
-gasping for water, when even
-the pond which has given so freely for
-the refreshment of the pasture people
-has shrunk back upon itself till a rod-wide
-rim of gravel and rough stones
-forbids them to come down and drink, I
-love to go down to the water&#8217;s edge and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
-marvel at the hedge hyssop. All along
-the shore the summer drought forbids
-the water weeds to grow. This rod-wide
-space is not for them. The flood of the
-winter and spring denies other land
-plants a roothold; yet, just when you
-think the shore is to be bare and barren
-for always, troops forth the hedge hyssop
-and clothes it with verdure, lighted
-with a golden smile.</p>
-
-<p>The common name of the plant seems
-to me to express ingenuity rather than
-purpose. It has nothing to do with
-hedges and is not a hyssop, which is a
-garden plant belonging with thyme and
-lavender and other sweet herbs beloved
-of old ladies in kerchief caps and figured
-gowns. The hedge hyssop is none of
-these. Nine months of the twelve it
-bides its time under water. During the
-other three it glows in golden contentment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-on the sandy stretches left bare by
-this yearly receding tide, climbing along
-the rocky shore and filling every crevice,
-lifting its yellow cups to the glare of the
-brazen sky and distilling subtle perfume
-to the antenn&aelig; of the little low-flying
-insects that are its friends. Yet if its
-common name means little, that given it
-by the botanists fits. <i>Gratiola aurea</i> may
-well mean a plant that is golden grace
-or a golden benediction, as you choose
-to take the Latin.</p>
-
-<p>The day before, then, I had no heart
-for the upland pasture, but Jotham&#8217;s
-reading of the quail had been the right
-one, for yesterday the brazen look was
-all blown out of the sky by the south
-wind. It did not leave it clear blue, for
-that would have meant cooler and still
-dry, but put into it a pallor that seemed
-to well up from all the horizon round.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-It was not the pallor of clouds, for there
-was not even a cumulus thunder head
-in sight, but the pallor that comes with
-the wind that has a storm behind it, yet
-is to blow itself out before the storm
-arrives.</p>
-
-<p>The cuckoo, flitting jerkily from one
-thicket to the next, noted this pallor
-from the corner of his eye and thenceforth
-through the day croaked to himself
-as he went his caterpillar-hunting
-rounds. &#8220;Clackity clack; tut, tut; cow,
-cow, cow,&#8221; he clucked musically, which
-is his way of saying, &#8220;Oh dear, it is
-going to rain and the caterpillars will
-be all soggy.&#8221; Jotham says the early
-settlers out here in the Dorchester backwoods
-taught the cuckoo to work for
-them, but that he was so lazy that their
-descendants, getting better help, gave it
-up, and that the cuckoo soon forgot all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
-he knew about farm work except calling
-the cows.</p>
-
-<p>Every bluejay is a born tease, and in
-the late August drought goes about crying
-&#8220;Rain, rain,&#8221; because he knows there
-will be no rain. He does it merely to
-fool the pasture people and then chuckle
-in his phonograph twang over their
-misery when no rain comes.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday when he smelt the south
-wind and saw that sky pallor he stopped
-calling &#8220;Rain, rain,&#8221; for he knew it was
-coming. Instead he fluttered round and
-round the pasture, ducking in among the
-boughs of the pines and ejaculating, as
-if he were surprised to find it so, &#8220;Clear,
-clear.&#8221; I fancy all the wild creatures
-of wood and pasture know the signs
-better than I do and could announce the
-rain if they would long before I know
-that it is coming. All the outdoor world<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
-was sure of it yesterday. With the very
-first show of that paleness in the sky&mdash;or
-was it something in the touch of the
-wind?&mdash;the drooping plants lifted their
-leaves to be ready for it. I could smell
-it in the falling of the wind at sunset;
-they seemed to smell it in mid-forenoon
-while yet the wind was rising.</p>
-
-<p>On such days looking across the pond
-toward wind and sun there is a peculiar
-blink in the light reflected from the surface
-of the waves which you do not see
-if fair weather is ahead of you. The
-pale sky seems to reflect blackly in the
-water. Down to leeward the shore poplars
-stand silvery white, a quivering,
-flashing silver under the lash of the
-wind. The swamp maples lose their
-green and turn pale and the willows
-lighten up in color.</p>
-
-<p>It is the turning of the leaves in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-wind. You may say that they would
-turn in any wind and show their lighter
-under sides, and this is true, yet there
-is a difference in the appearance when
-it is a rain-bringing wind. I cannot tell
-you why this should be, but the difference
-is there. It may be that a moist
-wind relaxes the tension of the petioles
-more than a dry one and thus lets the
-leaf lie flatter, giving a little different
-look to the tree as a whole. The
-weather-wise older people grew up on
-the land instead of within walls and
-they were wont to say, &#8220;The leaves are
-turning in the wind and it is going to
-rain.&#8221; Like the pasture people they
-knew.</p>
-
-<p>By nightfall the weather bureau suspected
-something but was not quite sure
-what. They hung out the &#8220;possible
-rain&#8221; flag, and all the crows in the pinewood,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
-congregating now in bigger and
-bigger flocks, practising, I take it, for
-their labor-day parade, went into fits
-of laughter. &#8220;Haw, haw, haw!&#8221; they
-shouted, and whirled up into the sky
-and took a look about and dashed down
-again, convulsed. &#8220;Haw, haw, haw!
