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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Nature's invitation, by Bradford
-Torrey
-
-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: Nature's invitation
- Notes of a bird-gazer, North and South
-
-Author: Bradford Torrey
-
-Release Date: January 12, 2023 [eBook #69774]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman, 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 NATURE'S INVITATION ***
-
-
-
-
-
-Books by Mr. Torrey.
-
-
- NATURE’S INVITATION. 16mo, $1.10, _net._ Postage extra.
-
- THE CLERK OF THE WOODS. 16mo, $1.10, _net._ Postpaid, $1.20.
-
- FOOTING IT IN FRANCONIA. 16mo, $1.10, _net._ Postpaid, $1.19.
-
- EVERYDAY BIRDS. Elementary Studies. With twelve colored Illustrations
- reproduced from Audubon. Square 12mo, $1.00.
-
- BIRDS IN THE BUSH. 16mo, $1.25.
-
- A RAMBLER’S LEASE. 16mo, $1.25.
-
- THE FOOT-PATH WAY. 16mo, gilt top, $1.25.
-
- A FLORIDA SKETCH-BOOK. 16mo, $1.25.
-
- SPRING NOTES FROM TENNESSEE. 16mo, $1.25.
-
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-
-
- HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK.
-
-
-
-
-NATURE’S INVITATION
-
-
-
-
- NATURE’S INVITATION
-
- NOTES OF A BIRD-GAZER
- NORTH AND SOUTH
-
- BY
- BRADFORD TORREY
-
- “On Nature’s invitation do I come.”--WORDSWORTH.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY
- The Riverside Press, Cambridge
- 1904
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT 1904 BY BRADFORD TORREY
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
- _Published October 1904_
-
-
-
-
-PREFATORY NOTE
-
-
-Of the chapters here brought together the two longest, the first
-and the last, are reprinted from the “Atlantic Monthly.” The others
-were originally contributed, by way of weekly letters, to three
-newspapers,--the “Evening Transcript” of Boston, and the “Mail and
-Express” and the “Evening Post” of New York.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- NEW HAMPSHIRE
-
- PAGE
-
- A MAY VISIT TO MOOSILAUKE 3
- A WEEK ON MOUNT WASHINGTON 32
- ABOVE THE BIRDS 41
- MOUNTAIN-TOP AND VALLEY 50
- IN THE MOUNT LAFAYETTE FOREST 57
- ON BALD MOUNTAIN 65
- BIRDS AND BRIGHT LEAVES 72
-
-
- FLORIDA
-
- FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF MIAMI 83
- A FROSTY MORNING 89
- BEWILDERMENT 96
- WAITING FOR THE MUSIC 104
- PERIPATETIC BOTANY 111
- A PEEP AT THE EVERGLADES 120
- THE BEGINNINGS OF SPRING 128
- FAIR ORMOND 136
- A DAY IN THE WOODS 142
- PICTURE AND SONG 151
-
-
- TEXAS AND ARIZONA
-
- IN OLD SAN ANTONIO 161
- A BIRD-GAZER’S PUZZLES 171
- LUCK ON THE PRAIRIE 179
- OVER THE BORDER 188
- FIRST DAYS IN TUCSON 196
- MOBBED IN ARIZONA 205
- AN IDLE AFTERNOON 215
- SHY LIFE IN THE DESERT 224
- A NEW ACQUAINTANCE 233
- THE DESERT REJOICES 242
- NESTS AND OTHER MATTERS 251
- A FLYCATCHER AND A SPARROW 259
- A BUNCH OF BRIGHT BIRDS 266
-
- INDEX 295
-
-
-
-
-NEW HAMPSHIRE
-
-
-
-
-A MAY VISIT TO MOOSILAUKE
-
-
-When a man sets forth on an out-of-door pleasure jaunt, his prayer
-is for weather. If he is going to the mountains, let him double his
-urgency. In the mountains, if nowhere else, weather is three fifths of
-life.
-
-My first trip to New Hampshire the present season[1] was made under
-smooth, high clouds, which left the distance clear, so that the
-mountains stood up grandly beyond the lake as we ran along its western
-border. Not a drop of rain fell till I stepped off the car at Warren.
-At that moment the world grew suddenly dark, and before I could get
-into the open carriage the clouds burst, and with a rattling of
-thunder bolts a deluge of rain and hail descended upon us. There was
-no contending with such an adversary, though a good woman across the
-way, commiserating our plight, came to the door with proffers of an
-umbrella. I retreated to the station, while the driver hastened down
-the street to put his team under shelter. So a half hour passed.
-Then we tried again, and half frozen, in spite of a winter overcoat
-and everything that goes with it (the date was May 17), I reached my
-destination, five miles away, at the foot of Moosilauke.
-
-All this would hardly deserve narration, perhaps (the story of
-travelers’ discomforts being mostly matter for skipping), only that it
-marked the setting in of a cold, rainy “spell” that hung upon us for
-four days. Four sunless days out of seven was a proportion fairly to
-be complained of. The more I consider it, the truer seems the equation
-just now stated, that mountain weather is three fifths of life. For
-those four days I did not even _see_ Moosilauke, though we were living,
-so to speak, upon its shoulder, and I knew by hearsay that the summit
-house was visible from the back doorstep.
-
-My first brief walk before supper should reasonably have been in
-the clearer valley country; but if reason spoke inclination did not
-hear it, and my feet--which seem to feel that they are old enough by
-this time to know their master’s business for him--took of their own
-motion an opposite course. The mountain woods, as I entered them,
-had the appearance of early March: only the merest sprinkling of new
-life,--clintonia leaves especially, with here and there a round-leaved
-violet, both leaves and flowers,--upon a ground still all defaced by
-the hand of Winter. Dead leaves make an agreeable carpet, as they
-rustle cheerfully-sadly under one’s feet in autumn; but there was no
-rustle here; the snow had pressed every leaf flat and left it sodden.
-One thing consoled me: I had not arrived too late. The “bud-crowned
-spring,” for all my fears, was yet to “go forth.”
-
-The next morning it was not enough to say that _it_ was cloudy. That
-impersonal expression would have been quite below the mark. _We_ were
-cloudy. In short, the cloud was literally around us and upon us. As
-I stepped out of doors, a rose-breasted grosbeak was singing in one
-direction, and a white-throated sparrow in another, both far away in
-the mist. It was strange they should be so happy, I was ready to say.
-But I bethought myself that their case was no different from my own. It
-was comparatively clear just about me, while the fog shut down like a
-curtain a rod or two away, leaving the rest of the world dark. So every
-bird stood in a ring of light, an illuminated chantry all his own,
-
- And sang for joy, good Christian bird,
- To be thus marked and favored.
-
-Strange had he _not_ been happy. To be blest above one’s fellows is to
-be blest twice over.
-
-This time I took the downward road, turning to the left, and found
-myself at once in pleasant woods, with hospitable openings and bypaths;
-a birdy spot, or I was no prophet, though just now but few voices were
-to be heard, and those of the commonest. Here stood new-blown anemones,
-bellworts, and white violets, an early flock, with one painted trillium
-lording it over them; a small specimen of its kind, but big enough to
-be king (or shepherd) in such company. A brook, or perhaps two, with
-the few birds, sang about me, invisible. I knew not whither I was
-going, and the all-embracing cloud deepened the mystery. Soon the road
-took a sudden dip, and a louder noise filled my ears. I was coming
-to a river? Yes, for presently I was on the bridge, with a raging
-mountain torrent, eighty feet, perhaps, underneath, foaming against the
-boulders; a bare, perpendicular cliff on one side, and perpendicular
-spruces and hemlocks draping a similar cliff on the other side. It was
-Baker’s River, I was told afterward,--the same that I had looked at
-here and there, the day before, from the car window. It was good to see
-it so young and exuberant; but even a young river need not be so much
-in haste, I thought. It would get to the sawmills soon enough, and by
-and by would learn, too late, that it is only a little way to the sea.
-
-Once over the bridge, the road climbed quickly out of the narrow gorge,
-and at the first turn brought me in sight of a small painted house,
-with a small orchard of thrifty-looking small trees behind it. Here
-a venerable collie came running forth to bark at the stranger, but
-yielded readily to the usual blandishments, and after sniffing again
-and again at my heels, just to make sure of knowing me the next time,
-went back, contented, to lie down in his old place before the window.
-He was the only person that spoke to me--the only one I met--during the
-forenoon, though I spent it all on the highway.
-
-Another patch of woods, where a distant Canadian nuthatch is calling
-(strange how I love that nasal, penetrating, far-reaching voice, whose
-quality my reasoning taste condemns), and I see before me another
-house, standing in broad acres of cleared land. This one is not
-painted, and, as I presently make out, is uninhabited, its old tenant
-gone, dead or discouraged, and no new one looked for; an “abandoned
-farm,” such as one grows used to seeing in our northern country. It
-is beautiful for situation, one of those sightly places which the
-city-worn passer-by in a mountain wagon pitches upon at once as just
-the place he should like to buy and retire to--_some_ day; in that
-autumn of golden leisure of which, now and then,
-
- “When all his active powers are still,”
-
-he has a pleasing vision. Oh yes, he means to do something of that
-kind--some day; and even while he talks of it he knows in his heart
-that “some day” is only another name for “next day after never.”
-
-A few happy barn swallows (wise enough, or simple enough, to be happy
-_now_) go skimming over the grass, and a pair of robins and a pair of
-bluebirds seem to be at home in the orchard; which they like none the
-worse, we may be sure,--the bluebirds, especially,--because, along with
-the house and the barn, it is falling into decay. What are apple trees
-for, but to grow old and become usefully hollow? Otherwise they would
-be no better than so many beeches or butternuts. It is impossible but
-that every creature should look at the world through its own eyes; and
-no bluebird ever ate an apple. A purple finch warbles ecstatically, a
-white-throated sparrow whistles in the distance, and now and then, from
-far down the slope, I catch the upliftings of a hermit thrush.
-
-A man grows thoughtful, not to say sentimental, in such a place,
-surrounded by fields on which so many years of human labor have been
-spent, so much ploughing and harrowing, planting and reaping, now given
-up again to nature. Here was the garden patch, its outlines still
-traceable. Here was the well. Long lines of stone wall still separate
-the mowing land from the pasturage; and scattered over the fields are
-heaps of boulders, thrown together thus to get them out of the grass’s
-way. About the edges of every pile, and sometimes through the midst,
-have sprung up a few shrubs,--shad bushes, cherries, willows, and the
-like. Here they escape the scythe, as we are all trying to do. “Give
-us room that we may dwell!”--so these children of Zion cry. It is the
-great want of seeds, so many millions of which go to waste annually in
-every acre,--a place in which to take root and (harder yet) to keep
-it. And the birds, too, find the boulder heaps a convenience. I watch
-a savanna sparrow as he flits from one to another, stopping to sing a
-measure or two from each. Even this humble, almost voiceless artist
-needs a stage or platform. The lowliest sparrow ever hatched has some
-rudiments of a histrionic faculty; and be we birds or humans, it is
-hard to do one’s best without a bit of posing.
-
-What further uses these humble stone heaps may serve I cannot say; no
-doubt they shelter many insects; but it is encouraging to consider how
-few things a farmer can do that will not be of benefit to others beside
-himself. Surely the man who piled these boulders for the advantage of
-his hay crop never expected them to serve as a text for preaching.
-
-The cloud drops again, and is at its old trick of exaggeration. A
-bird that I take for a robin turns out to be a sparrow. Did it look
-larger because it seemed to be farther away than it really was? Or
-is it seen now as it actually is, my vision not being deceived, but
-rather corrected of an habitual error? The fog makes for me a newer
-and stranger world, at any rate; I am farther from home because of
-it; another day’s travel might have done less for me. And for all
-that, I am not sorry when it rises again, and the hills come out. How
-beautiful they are! They will hardly be more so, I think, when the
-June foliage replaces the square miles of bare boughs which now give
-them a blue-purple tint, interrupted here and there by patches of new
-yellow-green poplar leaves--a veritable illumination, sun-bright even
-in this sunless weather--or a few sombre evergreens.
-
-As I get away from the farm, the mountain woods on either side seem
-to be filled with something like a chorus of rose-breasted grosbeaks.
-Except for a few days at Highlands, North Carolina, some years ago,
-I have never seen so many together. A grand “migratory wave” must
-have broken on the mountains within a night or two. As far as music
-is concerned, the grosbeaks have the field mostly to themselves,
-though a grouse beats his drum at short intervals, and now and then
-a white-throat whistles. There is no bird’s voice to which a fog is
-more becoming, I say to myself, with a pleasing sense of having said
-something unintended. To my thinking, the white-throat should always
-be a good distance away (perhaps because in the mountains one grows
-accustomed to hearing him thus); and the fog puts him there, with no
-damage to the fullness of his tone.
-
-Looking at the flowers along the wayside,--a few yellow violets, a
-patch of spring-beauties, and little else,--my eye falls upon what
-seems to be a miniature forest of curious tiny plants growing in the
-gutter. At first I see only the upright, whitish stalks, an inch or two
-in height, each bearing at the top a globular brown knob. Afterward
-I discover that the stalks, which, examined more closely, have a
-crystalline, glassy appearance, spring from a leaf-like or lichen-like
-growth, lying prostrate upon the wet soil. The plant is a liverwort,
-or scale-moss, of some kind, I suppose, and is growing here by the
-mile. How few are the things we see! And of those we see, how few
-there are concerning which we have any real knowledge,--enough, even,
-to use words about them! (When a man can do that concerning any class
-of natural objects, no matter what they are or what he says about
-them, he passes with the crowd for a scholar, or at the very least a
-“close observer.”) But to tell the shameful truth, my mood just now is
-not inquisitive. I should like to know? Yes; but I can get on without
-knowing. There are worse things than ignorance. Let this plant be what
-it will. I should be little the wiser for being able to name it.[2] I
-have no body of facts to which to attach this new one; and unrelated
-knowledge is almost the same as none at all. At best it is quickly
-forgotten. So my indolence excuses itself.
-
-The road begins to climb rather sharply. Unless I am going to the top
-of the ridge and beyond, I have gone far enough. So I turn my back
-upon the mountain; and behold, the cloud having lifted again, there,
-straight before me down the road and across the valley, is the house
-from which I set out, almost or quite the only one in sight. After
-all, I have walked but a little way, though I have been a good while
-about it; for I have hardly begun my return before I find myself again
-approaching the abandoned farm. Downhill miles are short. Here a
-light shower comes on, and I raise my umbrella. Then follows a grand
-excitement among a flock of sheep, whose day, perhaps, needs enlivening
-as badly as my own. They gaze at the umbrella, start away upon the
-gallop, stop again to look (“There are forty looking like one,” I say
-to myself), and are again struck with panic. This time they scamper
-down the field out of sight. Another danger escaped! Shepherds, it is
-evident, cannot be so effeminate as to carry umbrellas.
-
-Two heifers are of a more confiding disposition, coming close to look
-at the stranger as he sits on the doorsill of the old barn. Their
-curiosity concerning me is perhaps about as lively as mine was touching
-the supposed liverworts. Like me they stand and consider, but betray
-no unmannerly eagerness. “Who is he, I wonder?” they might be saying;
-“I never saw him before.” But their jaws still move mechanically, and
-their beautiful eyes are full of a peaceful satisfaction. A cud must
-be a great alleviation to the temper. With such a perennial sedative,
-how could any one ever be fretted into nervous prostration? As a
-matter of fact, I am told, cows rarely or never suffer from that most
-distressing ailment. I have seen chewers of gum before now who, by all
-signs, should have enjoyed a similar immunity.
-
-While the heifers are still making up their minds about their
-unexpected visitor, I turn to examine a couple of white-crowned
-sparrows, male and female,--I wonder if they really _are_ a
-couple?--feeding before the house. I hope the species is to prove
-common here. Three birds were behind the hotel before breakfast, and
-one of them sang. The quaint little medley, sparrow song and warbler
-song together, is still something of an event with me, I have heard it
-so seldom and like it so well; and whether the birds sing or not, they
-are musical to look at.
-
-When I approach the painted house, on my way homeward, the fat old
-collie comes running out again, barking. This time, however, he takes
-but one sniff. He has made a mistake, and realizes it at once. “Oh,
-excuse me,” he says quite plainly. “I didn’t recognize you. You’re the
-same old codger. I ought to have known.” And he is so confused and
-ashamed that he hurries away without waiting to make up.
-
-It is a great mortification to a gentlemanly dog to find himself at
-fault in this manner. I remember another collie, much younger than
-this one, with whom I once had a minute or two of friendly intercourse.
-Then, months afterward, I went again by the house where he lived, and
-he came dashing out with all fierceness, as if he would rend me in
-pieces. I let him come (there was nothing else to do, or nothing else
-worth doing), but the instant his nose struck me he saw his error.
-Then, in a flash, he dropped flat on the ground, and literally licked
-my shoes. There was no attitude abject enough to express the depth of
-his humiliation. And then, like the dog of this morning, he jumped up,
-and ran with all speed back to his doorstep.
-
-Another descent into the gorge of Baker’s River, and another stop on
-the bridge (how gloriously the water comes down!), and I am again
-in the pretty, broken woods below the hotel. Here my attention is
-attracted by an almost prostrate but still vigorous yellow birch, like
-the one that stood for so many years by the road below the Profile
-House, in the Franconia Notch. Somehow the tree got an awkward slant in
-its youth, and has always kept it, while the larger branches have grown
-straight upward, at right angles with the trunk, as if each were trying
-to be a tree on its own account. The Franconia Notch specimen became a
-landmark, and was really of no inconsiderable service; a convenience
-to the hotel proprietors, and a means of health to idle boarders, who
-needed an incentive to exercise. “Come, let’s walk down as far as the
-bent tree,” one would say to another. The average American cannot
-stroll; he has never learned; if he puts his legs in motion, he must
-go to some fixed point, though it be only a milestone or a huckleberry
-bush. The infirmity is most likely congenital, a taint in the blood.
-The fathers worked,--all honor to them,--having to earn their bread
-under hard conditions; and the children, though they may dress like the
-descendants of princes, cannot help turning even their amusements into
-a stint.
-
-And the sapient critic? Well, instead of carrying a fishing rod or
-walking to a bent tree, he had come out with an opera-glass, and had
-made of his morning jaunt a bird-cataloguing expedition. Considered
-in that light, the trip had not been a brilliant success. In my whole
-forenoon I had seen and heard but twenty-eight species. If I had stayed
-in my low-country village, and walked half as far, I should have
-counted twice as many. But I should not have enjoyed myself one quarter
-as well.
-
-The next day and the next were rainy, with Moosilauke still invisible.
-Then came a morning of sunshine and clear atmosphere. So far it was
-ideal mountain weather; but the cold wind was so strong at our level
-that it was certain to be nothing less than a hurricane at the top. I
-waited, therefore, twenty-four hours longer. Then, at quarter before
-seven on the morning of May 23, I set out. I am as careful of my dates,
-it seems, as if I had been starting for the North Pole. And why not?
-The importance of an expedition depends upon the spirit in which it is
-undertaken. Nothing is of serious consequence in this world except as
-subjective considerations make it so. Even the North Pole is only an
-imaginary point, the end of an imaginary line, as old geographies used
-to inform us, pleonastically,--as if “position without dimensions,” a
-something without length, breadth, or thickness, could be other than
-imaginary. I started, then, at quarter before seven. Many years ago I
-had been taken up the mountain road in a carriage; now I would travel
-it on foot, spending at least an hour upon each of its five miles, and
-so see something of the mountain itself, as well as of the prospect
-from the summit.
-
-The miles, some longer, some shorter, as I thought (a not unpleasant
-variety, though the fourth stage was excessively spun out, it seemed
-to me, perhaps to make it end at the spring), are marked off by
-guideboards, so that the newcomer need not fall into the usual
-disheartening mistake of supposing himself almost at the top before
-he has gone halfway. As for the first mile, which must measure near a
-mile and a half, and which ends just above the “second brook” (every
-mountain path has its natural waymarks), I had been over it twice
-within the last few days, so that the edge of my curiosity was dulled;
-but, with one excuse and another, I managed easily enough to give it
-its allotted hour. For one thing, a hairy woodpecker detained me five
-or ten minutes, putting such tremendous vigor into his hammering that
-I was positively certain (with a shade of uncertainty, nevertheless,
-such as all “observers” will understand; there is nothing so true as a
-paradox) that he must be a _pileatus_, till at last he showed himself.
-“Well, well,” said I, “guesswork is a poor dependence.” It was well I
-had stayed by. The forest was so nearly deserted, so little animated,
-that I felt under obligation to the fellow for every stroke of his
-mallet. Though a man goes to the wood for silence, his ear craves some
-natural noises,--enough, at least, to make the stillness audible.
-
-The second mile is of steeper grade than the first, and toward the
-close brought me suddenly to a place unlike anything that had gone
-before. I named it at once the Flower Garden. For an acre, or,
-more likely, for two or three acres, the ground--a steep southern
-exposure, held up to face the sun--was covered with plants in bloom:
-Dutchman’s-breeches (_Dicentra cucullaria_),--bunches of heart-shaped,
-cream-white flowers with yellow facings, looking for all the world as
-if they had been planted there; round-leaved violets in profusion;
-white violets (_blanda_); spring-beauties; adder’s-tongue (dog’s-tooth
-violet); and painted trillium. A pretty show; pretty in itself, and
-a thousand times prettier for being happened upon thus unexpectedly,
-after two hours of woods that were almost as dead as winter.
-
-Only a little way above this point were the first beds of snow; and
-henceforward, till I came out upon the ridge, two miles above, the
-woods were mostly filled with it, though there was little in the
-road. About this time, also, I began to notice a deer’s track. He
-had descended the road within a few hours, as I judged, or since the
-last rainfall, and might have been a two-legged, or even a one-legged
-animal,--biped or uniped,--so far as his footsteps showed. I should
-rather have seen _him_, but the hoofprints were a deal better than
-nothing; and undoubtedly I saw them much longer than I could possibly
-have seen the maker of them, and so, perhaps, got out of them more of
-companionship. They were with me for two hours,--clean up to the ridge,
-and part way across it.
-
-Somewhere between the third and fourth mileboards I stopped short
-with an exclamation. There, straight before me, over the long eastern
-shoulder of Moosilauke, beyond the big Jobildunk Ravine, loomed or
-floated a shining snow-white mountain-top. Nothing could have been more
-beautiful. It was the crest of Mount Washington, I assumed, though
-even with the aid of a glass I could make out no sign of buildings,
-which must have been matted with new-fallen snow. I took its identity
-for granted, I say. The truth is, I became badly confused about it
-afterward, such portions of the range as came into view having an
-unfamiliar aspect; but later still, on arriving at the summit, found
-that my first idea had been correct.
-
-That sudden, heavenly apparition gave me one of those minutes that
-are good as years. Once, indeed, in early October, I had seen Mount
-Washington when it was more resplendent: freshly snow-covered
-throughout, and then, as the sun went down, lighted up before my eyes
-with a rosy glow, brighter and brighter and brighter, till it seemed
-all on fire within. But even that unforgettable spectacle had less of
-unearthly beauty, was less a work of pure enchantment, I thought, than
-this detached, fleecy-looking piece of aerial whiteness, cloud stuff or
-dream stuff, yet whiter than any cloud, lying at rest yonder, almost at
-my own level, against the deep blue of the forenoon sky.
-
-All this while, the birds, which had been few from the start,
---black-throated greens and blues, Blackburnians, oven-birds,
-a bay-breast, blue yellow-backs, siskins, Swainson thrushes, a
-blue-headed vireo, winter wrens, rose-breasted grosbeaks, chickadees,
-grouse, and snowbirds,--had grown fewer and fewer, till at last, among
-these stunted, low-branched spruces, with the snow under them, there
-was little else but an occasional myrtle warbler (“The brave myrtle,”
-I kept saying to myself), with its musical, soft trill, so out of
-place,--the voice of peaceful green valleys rather than of stormy
-mountain-tops,--yet so welcome. Once a gray-cheeked thrush called just
-above me. These impenetrable upper woods are the gray-cheeks’ summer
-home,--a worthy one; but I heard nothing of their wild music, and
-doubted whether they had yet arrived in full summer force.
-
-It was past eleven o’clock when I came out at the clearing by the
-woodpile, with half the world before me. From this point it was but a
-little way to the bare ridge connecting the South Peak--up which I had
-been trudging all the forenoon--and the main summit. This, with its
-little hotel, that looked as if it were in danger of sliding off the
-mountain northward, was straight before me across the ravine, a long
-but easy mile away.
-
-On the ridge I found myself all at once in something like a gale of
-ice-cold wind. Who could have believed it? It was well I had brought
-a sweater; and squatting behind a lucky clump of low evergreens, I
-wormed my way into what is certainly the most comfortable of all
-garments for such a place,--as good, at least, as two overcoats. Now
-let the wind whistle, especially as it was at my back, and was bearing
-me triumphantly up the slope. So I thought, bravely enough, till the
-trail took a sudden shift, and the gale caught me on another tack. Then
-I sang out of the other corner of my mouth, as I used to hear country
-people say. I no longer boasted, but saved my breath for better use.
-
-Wind or no wind, it is an exhilaration to walk here above the world.
-Once a bird chirps to me timidly from the knee-wood close by. I answer
-him, and out peeps a white-throat. “_You_ here!” he says; “so early!”
-At my feet is plenty of Greenland sandwort,--faded, winter-worn,
-gray-green tufts, tightly packed among the small boulders. Whatever
-lives here must lie low and hang on. And with it is the shiny-leaved
-mountain cranberry,--_Vaccinium Vitis-Idæa_. Let me never omit that
-pretty name. Neither cranberry nor sandwort shows any sign of blossom
-or bud as yet; but it is good to know that they will both be ready when
-the clock strikes. I can see them now, pink and white, just as they
-will look in July--nay, just as they will look a thousand years hence.
-
-Again my course alters, and the wind lets me lean back upon it as it
-lifts me forward. Who says we are growing old? The years, as they pass,
-may turn and look at us meaningly, as if to say, “You have lived long
-enough;” yet even to us the climbing of a mountain road (though by
-this time it must _be_ a road, or something like it) is still only the
-putting of one foot before the other.
-
-So I come at last to the top, and make haste to get into the lee of the
-house, which is tightly barred, of course, just as its owners left it
-seven or eight months ago. The wind chases me round the corners, one
-after another; but by searching I discover a nook where it can hit me
-no more than half the time. Here I sit and look at the mountains,--a
-glorious company: Mount Washington and its fellows, with all their
-higher parts white; the sombre mass of the Twins on this side of them;
-and, nearer still, the long, sharp, purple crest of dear old Lafayette
-and its southern neighbors. So many I can name. The rest are mountains
-only; a wilderness of heaped-up, forest-covered land; a prospect to
-dilate the soul.
-
-My expectation has been to stay here for two hours or more; but
-the wind is merciless, and after going out over the broad, bare,
-boulder-sprinkled summit till I can see down into Franconia (which
-looks pretty low and pretty far off, though I distinguish certain of
-the buildings clearly enough), I begin to feel that I shall enjoy the
-sight of my eyes better from some sheltered position on the upper part
-of the road. Even on the ridge, however, I take advantage of every tuft
-of spruces to stand still for a bit, looking especially at the mountain
-itself, so big, so bare, and so solid: East Peak, South Peak, and _the_
-Peak, as they are called, although neither of them is in the slightest
-degree peaked, with the great gulf of Jobildunk--in which Baker’s River
-rises--wedged among them. If the word Moosilauke means a “bald place,”
-as it is said to do, then we have here another proof of the North
-American Indian’s genius for fitting words to things.[3]
-
-Even to-day, windy and cold as it is, a butterfly passes over now and
-then (mostly red admirals), and smaller insects flit carelessly about.
-Insects are capable mountaineers, as I have often found occasion to
-notice. The only time I was ever on the sharp point of Mount Adams,
-where my companion and I had barely room to stand together, the air
-about our heads was black with insects of all sorts and sizes, a
-veritable cloud; and when we unscrewed the Appalachian Club’s brass
-bottle to sign the roll of visitors, we found that the signers
-immediately before us, after putting down a date and their names, had
-added, “Plenty of bugs.” And surely I was never pestered worse by black
-flies than once, years ago, on this very summit of Moosilauke. All the
-hours of a long, breathless, tropical July day they made life miserable
-for me. Better a thousand times such a frosty, man-compelling wind as I
-am now fleeing from.
-
-Once off the ridge, I can loosen my hat and sit down in comfort. The
-sun is good. How incredible it seems that the air is so furiously in
-motion only fifty rods back! Here it is like Elysium. And almost I
-believe that this limited prospect is better than the grander sweep
-from the summit itself,--less distracting and more restful. So half
-a loaf may be better than a whole one, if a man cannot be contented
-without trying to eat the whole one. A white-throat and a myrtle
-warbler sing to me as I nibble my sandwich. They are the loftiest
-spirits, it appears. I take off my hat to them.
-
-Already I am down far enough to catch the sound of running water; and
-every rod brings a new mountain into view from behind the long East
-Peak. One of the best of them all is cone-shaped Kearsarge, topped with
-its house. Now the white crest of Washington rises upon me,--snow with
-the sun on it; and here, by the fourth mileboard, are a few pale-bright
-spring-beauties,--five or six blossoms only. They have found a bit of
-earth from which the snow melted early, and here they are, true to
-their name, with the world on every side nothing but a desolation. If
-it is time for myrtle warblers, why not for them? Now I see not only
-Washington, but the mountains with it, all strangely foreshortened, so
-as to give the highest peak a most surprising preëminence. No wonder
-I was in doubt what to call it. In days past I have walked that
-whole ridge, from Clinton to Adams; and glad I am to remember it. A
-man should do such things while he can, teaching his feet to feel the
-ground, and letting his heart cheer him.
-
-A turn in the road, and straight below me lies my deserted farmhouse.
-Another turn, and I lose it. In ascending a mountain we face the path;
-in descending we face the world. I speak thus because at this moment I
-am looking down a charming vista,--forest-covered mountains, row beyond
-row. But for the gravel under my feet I might be a thousand miles from
-any human habitation. Presently a Swainson thrush whistles. By that
-token I am getting away from the summit, though things are still wintry
-enough, with no sign of bud or blossom.
-
-And look! What is that far below me, facing up the road? A four-footed
-beast of some kind. A bear? No; I raise my glass, and see a porcupine.
-He has his mobile, sensitive nose to the ground, and continues to
-smell, and perhaps to feed, as I draw nearer and nearer. By and by,
-being very near, and still unworthy of the creature’s notice, I roll
-a stone toward him. At this he shows a gleam of interest. He sits up,
-folds his hands,--puts his fore paws together over his breast,--looks
-at me, and then waddles a few steps toward the upper side of the road.
-“I must be getting out of this,” he seems to think. But he reconsiders
-his purpose, comes back, sits on end again and folds his hands; and
-then, the reconnoissance being satisfactory, falls to smelling the
-ground as before. I can see the tips of his nostrils twitching as in a
-kind of ecstasy. There must be something savory under them. Meantime,
-still with my glass lifted, I come closer and closer, till I am right
-upon him. If porcupines can shoot, I must be in danger of a quill.
-Another step or two, and he waddles to the lower side of the road.
-He is a vacillating body, however; and once more he turns to sit up
-and fold his hands. This time I hear him rattling his teeth, but not
-very fiercely,--nothing to compare with the gnashings of an angry
-woodchuck; and at last, when I cluck to him, he hastens his steps a
-little, as much, perhaps, as a porcupine can, and disappears in the
-brush, dragging his ridiculous, sloping, straw-thatched hinder parts--a
-combination of lean-to and L--after him. He has never cultivated
-speed or decision of character, having a better defense. So far as
-appearances go, he is certainly an odd one.
-
-There are no blossoms yet, nor visible promise of any, but once in
-a while a bright Atalanta (red admiral) butterfly flits before me.
-I wonder if I could capture one by the old schoolboy method? I am
-moved to try; but my best effort--not very determined, it must be
-confessed--ends in failure. Perhaps I should have had some golden
-apples.
-
-At last I come to a few adder’s-tongues, the first flowers since
-the five or six spring-beauties a mile and a half back. Yes, I am
-approaching the Flower Garden; for here is a most lovely bank of yellow
-violets, a hundred or two together, a real bed of them. Nobody ever
-saw anything prettier. Here, also, is the showy purple trillium, not
-so unhandsomely overgrown as it sometimes is, in addition to all the
-flowers that I noticed on the ascent. A garden indeed. I pull up a
-root of Dutchman’s-breeches, and sit down to examine the cluster of
-rice-like pink kernels at the base of the stem. Excellent fodder they
-must make for animals of some kind. “Squirrel-corn” is an apt name, I
-think, though I believe it is applied, not to this species, but to its
-relative, _Dicentra Canadensis_.
-
-The whole plant is uncommonly clean-looking and attractive, with its
-pale, finely dissected leaves and its delicate, waxy bloom; but looking
-at it, and then at a bank of round-leaved violets opposite, I say once
-more, “Those are _my_ flowers.” Something in the shade of color is most
-exactly to my taste. The very sight of them gladdens me like sunshine.
-But before I get out of the garden, as I am in no haste to do (if it
-was attractive this morning, it is doubly so now, after those miles
-of snowbanks), I am near to changing my mind; for suddenly, as my eye
-follows the border of the road, it falls upon a small blue violet, the
-first of that color that I have noticed since my arrival at Moosilauke.
-It must be my long-desired _Selkirkii_, I say to myself, and down I
-go to look at it. Yes, it is not leafy-stemmed, the petals are not
-bearded, and the leaves are unlike any I have ever seen. I take it up,
-root and all, and search carefully till I find one more. If it _is_
-Selkirkii, as I feel sure it is,[4] then I am happy. This is the one
-species of our eastern North American violets that I have never picked.
-It completes my set. And it is especially good to find it here, where I
-was not in the least expecting it. With the two specimens in my pocket
-I trudge the remaining two miles in high spirits. The violets are no
-newer to me than the liverwort specimens on Mount Cushman were, but
-they have the incomparable advantage of things long looked for,--things
-for the lack of which, so to speak, a pigeonhole in the mind has stood
-consciously vacant. Blessed are they who want something, for when they
-get it they will be glad.
-
-The weather below had been warm and still, a touch of real summer. So
-said the people at the hotel; and I knew it already; for, as I came
-through the cattle pasture, I saw below me a new, strange-looking,
-brightly illuminated grove of young birches. “Were those trees there
-this morning?” I thought. A single day had covered them with sunny,
-yellow-green leaves, till the change was like a miracle. Indeed, it
-_was_ a miracle. May the spring never come when I shall fail to feel
-it so. Then I looked back at the summit. Was it there, no farther away
-than that, that so icy a wind had chased me about?--or had I been in
-Greenland?
-
-
-
-
-A WEEK ON MOUNT WASHINGTON
-
-
-I went up Mount Washington in the afternoon of August 22d, and came
-down again in the afternoon of the 29th. Ten years before I had spent
-a week there, in early July, and had not visited the place since. In
-some respects, of course, the summit is badly damaged (I have heard it
-spoken of as utterly ruined) by the presence of the hotel and other
-buildings, not to mention the railway trains, with their daily freight
-of bustling lunch-box tourists. Still the railway and the hotel are
-indisputable conveniences; I should hardly have stayed there so long
-without them; and in this imperfect world we must not expect to find
-all the good things in one basket.
-
-As for the tourists, one need walk but a few steps to be rid of
-them. As a class they are not enterprising pedestrians. In fifteen
-minutes you may find yourself where human beings are as far away,
-practically, as if you were among the highest Andes or on the famous
-“peak in Darien.” There you may sit on a boulder, or recline on a mat
-of prostrate willow, and imagine yourself the only man in the world;
-gazing at the prospect, listening to the mountain silence (there is
-none like it), or eating alpine blueberries, as lonely as any hermit’s
-heart could wish. All this you may do, and then return to the most
-obliging of hosts, the best of good dinners, and a comfortable bed.
-
-By the time you have been there two days, moreover, you will have
-begun to enjoy the hotel, not only for its physical comforts, but as
-an interesting miniature world. The manager and the clerk, the waiters
-and the bellboys, the editors and the printers, the night watchman and
-the train conductor, will all have become your friends, almost your
-blood relations,--such intimate good feeling does a joint seclusion
-induce,--and at any minute of the day in may come a group of strangers
-of the most engagingly picturesque sort; having no more the appearance
-of sales-ladies or women of fashion, shopkeepers or bankers’ clerks,
-than of college students and professors. They are men and women. They
-have put off the fine clothes and the smug appearance which society
-exacts of its members; they look not the least in the world as if they
-had just come out of a bandbox; their _negligée_ costumes bear no
-resemblance to the dainty, immaculate rig of the tennis court or the
-golf links. They are “roughing it” in earnest. For at least eight or
-ten hours, possibly for as many days, they have ceased to be concerned
-about the cut of their garments or the smoothness of their hair. Of
-some of them the aspect is fairly disreputable. It is a solemn fact
-that you may here see gentlemen with rents in their trousers and a
-week’s beard on their faces. And ten to one they will brazen it out
-without apology.
-
-The dapper clerk and the prosperous merchant and his wife, who have
-ridden up in the train with their good clothes and their company faces
-on, may stare if they will. It is nothing to the campers and walkers.
-They are not on parade, and do not mind being smiled at. A pretty
-college girl will walk about the office, alpenstock in hand, with her
-hair tied in a careless knot, her skirts well above the tops of her
-scratched and dusty boots, her face brown and her sleeves tucked up,
-and seem quite as much at ease as if she were in full evening dress
-with the drawing-room lights blazing upon her alabaster shoulders, her
-laces, and her diamonds. It is heroism (or heroinism) of a kind worth
-seeing.
-
-You are still enjoying the spectacle when two men enter the door, one
-with a botanical box slung over his shoulder. It is as if he had given
-you the Masonic grip, and you hardly wait for him to cross the sill
-before you make up to him with a question. By which route has he come,
-and what luck has he met with? Over the Crawford path, he answers, and
-though the season is pretty late, and Alpine plants are mostly out of
-bloom, he has found some interesting things.
-
-Two or three of them he cannot name, and he opens the box. His special
-puzzle is a tiny, upright-growing plant, thickly set with roundish,
-crinkled leaves, and bearing a few blossoms so exceedingly small as
-almost to defy a common pocket-lens. Do you know what it is? Yes, to
-your own surprise, you remember, or seem to remember, and you run
-upstairs to bring down a Gray’s Manual. The plant is _Euphrasia_
-(eyebright), an Alpine variety. It was pointed out to you ten years
-ago, near the same Crawford path, by the man who knew the Mount
-Washington flora better than any one else. You recall the time as
-if it had been yesterday. Your companion dropped suddenly upon his
-knees, eyes to the ground. “What are you looking for?” you asked; and
-he answered “Euphrasia.” It is good to see it again. You find it for
-yourself the next day, it may be, in the Alpine Garden.
-
-And this other plant, stiffly matted and long past flowering? Your new
-acquaintance supposes it to be _Diapensia_; and for that you need no
-book. And this third one, with its rusty leaves, is the Lapland azalea.
-You remember the day you saw it first--in middle June--when all by
-yourself you were making your first ascent of the mountain, walking
-alternately over snowbanks and beds of flowers. So far as the lovely
-blossoms are concerned, you have never seen it since.
-
-Next morning your botanist bids you good-by; he is going down by the
-way of Tuckerman’s Ravine; and at noon, after some indolent, happy
-hours on the carriage-road and in the Alpine Garden, you are again in
-the hotel office when half a dozen campers from the northern peaks
-make their appearance. Dusty, travel-stained, disheveled, they bring
-the freedom of the hills with them and fill the place with their
-breeziness. Some of the “transients” clustered about the stove smile at
-a sight so unconventional, but the manager, the clerk, and the bellboys
-are better informed. They have seen the leader of the party before, and
-in a minute the word is passed round. This is Mr. ----, who came up the
-mountain with his son a year ago on the day of that dreadful storm,
-when two later adventurers upon the same path perished by the way, and
-he himself, old mountaineer that he was, with another life hanging
-upon his own, had more than once been all but ready to say, “It can’t
-be done.” Your traveling companion has seen him here before, though
-she was not present on that memorable occasion, and presently you are
-being introduced to him and his friends--a metropolitan clergyman, a
-university professor, and a younger man, with whose excellent work in
-your own line you are already acquainted.
-
-Anon the company breaks up,--the pedestrians are off for an afternoon
-excursion,--and you step out upon the platform to look about you.
-Against the railing are two men, one of them with what seems to be a
-“collecting gun” in his hand. “An ornithologist,” you say to yourself,
-and at the word you begin edging toward him. A remark or two about the
-weather and you ask him point-blank if he is collecting birds. No, he
-answers, his weapon is a rifle, and he shows you the cartridge. He has
-brought it along to shoot squirrels with. You wonder why any one should
-think it worth while to carry a gun over the nine miles of the Crawford
-path for so trifling a use; but that is none of your business, and just
-then the other man speaks up to say that his companion is a botanist,
-while he himself is a “bird man.” This is interesting (the second
-ornithologist within an hour), and you set about comparing notes. Did
-he hear anything of the Bicknell thrushes and the Hudsonian chickadees
-on his way up? No, he missed them both on this trip, though he has met
-them elsewhere in the mountains. You drop an innocent remark about the
-thrushes, and he says, “Are you Mr. So-and-So?” There is no denying
-it, and when he pronounces his own name it proves to be familiar; and
-a good talk follows. Then he starts down into the Alpine Garden,--you
-charging him to be sure to eat some of the delicious cespitose
-blueberries on the descent,--and ten minutes afterward he turns up
-again at your elbow. He has left his friend, and has hurried back to
-tell you of a sharp-shinned hawk that he has just seen. You may put the
-name into your Mount Washington bird list, if you will.
-
-So the days pass--no day without a new acquaintance. If you and one of
-the local editors start down the trail to the Lakes of the Clouds after
-a Sunday-morning breakfast, you find yourselves going along with three
-Baltimore gentlemen, who have walked up from the Crawford House the
-day before (“Well, we arrive!” you remember to have heard the leader
-exclaim, as his foot struck the hotel platform), and are now on their
-return.
-
-They introduce one another to you and your companion,--Dr. This, Dr.
-That, and Dr. The Other,--and you pick your way downward over the
-boulders in Indian file, talking as you go. After a while you and the
-oldest of the Baltimoreans find yourselves falling a little behind the
-rest, and the conversation grows more and more friendly. He has come
-to New Hampshire, as he does every year, for the best of all tonics,
-a dose of mountain climbing. He has been somewhat overworked of late,
-especially with a long task of proof-reading. A new edition of his
-treatise on chemistry is passing through the press, and the moment the
-last sheets were corrected he broke away northward; and here he is,
-walking over high places, where he loves to be. “I am an old man,” he
-says; but his strength is not abated. Far be the day! At the lakeside
-hands are shaken and good-bys said. You will most likely never see each
-other again, but one of you, at least, keeps a bright memory.
-
-It is a strange place, the Summit House. Twice a day, as on the
-seashore, the tide rises and falls. But the evening flood is a small
-affair. The crowd comes at noon. It registers its name, eats its
-luncheon, writes a postal-card, buys a souvenir, asks a question or
-two, more or less pertinent (“Can you tell me where the Tip-Over House
-is?” one good woman said--for the rarified air plays queer pranks with
-its victims), possibly looks at the prospect, probably snaps a camera,
-and then takes the after-dinner train for the base. Evening passengers
-make a longer stay. They cannot do otherwise. For them the sunset and
-the sunrise are the great events. One would think that such phenomena
-were never to be witnessed in the low country. They watch the clouds,
-or more likely the cloud, and go to sleep with one ear open for the
-sunrise bell.
-
-So much for the larger number of Summit House guests, the respectable
-majority. A few, two in twenty, perhaps, arrive on foot; and these are
-the good ones--the salt of the mountain, so to speak. This time I was
-not one of them, but I had no thought of denying the superiority of
-their privilege.
-
-
-
-
-ABOVE THE BIRDS
-
-
-In the course of my seven days at the summit of Mount Washington I
-listed six species of birds. A few snowbirds--three or four--were to
-be found almost always in the neighborhood of the stables; a myrtle
-warbler was seen on the climb up the cone from the Lakes of the Clouds;
-twice I heard a goldfinch passing somewhere overhead; a sharp-shinned
-hawk, as I took it to be, showed itself one day, none too clearly,
-flying through the mist; and the next afternoon, as I sat in the rear
-of the old Tip-Top House waiting for the glories of the sunset, a
-sparrow hawk shot past me so near as to display not only his rusty
-tail, but the black bands on the side of his neck. Here are five
-species. The sixth was one that, rightly or wrongly, I should not have
-expected to find in so treeless a place. I speak of the red-breasted
-(or Canadian) nuthatch. On two mornings, as all hands were out upon the
-platform at sunrise, we heard the characteristic nasal calls of this
-northern forester, and saw two birds scrambling about the roofs of the
-buildings; and more than once at other times I noticed one or two on
-the wing. The species is very common this season in Franconia,--where
-it was extremely scarce a year ago,--and I was pleased at the summit
-when a lady standing near me remarked to her husband, “Why, that is the
-note we have been hearing so continually at the Rangeleys.” It was so
-incessant there, she told me, as to be almost a trouble. Let us hope
-that this autumnal abundance in New Hampshire foreshadows a nuthatch
-winter in Massachusetts.
-
-The all but total absence of birds at the summit was a most striking
-thing. It helped greatly to intensify the loneliness and the silence;
-that wonderful mountain silence--no leaf to rustle, no brook to murmur,
-no bird to sing--which, wherever I walked, I was always stopping to
-listen to. I should love to praise it, but language for such a purpose
-would need to be found on the spot, the stillness itself suggesting the
-words; and I came down from the summit more than a week ago. It must
-have been, I think, something like that apocalyptic “silence in heaven.”
-
-As for the birds, I should have felt their absence more disagreeably
-but for the fact that I had a novel and absorbing occupation with which
-to enliven my walks, and even to beguile effectually what otherwise
-might have been the idle odds and ends of the day. For the nonce I had
-turned entomological collector. My search was for rare Alpine insects.
-Not that I knew anything about them; it would have been all one to me
-if most of what I saw had been created out of nothing the day before;
-but I was in learned company and needed no science of my own. My part
-was to carry a “cyanide bottle” and put into it any beetle, moth, fly,
-or other insect--ants and spiders excepted--on which I could lay my
-ignorant fingers. The possessor of the learning--enough and to spare
-for the two of us--has made many collecting visits to the summit; her
-list of Mount Washington species numbers more than sixteen hundred, if
-I remember the figures correctly, and no inconsiderable proportion of
-them are honored with her name. A proud lot they would be, if they knew
-it. But the end is not yet; there are many winged mountaineers still to
-be pinned, and in the prosecution of such an enterprise, so she gave me
-to understand, two bottles are better than one, no matter who carries
-the second one. Her language was rather encouraging than complimentary,
-it might have seemed, but I did not mind; and for seven days I was
-never without a bottle about my person except when I lay in bed.
-
-If I went down to the Lakes of the Clouds, for example, the
-poison-bottle went with me; and the looker-on, had there been one,--as
-luckily there wasn’t,--might have seen me on my knees, with hands
-outstretched over the water, struggling to snatch from the surface a
-poor, unhappy “skater,” or a “lucky-bug” (it really was lucky, for it
-got away while the skater perished), as a possible prize for my lady’s
-cork-lined box. On all my jaunts down the carriage-road (and they
-were many, longer or shorter, that route offering the readiest means
-of escape from the frequent summit-capping cloud) the same scientific
-vial was my companion. If a grasshopper jumped (not the common one with
-banded legs, of which I saw a superfluity, but a handsome, rare-looking
-green fellow, making me think of Leigh Hunt’s “green little vaulter in
-the sunny grass”), I stole murderously after him, and with a reckless
-clutch at the stunted bush on which he had settled I gathered him
-in and put him to sleep. (This was well done, for he was really of
-a wingless Alpine species, and only my employer’s third specimen of
-his kind.) If a “daddy-long-legs,” prayerless friend of my childhood,
-crawled across the way, he, too, hapless creature, with legs so
-superfluously numerous and elongated that he could not hurry, even to
-save his life, fell a victim to my uninstructed zeal. He died easily,
-for all his undevout habits, but the sacrifice was useless. He proved
-to be no longer among the entomologist’s desiderata, though he also is
-Alpine, and it is not many years since she herself discovered him here,
-an insect till then unregistered by human science.
-
-All caterpillars I was bidden to bring in alive; and so, of course,
-I did, rolling them up in scraps of soft paper and committing them
-tenderly to a pocket. My chief business, however, after I had breathed
-the air, eaten my fill of mountain blueberries (“Happy,” said I,
-“is the mouth that feeds on such manna”), and looked my fill at
-the northern peaks,--for I was not employed by the day, but by the
-piece, and could steal an hour to myself now and then with a clear
-conscience,--my principal occupation, I say, was to pry under the
-boulders for beetles. “Leave no stone unturned,” the entomologist had
-said, with her fine gift of laconic quotation; but she could not have
-intended the commission to be taken literally. The stones were too
-many, and human existence is too brief. She meant no more than that I
-should use a reasonable diligence; and so much I surely did, till the
-ends of my fingers were in danger of being skinned alive. Down on all
-fours I got, lifted a stone quickly, fastened an eagle eye upon the
-exposed hollow, and if a dark object, no matter how small or how large,
-was seen to be scurrying to its burrow, I thrust my fingers into the
-dirt in frantic efforts to seize it. I knew not which were common and
-which rare; my only course was to let none escape. But many were too
-swift for me, with all my efforts, and of all that I captured in this
-manner I am not sure that one was “worth mounting.” I quote those last
-two words partly by way of emphasis. They stood for the lowest round
-in the ladder of my entomological ambition. What I most of all desired
-was to discover a new species; next I coveted a species new to New
-England; after that a species new to Mount Washington; and last of all
-a specimen worth saving, or, as my employer said, “worth mounting”--in
-short, worth a pin.
-
-My most productive field, like her own, was about the front of the
-hotel itself. In warm afternoons flies, beetles, moths and what not are
-known to drop out of the invisible, from nobody can tell where, upon
-the windows or the white clapboards of the house. Here, not once, but
-with something like regularity, insects have been captured, the like
-of which have never been seen elsewhere except in the West Indies or
-Mexico, in Greenland or among the Rocky Mountains. How such wanderers
-come, and why, are among the things that no man knoweth. Enough that
-they are known to come. And who could tell but one might have come
-for me? Here, at all events, was my golden opportunity. Let me not
-miss it. If by chance, therefore, the lady herself stepped inside for
-a minute or two, I hastened to take her place. Tourists by the dozen
-might be watching me curiously, or even derisively, my equanimity was
-undisturbed. Science is a shield. Vial in hand (my _vade-mecum_ I
-called it, Latin being in the air), I walked along the platform, with
-my eyes upon the glass and the paint, and woe to the unlucky insect
-that was there taking the sun. The yawning mouth of a bottle was
-clapped over him, the world swam before his eyes, and long before he
-knew it he was on his way to be a specimen. Strange things happen to
-insects, though they are not the only ones who have found perdition in
-a bottle.
-
-Sometimes I climbed the stairs to the upper floors of the observatory.
-No matter how high I went, the higher the better. In the warm hours
-of the day the air at the very top was almost a cloud of tiny wings.
-“Excelsior” is the insects’ watchword. Once, in the upper room, I
-bottled carelessly a small black-and-white moth. Its appearance was
-ordinary enough; no doubt it was common; but it was an insect, and hit
-or miss I took it in. And in due course it went into the entomologist’s
-hands with the rest of the catch. She emptied the vial, and passed an
-unexciting comment or two upon the few flies and beetles it contained;
-perhaps she remarked that one of them might be worth mounting--I do
-not remember precisely; it was a way she had of egging me on; but the
-next morning she said: “You didn’t tell me anything about the lovely
-moth you took yesterday.” I was obliged to stop and think. “Oh, that
-little black-and-white thing,” I said. Yes, that was the one--“new to
-the summit.” If I was not proud, then pride does not dwell in earthly
-minds. This, I confide, was not my only contribution to the fauna of
-our highest New England mountain; I seem to remember a short-winged
-beetle also; but the moth, being in the Lepidoptera, is my especial
-glory. I wish I could recall its name, that I might print it here for
-the reading of future generations.
-
-With such pursuits did I improve the spare hours of my Mount Washington
-week. I have no thought of boasting. At least I would not seem to
-do so. It was little enough that I accomplished, or could hope to
-accomplish, hampered as I was by my ignorance. Probably I shall
-never have a beetle, much less a moth, named after me; but with that
-precious black-and-white rarity in mind I feel that even in the way of
-entomology I have not lived altogether in vain.
-
-Scientific studies apart, the best hours of the week (after some spent
-along the carriage-road, resting here and there upon a boulder to enjoy
-the magnificent, ever-shifting prospect, and some--not hours, alas, but
-minutes--spent in eating the ambrosial, banana-savored, soul-satisfying
-berries of _Vaccinium cæspitosum_)--my best hours, I say, were perhaps
-those of a certain wonderful evening. The air was warm, no breath
-stirring, the sky clear, and the half world below us, as we walked the
-hotel platform, lay covered with white clouds, on which the full moon
-was shining. The stillness, the mildness, the brightness, the sense of
-elevation, and the bewitching, unearthly scene, all this was like an
-evening in fairyland. For the time being, it is to be feared, even the
-rarest of moths would have seemed a matter of secondary importance.
-Such is the power of beauty. So truly was it born to make other things
-forgotten.
-
-
-
-
-MOUNTAIN-TOP AND VALLEY
-
-
-Nothing heightens appreciation like a contrast. After a week at the
-summit of Mount Washington, where we lived in the clouds and above
-them, in a world above the world, we returned to the lowlands. The
-afternoon was sultry, and before the descent was half accomplished--by
-the train--we wished ourselves back again on the heights. How can
-men live in such an atmosphere, we asked each other; so stifling, so
-depressing, so wanting in all the elements of vitality. Our condition
-seemed like that of fishes out of water, and we began to think of
-angling as a cruel sport. It grieved us to see the trees growing
-taller. Even the laughing young Ammonoosuc was looked upon with
-indifference. “I wish I were back,” said one; and the other responded,
-“So do I.”
-
-At Fabyan’s the crowd surged about us like a sea. Baggage must be
-found and checked, our train was waiting, and the baggage-master, true
-railway “official” that he was, was not to be hastened. His steps were
-all taken by rule, and every movement of his hands was set to slow
-music. When he spoke, which was seldom, it was in a muffled voice and
-with funereal moderation. In the midst of all that bustle he was calm--
-
- “Calm as to suit a calmer grief.”
-
-You might say what you pleased to him, be urgently argumentative,
-or plaintive even to wheedling, it was all one. Your eloquence was
-wasted. It was like nudging a graven image, or crying haste in
-the ear of Death. Not a feature of his countenance altered, not a
-muscle quickened. Who ever knew the hands of a clock to accelerate
-their pace in response to human impatience? Time and tide--and a
-baggage-master--hurry for no man.
-
-“Two trunks for Bethlehem,” you say. No answer. By and by, meekly
-insistent, and thinking that by this time your turn must surely have
-come, you repeat the words. No answer. But the man is taking down
-checks from their peg, and in due time, stepping as to the measure of
-a dirge, he marches with them down the platform. “These are mine,”
-you say, keeping an uneasy pace or two in advance and pointing to the
-trunks on the truck. No answer--not so much as a look. Nor is there
-need of any. You are silenced. That implacable manner carries all
-before it. You could not speak again, even to claim your soul. But
-finally the man himself speaks. You are relieved to know he can. He is
-addressing you. The minute hand is at twelve and the clock strikes.
-“These are yours?” he asks. You reply in the affirmative, as best
-you are able. “For Bethlehem?” he asks, and you answer “Yes.” And
-then, after one more set of machine-like motions, the mighty work is
-accomplished. The checks are yours. Fortunately, the train has not yet
-pulled away, though it is past the time, and at the last moment you see
-the trunks on board.
-
-Trifles like these would have been as nothing, of course, to ordinary
-travelers; but to us, innocent Carthusians, fresh from the unearthly
-quiet of a mountain-top, they were little short of tragical. And how
-intolerably hot and close the car was! Things were growing worse and
-worse with us. Should we live to reach Bethlehem, with nothing but this
-blast out of Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace in our nostrils? Why had we not
-remained where existence was not a struggle, but a dream of pleasure;
-where the air had not to be gasped for, but came of itself to be
-sweetly inhaled? Nevertheless, we survived the passage,--the conductor
-helping to pass the time by stopping in the aisle to make inquiries
-touching a little flock of puzzling birds, crossbills, perhaps, lately
-seen in his apple orchard,--and at Bethlehem the carriage awaited us.
-This was a welcome change, but even so we still found it difficult to
-draw breath; and when the horses started, what a dust they set flying!
-Truly, between the heat and the drought, this lower world was in an
-evil case. It was a road of sighs all the six miles to Franconia.
-
-Once there, however, and supper eaten, I stepped out upon the piazza
-and looked westward. Venus was bright just above the near horizon
-(the _near_ horizon!), and against the sunset sky stood a line of low
-woods, with detached pine trees towering over the rest. And in that
-sight I discovered anew, all in a moment, the charm of this valley
-world. I had seen nothing like this from the mountain-top. Yes, good
-as the summit prospect was, this was in some respects better. If that
-was more magnificent, more soul-expanding, this was more home-felt and
-beautiful. And as I looked and looked, while the light faded out of the
-sky, I was conscious of a new contentment. Mountain-tops for visits, I
-said, and may I enjoy them often; but the valley to live in.
-
-The next morning I was no sooner abroad than this happy impression was
-renewed and deepened. It was a comfort to the feet to be going neither
-uphill nor downhill, and it rested the eyes to be looking not at remote
-peaks and dimly discovered sheets of water, but into green branches
-so near that the leaves could be seen, and the blue sky through them.
-How sweetly the ripple of the brook came to my ears as it ran over
-its stony bed just beyond the velvety, smooth meadow! And the cawing
-of a dozen or two of crows, who were talking politics among the pines
-on the hillside, affected me most agreeably. There was something of
-real neighborliness about it. I would gladly have taken a hand in the
-discussion, if they would have let me. When a song sparrow started out
-of the hedge at my elbow it gave me a start of surprise. I had become
-so unused to such movements! A robin’s sudden cackle I thought almost
-the sweetest of music; the careless warble of a bluebird was nothing
-less than a voice from heaven; and a squirrel sputtering defiance from
-the stone wall set me laughing with pleasure. None of these sounds, nor
-anything akin to them, was to be heard on the desolate, boulder-covered
-top of Mount Washington.
-
-Now the trees interlaced their branches over my head. Nothing could be
-prettier; and the effect was so novel! I stopped short to admire it.
-And anon, as the road made a little ascent, scarcely noticeable to one
-fresh from the steepness of a mountain cone, I found myself gazing down
-upon one of the most engaging scenes in the world; a sequestered valley
-farm, thrifty-looking, snugly kept, nestled among low hills, with a
-mountain river winding along the farther side of it, between the meadow
-and the woodland, now lost to sight, now shining in the sun. I had
-known the place for years, as I had known the worthy man who owns it;
-and I had looked at it many times from this very point; but I had never
-seen it till this morning. A pleasant thing it is when an old picture
-or an old poem, or both in one, is thus made new. If our eyes could but
-oftener be anointed!
-
-The softness of the meadow, freshly sprung after the summer mowing,
-the glistening of the corn leaves, the narrow road,--a brown ribbon
-laid upon the green carpet,--that runs to the door and stops (for
-nothing goes by--nothing but the river, the clouds, and the birds),
-the shade trees clustered lovingly about the house, the whole pastoral
-scene, I saw it all with the vision of one who had been looking at a
-vaguely defined, far-away world, over which the eye wandered as the
-dove wandered over the face of the waters, and now had come suddenly in
-sight of home.
-
-Yes, distance is a good painter, but nearness is a better one. So I
-felt for the time being, at all events, falling in with the mood of the
-hour; for it is well that moods alter, as it is well that the earth
-goes round the sun and season gives place to season. Man was not made
-to see one kind of beauty, or to believe in one kind of goodness. The
-whole world is hid in his heart. All things are his. The small and the
-great, the near and the far, light and darkness, good and evil, the
-intimacies of home and the isolations of infinite space, all are parts
-of the Creator’s work, and equally parts of the creature’s inheritance.
-
-For to-day, then, I praise the valley. I am for having the hills close
-about me, rather than afar off and far below. I like to see the trees,
-and the leaves on them, rather than leagues on leagues of barely
-discernible forest; and a lonely pool of still water at my feet, with
-alders reflected in it, is more in my eyes than Lake Umbagog itself,
-hardly better than a blur upon the landscape, fifty miles away.
-To-morrow I may feel differently, but for to-day let me listen to the
-breeze in the pine branches and the brook pattering over stones, rather
-than to the eternal silences of the bare mountain-top and the brooding
-sky.
-
-
-
-
-IN THE MOUNT LAFAYETTE FOREST
-
-
-It is one of the cool mornings that descend rather suddenly upon our
-White Mountain country with the coming of autumn; cool mornings that
-are liable to be followed by warm days. I was in doubt how to dress as
-I set out, and for the first mile or two almost regretted that I had
-not taken an extra garment. Then all at once the sun broke through the
-clouds, and even the one coat became superfluous and was thrown over my
-arm. This state of things lasted till I had crossed the golf links and
-entered the woods. At that point the sun withdrew his shining, and now,
-between the clouds and the shadow and dampness of the forest, I have
-put on my coat again and buttoned it up; and what counts for more, I am
-driven to walk less slowly than one would always prefer to do in such a
-place.
-
-A fresh breeze stirs the tree-tops, so that I am not without music, let
-the birds be as silent as they will. Nearly or quite the only voice I
-have so far heard was that of an unseen Maryland yellow-throat, some
-distance back, who sprang into the air and delivered himself of a song
-with variations, all in his most rapturous June manner. Why the fellow
-should have been in anything like an ecstasy at that precise moment
-is quite beyond my guessing. Possibly it would be equally beyond his,
-if he were to stop to think about it. Some sudden stirring of memory,
-perhaps. Natural beings seldom know just why they are happy. I recall
-the fact, unthought of till now, that I have not heard a yellow-throat
-sing before for several weeks, though I have seen the birds often.
-They are among the late stayers, and at this season have a more or
-less lonesome look, being commonly found not as members of a flock or
-family, after the manner of autumnal warblers in general, but here
-and there one, dodging about in a roadside thicket, or peeping out
-curiously at a casual passer-by.
-
-Just as I am remarking upon the unusual silence my ear catches in the
-far distance the song of a white-throated sparrow. So very far off it
-is that the sound barely reaches me. Indeed, I do not so much hear it
-as become vaguely conscious that I should hear it if the bird were ever
-so little nearer. Yet I am sure he sang--as sure as if I had seen him.
-Probably experienced readers will divine what I mean, although I seem
-unable to express it.
-
-The road is bordered with the dead tops of trees, thrown there in
-heaps by the road-makers. They form an unsightly hedge, which birds of
-various kinds resort to for cover. At this minute two winter wrens,
-pert-looking, bob-tailed things, scold at me out of it. My passing
-is a trespass, they consider, and they tell me so with emphasis. For
-the sake of stirring them up to protest even more vigorously (such an
-eloquent gesticulatory manner as they have), I stand still and squeak
-to them. Few birds can be quiet under such insults; and the winter wren
-is not one of them. There is nothing phlegmatic about his disposition.
-He is like some beings of a higher class: it takes very little to set
-him in a flutter. So I squeak and squeak, and the pair vociferate _tut,
-tut_, till I have had enough and go on my way laughing. Touchy people
-were made for teasing.
-
-I have hardly started before a hairy woodpecker’s sharp signal is
-heard, and within a minute a sapsucker on the opposite side of the way
-utters a snarling note, which by a slight effort of the imagination
-might be taken for the voice of an angry cat. To my ear it is not in
-the smallest degree woodpeckerish. I see the bird a moment later as he
-flies across the road.
-
-In a mountain-side forest like this, near the mountain’s foot, the
-traveler, if he is not climbing the slope but crossing it transversely,
-is certain to come now and then upon a brook. I am on the edge of one
-now, and as the sun at this moment shines out between two clouds I
-stand still to enjoy the warmth while it lasts, and at the same time
-to hear the singing of the water. Good music, I call it, and fear no
-contradiction. It has the quality of some of the best verse--liquidity.
-It is broken unevenly into syllables, yet it is true to the beat,
-and it flows. In short, it is smooth, yet not too smooth--with the
-smoothness of water, not of oil. It speaks to every boulder as it
-passes. I wish my ear were more at home in the language.
-
-There is seldom a minute when, if I pause to listen, I cannot hear
-from one direction or another the quaint, homely, twangy, countryfied,
-yet to me always agreeable voice of Canadian nuthatches. At frequent
-intervals one or two come near enough so that I see them creeping
-about over the trees, bodies bent, heads down, always in search of a
-mouthful, yet keeping up, every one, his share of the universal chorus.
-As well as I can judge, all the evergreen forests of this Northern
-country are now alive with these pretty creatures; for they really
-are pretty. In fact, there are few forest birds for whom I cherish a
-kindlier feeling. It is too bad they do not summer in our Massachusetts
-woods, though possibly I should care less for them if they made
-themselves neighborly the whole year long, like their relatives, the
-white-breasts.
-
-A goldfinch is passing far above, dropping music as he goes. He is one
-of the high-fliers. Wherever you may happen to be, at the summit of
-Mount Washington or where not, you will pretty often hear his sweet
-voice as he wanders under the sky, dipping and rising, dipping and
-rising, voice and wing keeping step together.
-
-Here and there one or two clouded-sulphur butterflies (Philodice) take
-wing as I disturb them. They have been most extraordinarily abundant
-of late. A fortnight ago we drove for almost a whole forenoon through
-clouds of them, bunches of twenty or more constantly rising from damp
-spots of earth by the wayside; and in a meadow all bespangled with
-purple asters they were so thick as almost to conceal the flowers.
-Twinkling in the sunlight, they looked a thousand times more like stars
-than the asters themselves. Even the entomologists of the valley, in
-whose company I was driving, had never seen the like. Here in this
-shaded road such lovers of the sun are naturally less numerous. In
-truth, the wonder is that they should be here at all. And yet the
-wonder is not so very great; they wander at their own will, and the
-will of the wind. Only last week, I am told, in the midst of a driving
-snowstorm, one took shelter in the Summit House on Mount Washington.
-After all, a butterfly is not exactly a fool; it knows enough to go
-into the house when it snows.
-
-Now I come upon a few snowbirds, hopping in silence about the twigs
-of a brush-heap, snapping their tails nervously, as if proud to show
-the white feather; and shortly beyond are two or three white-throated
-sparrows. They also are silent. Perhaps they perceive that a red
-squirrel close by is talking enough for them and himself too. He says a
-good many things, some of which I feel sure would be highly interesting
-to a competent listener. Among forest folk, as among church folk, the
-rule is, “He that hath ears to hear, let him hear.” As for me, I can
-only lament my deficiency. A solitary vireo is chattering sweetly (with
-him music is its own reward), and all the while, whoever else speaks
-or keeps silence, the nuthatch chorus goes on. Taking New England
-together, we may safely say that just at present hundreds of thousands,
-yea, millions of _ank-anks_ go up to heaven every minute of every day,
-from sunrise to sunset.
-
-I walk but a few rods farther before I am delighted by the sight of
-four winter wrens in an overturned tree-top. In my experience it is
-something extremely out of the common course to see so many together,
-and--as I did with the two a quarter of a mile back--I work upon this
-quartet’s sensibilities till they fairly dance with curiosity and
-indignation. I wonder if they are a family group.
-
-I bethink myself that I am saying nothing about the forest itself.
-Its presence is felt rather than seen, a grateful solemnity; but the
-temperature will not suffer me to sit down and enjoy it as a Christian
-should. And just here I emerge into territory over which a fire has
-swept within a few years. Under these dead trees I get the sun again,
-and can go slowly. Nothing in the way of physical comfort is more
-grateful than warmth after coolness, unless it be coolness after
-warmth. A pine siskin calls, the first for some weeks, and another
-hairy woodpecker shows himself. Not a warbler has been seen since I
-entered the woods. Of the flycatchers, too,--olive-sides and wood
-pewees,--which were always conspicuous in this burning in August and
-early September, there is neither sight nor sound. Their season is
-done. Crossbill notes lead me to look upward, and I see four birds
-flying past. Restless, nomadic souls! Like the saints, they have “no
-continuing city.”
-
-Another half-mile in the leafy forest, and I reach the foot of Echo
-Lake, where as I pass a cluster of balsam firs I am saluted by the
-busy, hurried calls of golden-crowned kinglets. A wren is here also,
-irritable as ever, and hearing a chickadee’s voice, I whistle and
-chirp to him. If I can set him to scolding, all the birds in the
-neighborhood will flock this way to ascertain what the trouble is. The
-device works to a charm; in half a minute the excitement is intense.
-Nuthatches, white-throats, chickadees, kinglets, and wren, all take a
-hand in vituperating the intruder, and a youthful redstart comes from
-the opposite side of the way to satisfy his more gentle curiosity. One
-creature, strangely enough, remains neutral: a red squirrel, who sits
-on end at the top of a stump and gazes at me in silence. He holds one
-hand upon his heart, like an opera singer, and looks and looks. “You
-sentimental goose!” I say; “who taught you that trick?” and I laugh at
-him and pass on. This is near the corner of the old Notch road, and as
-I round it and face the cold northerly wind I button my coat about me
-and start homeward at a quicker pace.
-
-
-
-
-ON BALD MOUNTAIN
-
-
-“Four inches of snow at the Profile House:” such was the word brought
-to us at the breakfast table, the driver of the “stage” having
-communicated the intelligence as he passed the hotel an hour or two
-earlier. We were not surprised. It rained in Franconia night before
-last, and yesterday, when the clouds now and then lifted a little, the
-sides of the mountains were seen to be white. This morning (October 7),
-although even the lower slopes were veiled, the day promised well, and
-at the first minute I set out for the Notch.
-
-It was evident almost immediately that at some time within the last
-forty-eight hours there had been a great influx of migrating birds.
-Song sparrows, white-throated sparrows, snowbirds, bluebirds, and
-myrtle warblers were in extraordinary force. Soon I began to hear the
-wrennish calls of ruby-crowned kinglets,--which have been very scarce
-hitherto,--and presently more than one was heard rehearsing its pretty
-song. What with bluebird voices, song sparrows’ warblings (no set tune,
-but “continuous melody”), the cackle of robins, and the croaking of
-rusty blackbirds, the air was loud. To these travelers, as to me, the
-weather seemed to be changing for the better, though the sun did not
-yet show itself, and finding themselves in so delectable a valley, they
-were in exuberant spirits.
-
-Just above the Profile House farm the road took me into a flock of
-birds that proved to be the better part of half a mile in length.
-The wayside hedges were literally in a flutter, snowbirds being the
-most abundant, I think, with white-throats and myrtle warblers not
-far behind. Hermit thrushes, winter wrens, chipping sparrows, song
-sparrows, and ruby-crowns were continually in sight, and an unseen
-purple finch was practicing niggardly, disconnected, vireo-like
-phrases, as the manner of his kind is in the autumnal season.
-
-Then, when the older forest was reached, there came an interval of
-silence, broken at last by the distant, or distant-seeming, voice of a
-red-breasted nuthatch and the cheerful notes of chickadees. Soon two
-hermits showed themselves, facing me on a low perch, and lifting their
-tails solemnly in response to my chirping; and not far away were a
-winter wren or two, and a flock of white-throats and snowbirds. I had
-never seen the dear old road birdier, even in May, though of course I
-had often seen the number of species very much larger.
-
-At the height of land I came upon the first snow, a ragged fringe left
-on the shady side of the way. I made a snowball, for the sake of doing
-it (or, as I said to myself, suiting the boyish act with a boyish
-word, “for greens”), and decided all at once not to go down into the
-Notch, but up to the top of Bald Mountain. From that point, if the
-sky cleared, as I felt hopeful it would, there would be sights worth
-remembering.
-
-The mountain is only a little one, but it is steep enough--the upper
-half, at all events--to give the eager pedestrian a puff for his money.
-For myself, I had time to spare, and, fortunately or unfortunately,
-had been over the path too often to be subject to the state of mind
-(I know it well) which we may characterize as climbers’ impatience.
-Unless something unforeseen should happen, the summit would wait for
-me. Halfway up, also, a flock of blue jays, five or six at least, who
-were holding a long and mysterious confabulation close by the path,
-afforded me a comfortable breathing spell. For a moment I suspected the
-presence of an owl, against whom the rascals were plotting mischief;
-but their voices were much of the time too soft, too intimate-sounding,
-too lacking in belligerency. Some of the birds might even have
-been communing with themselves. Their whole behavior had an air of
-preternatural gravity and cunning, and their remarks, whatever the
-purport of them, were in the highest degree varied. One fellow was a
-masterly performer upon the bones (jay scholars will understand what
-I mean, and I should despair of explaining myself in a few words to
-any one else), while another furnished me with a genuine surprise by
-whistling again and again in the manner of a red-tailed hawk.
-
-Well, the conspirators dispersed, the solitary climber pocketed his
-curiosity, and in a few minutes longer his feet were at the top.
-The rocky cone of Lafayette was still densely capped, but under the
-fringed edges of the cloud there was plenty of snow in sight. All the
-upper slopes of Kinsman, Cannon, and Lafayette were covered with it,
-except that the deciduous trees (broad patches of yellow) stood bare.
-Apparently the snow had stuck only upon the evergreens, and the effect
-at this distance was very striking, the white over the green producing
-a beautiful gray. I could never have imagined it. The hotel and its
-cottages, nestled between the mountains, all had white roofs, but the
-landscape as a whole was anything but wintry. Everywhere below me the
-great forest still showed an abundance of bright hues,--red, yellow,
-and russet,--a piece of glorious pageantry, though many shades less
-brilliant than I had seen it two days before.
-
-So I am saying to myself when suddenly I look upward, and behold,
-the cap is lifted from Lafayette, and the mountain-top is clear
-white, shining in the sunlight against the blue sky; a vision, it
-seems; something not of this world; splendor immaculate, unearthly,
-unspeakable. I feel like shouting, or tell myself that I do; but for
-some reason I keep silence. Clouds still hang about the mountains,
-their shapes altering from glory to glory with every minute. Now a band
-lies clean across Lafayette, immediately below the cone, detaching the
-white mass from everything underneath, and leaving it, as it were,
-floating in the air.
-
-A sharp-shinned hawk sails past me, nuthatches call from the valley
-woods, a snowbird perches on a dwarf spruce at my elbow, a red squirrel
-breaks into sudden spluttering, and then, with hands uplifted, sits
-silent and motionless. I mention these details, but they are nothing.
-What I really see and feel is the world I am living in: the sunshine,
-the stillness, the temperate airs, the bright encircling forest, in
-which my little hilltop is cradled, and the white peak yonder in the
-sky. The snow lends it lightness, airiness, buoyancy. As I said just
-now, it seems almost to float in the ether.
-
-I remained with this beauty for an hour, divided at the last between
-the luminous, snowy peak above me and the soft--ineffably soft--world
-of leafy tree-tops below. Then, as I had done only day before
-yesterday, I bade the place good-by. Probably I should not come this
-way again till next summer, at the soonest. Good-by, old mountain.
-Good-by, old woods. No doubt you have many worthier lovers, but let me
-be counted as one of the faithful.
-
-I was still on the cone, making my way downward, when a grouse
-drummed and in a minute or two repeated himself. The sound struck me
-as curiously wanting in resonance, as if the log were water-soaked
-(though I do not believe he was striking one), or his breast not
-fully inflated. Perhaps he was a young fellow, a new hand with the
-drumsticks, and so excusable. Certainly the difficulty lay not in the
-matter of distance, for between two of the performances I turned a
-sharp corner, effectively triangulating the bird, and it was impossible
-that he should be more than a few yards away. On all sides the
-little nuthatches were calling to each other in their quaint childish
-treble. I love to hear them, and the goldcrests also; but here, as
-on the heights above, the birds were less than the forest. I was in
-a susceptible mood, I suppose. The mere sight of the tall, straight
-trunks, with the lights and shadows on them, gave me a pleasure
-indescribable. Though the friend who had been my walking companion for
-a week past (and no man could wish a better one) is sure to read this
-column, I cannot refrain from saying that solitariness has its merciful
-alleviations. I was no longer tempted to babble, and the wise old trees
-took their turn at talking. If I could only repeat what they said!
-
-
-
-
-BIRDS AND BRIGHT LEAVES
-
-
-After the red maple trees and the yellow birches are mostly bare, and
-the greater part of the sugar groves have passed the zenith of their
-brilliancy, then the poplars come to the rescue. The hills are all
-at once bright again with a second crop of color, an aftermath of
-splendid sun-bright yellow. I knew nothing about this beforehand, and
-am delighted over the discovery. From my Franconia window I am looking
-at as pretty an autumnal wood as any man need wish to see, and it is a
-wood the seasonable glories of which were ended, I thought, more than
-a week ago. As I look at it I feel sorry for my last week’s companion,
-who went home too soon. Since his departure the days have been outdoing
-one another in the softness of their airs and the beauty of their
-lights. Mother Earth has been in her most amiable mood. Nothing is too
-good for her children. I have never seen fairer weather; though some, I
-dare say, might criticise it as a few degrees too warm. It is hard, I
-admit, for a walker to keep a coat on his back, far along as the season
-is getting, when the sun wrestles with him for it.
-
-An interesting thing to me has been the tardy brightening of individual
-maple trees. It is one more manifestation, I assume, of Nature’s gift
-of versatility, her faculty of variation, to which, all but universal
-as it is, scientific men attribute so much potency in the evolving of
-so-called species. What I notice just now is that, as some bushes and
-trees mature their fruit later than others of the same kind, living
-apparently under the same conditions, so some maple trees are a week or
-two behind their immediate neighbors in ripening their foliage. I have
-passed within a day or two both sugar maples and red maples that were
-just donning their gay robes. Well done, I am moved to say, as my eye
-lights on them. They and the poplars, together with certain extensive
-maple groves on the higher levels, still keep the world arrayed in a
-really barbaric splendor. Two weeks ago I should have prophesied that
-before this time the landscape would be stripped for winter; and so it
-would have been, perhaps, if a cold storm had supervened instead of
-this period of summery brightness and calm. Great is weather. There
-is nothing like it. It makes a man--and a tree, too, for aught I
-know--glad to be alive.
-
-That it makes the birds happy is beyond dispute. You can see it with
-half an eye. Many of them are gone, it is true, but many others are
-left; and wherever you take your walk you may have joy of them. You
-will need to be blind and deaf, or of a hopelessly sour temper, not
-to catch a little of their cheeriness. Three days ago (it was an
-anniversary with me, and I was early abroad) I went into the kitchen
-garden before breakfast, as I have been doing frequently of late, to
-see what birds might be there. For a month and more, as the coarse
-grasses and weeds have ripened their crop (the garden, luckily for me,
-having been allowed to go untended), the place has been a favorite
-resort of sparrows. There I saw the Lincoln finches in their time,--on
-September 5 and subsequently,--and there for a fortnight past I have
-always been able to begin the day with a few white-crowns.
-
-Well, on the morning in question one of the first things I heard was a
-brief, uncharacteristic, autumnal-sounding ditty which, being too short
-for a song sparrow’s work, I at once credited to a white-crown; and, to
-be sure, when I looked that way, there the bird stood on a top stone
-of the wall, a young fellow, not yet “crowned,” practicing his first
-musical exercises. The morning was cool,--the ground had stiffened
-overnight,--and every time he opened his mouth to sing, a tiny cloud of
-vapor could be seen rising from it. It was visible music. Again and
-again I watched him. The dear little chorister! Nobody’s birthday was
-ever more prettily honored. He “sang to my eye” indeed--in a daintily
-literal sense such as the poet never thought of. I wonder if any one,
-anywhere, ever saw and heard the like.
-
-The white-crowns have been surprisingly musical (the weather, no doubt,
-being a provocation), but I have not once heard their spring song, or
-anything which to my ear--none too well accustomed to it--has seemed
-to bear any relation thereto. Song sparrows, on the other hand, while
-mostly contenting themselves with incoherent, _sotto voce_ twitterings,
-have now and then--almost daily, I think--varied the programme with
-more or less successful attempts at a fuller-voiced and more formal
-melody. As for the vesper sparrows, they have mainly kept silence, but
-on one or two bright mornings have sung as sweetly as ever they do in
-May. Indeed, I might truthfully say more than that; for at this season,
-when all bright things are taking leave, a strain of wild music is more
-grateful to the ear than by any possibility it can be when every newly
-green bush is part of the universal choir gallery.
-
-To us who have been in the habit of coming to this valley in
-bright-leaf time nothing is more characteristic, as nothing is more
-welcome, than the continual familiar presence of bluebirds. This year,
-because I have stayed later than usual, it may be, they have seemed
-uncommonly abundant. Their voices are sure to be among the first to be
-heard as I step out of the door in the morning, and wherever I walk--in
-the open country--I find myself surrounded at frequent intervals by a
-larger or smaller flock. Two days ago I counted forty in sight at once;
-and a bunch of forty bluebirds--well, there may be pleasanter sights
-for a bird-lover (a flock of sixty, for example), but it is a sight to
-raise low spirits, especially for a man who remembers the time--after a
-cruel winter--when the vision of a single bird was accepted by all of
-us as an event to talk about.
-
-Myrtle warblers (yellow-rumps) are still more numerous, and if a
-bluebird quits a perch and takes wing it is almost an even chance that
-a yellow-rump, who has been sitting near at hand, waiting for this to
-happen, will be seen dashing in pursuit. You may go down the village
-street and watch the trick repeated half a dozen times within half a
-mile. To my walking companion and myself the sight has come to be part
-of a Franconia autumn. If you are pretty close to the birds you may
-hear a bill snapping (the warbler’s, I think), as if in anger, but on
-the whole I am inclined to believe that the thing is no more than
-an innocent, though one-sided, game of tag. All young creatures must
-have something to play with, somebody to make game of. So it is with
-yellow-rumps, I dare say; but why should they so universally pitch upon
-the inoffensive bluebird, I should like to know. It is to be added,
-however, to make the story truthful, that if there are no bluebirds
-handy, the warblers take it out by a free chasing of each other. To
-watch them, one would think that life, by their apprehension of it,
-were all a holiday.
-
-And while I am talking of bluebirds I ought to mention their habit of
-hanging about bird boxes in these last days of their Northern season.
-Only this forenoon, since the foregoing paragraphs were written,
-I passed a box perched upon a pole beside a house, and at least
-six bluebirds were sitting upon its platform, or investigating its
-different apartments. Sometimes a pair (so they looked, one bright
-colored, the other dull) sat side by side before a door, like married
-lovers. Sometimes one would go inside, sometimes both, while out of the
-next door another bird would be peeping. The box was very unlikely to
-have been their home; the countryside is overrun with bluebirds, too
-many by half to have summered hereabout; but evidently the sight of
-it had suggested family pleasures. Perhaps they were living over the
-past, perhaps forecasting the future. Bluebirds have their full share
-of sentiment, or both voice and behavior are rank deceivers. Concerning
-this aspect of the case, however, the frivolous yellow-rumps cared not
-a farthing. They sat in a small apple tree conveniently near, and as
-often as a bluebird ventured upon the wing, one or two of them started
-instantly in pursuit. If he alighted upon a fence-post, down they
-dropped upon the next rail and waited for him to make another sally.
-Once I heard a bluebird utter a pretty sharp note of remonstrance, but
-that, we may guess, only made the fun the greater. Birds will be birds.
-
-My morning stroll (it is October 13, my last day in Franconia) showed
-me, in addition to the birds already named, one lonesome-mannered
-hermit thrush, a few robins, two or three ruby-crowned kinglets, one of
-them running over with his musical _twittity, twittity, twittity_,
-a single yellow palm warbler (this and the myrtle have been the only
-warblers of the month), a red cross-bill, going somewhere, as usual,
-and leaving word behind him as he went, a small flock of pine siskins,
-a strangely few song sparrows, one vesper sparrow, one white-crown,
-a multitude of snowbirds, a purple finch or two, a goldfinch, and a
-grouse, with the inevitable crows, jays, chickadees, and red-breasted
-nuthatches. Had my walk been longer and into a more varied country, I
-should have found gold-crested kinglets, winter wrens, brown creepers,
-titlarks (perhaps), white-throated sparrows, field sparrows, chippers,
-tree sparrows (probably), and three or four kinds of woodpeckers.
-
-And speaking of woodpeckers, I must allow myself to boast that within
-the last few days I have had exceptional luck with the big fellow of
-them all, known in books as the pileated. On the 9th I saw one and
-heard the halloo of another, and on the 11th I saw two (together) and
-heard a third. One of those seen on the 11th shouted at full length,
-and at the top of his voice while flying.
-
-The pileated woodpecker is a splendid bird. A pity he cannot find
-himself at home in our Massachusetts country. To see him here in New
-Hampshire one might imagine that he belonged with the mountains and
-would be homesick in other company; but if you would see him oftener
-than anywhere else, you may go to a land where there is scarcely so
-much as a hillock--to the peninsula of Florida. There or here, he is a
-great bird. The brightest maple leaf that ever took color was not so
-bright as his crest.
-
-
-
-
-FLORIDA
-
-
-
-
-FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF MIAMI
-
-
-It is Sunday, the 19th of January. A week ago I was sitting before a
-fire, watching the snow fall outside, in winter-bound Massachusetts.
-This forenoon I am reclining in the shade of a cocoanut palm, looking
-across the smooth blue waters of Biscayne Bay to a line of woods, I
-know not how many miles distant, broken in the midst by a narrow cut or
-inlet (Norris Cut, a passer-by tells me it is called), through which is
-to be seen the open Atlantic. The air is motionless, the sky cloudless,
-the temperature ideal. “This is the day the Lord hath made,” I repeat
-to myself. He has seldom done better.
-
-I left Boston Monday morning, spent that night and the next day in
-Washington, slept in St. Augustine Wednesday night, and on Thursday
-took the long, all-day ride down the east coast of Florida, past miles
-on miles of orange groves and pineapple plantations, to the terminus of
-the railroad, the new and flourishing city of Miami.
-
-My visit, it must be owned, began rather inauspiciously. It was
-nobody’s fault, of course, but the “magic city” did not put its best
-foot forward. Friday morning the mercury stood at forty-five, and
-although the day was abundantly warm out of doors,--so warm that a
-walker naturally took off his coat,--an oil stove proved a comfort at
-nightfall. In short, the day was exactly like a White Mountain day in
-late September, hot in the middle and cool at both ends. Yesterday,
-however, was a piece of Massachusetts June, while this morning is so
-perfect that every one, visitor or resident, passes comments upon it.
-Perfection of any kind is a rare and precious thing,--in this world,
-at least,--and though it be merely a bit of weather, it should never
-go unspoken of. So I say to myself as I lie in the shade, and look and
-breathe.
-
-In truth, I can hardly feel it credible that I was in the midst of
-snowstorms less than a week ago. For a long two days winter has seemed
-a thing utterly past and forgotten. Only now and then it comes upon me,
-with the shock of unexpected news, that this is not summer, but January.
-
-The bay, for some reason to me unknown, is almost without birds. The
-only one just now in sight is a cormorant pretty far offshore, diving
-and swimming by turns. I imagine him to be a loon till suddenly he
-takes wing, with outstretched neck, and after a long flight comes to
-rest, not in the water, but at the top of a stake. Somewhere behind me
-a flicker is shouting as in springtime, and on one side a mockingbird
-is calling (“smacking” is the word that comes of itself to my pencil),
-and a blue-gray gnatcatcher utters now and then a fine, thread-like
-ejaculation.
-
-The stillness is really a relief, even to my ornithological ears; for
-though they had been starved for two or three months in Massachusetts,
-they have been so dinned with bird voices for the last two days
-that a brief period of silence is grateful. The centre of the town,
-where I have taken up my abode, literally swarms with fish crows
-and boat-tailed grackles, every one trying, as it seems, to outdo
-its rivals in noisiness. I remember the day, eight or nine years
-ago, when in the flatwoods of New Smyrna I spent an hour of almost
-painful excitement in taking observations upon the first boat-tail
-I had ever seen. It would have been hard at that moment for me to
-imagine that so clever and interesting a bird could ever become a
-nuisance. Fortunately, both crow and grackle retire to roost early and
-are comparatively late risers; otherwise the people of Miami might
-be driven to violent measures, as against a plague. As things are,
-the birds have no fears. They alight in the shade trees before the
-windows, or gather about the kitchen door, crows and blackbirds alike
-(and the male blackbirds, with their overgrown tails, are almost or
-quite as large as the crows), as fearless as so many English sparrows.
-
-After them the abundant birds hereabout, so far as I have yet
-discovered, are buzzards, carrion crows (black vultures), blue jays,
-catbirds (which I have never seen half so plentiful), palm warblers,
-myrtle warblers, and blue-gray gnatcatchers. Less numerous, but still
-decidedly common, are flickers, red-bellied woodpeckers, mockingbirds,
-Florida yellow-throats, hummingbirds, ground doves, and phœbes. Day
-before yesterday a long procession of tree swallows straggled past me
-as I wandered along the bay shore, and in the same place a flock of
-masculine red-winged blackbirds were holding a vociferous mid-winter
-convention in a thicket of tall reeds. White-eyed vireos are well
-distributed, and sing as saucily as if the month were May instead of
-January. Solitary vireos are present likewise, but I have seen only
-one, and he was not yet in tune.
-
-Out in the pine lands I came upon a single group of pine warblers and
-half a dozen bluebirds, both singing freely. What a voice the bluebird
-has! It does a Yankee’s heart good to hear it. I have yet to see a
-robin or a chickadee.
-
-All in all, notwithstanding the woods are alive with wings, there
-is surprisingly little music. The season of song is not yet come.
-Phœbes, for some reason, form a bright exception to the rule, and now
-and then a cardinal grosbeak whistles with a sweetness that beggars
-words. Twice, I think, I have heard a distant mockingbird singing, and
-yesterday, in front of the hotel, I stopped to watch a pair that seemed
-to be in what I should call a decidedly lyrical mood, though they were
-silent as dead men. They stood on the pavement a foot or so apart, and
-took turns in a very original and pretty kind of dance. One and then
-the other suddenly hopped straight upward for an inch or two, both
-feet at once. Between whiles they stood motionless, or sometimes one
-(always the same) moved a little away from its partner. Plainly they
-were much in earnest, and without question the ceremony, simple, and
-almost laughable, as it looked, had some deep and perfectly understood
-significance. Ritualism is not confined to churches. Everywhere the
-heart speaks by attitude and gesticulation.
-
-A noble concert it will be when all these thousands of song-birds
-recover their voices. May I be here to enjoy it. For the present I am
-contented to wait. It is sufficient just now to be in so strange a land
-in so lovely a season, with acres of morning-glories and moon-flowers
-all about, roses and marigolds in the gardens, birds in every bush (not
-an English sparrow among them), airs gratefully cool from the sea, and
-bright summer weather. For a winter-killed Yankee, this is what old
-Omar would have called “Paradise enow.”
-
-
-
-
-A FROSTY MORNING
-
-
-There is nothing like weather. It is man’s comfort and his misery; more
-important still, perhaps, it is his prosperity and his ruin. Indeed,
-it has almost divine prerogatives. It wounds and it heals; it kills
-and it makes alive. And this, which in good degree is true everywhere,
-is especially true in a country like southern Florida, the Mecca at
-once of pleasure-seeking winter vacationers, health-seeking tourists,
-and livelihood-seeking settlers. For all these, Florida is what it is
-because of its climate, that is to say, its weather. Speak with whom
-you will, weather is the topic that naturally comes uppermost.
-
-Yesterday (January 22) was one of the most delightful days imaginable;
-for a pedestrian, I mean to say. I know an insect collector, a gentle
-soul, little used to complaining against the order of the world, who
-pronounced it “horrid.” For the successful prosecution of her industry
-there lacked a few degrees of warmth. Florida insects, it appears, are
-much less hardy than their Northern cousins, keeping indoors, and so
-out of the net, in temperature such as a Yankee butterfly or beetle,
-thicker-skinned or thicker-blooded, would scorn to be afraid of. But
-if yesterday was perfect, to-day, by my reckoning, at least, has been
-finer still--perfection heaped upon perfection. Yet every one hereabout
-is more or less unhappy, and with more or less reason. In the night
-between these two perfect days an air from the North descended suddenly
-upon us, and the temperature took an alarming drop, some say to 38°,
-some to 31°--a drop which meant discomfort to all, and disaster to
-many. When I put my head out of doors at seven o’clock this morning, on
-my way to the post office, I was startled. My first thought was to run
-back for an overcoat. Instead of that I put on steam.