-Possible rain; here&#8217;s the sky just ready
-to spill out a twenty-four hour soaker!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The wind went down with the sun,
-and the willow and maple leaves were
-green again for a little before they
-faded into the growing purple of the
-dusk, but with every faint sigh of the
-failing breeze the poplars loomed white
-again with a radiant ghostliness which
-seemed to people the rustling dusk with
-softly phosphorescent spooks. You will
-see these other-world visitors to the
-pond shore only on such a night when
-the wind is right.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>There was no glow of rich color in
-the sky at sunset. Instead the dusk
-hung violet gray draperies all about the
-horizon,&mdash;curtains that veiled but did
-not hide the evening stars, shutting them
-almost out near the horizon and leaving
-them comparatively clear at the zenith.
-In such dusk stars do not twinkle, they
-blink, and that is a sign of rain which
-all the pasture people that have eyes
-know well.</p>
-
-<p>Those that have ears and no eyes may
-know what sort of a night it is as well,
-for there is some quality in such an atmosphere
-which makes sounds carry far.
-The rap of a paddle on a canoe seat a
-mile away up the pond sounds right in
-your ear. A train roaring through the
-wood three miles distant seems so near
-that you involuntarily look around lest
-it be coming behind and run over you.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-On such nights speak low if you do not
-wish the whole world to hear, for the
-air all about you is a wireless telephone
-receiver tuned to your pitch. Those
-gray rain curtains which the dusk has
-hung all about the horizon have made
-the whole world a whispering gallery.</p>
-
-<p>Sometime in the night the wind dies.
-It passes away so peacefully that no
-mirror held to its lips would note that
-last sigh. But the stars have known it
-all the evening, and that is why their
-eyes blinked so. It was to keep back
-the tears. Then the stars vanish and the
-night is dark indeed.</p>
-
-<p>Scents carry far on such a night, not
-only those of the pasture world, which
-are pleasant, but those of the more distant
-town, which sometimes are not.
-The air is not only telephonic but telefumic.
-The distant leather factory sends<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
-out a faint but characteristic odor by
-which you might hunt it across country
-for a lustrum of miles. The sooty
-emanation from my neighbors&#8217; chimneys
-is pungent in my nostrils, though their
-houses are a mile away. I think I can
-tell which is which, for the fireplace
-smell differs from that of the furnace,
-as does that of the parlor stove from the
-range. Agreeably these are forgotten,
-for something has crushed sassafras
-leaves over on the pasture knoll and the
-fine fragrance comes to drive away
-thoughts of the others.</p>
-
-<p>As the night was gray, which foretells
-rain, so the morning breaks crimson,
-which announces it. No bird heralds
-this dawn, no chirping insect sends its
-voice questing through its shades. The
-sky hardly lightens up; it is rather that
-the darkness turns red. Nor does the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
-light come from the sky when it does
-come. It wells up from the earth instead,
-for when the crimson is gone the
-sky is still black with shadows, while the
-pasture grows distinct in a gray outline
-wherein is no color.</p>
-
-<p>A stillness of expectation broods all
-things,&mdash;a stillness so intense that the
-first rain-drop sounds like a pistol-shot
-as it strikes a leaf near you. Then
-there is a volley and further silence for
-a brief space, followed by a crepitation
-all about you. Those first heavy drops
-have been followed by lighter ones, and
-this crepitation merges into a steady
-drumming, which becomes a low roar
-to your ears made sensitive by silence
-and faint sounds. The first of the fall
-rains has come, and the summer suffering
-of the pasture people is at an end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>
-<p class="ph1">INDEX</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<p>
-A<br />
-<br />
-Adder, flat-head, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
-<br />
-Admiral, white, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
-<br />
-Alder, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">black, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">white, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Alice-in-Wonderland, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
-<br />
-Ambergris, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
-<br />
-Angle-worm, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
-<br />
-Ant, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
-<br />
-Antiopa vanessa, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
-<br />
-Aphids, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
-<br />
-Arabian days, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
-<br />
-Arabian Nights, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
-<br />
-Arethusa, <a href="#Page_83">83</a><br />
-<br />
-Azalia, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-B<br />
-<br />
-Bagdad, Caliph of, <a href="#Page_76">76</a><br />
-<br />
-Baptist, <a href="#Page_53">53</a><br />
-<br />
-Barberry, <a href="#Page_32">32</a><br />
-<br />
-Basilarchia astyanax, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a><br />
-<br />
-Basilarchia disippus, <a href="#Page_161">161</a><br />
-<br />
-Bass, rock, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
-<br />
-Bayberry, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
-<br />
-Bee, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">bumble, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Beetles, <a href="#Page_161">161</a><br />
-<br />
-Berkshire hills, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
-<br />
-Birch, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a><br />
-<br />
-Bittern, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br />
-<br />
-Blackberry, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">high-bush, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Blackbird, <a href="#Page_143">143</a><br />
-<br />
-Bladderwort, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
-<br />
-Blueberry, high-bush, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
-<br />
-Bluebird, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
-<br />
-Blue Hill, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a><br />
-<br />
-Blue Hill Reservation, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
-<br />
-Bluejay, <a href="#Page_226">226</a><br />
-<br />
-Bobolink, <a href="#Page_189">189</a><br />
-<br />
-Brake, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
-<br />
-Bream, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
-<br />
-Bullhead, <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
-<br />
-Bulrush, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a><br />
-<br />
-Bunting, indigo, <a href="#Page_189">189</a><br />
-<br />
-Butterfly, angle-wing, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">Anosia plexippus, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">Antiopa vanessa, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">fritillaries, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">meadow-brown, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span><span class="indent2">monarch, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">mourning-cloak, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">pearl crescent, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">white admiral, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Button bush, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-C<br />
-<br />
-California, Gulf of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br />
-<br />
-Calvinists, <a href="#Page_219">219</a><br />
-<br />
-Camberwell beauty, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
-<br />
-Carnations, <a href="#Page_156">156</a><br />
-<br />
-Cassandra, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-Cassius, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br />
-<br />
-Catbird, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a><br />
-<br />
-Caterpillar, <a href="#Page_43">43</a><br />
-<br />
-Cedar, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a><br />
-<br />
-Ceylon, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br />
-<br />
-Chewink, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
-<br />
-Clams, fresh-water, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a><br />
-<br />
-Clethra, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a><br />
-<br />
-Composit&aelig;, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
-<br />
-Coot, <a href="#Page_183">183</a><br />
-<br />
-Corydalus cornutus, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
-<br />
-Cranberries, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
-<br />
-Crow, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
-<br />
-Cuckoo, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-D<br />
-<br />
-Daisy, <a href="#Page_41">41</a><br />
-<br />
-Delphos, <a href="#Page_221">221</a><br />
-<br />
-Demoiselles, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
-<br />
-Dionaea, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
-<br />
-Dorchester backwoods, <a href="#Page_225">225</a><br />
-<br />
-Dragon, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
-<br />
-Dragon-flies, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a><br />
-<br />
-Drosera, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
-<br />
-Duck, wood, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-E<br />
-<br />
-Eel, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
-<br />
-Eden, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
-<br />
-Elm, <a href="#Page_51">51</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-F<br />
-<br />
-Fern, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">cinnamon, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">ostrich-plume, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">rock, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Fern seed, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
-<br />
-Field mouse, <a href="#Page_113">113</a><br />
-<br />
-Finches, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
-<br />
-Flag, sweet, <a href="#Page_117">117</a><br />
-<br />
-Flagroot, <a href="#Page_111">111</a><br />
-<br />
-Flappers, <a href="#Page_144">144</a><br />
-<br />
-Flea, <a href="#Page_56">56</a><br />
-<br />
-Floating-heart, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
-<br />
-Florida, <a href="#Page_191">191</a><br />
-<br />
-Fly-catcher, great crested, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
-<br />
-Flicker, <a href="#Page_177">177</a><br />
-<br />
-Fountain head, <a href="#Page_81">81</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span><br />
-Fox, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a><br />
-<br />
-Franklin Field, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
-<br />
-Frog, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">green, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">Rana virescens, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-G<br />
-<br />
-Gall, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
-<br />