-
-Breakfast over, I betook myself to the pine lands, my rule being to
-improve cool days in that sunny region, leaving the shady hammock
-woods for hotter weather. It was cold enough for overcoat and mittens.
-In Massachusetts, with anything like the same temperature, I should
-certainly have worn them. Here, however, it was not so plain a case.
-I was to be on foot till noon, and I felt sure that long before that
-time the lightest outer garment would become intolerable. So I buttoned
-my one coat tightly about me, stuffed my hands into my pockets, and
-hastened my steps. For a mile, perhaps, I kept up the pace. By that
-time the sun had begun to make itself felt. At the end of the second
-mile the temperature was nothing less than summer-like, and before the
-third mile was finished my coat was on my arm; and as I came down one
-of the city streets, on my return at noon, and met two Seminole Indians
-walking abroad dressed, after their airy fashion, in nothing but
-waistcoat and shirt, the sight of their comfortable uncivilized legs
-was calculated to make a perspiring man envious.
-
-By nine o’clock, indeed, the weather was superb; but presently I came
-to an opening in the woods. Here was a field of tomato plants in front
-of a new, unpainted house. Some recent settler had cleared a piece of
-ground and established a home in this land of perpetual summer. And
-to support himself and his family he had “gone into early tomatoes.”
-So much was to be seen at a glance. And yes, there stood the man
-himself in the midst of his plantation. I went near and accosted him,
-expressing my hope that the frost (for by this time it was plain there
-had been one) had not damaged his crop. He had been badly frightened
-in the night, he confessed, but thought he had mostly escaped harm.
-“I was glad,” he said, dwelling upon the verb with a pleasant foreign
-accent, “when I saw the thermometer” (pronounced etymologically, with
-the accent on the penult). I fear he was worse hit than he knew. At
-all events there were many acres of wilting tomato plants only a mile
-away on the same road. One man, whom I saw looking over his field,
-was calling the attention of a solicitous neighbor to the fact that a
-certain part of the plantation had fared better than the rest. A few
-burning stumps had happened to be left smouldering on one edge of the
-field overnight, and the wind had drifted a light blanket of smoke
-across that corner.
-
-But even in unprotected gardens the different parts had not fared
-alike. Here the tender plants were wilting as the sun shone on them,
-and yonder, only five or ten yards away, there was no symptom of
-blight. So true is it of tomato vines, as of nobler creations, that
-one shall be taken and the other left. The frost is like the wind, it
-striketh where it listeth, and thou seest the effect thereof; and the
-poor man suffereth with the rich.
-
-Such are the cruel uncertainties of truck farming in this sub-tropical
-region, far down toward the very tip of Florida. Like the speculator in
-copper or in oil, the farmer goes to bed rich and gets up poor. But,
-like the dabbler in “shares,” the farmer is not easily discouraged.
-Though he has moved from one point to another, farther and farther
-down the peninsula, the frost pursuing him, he will still try again.
-There is one thing to be depended upon (let us be thankful to say
-it)--a sanguine man’s hope.
-
-So much for tillers of the soil. For the rest of us, mere idlers and
-wayfarers, concerned only with questions of sight-seeing and momentary
-comfort, a day like the present needs no bettering. My own course,
-as I have said, lay through the pine woods--sunny, spacious, not in
-the least like anything that a New Englander would call a forest. At
-short intervals the road, white and hard, ran past a small clearing,
-generally with a house upon it. Here would be orange trees, mango trees
-(just now in bloom), splendid hibiscus shrubs, pineapples, perhaps,
-with other novelties pleasant for Northern eyes to look upon, or,
-quite as likely, a field of tomatoes (the fruit nearly grown), or a
-sweet-potato patch.
-
-Near one of the houses the loud cries of some strange bird troubled
-my curiosity. The opera-glass showed me nothing, and I was none the
-wiser till beside a second house I heard the same voice again. This
-time I put aside my scruples and made a set attempt to solve the
-mystery. A woman before the door was inquisitive about the stranger,
-but the stranger was still more inquisitive about the bird; and by
-and by, on a lower perch than I had thought, there the fellow stood
-at the top of a shrub, directly before my eyes, a Florida jay. It was
-nine years since I had seen a bird of his kind, and the sight was
-welcome accordingly. Perhaps he knew it. At any rate, whether for my
-pleasure or his own, he held his ground and kept up his harsh, shrikely
-vociferations.
-
-The Florida jay (a crestless bird, not at all the same as the Florida
-blue jay, which abounds everywhere and is everywhere noisy, especially
-in the villages) is strictly a bird of the peninsula, being found
-nowhere else--a remarkable instance of extreme localization. I ran upon
-still another individual before reaching the end of my jaunt,--on the
-outskirts of Lemon City,--and all three were in dooryards. Oak scrub
-(where you may look out for rattlesnakes) and human neighborhood,
-these, as I read the signs, are the Florida jay’s desiderata.
-
-In general, as compared with the hammock woods, the pine lands are
-nearly birdless. An occasional sparrow hawk (another strangely trustful
-creature, very common in this country[5]), an occasional mockingbird
-(more than once in splendid song), a shrike now and then, a flock of
-myrtle-birds, and another of palm warblers, a good many white-breasted
-swallows and turkey buzzards overhead, with a bunch of silent sparrows
-skulking beneath the dwarf palmettoes,--these are what I now remember.
-
-Birds or no birds, flowers or no flowers, I should have enjoyed the
-eight miles. The bright sunshine, the temperate, genial warmth, the
-endless, widely spaced woods, the blue sky, and on one side the blue
-expanse of Biscayne Bay,--summer in winter,--I am not so long from
-snowy Massachusetts but that these things are enough to make for me a
-kind of perpetual fiesta. As I said to begin with (and it is as true of
-thoughts and feelings as of the tenderest of garden crops), there is
-nothing like weather.
-
-
-
-
-BEWILDERMENT
-
-
-If any untraveled Northern botanist wishes to be puzzled, hopelessly
-confused, clean put out of his reckoning, let him come to Miami.
-His knowledge will drop away from him till not a rag is left. Let
-him arrive, as I did, after dark, and in the morning take the road
-southward to Cocoanut Grove. The distance is only five miles, and the
-walking excellent. I should like to go with him, and listen to his
-exclamations and comments.
-
-The cocoanut palms before the hotel, as he leaves the piazza, he
-has no need to inquire about; such things he has at least seen in
-pictures. And the parti-colored crotons, likewise, are nothing new;
-he has seen the like in hot-houses, if nowhere else. And the scores
-of big, round hibiscus bushes, each with its score or two of regal
-scarlet blossoms,--these, or poverty-stricken imitations of them, he
-has admired before now in the Boston Public Garden and elsewhere. The
-acalypha shrubs, also, he will perhaps recognize upon a second look,
-though he has never before seen them growing as a hedge, carefully
-squared, three or four feet high, and as many feet thick. Yonder
-euphorbia bush, too (_Poinsettia_), with its flaring, flaming rosettes
-of scarlet floral leaves at the tips of the stems--this, like the
-crotons, he is more or less familiar with under glass. All these are
-cultivated plants, pleasant to look upon out of doors in mid-winter,
-but of themselves not especially interesting, perhaps, to a botanist.
-
-But now, at the foot of Thirteenth or Fourteenth Street, less than a
-quarter of a mile from the hotel, we come to some vacant lots. Here are
-a few dingy live-oaks (still with last year’s leaves on), and in their
-shadow, sprawling over the tangled undergrowth, a wilderness of gadding
-morning-glory vines. How lovely the flowers are--pink and blue! Unless
-it be the ubiquitous fish crow, there is nothing else so common in this
-Miami country as the morning-glory; and the vines, acres on acres, hold
-in bloom, one kind and another, so I am given to understand, almost or
-quite the whole year round.
-
-Now we leave the sidewalk and are in the pine woods. The
-trees--long-leaved pines--our botanist knows well enough, the train
-having brought him past a thousand miles of such, on his way hither;
-though, even so, he might be puzzled to tell to which of two related
-species (_Palustris_ and _Elliottii_) they belong. From the rude
-bridge, as we cross the Miami River, he admires the myriad-footed,
-glossy-leaved mangrove thickets that line the banks, especially as
-he looks up the stream. Just beyond are ancient live-oaks, the huge
-spreading branches of which support a profusion of air-plants (poor
-relations of the pineapple), with here and there an orchid. I should
-like to show him an _Epidendrum_ such as I secured ten days ago--an
-open spray of a dozen blooms, handsome enough to grace the finest
-of hothouse collections; but I have not been able to find a second
-specimen, with all my searching. However, a smaller, one-flowered
-species is common enough, and if he is sufficiently enterprising he
-will climb one of the trees for it, or--as I did--cut a stick by means
-of which, with more or less hard work, he can pry the bulbous root from
-its foothold.
-
-“What is this yellow flower?” he asks, as we go on.
-
-“I don’t know,” is my answer. “Some member of the pulse family.”
-
-My companion knew as much as that already.
-
-“And this bush, with its strangely contorted pods?”
-
-Here I am more at home, and proud to show it. The plant is
-_Pithecolobium Unguis-Cati_, I tell him. Small wonder the pods are
-twisted.
-
-With this we come to more live-oaks, on which are more air-plants and
-orchids, and just beyond is a confusion of thick-leaved trees and
-shrubs.
-
-“What is this?” he asks; “and this? and this?”
-
-I have no idea, I am obliged to answer. But the tall tree a little
-farther on is _Ficus aurea_, I hasten to remark, with a show of extreme
-erudition.
-
-“A fig-tree?” he answers, in a tone of surprise; for, being a botanist,
-he knows, of course, that _ficus_ is fig.
-
-Yes, I assure him, it is a _kind_ of fig (rubber tree, it is otherwise
-called), though the leaf is small and, as botanists say, “entire,” not
-in the least resembling the modest fig-leaf of convention. I know the
-tree’s name, as I know that of the shrub before mentioned, because I
-was told it yesterday. One’s knowledge (of names) increases rapidly
-under favorable circumstances, in a country like this.
-
-Yonder very noticeable shrub, bearing large globular bunches of small
-bright-purplish berries (no eye could miss them), is the French
-mulberry, so called (_Callicarpa Americana_); and the larger and
-leafier bush near it, set along the branches with more loosely disposed
-orange-colored berries, is _Trema micrantha_, a plant which Chapman’s
-Flora credits to but one place in the United States,--“Shellmounds
-in Lastero Bay, South Florida,”--though hereabout it is one of the
-commonest of the common. Both it and the French mulberry are prime
-favorites with various kinds of birds. Mockingbirds and catbirds are
-feasting on the berries at this moment.
-
-And yes, here is a tree that I knew would excite my companion’s
-curiosity. No stranger ever drove over this road (and the first drive
-of every newcomer to Miami is taken this way) without asking his driver
-about it: a large tree, all its leafy branches far above the ground,
-with a strangely conspicuous mahogany-colored bark, the outermost
-layers of which peel off in loose papery flakes, after the manner
-of the canoe birch. On my first jaunt into the hammock I heard more
-than one driver pronounce its eloquent name--gumbo-limbo. The two or
-three men of whom I made inquiries could tell me nothing more, till
-my host, who professed no botany, modestly suggested a reference to
-the dictionary. There, sure enough, I found the clue I was seeking.
-The tree is _Bursera gummifera_, or Jamaica birch, one of two Florida
-representatives of the tropical torch-wood family. It is among the
-chief of my South Florida admirations, especially for its color. It and
-the Seminoles should be of kindred stock. In the lobby of the hotel,
-the other evening, I heard one man rallying another (who had been
-fishing and playing golf bareheaded) upon the magnificent complexion he
-had put on. “Your face reminds me of the gumbo-limbo,” the joker said.
-The comparison was obvious. I had been thinking the same thing.
-
-Our course takes us through a brief tract of pine land largely occupied
-by bayberry bushes, about which there are always many myrtle warblers
-(which is the same as to say bayberry warblers); and presently we
-are in a dense tropical forest. This is the place I have desired my
-companion to see; and here, after a few minutes of silent wonderment,
-his curiosity begins to play. “What is this? What is this? What is
-this?” His interrogations come in crowds; and to every one my answer
-is ready--“I don’t know.” I am in the case of the poor fellow whose
-sarcastic French instructor promised to teach him in one sentence how
-to answer correctly every question he might be asked. Like him I have
-only to respond, “_Je ne sais pas._” Trees, shrubs, and vines are all
-far out of my range. During the fortnight that I have been here, to be
-sure, I have begun to distinguish differences among them, and even to
-recognize individuality; but as to what they are, and what their names
-are, I know absolutely nothing.
-
-It is a strange sensation, so delightfully, tantalizingly strange
-that I can hardly keep away from the place. Day after day, in spite
-of the dust and (sometimes) the scorching heat, my steps turn in this
-direction. “Where have you been?” my new acquaintances say to me at the
-dinner table; and I answer, almost of course, “Down in the hammock.”
-
-Here and there, wherever there is a favorable opening, I venture a
-few steps into the jungle; but sometimes I cannot stay. A feeling of
-something like superstitious terror comes over me, the wood is so
-dense and dark and strange. I am glad to get back into the dusty road.
-My supposititious companion will be braver than I, I dare say, but
-he will be with me in confessing how confusingly alike all the trees
-look, and how utterly unavailable all his previous knowledge proves to
-be. On this point I have talked with two botanists, and they have both
-assured me that, although they had lived much in upper Florida, they
-found themselves here in a world they knew nothing about. With me, who
-am not a botanist, or only the sheerest dabbler in the science, it is
-literally true that in this sub-tropical forest I cannot guess at so
-much as the family relationship of one plant in twenty.
-
-
-
-
-WAITING FOR THE MUSIC
-
-
-I am impatient for the concert to begin. It is the 7th of February. For
-three weeks I have been in Miami; birds are plentiful; the country,
-one may almost say, is full of them; the weather, mostly a few shades
-too warm for a pedestrian’s comfort, seems to be all that birds could
-wish; but thus far there has been scarcely a sign of the grand vernal
-awakening. Warm or cold, for the birds it is still winter. Phœbes, to
-be sure, have sung ever since my arrival, I cannot help wondering why;
-and the same is true of white-eyed vireos. It is impossible to walk
-through the hammock woods without getting somewhat more than one’s
-fill of their saucily emphatic deliverances. For aught I can see, they
-are quite as loquacious now as they will be two or three months hence.
-Once in a while, hardly oftener than once a week, I should say, I have
-heard a mockingbird letting himself loose, and rather more frequently,
-especially during the last few days, cardinal grosbeaks have sweetened
-the air with their whistle; but for much the greater part the birds are
-dumb. On the morning of February 1, as I stepped out upon the piazza,
-a house wren sang from a live-oak by the kitchen door. I remembered the
-date. “Good!” said I to myself, “the time of the singing of birds is
-come.” But I was too much in haste. Since then I have heard plenty of
-wren chattering, but not another note of wren music.
-
-Still the opening of the annual concert cannot be much longer delayed.
-When I was in Florida nine years ago, mockingbirds were in free song at
-St. Augustine, before the middle of February; and at this point, three
-hundred miles and more farther south, the season must be earlier rather
-than later.
-
-Some of the more distinctively Southern of the birds about me I am
-especially desirous of hearing--the Florida yellow-throats, for
-example, a local race of the Maryland yellow-throat, so called. They
-are everywhere in sight (the dark brown of the flanks distinguishing
-them readily), and as their music is said to be very unlike that of
-their familiar Northern relative, I am naturally desirous of adding it
-to my (memorized) collection. It will be nothing great, presumably, but
-it will be something new.
-
-Still more interesting will be the song of the painted bunting, or
-nonpareil, a beauty of beauties that I had never seen (a wild one, I
-mean) until this winter. About Miami it is decidedly common, though
-the green females show themselves ten times as often as the red,
-blue, and yellow-green males. What a superbly dressed creature the
-masculine nonpareil is! And he carries himself as if he knew it. “Dear
-me,” he seems always to be saying; “this Joseph’s coat of mine makes
-me so conspicuous! Some day it will be my undoing.” My readers will
-most likely have seen the gorgeous little creature in cages (I found
-one many years ago in the Boston Public Garden, I remember), though
-the chances are that they have never seen him in anything like his
-brightest and liveliest feather. A bird, like a butterfly, was born
-to be looked at out of doors with the sunlight on him. So far I have
-heard no note from the nonpareil except his rather soft chip. The birds
-frequent weedy tangles in open grounds, showing special fondness for
-patches of the white bur-marigold, and seem to be well scattered over
-the country.
-
-Day after day I walk down through the hammock (I have spoken of it
-before, and most likely shall do so again) between Miami and Cocoanut
-Grove. Indeed, so constant are my peregrinations thither that I begin
-to find my innocent self treated as a kind of mysterious personage--one
-of the “features” of the place, so to speak, an “object of interest,”
-like the gumbo-limbos, the air-plants, and the blossoming lime trees.
-Three times, at least, I have overheard a driver describing me to
-his fares as “the man who comes down through this hammock _every
-day_”--with strong emphasis on the last two words. One passenger was
-good enough to surmise, quite audibly, that I might be a botanist,
-while another loudly proclaimed his belief that I must be “a sort of a
-bird fiend.” So much for being useful in one’s day and generation. The
-tourist mind--like the tourist stomach--abhors a vacuum. It must have
-something to browse upon. And the drivers know it. It is a bad day for
-the cow when she loses her cud.
-
-In sober truth the hammock is well worth a daily visit; and almost as
-often as I am here it comes over me what a glorious concert hall it
-will be when all these thousands of birds find their voices, if they
-ever do; for it may be, I know, that the great majority will start
-on their journey northward before that happy day arrives. Here--to
-name only some of the more common species--here are mockingbirds,
-catbirds, cardinals, house wrens, Carolina wrens, ruby-crowned
-kinglets, palm warblers, myrtle warblers, parula warblers, prairie
-warblers, black-and-white warblers, Florida yellow-throats, oven-birds,
-blue-gray gnatcatchers (a host), white-eyed vireos (another host),
-solitary vireos, chewinks, painted buntings, phœbes, crested
-flycatchers, and blue jays. What a chorus there would be if the spring
-should get into all their throats at once! Might I be here to listen!
-Then, indeed, I could make a list, with the hearing to help the
-eyesight. Now I follow the road, and find only such birds as happen to
-be near it at the moment when I pass. Then it would be another story. I
-should need a stenographer. The names would crowd upon the pencil.
-
-It is really an astonishing, unnatural-seeming thing--this multitude
-of birds, in this cloudless summer weather, with mating-time so close
-at hand, and no impulse to sing. Yet that expression is a trifle too
-strong, or at least too sweeping. This forenoon I heard a gnatcatcher
-warbling softly, as if to himself, tuning his instrument, it may be,
-or, more likely, dreaming. The cardinals, too, are certainly growing
-amorous. I see the bright males quarreling among themselves here and
-there (they are constantly in the road), and not infrequently, as I
-have said, they whistle with all sweetness. At that work there is
-no bird to excel them. How any female heart can resist such appeals
-is more than any bachelor’s heart can imagine. I rejoice in their
-numbers. I should love to walk through the hammock and hear them all
-whistling together, a chorus a good mile in length and no rod without a
-bird.
-
-Loggerhead shrikes are paired or pairing. The other day I saw one fly
-up from the ground and feed another perched on a telegraph wire. He was
-doing no more than was meet, her cool-appearing, unresponsive manner
-seemed to say. Mockingbirds, also, though singing little, are beginning
-to manifest symptoms of jealousy. If all the mockers and all the
-cardinals should break into voice at once, the air itself would hardly
-contain the music.
-
-Two pileated woodpeckers that I see every few days at a particular spot
-in the hammock have already come to an understanding, or so I fancy
-from certain bits of conduct that I have been privileged to witness.
-This morning I stood watching the female as she hammered to pieces a
-decayed branch close by me, when all at once her mate called in the
-distance. Instantly she held up her head, as much as to say, “Hark!
-Was that he?” and the next moment she was gone. Then I heard low
-conversational notes, followed presently by loud drumming on a resonant
-stub or branch. I thought of what I have heard preachers say, that
-Heaven is a state, not a place.
-
-Pileated woodpeckers are birds good to look at, and, wild as they
-look, it is pleasant to find them so approachable. But in fact, this
-is most productive woodpecker country. Here are flickers in abundance,
-red-bellies almost as many, and along with them the red-headed, the
-red-cockaded (in the pine lands), the yellow-bellied (least common of
-all), the downy, and the hairy; all, in short, that could be expected,
-with the exception of the ivory-billed; and (such is human nature) I
-would give more to see him than all the rest together.
-
-Well, I will not wish time away, as the saying is. I begin to perceive
-that I have none to spare. But I shall rejoice when some morning I go
-out and find the conductor’s arm lifted, and the chorus minding the
-beat.
-
-
-
-
-PERIPATETIC BOTANY
-
-
-When I called upon my friend the entomologist, a few evenings ago,
-she informed me that she had passed a very exciting day. While out on
-her usual insect-collecting expedition, along the bay shore, she had
-come suddenly upon an unknown plant growing among the mangrove bushes.
-A glance at the blossom showed that it must belong to the mallow
-family, and on getting back to the hotel and consulting the manual, she
-determined it at once as _Pavonia racemosa_,--“Miami and Key Biscayne.”
-Every collector knows the pleasure of discovering a plant or other
-specimen, the known habitat of which is entitled to this kind of exact
-specification.
-
-“Very good,” said I, when she had finished the story, “I shall go down
-to-morrow and look at _Pavonia racemosa_ for myself.”
-
-The next afternoon, therefore, saw me at the place; but it appeared
-that I had not sufficiently attended to my friend’s instructions.
-At all events, I could find nothing that looked like a _Malva_. In
-a country so richly and strangely furnished as this, however, a
-visitor cannot turn his eyes in any direction without putting them
-upon something he never saw before; and so it happened that while I
-hunted vainly for one thing I found another and better; or if it was
-not better in itself, it was more unexpected and interesting. This
-was a shrub, or small tree, bearing large, glossy, coriaceous leaves,
-clustered near the ends of the branches, from which depended long,
-smooth, pear-shaped or gourd-shaped buds. More careful search revealed
-a few faded flowers and a large pendent green fruit. And then, ten
-minutes afterward, as I was starting away, my eyes fell upon a clump of
-the rare _Pavonia_.
-
-With that, of course, there was no room for difficulty. I had only to
-compare the specimen with the printed description, and check the name.
-But as for the strange shrub, of which I had bud, blossom, fruit, and
-leaf (what more could a man desire?), with that I was fairly beaten.
-Even a methodical, schoolboyish use of the “key” was without result.
-The signs brought me, or seemed to bring me, to the Bignonia family,
-and there came to nothing.
-
-Happily a professor of botany in one of our great universities had
-arrived in town within the last twenty-four hours, and after supper I
-invited him to my room to help me with the puzzle. He set about the
-work just as I had done, only after a more workmanlike fashion, and
-him also the key led to the _Bignoniaceæ_, but no farther. As the
-common saying is, the trail had “run up a tree.” In short, with all the
-facts before us,--leaves, buds, blossom, fruit,--we were stumped. “It
-is some representative of the Bignonia family not included in Chapman’s
-Flora,” was the professor’s final verdict.
-
-The next forenoon we had agreed to spend together in the big hammock,
-through which I had been sauntering by myself for the past five weeks.
-We should pass the Agricultural Experiment Station on the way, and I
-determined to carry the troublesome specimen along and submit it to
-the professor in charge. So said, so done; but as we stopped at the
-post office, there stood the man himself at the door. “What is this?”
-I asked, scarcely waiting to bid him good-morning. “_Crescentia_,”
-he answered promptly, “a plant of the Bignonia family.” So the other
-professor had been exactly right.
-
-And now for the more dramatic part of the story. The day before--at
-noon of the day on which I found the plant in question--I received a
-letter from a Boston friend, himself a university professor of botany,
-to whom I had written, begging him to quit his desk, like a reasonable
-man, and join me in this botanical paradise. He replied that he could
-not come, and furthermore, that he wasn’t so very sorry. New England
-winter is to him a constant refreshment and exhilaration, it appears.
-Happy New Englander! “To-day is simply perfect,” he wrote, “and you
-can’t beat it in Miami.” As to that point I reserve my opinion. “How
-changed the place must be from what it was when I was there in the
-’80’s,” he continued. “No railroad then within hundreds of miles, and
-none of your modern improvements. It is a great place for plants. I
-shan’t forget how delighted I was to find _Crescentia cucurbitina_ in
-flower. I had searched the whole range of Keys for it in vain.”
-
-This very plant, of the existence of which I had never before heard,
-I had found, without knowing it, within two hours after receiving my
-friend’s letter.[6]
-
-Winter botanizing by newcomers, in a country so foreign as this,
-where much the greater part of the shrubs and trees are West Indian,
-with no better help than Chapman’s Flora, is carried on under almost
-discouraging difficulties. “If we only had the blossoms!” the professor
-is continually exclaiming. And his pupil responds, “Yes, if we only
-had!” As it is, we content ourselves with finding out a few things
-daily, guessing at characters and relationships (no very bad practice,
-by the way), running down all sorts of clues, real or imaginary, like
-detectives on the hunt for a murderer, and even asking questions
-freely of chance passers-by, especially of the numerous class known
-by the white people hereabout as “Bahama niggers.” They, rather than
-their pale-faced superiors, seem to be observant of natural things.
-It is likely, too, that they or their forbears may have brought some
-traditionary knowledge of such matters from the islands where the
-plants are more at home. At all events, it is pleasant to notice how
-ready even the black children are, not only to answer questions, but to
-ask them as well, about any flowers that one happens to be carrying.
-
-The other day I came suddenly upon a bush, the like of which I had
-seen and wondered over a hundred times since my arrival in Miami,
-remarking especially the highly peculiar, almost perpendicular carriage
-of its innumerable thick, brightly varnished leaves, a device, as the
-professor had suggested, for protecting them against the vertical
-rays of the sun. I had never seen either fruit or blossom, but here,
-on this particular plant, my eye fell upon a few scattered purplish
-drupes. Now, then, here was something to go upon. Now, possibly, with a
-sprinkling more of good luck, I might find the name of the bush. I was
-a mile or two from town, on the road to Alapattah Prairie, where there
-are many truck farms. A white man came along, one of the “truckers,”
-driving homeward from the city.
-
-“Do you know what this is?” I inquired, showing him the specimen.
-
-“No, sir,” he answered.
-
-Soon I met another man, and proposed to him the same question, with the
-same result. A third attempt was no more successful. Then I overtook
-two colored men talking beside a quarry.
-
-“Excuse me,” I said, “but can you tell me the name of this plant?”
-
-“Yes, sir, it is cocoa plum,” answered one of them; and the other said,
-“Yes, cocoa plum.”
-
-And so it was; for on referring to the manual I found the bush fully
-described under that name.
-
-Another experiment in this kind of putting myself to school, it is fair
-to add, was less in the Bahama colored man’s favor. A tourist whom I
-happened upon resting beside the hammock road held in his hand two or
-three twigs, from each of which depended a large, stony, pear-shaped
-fruit, and seeing me curious about the novelty, he kindly offered me
-one. This, also, I forthwith carried into the city, stopping passengers
-by the way--like a natural-historical Socrates--to ask them about it.
-No one, white or black, could tell me anything till in a fruit shop
-I questioned a white boy. “It’s a seven-year apple,” he said. “Some
-foolish local name,” I thought. At all events it could do me no good,
-since it was not to be found in Chapman’s index. But that evening, on
-my showing the specimen to the entomologist, and telling her what the
-boy had said, she replied, “Certainly, that is right. The plant is
-_Genipa_, or seven-year apple.” And under the word “Genipa” I found it
-so spoken of in the Standard Dictionary. There the fruit is said to
-be edible, which seems to disprove the conjecture of another lady to
-whom I had shown it, that it derives its name from the fact that it
-would take an eater seven years to digest it. Apples, like men, are not
-fairly to be judged in the green state.
-
-I have said that this guessing at characters and relationships is not
-a bad discipline. And no more is it the worst of fun. Of this I had
-only two days ago a strikingly happy proof. Everywhere in the hammock
-there grows a tall tree, noticeable for the peculiar color of its bark
-and its channeled and often fantastically contorted trunk. The leafy
-branches are always far overhead (a necessity in so crowded a place),
-and I had seen the purplish, globular drupes only as they had dropped
-one by one to the ground. At every opportunity I had made inquiries
-about the tree, but had received no light, nor, after much searching,
-had either the professor or myself been able to hit upon so much as a
-plausible conjecture as to its identity. Well, two days ago, as I say,
-we were walking together on the outskirts of the city, when we came to
-a tree of this kind growing in the open, the fruit-bearing branches of
-which hung within reach. We pulled one of them down, and I exclaimed at
-once, “Why, this should be related to the sea-grape!”--a most curious
-West Indian tree (_Coccoloba uvifera_, a member of the buckwheat
-family!) which grows freely along the shore of Biscayne Bay. “See the
-fruit,” said I, “for all the world like a bunch of grapes.” With that
-we began a detailed examination, and, to make a long story short, the
-tree proved to be another species of _Coccoloba_--_C. Floridana_.
-
-That was pretty good guessing, based as it was on nothing better than
-an “external character,” as the professor rather slightingly called it.
-For five weeks my curiosity had been exercised over the puzzle, and in
-five seconds I had found the needed clue. Who will say that this was
-not better and more interesting, and withal more instructive, than to
-have been told the tree’s name on the first day I saw it?
-
-
-
-
-A PEEP AT THE EVERGLADES
-
-
-My first stroll in Miami was taken under the pilotage of a lady
-who had already spent several winters here. In the course of it we
-came suddenly upon a colored man lying face downward in the grass,
-under a blazing sun, fast asleep. It was no uncommon happening, my
-friend remarked; she was always stumbling over such dusky sleepers.
-But in this Southern clime the luxury of physical inactivity is not
-appreciated by black people alone. I was walking away from the city
-at a rather brisk pace, one morning, when I passed a lonesome shanty.
-A white man sat upon the rude piazza, and another man and a boy stood
-near.
-
-“Are you going to work to-day?” asked the boy of the occupant of the
-piazza.
-
-“No,” was the answer, quick and pithy.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“I ain’t got time.”
-
-I laid the words up as a treasure; I do not expect to hear the
-philosophy of indolence more succinctly and pointedly stated if I live
-a thousand years.
-
-But though we Northern visitors may sometimes envy our Southern
-brethren their gift of happy _insouciance_, it is not for our
-possessing. We were born under another star. Our lack is the precise
-opposite of theirs; even in our vacation hours we have seldom time to
-sit still.
-
-So it happened that on a sultry, dog-day morning, with a south wind
-blowing, the sky partly clouded,--a comfort to the eyes,--the professor
-and the bird-gazer, after an early breakfast, set forth upon a
-reconnoissance of the Everglades. We took each a boat and an oarsman,
-planning to go up the Miami River, or rather its south branch, till we
-were among the “islands”--small pieces of hammock woods scattered amid
-the wilderness of saw-grass.
-
-As each of us had his own boat, so each had his own errand, one
-botanical, the other lazily ornithological. The professor expected to
-see and learn much--especially about the adaptation of plants to their
-surroundings; his associate expected to see and learn little--little or
-nothing; and according to each man’s faith, so it was unto him.
-
-For the first mile or so--as far as the tide runs, perhaps--the river
-is densely beset on either side by a shining green hedge of mangrove
-bushes, every branch sending down “aerial roots” of its own, till
-landing among them is an adventure hardly to be thought of. After the
-mangroves come taller hedges of the cocoa plum, leafier still, and
-equally shining.
-
-“Aren’t you glad you know what this bush is?” I shouted downstream to
-the professor.
-
-“Indeed I am,” he shouted back.
-
-Without this knowledge, which we had acquired within a few days, by a
-kind of accident, as before related, our present state of mind would
-have been pitiable. We were surprised to find the plant so fond of
-water, having noticed it heretofore in comparatively dry situations.
-Another example of the extreme adaptability of tropical plants, the
-professor remarked.
-
-By and by we came to the first cypress trees, the only ones I have seen
-in this all but swampless Miami neighborhood; beautiful in their new
-dress of living green. I rejoiced at the sight. Under one of them we
-landed, admiring the “knees” that its roots had sent up till the ground
-was studded with them. These, the professor tells me (it is nothing
-new, by his account of the matter, but it is new to me), are believed
-to serve as breathing or aerating organs, supplying to the tree the
-oxygen for lack of which, standing in water, as it mostly does, it
-would otherwise drown. All visitors to Florida are impressed by the
-beauty and majesty of the cypress, and many have no doubt puzzled
-themselves over the meaning of these strange, apparently useless
-protuberances--as if nature had attempted something and failed--that
-are so constantly found underneath. “They never do grow to be trees,”
-my boatman said.
-
-It was at this point, as nearly as I remember, that the stream grew
-narrow and shallow at once, till behold, we were laboring up what might
-fairly be called rapids. Here, between the awkward crowding of the
-banks and the swiftness of the current (it was good, I said to myself,
-to see water actually _running_ in Florida), the men were certainly
-earning their money. Fortunately, both proved equal to the task. Then
-a bend in the stream took us away from the neighborhood of the trees
-(not until, in one of the cypresses, I had remarked my first Miami
-nuthatch--a white-breast), and into the very midst of the saw-grass.
-This densely growing, sharp-edged, appropriately named grass, higher
-than a man’s head, standing to-day in two or three feet of water, is
-said to cover the Everglades. It must render them a frightful place in
-which to lose one’s way. “I should rather be lost at sea in a rowboat,”
-my oarsman declared.
-
-All this while, of course, I had kept a lookout for birds, but, as I
-had expected, to comparatively little purpose. No doubt there were many
-about us, but not for our finding. The shallower and quieter edges of
-the river were covered here and there with broad leaves of the yellow
-lily, among which should have been at least a chance gallinule, it
-seemed to me; but neither gallinule nor rail showed itself. Here,
-as everywhere, buzzards and vultures were sailing overhead. Many
-white-breasted swallows, too, went hawking over the grass, and once a
-purple martin passed near me. Better still, he allowed me, in one brief
-note, to hear his welcome voice. Like the new leaves of the cypress, it
-prophesied of spring.
-
-At intervals a heron of one kind or another started up far in advance.
-One was snow-white, but whether I was to call it an immature little
-blue heron or a white egret was more than could be made sure of at
-my distance. I recall, too, a flock of ducks, a cormorant or two,
-speeding through the air after their usual headlong manner, a solitary
-red-winged blackbird, astray from the flock, and the cries of killdeer
-plovers. Kingfishers were not infrequent, two or three ospreys came
-into sight, and once, at least, I made sure of a Louisiana heron. A
-lean showing, certainly, for what might have been thought so promising
-a place.
-
-And now, as the grass grew shorter, so that we could survey the world
-about us, the water of a sudden turned shallow. The professor’s
-flat-bottomed boat still floated prosperously, but my own heavier,
-keeled craft speedily touched bottom. The rower put down the oars, took
-off his shoes and stockings, rolled up his trousers, and proceeded to
-lighten the boat of his weight, and drag it forward. This expedient
-answered for a rod or two. Then we stuck fast again, and the passenger
-followed his boatman’s example and took to the water. So we followed
-along, the water now deeper, now shallower, the bottom hard and slimy,
-till after a little we were at the end of our rope. If we were to go
-farther we must leave the boat behind us.
-
-This was hardly worth while, especially as even in that way we could
-not hope to proceed far enough to see anything different from what we
-had seen already. “We will go back,” I said, “drifting with the current
-and stopping by the way.” And so we did, my boatman and I, leaving the
-professor--who, as it turned out, went but a few rods beyond us--to
-pursue his investigations unhindered.
-
-After all, in spite of our indolent intentions, the return was faster
-than the upward journey, as almost of necessity happens, whether one is
-descending a river or a mountain. The time for loitering is in going
-up. One good thing we saw, nevertheless, though it was only for an
-instant.
-
-“What’s that?” my man suddenly exclaimed, in the eagerest of tones.
-“Look! Right there!”
-
-“Oh, yes,” I said; “a least bittern.”
-
-It stood crosswise, so to speak, halfway up a tall reed, for all the
-world like a marsh wren. Then away it went on the wing, and was lost in
-the grass. It was a good bird to see, besides counting as “No. 91” in
-my Miami list.
-
-“I never did see a bird like that,”[7] the boatman said. “Such a little
-fellow!” he called it. It was a pleasure to find him so enthusiastic.
-
-The best thing of the whole trip, notwithstanding, was not the sight
-of any bird, but our lazy, careless, albeit too rapid gliding down the
-stream, with the world so bright and calm about us and above. Here
-and there, for our delight, was a tuft of fragrant white “lilies”
-(_Crinum_) standing amid a tuft of handsome upright green leaves. More
-than once, also, we passed boatloads of fishermen (and fisherwomen),
-white and black. One elderly and carefully dressed, city-coated
-gentleman I especially remember. He sat in the stern of the boat (his
-African boatman with a line out, also), watching the fluctuations of
-his bob as earnestly, I thought, as ever he could have watched the
-fluctuations of the stock market. His whole soul was centred upon that
-bit of cork and the possible fish below. He actually had a nibble as
-we passed! What cared he then for “coppers” or “industrials”? He must
-at some time or other have been a boy. The lucky man! By the look on
-his face he was happy. And happiness, if I am to judge by what I see,
-is one of the main things, in Florida. At all events, it was the main
-thing that I found in the Everglades.
-
-
-
-
-THE BEGINNINGS OF SPRING
-
-
-Manifold are the perils of journalism. A few weeks ago I filled a
-letter with the praise, most sincerely felt, of a certain tropical
-hammock on the road from Miami to Cocoanut Grove, a place full of
-birds, and destined, so I hoped, to be equally full of music. This
-eulogy, it transpires, was read by a bird-loving enthusiast from New
-England, sojourning for the winter at the Hotel Ormond; and what should
-he do but send me word, a stranger, that he had packed his trunk and
-was coming down straightway (two hundred and fifty miles or more) to
-inspect the wonder.
-
-In due course he arrived, and as soon as possible I led him out of the
-city, across the river, through a stretch of blazing sunshine, and at
-last into the heart of the hammock. It was a long jaunt, much longer
-than he was prepared for, the afternoon was hot, and to make matters
-worse the hammock showed almost no sign of that profusion of avian
-existence, with the anticipation of which my glowing periods had filled
-him.
-
-Fortunately for my reputation, I had forewarned him that such would
-be the case. The birds, I explained, either because the season
-had advanced, or for some other reason, had pretty nearly deserted
-the jungle of West Indian trees, shrubs, and vines,--for such this
-particular hammock is,--and had betaken themselves to the more open
-country, especially to certain groves of newly clad live-oaks, whose
-sturdy, wide-spreading, rival-killing, trust-creating, monopolistic
-arms, by the time the trees are of middle age, have made for themselves
-a relatively sunny clearing.
-
-I had been growing aware of this change in the face of things for a
-week or two, and now, when the newcomer has been three or four days in
-Miami, the reality of it is conclusively established. On two mornings
-of the present week, for example, I found in a few minutes’ stroll
-before breakfast a highly interesting flock of perhaps twenty kinds
-of birds in the live-oaks and other scattered trees on the very edge
-of the city, within a hundred rods of my own doorstep: fish crows,
-boat-tailed grackles, crow blackbirds, red-headed woodpeckers, downy
-woodpeckers, red-bellied woodpeckers, flickers, catbirds, mockingbirds,
-house wrens, cardinals, palm warblers, myrtle warblers, parula
-warblers, prairie warblers, black-and-white warblers, yellow-throated
-warblers, solitary vireos, yellow-throated vireos, blue jays, phœbes,
-ground doves, blue-gray gnatcatchers, ruby-crowned kinglets, a male
-nonpareil, a Baltimore oriole, a crested flycatcher, a hummingbird, and
-a hermit thrush. A varied bunch of feathers, and no mistake.
-
-In the tropical hammock, on the other hand, during the same forenoons,
-I saw, as well as I remember, nothing but white-eyed vireos, phœbes,
-catbirds, cardinals, palm and myrtle warblers, crested flycatchers,
-nonpareils, and gnatcatchers. So completely has the condition of things
-been reversed with the change of season.
-
-Other signs are not lacking that March has brought the spring.
-Mockingbirds are daily becoming more rhapsodical. The other afternoon,
-out among the cabins of the black suburb, I stood still while three
-sang at once on different sides. They are friends of the poor, as
-well as of the rich. This morning two yellow-throated vireos sang,
-chattered, and whistled; and a most delicious trilled whistle theirs
-is, soft, musical, full of sweet and happy feeling. Better still,
-almost (because more of a novelty), a yellow-throated warbler sang his
-dreamy tune over and over. This is one of the most exquisite birds ever
-made; of quiet, modest colors, bluish-black and white, with a single
-bright jewel to set them off--a gorget of brilliant yellow. To-day I
-have seen as many as ten such beauties, I think. Their feeding habits
-and their movements, as well as their black-and-white stripes, are
-surprisingly like those of the black-and-white creeper,--to which they
-ought to be more nearly related than the systematists allow,--while
-their song is in the manner of the indigo-bird.
-
-Now, if the nonpareil buntings would only fall into line! Thus far they
-have not favored me with a note, and indifferent musicians as I know
-them to be, I believe there is no other bird in Miami that I am so
-desirous of hearing. Such feathers as they wear! Once in a while, of
-late, a male has been good enough to take a somewhat lofty perch and
-display himself. If there is a more gorgeous bird in the United States
-I should like to see him. Just now there are at least three enthusiasts
-in Miami--a Kentucky lady, a Rhode Island man, and a Massachusetts
-man--who are doing their best daily to get their fill of his loveliness.
-
-Phœbes have sung much less of late than they did in January. Then they
-seemed to find existence a perpetual jubilee. Red-bellied woodpeckers,
-too, are far less talkative than they were a month ago. Most likely
-they are busier. And by the by, the Kentucky enthusiast above mentioned
-pleased me by calling this woodpecker the “checkerback,” a felicitous
-name, in common use in Kentucky, it appears, and perhaps elsewhere. I
-am happy to adopt it and pass it on.
-
-If there were words wherewith to describe the indescribable, I should
-like to tell of a bluebird that I saw a week ago about one of the
-vegetable gardens out on the prairie. The blue of that creature’s back
-and wings is not to be imagined. The bluest sky never matched it. I
-would wager that he was Florida born. No Northern bird ever owned such
-a coat. In my recollection he will stand as one of the sights of the
-country, along with the “banyan trees,” the snaky green vanilla vines,
-and the tropical jungle.
-
-These letters are of necessity written piecemeal. In this hospitable
-Southern country, where the weather and so many things beside are
-continually calling, “Come forth and enjoy us,” one cannot stay indoors
-very long at once. So it happened that at the conclusion of the last
-paragraph I put down my pencil and started out for another few minutes
-among the live-oaks. As I approached them I descried a man sitting upon
-a heap of coal-ashes dumped along the railway. He might have been Job
-himself, to look at him, but at a second glance I perceived that he
-was not actually sitting in the ashes, but on a board, and instead of
-bewailing his afflictions or his sins, was peacefully minding the New
-Testament injunction, “Behold the fowls of the air.” In short, he was
-the gentleman from Ormond, with his glass, as it happened, focused upon
-a handsome prairie warbler.
-
-We passed the time of day, after the bird had flown,--for the field has
-its courtesies, and we respect them,--and he told me that in spite of
-the unfavorable north wind (one of our periodical cold spells is upon
-us, with the mercury in the forties) he had ventured out, and had been
-liberally rewarded. He had seen yellow-throated warblers, a parula,
-a prairie, and I forget what else, and, to take his word for it, was
-living in clover.
-
-Presently a hawk swooped among the trees, and every small bird
-became invisible as if by magic. Then my companion proposed taking
-a turn beyond the fence. This we did, and just as we came suddenly
-upon a huge watch-dog (a great Dane, I suppose he would be called),
-formidable-looking and chained, but fawning upon us so eagerly that
-there was nothing for it but to pat him on the head and call him a good
-fellow--just as we approached him, I say, I nudged the second man to
-stop. There, straight before us, side by side on the rim of an iron
-kettle of water set under the trees for the dog’s benefit, stood a
-male cardinal and a male nonpareil. Perhaps they were not a glorious
-pair! Them also I shall remember, along with the miraculous bluebird.
-
-Less brilliant, but even more memorable, was my one Bachman’s warbler.
-I had stopped under a live-oak,--on a return from the big hammock,--and
-was putting my glass upon one bird after another feeding among its
-blossoms (parulas, yellow-throats, ruby-crowns, gnatcatchers, and
-myrtle-birds), when in the very topmost spray I sighted a spot of
-coal-black set in bright yellow. Here was something new. From twig to
-twig the stranger went,--rather deliberately, for a warbler,--the glass
-following, till after submitting for perhaps ten minutes to my eager
-inspection he slipped away, as birds have a knack of doing, without
-my seeing him go. However, he had shown himself perfectly--the jet
-breastplate, the yellow forehead, the black crown, the lustrous olive
-of the upper parts, and the yellow patch upon the wing. He was a bird
-that I had never expected to see. Comparatively few ornithologists have
-been so happy.
-
-This was on March 7. For two days we had noticed indications of a
-migratory movement, especially among parulas and yellow-throated
-warblers. Probably the Bachman had come from farther south. My thanks
-to him for treating me so handsomely, though he might have doubled the
-obligation, at no cost to himself, by singing me a tune.
-
-
-
-
-FAIR ORMOND
-
-
-After nearly two months in the extreme south of Florida I have turned
-my face northward, and here I am at Ormond, fair Ormond-on-the-Halifax.
-No more bewildering jungles of nameless West Indian trees and climbers,
-no more cocoanut palms, no more acres of wild morning-glory vines. It
-gave me a start of pleasurable surprise when, somewhere on this side
-of Palm Beach, I do not remember where, I saw from the car window
-a stately sweet-gum tree all freshly green. It had not occurred to
-me till then that I had found nothing at Miami of this handsome and
-characteristic Southerner, always one of my favorites.
-
-Indeed, I have come to a different world. I am no longer in a foreign
-country. Here are lordly magnolias, not yet in blossom, to be sure, but
-proudly beautiful in the leaf. Here, too, are Cherokee roses, loveliest
-of all flowers, just coming into their kingdom. At sight of the first
-glossy-leaved bush, which happened to stand near a house, I made up to
-the door, not stopping twice to consider, and asked the privilege of
-picking a flower and a bud. The householder was generous, and the bush
-even more so. “Take another, and another,” it seemed to say, catching
-me again and again by the sleeve; “I have enough and to spare.” It was
-hard work for me to get away. Here, also, is the yellow jessamine,
-only less beautiful than the rose, hanging the tall forest trees full
-of golden, fragrant bells. And here, sprinkled along the wayside, are
-stores of blue violets. None of these things are to be seen on the
-shores of Biscayne Bay. Yes, I am glad to be here.
-
-And the phlox, likewise, the pretty Drummond’s phlox of our Northern
-gardens, dear to me of old, let me not forget that. It is not
-indigenous to the country, I suppose, but, like the garden verbena,
-being here it makes itself most comfortably at home, delighting to
-overrun forsaken orange groves and similar unoccupied waste places.
-How sweetly it looks up at us with its innocent child’s face! Just
-now one of the guests of the hotel came in with a broad market-basket
-loaded with it, a good half-bushel, at the very least. “I have counted
-twenty-six varieties,” he said (he was thinking of diversities of
-color), and there must be somewhere near that number in the crowded
-vase that he has sent down to brighten my writing-table.
-
-Here, too, is the Atlantic beach. In ten minutes I cross the peninsula
-and am on the sands; or, if I stroll up or down the river shore,--on
-the western side of the peninsula,--I can hear all the while the
-pounding of the surf.
-
-I have been in Ormond two days,--two perfect days of temperate summer
-weather,--and have walked hither and thither, up the river, down
-the river, across the river, and on the beach, seeing comparatively
-little of the country as yet, but enough to be able to say that I have
-never found any place in Florida where a walking man should be better
-contented. There are paths and roads everywhere,--a convenience not to
-be taken for granted in this Southern country,--and be his states of
-mind never so variable, he may here suit the jaunt to the mood.
-
-A visit to Ormond was not in my plans for the winter, and I left Miami
-with regret. Migratory birds were arriving, and I seemed to be running
-away just when there was most to detain me; those tropical plants, too,
-were certain to become more and more interesting as the season grew
-older; but, like the verbena and the phlox, being here I am thankful.
-If I have taken leave of some splendid birds (those painted buntings
-are in my eye as I write), I have found some old friends in their
-place. It is good to see brown thrashers again, with song sparrows,
-white-throats, and chickadees. One of a bird-loving man’s strangest
-sensations at Miami is the absence of chickadees and tufted titmice. I
-had never been in such a place before. (For eight weeks, let me say in
-passing, I have seen no English sparrows. Unfortunately I have not yet
-forgotten how they look.)
-
-In my two days here I have counted but fifty kinds of birds. A goodly
-number that I know to be present, and even common, I have so far
-happened to miss. But in the middle of March even fifty birds make
-something like a festival. Mockers, cardinals, and Carolina wrens--the
-great Southern trio--are tuneful, of course. Even as I write, a wren
-is whistling an accompaniment to my pencil. If I could only put the
-music on the paper! If it would only “modulate my periods!” as Charles
-Lamb said. When I sit in the shade of a moss-hung live-oak, letting the
-sea breeze fan me, and listen to an assembly of red-winged blackbirds
-rehearsing their breezy _conkaree_ among the reeds along the Halifax
-(though it is not a simple _conkaree_, either, but _conkaree-dah_,
-the old tune with a new coda), I think of swamps in far Massachusetts
-where on this very 12th of March other redwings are opening the musical
-season in a very different atmosphere.
-
-Chewinks of both kinds (red-eyes and white-eyes, Northerners and
-Southerners) are calling and singing. Blue yellow-backed warblers are
-musical after their manner (they hardly need to be singers, being
-so exquisite in color, form, and motion), and white-eyed vireos are
-numerous enough, though nothing like so plentiful as at Miami. Here, as
-there, they have no thought of hiding their light under a bushel.
-
-It is like old times to see Florida jays sitting on the chimney-tops of
-the summer cottages along the dunes behind the beach. Thus it was that
-I saw them first, at Daytona, nine years ago. As a friend and I stopped
-this morning to rest in the shade of a piazza, one came and stood upon
-the railing and eyed us long and curiously. “Have you nothing edible
-about you?” he seemed to say. If we had had anything to offer the
-beggar, I am confident he would have hopped upon our knees.[8] As it
-was, he approached within five or six feet while we chirped and talked
-to him. Florida jays are strange creatures for tameness, and if it were
-thought worth while could readily be domesticated.
-
-It seemed natural, also, to see pelicans flying in small flocks up
-the beach, just over the breakers, so that half the time they were
-invisible, lost in the trough of the sea; moving always in Indian
-file, flapping their wings and scaling by turns. And still another
-remembrancer of my previous visit to this part of Florida was the
-sight of a bald eagle robbing a fishhawk. The hawk made a stubborn
-defense, dodging this way and that, rising and falling, but in the end
-the eagle, an old white-headed fellow, was more than a match for his
-victim; for though they were far away, the motions of the contestants
-showed plainly enough how the struggle terminated.
-
-On the beach, halfway to his knees in water, stood a great blue heron,
-leaning seaward, waiting for a fish. He might have been standing
-there for nine years. At all events I left him in the same position
-that length of time ago. “Ay, and you,” he might rejoin, “you haven’t
-changed, either. You have still nothing better to do than to go
-wandering up and down the earth, shooting birds with an opera-glass?”
-True enough. Heron and man, after nine years each is the same old
-sixpence. “The thing that hath been it is that which shall be, and
-there is nothing new under the sun.” Well, so be it. Only let me find
-new pleasure in the old places and the old pursuits.
-
-
-
-
-A DAY IN THE WOODS
-
-
-I was well within the truth when I said, a week ago, that there could
-not be many places in Florida where a walking man would find his wants
-so generously provided for as at Ormond. Here he may spend a half-day
-in idling over a round of a mile or two,--sea beach, river bank, and
-woodland,--or he may foot it as industriously as he pleases from
-morning till night; and the next day and the day after he will have
-plenty of invitations to “fresh woods,” though hardly to “pastures
-new.” Pastures, whether new or old, he may look for elsewhere.
-
-But at Ormond a man may not only walk, he may drive; and this forenoon
-(March 19) a pair of horses have taken me over such a road as I do not
-expect soon to find the like of, either in Florida or anywhere else;
-a course of twelve or fifteen miles, the whole of it (as soon as the
-bridge over the Halifax was crossed) through most beautiful forest. The
-road was wide enough for the carriage and no more; soft as a carpet, so
-that the wheels made no noise, with big trunks of pines, palmettoes,
-oaks, sweet-gums, magnolias, and what not crowding upon the track so
-closely that we could almost put out our hands and touch them as we
-passed. In the whole distance, to the best of my recollection, we met
-neither carriage nor foot-passenger.
-
-We drove as we pleased, stopped as we pleased, talked or kept silence,
-listened to the birds, admired the flowers and the new leafage (there
-are no words wherewith to intimate its freshness and beauty), and
-withal dreamed of the time when all the land about us was the scene of
-busy labors, when sugar and rice and cotton were cultivated here by
-hundreds of slaves, and those who owned the land, as they imagined, had
-no thought of a day when the forest should again claim all their fair
-possessions. We drove to Mount Oswald, so called, near the mouth of the
-Tomoka River, thence over the famous old causeway, set with palmettoes,
-to Buckhead Bluff, at which point the King’s road to St. Augustine is
-supposed (or known) to have crossed the river a hundred years ago. I
-was glad to see the river (I shall see more of it, if I live a day
-or two longer), but the great thing was the forest, with its present
-beauty and its whisperings of past romance.
-
-Now it is afternoon, and I am in the same woods. No lover of wild life
-ever drove over a beautiful country road for the first time without
-saying to himself again and again, “I must come this way on foot.”
-A carriage is well enough in its place, but really to see things a
-man must be on his own legs. Immediately after luncheon, therefore,
-with a merry company of golfers (a flourishing sect in Florida), I
-took the little one-horse street-car to the railway station, and now,
-having crossed a narrow field and left the golfers at their afternoon
-devotions, I am in the Volusia road, in the noblest of hammock woods.
-
-The first half-mile of the way I have walked over more than once
-already, and having in mind the shortness of the afternoon I quicken my
-steps. The doing so is no hardship. For the last forty-eight hours the
-wind has blown from the north; during the night the mercury settled to
-38°; and though it is considerably warmer than that now, a pretty brisk
-movement is still not uncomfortable.
-
-Here I pass a mournful sight--an old orange grove, of which nothing
-remains but the sandy soil and a few blackened stumps. The “great
-freeze” of six or seven years ago killed the trees to the roots.
-Nearly opposite, to add to the forlornness of the impression, stands
-a deserted house; and not far along is another, that looks only less
-unthrifty and disconsolate, with an old woman smoking a pipe on the
-piazza. It would be a strict moralist who should grudge her that one
-comfort.
-
-Now I have left the last human habitation behind me, and in front
-stretches the narrow road arched with greenness, running away and
-away till it runs out of sight. What lofty oaks and sweet-gums! And
-what beautiful lichens cover them with wise-looking hieroglyphics! If
-we could only decipher their meaning! I note especially the ribbed,
-muscular-seeming trunks of the hornbeams, one of which, the largest,
-is riddled with uncountable perforations, the work of some sap-loving
-woodpecker; and I turn about more than once to admire the proportions
-of a magnificent magnolia, one of the largest I have ever seen. My
-thanks to the highway surveyor who went a few feet out of his way to
-leave it standing. A rod or two more, and I stop to look up at some
-exceptionally tall pines and live-oaks, a noticeable group, in the
-altitude of which I have before found a pleasure.
-
-How they soar, as if to see which shall go highest! And as high as the
-oak branches go, so high the gray moss follows.
-
-Now I am at the fork of the road. My course is to the right. “Old
-Stage Road to Buckhead Bluff on the Tomoka River at the crossing of
-the ‘old King’s road’ to St. Augustine.” So the guideboard reads, with
-commendable particularity. “Old” is the word. Even the wind in the
-tree-tops seems to be whispering stories of things that happened long,
-long ago. And the trees answer, “Yes, so the fathers have told us.” To
-think of all those busy people! And every one of them dead!
-
-Here is a bit of clearing where the sun strikes in. It feels good.
-This is the right kind of outdoor weather--shade not uncomfortable
-and the sun’s heat welcome. A white-eyed chewink, happy Floridian, is
-whistling from the brush. Holly trees are common, and the sweet-bay is
-everywhere. Its shining leaves are of a most salubrious odor, as if
-they might be for the healing of the nations. I am continually plucking
-them and rolling them in my fingers.
-
-And yonder is the maker of the clearing--a colored man, standing beside
-a woodpile. I hail him to remark that it is a fine day, and he answers,
-“Yes, very nice.” Strange that when two men meet for the only time in
-their lives they should find nothing more important to communicate than
-that it rains, or that the sun is shining. But weather is the thing,
-after all, especially in Florida. Perhaps it deserves all that is said
-about it. Anyhow, the woodcutter and the stroller have expressed a
-feeling of neighborliness and have told each other no lies.
-
-With every rod the wood changes from glory to glory. I remark with
-special joy a grove of tall, slender, smooth-barked water-oaks, every
-one in new leaf. Height rather than girth is their aim. “We must have
-the sun,” they say, “and we climb to get it.” How good the sun is, let
-their leaves testify; those millions on millions of shining leaves,
-every one new. Yes, every one new. I cannot write the word too often.
-And many times as I write it, the Northern reader will have but an
-insufficient sense of its meaning. Such freshness and greenness!
-Neither memory nor imagination can body it forth. Happy are the eyes
-that behold the miracle twice in a single spring. It is like doubling
-one’s year.
-
-A Carolina wren whistles, near at hand, but invisible (invisibility
-is the wren’s trick), and a red-eyed vireo, farther away, has begun
-his reiterative, summer-long exhortation. I was taken by surprise,
-two or three days ago, when I heard the first of his kind in this
-same hammock; I was not looking for him so early. His irrepressible
-cousin, the white-eye, has been abundantly vocal for at least two
-months. At this very minute one is rehearsing a strain with a pretty
-and decidedly original quirk at the end. And, by the by, I notice
-that many white-eyes hereabout practice a deceptive imitation of the
-crested flycatcher’s loud whistle, while others, or perhaps the same
-ones, sometimes begin with a broken measure, such as I think I never
-heard from a Massachusetts white-eye, strongly suggestive of the summer
-tanager. Call him pert, saucy, a chatter-box, Old Volubility, what you
-will, the white-eye is indisputably a genius.
-
-But for to-day, and for me, none of the birds sing quite so feelingly
-or so well as the wind in the tree-tops. I stop again and again to
-listen to it, and would stop oftener still but for the brevity of the
-afternoon and the uncertainty I am in as to the length of the walk
-before me.
-
-Hickory nuts, split in halves and lying blackened in the sand, lead me
-to look upward. Yes, there are the trees, still with bare boughs. Their
-tender leafage does well to be late in sprouting, even in this Southern
-country. There is no tree but knows a thing or two. Every kind has a
-wisdom of its own. _Experientia docet_ is true of them as of us.
-
-And now I suddenly find myself nearing the railroad, and having
-consulted my watch conclude to go back over the sleepers. It will be my
-shortest course, and will have the further advantage of taking me past
-a swamp, on the edge of which I caught glimpses of sora rails a few
-days ago. This time I will be more cautious in my approaches.
-
-A cardinal is whistling, a checkerback is chattering, many warblers are
-in the sunny tree-tops, and from somewhere in the depths of the forest
-comes the deep, oracular voice of an owl, though the sun is at least
-half an hour high. _Whoo, whoo, who-who_, he calls. I love to hear him.
-On the wire fence is a yellow jessamine vine, still sporting a few last
-blossoms, and for rods together the sandy railway embankment is draped
-with exquisite white “bramble roses,” the flowers of the creeping
-blackberry. Later comers will find berries on the vines, but perhaps I
-have the better part of the crop.
-
-I am well satisfied, at all events, and am still feasting upon the
-sight when out of the tall grass on my left hand comes a rail’s
-voice--the voice of one crying in the wilderness. I am drawing near
-the swamp, and make haste to cover with my field-glass the spaces of
-open water among the dead flags. Yes, there are birds--one, two, three,
-four. But they are not rails. I see as much as that before I have
-finished my count. Three of them are swimming. They are gallinules; and
-when one of them turns, and the sunlight strikes him, I see the red
-plate on his forehead. They are Florida gallinules, my first ones for
-nine years. My glass follows their movements jealously till the thunder
-of an approaching train startles them and they fly to the shelter of
-the tall grass. I shall come this way again, and not only see but hear
-them. Their language is various and interesting, though most of it has
-the accent of the barnyard.
-
-A pileated woodpecker crosses the track just before me, with all his
-colors flying, a pair of bluebirds sit in their accustomed place
-upon the telegraph wire, and from the neighboring pines I catch the
-finch-like twitters of a brown-headed nuthatch. This is close upon the
-railway station and the golf links. My afternoon is done, but the golf
-players are still making the most of daylight. I blush to confess it,
-but there are some enthusiasms with which even that of a strolling
-naturalist will hardly endure comparison.
-
-
-
-
-PICTURE AND SONG
-
-
-What seek we in Florida? The same that we seek everywhere--sensations.
-Life is made of them. In proportion as they are lively and pleasurable
-we find it good. The higher their quality, the nobler the part that
-feels them, the less physical they are, the less they have to do with
-eating and drinking and being clothed, the more truly we are alive and
-not dead.
-
-Most of the people that we meet in Florida are vacationers like
-ourselves. At home they may be in the wool business, in shoes, or in
-dyestuffs; here they have no occupation but to amuse themselves. In
-the daytime they fish, play golf, drive, or lounge upon the hotel
-piazza. In the evening they sit in the lobby, listen (possibly) to
-the music, admire (or not) the gowns and jewels of the ladies (the
-self-sacrificing creatures are all on parade, like so many Queens of
-Sheba), take a hand at cards, or gossip about something or nothing
-with a traveling companion or a chance acquaintance. At the worst they
-dawdle over a newspaper or a novel, and consume the hour in smoke. To
-judge by appearances their sensations are not poignant, though the
-anglers and the golfers, and even the shuffle-board players, no doubt
-have their exciting moments; but on the whole the winter passes rather
-quickly. When there is nothing else to do, and the time drags, one can
-always cheer one’s self by thinking how intemperate the season is at
-home. The most refreshing parts of the Northern newspapers are their
-reports of snowstorms and blizzards.
-
-For my own part, I admire the ladies’ gowns (in one sense or other of
-the word, who could help it?), but what my untutored mind is most taken
-with is the beauty of the natural world, the world as God made it,
-rather than as man, even the man-milliner, has improved it. I love to
-look up or down the moss-hung vista of the river road (I am still at
-Ormond), or, turning my head, to gaze across the smooth water at the
-freshly green, happy-looking oak woods and the overtopping pines. These
-are pictures that I hope never to forget.
-
-The other day an old friend, a settler in these parts, rowed me down
-the river a few miles. There we took an untraveled road through the
-forest, and by and by came suddenly to a clearing, in the middle of
-which stood an abandoned house. The place had once been an orange
-orchard, I suppose; and even now, although there was hardly so much
-as a stump left to tell the tale, it remained in its own way a
-paradise of beauty. From end to end the five or six sandy acres were
-thickly overgrown with Drummond’s phlox, all in fullest bloom, a rosy
-wilderness.
-
-It was a pretty show. We exclaimed over it, and gathered handfuls of
-the lovely flowers, but as we rowed homeward we were favored with a
-spectacle to which it would be a profanation to apply such epithets.
-The afternoon, which began doubtfully, had turned out a marvel of
-perfection. The wind had gone down, the river was like glass, and
-the level rays of the sun touched all the shore woods to an almost
-unearthly beauty. And withal, the sky was full of the softest, most
-exquisitely shaded, finely broken clouds. It was an hour such as comes
-once and is never repeated. In my mind the memory of it has already
-taken its place beside the memory of a sunset seen many years ago from
-a Massachusetts mountain-top. These are some of the “sensations” of
-which I spoke. They are the sufficient rewards of travel, though now
-and then, the Fates favoring, we may have them at home also, without
-money and without price.
-
-The next day, or the next but one, I strolled about two miles up the
-river northward, to the house where, on my first day at Ormond, I had
-seen a Cherokee rosebush just breaking into flower. This time it was at
-the top of its glory, such a glory as I have no hope of describing. At
-a moderate calculation the mound of leafy stems must have borne four or
-five thousand roses, every one the very image of purity and sweetness.
-Those who are familiar with the Cherokee rose will perhaps be able to
-imagine the picture of loveliness here presented; and such readers
-will be glad to know that a lover of beauty (not an idle, time-killing
-tourist, but a man at home and at work), having heard my report of the
-bush, walked four or five miles on purpose to see it, and declared
-himself amply repaid for his labor. “The poetry of earth is never
-dead;” and there is never wanting some poet’s soul to enjoy it, and so
-to make it twice alive.
-
-Though it is near the end of March there is comparatively little sign
-of bird migration. Chuck-will’s-widows--Southern whippoorwills, if one
-chooses to call them so--have arrived and are abundantly in voice.
-The nights are scarcely long enough for all they have to say. I hear
-of a cottager who is awakened by one so persistently and so early in
-the morning that he is devising means to kill it. I hope he will not
-succeed, although if the bird is close to his open window and begins to
-unburden himself at half-past two, as one does within hearing from my
-bed, I cannot very seriously blame him for the attempt. He goes out in
-his night-clothes, I am told, and tries to “shoo” it away; but the bird
-has a message, as truly as Poe’s raven, and is bound to deliver it,
-whether men will hear or forbear.
-
-On the morning of March 26, in an ante-breakfast stroll, I found
-among the pines immediately in the rear of the hotel the first summer
-tanager of the season. The splendid creature, bright red throughout,
-was flitting from tree to tree, singing a measure or two from each. He
-acted as if he were happy to be back in Ormond, and I did not wonder.
-A red-eyed vireo was singing on the 15th, and since then birds of the
-same kind have become moderately common. Considering that the red-eye
-is not supposed to winter anywhere in the United States (I saw nothing
-of it at Miami), and arrives so late in New England, it seems to have
-reached Ormond surprisingly early.
-
-For some time the woods have been alive in spots with busy crowds of
-warblers. Parulas especially have been present in enormous force,
-and have sung literally in chorus. I have seen many yellow-throated
-warblers also, and many myrtles, with a fair sprinkling of prairies
-and black-and-white creepers. But the birds that have sung best--after
-the mocker and the thrasher, perhaps--are not spring comers, but our
-faithful winter friends, the cardinal grosbeak and the Carolina wren.
-Indeed, of all Southern songsters I believe that the cardinal stands
-first in my affections. Sweetness, tenderness, affectionateness, and
-variety, these are his gifts, and they are good ones, even if they are
-not the highest.
-
-Out in the flatwoods, a few days ago, we suddenly heard, coming from
-a thicket of dwarf palmetto on the edge of water, a quite unexpected
-strain, a loud, short trill. “What was that?” asked my companions, as
-we looked at one another; for there were three pairs of field-glasses
-in the carriage. “It sounded like a swamp sparrow,” said I, with doubt
-in my voice. At that moment the measure was given out again, prefaced
-this time by a peculiar indrawn whistle. Then the truth flashed upon
-me. It was the song of a pine-wood sparrow. I had not heard it for many
-years. In the same place meadow larks were in tune, bluebirds warbled,
-and pine warblers and brown-headed nuthatches were in voice among
-the pine trees. Here, too, I was glad to hear, for the first time in
-Florida, the caw of a real crow, a bird with a roof to his mouth and a
-voice that sounded like home.
-
-Such are some of a bird-loving man’s early spring pleasures in this
-Southern country. I do not mean to praise the season unduly. New
-England can beat it when the time comes; at least, I know one New
-Englander who thinks so; but not in March.
-
-
-
-
-TEXAS AND ARIZONA
-
-
-
-
-IN OLD SAN ANTONIO
-
-
-After three days and four nights in a sleeping-car it is good to
-breathe air again. Not that I mean to speak ill of the modern necessity
-known in railway offices as a “sleeper”; it has done me too many a
-service; but, for all that,--though it is a bridge that has carried me
-over,--well, as I said, it is a luxury to breathe air again.
-
-So I thought this January afternoon as I sat upon the top rail (a
-pretty thin board) of a tall fence at the summit of what I take to
-be one of the highest elevations (it would be exceeding the truth,
-perhaps, to call it a hill) in the immediate neighborhood of this
-venerable but young and vigorous Texas city, known in geographies and
-gazetteers as San Antonio, but among railroad men, with whom time and
-breath are precious, as “San Antone.”
-
-The city itself lay all before me, and an excellent showing it made,
-with its many stately and handsome buildings and its general air of
-prosperity; but for the most part my eyes traveled beyond it, or in
-other directions. The landscape was wide, whichever way I turned, and
-the transparency of the atmosphere, of a kind never enjoyed in New
-England except on some half-dozen days in a year, made it the wider
-and more alluring. It surprised me to see imposing public buildings
-scattered about over the country. The nearest must have been several
-miles from the town, and each, so far as I could see, stood entirely by
-itself. Here and there, also, miles apart, were fine dwelling-houses,
-with outbuildings and windmills; each, like the public institutions
-just mentioned, standing alone, as if its proprietor were also the
-proprietor of the entire tract of country roundabout. Rich men’s
-ranches, they should perhaps be called. All these, or most of them,
-would have been invisible from my fence-rail perch, but for the fact,
-which really made the strangeness of the whole spectacle to a New
-England man’s eyes, that the rolling land is all unwooded--a broad
-landscape, stretching away and away, north, south, east, and west,
-and no forest! The slopes look, at a little distance,--just as the
-one on which I was now sitting had looked to me half a mile back,--as
-if they might be planted with young peach orchards. They are really
-covered loosely with wild shrubs ten or fifteen feet high, now budded
-and in pale green leaf (Huisache, I understand their Mexican name
-to be,[9] though I may err in the spelling), with lower shrubs of
-different sorts, mostly thorny, scattered loosely among them, the whole
-constituting (or so I suppose) what is known in this part of the world
-as chaparral; which is very like what in our Northern country we speak
-of, less respectfully, as “scrub.”
-
-It is a godsend to a man on my errand, that chaparral, as it grows
-about San Antonio, at all events, is not a dense thicket. It can be
-walked through or ridden through in all directions with perfect ease,
-though one cannot keep a straight course for more than a rod or two
-together.
-
-I had been strolling over exactly such a hill half an hour before,
-circling one cluster of shrubs after another, opera-glass in hand, on
-the alert for any bird that might show itself (it was likely as not to
-be a stranger), when all at once--how it came about I shall never be
-able to tell--there, just before me on the ground, twenty or thirty
-feet away, stood one of the birds that I had most desired to see in
-this novel Southwestern world--a road-runner. I have found some puzzles
-since my arrival at San Antonio, three days ago, but this was not one
-of them. As our good common saying is, the fellow looked “as natural
-as life.” Mr. Fuertes’s drawing had stepped out of the book. I could
-have shouted with pleasure.
-
-The bird was true to his name. There was no road, to be sure, but he
-knew what was expected of him, and started off at once at a lively
-trot; then, within ten or fifteen feet, he stopped short, lifted
-his ridiculously long tail till it stood at right angles with his
-body,--the white “thumb-marks” at the ends of the feathers making
-a brave show, in spite of the almost indecent absurdity of his
-attitude,--and after a moment started on again. Two or three times he
-repeated these manœuvres; and then, without my knowing how he did it,
-he escaped me altogether, although the bit of shrubbery into which he
-had vanished was only a few feet in diameter. “Never mind,” I thought,
-“I have seen him.” And he was every whit as oddly behaved a piece as my
-fancy had painted him.
-
-The road-runner, it should be said, is an overgrown member of the
-cuckoo family. Its length from the tip of its bill to the end of
-its tail is about two feet. It wears what may be described as a
-frightened-looking crest, its plumage is conspicuously mottled, and,
-what gives it its special character, its tail is a foot long. As Mrs.
-Bailey well says, it is “one of the most original and entertaining of
-Western birds. The newcomer is amazed when the long-tailed creature
-darts out of the brush and races the horses down the road, easily
-keeping ahead as they trot, and when tired turns out into the brush and
-throws his tail over his back to stop himself.”
-
-My bird’s performance was less theatrical than that, perhaps because I
-was on foot, perhaps because the day was Sunday, perhaps because of the
-absence of a thoroughfare; but I was well pleased.
-
-It is noticeable how birds, not less than men, tend to become
-specialists. To accomplish one thing supremely well,--that is
-certainly the way to make one’s self famous. And that is what the
-road-runner does. He has chosen a hobby, and he rides it. His legs are
-proportionally no longer than other birds’, but that does not matter.
-Such as they are, he will make the most of them.
-
-He is like a certain Maine farmer of whom I have heard, a plain tiller
-of the soil, who feels, nevertheless, that he was born for better
-things; not for a cart-horse, if you please, but for a race-horse. He
-may be working on his farm, at the plough, we will say; suddenly the
-impulse comes upon him, as inspiration is said to come upon a poet;
-there is nothing for it but he must start and run; and so he does.
-Once every summer he travels from Maine to Mount Washington, for
-the great event of the year. When he appears at the Summit House,
-every one knows what is to happen. So-and-so is going to run down the
-mountain. The daily newspaper chronicles his arrival and announces the
-hour of the annual event. Then, at the minute agreed upon, all hands
-gather before the door, a man appointed for the purpose holds the
-watch and gives the signal, and down the steep road starts the farmer,
-his invariable “tall hat” on his head, and his coat-tails flying.
-At the Half-Way House, and again at the base, his time is taken. If
-it is shorter than last year’s, so much the more glory. If it is
-longer,--well, he has run; and presumably, like Cincinnatus before him,
-he goes back to his plough contented.
-
-The road-runner, I suspect (the running cuckoo!), is subject to the
-same irresistible ambulatory impulses, and by a curious coincidence
-he, too, wears what we may term a “tall hat.” I should like to see him
-racing down the Mount Washington road, putting on the brakes now and
-then, at the sharper turns, by a sudden cocking of his tail!
-
-The temperature here--for temperature must always be mentioned in
-writing of one’s travels--has thus far been pretty comfortable for a
-walker, though not without something of the contradictoriness which
-seems to belong to weather conditions everywhere and always: roses in
-all the gardens, and steam in the radiators; children, black and white,
-paddling about in the mud barefooted and barelegged, and gentlemen with
-heavy overcoats on, and, not unlikely, collars turned up. Concerning
-such things, here in “San Antone,” you take your choice. For myself I
-have compromised the matter, keeping my boots on and wearing, except
-when the sun has been more than commonly persuasive, the lightest of
-spring overcoats.
-
-The great drawback to a walking man’s comfort, and just now the most
-impressive “feature” of the city,--more impressive by far than the old
-Spanish missions, the most famous of which, the Alamo, is directly at
-my door,--has been the mud; deep and black, and more adhesive than
-glue. If you go outside the city your shoes gather it as a rolling
-snowball gathers snow (“to him that hath shall be given,” you repeat
-to yourself), and it is like one of the labors of Hercules to get it
-off. I walk about, scuffing and kicking, with pounds of it on either
-overshoe, like a dark fringe, and fancy I know how it feels to drag
-a ball and chain. However, conditions are bettering in this respect,
-and in any case, things might easily be worse. Yesterday morning,
-seeing the sky clouded, I remarked to the elevator boy on my way
-down to breakfast, that I believed it was going to rain; and I added,
-sententiously, “More rain, more mud.” “Yes,” said the boy, quick to
-resent an imputation upon the climate of Texas, “and the more rain,
-the better crops.” The State, it appears, has suffered greatly from
-drought for the past few seasons, and no doubt its people can well
-afford to play the mud-lark for a week now and then in winter. It makes
-a difference whether you are a selfish, pleasure-seeking tourist,
-thinking only of to-day’s comfort, or a man with his living to make out
-of a cotton plantation or a market garden.
-
-For the present, if the tourist wishes, as I do, to walk in the
-country, he may do worse than betake himself to one of the numerous
-railroad tracks.[10] These have carried me into good places and
-shown me many interesting birds; but they would be more convenient
-if they were not walled in, mile after mile, except as a highway or
-a plantation road crosses them, by an excessively high and close
-barbed-wire fence. Yet even this hateful obstruction has served me one
-slight good turn.
-
-A man of something like my own age and build was trudging along
-the track in front of me, a day or two ago (by his gait and general
-appearance he was used to trudging), when I saw him approach the fence
-as if he meant in some way to force a passage. “You’ll never do it,”
-I thought. Really, there seemed not to be space enough between the
-wires, even if they had not been barbed, for a human body to squeeze
-through; but to my astonishment the fellow slipped between them without
-the slightest fumbling or hesitation, and without so much as a barb’s
-touching him. He must have been a specialist, I am sure. I could not
-have followed suit without tearing my clothing to tatters, if all the
-wealth of the East, “barbaric pearl and gold,” had been spread out
-before my itching fingers on the farther side. I have not yet ceased
-wondering at the rogue’s address. Such practice as he must have had!
-I hope he was never in jail. It was like the neatest of Japanese
-jugglery, or the famous passage through the eye of a needle. Behold,
-said I, the compensations of poverty. No rich man could have done it.
-
-The greater part of the passengers that one meets in such
-out-of-the-way places are short, swarthy Mexicans. Usually they are
-able to bid you “good-morning,” or to ask how you “do,” but now
-and then you will hear a “_buenos dias_.” In the city one finds
-them at every corner selling peculiar-looking confections. Whether
-one likes their wares or not,--and for myself, I must confess that
-“my own particular lip” has not yet made up its mind to try the
-experiment,--their presence gives one an agreeable sense of being far
-from home. Two days ago I was wandering about San Pedro Park at noon,
-and noticed for the first time a few butterflies on the wing. Most of
-them were much like our common yellow one,--evidently some species of
-Colias,--but by and by I noticed a dark one, showing a touch of red as
-it flew. I took chase, and came up with it just as it dropped to rest
-directly in front of two Mexicans seated upon the grass. I stepped
-near to see it (a common red admiral, for aught I could discover),
-and perceiving that the men were inquisitive, I pointed to it with my
-finger. One of them imitated the gesture, as much as to say “That,
-do you mean?” I nodded, and he said, with a smile, “_Mariposa_.”
-“Yes,” said I, “a butterfly.” That was beyond him, and he repeated
-his incomparably prettier word, “_mariposa_.” “Very good,” said I to
-myself, “I am glad to find that I understand Spanish when I hear it
-spoken!” A solitary traveler, of all men, should know how to amuse
-himself with trifles.
-
-
-
-
-A BIRD-GAZER’S PUZZLES
-
-
-The days of my youth have come back to me. I am again at the foot of
-the ladder, a boy in the primary school, a speller of a-b-abs. The
-experience is pleasant, but not unmixedly so; it is sweet, with a
-suggestion of bitter. I am finding out daily that one is never too old
-to be mistaken. I knew it before, of course; but I am still finding it
-out; for the two things are not incompatible. One may know a thing,
-and still have need to learn it. It is possible that the most erudite
-scholar has never more than begun to apprehend his own ignorance; nay,
-that he would never make more than a beginning in that salutary study
-were he to burn the midnight oil for a thousand years. In that time he
-might square the circle and discover the philosopher’s stone, but he
-would not discover how little he knew. In that respect, in respect to
-what we do not know, human capacity is unlimited. Finite creatures that
-we are, we are endowed with a kind of negative infinity. And, for one,
-I wish to make the most of my greatest gift. It shall not be “lodged
-with me useless,” if I can help it.
-
-I saw a strange warbler the other day. That is to say, I thought I
-saw one. I had been wandering for a whole forenoon amid the chaparral
-just outside the city of San Antonio, and had enjoyed a good number of
-novel sensations, when suddenly (such things always come suddenly, but
-it seems necessary to repeat the word) a tiny bird moved in a low bush
-directly before me. “A gray warbler with no wing-marks,” I said; and
-the next instant I saw that its crown was light yellow. It moved again,
-and the forward parts came into view. Its throat also was yellow. At
-that moment it was eating a yellow berry. Its ground color was near the
-shade worn by a juvenile chestnut-sided warbler, and the yellow of the
-crown and throat was very lightly laid on over the gray, so to express
-it, just as it is in the chestnut-side’s case.
-
-Now what kind of warbler can this be? I asked myself: a gray warbler
-with a yellow crown and a yellow throat, and no other adornments.
-And with the question there came into my mind, as by the effect of
-immediate inspiration, the word Calaveras. Whether it was Calaveras or
-something else, there could be no doubt of my being able to clear up
-the question, once I should have a book in my hand.
-
-I resumed my peregrinations, therefore, the bird having moved on,
-as birds do, being provided with wings for that very purpose, and by
-and by, walking at a venture round one clump of bushes after another,
-I came again upon the stranger, who, it should be said, was of a
-peculiarly unsuspicious disposition, and this time was swallowing
-piecemeal what seemed to my New England mind a very unseasonable
-caterpillar. And now I made a further discovery: the shoulder of the
-bird’s wing was edged with a line of pretty bright red, of a shade
-between chestnut and carmine! Surely, it was only a matter of surviving
-to reach the hotel and the mystery would be solved. Calaveras or what
-not, it was impossible that there should be two warblers marked in this
-singular manner.
-
-Well, I got back to my room, and sure enough, not only were there not
-two warblers thus marked, there was not even one. Calaveras was nothing
-to the purpose. My inspiration must have come from the wrong place. At
-any rate, it was unprofitable for instruction. It wasn’t far to go, you
-may say, but I was at my wits’ end.
-
-That evening I had occasion to answer a letter from an eminent
-ornithologist, who has herself worked much in the Southwest, and
-besides has at her elbow the best of American bird collections. She
-would be able to help me out of my difficulty. In all innocence,
-therefore, I stated my case. It was possible, I admitted (thrice lucky
-admission--it is always politic to seem modest, however one may feel),
-that the bird was not a warbler, after all, though, if it were not, I
-had no idea what it could be.
-
-Well, the next day I was out in the country again, this time in a
-pecan grove, with tall seed-bearing weeds standing by the acre under
-the tall, leafless trees (a paradise for sparrows), when I heard a
-chickadee whistling his four notes in the distance. “How closely his
-music resembles that of his relative as we hear it in Florida,” I said
-to myself. And this reflection set me asking, “Where is that odd little
-titmouse, the verdin, that was said to be common about San Antonio at
-all seasons?” And then, like a flash, came the answer: “Why, man, that
-was a verdin you saw yesterday, out in the chaparral, and mistook for a
-warbler.” And so it turned out. Red shoulder-strap and all, everything
-suited. The verdin, by the by, is a distinctively Southwestern species,
-not _Parus_, but _Auriparus_. My bird had been a female, I suppose,
-showing less yellow than her mate would have done. Perhaps if I had
-seen him instead of her, I should not have been so befooled.
-
-No sooner was the puzzle thus satisfactorily solved, than I began to
-meditate, with something less of satisfaction, upon the letter I had
-written the evening before. I thought, too, of the many more or less
-foolish letters that I had myself received (and sometimes smiled at,
-I fear) in the past twenty years, letters in which eager searchers
-after ornithological knowledge had confided to me marvelous accounts
-of the wonders they had seen afield, and by an unhappy fate could find
-no description of when they returned to the study. Not many of these
-correspondents, as well as I could now remember, had ever mistaken a
-titmouse for a warbler! I must dispatch a postscript to my letter by
-the earliest mail. And so I did, ostensibly, of course, to save my
-friend the trouble of a reply, but really to prove to her that, though
-I was capable of blundering, I was also capable of a second thought.
-
-And now, having made my confession, I am bound to add that some who
-may laugh at me would possibly have been little wiser than I, had they
-stood in my shoes; for the verdin does not look the least in the world
-like anything that goes by the name of titmouse or chickadee up in our
-Northern country. I hope to see more of it, and especially to hear its
-song, which is said to be of surprising volume.
-
-Really (and this is why I have told this not very exciting tale at
-such length), it is the chief delight of bird-gazing in a strange
-country that one has to begin, as it were, all one’s studies over
-again; as I have seen a professor of botany in similar circumstances
-fingering the leaves of the manual like the veriest schoolboy, as for
-the time being he was. It is not the proudest way of renewing one’s
-youth, but it will answer. And conditions being as they are, nothing
-else will answer.
-
-Such is my present case here in Texas. Even now, in the dead of winter,
-with the number of species greatly reduced, the novelties seen in one
-walk are so many that the man who uses no gun, and so can take no
-specimens home with him for inspection, is often put to his trumps
-when he comes to run over his day’s notes. Though he may have done his
-best, he is certain to have overlooked or forgotten some detail which,
-with the book before him, turns out to be all important. What a pity
-he did not note with more exactness the proportion of white on the
-tail feathers, or the position of a certain black spot on the side of
-the head! He must go out again, and--if he is fortunate enough to find
-the bird--secure a stricter and more intelligent observation. It is
-plaguing fun, but it is fun, nevertheless, and good practice, besides;
-and withal, it leaves work for to-morrow.
-
-It must be admitted, moreover, if the truth is to be told,--and it is
-sometimes better to tell it,--that no amount of observation in the
-field will be likely, in a month or two, at any rate, to settle all
-the nice questions that confront the student in a new region in these
-latter days; especially if the region happens to be, like this about
-San Antonio, one in which Eastern and Western forms of the same species
-are to be found overlapping each other. It was very well for Emerson
-to speak, poetically, of naming all the birds without a gun. He lived
-before the day of trinomials; or if that be not quite true, before our
-younger brood of ambitious closet ornithologists had set themselves
-so zealously at the work of dividing and subdividing. Time was when a
-song sparrow was a song sparrow, and there was an end of it. Now to
-call a bird by that name is only the beginning of sorrows. What kind
-of song sparrow is it? My Western handbook enumerates about fifteen
-sub-species, and the differences, I suspect, are many of them almost
-too fine for opera-glass determination. For what I know, a microscope
-might be more to the purpose.
-
-The man who refuses a gun must accept the limitations that go with that
-refusal. Time and repeated observation will do much; a good ear will
-help--in some cases it will do the larger half of the work; but he
-must not expect to accomplish with a glass and patience exactly what
-another man accomplishes with powder and shot and a pair of dividers.
-In the study of ornithology, as elsewhere, there are diversities of
-operations, and possibly not the same spirit.
-
-If I cannot be certain whether the vesper sparrows I saw to-day were
-light-colored enough to pass for _Poœcetes gramineus confinis_, or were
-probably nothing but plain _Poœcetes gramineus_, I must put up with my
-ignorance, distressing as it is. Possibly, if I were to see species and
-sub-species side by side, even in the field, I could tell them apart;
-possibly I could not. Whether their songs differ, is a point concerning
-which my book, after the manner of books, has nothing to offer; and as
-the birds are now dumb, there is nothing for me to do but to call them
-vesper sparrows, and await developments.
-
-And some things can be settled, even in Texas, with no weapon but a
-field-glass. I know, for example, that I have to-day seen Mexican
-goldfinches, and Arctic towhees, and red-shafted flickers. That is more
-than half a loaf, by a good deal, and several times better than no
-bread.
-
-
-
-
-LUCK ON THE PRAIRIE
-
-
-A well-groomed hobby will carry its rider comfortably over many a
-slough.
-
-I was on my way westward to El Paso, and knowing that the train was due
-there before daylight, I left my berth early, and had gone out upon the
-porch of the observation car to catch a bite of fresh air and enjoy
-the first faint flushes of the dawn, when a train-hand, passing in the
-semi-darkness, informed me that the wreck of a freight train was on
-the track in front of us, and that we should probably not be able to
-move for eight or nine hours. I had noticed that we were standing still
-upon a “siding,” but such halts are not infrequent on a single-track
-road, and having my mind upon pleasanter themes, I had passed the
-circumstance by without further thought.
-
-The news of our trouble spread, as one passenger after another made
-his unhandsome, half-civilized appearance from behind the curtains,
-and though we proved to be a pretty philosophical company, as
-transcontinental travelers have need to be, the general run of comment
-was not hilarious.
-
-A turn outside, as it grew lighter, showed that we were at a station
-called San Elizario (a pleasing name, surely), some three thousand two
-hundred feet above sea-level. The westerly breeze was a refreshment,
-and three or four ranges of jagged mountains glorified the horizon. If
-we must be delayed, the Fates had chosen a favorable place for us.
-
-I, for one, soon began to feel reconciled to the turn affairs had
-taken, and went back to the car for an opera-glass. It must be a dull
-day in Texas when a tender-footed bird-gazer cannot find at least one
-novelty, and till the “first call for breakfast” I would be out trying
-my luck.
-
-An adobe building, windowless and unoccupied, stood not far off, and
-near it was a cottonwood tree, still holding, in spite of all those
-Texas winds, part of its last season’s crop of dry leaves. I walked
-in that direction, and at the moment three birds, with musical,
-goldfinch-like twitters, flew into the tree. A glance showed them to be
-not goldfinches, but small birds of the purple finch group, very bright
-and rosy (the two males), and thickly streaked underneath. “The house
-finch!” I exclaimed.
-
-This is a Western beauty, greatly beloved for its color, its music, and
-its engaging familiarity, by all to whom it is a neighbor. I had read
-of its charms, and had freshly in mind an enthusiastic eulogy of it by
-an old friend, now a resident of Colorado, whom I had chanced to fall
-in with a fortnight before in a railway car. With those three lovely
-creatures talking to me, I felt that the day was saved.
-
-A Say’s phœbe was near by, in a pear orchard (for the piece of prairie
-land on which we so unexpectedly found ourselves was under irrigation),
-and as I had met it first only forty-eight hours before--at Del Rio--I
-was glad to see more of its very demure and pretty habits, especially
-of its clever trick of hovering at considerable length just over the
-grass. The rather bright buff of its under-parts is one of its striking
-characteristics, and now, when I caught sight of it in the distance, I
-had for a moment thoughts of some unfamiliar kind of oriole.
-
-There was barely time to pay my respects to the phœbe before a flash of
-blue wings made me aware of something more interesting still, a bevy
-of bluebirds. It would be good fortune, surely, if they should turn
-out to be of one of the several Western forms that I had never seen. I
-drew near, therefore, with all carefulness, and needed but one look to
-assure myself that such was indeed the case. Their backs were not blue,
-but of a chestnut shade. The blue of the wings, moreover, was not
-quite the same as that of our common Eastern _Sialia_.
-
-Whatever they were, the color of the backs would probably be enough to
-name them, and I returned to the car for breakfast and, first of all,
-to make sure of my new birds’ identity. A consultation of the handbook
-showed it to be reasonably certain that they were of the sub-species
-_Sialia mexicana bairdi_, the chestnut-backed bluebird; but I had
-failed to observe one important mark: the throat should have been
-“purplish blue.” I wished very much to see them again, but they had
-disappeared. Doubtless they were migrants or stragglers, and by this
-time were far away. A pity I had not been more painstaking while I had
-the opportunity. The one safe rule is to note everything, though it is
-a rule more easily laid down than lived up to, to be sure, especially
-in a new place, with many distractions. Anyhow, the birds must be of
-the chestnut-backed sub-species, I reassured myself, for the sufficient
-reason that it was impossible, here in western Texas, that they should
-be anything else.
-
-Allaying my scruples thus, I started across a field toward a farmhouse,
-and on the way noticed a crow flying over. It was the first one I had
-seen since reaching San Antonio,--the chaparral country not favoring
-birds of the crow-jay tribe,[11]--and I remarked it with pleasure. And
-then, remembering something I had lately read of Arizona, I thought,
-“But is it a crow, after all? Isn’t it one of the white-necked ravens
-that are set down as so common and familiar in this part of the world?”
-And, in fact, it was; for the next moment it began calling in a voice
-that put the possibility of its being a common American crow, the only
-one that could possibly be met with in all this region, quite out of
-the account. Another new bird! The third within half an hour! Surely
-this was better than getting into El Paso on schedule time. Let El Paso
-wait. It would probably last the day out.
-
-But the story was not yet done, for after a little the meadow larks, of
-which there were many in the fields (with large flocks of horned larks,
-also), began singing. I was disappointed in the song, of the beauty of
-which I had formed the most exalted expectations, but consoled myself
-with believing that the birds were not Western meadow larks proper,
-but the Texan sub-species; otherwise I must conclude that their voices
-were still somewhat winter-bound, or at least, not yet keyed up to
-concert pitch.