-Genie, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
-<br />
-Gentian, <a href="#Page_134">134</a><br />
-<br />
-Gerardia, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
-<br />
-Goblin, water, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
-<br />
-Golchidium, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a><br />
-<br />
-Goldthread, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
-<br />
-Grape, fox, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">wild, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Grass, fresh-water eel, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">marsh, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">tape, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Gratiola aurea, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
-<br />
-Greenbrier, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-H<br />
-<br />
-Habenaria, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
-<br />
-Hardhack, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-Hasheesh, <a href="#Page_130">130</a><br />
-<br />
-Hawk, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
-<br />
-Helgramite worm, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
-<br />
-Hepatica, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
-<br />
-Heron, <a href="#Page_197">197</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">night, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Hickory, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a><br />
-<br />
-Holmes, Sherlock, <a href="#Page_150">150</a><br />
-<br />
-Horn-pout, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
-<br />
-Horse brier, <a href="#Page_15">15</a><br />
-<br />
-Houghton&#8217;s pond, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
-<br />
-Huckleberry, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">low-bush black, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Humming-bird, ruby-throated, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
-<br />
-Hyla, <a href="#Page_66">66</a><br />
-<br />
-Hyssop, hedge, <a href="#Page_223">223</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-I<br />
-<br />
-Incas, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-J<br />
-<br />
-Jasmine, Mexican, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
-<br />
-Joe Pye weed, <a href="#Page_141">141</a><br />
-<br />
-Jotham, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a><br />
-<br />
-Judas, <a href="#Page_167">167</a><br />
-<br />
-June beetle, <a href="#Page_59">59</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-K<br />
-<br />
-&#8220;Kiver,&#8221; <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-L<br />
-<br />
-Labrador, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
-<br />
-Ladies&#8217; tresses, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
-<br />
-Laurel, sheep, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-Lepomis gibbosus, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
-<br />
-Leprechaun, <a href="#Page_78">78</a><br />
-<br />
-Lilacs, <a href="#Page_190">190</a><br />
-<br />
-Lily, dog, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">water, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Lily-of-the-valley, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
-<br />
-Lucky bug, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-M<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span><br />
-<br />
-Malachite, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
-<br />
-Maple, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
-<br />
-Meadow-sweet, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-Memorial Day, <a href="#Page_50">50</a><br />
-<br />
-Merlin, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a><br />
-<br />
-Metropolitan Park Commission, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
-<br />
-Milkweed, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a><br />
-<br />
-&#8220;Minister,&#8221; <a href="#Page_101">101</a><br />
-<br />
-Minnow, <a href="#Page_103">103</a><br />
-<br />
-Mocking-bird, <a href="#Page_21">21</a><br />
-<br />
-Monarch butterfly, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a><br />
-<br />
-Monitor, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
-<br />
-Moss, sphagnum, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
-<br />
-Moth, <a href="#Page_155">155</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">luna, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Mourning-cloak butterfly, <a href="#Page_166">166</a><br />
-<br />
-Murray, &#8220;Adirondack,&#8221; <a href="#Page_148">148</a><br />
-<br />
-Muskrat, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a><br />
-<br />
-Myrica, <a href="#Page_34">34</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-N<br />
-<br />
-Night heron, <a href="#Page_140">140</a><br />
-<br />
-Nymph&aelig;a, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
-<br />
-Nymphs, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-O<br />
-<br />
-Oak, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">scrub, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Orchis, purple-fringed, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
-<br />
-Oven bird, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a><br />
-<br />
-Owl, <a href="#Page_10">10</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-P<br />
-<br />
-Pan, <a href="#Page_45">45</a><br />
-<br />
-Panama, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
-<br />
-Papilio asterias, <a href="#Page_169">169</a><br />
-<br />
-Partridge, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a><br />
-<br />
-Partridge berry, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
-<br />