-
-A sparrow hawk beside the farmhouse before mentioned allowed me
-to stand almost under his low tree before he took wing, and when
-at last he did so I had a feeling that he was rather surprisingly
-long. I thought nothing more of the matter at the moment, but later,
-discovering by a reference to the handbook that a variety of _Falco
-sparverius_, somewhat larger and with a longer tail, had been described
-from this region, I concluded it probable, not to say certain, that
-my impression had been correct, and that the bird was not my old
-acquaintance of the East, but _Falco sparverius deserticola_. That
-would make the new birds of the morning four instead of three.
-
-All this while, it must be understood, there was always the possibility
-that the train might start at any moment, no positive information upon
-that point being obtainable, so that I could move about only within
-a narrowly limited area. For a man thus tethered I was doing pretty
-well, whatever my unornithological fellow-travelers might think of my
-peculiar movements and attitudes. And to increase my enthusiasm, as I
-turned to go back to the train for dinner, in crossing an irrigation
-ditch (now dry), bordered with a dense thicket of low shrubs, I caught
-the tinkle of junco voices and presently a glimpse of white tail
-feathers. Now, then, since luck was the order of the day, it was as
-likely as not that these were not simple _Junco hyemalis_ such as I had
-found at San Antonio, but one of several Western kinds that might, for
-aught I was aware, be looked for hereabout.
-
-And so it proved. The birds were amazingly shy and secretive, but
-with patience I had three or four of them under my glass one after
-another; and they were noticeably different from our Eastern junco, and
-belonged, as the book’s description made clear, to the variety _Junco
-hyemalis connectens_, the intermediate junco, so (not very poetically)
-called.
-
-I went to dinner with an excellent appetite, and afterward, the delay
-of the train still continuing, though with rumors that its end was
-near, I took one more turn in the field, and this time happened upon
-still another stranger, the handsomest of the day, so wonderfully
-handsome, though “handsome” is too cheap a word, that a man would have
-to go far to beat it--an Arizona _Pyrrhuloxia_; a bird--related to the
-cardinal grosbeak group--having no representative in the East. It would
-be a shame to attempt a description of it here at the end of a hurried
-sketch, but it made a glorious sixth in my list of the day’s findings.
-I shall see more of it, I trust, when I reach the territory to which it
-more distinctively belongs.
-
-One other piece of good fortune I must not fail to chronicle, though I
-have omitted to do so in its proper place. Late in the forenoon, after
-I had given the bluebirds up for lost, I discovered them sitting, the
-six together, a lovely company, among the leaves of a cottonwood tree,
-as if they had taken shelter from the wind; and the book’s description
-was borne out: their throats were “purplish blue.”
-
-The nine hours--for so long the embargo lasted--passed all too soon. If
-I could have had two or three hours of free wandering, who knows what
-other bright names I might have brought back? I went so far, indeed,
-as to inquire of the postmaster and variety storekeeper--a genial,
-smiling German--whether there was any place in the neighborhood where a
-stranger could be put up for the night; but he thought not, and advised
-me, not at all inhospitably, to stick to the train. And possibly, after
-all, I had found more rather than less for being compelled to beat a
-small space over again and again, instead of ranging farther afield. At
-all events, I had discovered a new use for ornithological enthusiasm,
-and I might almost add for railway accidents. I do not expect to find
-many birdier places, no matter where my wanderings take me, than that
-piece of dry, winter-bleached prairie about San Elizario.
-
-
-
-
-OVER THE BORDER
-
-
-On my first morning at El Paso, where, by good luck, as already
-explained, I arrived nine or ten hours behind time, I made an early
-start for Juarez, the Mexican city on the opposite bank of the Rio
-Grande. As I waited for the car at the corner of the street, a rosy
-house finch stood on the top of a telegraph pole overhead, singing
-ecstatically. The pretty creature, it is evident, is very much at home
-in this bustling city, at least in winter, for I was hardly in my room
-on the afternoon of my arrival before I heard its warble, and looking
-out of the window beheld the bird perched upon the eaves of a building
-across the way, where more than once since then I have heard and seen
-it. I am sorry to add that the English sparrow, its most unworthy
-rival, is here also, though for the moment in small numbers.
-
-When the car came along, it proved to be an open one.
-
-“A rather cold morning for open cars,” I said to the youthful conductor.
-
-“Oh, we run open cars all winter,” he answered. “But I suppose we
-don’t mind the cold so much,” he continued, emphasizing the pronoun,
-“because we are out of doors all the time.”
-
-A Northern tenderfoot might naturally be less inured to frigidity,
-he seemed to imply; but I remarked that he wore the heaviest of
-overcoats with the collar up. Warm days (much like New England June),
-cool nights, clear skies, constant winds, dryness and dust--such is
-the January climate of El Paso, if my four days have given me a fair
-impression of its quality.
-
-Presently we crossed a short bridge.
-
-“Was that the river?” I asked my seatmate, a minute afterward, a sudden
-suspicion coming over me, though it seemed so absurd that I was half
-ashamed to betray it.
-
-“Yes, sir; that was the Rio Grande. You’re in Mexico now,” he answered.
-
-Yes, and that must have been the Mexican Custom House officer whom I
-had seen step out of the door of a small building on the southern bank
-of the river and salute our conductor so politely. None of us looked
-like smugglers, I suppose. At all events, the car was not “held up,” as
-happened at the other end of the bridge, a day or two later, while two
-rather boisterous young fellows on the rear seat made themselves merry
-over the attempt of Uncle Sam’s official representative to collect a
-duty. International travel, even in an electric street-car, is liable
-to complications.
-
-As for the river, it was practically dry. Pedestrians were crossing
-it--to save toll--on a few small stepping-stones at a point where the
-current could not have been ten feet wide nor more than half of ten
-inches deep. My seatmate explained that so much water was drawn off
-above this point for irrigation purposes that the river had little left
-for its own use; and in fact, more than once afterward I saw its bed
-absolutely dry, so that even the stepping-stones had for the day gone
-out of business. Yet it is a real _rio grande_, for all that, and the
-life of a long, long strip of Texas.
-
-Drought is the mark of this country. A friendly citizen (of whom, in my
-ignorance, I had inquired about “suburban trains”!) warned me earnestly
-against wandering far out of the town. If some Mexican did not kill me
-“for the sake of the clothes I had on” (an ignoble death, surely), I
-might get lost (an easy matter, by my adviser’s tell), in which event,
-if nothing more serious happened to me, I should infallibly perish of
-thirst.
-
-The car took me through the compact little _ciudad_ (a five-minute
-passage, perhaps), and I struck out for the country, along the line
-of the Mexican Central Railroad, in the direction of the mountains,
-heading my course for a cemetery out on the slope, in the midst of
-the chaparral. White-necked ravens were foraging beside the track, as
-little disturbed by human approach as so many English sparrows might
-have been. “How soon the strange becomes familiar!” I thought. I had
-never seen a white-necked raven (there is no whiteness visible,[12]
-the bird being a very imp of darkness to look at it) till less than
-twenty-four hours ago, and already I was passing it with something
-like indifference. I was far from indifferent, however, two afternoons
-later, when for the first time I watched a flock of several hundred
-soaring in mazy circles high overhead, after the manner of buzzards or
-sea-gulls.
-
-No other birds showed themselves till I drew near the cemetery gate,
-when suddenly the bushes just in front, straight between me and the
-sun, were alive with sparrows. My eyes, dazzled as they were by the
-sunshine, caught sight of one lark bunting as the flock took wing. I
-must see more of it,--it was my first one,--and started eagerly in
-pursuit. But the creatures were timid beyond all calculation, and
-though I pursued them with cautious haste for some distance, I could
-never come up with them. Wherever I looked, there was nothing but
-white-crowned sparrows; handsome birds, the sight of which is almost an
-event in Massachusetts, but so abundant in Texas at this time of the
-year--as Lincoln finches are, also--that I have begun to turn away from
-them as almost a nuisance. It becomes vexatious to a man in search of
-novelties when even an old favorite keeps itself too persistently under
-his glass. As the proverb has it, there is reason in all things.
-
-While I was beating the chaparral over, still in search of those
-missing white wing-patches, I noticed a funeral procession coming
-from the city. Heading the cortege was what in a Massachusetts town
-would be called a “depot carriage.” It served the purpose of a hearse,
-I suppose, and in it sat two men bareheaded. It seemed a neighborly
-and Christian act to accompany a brother mortal to the grave in this
-fraternal manner. The second carriage was an open buggy, drawn by a
-white horse.
-
-These things I took note of while the procession was still a long way
-off (a military band, still farther away, at the barracks, no doubt,
-was playing a march), and meantime I went up to the cemetery fence and
-looked over. The monuments were mostly, if not wholly, wooden crosses,
-with the ordinary run of affectionate epitaphs. A man, who appeared to
-be the keeper of the place, came out of the one house near at hand, and
-asked me something in Spanish, to which I replied in English. We were
-unable to communicate with each other till finally I said, “_No sabe._”
-It was not precisely what I intended to tell him; but it was all one.
-He saw for himself that I spoke no Spanish, and with that left me to
-myself.
-
-I returned to El Paso on foot, and as I reached the northern end of the
-bridge, walking, as it happened, on the far side of the road, with my
-overcoat on my arm, as careless as could be, I was hailed by an officer
-in uniform. I halted, and he approached. Then he waited. It was my
-place to speak first, as it seemed, and I began:
-
-“Do you wish to inspect me?”
-
-“Well, what did you buy in Mexico?” he asked.
-
-“A postal-card, and mailed it.”
-
-“Was that all you bought?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“All right.”
-
-The souvenir postal-card industry, though comparatively infantile,
-is not “protected,” it appears, although, if I had brought the
-five-cents’ worth away with me, I might, for aught I positively know,
-have been called upon for duty. The rights of American laboring men
-must by all means be looked after. To think what ruin might befall
-this great republic if its people, with all the rest of their freedom,
-should in some fit of madness insist upon the freedom to buy and sell!
-
-That was three days ago. Since then I have been to Juarez twice,
-pushing a little farther each time into the country southward. On
-both visits I found lark buntings in plenty. They move about--and sit
-about--in peculiarly dense flocks. One such, that I saw this morning,
-might have numbered a thousand birds. If disturbed, they rise in a
-cloud, and on coming to rest again every one seems to desire a perch
-at the very tip of a bush. As they must all alight in the same one or
-two bunches of scrub, however, though there are hundreds of others
-exactly like them all about, there are by no means top seats enough
-to go round, and there is a deal of preliminary hovering, accompanied
-by a grand confusion of formless twittering, during which--the white
-patches of the quivering wings and outspread tails showing through--the
-spectacle is most animated and pleasing.
-
-As for the city itself, it is squalid, but well worth a visit; having
-so strange and other-worldish a look that one seems to have crossed at
-least an ocean rather than a trickling streamlet. The white church; the
-little shops, with their curious wares; the game cocks in the street,
-tethered each by a yard of cord to a peg driven into the ground on the
-edge of the sidewalk, crowing defiance to each other, and regarded
-proudly by their owners, who now and then take them up in their arms,
-caressing them fondly, or shaking one in the face of another, to see
-the feathers of their necks bristle; the bust of Bonito Juarez in the
-fenced plaza, the bust itself of a size to adorn a parlor mantel, while
-the marble pedestal is ten or fifteen feet high and at least ten feet
-square at the base; the Spanish signboards and placards; best of all,
-the people themselves, men, women, and children--the children, some
-of them, half naked, even on a cold, windy forenoon, while the men
-saunter about, or lean against an adobe wall in the sun, wrapped in
-thick, bright-colored blankets (I shall think of a Mexican, as long as
-I live, as leaning against the side of a house)--all these go to make a
-memorable picture for a Yankee on his travels.
-
-
-
-
-FIRST DAYS IN TUCSON
-
-
-What is more fickle than New England weather? Nothing, perhaps, or
-nothing inanimate, unless it be the weather of some Southern winter
-resort, say in Florida or Arizona.
-
-I reached Tucson in the evening of January 31, a stop at El Paso having
-saved me from participation in a railroad accident, as a result of
-which many passengers (nobody knows how many) were burned to death. The
-first of February was bright and warm; so that in a long forenoon jaunt
-over the desert a very light overcoat quickly became burdensome. The
-next morning, therefore, it was left at home.
-
-My course this time was into the valley of the Santa Cruz, where
-farmers live by irrigation and barley fields are already green. I
-had crossed the river, pausing on the bridge to enjoy the sight of
-my first black phœbe,--a handsome, highly presentable fellow with a
-jet-black waistcoat,--when all at once the dusty road before me was
-seen to be fast becoming inundated. Beside the fence, wading in mud and
-water, the owner of the fields, having taken up arms--a long-handled
-spade--against this sea of troubles, appeared to have been working hard
-to repair the mischief. At that moment, however, he had given over
-the attempt in despair and was lifting his boots, first one, then the
-other, out of the mire and scraping them, rather ineffectually, with
-the spade.
-
-I ought to have known better, but it is easy to see the comical side of
-other people’s misfortunes, and I remarked in a cheerful tone:
-
-“Well, well, you seem to have water to burn.”
-
-Thereupon other floodgates were opened, and out poured a stream of
-language, the greater part of it too “colloquial” for print. The
-substance of it all was that a Mexican (the opprobrious word being
-dwelt upon and forcibly qualified) had come in the night and let on the
-water, without giving him, the farmer, any notice of the unseasonable
-action. Now the water was all over the road, and all over the yard, and
-close up to the back door of the house. He had sent for a man to help
-him.
-
-Seeing nothing better to do, I picked my steps among the dust-bounded
-streams as best I was able, and passed by on the other side. I
-had always understood irrigation to be a kind of predictable and
-controllable rain, but it appeared that, if this were the rule, the
-rule had exceptions. The sight set me thinking that possibly if the
-general management of the weather were put into human hands, as the
-least presumptuous of us are more or less in the habit of wishing were
-possible, it might still be found difficult to escape an occasional
-fault of administration. As for my farmer’s emphatic language, I held
-it excusable. He certainly had provocation, and as the Scripture says,
-with commendable toleration, there is a time for everything under the
-sun.
-
-The river valley is narrow, like the river itself, and on the farther
-side is bounded sharply by steep foothills, behind which are high
-mountains. I was barely beginning to climb the nearest hill, over its
-loose covering of small stones, when some bird broke into voice a
-little above me; one of those peculiar voices, I said to myself, that
-at a first hearing afford almost no indication as to the size of their
-owners.
-
-My uncertainty lasted for some minutes, while I made my way cautiously
-upwards, a step or two at a time. The bird proved to be a small
-wren,--the rock wren, so called,--said to be “more or less abundant” in
-this region; “more” rather than “less,” I hope, for I fell in love with
-the creature immediately.
-
-One of the birds,--for there were two, talking “back and forth,” as
-we say,--his fit of nervousness over, dropped into a lyrical mood,
-and regaled me with a very pleasing bit of simple music, all in brief
-phrases, but with a surprisingly wide range of pitch. Some of the
-measures had a peculiar vibrant quality suggestive of the finest work
-of our common Eastern snowbird. But withal, I received the impression
-that the musician was rather trying his instrument than aiming at a
-serious performance.
-
-While I stood listening, a bunch of a dozen Mexican house finches, more
-than half the number in rosy plumage, happened along with the usual
-chorus of twitters, and alighted in a very peculiar and graceful shrub
-(_ocotillo_, I am told is its Mexican name), which grows in clusters of
-a dozen or so of slender, angular stems, leaning away from one another
-in all directions and covered sparsely with reddish leaves, which look
-for all the world like the autumnal foliage of the common barberry.
-The rosy finches, perched upon this group of slanting, wandlike,
-fountain-like stems,[13] were exceedingly pretty to look at.
-
-All about me stood tall, fluted columns of the giant cactus, fifteen
-or twenty feet in height, and large enough for telegraph poles. On
-the day before, my first day in the city, I had turned a field-glass
-in this direction, and to my surprise had seen the hills covered with
-verdure. “Why,” said I, noticing what I took for the trunks of trees
-amid the green, “those hills are forested.” Now I discovered that
-the greenness was mostly that of the desert-loving creosote bush (a
-low shrub, noticeable for being thornless, which covers thousands on
-thousands of acres hereabouts, and just now is putting forth small
-yellow blossoms), while the boles of trees were nothing but giant cacti.
-
-Among the stones at my feet grew flowers of various unknown sorts,
-especially a large yellow one, apparently an evening primrose, rising
-no more than two inches from the ground, with a tuft of leaves at
-the base of the stem, or rather at the bottom of the calyx. The only
-flower of them all that I could certainly name was a pretty blue
-lupine, smaller than our New England species, both in blossom and leaf,
-but so exactly like it in other respects that for old acquaintance’
-sake, though the lupine was never one of my particular favorites, I
-plucked it for my buttonhole. I believe it is the only natural-looking,
-familiar-looking wild plant that I have so far seen in this desert
-country.
-
-The wrens having become silent, and the finches flown away, I descended
-the hill and took the road running along its base northward. It must
-lead, I thought, to another road across the valley, and would make a
-round of my forenoon’s walk. And so it did; but first it brought me
-to a large building which proved to be St. Mary’s Sanatorium, more
-commonly known as the Sisters’ Hospital. I had just passed this and
-turned the corner, facing the town, when all in a moment, so far at
-least as my perception of events was concerned, the sky was covered
-with black clouds, and an icy north wind changed the day from summer to
-winter as in the twinkling of an eye.
-
-No more loitering by the way. I did at once what every other creature
-was already doing--I hurried. “Now if I only had that overcoat!” I
-thought; but speed also is an extra garment, and I put it on.
-
-No more loitering, I said; but I did stop once. Halfway across the
-valley a flock of blackbirds were feeding beside a barn, and I turned
-into the yard to look at them.
-
-“I want to see what kind of blackbirds these are,” I explained to the
-man of the house, who came out of the door at that moment.
-
-“Oh, they’re the same kind that is all over the universe,” he answered,
-smiling.
-
-But his generalization was hasty, as generalizations are apt to be.
-They were Brewer’s blackbirds--the handsomest of grackles; birds that
-I had seen for the first time, at Del Rio, only the week before. I
-did not stay to admire their iridescence, but declining an invitation
-to ride (it was too cold for that, though the man was just going to
-harness up, he said), I buttoned another button and hastened on. The
-two or three persons I met each had something to say about the weather,
-but nobody stopped for prolonged comment. Short speeches and quick
-steps, or another crack at the mule, were the order of the day. Even
-at the South a man will generally hurry a little rather than freeze to
-death.
-
-Well, the experience was more amusing than uncomfortable, after all,
-and I reached the hotel door just as rain began falling. Before night
-snow was mingled with the rain, and the next morning I saw a small boy,
-his eyes dancing with brightness, making a tiny snow image to stand
-upon the front-yard fence, while the mountains--that fairly surround
-the city, as they do the Holy City in the Hebrew psalm--were dazzling
-white. The mud was beyond belief, the walking laborious; but as I
-paused now and then for breath or to recover my footing, and saw all
-that glory about me, I thanked my stars that I was here. I was glad
-to see that even in this arid zone (_arida zona_, as the Mexicans are
-supposed to have begun by calling it) it still knew how both to rain
-and to snow.
-
-“Well, now, this was a surprise, wasn’t it?” I remarked to a German
-whom I met in the valley road.
-
-“You bet,” he answered; and then, with a smile, he added: “but it won’t
-last only a couple of days; that’s all.”
-
-His mastery of American idiom recalls what another German farmer said
-on the same forenoon. He had been living here and in California since
-’82, he told me.
-
-“Which place do you like best?” I inquired.
-
-“Oh, Arizona,” he answered, without hesitation. “Things are freer
-here,” he went on. “In Los Angeles, now, you have to dress up once in
-a while; but here, if you dress up, or if you don’t dress up, it don’t
-cut no ice.”
-
-My first man’s confident “couple of days” was a trifle too confident.
-Twice two days have passed. In that time we have had summer weather (at
-noon), a pretty hard freeze (at night), and another rain and another
-snowfall, both heavier than the first.
-
-The winter visitors, of whom there are many, the greater part, alas,
-ordered here for “lung trouble,” have naturally been put out,--the
-more recent arrivals among them greatly astonished; they thought
-they were coming to a dry climate; but the residents proper, if not
-jubilant, have seemed at least reasonably well contented with the turn
-of affairs. There has been a general agreement, to be sure (one heard
-it on all hands), that it was “pretty muddy;” the wayfaring man, though
-a fool, could not dispute the statement; but so far as the prosperity
-of Arizona is concerned, there is no probability of an excessive
-rainfall. The more the better. So much is evident, even to an itinerant
-ornithologist, who may stand, if you will, for the wayfaring man before
-mentioned. What is not so clear to his darkened understanding is why
-the weather, no matter where one goes, should be every season so
-strangely exceptional, so utterly different from everything that the
-oldest inhabitant can remember.
-
-
-
-
-MOBBED IN ARIZONA
-
-
-I have never known a city more orderly seeming, more evidently peaceful
-and law-abiding than Tucson. Nowhere have I felt safer in wandering
-about by myself in all sorts of places, whether within the city proper
-or in the surrounding country. Here is a town, I have said to myself,
-where the citizen has small need of the policeman. And yet I know a
-man, most discreet and inoffensive (not to be shame-faced about it, let
-me admit that I speak of the bird-gazer himself), who a few days ago,
-for no assignable reason, was violently set upon, or, to speak plainly,
-mobbed, just outside the city limits.
-
-Tucson, it should be premised, is a thriving, rapidly growing, modern
-city--though it has an antiquity to boast of, as well--in the midst of
-a desert. Its own site was originally part of the desert. The nearest
-large city is Los Angeles, California, five hundred miles distant; the
-nearest village, from what I hear, must be fifty or sixty miles away.
-Many roads run out of the town, but only to ranches scattered here and
-there along the two watercourses, or to mining camps farther off in
-the mountains. How a city ever came to grow up in a place so isolated,
-so seemingly destitute of anything like local advantages, is a riddle
-beyond my reading; but here it is, a city in the desert. North, south,
-east, or west, you may start where you will and go in what direction
-you please, and in fifteen minutes you will be out among the creosote
-bushes and the cacti, with nothing but a world of creosote and
-cactus--with perhaps a windmill and a roof rising above them somewhere
-in the distance--between you and the mountain range that bounds the
-horizon.
-
-Well, this was exactly what I myself did one fine morning a week ago. I
-walked up the main street of the city, turned to the right, passed the
-territorial university buildings, and, taking a course northward toward
-the Santa Catalinas, sauntered carelessly forward, field-glass in hand,
-to see what might be stirring in the chaparral.
-
-There would not be much, I knew. By daylight, at least, and in the
-winter season, the desert is not a stirring place. In the tracts where
-the creosote occupies the ground alone there proved, as usual, to be
-nothing; but presently I came to a place where two or three kinds of
-cactus were sprinkled among the creosote bushes, and newly sprung
-bluish-green grass (I call it grass, provisionally, although, like
-almost everything else hereabout, it has an unaccustomed look) carpeted
-or half-carpeted the ground. Here were the almost inevitable two cactus
-wrens (how overjoyed I was at the unexpected sight of my first one,
-at San Antonio, only three weeks ago, and how soon they have become
-an old story!) perched, one here, one there, at the top of branching
-cactus trees five or six feet high, calling antiphonally, as their
-habit is, in a coarse, unmusical, wearisome voice--the same churlish
-phase over and over and over. Nothing but the lonesomeness of the
-desert, surely, could ever make that grating, repetitive monotony a
-pleasure-giving sound. What the birds will do in the way of song when
-their musical season arrives, if it ever does,[14] is more than I know;
-but, belonging to be so musical a family, they ought to be capable of
-something better than this, for music, of all gifts, is a thing that
-runs in the blood. It would be a strange wren that could not express
-his happiness in some really lyrical manner.
-
-In the same neighborhood, as has happened on several occasions, were
-a group of five or six sage thrashers. It was in this very place,
-indeed, that I first formed their acquaintance; and a sorely puzzled
-novelty-seeker I was on that eventful afternoon. The whole desert had
-seemed to be devoid of animal existence, I remember, when of a sudden
-there stood those strange birds on the ground before me. At the first
-instant they gave me an impression of overgrown titlarks. Then, when I
-watched them running at full speed over the grass, all at once pulling
-themselves up and standing erect with a snap of the tail, I said: “Why,
-they must be thrushes of some sort.” In attitude and action they were
-almost exactly like so many robins. The only striking characteristic of
-their plumage was the peculiarly dense streaking of the under-parts.
-
-The mystery was heightened for me by the fact that they maintained an
-absolute silence. Indeed, although I have seen them many times since
-then, I have yet to hear them utter the first syllable. For aught I can
-positively affirm, they may every one be mutes. I chased them about for
-half an hour, scrutinizing the least detail of their dress, all the
-while wondering what on earth to call them, till finally it came over
-me, I could never tell how, that they must be sage thrashers.
-
-“Yes,” I said, “_Oroscoptes!_ I remember that that bird is described as
-having a short bill.”
-
-It was a true guess; and in a strange country a man makes so many poor
-guesses that he may reasonably boast a little over every good one. To
-this day, I am bound to add, the birds, with their short bills, their
-extraordinary quickness upon their feet, and their upright carriage,
-have to my eye very little the appearance of thrashers. Perhaps when I
-hear them sing, my feeling may alter.
-
-There is at least one real thrasher in the desert, however, and usually
-in the same places that Oroscoptes affects, places such as I have
-mentioned, where cacti are mingled with the omnipresent creosote.
-This is Palmer’s thrasher, so called, a grayish-brown bird, with
-the characteristic thrasher make-up--long bill, long body, and long
-tail. He is one of the common birds about Tucson, both in the river
-valley and on the desert, and one of the few that are already in song.
-Even he, I suspect, is not really letting himself go as yet, but he
-is in tune daily; not so versatile a performer, seemingly, as our
-Eastern reddish-brown bird; with much less range of voice, and more
-given to repeating the same phrase half a dozen times in succession,
-so that his music has less the air of a strict improvisation; but a
-genuine thrasher, nevertheless, with a thrasher’s song. As the season
-progresses he will probably grow more ecstatic, though to hear him
-now, one would not expect him ever to become so mad a rhapsodist as
-the crazy bird that we admire, and sometimes smile at, in the Eastern
-country.
-
-Whether the thrasher was seen on the day I am supposed to be
-describing, I do not now remember, but in all probability he was,
-for I never walk far in the desert without seeing or hearing him. If
-he does not sing, he salutes me with volleys of sharp, whip-snapping
-whistles in the style of the wood thrush and the robin. Like the wren,
-he prefers a perch at the top of a cactus. He prefers it, I say; but in
-truth it is almost Hobson’s choice with him, since the topmost spray
-of a creosote bush, the only other thing he _could_ perch on, would
-hardly support his weight. There he stands, at all events, perfectly at
-his ease among the closely set spines, sharp as the sharpest needles,
-though how he manages the ticklish feat so adroitly is more than I can
-imagine.
-
-I may have seen two or three desert sparrows, also; the black-throated
-sparrow, that is, with some slight variations, imperceptible in the
-bush, that make him, in the language of science, _Amphispiza bilineata
-deserticola_; and possibly, though this is somewhat less to be taken
-for granted, his long-tailed relative, the sage sparrow (_Amphispiza
-belli nevadensis_), may have teased me by his shyness. Both these birds
-are said to be famous enliveners of the desert,--though neither of them
-in their present silent state quite lives up to his reputation,--and
-will doubtless become prime favorites with me if I remain here long
-enough really to know them. Where should simple, hearty melodies find
-appreciation, if not in the desert?
-
-I am slow in coming to the point of my story; and with reason. It is
-not pleasant to be mobbed; there is nothing to boast of in such an
-adventure; nothing to flatter one’s sense of personal importance; one
-is not apt to speak of it _con amore_, as we say. Some things are best
-slipped over in silence. So I have noticed that men who have served
-their country in prison will always contrive by one path or another to
-go round the name of that unpopular institution. But I have begun, and
-there is nothing for it but to finish.
-
-Well, then, I had walked perhaps a mile and a half beyond the
-university buildings, which is the same as to say beyond the limits
-of the town, and found myself approaching a lonely ranch, when a
-flock of ravens, white-necked ravens, which abound hereabout--“the
-multitudinous raven,” I have caught myself saying[15]--rose from the
-scrub not far in advance, with the invariable hoarse chorus of _quark_,
-_quark_. I thought nothing of it, the sight being so much an every-day
-matter, till after a little I began to be aware that the whole flock
-seemed to be concentrating its attention upon my unsuspecting,
-inoffensive self. There must have been fifty of the big black birds.
-Round and round they went in circles, just above my head, moving
-forward as I moved, vociferating every one as he came near, “quark,
-quark.”
-
-At first I was amused; it was something new and interesting. I recalled
-the time when I walked miles on miles over the North Carolina mountains
-in hope of seeing one raven, and here were half a hundred almost within
-hand’s reach; I chaffed them as they passed, calling them names and
-quarking back to them in derision. But before very long the novelty of
-the thing wore off; the persecution grew tiresome. Enough is as good
-as a feast; and I had had enough. “Quark, quark,” they yelled, all the
-while settling nearer,--or so I fancied,--till it seemed as if they
-actually meant violence. They were doing precisely what a flock of
-crows does to an owl or a hawk: they were mobbing me. “Quark, quark!
-Hit him, there! Hit him! Pick his eyes out!”
-
-The commotion lasted for at least half a mile. Then the birds wearied
-of it, and went off about their business. All but one of them, I mean
-to say. He had no such notion. For ten minutes longer he stayed by. His
-persistency was devilish. It became almost unbearable. The single voice
-was more exasperating even than the chorus. If the famous albatross
-carried on after any such outrageous fashion, I have no stones to throw
-at the Ancient Mariner. He acted well within his rights. If I had had
-a crossbow, and had been as good a marksman as he was,--with “his
-glittering eye,”--there would have been one less raven in Arizona, and
-no questions asked. If a dead calm had succeeded, so much the better.
-“Quark, quark!” the black villain cried, wagging his impish head, and
-swooping low to spit the insult into my ear.
-
-But all things have an end, as leaves have their time to fall, and even
-a raven’s perseverance will wear out at last. Perhaps the bird grew
-hungry. At all events he gave over the assault, stillness fell upon the
-desert, and an innocent foot-passenger went on his way in peace.
-
-And this is how I was mobbed in Arizona. I could never have believed
-it.
-
-
-
-
-AN IDLE AFTERNOON
-
-
-I have heard of a man who invariably begins his letters, whether of
-friendship or business, with a bulletin of the day’s weather: it rains,
-or it shines; it is cold or warm; and to my way of thinking it is far
-from certain that the custom is not commendable. It is fair to sender
-and receiver alike that the mental conditions under which an epistle
-is written should be understood; and there is no man--or no ordinary
-man, such as most of us have the happiness to deal with--whose thoughts
-and language are not more or less colored by those skyey influences
-the sum of which we designate by the interrogative name of weather. I
-say “interrogative,” because I assume, although, having no dictionary
-by me, I cannot verify the assumption, that the word “weather” is only
-a corruption or variant of the older word “whether;” the thing itself
-being an entity so variable and doubtful that remarks about it fall
-naturally, and almost of necessity, into a discussion of probabilities,
-in other words, of “whether.”
-
-As to the weather here in Tucson, I could fill all my letters with
-it, and still leave a world of things unsaid. Its fluctuations are so
-constant that they tend to become monotonous; as Thoreau said of one of
-his Concord days, that it was so wet you might almost call it dry.
-
-Three or four mornings ago, for example, I started early for a
-seven-mile tramp across the desert. I wore overcoat and woolen gloves,
-and needed them. It was so cool, indeed, that I left word for an extra
-garment to be put into the carriage that was to come out and fetch me
-back at noon.
-
-That same afternoon I walked down into the valley of the Santa Cruz.
-The sun was blazing, and the heat intense. The few cottonwood trees
-scattered along the road were still leafless (I had left my umbrella
-at home--for the last time) and the only shelter to be found was on
-the northeasterly side of the telegraph poles. I believe I never
-before complained of such obstructions that they were not big enough;
-but everything comes round in its turn. My thoughts ran back to the
-time when a boy of my acquaintance used to trudge homeward from
-berry-picking excursions on burning July noons. Also I thought of that
-comfortable Hebrew text about the “shadow of a great rock in a weary
-land.” The man who wrote that might have lived in Arizona. Finally,
-out of sheer desperation, I stepped into the yard of a little adobe
-house, and being obliged to walk almost to the door, said to the
-motherly-looking woman who came forward to see what was wanted, “Excuse
-me, please, but I only wish to stand a few minutes in the shade of your
-house.” She looked surprised, as well she might. No doubt she took me
-for an invalid, as Arizona people say, a “lunger.” Probably, sitting
-indoors, and used to summer temperature in these parts, she had been
-thinking of the day as rather cool, not to say wintry. Wouldn’t I come
-in and sit awhile? She was sure I should be welcome. But I answered no;
-I only desired to stand a few minutes in the shade. And two or three
-hours afterward, within five minutes after the sun went down,--though
-it had been shining in at my west window,--I needed a fire.
-
-Forty-eight hours later we had a snowfall,--the third within ten
-days,--the whole world white, with “storm rubbers” barely equal to the
-emergency; and the next morning, the snow having gone, ice was thick in
-a big tub of water outside my door.
-
-“Cold?” said an Illinois gentleman, with whom I fell into conversation
-yesterday, “I’ve been here three weeks, and in that time I’ve suffered
-more from cold than in all my forty years.”
-
-I suspect that he exaggerated. For my own part, I haven’t suffered from
-cold. It is the occasional heat that makes me fearful of homesickness.
-Three days like that one afternoon would set me packing. All of which
-may seem not very important to a chance reader; but unless he is of a
-hopelessly unimaginative turn he can perhaps conceive how interesting
-and important it must be to the parties directly concerned, especially
-if he remembers that this is a winter resort, where weather is the one
-thing needful.
-
-But what a perfect afternoon we had yesterday!--cool, yet not too cool;
-and warm, yet not too warm; with a softness and yet a gently bracing,
-uplifting, pulse-quickening, life-reviving quality in the air; and the
-sky, too, clear, but not too clear, so that wisps of cloud floated here
-and there over the bare, steep sides of the Santa Catalinas, giving
-them beauty. I was out upon the desert in a mood of absolute indolence,
-contented to walk a mile an hour, and breathe and breathe, and look. At
-such times it seems hardly too much to say, strange as the words may
-sound, that I am falling in love with the desert, a desert bounded only
-by mountains. Already I can believe that men are fascinated by it (the
-right men), and having once been here cannot long stay away.
-
-Looking and dreaming, the bird-gazer within me pretty well laid asleep,
-suddenly I heard a strange voice in the air, thin, insect-like,
-unknown. By the time it had sounded twice the sleeper was wide-awake,
-with his opera-glass in play. The voice came from yonder thin clump of
-creosote bushes. Yes, the bird flits into sight--a gnatcatcher; and
-being a gnatcatcher, with such a note, it must be “the other one,”
-known as the plumbeous, which I have been looking for ever since my
-arrival in Tucson. And so it was--a pretty creature with a jaunty black
-cap. I shall know him henceforth, I hope, even without seeing him.
-We are fortunate, both of us, I take leave to say, to have made each
-other’s acquaintance on so ideal an afternoon.
-
-The gnatcatcher disappeared, and the dreamer was just dozing off again,
-when two large birds were seen to be having a hot encounter, high
-overhead. This time the field-glass came into requisition. A raven was
-teasing a red-tailed hawk, with all a raven’s pertinacity and spite.
-Again and again and again he swooped upon him, while the hawk ducked
-and turned to avoid the stroke. Why the big fellow, biggest of all our
-hawks, larger and stronger in every way than the raven, did not face
-his tormentor and lay him out was a mystery. I confess, I should have
-been glad to see him do it. Instead, he made off toward the mountains,
-and after a long chase and much croaking, the raven turned away.
-
-This also had passed out of mind, and I was on my way homeward, barely
-putting one foot before the other, enjoying the air and the sun,--and
-the mountains,--when, happening to glance upward, I beheld a grand
-sight. “That’s the golden eagle,” I said aloud (in the desert a man
-soon falls into the neighborly habit of talking to himself), and one
-look through the field-glass proved the words correct. The great bird
-was in perfect light, sailing in circles, so that his upper parts came
-every minute into full view as he swung about, the old gold of the
-head and neck, as well as the contrasted brown and black of the wings,
-perfectly displayed, with nothing left for guesswork. I was all eyes,
-and watched him and watched him, admiring especially the firm set of
-his wings, till he, too, sailed away, not chased, but moving of his own
-royal will, and dropped at last out of sight behind the rolling desert.
-
-He was my first golden eagle, in some respects one of the noblest
-of all North American birds. I knew him to be not uncommon in the
-mountains, and had hoped some day to see him passing, especially when
-I should be far out on the edge of the foothills; and behold, here he
-was on my idle afternoon, close at home. Who says that the lame and the
-lazy are not provided for?
-
-My dreamy saunter was turning out ornithological in spite of myself,
-and as if the gnatcatcher and the eagle had not done enough to that
-end, the ubiquitous raven now took a hand at the business. My thoughts
-were just settling back into vacancy, when the ravens were seen to be
-commencing their regular afternoon progress to their roosting grounds,
-wherever those may be, on the other side of the city. A detachment of
-some scores was already on the move. And presently I observed what was
-to me a strange and interesting thing, although, for aught I can affirm
-to the contrary, it may be only an every-day occurrence.
-
-A great part of the birds were playing by twos, one chasing the
-other, as if engaged in a frolic to which all parties were perfectly
-accustomed. I had not expected such a pitch of levity on the part of
-these black-suited, and as I should have thought, rather gloomy-natured
-scavengers. But they were going to roost, and like children at the
-hour of bedtime, they were making a lark of it. Perhaps the day’s
-picking had been uncommonly good; they had been over by a certain
-cattle-slaughtering establishment; something, at all events, had put
-them in high spirits, and so Tom was having it out with Dick, and Bob
-with Harry. To look at them, it seemed as much fun as a pillow-fight,
-and as I have said, the greater part of the flock were engaged in it.
-
-But the point I started to speak of was not the game itself, but a
-certain acrobatic feat by which it was accompanied. Again and again,
-in the course of their doublings and duckings, I saw the birds turn
-what looked to be a complete sidewise somersault. It may have been
-an optical illusion; probably it was; but if so, it was absolute.
-Sure I am that more than once I saw a bird flat on his back in the
-air (as flat on his back as ever a swimmer was in water), and to all
-appearance, as I say, he did not turn back, but came up like a flash on
-the other side. Fact or illusion, clean over or halfway over, it was
-a clever trick, and I could not wonder that the birds seemed to take
-pleasure in its repetition. I imagined they were as proud of it as a
-young gymnast ever was of his newly acquired back handspring. And why
-not? A man must be extremely well contented with himself, or possess a
-feeble imagination, not to feel sometimes a twinge of envy at sight of
-a bird’s superiorities.[16]
-
-And while one flock of ravens were playing “it” in this brilliant
-fashion, another and larger flock were sailing in mazy circles after
-the manner of sea-gulls; a fascinating spectacle, to be witnessed here
-every afternoon by any who will be at the trouble to look up. More than
-once I have watched hundreds of the birds thus engaged, not all at the
-same elevation, be it understood, but circle above circle--a kind of
-Jacob’s ladder--till the top ones were almost at heaven’s gate. It is a
-good time to be out on the desert when the ravens are going to roost.
-And what with their soarings and tumblings, I have begun to think that
-perhaps the big hawk was not such an absolute fool, after all, to
-decline an aerial combat. The white-necked raven may be only a little
-larger kind of crow, but he is a wonder on the wing.
-
-
-
-
-SHY LIFE IN THE DESERT
-
-
-After the desert and the mountains, and some of the longer-desired
-birds, I have enjoyed few sights in Arizona more than that of two
-coyotes. Old beaters about the wilds of this Western country will be
-ready to scoff, I dare say, at so simple a confession. “Two coyotes,
-indeed! A great sight, that!” So I think I hear them saying. Well, they
-are welcome to their fun. It is kindly ordered, the world being mostly
-a dull place, that men shall be mutually amusing, and there is no great
-harm in being laughed at, provided it be done behind one’s back.
-
-The fact remains, then, as I state it. To me the coyotes were very
-interesting and unexpected beasts. And the pleasure of my encounter
-with them was heightened materially (this, too, is a laughable
-admission; I know it as well as anybody), when I learned that
-hereabouts, whatever may be true elsewhere, it was to be esteemed a
-piece of rather extraordinary luck, unlikely to be soon repeated. To
-all men of science, though they be nothing but amateurs and dabsters,
-rarity is one of the cardinal virtues of a specimen. My good fortune,
-be it accounted greater or less, came about in this way.
-
-Six or seven miles across the desert, where the plain comes to an
-end at the buried Rillito River, and the foothills of the Catalinas
-begin to rise from the opposite bank, are the adobe ruins (hospital,
-barracks, and what not) of Old Camp Lowell, a relic of the Apache wars.
-I had heard of the place (in fact, I had been happy enough to meet a
-young man who is camping there with his brother), and started early one
-morning to visit it.
-
-Perhaps it was because of the earliness of the hour, though the sun was
-well above the horizon; at any rate, I had gone but a short distance
-before my steps were arrested by the sight of a gray, long-legged,
-wolfish-looking animal not far ahead. He had seen me first, I think
-(strange if he had not, so alert as every motion showed him to be),
-and was already considering his course of action, starting away, then
-stopping to look back. My glass covered him at once (he was easily
-within gunshot), and then, following a turn of his head, I saw that he
-had a companion. The second one had already crossed the trail, and the
-question between the two seemed to be whether he should come back or
-the other should follow him. The point was quickly decided; the second
-one recrossed the trail, and the two ran off among the creosote clumps
-on the left, and in a few seconds were lost; but the hesitation had
-given me time to note their color, size, build (especially their long,
-sharp, collie-shaped noses), and their general appearance and action,
-all very “doggy.”
-
-This, as I have said, was but a little way beyond the university
-buildings, and, knowing no better, I assumed the occurrence to be a
-common one, and spoke of it in a matter-of-fact tone to the campers
-at the fort. They exclaimed at once that I had been surprisingly
-fortunate; they themselves, passing their days and nights in the
-desert, seldom or never saw one of the animals, though they often heard
-them barking after dark. The circumstantiality of my description, and
-it may be their politeness,--for they were gentlemen, “baching it” here
-for the older brother’s health,--made it impossible for them to suggest
-a doubt as to the identity of the animals; but I had no difficulty in
-perceiving that if I wished to pass as a man of veracity among ordinary
-dwellers hereabouts I must not see coyotes too frequently. In point of
-fact, the very next man to whom I mentioned the circumstance, a man who
-has lived here for several years, on the rim of the desert, answered
-promptly: “They weren’t jack rabbits, were they?” He had never seen a
-coyote in Arizona, he said, though he had seen plenty in Colorado.
-
-As for the big jack rabbits, if I have not seen “plenty” of them (and
-I cannot truthfully profess so much as that), I have seen a good many.
-One cannot walk far in the desert, with his eyes ranging, without
-discovering, to right or left or in advance, a pair of long ears,
-followed by a black tail, making quick time out of sight. Generally the
-creatures seem to run by fits and starts (“leaps and bounds and sudden
-stops” would express it), but the other morning a fellow had evidently
-been frightened almost out of his five senses by something--not by
-me--when a long way from home. There were no stops in his schedule.
-Straight across the desert he bounded, going like an express train--a
-mile a minute at the very least.
-
-So lively as these large rabbits are (there is a smaller kind that I
-have not yet seen[17]) they would be as interesting as the much larger
-coyotes but for their greater commonness. For grace and lightness,
-as well as speed, their gait is next to flying. All the words in the
-dictionary could not describe it. I never see one on the move without
-admiration and an impulse to give him three cheers. Surely, man is a
-slow coach, and a race-horse is clumsy.
-
-To one who comes this way for the first time in winter, as I have
-come (and may Heaven save me from ever being here in summer, so long
-at least as I am in an embodied state!), the desert seems thinly
-inhabited. Of the scarcity of bird-life upon it I have before spoken;
-and the reason is obvious: there is little here for birds to feed upon.
-The smaller quadrupeds, too, are of surprising infrequency. Once in a
-long while a striped squirrel, as I should call it, with its tail over
-its back, will be seen squatting beside a hole in the ground, ready to
-slip into it long before you can get near; and somewhat oftener a gray,
-rat-tailed, big-eyed squirrel (if it _is_ a squirrel--I have only half
-seen it) will dart across an open space, tail in air, barely visible
-before it, too, has ducked into its burrow; but two or three such small
-fry, with as many jack rabbits, in the course of a half-day tramp, do
-not go far toward constituting anything to be accounted populousness.
-
-One morning I walked out upon the desert immediately after a snowfall.
-It would be a favorable time, I thought, to study zoölogical
-hieroglyphics; and I believe I walked a mile before I saw a single
-footprint. Think of doing that, or anything like it, in our poor,
-frost-bitten, winter-killed, over-civilized New England! The tracks
-would have been a perfect crisscross.
-
-And, notwithstanding all this, footprints or no footprints, the desert
-is not without its own world of little people. It is a desert only to
-our dull, provincial, self-absorbed, self-sufficient, narrow-minded,
-egotistical human apprehension of it. So much ought to be plain as day
-to the most undiscerning traveler; for if he so much as looks where he
-steps (lest a snake should bite him), he cannot help seeing that the
-ground all about is almost as full of holes as a colander. Larger and
-smaller, the earth is riddled with them. If the diggers of the holes
-happen to be just now within doors instead of gadding abroad like so
-many restless tourists, probably their conduct is not without a reason.
-Possibly they object to cold feet. More likely they have an eye to
-bodily safety. One thing you may wager upon, homekeepers though they
-be--the sharpness of their wits.