-Perch, yellow, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
-<br />
-Pickerel, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a><br />
-<br />
-Pickerel weed, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a><br />
-<br />
-Pine, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a><br />
-<br />
-Pipsissewa, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
-<br />
-Plymouth Rock, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
-<br />
-Polypody, <a href="#Page_124">124</a><br />
-<br />
-Ponkapoag pond, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a><br />
-<br />
-Poplars, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
-<br />
-Pumpkin seed, <a href="#Page_96">96</a><br />
-<br />
-Pyrola, <a href="#Page_74">74</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Q<br />
-<br />
-Quail, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-R<br />
-<br />
-Rana virescens, <a href="#Page_186">186</a><br />
-<br />
-Raspberry, <a href="#Page_5">5</a><br />
-<br />
-Robin, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a><br />
-<br />
-Rocket, sweet, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
-<br />
-Rose, wild, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-S<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span><br />
-<br />
-Santo Domingo, <a href="#Page_191">191</a><br />
-<br />
-Sassafras, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a><br />
-<br />
-Sedges, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a><br />
-<br />
-Skipper, <a href="#Page_63">63</a><br />
-<br />
-Skunk, <a href="#Page_198">198</a><br />
-<br />
-Skunk-cabbage, <a href="#Page_40">40</a><br />
-<br />
-Snake, water, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
-<br />
-Sparrow, chipping, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">English, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">song, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Sphagnum moss, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a><br />
-<br />
-Spir&aelig;a, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
-<br />
-Spiranthes gracilis, <a href="#Page_217">217</a><br />
-<br />
-Squirrel, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">gray, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">red, <a href="#Page_6">6</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Standish, Myles, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
-<br />
-Stephanotis, <a href="#Page_163">163</a><br />
-<br />
-St. John&#8217;s-wort, marsh, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
-<br />
-Strawberries, wild, <a href="#Page_33">33</a><br />
-<br />
-Stumpy Cove, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a><br />
-<br />
-Submarine, <a href="#Page_54">54</a><br />
-<br />
-Sulu, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br />
-<br />
-Sunda, straits of, <a href="#Page_213">213</a><br />
-<br />
-Sunfish, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a><br />
-<br />
-Sweet-fern, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-Sweet-gale, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-T<br />
-<br />
-Tanager, scarlet, <a href="#Page_188">188</a><br />
-<br />
-Terrapin, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
-<br />
-Texas, <a href="#Page_158">158</a><br />
-<br />
-Thoroughwort, <a href="#Page_141">141</a><br />
-<br />
-Thrasher, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
-<br />
-Thrush, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
-<span class="indent2">brown, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></span><br />
-<span class="indent2">wood, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></span><br />
-<br />
-Toad, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
-<br />
-Torpedo boat, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a><br />
-<br />
-Trout, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a><br />
-<br />
-Turtle, spotted, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-U<br />
-<br />
-Ulysses, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
-<br />
-Unio, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a><br />
-<br />
-Unio margaritifera, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
-<br />
-Unionid&aelig;, <a href="#Page_207">207</a><br />
-<br />
-Utricularia, <a href="#Page_64">64</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-V<br />
-<br />
-Venus&#8217;s fly-trap, <a href="#Page_206">206</a><br />
-<br />
-Viceroy butterfly, <a href="#Page_161">161</a><br />
-<br />
-Vireo, <a href="#Page_119">119</a><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-W<br />
-<br />
-Walden pond, <a href="#Page_80">80</a><br />
-<br />
-Warblers, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a><br />
-<br />
-Wasps, <a href="#Page_161">161</a><br />
-<br />
-Watercress, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a><br />
-<br />
-Water shield, <a href="#Page_136">136</a><br />
-<br />
-Water-strider, <a href="#Page_55">55</a><br />
-<br />
-Watson, Doctor, <a href="#Page_150">150</a><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span><br />
-Whip-poor-will, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a><br />
-<br />
-Wild rose, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a><br />
-<br />
-Willows, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a><br />
-<br />
-Witch, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a><br />
-<br />
-Witch-caps, <a href="#Page_115">115</a><br />
-<br />
-Witch-hazel, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a><br />
-<br />
-Woodbine, <a href="#Page_4">4</a><br />
-<br />
-Woodchuck, <a href="#Page_9">9</a><br />
-</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
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