-
-Whatever would live on this bare, open plain must be as wise as
-a serpent. The remainder of the text may be omitted as locally
-inapplicable. The desert-dweller--_Deserticola_, as we name him in
-zoölogical Latin--must know the times and the seasons, and catch the
-scent of danger afar off. You will find no trustful innocence in these
-diggings. If there ever was any, it long ago perished. Everything is
-shy, and has need to be. “Nature red in tooth and claw” has here its
-ancestral seat. He that cannot fight must run; and however it may be
-elsewhere, in the desert the race is to the swift and the battle to
-the strong. In one way or another everything goes armed. It may be
-set with thorns like the mesquite and the cactus, or it may have an
-offensive oil like the creosote; it may run like the rabbit, or strike
-like the rattlesnake. If it can do nothing else, it must hide. And even
-the strong and the speedy must hide when that which is stronger and
-speedier heaves in sight. The desert is open to the sky, but its life
-is not open. Like the currents of the rivers, the current of animal
-existence runs mostly underground.
-
-A Tucson business man was telling me about the great antiquity of the
-town: the oldest settlement in the country, I think he called it, with
-the exception of St. Augustine, Florida.
-
-“But how in the world came a city to grow up here?” I inquired. “I can
-see no sufficient reason.”
-
-“Well,” said he, as if he could think of nothing else, “the river
-comes to the surface here, you know.”
-
-He spoke of the Santa Cruz. And it is true. The river comes to the
-surface; the stretch of watered farms and the brimming irrigation
-ditches bear witness to the fact; but it does not stay there. I have
-frequent occasion to go over the four roads that cross it from the
-city. On the southernmost of these, where Mexican women are always to
-be seen washing clothes, spreading the garment over a stone and beating
-it clean with a stick (“mangling,” I should suppose the word ought to
-be), carriages drive through the stream, while foot-passengers cross by
-means of stepping-stones; six or eight boulders of the size of a man’s
-head, perhaps, picked up at random and laid in a row. The next road is
-furnished with a bridge, though it is hard to see why. The other two
-(they are all within the distance of a mile) have neither bridge nor
-stepping-stones, nor need of any. The river bottom, so called, though
-it is rather roof than bottom, is as dry as the Sahara.
-
-So it is with the Rillito, and, I suppose, with all the rivers of the
-desert. They are shy creatures. They love not the garish day. Like
-the saints of old and the capitalists of our own time, they abhor
-publicity. Water, they think, shouldn’t be too much in sight. With the
-squirrel and the rabbit, they live mostly in burrows.
-
-Of certain more highly specialized inhabitants of the desert--
-rattlesnakes, Gila monsters, tarantulas, and the like--a winter
-stroller can have little or nothing to relate. They are all here,
-no doubt, and will disport themselves in their season. No midsummer
-sun will be too hot for them. For myself, in three weeks’ wandering
-I have seen one lizard, nothing else. And it, too, was shy, legging
-it for shelter; running, literally, “like a streak.” That was really
-all that I saw--a streak of brown over the gray sand. I was neither a
-road-runner nor a hawk, and for that time the lizard was more scared
-than hurt.
-
-If this shy life of the desert is happy, as I believe it is, after its
-manner and according to its measure, we can only admire once more the
-beneficent effect of use and custom. The safest of us are always in
-danger. Whether we tread the sands of the desert or the shaded paths of
-some Garden of Eden, our steps all tend to one end, the one event that
-happeneth alike to all; and if we, who look before and after, go on our
-way smiling, why not the humbler and presumably less sensitive people
-whose homes are under the roots of the creosote bushes?
-
-
-
-
-A NEW ACQUAINTANCE
-
-
-A student of nature, differing from some less fortunate folk that one
-meets at wintering places, is never at a loss what to do with his day.
-In a strange land, at least (the stranger the better), he possesses one
-of the prime requisites of a contented life: he knows every night what
-is on his docket for the morrow. His days, so to express it, are all
-dovetailed together. Tuesday’s work is to finish Monday’s; Wednesday’s
-is to finish Tuesday’s; and so the weeks run by. What could be simpler,
-or more conducive to cheerfulness? A day should have a motive, as well
-as a piece of music or a poem.
-
-I am still at Tucson. Two mornings ago there was but one thing for
-me to do. I knew it before I rose. I must take the half-past seven
-horse-car, ride down town as far as Simpson Street, walk thence across
-the Santa Cruz Valley to the base of Tucson Mountain, and from there
-follow the narrow road that winds between the foot of the cliffs and
-the old canal, till I came to a certain bush. The name of this bush I
-cannot give, not knowing it, but it bears millions of small, fleshy
-leaves, and, what is more to the present purpose, is covered with
-thousands, if not millions, of small purple flowers.
-
-I had noticed it for the first time the forenoon before; and I noticed
-it then because, as I passed, I heard to my great surprise and intense
-gratification the buzz of a hummingbird’s wings. I was not in the least
-expecting to see any bird of that sort during my brief winter’s stay
-in Arizona; and which is better, ornithologically speaking, to find
-the long expected or the unexpected, is a point that wiser heads than
-mine may settle. For myself, either happening will do, so it be not too
-infrequent.
-
-My eyes turned of themselves in the right direction, and there at my
-elbow was the tiny, emerald-backed, familiar-looking beauty, hovering
-before the blossoms of this spreading bush. It was only for a second
-or two. Then for another such period he perched on the slender tip of
-the nearest mesquite, and then was away on the wings of the wind. I
-waited for his return, but not long enough, and came back to the city,
-wondering.
-
-His upper parts, as I say, were green, and he looked at a first glance
-much like our common ruby-throat of the East. But in the few seconds
-that my eye followed him--a time too short for catching myself up and
-making sure even of the little I had seen--I received an impression
-(it was nothing more) of a black head as well as of a black throat. If
-the impression was correct, the bird could not be a ruby-throat, and
-besides, unless my memory was at fault, the ruby-throat was not to be
-looked for in this longitude. I must see the handbook.
-
-A reference to that authority showed that eight species of hummingbirds
-had been reported from the Catalina Mountains, but not the ruby-throat.
-Of the two or three common ones among the eight, the most likely
-candidate seemed to be the black-chinned, _Trochilus alexandri_, though
-that bird’s crown is not black. Probably my impression upon that
-point had been erroneous; so surprised and hurried as I had been, a
-measure of inexactness was rather to be looked for. At all events, it
-was impossible to make out how the bird could be any one of the other
-seven. By the rule of exclusion--a pretty safe rule, I told myself--he
-ought to be a black-chin.
-
-So the matter rested, not much to my satisfaction, till the next
-morning. Then, as I have already said, I went immediately after
-breakfast to stand beside that blossoming bush until the bird should
-again show himself. If my confidence that he would be there, in that
-precise spot, no different from thousands of others in all those miles
-and miles of country, all so exactly alike, beside that particular
-bush, itself like thousands of others,--if my confidence seems
-presumptuous, as to many readers I dare say it will, I can only profess
-that it was based upon no small acquaintance with the ruby-throat’s
-habit of frequenting day after day the same tree, and even the same
-twig, as a resting-place, or post of observation. It was not at all
-unlikely, I reasoned, that the black-chin’s habit would prove to
-be similar. At any rate, there was no harm in proceeding upon that
-hypothesis.
-
-I went at once to the place, therefore, took a favorable position
-with the sun at my back, focused my eight-power glass to a nicety
-upon the topmost twig of the mesquite bush (quarter seconds might be
-precious), and waited. As the capable reader has already divined, the
-bird did not fail me, nor keep me long in suspense. There was a sound
-of wings, and in another instant the hummer stood on the top spray of
-the mesquite. And his crown was black, like his throat. He could not
-be _alexandri_. But before I had time to take in the full awkwardness
-of my dilemma--since I had already ruled the other seven species out
-of the account--the bird turned his head to one side, the sun struck
-him at the right angle, and behold, his gorget had long, flaring
-wings, like the loose ends of a broad necktie, or, to use the homely
-comparison which occurred to me at the moment, like a pair of big
-mutton-chop whiskers, and was no longer black, but of a most exquisite
-and brilliant shade of violet. The radiant vision shone upon me for an
-instant; then, at another movement of the head, all was black again,
-and in another instant the bird was gone.
-
-Now, then, I began to see daylight. The bird, having a ruff, was not
-of the genus _Trochilus_, and the question was so far simplified,
-though it would be necessary to consult the book again before it could
-be settled. Meanwhile, I must by all means have another look at the
-beauty. Such splendor of color was worth waiting for, though it came
-only in flashes. And I waited. But though the creature finally returned
-to the mesquite he persisted in sitting with his back to the sun, and I
-came away without seeing him again transfigured.
-
-Another reference to the handbook, and I knew him for _Calypte costæ_,
-the Costa hummingbird. But now mark how one day’s work is linked with
-another’s. The book informed me that the crown, as well as the gorget
-and the ruff, was “brilliantly burnished amethyst violet.” I had not
-seen that, doubtless because the light had not fallen upon the crown
-at the necessary angle. The detail must nevertheless be verified. Here,
-then, was my business for to-morrow.
-
-I was late in arriving,--a full hour, at least, behind my
-appointment,--having walked the whole distance this time, and by a
-roundabout course; and the hummer was waiting for me. “You are late,”
-I fancied him saying; but of course that was my “pathetic fallacy.”
-In the course of my stay he “gave me three sittings,” as my penciled
-memorandum puts it, and I saw that his forehead and a spot behind the
-ear were of the same dazzling, indescribably beautiful color as the
-gorget and ruff. The whole crown I did not see illuminated, but the
-forehead sufficed.
-
-At one time a ruby-crowned kinglet came and played about in the same
-bush, and in that comparison he seemed almost a giant. “The hummer
-is smaller and smaller,” my pencil remarked, “every time I see him.”
-I might have addressed him as Charles Lamb addressed the shade of
-Elliston, when he saw that worthy, all his stage trappings removed,
-seated in Charon’s boat,--“Bless me, how little you look.”
-
-The identification was now complete. I had doubled my list of
-hummingbirds, having seen but one species in all my previous years, and
-the next morning I might reasonably have turned my steps elsewhere.
-But when the hour came round I could think of nothing else I wanted so
-much to do as to see that hummer again. And I followed my inclination.
-It was well I did.
-
-We were both prompt. As I drew near I saw the tiny creature perched
-as usual at the tip of the mesquite. How many times he came and went
-during the hour that I stayed by him I fail to remember; but on the
-second or third occasion a verdin happened into the neighborhood. The
-hummer descended upon him hotly, drove him away in no time, and then,
-as if in celebration of his triumph, mounted straight into the air till
-he was like a dot, and came down again almost vertically to his perch.
-It was a brilliant and lovely display, an ebullition of vital spirits
-well worth a forenoon of any man’s life to witness. There are city
-parades, hours in length, with martial music and all manner of bright
-regalia, that might better be skipped. And a few minutes later, the
-enemy having returned, the entire performance was repeated, ecstatic
-flight, vertical drop and all. The verdin’s presence, it appeared, was
-extremely annoying to the hummer. This place was his. Trespassing was
-forbidden, and the verdin ought to know it.
-
-Once, watching for another flash of color, I had my glass on the hummer
-as he sat quiet. Suddenly the verdin began sputtering to himself,
-after his manner, a little way off. Quick as thought the hummer cocked
-his head, waited an instant as if to make sure he had heard correctly
-(it seemed impossible, I suppose, after such a drubbing), and then,
-like a bullet out of a gun, flew at the persistent intruder. His spirit
-was wonderful, and being roused to his work, he finished by descending
-at full speed upon a black phœbe that just then blundered innocently
-along. The big flycatcher, many times bigger than the hummer,--but so
-is a man many times bigger than a rifle ball,--did not stand upon the
-order of his going, but went at once. I did not wonder. The fellow
-might have driven me away, also, had he taken it into his head to try.
-He was irresistible. Talk of a strenuous life!
-
-At another time he darted from his perch in a quite unwonted direction,
-and flew on the line to a palo-verde shrub off on the hillside. The
-verdin was there, it turned out, down at the very bottom of the
-bush,--though to my senses he had made no sign,--and must be dislodged
-forthwith.
-
-Why the hummer offered no objection to the kinglet’s presence is beyond
-my knowledge. Perhaps he took into account the fact that the kinglet
-was here only for the winter; for it was impossible not to surmise
-that the hummer had selected this particular spot for his summer home,
-and as such meant to hold it against all comers, exercising over it all
-the rights of sovereignty. Let the verdin and the phœbe go elsewhere.
-
-The phœbe pretty certainly would have gone elsewhere, hummer or no
-hummer. As to what the verdin will conclude to do, things being as they
-are, my mind is less clearly made up. He is not so swift as his bullet
-of a rival, but I fancy him to be a pretty dogged fighter, able to be
-whipped a good many times without finding it out. Still, as between the
-two, if I were compelled to wager, I think I should risk my money on
-the hummingbird.
-
-
-
-
-THE DESERT REJOICES
-
-
-What was foretold in Judea is fulfilled in Arizona--the desert has
-blossomed like the rose.
-
-I could hardly believe it, a month ago, when a Tucson business man, who
-in the kindness of his heart had turned the city upside down, almost,
-seeking to find a home for a man who was not a consumptive and did not
-wish to live in a hospital or a pest-house--I could hardly believe it,
-I repeat, when he said: “Oh, you mustn’t go back to Texas yet. You
-must stay and see the desert in bloom. After these unusual rains and
-snowfalls it will soon be all like a flower garden.” “So may it turn
-out,” I thought; “but time will tell.”
-
-He spoke, according to the privilege of prophets, in the language of
-hyperbole; for, although his prediction has come true, its fulfillment
-is more than a little straitened and stingy. The desert has blossomed,
-but it is like a flower garden only in this respect--that there are
-flowers in it. They are numbered by millions, indeed; or, rather, they
-are beyond all thought of numeration; but, as far as the appearance of
-the place is concerned, it is scarcely more like a flower garden than
-like a billiard table. A careless traveler--and not so very careless,
-neither--might tread the blossoms under his feet for miles without
-seeing so much as one of them. They are desert flowers; vegetable
-Lilliputians; minute, almost microscopic, for the most part, as if
-moisture had been doled out to them by the drop or the thimbleful, as
-indeed it has been; and the few that are larger have in the main a
-weedy aspect, such as blinds the eye of the ordinary non-observer, to
-whom, rightly or wrongly, a flower is one thing and a weed another.
-As for the tiny ones, the overwhelming majority, a blossom that you
-can see in its place only by getting down on your knees to look for it
-may be a “flower” to a botanist, but hardly to a plain, unlettered,
-matter-of-fact citizen.
-
-And still, after the prophetic manner, the prediction has come true.
-The desert has blossomed abundantly. As it now is, I can imagine
-that it would be a place of unspeakable interest to a philosophic
-botanist. He would know, presumably, what I do not, whether these
-starveling races, existers upon nothing, are to be accounted species
-by themselves, or only stunted representatives of species that under
-favoring conditions grow to a more considerable size. To his mind
-numberless problems would be suggested touching the methods by which
-plants, sturdy and patient beings, adapt themselves to untoward
-circumstances and keep themselves alive--so perpetuating the race--upon
-the chariest of encouragement. He would understand the significance of
-the prevailing hairiness of desert-inhabiting species, as well as of
-the all but universal light bluish or dusty color of the foliage; for,
-saving the yellow-green creosote, there is hardly so much as a bright
-green leaf from one end of the desert to the other.
-
-The state of my own unphilosophic mind is peculiar, like the
-circumstances in which it finds itself. It is (or perhaps it would be
-more honest to say, it ought to be) humiliating, but it has something
-of the charm of novelty.
-
-I spoke a month ago of my ornithological predicament when, newly
-arrived in Texas, I found myself surrounded by a quite strange set of
-birds. I was back in the primer, I think I said. Well, botanically,
-here in Tucson, I have retrograded a long step farther even than that.
-If I may say so, my state is pre-primeric. I am not even a primary
-scholar. I am no scholar at all. My condition is what it was in
-childhood, when I had never heard of botany. In those days, in what
-for some reason was known as a grammar school, we studied reading,
-writing, arithmetic, geography, and grammar. One older girl, long since
-dead (poor child, I can see her now, reciting all by herself), studied
-“Watts on the Mind!” At the high school we added algebra, geometry,
-Latin, and Greek. As for “nature study,” neither the name nor the
-thing was ever mentioned to us. Mr. Burroughs had not yet written, and
-if Thoreau had written, his books were not yet heard of. Botany and
-Hebrew were alike absent from our curriculum. For my own part, at any
-rate, whatever may have been true of my cleverer or more home-favored
-contemporaries, I neither knew the names of the flowers I saw, nor did
-I aspire to know them. If I ever thought of such knowledge, I regarded
-it as permanently beyond my ken. Who was I, that I should be wiser than
-all my betters? I contented myself with liking the things themselves.
-
-Then, years afterward, I somehow began to “botanize,” as we say, by
-myself; and from that time to the present, whether at home or abroad, I
-have always had a “manual” at my elbow or in my trunk. A strange flower
-must be looked up and set in its place.
-
-But now, in Arizona, all this is done. I have no manual. This carpet
-of desert plants I walk over almost without curiosity, as I might
-walk over a flowery carpet in a parlor. Their names are nothing more
-to me than the jabberings of the Mexicans who pass me on the desert
-with loads of wood. Sometimes, indeed, I guess at a relationship, as
-now and then I catch a word of Spanish. This flower, I say, may be a
-_Myosotis_. But nine chances to one I do not so much as guess. It’s a
-pretty red flower, or a dainty white blossom, and there’s an end of
-it. As I said just now, the state of my mind is pre-primeric. I am too
-ignorant even to ask questions.
-
-A sad case, certainly, but, like sad cases in general, it brings its
-own partial compensations. I have the more leisure for the birds, and
-for looking at the mountains. Two months ago it would not have seemed
-possible, but it has come true; I can sit upon the ground with half a
-dozen kinds of unknown flowers about me, and gaze upon the Catalinas
-or the snow-capped Santa Ritas as peacefully or rapturously as if I
-had never used a manual or a pocket-lens since I was born. Have I been
-converted, and become as a little child? Possibly; but I anticipate a
-speedy backsliding when conditions alter.
-
-Yet I perceive that, like the prophet, I am waxing tropical, and using
-language that requires “interpretation.” There are at least three
-kinds of flowers in the desert that are not microscopic, and that I
-call by name. They are not very numerous; you may walk long distances
-without meeting them; but they are there. I mean the evening primrose,
-the lupine, and the California poppy. The primrose, which is much the
-commonest of the three, has no stalk, or none that is apparent; the
-large, handsome, lemon-colored flower opens directly from a tuft of
-leaves lying flat on the ground. As for the poppies, I should hardly
-speak of them as growing in the desert but for the fact that two or
-three days ago I stumbled upon a place (it would be like trying to find
-a spot in the ocean to look for it again) where the ground for the
-space of an acre or more was sparsely sprinkled with them. They were
-abnormally small, and very short in the stem; but they were bright as
-the sun, and being lighted upon thus unexpectedly they really made the
-spot a garden. As the prophet said, the place was “glad for them;” and
-so was I.
-
-Both poppy and primrose (and the lupine as well) are much more at home
-on the foothills. There, too, are many flowers not to be seen at all on
-the desert. I cannot talk about them for lack of names. The brightest
-and showiest of them all is of a vivid, but, in my vocabulary,
-nameless shade of red; not scarlet, nor crimson, nor orange, nor pink,
-but red. The plant stands a foot or so in height and bears a dozen,
-more or less, of rather large cup-shaped blossoms, the lively color of
-which would attract notice in any garden.
-
-A very different favorite of mine (I have been intimate with it for a
-week) is a low--inch-high--composite flower, of the size of a ten-cent
-piece, with seven or eight white rays and a yellow disk; a dwarf daisy,
-it looks to be, with soft, cottony stem and leaves. It grows in the
-driest and most barren places, and as I sit down here and there on the
-hillsides to rest (looking meanwhile at the green barley fields and the
-ever-glorious mountains) I am sensibly happier if I see this dainty
-bit of nature’s loveliness (a child, not a dwarf--I take back the
-word) within my hand’s reach. It is the very flower to make a pet of;
-prettier by far than if it were taller and showier. Cultivation would
-spoil it. It was made for the desert.
-
-And this reminds me to say that, if the hills are to be counted as
-part of the desert, as in reason they may be, then the prophet’s word
-has been fulfilled, not partially but in all strictness. The desert
-has blossomed like the rose. For the slopes of the Tucson range are
-literally on fire with blossoms. Patches of sun-bright yellow, some
-of them to all appearance an acre or more in extent, can be seen clear
-across the plain. I saw them yesterday afternoon as I started homeward
-from Camp Lowell. The distance could hardly be less than eight miles,
-and probably they would have been visible had it been twice as far.
-That the flowers are poppies, and not blossoms of a smaller cruciferous
-plant that is very abundant and gregarious hereabout, I am confident,
-not only because I am assured so by residents of the city, but because
-the patches are much less conspicuous in the early forenoon, when
-poppies are not wide open, than later in the day. Some of the patches
-(I can see a dozen from my window as I write, fully five miles off[18])
-are well toward the tops of the mountains, which, needless to say, are
-not of great elevation, perhaps four thousand feet.
-
-The poppy is the Tucson flower. Children go out upon the hills and
-bring back bunches to sell along the streets and from house to house.
-Their splendid color need not be praised. It is known to all Eastern
-people, who grow the plants in gardens (I seem to remember when they
-came in) under the name of _Eschscholtzia_. And here, on the mountain
-walls of this Arizona desert, are hanging-gardens so full of them as
-to form masses of color visible ten or fifteen miles away! “They shall
-blossom abundantly,” said the prophet; and who knows but he spoke of
-the Tucson Mountains in poppy time?
-
-
-
-
-NESTS AND OTHER MATTERS
-
-
-With the first of April approaching, the life of Arizona birds takes
-on a busier complexion. The idle season is over; now there are nests
-to be built (no small undertaking, in itself, as a man may easily
-find out by setting himself to build one), and a family to be watched
-over and defended. Now the human visitor begins to understand what
-cactuses were made for. As he walks among the whitish-green chollas,
-giving them elbow-room, he has only to glance to right and left to
-see what a considerable proportion of them are inhabited; this one by
-a pair of thrashers, the other by a pair of cactus wrens. In neither
-case is there any serious attempt at concealment; partly because the
-attempt would be useless; partly, we may guess, because concealment is
-unnecessary. If your safe is burglar proof, why be at the trouble to
-hide it? Neither squirrel nor snake is likely to climb a cholla cactus,
-and even a man knows enough to approach it with caution.
-
-Of the two species of thrasher that live in the desert the larger one,
-known as Palmer’s, seems to be the earlier breeder. I found a nest
-with eggs on the first day of March; and on the ninth, I came upon a
-brood of young birds already out of the nest. They were still new to
-the world, acting as if they found it a strange, unintelligible place;
-but they were fully fledged, and when put to it, flew from one cholla
-to another without difficulty. Still, they had more faith in cactus
-thorns than in wing-power, and allowed me almost to lay hands on them
-before taking flight.
-
-The two desert-inhabiting thrashers, by the by, Palmer’s and Bendire’s,
-are so much alike (the Palmer being somewhat longer and darker than
-its neighbor), that it was some time before I felt sure of myself in
-discriminating between them. As to the question of comparative length
-(one of the most uncertain points on which an observer can base a
-determination), I fell back upon an old method, which it seems worth
-while to mention here, because I have never seen it referred to in
-print. It has served one man well, and may do as much for another.
-
-Two of our Eastern birds that are most troublesome to beginners in
-ornithology are the downy and the hairy woodpecker, the only difference
-between them--the only one that can ordinarily be seen in the field, I
-mean to say--being one of size. Well, I long ago discovered for myself
-that it was much easier to carry in my eye the comparative measurements
-of the two birds’ bills than the comparative measurements of the birds
-themselves. Let me see the head in profile, and I could name its owner
-almost beyond mistake.
-
-This method, as I say, I resorted to in the case of my two desert
-thrashers, and little by little (time itself being of great service
-in such matters), I settled the question with myself. And still
-there remained a certain fact that cast a shade of doubt over my
-determination. In Mrs. Bailey’s Handbook, the only authority I had
-brought with me, Mr. Herbert Brown, after twenty years’ experience
-with Tucson birds, is quoted as saying that the Bendire thrasher
-almost never sings, whereas the birds that I was calling by that name
-were in song continually. What was I to think? It seemed a case for a
-gun. Without it, how could I ever be sure of my reckoning? I was in a
-box, as we say. But there was a way out. There almost always is. The
-two species lay eggs of different colors. I must find them; and with
-patience I did; first, the blue-green eggs of Palmer, and then (two
-sets in one day), the whitish eggs of Bendire; and my identification
-of the owners, made before the eggs were examined, turned out to be
-correct in all cases.
-
-In the way of music, neither bird is equal to the brown thrasher of
-the East. In fact, if I am to be judge, one Massachusetts thrasher,
-in his cinnamon-colored suit (and in the top of a gray birch), could
-outsing any half-dozen of the birds in this Arizona desert. It is to be
-said, however, that there is a third species here (not on the face of
-the desert itself, but in the thickets along the Rillito River), the
-crissal thrasher so called, whose song I have yet to make sure of. He
-is larger even than the Palmer, and to look at him should have a fuller
-voice.
-
-And this reminds me that I had been in Tucson more than a month before
-I saw a mockingbird; and even now, when I have been here almost two
-months, I have seen but three. The people generally seem to mistake
-the thrashers for mockers. If I speak to them about the strangeness of
-the mocker’s absence, they declare that mockers are common here. At
-least two persons have turned upon me with the assertion, “Why, there’s
-one singing out there at this minute.” And they point to a thrasher,
-a bird that wears not one of the mocker’s three colors,--gray, black,
-and white,--and for music is as much like him as a child’s tin
-whistle is like a master’s flute. And still it is true, at least the
-systematists tell us so, and I have no thought of questioning it, that
-the mockingbird is only a nobler kind of thrasher. And thrashers, the
-mocker included, are only larger kinds of wrens.
-
-Arizona is the wrens’ country. During my short stay in Tucson I have
-seen ten species: the sage thrasher, the Western mockingbird, the
-Bendire thrasher, the Palmer thrasher, the crissal thrasher, the cactus
-wren, the rock wren, the canyon wren, the Baird wren, and the interior
-tule wren.
-
-The sage thrashers, whose mysterious silence was commented upon in a
-previous article, are only now beginning to find their voices; for they
-are still (March 21) in the desert, though they will go elsewhere to
-breed. Two days ago, while returning from the Rillito Valley, I came
-upon a group of them, and to my great pleasure two or three were in
-song; not letting themselves out, to be sure, but running over a medley
-of a tune under their breath in a kind of dumb rehearsal. I could
-barely hear it, but I saw at once why the birds, for all their short
-bills and unthrasher-like ways, are called sometimes sage thrashers and
-sometimes mountain mockingbirds. I hope their _sotto voce_ preludings
-will not outlast my stay among them.
-
-One of my particular favorites here is the Say phœbe. From the first he
-took my fancy. All his ways please me. As the homely phrase is, I like
-the cut of his jib. His plaintive call is never wearisome, though he
-is exceedingly free with it. And I have grown to like him and his mate
-the better because they are fond of certain places where I myself am
-given to spending now and then an idle hour. There are four abandoned
-shanties in different parts of the desert, in the shade of which I
-often rest; and every one of them has its pair of Say phœbes. I saw the
-birds with building materials in their bills, and began by expecting to
-find the nest inside the open building; but by and by I discovered that
-they liked best of all a site down in a well! It seems a safe position
-to begin with--as long as the nest contains nothing but eggs; but I ask
-myself about the danger to the little ones when they become big enough
-to be uneasy. If they are anything like young robins, for example, a
-pitiful share of them must perish sixty feet underground. However, the
-birds may be presumed to understand their own business better than any
-outsider can teach it to them; and they unquestionably prefer the well.
-Of the four pairs just mentioned, three have built in that position
-(the wells, it should be understood, are not stoned), and the fourth
-would have done likewise, I dare say, only that the well in their case
-happens to be covered. As it is, the nest is on one of the joists of
-a shed, and an impertinent stranger has been known to clamber up and
-examine the eggs. “Oh, if that well had only been left open!” the birds
-probably thought, as they saw what he was doing.
-
-One kind of nest that is common here is set so out in sight that none
-but a blind man could miss it, though from its color it might readily
-be passed as an old one, not worth investigation. I do not remember
-just how many I have seen,--half a dozen, it may be,--but I have never
-looked into one. They cannot be looked into, unless they are first torn
-to pieces.
-
-I speak of the verdin’s nest. It is a marvel of workmanship: globular,
-or roughly so, with an entrance neatly roofed over well down on one
-side; constructed outwardly--I cannot speak beyond that, of course--of
-countless small thorny sticks, and in size and general color resembling
-a large paper-wasps’ nest. The bird, as I say, plants it in full sight,
-in a leafless cat’s-claw bush, by preference, though I have seen one
-beauty in a palo-verde tree.
-
-My first one I was directed to by the outcries of the owner. The
-foolish thing--if she _was_ foolish--actually went inside, and while
-there scolded me. She took it for granted, I suppose, that I had seen
-her go in, and was determined to let me know what she thought of such
-despicable espionage. As a matter of fact, I was busy just then with a
-rarer bird, and might have passed her pretty house unnoticed had she
-held her peace. But the verdin is a nervously loquacious body, and
-perhaps would rather talk than keep a secret. Such cases have been
-heard of. Whatever else we may say of her, she is an architect of
-something like genius.
-
-
-
-
-A FLYCATCHER AND A SPARROW
-
-
-I believe I have seen two of the oddest birds in Texas--the road-runner
-and the scissor-tailed flycatcher. The first was mentioned some time
-ago in these letters; the second I have but lately met with. When I
-was in San Antonio in January, he was absent for the winter. He would
-return, I was informed, shortly after the middle of March, and I have
-kept it fast in mind that I must stop here on my way home and make his
-acquaintance.
-
-I knew he was odd, but he has turned out to be odder even than I
-supposed. Other places, other birds, as a matter of course, but surely
-this one, to use Emerson’s word, is the “otherest.” When I saw him
-first, in San Pedro Park (everything is saintly in the Southwest), I
-thought for an instant that I was looking at a bird which had seized a
-long string, or a strip of cloth, and was flying away with it to his
-nest. Seen more fully, he looked, I said to myself, like a Japanese
-kite, or some other outlandish plaything. Even now, when he has been
-in sight pretty constantly for five or six days, I can hardly say that
-he looks like a bird to me. His enormously long tail feathers are so
-fantastic, so almost grotesque! They render him a kind of monstrosity.
-One feels as if he had been made, not born; and some Oriental must have
-been the maker.
-
-Yet if ever a bird was alive, he is. His spirits are effervescent and
-apparently inexhaustible. Few birds are noisier or more continually
-on the move. When six or eight scissor-tails meet for consultation
-in one small tree, even though it be in a cemetery, there are “great
-doings,” as the country phrase is. What the disturbance is all about,
-it is beyond me to tell, but it seems a reasonable assumption that it
-has to do somehow with questions of love and marriage. So far as I have
-noticed, such sessions do not last long. In the nature of things they
-cannot. The hubbub increases, the discussion, whatever its subject,
-waxes more and more animated, and then, of a sudden, the assembly
-breaks up (I was going to say explodes), and away fly the birds (and
-the birds’ tails), every one still contending for the last word.
-
-But there is no need of six or eight to set the pot bubbling. Two are
-a plenty; and indeed I suspect that a single bird would have it out
-with himself rather than forego for an hour or two the excitement of a
-shindy. In temperament the scissor-tail, as well as I can determine,
-is own brother to the kingbird. As I said, he is brimming over with
-spirits. If he gave them no vent he would burst.
-
-So after a few minutes of quietness, the calm that precedes the storm,
-he darts into the air, with vehement, mad gyrations, opening and
-shutting his tail feathers spasmodically, and uttering loud cries of
-one sort and another. Perhaps he flies straight upward, or as nearly
-so as possible (this is one of the kingbird’s tricks), and with tail
-outspread comes down headfirst like an arrow. He is like a creature
-full of wine, or like one beside himself. What he does, he has to do.
-There is no holding him in.
-
-Sometimes, when there are two in the air together, and for anything
-I know at other times,--I tell what I have seen,--they utter most
-curious, hollow, throbbing, booming noises, such as one would never
-attribute to any bird of the flycatcher family. They utter them, I say,
-but I mean only that they make them. How they do it, whether with the
-throat, the wings, or the tail, is something I have yet to discover.
-The only book I have at hand makes no mention of such noises, and I was
-greatly taken aback when I heard them.
-
-As the reader perceives, I am dealing in first impressions. They are
-all I have. Most of the scissor-tail’s tricks and manners, indeed, I
-have yet to witness. I have not seen him chase a crow, for instance,
-or a raven (he would have to travel a hundred miles, I suspect, to
-find either the one or the other), but give him half a chance, and
-I am sure he would do it. One thing I have seen him do: I have seen
-him fly before an English sparrow. The action seemed unworthy of him,
-but I dare say he did not so regard it. Perhaps it was all a joke.
-But apparently no bird considers it a disgrace to be put to rout by a
-smaller one. The shameful thing is to be afraid of one that is larger
-than yourself. This is not the human way of looking at such matters;
-but perhaps that does not prove it a false way. I seem to see that much
-might be said in defense of it.
-
-It is surprising how common the scissor-tail is, and more surprising
-yet that nobody seems to notice him. I should have thought that all the
-passers-by would be stopping to stare at so half-absurd a prodigy. But
-when he performs his craziest evolutions here in the Alamo Plaza, in
-the very heart of the city, nobody appears to mind him. The truth is
-that to these people--to most of them, at least--he is an old story,
-while to me he is like a bird invented last week. Wherever you notice
-men, you will perceive that it is not the wonderful that attracts their
-attention, but the novel and the out-of-the-way. The moon and the stars
-they are used to, and quite properly look upon with indifference; but
-let a neighbor’s hencoop catch fire, and they cannot run fast enough to
-behold the spectacle.
-
-Another and better thing I have accomplished during my present brief
-stay in San Antonio: I have heard and seen the Cassin sparrow. A
-Washington ornithologist, familiar with this Southwestern country,
-learning that I was on my way thither, wrote to me in January: “On no
-account return without hearing the Cassin sparrow.” To confess the
-truth, I had almost forgotten the injunction, emphatic as it was; but a
-few mornings ago, on my way back to the terminus of the street-car line
-after a jaunt into some old pecan woods, five or six miles out of the
-city, I stopped short at the sound of a few simple bird notes. What a
-gracious tune! And as novel as it was gracious! I had never heard the
-like: a long trill or shake, pitched at the top of the scale, and then,
-after a rest, a phrase of five notes in the sweetest of sparrow voices,
-ending with the truest and most unexpected of musical intervals. For
-mnemonic purposes, as my custom is (useful to me, if to no one else),
-I at once put words to the tune: “She” (this for the long trill),
-“pretty, pretty she.”
-
-The birds were in some scattered mesquite bushes (very bright now,
-in their new yellow-green leafage), and I hastened to get through
-the fence and make up to them. They proved to be very small, and
-distressingly deficient in marks or “characters,” but I took such note
-of them as I could, in a poor light. The main thing, for the time
-being, was the song. That prolonged opening note, with its sound of
-an indrawn whistle, ought to be the work of a _Pucæa_, I told myself,
-remembering the Florida representative of that genus, and the singers
-should therefore be Cassin sparrows.
-
-The next morning, having refreshed my memory by a reading of the
-handbook, I took the car immediately after breakfast for another visit
-to the place. This, I should have said, was in the rear grounds of an
-asylum for the insane. It was Sunday morning, and as I crawled through
-the fence and took up my position among the mesquites, I presently
-found myself under fire from the windows and balconies. The distance
-was too great for me to understand what was said, but there was no
-doubt that the inmates of the institution regarded me as a queer one.
-However, I believed in my own sanity (as things go in this world),
-and did not propose to be hindered. The birds were there, and that was
-enough.
-
-And now, to my intense satisfaction, I found that they were doing
-just what the handbook described: springing into the air for a few
-feet, after the manner of long-billed marsh wrens, and with fluttering
-wings dropping slowly back to the perch, uttering their sweet, “She,
-pretty, pretty she,” as they descended. I secured somewhat fuller
-observations of their plumage, also, and became morally certain--which
-means something less than scientifically certain, though really, taking
-Mr. Attwater’s list of the birds of San Antonio as a guide, there is
-nothing else they can be--that the singers were Cassin sparrows.[19]
-
-And glad I am to have heard them. I cannot speak for others; judgment
-in such matters must always be largely a question of personal taste;
-but for myself I have heard few bird songs that satisfy me so well; so
-quaint and original, yet so true and simple. San Antonio mockingbirds
-are numberless, and their performances are wonderful; I think I should
-never tire of them; but somehow those six quiet notes of the sparrow
-seem to go deeper home.
-
-
-
-
-A BUNCH OF BRIGHT BIRDS
-
-
-Almost or quite the most brilliant bird that I saw in Arizona was the
-vermilion flycatcher. I had heard of it as sometimes appearing in the
-neighborhood of Tucson, but entertained small hope of meeting it there
-myself. A stranger, straitened for time, and that time in winter,
-blundering about by himself, with no pilot to show him the likely
-places, could hardly expect to find many besides the commoner things.
-So I reasoned with myself, aiming to be philosophical. Nevertheless,
-there is always the chance of green hand’s luck; I knew it by more than
-one happy experience; and who could tell what might happen? Possibly it
-was not for nothing that my eye, as by a kind of magnetic attraction,
-fell so often upon Mrs. Bailey’s opening sentence about this particular
-bird as day after day, on one hunt and another, I turned the leaves of
-her Handbook. “Of all the rare Mexican birds seen in southern Arizona
-and Texas,” so I read, “the vermilion flycatcher is the gem.”
-
-One thing was certain: this famous Mexican rarity was not confusingly
-like anything else, as so many of its Northern relatives have the
-unhandsome trick of being. If I saw it, ever so hurriedly, I should
-recognize it.
-
-Well, I did see it, and almost of course at a moment when I was least
-looking for it. This was on the 5th of February, my fifth day in
-Tucson. I had crossed the Santa Cruz Valley, west of the city, by one
-road, and after a stroll among the foothills opposite, was returning
-by another, when a bit of flashing red started up from the wire fence
-directly before me. I knew what it was, almost before I saw it, as it
-seemed, so eager was I, and so well prepared; and as the solitary’s
-companionable habit is, I spoke aloud. “There’s the vermilion
-flycatcher!” I heard myself saying.
-
-The fellow was every whit as splendid as my fancy had painted him, and
-to my joy he seemed to be not in the least put out by my approach nor
-chary of displaying himself. He was too innocent and too busy; darting
-into the air to snatch a passing insect, and anon returning to his
-perch, which was now a fence-post, now the wire, and now, best of all,
-the topmost, tilting spray of a dwarf mesquite. Thus engaged, every
-motion a delight to the eye, he flitted along the road in advance of
-me, till finally, having reached the limit of his hunting-ground,--the
-roadside ditches filled with water from the overflow of irrigated
-barley fields,--he turned back by the way he had come.
-
-I went home a happy man; I had added one of the choicest and most
-beautiful of American birds to my mental collection. One thing was
-still lacking, however: flycatchers are not song-birds, but the
-humblest of them has a voice, and having things to say is apt to say
-them; my new acquaintance had kept his thoughts to himself.
-
-This was in the forenoon, and after luncheon I went back to walk again
-over that muddy road between those ditches of muddy water. The bird
-might still be there. And he was,--still catching insects, and still
-silent. But so handsome! At first sight most people, I suppose, would
-compare him, as I did, with the scarlet tanager. The red parts are
-of nearly or quite the same shade,--a little deeper and richer, if
-anything,--while the wings, tail, and back are dark brown, approaching
-black,--the wings and tail especially,--dark enough, at any rate, to
-afford a brilliant contrast. His scientific name is Pyrocephalus, which
-is admirable as far as it goes, but falls a long way short of telling
-the whole truth about him; for not only is his head of a fiery hue, but
-his whole body as well, with the exceptions already noted. In size he
-ranks between the least flycatcher and the wood pewee. In liveliness of
-action he is equal to the spryest of his family, with a flirt of the
-tail which to my eye is identical with that of the phœbe. His gorgeous
-color is the more effective because of his aerial habits. The tanager
-is bright sitting on the bough, but how much brighter he would look if
-every few minutes he were seen hovering in mid-air with the sunlight
-playing upon him!
-
-Certainly I was in great luck, and I felt it the more as day after
-day I found the dashing beauty in the same place. I could not spend
-my whole winter vacation in visiting him, but I saw him there at odd
-times,--nearly as often as I passed,--until February 17. Then he
-disappeared; but a week later I discovered him, or another like him,
-in a different part of the valley, and on the 26th I saw two. The next
-day, for the first time, one of the birds was in voice, uttering a few
-fine, short notes, little remarkable in themselves, but thoroughly
-characteristic; not suggestive of any other flycatcher notes known to
-me; so that, from that time to the end of my stay in Tucson, I was
-never in doubt as to their authorship, no matter where I heard them.
-
-All these earlier birds were males in full plumage. The first
-female--herself a beauty, with a modest tinge of red upon her lower
-parts, enough to mark the relationship--was noticed March 5. Males
-were now becoming common, and on the 9th, although my walks covered
-no very wide territory, I counted, of males and females together,
-seventeen. From first to last not one was met with on the creosote and
-cactus-covered desert, but after the first few days of March they were
-well distributed over the Santa Cruz and Rillito valleys and about the
-grounds of the university. I found no nest until March 27, although
-at least two weeks earlier than that a female was seen pulling shreds
-of dry bark from a cottonwood limb, while her mate flitted about the
-neighborhood, now here, now there, as if he were too happy to contain
-himself.
-
-The prettiest performance of the male, witnessed almost daily, and
-sometimes many times a day, after the arrival of the other sex, was a
-surprisingly protracted ecstatic flight, half flying, half hovering,
-the wings being held unnaturally high above the back, as if on purpose
-to display the red body (a most peculiar action, by which the bird
-could be told as far as he could be seen), accompanied throughout by a
-rapid repetition of his simple call; all thoroughly in the flycatcher
-manner; exactly such a mad, lyrical outburst as one frequently sees
-indulged in by the chebec, for instance, and the different species of
-phœbe. In endurance, as well as in passion, Pyrocephalus is not behind
-the best of them, while his exceptional bravery of color gives him at
-such moments a glory altogether his own. Sometimes, indeed, he seems to
-be emulous of the skylark himself, he rises to such a height, beating
-his way upward, hovering for breath, and then pushing higher and still
-higher. Once I saw him and the large Arizona crested flycatcher in the
-air side by side, one as crazy as the other; but the big _magister_ was
-an awkward hand at the business, compared with the tiny Pyrocephalus.
-
-It was good to find so showy a bird so little disposed to shyness.
-At Old Camp Lowell, where I often rested for an hour at noon in the
-shade of one of the adobe buildings, the bachelor winter occupants
-of which were kind enough to give me food and shelter (together with
-pleasant company) whenever my walk took me so far from home, our siesta
-was constantly enlivened by his bright presence and engaging tricks.
-One day, as he perched at the top of a low mesquite, on a level with
-our eyes, I put my glass into the hand of the younger of my hosts.
-He broke out in a tone of wonder. “Well, now,” said he (he spoke to
-the bird), “you are a peach.” And so he is. It is exactly what, in my
-more old-fashioned and less collegiate English, I have been vainly
-endeavoring to say.
-
-And to be a “peach” is a fine thing. A vivacious living essayist,
-it is true, who is probably a handsome man himself, at least in the
-looking-glass, declares that “male ugliness is an endearing quality.”
-The remark may be true--in a sense; by all means let us hope so, seeing
-how lavish Nature has been with the commodity in question; but I am
-confident that the female vermilion flycatcher would never admit it. As
-for her glorious dandy of a husband, there can be no doubt what opinion
-he would hold of such an impudent reflection upon feminine perspicacity
-and taste. “A plague upon paradoxes and aphorisms,” I hear him answer.
-“If fine feathers don’t make fine birds, what in Heaven’s name do they
-make?”
-
-It was only two days after my discovery of the vermilion flycatcher (if
-I remember correctly I was at that moment on my way to enjoy a third
-or fourth look at him) that I first saw a very different but scarcely
-less interesting novelty. I was on the sidewalk of Main Street, in
-the busy part of the day, my thoughts running upon a batch of delayed
-letters just received, when suddenly I looked up (probably I had heard
-a voice without being conscious of it, for the confirmed hobby-rider
-is sometimes in the saddle unwittingly) and caught sight of a few
-swifts far overhead. People were passing, but it was now or never with
-me, and I whipped out my opera-glass. There were six of the birds, and
-their throats were white. So much I saw, having known what to look for,
-and then they were gone,--as if the heavens had opened and swallowed
-them up. It was a niggardly interview, at pretty long range, but a deal
-better than nothing; enough, at all events, for an identification. They
-were white-throated swifts,--_Aëronautes melanoleucus_.
-
-Three days later a flock of at least seventeen birds of the same
-species were hawking over the Santa Cruz Valley, and now, as they
-swept this way and that at their feeding, there was leisure for the
-field-glass and something like a real examination. To my surprise
-(surprise is the compensation of ignorance) I discovered that they
-had not only white throats, as their name implies, but white breasts,
-and more noticeable still, white rumps. Those who are familiar with
-our common dingy, soot-colored chimney swift of the East will be able
-to form some idea of the distinguished appearance of this Westerner:
-a considerably larger bird, built on the same rakish lines, shooting
-about the sky in the same lightning-like zigzags, and marked in this
-striking and original manner with white. I saw the birds only four
-times afterward, the last time on the 17th of February. So I say,
-speaking after the manner of men; but in truth I can see them now,
-their white rumps lighting up as they wheel and catch the sun. It
-pleases me to learn that it is next to impossible to shoot them, and
-that they are scarce in collections. So may they continue. They were
-made for better things.
-
-The most _beautiful_ bird that I found in Arizona, though judgments of
-this kind are of necessity liable to revision as one’s mood changes,
-was the Arizona Pyrrhuloxia. I should be glad to give the reader, as
-well as to have for my own use, an English name for it, but so far as I
-am aware it has none. It has lived beyond the range of the vernacular.
-My delight in its beauty was less keen than naturally it would have
-been, because I had spent my first raptures upon its equally handsome
-Texas relative of the same name a few weeks before. This was at San
-Antonio, in the chaparral just outside the city. I had been listening
-to a flock of lark sparrows, I remember, and looking at sundry things,
-where almost everything was new, when all at once I saw before me at
-the foot of a bush the loveliest bunch of feathers that I had ever
-set eyes on. Without the least thought of what I was doing I began
-repeating to myself under my breath, “O my soul! O my soul!” And
-in sober truth the creature was deserving of all the admiration it
-excited: a bird of the cardinal’s size and build, dressed not in gaudy
-red, but in the most exquisite shade of gray, with a plentiful spilling
-of an equally exquisite rose color over its under-parts. Its bright
-orange bill was surrounded at the base by a double ring of black and
-rose, and on its head was a most distinguished-looking, divided crest,
-tipped with rose color of a deeper shade. It was loveliness to wonder
-at. I cannot profess that I was awe-struck (not being sure that I know
-just what that excellent word means), but it would hardly be too much
-to say that “as I passed, I worshiped.”
-
-The Arizona bird, unhappily, was not often seen (the Texas bird treated
-me better), though when I did come upon it, it was generally in
-accessible places (in wayside hedgerows) not far from houses. It would
-be impossible to see either the Texas or the Arizona bird for the first
-time without comparing it with the cardinal, the two are so much alike,
-and yet so different. The cardinal is brighter, but for beauty give
-me Pyrrhuloxia. I do not expect the sight of any other bird ever to
-fill me with quite so rapturous a delight in pure color as that first
-unlooked-for Pyrrhuloxia did in the San Antonio chaparral. It was
-like the joy that comes from falling suddenly upon a stanza of magical
-verse, or catching from some unexpected quarter a strain of heavenly
-music.
-
-If Pyrocephalus was the brightest and Pyrrhuloxia the most beautiful of
-my Arizona birds, Phainopepla must be called the most elegant, the most
-supremely graceful, if I may be pardoned such an application of the
-word, the most incomparably genteel. I saw it first at Old Camp Lowell,
-before mentioned, near the Rillito, at the base of the low foothills of
-the Santa Catalina Mountains. At my first visit to the camp, which is
-six or seven miles from the city of Tucson, straight across the desert,
-I mistook my way at the last and approached the place from the farther
-end by a cross-cut through the creosote bushes. Just as I reached the
-adobe ruins, all that is left of the old camp, I descried a black
-bird balancing itself daintily at the tip of a mesquite. I lifted my
-glass, caught sight of the bird’s crest, and knew it for a Phainopepla.
-How good it is to find something you have greatly desired and little
-expected!
-
-The Phainopepla (like the Pyrrhuloxia it has no vernacular appellation,
-living only in that sparsely settled, Spanish-speaking corner of
-the world) is ranked with the waxwings, though except for its crest
-there is little or nothing in its outward appearance to suggest such
-a relationship; and the crest itself bears but a moderate resemblance
-to the pointed topknot of our familiar cedar-bird. What I call the
-Phainopepla’s elegance comes partly from its form, which is the very
-perfection of shapeliness, having in the highest degree that elusive
-quality which in semi-slang phrase is designated as “style;” partly
-from its motions, all prettily conscious and in a pleasing sense
-affected, like the movements of a dancing-master; and partly from its
-color, which is black with the most exquisite bluish sheen, set off in
-the finest manner by broad wing-patches of white. These wing-patches
-are noticeable, furthermore, for being divided into a kind of network
-by black lines. It is for this reason, I suppose, that they have a
-peculiar gauzy look (I speak of their appearance while in action) such
-as I have never seen in the case of any other bird, and which often
-made me think of the ribbed, translucent wings of certain dragon flies.
-
-Doubtless this peculiar appearance was heightened to my eyes, because
-of the mincing, wavering, over-buoyant method of flight (the wings
-being carried unusually high) to which I have alluded, and which
-always suggested to me the studied movements of a dance. I think I
-never saw one of the birds so far forget itself as to take a direct,
-straightforward course from one point to another. No matter where they
-might be going, though the flight were only a matter of a hundred
-yards, they progressed always in pretty zigzags, making so many little,
-unexpected, indecisive tacks and turns by the way, butterfly fashion,
-that you began to wonder where they would finally come to rest.
-
-The two birds first seen--the female in lovely gray--were evidently
-at home about the camp. The berry-bearing parasitic plants in the
-mesquites seemed to furnish them with food, and no doubt they were
-settled there for the season; and at least two more were wintering
-out among the Chinese kitchen gardens, not far away. And some weeks
-afterward I came upon a third pair, also in a mesquite grove, on the
-Santa Cruz side of the desert. But though in the two river valleys I
-passed a good many hours in their society, I never once heard them
-sing, nor, so far as I can now recall, did they ever utter any sound
-save a mellow _pip_, almost exactly like a certain call of the robin;
-so like it, in fact, that to the very last I never heard it suddenly
-given, but my first thought was of that common Eastern bird, whose
-voice in those early spring days it would have been so natural and
-so pleasant to hear. I could have spared a dozen or two of thrashers,
-I thought (not _brown_ thrashers), for a pair of robins and a pair of
-bluebirds. But southern Arizona is a kind of thrasher paradise, while
-robins and bluebirds desire a better country, and seemingly know where
-to find it.[20]
-
-In the last week of March, however, there took place, as well as I
-could judge, a concerted movement of Phainopeplas northward. They
-showed themselves in the Santa Cruz Valley, here and there a pair,
-until they became, not abundant, indeed, but a counted-upon, every-day
-sight. Those that I had heretofore seen, it appeared, were only a few
-winter “stay-overs.” Now the season had opened; and now the birds began
-singing. For curiosity’s sake it pleased me to hear them, but the
-brief measure, in a thin, squeaky voice, was nothing for any bird to
-be proud of. They sing best to the eye. “Birds of the shining robes,”
-their Greek name calls them; and worthily do they wear it, under that
-unclouded Arizona sun, perching, as they habitually do, at the tip of
-some tree or bush, where the man with birds in his eye can hardly fail
-to sight them and name them, across the widest barley field.
-
-One of the birds whose acquaintance I chiefly wished to make on this
-my first Western journey was the famous canyon wren,--famous not for
-its beauty (beauty is not the wren family’s mark), but for its voice.
-Whether my wish would be gratified was of course a question, especially
-as my very modest itinerary included no exploration of canyons; but I
-was not without hope.
-
-I had been in Tucson nearly a week, when one cool morning after a cold
-night (it was February 7) I went down into the Santa Cruz Valley and
-took the road that winds--where there is barely room for it--between
-the base of Tucson Mountain and the river. Steep, broken cliffs,
-perhaps a hundred feet high, were on my right hand, and the deep bed
-of the shallow river lay below me on my left. Here I was enjoying the
-sun, and keeping my eyes open, when a set of loud, clear bird notes in
-a descending scale fell upon my ears from overhead. I stopped, pulled
-myself together, and said, “A canyon wren.” I remembered a description
-of that descending scale. The next instant a small hawk took wing
-from the spot on the cliff whence the notes had seemed to fall. My
-mind wavered, but only for a moment. “No, no,” I said, “it is not in
-any hawk’s throat to produce sounds of that quality;” and I waited.
-A rock wren began calling, but rock wrens did not count with me at
-that moment. Then, in a very different voice, a wren, presumably the
-one I was in search of, began fretting, unseen, somewhere above my
-head; and then, silence. I waited and waited. Finally I tried an old
-trick--I started on. If the bird was watching me, as likely enough he
-was, a movement to leave his neighborhood would perhaps excite him
-pleasurably. And so it did; or so it seemed; for almost at once the
-song was given out and repeated: a hurried introductory phrase, and
-then the fuller, longer, more liquid notes, tripping in procession down
-the scale.
-
-The singer could be no other than the canyon wren; but of course I
-must see him. At last, my patience outwearing his, he fell to scolding
-again, and glancing up in the direction of the sound, I saw him on the
-jutting top of the very highest stone, his white throat and breast
-flashing in the sun, and the dark, rich brown of his lower parts
-setting the whiteness off to marvelous advantage. There he stood,
-calling and bobbing, calling and bobbing, after the familiar wren
-manner, though why he should resent an innocent man’s presence so far
-below was more than any innocent man could imagine.
-
-It would be an offense against the truth not to confess that the
-celebrated song fell at first a little short of my expectations.
-Perhaps I had heard it celebrated somewhat too loudly and too often.
-It was very pleasing; the voice beautifully clear and full, and the
-cadence of the sweetest; it had the grace of simplicity; indeed, there
-was nothing to be said against it, except that I had supposed it would
-be--well, I hardly know what, but somehow wilder and more telling.
-
-Within a few days I discovered a second pair of the birds not far away,
-about an old, long-disused adobe mill. They were already building a
-nest somewhere inside, entering by a crack over one of the windows. The
-female appeared to be doing the greater part of the work, while her
-mate sat upon the edge of the flat roof and sang for her encouragement,
-or railed at me for my too assiduous lounging about the premises. The
-more I listened to the song, the better I enjoyed it; it is certainly a
-song by itself; I have never heard anything with which to compare it;
-and I was especially pleased to see how many variations the performer
-was able to introduce into his music, and yet leave it always the same.
-
-The first pair, on the precipitous face of the mountain, had chosen
-the more romantic site, and I often stopped to admire their address in
-climbing about over the almost perpendicular surface of the rock; now
-disappearing for a few seconds, now popping into sight again a little
-further on; finding a foothold everywhere, no matter how smooth and
-steep the rock might look.
-
-The canyon wren is a darling bird and a musical genius; and now that
-I have ceased to measure his song by my extravagant expectations
-concerning it, I do not wish it in any wise altered. His natural home
-is by the side of falling water (I have heard him since, where I should
-have heard him first, in a canyon), and his notes fall with it. I seem
-to hear them dropping one by one, every note by itself, as I write
-about them. If they are not of a kind to be ecstatic over at a first
-hearing (a little too simple for that), they are all the surer of a
-long welcome. Indeed, I am half ashamed to have so much as referred to
-my own early lack of appreciation of their excellence. Perhaps this was
-one of the times when the truth should not have been spoken.
-
-My mention just now of the wren’s cleverness in traveling over the
-steep side of Tucson Mountain called to mind a similar performance on
-the part of a very different bird--a road-runner--in the same place;
-and though it was not in my plan to name that bird in this paper, I
-cannot deny myself the digression.
-
-I had taken a friend, newly inoculated with ornithological fever, down
-to this mountain-side road to show him a black-chinned hummingbird.
-We had seen it, to his amazement, on the very mesquite where I had
-told him it would be (“Well!” he said,--and a most eloquent “well”
-it was,--when I pointed the bird out, scarcely more than a speck,
-as we came in sight of the bush), and were driving further, when I
-laid my hand on the reins and bade him look up. There, halfway up the
-precipitous, broken cliff, was the big, mottled, long-tailed bird,
-looking strangely out of place to both of us, who had never seen him
-before except in the lowlands, running along the road, or dodging among
-clumps of bushes. Then of a sudden, he began climbing, and almost
-in no time was on the very topmost stone, at the base of a stunted
-palo-verde. There he fell to cooing (like a dove, I said, forgetting
-at the moment that the road-runner is a kind of cuckoo), and by the
-time he had repeated the phrase three or four times we remarked that
-before doing so he invariably lowered his head. We sat and watched and
-listened (“There!” one or the other would say, as the head was ducked)
-for I know not how many minutes, commenting upon the droll appearance
-of the bird, perched thus above the world, and cooing in this (for him)
-ridiculous, lovelorn, gesticulatory manner.
-
-Then, as we drove on, I recalled the strangely rapid and effortless
-gait with which he had gone up the mountain. “He didn’t use his wings,
-did he?” I asked; and my companion thought not. I was reminded of a
-bird of the same kind that I had seen a few days before cross a deep
-gully perhaps twenty feet in width. “He seemed to slide across,” said
-the man who was with me. That was exactly the word. He did not lift a
-wing, to the best of our noticing, nor rise so much as an inch into the
-air, but as it were stepped from one bank to the other. So this second
-bird went up the mountain-side almost without our seeing how he did it.
-A few steps, and he was there, as by the exercise of some special gift
-of specific levity. He did not fly; and yet it might have “_seemed_ he
-flew, the way so easy was.” Take him how you will, the road-runner’s
-looks do not belie him: he is an odd one; and never odder, I should
-guess, than when he stands upon a mountain-top and with lowered head
-pours out his amorous soul in coos as gentle as a sucking dove’s. I
-count myself happy to have witnessed the moving spectacle.
-
-I am running into superlatives, but no matter. The feeling against
-their use is largely prejudice. Let me suit myself with one or two
-more, therefore, and say that the rarest and most exciting bird seen
-by me in Arizona was a painted redstart, _Setophaga picta_. It was at
-the base of Tucson Mountain, close by the canyon wrens’ old mill. The
-vermilion flycatcher, rare as I considered it at first, became after
-a while almost excessively common. I believe it is no exaggeration
-to say that forty or fifty pairs must have been living in and about
-Tucson before the first of April. Unless you were out upon the desert,
-you could hardly turn round without seeing or hearing them. But there
-was no danger of the painted redstart’s cheapening itself after this
-fashion. I saw it twice, for perhaps ten minutes in all, and as long as
-I live I shall be thankful for the sight.
-
-I was playing the spy upon a pair of what I took to be Arkansas
-goldfinches, and the question being a nice one, had got over a wire
-fence to have the sun at my back. There I had barely focused my
-eight-power glass upon a leafless willow beside an irrigation ditch,
-when all at once there moved into its field such a piece of absolute
-gorgeousness as I have no hope of making my reader see by means of
-any description: a small bird in three colors,--deep, velvety black,
-the snowiest white, and the most brilliant red. Its glory lay in the
-depth and purity of the three colors; its singularity lay in a point
-not mentioned in book descriptions, being inconspicuous, I suppose,
-in cabinet specimens: a line (almost literally a line) of white below
-the eye. From its position and its extreme tenuity I took it for the
-lower eyelid, but as to that I cannot speak with positiveness. It would
-hardly have showed, even in life, I dare say, but for its intensely
-black surroundings. As it was, it fairly stared at me. I cannot affirm
-that it added to the bird’s beauty. Apart from it the colors were all
-what I may call solid,--laid on in broad masses, that is: a red belly,
-a long white band (not a bar) on each wing, some white tail feathers,
-white lower tail coverts, and everything else black. It does not sound
-like anything so very extraordinary, I confess. But the reader should
-have _seen_ it. Unless he is a very dry stick indeed, he would have let
-off an exclamation or two, I can warrant. There are cases in which the
-whole is a good deal more than the sum of all its parts.
-
-The bird was on one of the larger branches, over which it moved in
-something of the black-and-white creeper’s manner, turning its head
-to one side and the other alternately as it progressed. Then it sat
-still a long time (a long time for a warbler), so near me that the
-glass brought it almost into my hand, while I devoured its beauty;
-and then, of a sudden, it took flight into the dense, leafy top of a
-tall cottonwood, and I saw it no more. No more for that time, that
-is to say. In my mind, indeed, I bade it good-by forever. It was not
-to be thought of that such a bit of splendor (I had read of it as a
-mountain bird) should happen in my way more than once. But eight days
-afterward (March 28), in nearly the same place, it appeared again,
-straight over my head; and I was almost as much astonished as before.
-It was exploring the bare branches of a row of roadside ash trees, and
-I followed it, or rather preceded it, backing away as it flitted from
-one tree to the next, keeping the sun behind me. It carried itself now
-much like the common redstart; a little more inclined to moments of
-inactivity, perhaps, but at short intervals darting into the air after
-a passing insect with all conceivable quickness.
-
-And such colors! Such an unspeakable red, so intense a black, and so
-pure a white! If I said that the vermilion flycatcher was the brightest
-bird I saw in Arizona, I was like the Hebrew psalmist. I said it in my
-haste.
-
-This time the redstart was in a singing mood. On the previous occasion
-it had kept silence, and I had thought I was glad to have it so,
-feeling that no voice could be good enough to go with such feathers.
-In its way the feeling was justified; but, after all, it would have
-been too bad to miss the song. Curiosity has its claims, no less than
-sentiment. And happily the song proved to be a very pretty one; similar
-to that of the Eastern bird, to be sure, but less hurried (so it seemed
-to me), less over-emphatic, and in a voice less sharp and thin; a very
-pretty song (for a warbler), though, as is true of the Phainopepla and
-most other brilliantly handsome birds (and all good children), the
-redstart’s proper appeal is to the eye. So far as human appreciation is
-concerned, it need make no other.
-
-I have heard a canyon wren in a canyon, I said. It was a glorious
-day in a glorious place,--Sabino Canyon, it is called, in the Santa
-Catalina Mountains. And it was there, where the ground was all a flower
-garden, and the dashing brook a doubly delightful sight and sound after
-so much wandering over the desert and so many crossings of dry, sandy
-river-beds,--it was there, amid a cluster of leafy oaks (strange oak
-leaves they were) and leafless hackberry trees, that I saw my first and
-only solitaire,--_Myadestes townsendii_. I have praised other birds
-for their brightness and song; this one I must praise for a certain
-nameless dignity and, as the present-day word is, distinction. He did
-not deign to break silence, or to notice in any manner, unless it were
-by an added touch of patrician reserve, the presence of three human
-intruders. I stared at him,--exercising a cat’s privilege,--for all his
-hauteur, admiring his gray colors, his conspicuous white eye-ring, and
-his manner. I say “manner,” not “manners.” You would never liken _him_
-to a dancing-master.
-
-He was the solitaire, I somehow felt certain (certain with a lingering
-of uncertainty), though I had forgotten all description of that bird’s
-appearance. It was the place for him, and his looks went with the name.
-Moreover, to confess a more prosaic consideration, there was nothing
-else he could be.
-
-“Myadestes,” I said to my two companions, both unacquainted with such
-matters; “I think it is Myadestes, though I can’t exactly tell why I
-think so.”
-
-We must go into the canyon a little way, gazing up at the walls,
-picking a few of the more beautiful flowers, feeling the place
-itself (the best thing one _can_ do, whether in a canyon or on a
-mountain-top); then we came back to the hackberry trees, but the
-solitaire was no longer in them. I had had my opportunity, and perhaps
-had made too little of it. It is altogether likely that I shall never
-see another bird of his kind.
-
-For now those cloudless Arizona days, the creosote-covered desert, and
-the mountain ranges standing round about it, are all for me as things
-past and done; a bright memory, and no more. One event conspired with
-another to put a sudden end to my visit (which was already longer than
-I had planned), and on the last day of March I walked for the last time
-under that row of “leafless ash trees,”--no longer quite leafless, and
-no longer with a painted redstart in them,--and over that piece of
-winding road between the craggy hill and the river. Now I courted not
-the sun, but the shade; it was the sun, more than anything else, that
-was hurrying me away, when I would gladly have stayed longer; but sunny
-or shady, I stopped a bit in each of the more familiar places. Nobody
-knew or cared that I was taking leave. All things remained as they had
-been. The same rock wrens were practicing endless vocal variations here
-and there upon the stony hillside; the same fretful verdin was talking
-about something, it was beyond me to tell what, with the old emphatic
-monotony; the hummingbird stood on the tip of his mesquite bush, still
-turning his head eagerly from side to side, as if he expected her, and
-wondered why on earth she was so long in coming; the mocker across the
-field (one of no more than half a dozen that I saw about Tucson!) was
-bringing out of his treasury things new and old (a great bird that,
-always with another shot in his locker); the Lucy warbler, daintiest
-of the dainty, sang softly amid the willow catkins, a chorus of bees
-accompanying; the black cap of the pileolated warbler was _not_ in
-the blossoming quince-bush hedge (that was a pity); the desert-loving
-sparrow hawk sat at the top of a giant cactus, as if its thorns were
-nothing but a cushion; the happy little Mexican boy, who lived in one
-corner of the old mill, came down the road with his usual smile of
-welcome (we were almost old friends by this time) and a glance into
-the trees, meaning to say, what he could not express in English, nor
-I understand in Spanish, “I know what you are doing;” and then, as I
-rounded the bend, under the beetling crags, the same canyon wren, my
-first one, not dreaming what a favor he was conferring upon the man he
-had so often chided as a trespasser, let fall a few measures of his
-lovely song. How sweet and cool the notes were! Unless it was the sound
-of the brook in the Sabino Canyon, I believe I heard nothing else so
-good in Arizona.
-
-But at San Antonio, on my way homeward, I heard notes not to be called
-musical, in the smaller and more ordinary sense of the word; as
-unlike as possible, certainly, to the classic sweetness of the canyon
-wren’s tune; but to me even more exciting and memorable. On a sultry,
-indolent afternoon (April 9) I had betaken myself to Cemetery Hill for
-a lazy stroll, and had barely alighted from the electric car, when I
-heard strange noises somewhere near at hand. In my confusion I thought
-for an instant of the scissor-tailed flycatchers, with whose various
-outlandish outcries and antics I had been for several days amusing
-myself. Then I discovered that the sound came from above, and looking
-up, saw straight over my head, between the hilltop and the clouds, a
-wedge-shaped flock of large birds. Long slender necks and bills, feet
-drawn up and projecting out behind the tails, wing-action moderate
-(after the manner of geese rather than ducks), color dark,--so much,
-and no more, the glass showed me, while the birds, sixty or more in
-number, as I guessed, were fast receding northward. They should be
-cranes, I said to myself, since they were surely not herons, and then,
-like a flash, it came over me that I knew the voice. By good luck I had
-lived the winter before where I heard continually the lusty shouts of a
-captive sandhill crane; and it was to a chorus of sandhill cranes that
-I was now listening.
-
-The flock disappeared, the tumult lessened and ceased, and I passed on.
-But fifteen minutes afterward, as I was retracing my steps over the
-hill, suddenly I heard the same resounding chorus again. A second flock
-of cranes was passing. This, too, was in a V-shaped line, though for
-some reason it fell into disorder almost immediately. Now I essayed a
-count, and had just concluded that there were some eighty of the birds,
-when a commotion behind me caused me to turn my head. To my amazement,
-a third and much larger flock was following close behind the second.
-There was no numbering it with exactness, but I ran my glass down the
-long, wavering line, as best I could, and counted one hundred and
-fifteen.
-
-An hour before I had never seen a sandhill crane in its native wildness
-(a creature nearly or quite as tall as myself), and behold, here was
-the sky full of them. And what a judgment-day trumpeting they made!
-Angels and archangels, cherubim and seraphim! Perhaps I did not enjoy
-it,--there, with the white gravestones standing all about me. After
-all, there is something in mere volume of sound. If it does not feed
-the soul, at least it stirs the blood. And that is a good thing, also.
-I wonder if Michelangelo did not at some time or other see and hear the
-like.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Adder’s-tongue, 19, 29.
-
- Anemone, 6.
-
- Azalea, Lapland, 36.
-
-
- Bayberry, 101.
-
- Bellwort, 6.
-
- Birch, yellow, 15, 72.
-
- Bittern, least, 126.
-
- Blackbird, Brewer’s, 202.
- crow, 129.
- red-winged, 86, 124, 139.
- rusty, 66.
-
- Bluebird, 8, 54, 65, 76, 86, 132, 150, 156.
- chestnut-backed, 181, 186.
- Western, 279.
-
- Butterfly, clouded-sulphur, 61.
- red admiral, 28.
-
- Buzzard, turkey, 86, 95, 124.
-
-
- Cactus, giant, 199.
-
- Callicarpa, 99.
-
- Catbird, 86, 100, 107, 129, 130.
-
- Chewink, Arctic, 178.
- red-eyed, 108, 140.
- white-eyed, 140, 146.
-
- Chickadee, black-capped, 21, 64, 66, 79, 86, 139.
- Hudsonian, 37.
-
- Chuck-will’s-widow, 154.
-
- Clintonia, 4.
-
- Coccoloba, 118.
-
- Cocoa plum, 115, 122.
-
- Cormorant, Florida, 84, 124.
-
- Coyote, 224.
-
- Cranberry, mountain, 23.
-
- Crane, sandhill, 293.
-
- Creosote bush, 200, 206.
-
- Crescentia, 112.
-
- Crinum, 126.
-
- Crossbill, red, 63, 78.
-
- Crow, American, 79, 157.
- carrion, 86, 124.
- fish, 85, 97, 129.
-
- Cypress, 122.
-
-
- Diapensia, 35.
-
- Dove, ground, 86, 130.
-
- Dutchman’s-breeches, 19, 29.
-
-
- Eagle, bald, 141.
- golden, 220.
-
- Evening primrose, 200, 247.
-
- Eyebright, 35.
-
-
- Ficus aurea, 99.
-
- Finch, Lincoln, 74, 192.
- purple, 8, 66, 78.
-
- Flicker, 85, 86, 129.
- red-shafted, 178.
-
- Flycatcher, Arizona crested, 271.
- crested, 108, 130.
- olive-sided, 63.
- scissor-tailed, 259.
- vermilion, 266, 286.
-
-
- Gallinule, Florida, 149.
-
- Gnatcatcher, blue-gray, 85, 86, 108.
- plumbeous, 219.
-
- Goldfinch, American, 41, 61, 78.
-
- Goldfinch, Mexican, 178.
-
- Grackle, boat-tailed, 85, 129, 130.
-
- Grosbeak, cardinal, 87, 104, 107, 108, 129, 130, 134, 139, 149, 156.
- rose-breasted, 5, 10, 21.
-
- Grouse, 11, 21, 70, 78.
-
- Gumbo-limbo, 100.
-
-
- Hawk, desert sparrow, 184, 292.
- sharp-shinned, 38, 41, 69.
- sparrow, 41, 94.
- Western red-tailed, 219.
-
- Heron, great blue, 141.
- Louisiana, 124.
-
- Hickory, 148.
-
- Hornbeam, 145.
-
- House finch, 180, 188, 199.
-
- Huisache, 162.
-
- Hummingbird, black-chinned, 284, 291.
- Costa, 234.
- ruby-throated, 86, 130.
-
-
- Jay, blue, 67, 79, 86, 108, 130.
- Florida, 93, 140.
-
- Jessamine, yellow, 137, 149.
-
- Junco, intermediate, 185.
-
-
- Kingfisher, 124.
-
- Kinglet, golden-crowned, 64, 71.
- ruby-crowned, 65, 66, 78, 107, 130, 238.
-
-
- Lark bunting, 191, 194.
-
- Lupine, 200, 247.
-
-
- Mangrove, 98, 121.
-
- Martin, purple, 124.
-
- Meadow lark, 156, 183.
-
- Mockingbird, 85, 86, 87, 95,
- 100, 104, 107, 109, 129, 130, 139, 156.
- Western, 254, 292.
-
- Moon-flower, 88.
-
- Morning-glory, 88, 97.
-
-
- Nonpareil, 105, 108, 129, 130, 131, 134.
-
- Nuthatch, brown-headed, 150, 156.
- Canadian (red-breasted), 7, 41, 60, 62, 64, 66, 71, 79.
- Carolina (white-breasted), 123.
-
-
- Ocotillo, 199.
-
- Orchids, 98.
-
- Oriole, Baltimore, 130.
-
- Osprey, 124, 141.
-
- Oven-bird, 21, 107.
-
-
- Pavonia, 111.
-
- Pelican, brown, 140.
-
- Phainopepla, 276, 289.
-
- Phlox, Drummond, 137, 153.
-
- Phœbe, 86, 87, 104, 108, 130, 131.
- black, 196, 240.
- Say’s, 181, 255.
-
- Pithecolobium, 98.
-
- Plover, killdeer, 124.
-
- Poppy, California, 247, 249.
-
- Porcupine, 27.
-
- Pyrrhuloxia, Arizona, 185, 274.
- Texas, 274.
-
-
- Rabbits, 227.
-
- Rail, Carolina, 149.
-
- Raven, 212.
- white-necked, 182, 191, 211, 219, 221.
-
- Redstart, 64.
- painted, 286.
-
- Road-runner, 163, 259, 284.
-
- Robin, 8, 54, 66, 78, 86.
- Western, 279.
-
- Rose, Cherokee, 136, 154.
-
-
- Sandwort, Greenland, 23.
-
- Sapsucker, yellow-bellied, 59, 110.
-
- Seven-year apple, 116.
-
- Shrike, loggerhead, 95, 109.
-
- Siskin, 21, 63, 78.
-
- Snowbird, 21, 41, 62, 65, 66, 69, 78.
-
- Solitaire, 289.
-
- Sparrow, Cassin, 263.
- chipping, 66.
- desert, 210.
- pine-wood, 156.
- sage, 211.
- savanna, 9.
- song, 54, 65, 66, 75, 78, 138.
- vesper, 75, 78.
- white-crowned, 14, 74, 78, 192.
- white-throated, 5, 8, 11, 22, 26, 58, 62, 64, 65, 66, 139.
-
- Swallow, barn, 8.
- tree, 86, 95, 124.
-
- Sweet-bay, 146.
-
- Sweet-gum, 136, 145.
-
- Swift, white-throated, 273.
-
-
- Tanager, summer, 155.
-
- Thrasher, Bendire, 252, 255.
- brown, 138, 156.
- crissal, 254.
- Palmer, 209, 251, 255.
- sage, 207, 255.
-
- Thrush, Bicknell’s, 21, 37.
- hermit, 8, 66, 78, 130.
- Swainson’s, 21, 27.
-
- Titmouse, tufted, 139.
-
- Trema, 100.
-
- Trillium, painted, 6, 19.
- purple, 29.
-
-
- Vaccinium cæspitosum, 49.
-
- Verdin, 172, 239, 257, 291.
-
- Violet, round-leaved, 4, 11, 19, 29.
- Selkirk’s, 30.
-
- Vireo, blue-headed (solitary), 21, 86, 108, 129.
- red-eyed, 147, 155.
- yellow-throated, 129, 130.
- white-eyed, 86, 104, 108, 130, 140, 147.
-
-
- Warbler, Bachman’s, 134.
- bay-breasted, 21.
- black-and-white, 107, 129, 156.
- Blackburnian, 21.
- black-throated blue, 21.
- black-throated green, 21.
- Lucy, 292.
- myrtle, 21, 26, 41, 65, 66, 76, 86, 101, 107, 129, 130, 156.
- palm, 86, 107, 129, 130.
- parula, 21, 107, 129, 133, 134, 140, 155.
- pileolated, 292.
- pine, 86, 156.
- prairie, 107, 129, 133, 156.
- yellow palm, 78.
- yellow-throated, 129, 130, 133, 134, 156.
-
- Woodpecker, downy, 110, 129.
- hairy, 18, 59, 63, 110.
- ivory-billed, 110.
- pileated, 79, 109, 150.
- red-bellied, 86, 110, 129, 131, 149.
- red-cockaded, 110.
- red-headed, 110, 129.
-
- Wood pewee, 63.
-
- Wren, Baird, 255.
- cactus, 207, 251, 255.
- canyon, 255, 280, 289, 292.
- Carolina, 107, 139, 147, 156.
- house, 105, 107, 129.
- interior tule, 255.
- rock, 198, 255, 291.
- winter, 21, 59, 62, 64, 66.
-
-
- Yellow-throat, Florida, 86, 105, 107.
- Maryland, 57.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[1] 1900.
-
-[2] It may have been some species of _Pellia_, to judge by the plate in
-_Gray’s Manual_.
-
-[3] And if New Hampshire people will call the mountain “Moose Hillock,”
-as, alas, they will, then we have here another proof of the degeneracy
-which follows the white man’s addiction to the punning habit.
-
-[4] And so it was; for though I _felt_ sure, I wanted to _be_ sure, and
-submitted it to an expert.
-
-[5] One was living in the greenhouse connected with the big hotel.
-The gardener told me that it had come in of itself, and persisted in
-staying. He had tried in vain to get rid of it. Tossed out of doors, it
-would at once return and make itself at home.
-
-[6] And after all this talk about the plant I must in candor add that
-it turned out to be by no means rare along the bay shore. I think I am
-not wrong in remembering to have heard it called the calabash tree.
-
-[7] One of the most striking peculiarities of Southern speech among the
-illiterate classes (I have observed it in other states besides Florida)
-is the almost total absence of the word “saw.”
-
-[8] We often fed the birds afterward, and one or two, at least, were
-never shy about coming into our laps.
-
-[9] _Vachellia Farnesiana_, sparingly naturalized in Florida, where it
-goes by the name of Opopanax.
-
-[10] Since this letter was first printed I have been warned more than
-once that walking upon railroad tracks, in the Southwestern country,
-at least, is an unsafe proceeding, for a man alone and unarmed; and I
-think it right to pass along the caution.
-
-[11] I could hardly believe it anything but an accidental omission
-when I noticed the total absence of jays, crows, and ravens from Mr.
-Attwater’s list of the birds of San Antonio and vicinity. See _The
-Auk_, vol. ix, p. 229.
-
-[12] True as a general statement; but once, at Tucson, I saw a bird
-standing on the top of a telegraph pole facing a pretty stiff breeze,
-which blew the feathers of the throat apart till they showed a
-snow-white spot as large as a silver dollar.
-
-[13] Botanically, if I am correctly informed, the plant is _Fouquiera
-splendens_, otherwise known as candlewood, Jacob’s staff, and
-coach-whip. Like the giant cactus it seems to be restricted to the
-foothills.
-
-[14] Alas, it never does.
-
-[15] There is another raven in Arizona, rarer and larger,--a _real_
-raven, so to speak,--but I saw it only a few times, always high in air,
-as if it were passing from one mountain range to another.
-
-[16] The trick was seen to fuller advantage on subsequent occasions,
-and I came to the settled conclusion that the birds turned but halfway
-over; that is to say, they lay on their backs for an instant, and then,
-as by the recoil of a spring, recovered themselves. How they acquired
-the trick, and for what purpose they practice it, are questions beyond
-my answering. Since my return home, indeed, I have discovered that
-Gilbert White, who noted so many things, noted this same habit on the
-part of the European raven. According to him, the birds “lose the
-centre of gravity” while “scratching themselves with one foot.” How he
-knows this he does not inform us, and I must confess myself unconvinced.
-
-[17] They are not to be found on the desert, I afterward learned, but
-along the watercourses. There I often saw them.
-
-[18] I visited more than one of them afterward.
-
-[19] And so they were, on the testimony of the Washington ornithologist
-above quoted, who knows both bird and song.
-
-[20] It should be said, nevertheless, that straggling flocks of Western
-bluebirds--lovely creatures--were met with on the desert on rare
-occasions, and once, at Old Camp Lowell, three robins--Westerners, no
-doubt--passed over my head, flying toward the mountains, in which they
-are said to winter.
-
-
-
-
- The Riverside Press
- _Electrotyped and printed by H. O. Houghton & Co.
- Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A._
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
- Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Nature&#039;s invitation, by Bradford Torrey</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Nature&#039;s invitation</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>Notes of a bird-gazer, North and South</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Bradford Torrey</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 12, 2023 [eBook #69774]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Emmanuel Ackerman, 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)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NATURE&#039;S INVITATION ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt=""></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<p class="ph1"><span class="antiqua">Books by Mr. Torrey.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tiny">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p>NATURE’S INVITATION. 16mo, $1.10, <i>net.</i><br>
-Postage extra.</p>
-
-<p>THE CLERK OF THE WOODS. 16mo,<br>
-$1.10, <i>net.</i> Postpaid, $1.20.</p>
-
-<p>FOOTING IT IN FRANCONIA. 16mo, $1.10,<br>
-<i>net.</i> Postpaid, $1.19.</p>
-
-<p>EVERYDAY BIRDS. Elementary Studies.<br>
-With twelve colored Illustrations reproduced<br>
-from Audubon. Square 12mo, $1.00.</p>
-
-<p>BIRDS IN THE BUSH. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p>A RAMBLER’S LEASE. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p>THE FOOT-PATH WAY. 16mo, gilt top,<br>
-$1.25.</p>
-
-<p>A FLORIDA SKETCH-BOOK. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p>SPRING NOTES FROM TENNESSEE.<br>
-16mo, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p>A WORLD OF GREEN HILLS. 16mo, $1.25.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#160;</p>
-<p class="center">HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN &amp; CO.<br>
-<span class="smcap">Boston and New York.</span></p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>NATURE’S INVITATION</h1>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/title_page.jpg" alt=""></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<p><span class="xxlarge">NATURE’S INVITATION</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">NOTES OF A BIRD-GAZER<br>
-NORTH AND SOUTH</span><br>
-
-<p>BY<br>
-<span class="large">BRADFORD TORREY</span></p>
-
-<p>“On Nature’s invitation do I come.”—<span class="smcap">Wordsworth.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/title_page_logo.jpg" alt=""></div>
-
-<p>BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br>
-<span class="large">HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN AND COMPANY</span><br>
-<span class="antiqua">The Riverside Press, Cambridge</span><br>
-1904</p>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT 1904 BY BRADFORD TORREY<br>
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<br>
-<br>
-<i>Published October 1904</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">PREFATORY NOTE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p><span class="smcap">Of</span> the chapters here brought together the two
-longest, the first and the last, are reprinted from
-the “Atlantic Monthly.” The others were originally
-contributed, by way of weekly letters, to
-three newspapers,—the “Evening Transcript”
-of Boston, and the “Mail and Express” and the
-“Evening Post” of New York.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-<hr class="tiny">
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><th colspan="2">NEW HAMPSHIRE</th></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A May Visit to Moosilauke</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_3"> 3</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Week on Mount Washington</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_32"> 32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Above the Birds</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_41"> 41</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Mountain-Top and Valley</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_50"> 50</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">In the Mount Lafayette Forest</span>&#160; &#160;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_57"> 57</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">On Bald Mountain</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_65"> 65</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Birds and Bright Leaves</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_72"> 72</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th colspan="2">FLORIDA</th></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">First Impressions of Miami</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83"> 83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Frosty Morning</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89"> 89</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Bewilderment</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_96"> 96</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Waiting for the Music</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_104"> 104</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Peripatetic Botany</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_111"> 111</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Peep at the Everglades</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_120"> 120</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Beginnings of Spring</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_128"> 128</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Fair Ormond</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_136"> 136</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Day in the Woods</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_142"> 142</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Picture and Song</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151"> 151</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th colspan="2">TEXAS AND ARIZONA</th></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">In Old San Antonio</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_161"> 161</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Bird-Gazer’s Puzzles</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_171"> 171</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Luck on the Prairie</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_179"> 179</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Over the Border</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_188"> 188</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">First Days in Tucson</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_196"> 196</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Mobbed in Arizona</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_205"> 205</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">An Idle Afternoon</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_215"> 215</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Shy Life in the Desert</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_224"> 224</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A New Acquaintance</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_233"> 233</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Desert Rejoices</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_242"> 242</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Nests and Other Matters</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_251"> 251</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Flycatcher and a Sparrow</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_259"> 259</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">A Bunch of Bright Birds</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_266"> 266</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2">&#160;</td></tr>
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_295"> 295</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">NEW HAMPSHIRE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-<h3 class="nobreak">A MAY VISIT TO MOOSILAUKE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> a man sets forth on an out-of-door pleasure
-jaunt, his prayer is for weather. If he is going
-to the mountains, let him double his urgency.
-In the mountains, if nowhere else, weather is
-three fifths of life.</p>
-
-<p>My first trip to New Hampshire the present
-season<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> was made under smooth, high clouds,
-which left the distance clear, so that the mountains
-stood up grandly beyond the lake as we
-ran along its western border. Not a drop of
-rain fell till I stepped off the car at Warren.
-At that moment the world grew suddenly dark,
-and before I could get into the open carriage the
-clouds burst, and with a rattling of thunder bolts
-a deluge of rain and hail descended upon us.
-There was no contending with such an adversary,
-though a good woman across the way, commiserating
-our plight, came to the door with proffers of
-an umbrella. I retreated to the station, while the
-driver hastened down the street to put his team
-under shelter. So a half hour passed. Then we
-tried again, and half frozen, in spite of a winter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-overcoat and everything that goes with it (the
-date was May 17), I reached my destination, five
-miles away, at the foot of Moosilauke.</p>
-
-<p>All this would hardly deserve narration, perhaps
-(the story of travelers’ discomforts being
-mostly matter for skipping), only that it marked
-the setting in of a cold, rainy “spell” that hung
-upon us for four days. Four sunless days out of
-seven was a proportion fairly to be complained
-of. The more I consider it, the truer seems the
-equation just now stated, that mountain weather
-is three fifths of life. For those four days I did
-not even <i>see</i> Moosilauke, though we were living,
-so to speak, upon its shoulder, and I knew by
-hearsay that the summit house was visible from
-the back doorstep.</p>
-
-<p>My first brief walk before supper should reasonably
-have been in the clearer valley country;
-but if reason spoke inclination did not hear it,
-and my feet—which seem to feel that they are
-old enough by this time to know their master’s
-business for him—took of their own motion an
-opposite course. The mountain woods, as I entered
-them, had the appearance of early March:
-only the merest sprinkling of new life,—clintonia
-leaves especially, with here and there a
-round-leaved violet, both leaves and flowers,—upon
-a ground still all defaced by the hand of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-Winter. Dead leaves make an agreeable carpet,
-as they rustle cheerfully-sadly under one’s feet in
-autumn; but there was no rustle here; the snow
-had pressed every leaf flat and left it sodden.
-One thing consoled me: I had not arrived too
-late. The “bud-crowned spring,” for all my
-fears, was yet to “go forth.”</p>
-
-<p>The next morning it was not enough to say that
-<i>it</i> was cloudy. That impersonal expression would
-have been quite below the mark. <i>We</i> were
-cloudy. In short, the cloud was literally around
-us and upon us. As I stepped out of doors, a
-rose-breasted grosbeak was singing in one direction,
-and a white-throated sparrow in another,
-both far away in the mist. It was strange they
-should be so happy, I was ready to say. But I
-bethought myself that their case was no different
-from my own. It was comparatively clear just
-about me, while the fog shut down like a curtain
-a rod or two away, leaving the rest of the world
-dark. So every bird stood in a ring of light, an
-illuminated chantry all his own,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">And sang for joy, good Christian bird,</div>
-<div class="verse">To be thus marked and favored.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Strange had he <i>not</i> been happy. To be blest
-above one’s fellows is to be blest twice over.</p>
-
-<p>This time I took the downward road, turning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-to the left, and found myself at once in pleasant
-woods, with hospitable openings and bypaths; a
-birdy spot, or I was no prophet, though just now
-but few voices were to be heard, and those of the
-commonest. Here stood new-blown anemones,
-bellworts, and white violets, an early flock, with
-one painted trillium lording it over them; a small
-specimen of its kind, but big enough to be king
-(or shepherd) in such company. A brook, or
-perhaps two, with the few birds, sang about me,
-invisible. I knew not whither I was going, and
-the all-embracing cloud deepened the mystery.
-Soon the road took a sudden dip, and a louder
-noise filled my ears. I was coming to a river?
-Yes, for presently I was on the bridge, with a
-raging mountain torrent, eighty feet, perhaps,
-underneath, foaming against the boulders; a
-bare, perpendicular cliff on one side, and perpendicular
-spruces and hemlocks draping a similar
-cliff on the other side. It was Baker’s River, I
-was told afterward,—the same that I had looked
-at here and there, the day before, from the car
-window. It was good to see it so young and exuberant;
-but even a young river need not be so
-much in haste, I thought. It would get to the
-sawmills soon enough, and by and by would
-learn, too late, that it is only a little way to the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>Once over the bridge, the road climbed quickly
-out of the narrow gorge, and at the first turn
-brought me in sight of a small painted house,
-with a small orchard of thrifty-looking small
-trees behind it. Here a venerable collie came
-running forth to bark at the stranger, but yielded
-readily to the usual blandishments, and after
-sniffing again and again at my heels, just to
-make sure of knowing me the next time, went
-back, contented, to lie down in his old place before
-the window. He was the only person that
-spoke to me—the only one I met—during
-the forenoon, though I spent it all on the highway.</p>
-
-<p>Another patch of woods, where a distant
-Canadian nuthatch is calling (strange how I
-love that nasal, penetrating, far-reaching voice,
-whose quality my reasoning taste condemns),
-and I see before me another house, standing in
-broad acres of cleared land. This one is not
-painted, and, as I presently make out, is uninhabited,
-its old tenant gone, dead or discouraged,
-and no new one looked for; an “abandoned
-farm,” such as one grows used to seeing in our
-northern country. It is beautiful for situation,
-one of those sightly places which the city-worn
-passer-by in a mountain wagon pitches upon at
-once as just the place he should like to buy and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-retire to—<i>some</i> day; in that autumn of golden
-leisure of which, now and then,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“When all his active powers are still,”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>he has a pleasing vision. Oh yes, he means to
-do something of that kind—some day; and even
-while he talks of it he knows in his heart that
-“some day” is only another name for “next day
-after never.”</p>
-
-<p>A few happy barn swallows (wise enough, or
-simple enough, to be happy <i>now</i>) go skimming
-over the grass, and a pair of robins and a pair
-of bluebirds seem to be at home in the orchard;
-which they like none the worse, we may be sure,—the
-bluebirds, especially,—because, along
-with the house and the barn, it is falling into
-decay. What are apple trees for, but to grow
-old and become usefully hollow? Otherwise they
-would be no better than so many beeches or
-butternuts. It is impossible but that every creature
-should look at the world through its own
-eyes; and no bluebird ever ate an apple. A
-purple finch warbles ecstatically, a white-throated
-sparrow whistles in the distance, and now and
-then, from far down the slope, I catch the upliftings
-of a hermit thrush.</p>
-
-<p>A man grows thoughtful, not to say sentimental,
-in such a place, surrounded by fields on
-which so many years of human labor have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-spent, so much ploughing and harrowing, planting
-and reaping, now given up again to nature.
-Here was the garden patch, its outlines still
-traceable. Here was the well. Long lines of
-stone wall still separate the mowing land from
-the pasturage; and scattered over the fields are
-heaps of boulders, thrown together thus to get
-them out of the grass’s way. About the edges
-of every pile, and sometimes through the midst,
-have sprung up a few shrubs,—shad bushes,
-cherries, willows, and the like. Here they escape
-the scythe, as we are all trying to do. “Give us
-room that we may dwell!”—so these children
-of Zion cry. It is the great want of seeds, so
-many millions of which go to waste annually in
-every acre,—a place in which to take root and
-(harder yet) to keep it. And the birds, too, find
-the boulder heaps a convenience. I watch a savanna
-sparrow as he flits from one to another,
-stopping to sing a measure or two from each.
-Even this humble, almost voiceless artist needs
-a stage or platform. The lowliest sparrow ever
-hatched has some rudiments of a histrionic faculty;
-and be we birds or humans, it is hard to
-do one’s best without a bit of posing.</p>
-
-<p>What further uses these humble stone heaps
-may serve I cannot say; no doubt they shelter
-many insects; but it is encouraging to consider<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-how few things a farmer can do that will not be
-of benefit to others beside himself. Surely the
-man who piled these boulders for the advantage
-of his hay crop never expected them to serve as
-a text for preaching.</p>
-
-<p>The cloud drops again, and is at its old trick
-of exaggeration. A bird that I take for a robin
-turns out to be a sparrow. Did it look larger
-because it seemed to be farther away than it really
-was? Or is it seen now as it actually is, my
-vision not being deceived, but rather corrected
-of an habitual error? The fog makes for me a
-newer and stranger world, at any rate; I am
-farther from home because of it; another day’s
-travel might have done less for me. And for all
-that, I am not sorry when it rises again, and the
-hills come out. How beautiful they are! They
-will hardly be more so, I think, when the June
-foliage replaces the square miles of bare boughs
-which now give them a blue-purple tint, interrupted
-here and there by patches of new yellow-green
-poplar leaves—a veritable illumination,
-sun-bright even in this sunless weather—or a
-few sombre evergreens.</p>
-
-<p>As I get away from the farm, the mountain
-woods on either side seem to be filled with something
-like a chorus of rose-breasted grosbeaks.
-Except for a few days at Highlands, North Carolina,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-some years ago, I have never seen so many
-together. A grand “migratory wave” must have
-broken on the mountains within a night or two.
-As far as music is concerned, the grosbeaks have
-the field mostly to themselves, though a grouse
-beats his drum at short intervals, and now and
-then a white-throat whistles. There is no bird’s
-voice to which a fog is more becoming, I say to
-myself, with a pleasing sense of having said
-something unintended. To my thinking, the
-white-throat should always be a good distance
-away (perhaps because in the mountains one
-grows accustomed to hearing him thus); and
-the fog puts him there, with no damage to the
-fullness of his tone.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the flowers along the wayside,—a
-few yellow violets, a patch of spring-beauties,
-and little else,—my eye falls upon what seems
-to be a miniature forest of curious tiny plants
-growing in the gutter. At first I see only the
-upright, whitish stalks, an inch or two in height,
-each bearing at the top a globular brown knob.
-Afterward I discover that the stalks, which, examined
-more closely, have a crystalline, glassy
-appearance, spring from a leaf-like or lichen-like
-growth, lying prostrate upon the wet soil. The
-plant is a liverwort, or scale-moss, of some kind,
-I suppose, and is growing here by the mile. How<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-few are the things we see! And of those we see,
-how few there are concerning which we have any
-real knowledge,—enough, even, to use words
-about them! (When a man can do that concerning
-any class of natural objects, no matter what
-they are or what he says about them, he passes
-with the crowd for a scholar, or at the very least
-a “close observer.”) But to tell the shameful
-truth, my mood just now is not inquisitive. I
-should like to know? Yes; but I can get on
-without knowing. There are worse things than
-ignorance. Let this plant be what it will. I
-should be little the wiser for being able to name
-it.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> I have no body of facts to which to attach
-this new one; and unrelated knowledge is almost
-the same as none at all. At best it is quickly
-forgotten. So my indolence excuses itself.</p>
-
-<p>The road begins to climb rather sharply. Unless
-I am going to the top of the ridge and
-beyond, I have gone far enough. So I turn my
-back upon the mountain; and behold, the cloud
-having lifted again, there, straight before me
-down the road and across the valley, is the
-house from which I set out, almost or quite the
-only one in sight. After all, I have walked but
-a little way, though I have been a good while<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-about it; for I have hardly begun my return
-before I find myself again approaching the
-abandoned farm. Downhill miles are short.
-Here a light shower comes on, and I raise my
-umbrella. Then follows a grand excitement
-among a flock of sheep, whose day, perhaps,
-needs enlivening as badly as my own. They
-gaze at the umbrella, start away upon the gallop,
-stop again to look (“There are forty looking
-like one,” I say to myself), and are again
-struck with panic. This time they scamper
-down the field out of sight. Another danger
-escaped! Shepherds, it is evident, cannot be so
-effeminate as to carry umbrellas.</p>
-
-<p>Two heifers are of a more confiding disposition,
-coming close to look at the stranger as he
-sits on the doorsill of the old barn. Their curiosity
-concerning me is perhaps about as lively
-as mine was touching the supposed liverworts.
-Like me they stand and consider, but betray no
-unmannerly eagerness. “Who is he, I wonder?”
-they might be saying; “I never saw him
-before.” But their jaws still move mechanically,
-and their beautiful eyes are full of a peaceful
-satisfaction. A cud must be a great alleviation
-to the temper. With such a perennial sedative,
-how could any one ever be fretted into nervous
-prostration? As a matter of fact, I am told,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-cows rarely or never suffer from that most distressing
-ailment. I have seen chewers of gum
-before now who, by all signs, should have enjoyed
-a similar immunity.</p>
-
-<p>While the heifers are still making up their
-minds about their unexpected visitor, I turn to
-examine a couple of white-crowned sparrows,
-male and female,—I wonder if they really <i>are</i>
-a couple?—feeding before the house. I hope
-the species is to prove common here. Three
-birds were behind the hotel before breakfast,
-and one of them sang. The quaint little medley,
-sparrow song and warbler song together, is still
-something of an event with me, I have heard it
-so seldom and like it so well; and whether the
-birds sing or not, they are musical to look at.</p>
-
-<p>When I approach the painted house, on my
-way homeward, the fat old collie comes running
-out again, barking. This time, however, he
-takes but one sniff. He has made a mistake,
-and realizes it at once. “Oh, excuse me,” he
-says quite plainly. “I didn’t recognize you.
-You’re the same old codger. I ought to have
-known.” And he is so confused and ashamed
-that he hurries away without waiting to make
-up.</p>
-
-<p>It is a great mortification to a gentlemanly
-dog to find himself at fault in this manner. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-remember another collie, much younger than
-this one, with whom I once had a minute or two
-of friendly intercourse. Then, months afterward,
-I went again by the house where he lived, and
-he came dashing out with all fierceness, as if he
-would rend me in pieces. I let him come (there
-was nothing else to do, or nothing else worth
-doing), but the instant his nose struck me he
-saw his error. Then, in a flash, he dropped flat
-on the ground, and literally licked my shoes.
-There was no attitude abject enough to express
-the depth of his humiliation. And then, like the
-dog of this morning, he jumped up, and ran
-with all speed back to his doorstep.</p>
-
-<p>Another descent into the gorge of Baker’s
-River, and another stop on the bridge (how
-gloriously the water comes down!), and I am
-again in the pretty, broken woods below the
-hotel. Here my attention is attracted by an
-almost prostrate but still vigorous yellow birch,
-like the one that stood for so many years by the
-road below the Profile House, in the Franconia
-Notch. Somehow the tree got an awkward slant
-in its youth, and has always kept it, while the
-larger branches have grown straight upward, at
-right angles with the trunk, as if each were trying
-to be a tree on its own account. The Franconia
-Notch specimen became a landmark, and was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-really of no inconsiderable service; a convenience
-to the hotel proprietors, and a means of health
-to idle boarders, who needed an incentive to exercise.
-“Come, let’s walk down as far as the bent
-tree,” one would say to another. The average
-American cannot stroll; he has never learned;
-if he puts his legs in motion, he must go to
-some fixed point, though it be only a milestone
-or a huckleberry bush. The infirmity is most
-likely congenital, a taint in the blood. The
-fathers worked,—all honor to them,—having
-to earn their bread under hard conditions; and
-the children, though they may dress like the
-descendants of princes, cannot help turning even
-their amusements into a stint.</p>
-
-<p>And the sapient critic? Well, instead of
-carrying a fishing rod or walking to a bent tree,
-he had come out with an opera-glass, and had
-made of his morning jaunt a bird-cataloguing
-expedition. Considered in that light, the trip
-had not been a brilliant success. In my whole
-forenoon I had seen and heard but twenty-eight
-species. If I had stayed in my low-country village,
-and walked half as far, I should have
-counted twice as many. But I should not have
-enjoyed myself one quarter as well.</p>
-
-<p>The next day and the next were rainy, with
-Moosilauke still invisible. Then came a morning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-of sunshine and clear atmosphere. So far it
-was ideal mountain weather; but the cold wind
-was so strong at our level that it was certain
-to be nothing less than a hurricane at the top.
-I waited, therefore, twenty-four hours longer.
-Then, at quarter before seven on the morning
-of May 23, I set out. I am as careful of my
-dates, it seems, as if I had been starting for the
-North Pole. And why not? The importance of
-an expedition depends upon the spirit in which it
-is undertaken. Nothing is of serious consequence
-in this world except as subjective considerations
-make it so. Even the North Pole is only an
-imaginary point, the end of an imaginary line,
-as old geographies used to inform us, pleonastically,—as
-if “position without dimensions,”
-a something without length, breadth, or thickness,
-could be other than imaginary. I started,
-then, at quarter before seven. Many years ago
-I had been taken up the mountain road in a carriage;
-now I would travel it on foot, spending
-at least an hour upon each of its five miles, and
-so see something of the mountain itself, as well
-as of the prospect from the summit.</p>
-
-<p>The miles, some longer, some shorter, as I
-thought (a not unpleasant variety, though the
-fourth stage was excessively spun out, it seemed
-to me, perhaps to make it end at the spring),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-are marked off by guideboards, so that the newcomer
-need not fall into the usual disheartening
-mistake of supposing himself almost at the top
-before he has gone halfway. As for the first
-mile, which must measure near a mile and a half,
-and which ends just above the “second brook”
-(every mountain path has its natural waymarks),
-I had been over it twice within the last few days,
-so that the edge of my curiosity was dulled; but,
-with one excuse and another, I managed easily
-enough to give it its allotted hour. For one
-thing, a hairy woodpecker detained me five or ten
-minutes, putting such tremendous vigor into his
-hammering that I was positively certain (with
-a shade of uncertainty, nevertheless, such as all
-“observers” will understand; there is nothing
-so true as a paradox) that he must be a <i>pileatus</i>,
-till at last he showed himself. “Well, well,” said
-I, “guesswork is a poor dependence.” It was
-well I had stayed by. The forest was so nearly
-deserted, so little animated, that I felt under obligation
-to the fellow for every stroke of his mallet.
-Though a man goes to the wood for silence,
-his ear craves some natural noises,—enough, at
-least, to make the stillness audible.</p>
-
-<p>The second mile is of steeper grade than the
-first, and toward the close brought me suddenly
-to a place unlike anything that had gone before.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-I named it at once the Flower Garden. For an
-acre, or, more likely, for two or three acres, the
-ground—a steep southern exposure, held up to
-face the sun—was covered with plants in bloom:
-Dutchman’s-breeches (<i>Dicentra cucullaria</i>),—bunches
-of heart-shaped, cream-white flowers
-with yellow facings, looking for all the world
-as if they had been planted there; round-leaved
-violets in profusion; white violets (<i>blanda</i>);
-spring-beauties; adder’s-tongue (dog’s-tooth violet);
-and painted trillium. A pretty show; pretty
-in itself, and a thousand times prettier for being
-happened upon thus unexpectedly, after two hours
-of woods that were almost as dead as winter.</p>
-
-<p>Only a little way above this point were the
-first beds of snow; and henceforward, till I came
-out upon the ridge, two miles above, the woods
-were mostly filled with it, though there was little
-in the road. About this time, also, I began to
-notice a deer’s track. He had descended the
-road within a few hours, as I judged, or since the
-last rainfall, and might have been a two-legged,
-or even a one-legged animal,—biped or uniped,—so
-far as his footsteps showed. I should
-rather have seen <i>him</i>, but the hoofprints were
-a deal better than nothing; and undoubtedly
-I saw them much longer than I could possibly
-have seen the maker of them, and so, perhaps,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-got out of them more of companionship. They
-were with me for two hours,—clean up to the
-ridge, and part way across it.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere between the third and fourth mileboards
-I stopped short with an exclamation.
-There, straight before me, over the long eastern
-shoulder of Moosilauke, beyond the big Jobildunk
-Ravine, loomed or floated a shining snow-white
-mountain-top. Nothing could have been
-more beautiful. It was the crest of Mount
-Washington, I assumed, though even with the
-aid of a glass I could make out no sign of buildings,
-which must have been matted with new-fallen snow.
-I took its identity for granted, I
-say. The truth is, I became badly confused
-about it afterward, such portions of the range
-as came into view having an unfamiliar aspect;
-but later still, on arriving at the summit, found
-that my first idea had been correct.</p>
-
-<p>That sudden, heavenly apparition gave me
-one of those minutes that are good as years.
-Once, indeed, in early October, I had seen
-Mount Washington when it was more resplendent:
-freshly snow-covered throughout, and then,
-as the sun went down, lighted up before my eyes
-with a rosy glow, brighter and brighter and
-brighter, till it seemed all on fire within. But
-even that unforgettable spectacle had less of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-unearthly beauty, was less a work of pure enchantment,
-I thought, than this detached, fleecy-looking
-piece of aerial whiteness, cloud stuff or
-dream stuff, yet whiter than any cloud, lying at
-rest yonder, almost at my own level, against the
-deep blue of the forenoon sky.</p>
-
-<p>All this while, the birds, which had been few
-from the start,—black-throated greens and
-blues, Blackburnians, oven-birds, a bay-breast,
-blue yellow-backs, siskins, Swainson thrushes,
-a blue-headed vireo, winter wrens, rose-breasted
-grosbeaks, chickadees, grouse, and snowbirds,—had
-grown fewer and fewer, till at last, among
-these stunted, low-branched spruces, with the
-snow under them, there was little else but an
-occasional myrtle warbler (“The brave myrtle,”
-I kept saying to myself), with its musical, soft
-trill, so out of place,—the voice of peaceful
-green valleys rather than of stormy mountain-tops,—yet
-so welcome. Once a gray-cheeked
-thrush called just above me. These impenetrable
-upper woods are the gray-cheeks’ summer
-home,—a worthy one; but I heard nothing of
-their wild music, and doubted whether they had
-yet arrived in full summer force.</p>
-
-<p>It was past eleven o’clock when I came out at
-the clearing by the woodpile, with half the world
-before me. From this point it was but a little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-way to the bare ridge connecting the South Peak—up
-which I had been trudging all the forenoon—and
-the main summit. This, with its
-little hotel, that looked as if it were in danger of
-sliding off the mountain northward, was straight
-before me across the ravine, a long but easy mile
-away.</p>
-
-<p>On the ridge I found myself all at once in
-something like a gale of ice-cold wind. Who
-could have believed it? It was well I had
-brought a sweater; and squatting behind a lucky
-clump of low evergreens, I wormed my way into
-what is certainly the most comfortable of all garments
-for such a place,—as good, at least, as
-two overcoats. Now let the wind whistle, especially
-as it was at my back, and was bearing
-me triumphantly up the slope. So I thought,
-bravely enough, till the trail took a sudden
-shift, and the gale caught me on another tack.
-Then I sang out of the other corner of my
-mouth, as I used to hear country people say.
-I no longer boasted, but saved my breath for
-better use.</p>
-
-<p>Wind or no wind, it is an exhilaration to walk
-here above the world. Once a bird chirps to me
-timidly from the knee-wood close by. I answer
-him, and out peeps a white-throat. “<i>You</i> here!”
-he says; “so early!” At my feet is plenty of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-Greenland sandwort,—faded, winter-worn, gray-green
-tufts, tightly packed among the small
-boulders. Whatever lives here must lie low and
-hang on. And with it is the shiny-leaved mountain
-cranberry,—<i>Vaccinium Vitis-Idæa</i>. Let
-me never omit that pretty name. Neither cranberry
-nor sandwort shows any sign of blossom
-or bud as yet; but it is good to know that they
-will both be ready when the clock strikes. I can
-see them now, pink and white, just as they will
-look in July—nay, just as they will look a
-thousand years hence.</p>
-
-<p>Again my course alters, and the wind lets me
-lean back upon it as it lifts me forward. Who
-says we are growing old? The years, as they
-pass, may turn and look at us meaningly, as
-if to say, “You have lived long enough;” yet
-even to us the climbing of a mountain road
-(though by this time it must <i>be</i> a road, or something
-like it) is still only the putting of one foot
-before the other.</p>
-
-<p>So I come at last to the top, and make haste
-to get into the lee of the house, which is tightly
-barred, of course, just as its owners left it seven
-or eight months ago. The wind chases me round
-the corners, one after another; but by searching
-I discover a nook where it can hit me no more
-than half the time. Here I sit and look at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-mountains,—a glorious company: Mount Washington
-and its fellows, with all their higher parts
-white; the sombre mass of the Twins on this
-side of them; and, nearer still, the long, sharp,
-purple crest of dear old Lafayette and its southern
-neighbors. So many I can name. The rest
-are mountains only; a wilderness of heaped-up,
-forest-covered land; a prospect to dilate the
-soul.</p>
-
-<p>My expectation has been to stay here for two
-hours or more; but the wind is merciless, and
-after going out over the broad, bare, boulder-sprinkled
-summit till I can see down into Franconia
-(which looks pretty low and pretty far off,
-though I distinguish certain of the buildings
-clearly enough), I begin to feel that I shall enjoy
-the sight of my eyes better from some sheltered
-position on the upper part of the road. Even on
-the ridge, however, I take advantage of every
-tuft of spruces to stand still for a bit, looking
-especially at the mountain itself, so big, so bare,
-and so solid: East Peak, South Peak, and <i>the</i>
-Peak, as they are called, although neither of
-them is in the slightest degree peaked, with the
-great gulf of Jobildunk—in which Baker’s
-River rises—wedged among them. If the word
-Moosilauke means a “bald place,” as it is said
-to do, then we have here another proof of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-North American Indian’s genius for fitting words
-to things.<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>Even to-day, windy and cold as it is, a butterfly
-passes over now and then (mostly red admirals),
-and smaller insects flit carelessly about.
-Insects are capable mountaineers, as I have often
-found occasion to notice. The only time I was
-ever on the sharp point of Mount Adams, where
-my companion and I had barely room to stand
-together, the air about our heads was black with
-insects of all sorts and sizes, a veritable cloud;
-and when we unscrewed the Appalachian Club’s
-brass bottle to sign the roll of visitors, we found
-that the signers immediately before us, after putting
-down a date and their names, had added,
-“Plenty of bugs.” And surely I was never pestered
-worse by black flies than once, years ago, on
-this very summit of Moosilauke. All the hours
-of a long, breathless, tropical July day they made
-life miserable for me. Better a thousand times
-such a frosty, man-compelling wind as I am now
-fleeing from.</p>
-
-<p>Once off the ridge, I can loosen my hat and
-sit down in comfort. The sun is good. How incredible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-it seems that the air is so furiously in motion
-only fifty rods back! Here it is like Elysium.
-And almost I believe that this limited prospect
-is better than the grander sweep from the summit
-itself,—less distracting and more restful. So
-half a loaf may be better than a whole one, if a
-man cannot be contented without trying to eat the
-whole one. A white-throat and a myrtle warbler
-sing to me as I nibble my sandwich. They are
-the loftiest spirits, it appears. I take off my hat
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>Already I am down far enough to catch the
-sound of running water; and every rod brings a
-new mountain into view from behind the long
-East Peak. One of the best of them all is cone-shaped
-Kearsarge, topped with its house. Now
-the white crest of Washington rises upon me,—snow
-with the sun on it; and here, by the fourth
-mileboard, are a few pale-bright spring-beauties,—five
-or six blossoms only. They have found a
-bit of earth from which the snow melted early,
-and here they are, true to their name, with the
-world on every side nothing but a desolation. If it
-is time for myrtle warblers, why not for them?
-Now I see not only Washington, but the mountains
-with it, all strangely foreshortened, so as to
-give the highest peak a most surprising preëminence.
-No wonder I was in doubt what to call it.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-In days past I have walked that whole ridge, from
-Clinton to Adams; and glad I am to remember
-it. A man should do such things while he can,
-teaching his feet to feel the ground, and letting
-his heart cheer him.</p>
-
-<p>A turn in the road, and straight below me lies
-my deserted farmhouse. Another turn, and I lose
-it. In ascending a mountain we face the path;
-in descending we face the world. I speak thus
-because at this moment I am looking down a
-charming vista,—forest-covered mountains, row
-beyond row. But for the gravel under my feet I
-might be a thousand miles from any human habitation.
-Presently a Swainson thrush whistles.
-By that token I am getting away from the summit,
-though things are still wintry enough, with
-no sign of bud or blossom.</p>
-
-<p>And look! What is that far below me, facing
-up the road? A four-footed beast of some kind.
-A bear? No; I raise my glass, and see a porcupine.
-He has his mobile, sensitive nose to the
-ground, and continues to smell, and perhaps to
-feed, as I draw nearer and nearer. By and by,
-being very near, and still unworthy of the creature’s
-notice, I roll a stone toward him. At this
-he shows a gleam of interest. He sits up, folds
-his hands,—puts his fore paws together over his
-breast,—looks at me, and then waddles a few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-steps toward the upper side of the road. “I must
-be getting out of this,” he seems to think. But
-he reconsiders his purpose, comes back, sits on
-end again and folds his hands; and then, the reconnoissance
-being satisfactory, falls to smelling
-the ground as before. I can see the tips of his
-nostrils twitching as in a kind of ecstasy. There
-must be something savory under them. Meantime,
-still with my glass lifted, I come closer and
-closer, till I am right upon him. If porcupines
-can shoot, I must be in danger of a quill. Another
-step or two, and he waddles to the lower
-side of the road. He is a vacillating body, however;
-and once more he turns to sit up and fold
-his hands. This time I hear him rattling his teeth,
-but not very fiercely,—nothing to compare with
-the gnashings of an angry woodchuck; and at
-last, when I cluck to him, he hastens his steps a
-little, as much, perhaps, as a porcupine can, and
-disappears in the brush, dragging his ridiculous,
-sloping, straw-thatched hinder parts—a combination
-of lean-to and L—after him. He has
-never cultivated speed or decision of character,
-having a better defense. So far as appearances
-go, he is certainly an odd one.</p>
-
-<p>There are no blossoms yet, nor visible promise
-of any, but once in a while a bright Atalanta (red
-admiral) butterfly flits before me. I wonder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-if I could capture one by the old schoolboy
-method? I am moved to try; but my best effort—not
-very determined, it must be confessed—ends
-in failure. Perhaps I should have had some
-golden apples.</p>
-
-<p>At last I come to a few adder’s-tongues, the
-first flowers since the five or six spring-beauties a
-mile and a half back. Yes, I am approaching the
-Flower Garden; for here is a most lovely bank
-of yellow violets, a hundred or two together, a
-real bed of them. Nobody ever saw anything
-prettier. Here, also, is the showy purple trillium,
-not so unhandsomely overgrown as it sometimes
-is, in addition to all the flowers that I noticed on
-the ascent. A garden indeed. I pull up a root
-of Dutchman’s-breeches, and sit down to examine
-the cluster of rice-like pink kernels at the base
-of the stem. Excellent fodder they must make
-for animals of some kind. “Squirrel-corn” is an
-apt name, I think, though I believe it is applied,
-not to this species, but to its relative, <i>Dicentra
-Canadensis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The whole plant is uncommonly clean-looking
-and attractive, with its pale, finely dissected leaves
-and its delicate, waxy bloom; but looking at
-it, and then at a bank of round-leaved violets opposite,
-I say once more, “Those are <i>my</i> flowers.”
-Something in the shade of color is most exactly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-to my taste. The very sight of them gladdens
-me like sunshine. But before I get out of the
-garden, as I am in no haste to do (if it was attractive
-this morning, it is doubly so now, after
-those miles of snowbanks), I am near to changing
-my mind; for suddenly, as my eye follows
-the border of the road, it falls upon a small blue
-violet, the first of that color that I have noticed
-since my arrival at Moosilauke. It must be my
-long-desired <i>Selkirkii</i>, I say to myself, and down
-I go to look at it. Yes, it is not leafy-stemmed,
-the petals are not bearded, and the leaves are unlike
-any I have ever seen. I take it up, root and
-all, and search carefully till I find one more. If
-it <i>is</i> Selkirkii, as I feel sure it is,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> then I am
-happy. This is the one species of our eastern North
-American violets that I have never picked. It
-completes my set. And it is especially good to
-find it here, where I was not in the least expecting
-it. With the two specimens in my pocket I
-trudge the remaining two miles in high spirits.
-The violets are no newer to me than the liverwort
-specimens on Mount Cushman were, but
-they have the incomparable advantage of things
-long looked for,—things for the lack of which,
-so to speak, a pigeonhole in the mind has stood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-consciously vacant. Blessed are they who want
-something, for when they get it they will be
-glad.</p>
-
-<p>The weather below had been warm and still,
-a touch of real summer. So said the people at
-the hotel; and I knew it already; for, as I came
-through the cattle pasture, I saw below me a
-new, strange-looking, brightly illuminated grove
-of young birches. “Were those trees there this
-morning?” I thought. A single day had covered
-them with sunny, yellow-green leaves, till
-the change was like a miracle. Indeed, it <i>was</i> a
-miracle. May the spring never come when I shall
-fail to feel it so. Then I looked back at the summit.
-Was it there, no farther away than that,
-that so icy a wind had chased me about?—or
-had I been in Greenland?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A WEEK ON MOUNT WASHINGTON</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I went</span> up Mount Washington in the afternoon
-of August 22d, and came down again in the
-afternoon of the 29th. Ten years before I had
-spent a week there, in early July, and had not
-visited the place since. In some respects, of
-course, the summit is badly damaged (I have
-heard it spoken of as utterly ruined) by the presence
-of the hotel and other buildings, not to mention
-the railway trains, with their daily freight
-of bustling lunch-box tourists. Still the railway
-and the hotel are indisputable conveniences;
-I should hardly have stayed there so long without
-them; and in this imperfect world we must
-not expect to find all the good things in one
-basket.</p>
-
-<p>As for the tourists, one need walk but a few
-steps to be rid of them. As a class they are
-not enterprising pedestrians. In fifteen minutes
-you may find yourself where human beings are
-as far away, practically, as if you were among
-the highest Andes or on the famous “peak in
-Darien.” There you may sit on a boulder, or recline
-on a mat of prostrate willow, and imagine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-yourself the only man in the world; gazing at the
-prospect, listening to the mountain silence (there
-is none like it), or eating alpine blueberries, as
-lonely as any hermit’s heart could wish. All this
-you may do, and then return to the most obliging
-of hosts, the best of good dinners, and a comfortable
-bed.</p>
-
-<p>By the time you have been there two days,
-moreover, you will have begun to enjoy the hotel,
-not only for its physical comforts, but as an interesting
-miniature world. The manager and the
-clerk, the waiters and the bellboys, the editors
-and the printers, the night watchman and the
-train conductor, will all have become your friends,
-almost your blood relations,—such intimate
-good feeling does a joint seclusion induce,—and
-at any minute of the day in may come a group
-of strangers of the most engagingly picturesque
-sort; having no more the appearance of sales-ladies
-or women of fashion, shopkeepers or
-bankers’ clerks, than of college students and
-professors. They are men and women. They
-have put off the fine clothes and the smug appearance
-which society exacts of its members;
-they look not the least in the world as if they
-had just come out of a bandbox; their <i>negligée</i>
-costumes bear no resemblance to the dainty, immaculate
-rig of the tennis court or the golf links.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-They are “roughing it” in earnest. For at least
-eight or ten hours, possibly for as many days,
-they have ceased to be concerned about the cut
-of their garments or the smoothness of their hair.
-Of some of them the aspect is fairly disreputable.
-It is a solemn fact that you may here see gentlemen
-with rents in their trousers and a week’s
-beard on their faces. And ten to one they will
-brazen it out without apology.</p>
-
-<p>The dapper clerk and the prosperous merchant
-and his wife, who have ridden up in the train
-with their good clothes and their company faces
-on, may stare if they will. It is nothing to the
-campers and walkers. They are not on parade,
-and do not mind being smiled at. A pretty college
-girl will walk about the office, alpenstock
-in hand, with her hair tied in a careless knot,
-her skirts well above the tops of her scratched
-and dusty boots, her face brown and her sleeves
-tucked up, and seem quite as much at ease as if
-she were in full evening dress with the drawing-room
-lights blazing upon her alabaster shoulders,
-her laces, and her diamonds. It is heroism (or
-heroinism) of a kind worth seeing.</p>
-
-<p>You are still enjoying the spectacle when two
-men enter the door, one with a botanical box
-slung over his shoulder. It is as if he had given
-you the Masonic grip, and you hardly wait for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-him to cross the sill before you make up to him
-with a question. By which route has he come,
-and what luck has he met with? Over the Crawford
-path, he answers, and though the season is
-pretty late, and Alpine plants are mostly out of
-bloom, he has found some interesting things.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three of them he cannot name, and he
-opens the box. His special puzzle is a tiny, upright-growing
-plant, thickly set with roundish,
-crinkled leaves, and bearing a few blossoms so
-exceedingly small as almost to defy a common
-pocket-lens. Do you know what it is? Yes, to
-your own surprise, you remember, or seem to remember,
-and you run upstairs to bring down a
-Gray’s Manual. The plant is <i>Euphrasia</i> (eyebright),
-an Alpine variety. It was pointed out
-to you ten years ago, near the same Crawford
-path, by the man who knew the Mount Washington
-flora better than any one else. You recall
-the time as if it had been yesterday. Your companion
-dropped suddenly upon his knees, eyes
-to the ground. “What are you looking for?”
-you asked; and he answered “Euphrasia.” It
-is good to see it again. You find it for yourself
-the next day, it may be, in the Alpine Garden.</p>
-
-<p>And this other plant, stiffly matted and long
-past flowering? Your new acquaintance supposes
-it to be <i>Diapensia</i>; and for that you need no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-book. And this third one, with its rusty leaves,
-is the Lapland azalea. You remember the day
-you saw it first—in middle June—when all by
-yourself you were making your first ascent of the
-mountain, walking alternately over snowbanks
-and beds of flowers. So far as the lovely blossoms
-are concerned, you have never seen it since.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning your botanist bids you good-by;
-he is going down by the way of Tuckerman’s
-Ravine; and at noon, after some indolent, happy
-hours on the carriage-road and in the Alpine
-Garden, you are again in the hotel office when
-half a dozen campers from the northern peaks
-make their appearance. Dusty, travel-stained,
-disheveled, they bring the freedom of the hills
-with them and fill the place with their breeziness.
-Some of the “transients” clustered about
-the stove smile at a sight so unconventional, but
-the manager, the clerk, and the bellboys are better
-informed. They have seen the leader of the
-party before, and in a minute the word is passed
-round. This is Mr. ——, who came up the mountain
-with his son a year ago on the day of that
-dreadful storm, when two later adventurers upon
-the same path perished by the way, and he himself,
-old mountaineer that he was, with another
-life hanging upon his own, had more than once
-been all but ready to say, “It can’t be done.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-Your traveling companion has seen him here
-before, though she was not present on that memorable
-occasion, and presently you are being introduced
-to him and his friends—a metropolitan
-clergyman, a university professor, and a younger
-man, with whose excellent work in your own line
-you are already acquainted.</p>
-
-<p>Anon the company breaks up,—the pedestrians
-are off for an afternoon excursion,—and
-you step out upon the platform to look about
-you. Against the railing are two men, one of
-them with what seems to be a “collecting gun”
-in his hand. “An ornithologist,” you say to
-yourself, and at the word you begin edging toward
-him. A remark or two about the weather
-and you ask him point-blank if he is collecting
-birds. No, he answers, his weapon is a rifle, and
-he shows you the cartridge. He has brought it
-along to shoot squirrels with. You wonder why
-any one should think it worth while to carry a
-gun over the nine miles of the Crawford path
-for so trifling a use; but that is none of your
-business, and just then the other man speaks up
-to say that his companion is a botanist, while he
-himself is a “bird man.” This is interesting
-(the second ornithologist within an hour), and
-you set about comparing notes. Did he hear
-anything of the Bicknell thrushes and the Hudsonian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-chickadees on his way up? No, he missed
-them both on this trip, though he has met them
-elsewhere in the mountains. You drop an innocent
-remark about the thrushes, and he says,
-“Are you Mr. So-and-So?” There is no denying
-it, and when he pronounces his own name it
-proves to be familiar; and a good talk follows.
-Then he starts down into the Alpine Garden,—you
-charging him to be sure to eat some of the
-delicious cespitose blueberries on the descent,—and
-ten minutes afterward he turns up again at
-your elbow. He has left his friend, and has
-hurried back to tell you of a sharp-shinned hawk
-that he has just seen. You may put the name
-into your Mount Washington bird list, if you
-will.</p>
-
-<p>So the days pass—no day without a new
-acquaintance. If you and one of the local editors
-start down the trail to the Lakes of the
-Clouds after a Sunday-morning breakfast, you
-find yourselves going along with three Baltimore
-gentlemen, who have walked up from the Crawford
-House the day before (“Well, we arrive!”
-you remember to have heard the leader exclaim,
-as his foot struck the hotel platform), and are
-now on their return.</p>
-
-<p>They introduce one another to you and your
-companion,—Dr. This, Dr. That, and Dr. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-Other,—and you pick your way downward over
-the boulders in Indian file, talking as you go.
-After a while you and the oldest of the Baltimoreans
-find yourselves falling a little behind
-the rest, and the conversation grows more and
-more friendly. He has come to New Hampshire,
-as he does every year, for the best of all tonics,
-a dose of mountain climbing. He has been somewhat
-overworked of late, especially with a long
-task of proof-reading. A new edition of his
-treatise on chemistry is passing through the
-press, and the moment the last sheets were corrected
-he broke away northward; and here he
-is, walking over high places, where he loves to be.
-“I am an old man,” he says; but his strength
-is not abated. Far be the day! At the lakeside
-hands are shaken and good-bys said. You will
-most likely never see each other again, but one
-of you, at least, keeps a bright memory.</p>
-
-<p>It is a strange place, the Summit House.
-Twice a day, as on the seashore, the tide rises
-and falls. But the evening flood is a small affair.
-The crowd comes at noon. It registers its name,
-eats its luncheon, writes a postal-card, buys a
-souvenir, asks a question or two, more or less
-pertinent (“Can you tell me where the Tip-Over
-House is?” one good woman said—for
-the rarified air plays queer pranks with its victims),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-possibly looks at the prospect, probably
-snaps a camera, and then takes the after-dinner
-train for the base. Evening passengers make
-a longer stay. They cannot do otherwise. For
-them the sunset and the sunrise are the great
-events. One would think that such phenomena
-were never to be witnessed in the low country.
-They watch the clouds, or more likely the cloud,
-and go to sleep with one ear open for the sunrise
-bell.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the larger number of Summit
-House guests, the respectable majority. A few,
-two in twenty, perhaps, arrive on foot; and
-these are the good ones—the salt of the mountain,
-so to speak. This time I was not one of
-them, but I had no thought of denying the
-superiority of their privilege.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">ABOVE THE BIRDS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the course of my seven days at the summit of
-Mount Washington I listed six species of birds.
-A few snowbirds—three or four—were to be
-found almost always in the neighborhood of the
-stables; a myrtle warbler was seen on the climb
-up the cone from the Lakes of the Clouds;
-twice I heard a goldfinch passing somewhere
-overhead; a sharp-shinned hawk, as I took it to
-be, showed itself one day, none too clearly, flying
-through the mist; and the next afternoon, as I
-sat in the rear of the old Tip-Top House waiting
-for the glories of the sunset, a sparrow hawk
-shot past me so near as to display not only his
-rusty tail, but the black bands on the side of his
-neck. Here are five species. The sixth was one
-that, rightly or wrongly, I should not have expected
-to find in so treeless a place. I speak of
-the red-breasted (or Canadian) nuthatch. On
-two mornings, as all hands were out upon the
-platform at sunrise, we heard the characteristic
-nasal calls of this northern forester, and saw two
-birds scrambling about the roofs of the buildings;
-and more than once at other times I noticed one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-or two on the wing. The species is very common
-this season in Franconia,—where it was extremely
-scarce a year ago,—and I was pleased
-at the summit when a lady standing near me
-remarked to her husband, “Why, that is the
-note we have been hearing so continually at the
-Rangeleys.” It was so incessant there, she told
-me, as to be almost a trouble. Let us hope that
-this autumnal abundance in New Hampshire
-foreshadows a nuthatch winter in Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p>The all but total absence of birds at the
-summit was a most striking thing. It helped
-greatly to intensify the loneliness and the
-silence; that wonderful mountain silence—no
-leaf to rustle, no brook to murmur, no bird to
-sing—which, wherever I walked, I was always
-stopping to listen to. I should love to praise it,
-but language for such a purpose would need to
-be found on the spot, the stillness itself suggesting
-the words; and I came down from the
-summit more than a week ago. It must have
-been, I think, something like that apocalyptic
-“silence in heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>As for the birds, I should have felt their
-absence more disagreeably but for the fact that
-I had a novel and absorbing occupation with
-which to enliven my walks, and even to beguile
-effectually what otherwise might have been the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-idle odds and ends of the day. For the nonce I
-had turned entomological collector. My search
-was for rare Alpine insects. Not that I knew
-anything about them; it would have been all
-one to me if most of what I saw had been created
-out of nothing the day before; but I was in
-learned company and needed no science of my
-own. My part was to carry a “cyanide bottle”
-and put into it any beetle, moth, fly, or other
-insect—ants and spiders excepted—on which
-I could lay my ignorant fingers. The possessor
-of the learning—enough and to spare for the
-two of us—has made many collecting visits to
-the summit; her list of Mount Washington
-species numbers more than sixteen hundred, if
-I remember the figures correctly, and no inconsiderable
-proportion of them are honored with
-her name. A proud lot they would be, if they
-knew it. But the end is not yet; there are
-many winged mountaineers still to be pinned,
-and in the prosecution of such an enterprise, so
-she gave me to understand, two bottles are better
-than one, no matter who carries the second one.
-Her language was rather encouraging than complimentary,
-it might have seemed, but I did not
-mind; and for seven days I was never without a
-bottle about my person except when I lay in bed.</p>
-
-<p>If I went down to the Lakes of the Clouds,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-for example, the poison-bottle went with me;
-and the looker-on, had there been one,—as
-luckily there wasn’t,—might have seen me on
-my knees, with hands outstretched over the
-water, struggling to snatch from the surface
-a poor, unhappy “skater,” or a “lucky-bug”
-(it really was lucky, for it got away while the
-skater perished), as a possible prize for my
-lady’s cork-lined box. On all my jaunts down
-the carriage-road (and they were many, longer
-or shorter, that route offering the readiest means
-of escape from the frequent summit-capping
-cloud) the same scientific vial was my companion.
-If a grasshopper jumped (not the common
-one with banded legs, of which I saw a superfluity,
-but a handsome, rare-looking green fellow,
-making me think of Leigh Hunt’s “green little
-vaulter in the sunny grass”), I stole murderously
-after him, and with a reckless clutch at
-the stunted bush on which he had settled I
-gathered him in and put him to sleep. (This
-was well done, for he was really of a wingless
-Alpine species, and only my employer’s third
-specimen of his kind.) If a “daddy-long-legs,”
-prayerless friend of my childhood, crawled
-across the way, he, too, hapless creature, with
-legs so superfluously numerous and elongated
-that he could not hurry, even to save his life,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-fell a victim to my uninstructed zeal. He died
-easily, for all his undevout habits, but the sacrifice
-was useless. He proved to be no longer
-among the entomologist’s desiderata, though he
-also is Alpine, and it is not many years since
-she herself discovered him here, an insect till
-then unregistered by human science.</p>
-
-<p>All caterpillars I was bidden to bring in alive;
-and so, of course, I did, rolling them up in
-scraps of soft paper and committing them tenderly
-to a pocket. My chief business, however,
-after I had breathed the air, eaten my fill of
-mountain blueberries (“Happy,” said I, “is the
-mouth that feeds on such manna”), and looked
-my fill at the northern peaks,—for I was not
-employed by the day, but by the piece, and
-could steal an hour to myself now and then with
-a clear conscience,—my principal occupation, I
-say, was to pry under the boulders for beetles.
-“Leave no stone unturned,” the entomologist
-had said, with her fine gift of laconic quotation;
-but she could not have intended the commission
-to be taken literally. The stones were too
-many, and human existence is too brief. She
-meant no more than that I should use a reasonable
-diligence; and so much I surely did, till
-the ends of my fingers were in danger of being
-skinned alive. Down on all fours I got, lifted a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-stone quickly, fastened an eagle eye upon the
-exposed hollow, and if a dark object, no matter
-how small or how large, was seen to be scurrying
-to its burrow, I thrust my fingers into the
-dirt in frantic efforts to seize it. I knew not
-which were common and which rare; my only
-course was to let none escape. But many were
-too swift for me, with all my efforts, and of
-all that I captured in this manner I am not
-sure that one was “worth mounting.” I quote
-those last two words partly by way of emphasis.
-They stood for the lowest round in the ladder of
-my entomological ambition. What I most of all
-desired was to discover a new species; next I
-coveted a species new to New England; after
-that a species new to Mount Washington; and
-last of all a specimen worth saving, or, as my
-employer said, “worth mounting”—in short,
-worth a pin.</p>
-
-<p>My most productive field, like her own, was
-about the front of the hotel itself. In warm
-afternoons flies, beetles, moths and what not are
-known to drop out of the invisible, from nobody
-can tell where, upon the windows or the white
-clapboards of the house. Here, not once, but
-with something like regularity, insects have been
-captured, the like of which have never been seen
-elsewhere except in the West Indies or Mexico,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-in Greenland or among the Rocky Mountains.
-How such wanderers come, and why, are among
-the things that no man knoweth. Enough that
-they are known to come. And who could tell
-but one might have come for me? Here, at all
-events, was my golden opportunity. Let me not
-miss it. If by chance, therefore, the lady herself
-stepped inside for a minute or two, I hastened to
-take her place. Tourists by the dozen might be
-watching me curiously, or even derisively, my
-equanimity was undisturbed. Science is a shield.
-Vial in hand (my <i>vade-mecum</i> I called it, Latin
-being in the air), I walked along the platform,
-with my eyes upon the glass and the paint, and
-woe to the unlucky insect that was there taking
-the sun. The yawning mouth of a bottle was
-clapped over him, the world swam before his
-eyes, and long before he knew it he was on his
-way to be a specimen. Strange things happen to
-insects, though they are not the only ones who
-have found perdition in a bottle.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes I climbed the stairs to the upper
-floors of the observatory. No matter how high I
-went, the higher the better. In the warm hours
-of the day the air at the very top was almost a
-cloud of tiny wings. “Excelsior” is the insects’
-watchword. Once, in the upper room, I bottled
-carelessly a small black-and-white moth. Its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-appearance was ordinary enough; no doubt it
-was common; but it was an insect, and hit or
-miss I took it in. And in due course it went
-into the entomologist’s hands with the rest of
-the catch. She emptied the vial, and passed an
-unexciting comment or two upon the few flies
-and beetles it contained; perhaps she remarked
-that one of them might be worth mounting—I
-do not remember precisely; it was a way she
-had of egging me on; but the next morning she
-said: “You didn’t tell me anything about the
-lovely moth you took yesterday.” I was obliged
-to stop and think. “Oh, that little black-and-white
-thing,” I said. Yes, that was the one—“new
-to the summit.” If I was not proud, then
-pride does not dwell in earthly minds. This, I
-confide, was not my only contribution to the
-fauna of our highest New England mountain;
-I seem to remember a short-winged beetle also;
-but the moth, being in the Lepidoptera, is my
-especial glory. I wish I could recall its name,
-that I might print it here for the reading of
-future generations.</p>
-
-<p>With such pursuits did I improve the spare
-hours of my Mount Washington week. I have
-no thought of boasting. At least I would not
-seem to do so. It was little enough that I accomplished,
-or could hope to accomplish, hampered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-as I was by my ignorance. Probably I shall
-never have a beetle, much less a moth, named
-after me; but with that precious black-and-white
-rarity in mind I feel that even in the way of
-entomology I have not lived altogether in vain.</p>
-
-<p>Scientific studies apart, the best hours of the
-week (after some spent along the carriage-road,
-resting here and there upon a boulder to enjoy
-the magnificent, ever-shifting prospect, and some—not
-hours, alas, but minutes—spent in eating
-the ambrosial, banana-savored, soul-satisfying
-berries of <i>Vaccinium cæspitosum</i>)—my best
-hours, I say, were perhaps those of a certain wonderful
-evening. The air was warm, no breath
-stirring, the sky clear, and the half world below
-us, as we walked the hotel platform, lay covered
-with white clouds, on which the full moon was
-shining. The stillness, the mildness, the brightness,
-the sense of elevation, and the bewitching,
-unearthly scene, all this was like an evening in
-fairyland. For the time being, it is to be feared,
-even the rarest of moths would have seemed a
-matter of secondary importance. Such is the
-power of beauty. So truly was it born to make
-other things forgotten.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">MOUNTAIN-TOP AND VALLEY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nothing</span> heightens appreciation like a contrast.
-After a week at the summit of Mount Washington,
-where we lived in the clouds and above
-them, in a world above the world, we returned
-to the lowlands. The afternoon was sultry, and
-before the descent was half accomplished—by
-the train—we wished ourselves back again on
-the heights. How can men live in such an atmosphere,
-we asked each other; so stifling, so
-depressing, so wanting in all the elements of vitality.
-Our condition seemed like that of fishes
-out of water, and we began to think of angling
-as a cruel sport. It grieved us to see the trees
-growing taller. Even the laughing young Ammonoosuc
-was looked upon with indifference. “I
-wish I were back,” said one; and the other responded,
-“So do I.”</p>
-
-<p>At Fabyan’s the crowd surged about us like a
-sea. Baggage must be found and checked, our
-train was waiting, and the baggage-master, true
-railway “official” that he was, was not to be
-hastened. His steps were all taken by rule, and
-every movement of his hands was set to slow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-music. When he spoke, which was seldom, it was
-in a muffled voice and with funereal moderation.
-In the midst of all that bustle he was calm—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">“Calm as to suit a calmer grief.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>You might say what you pleased to him, be
-urgently argumentative, or plaintive even to
-wheedling, it was all one. Your eloquence was
-wasted. It was like nudging a graven image, or
-crying haste in the ear of Death. Not a feature
-of his countenance altered, not a muscle quickened.
-Who ever knew the hands of a clock to
-accelerate their pace in response to human impatience?
-Time and tide—and a baggage-master—hurry
-for no man.</p>
-
-<p>“Two trunks for Bethlehem,” you say. No
-answer. By and by, meekly insistent, and thinking
-that by this time your turn must surely have
-come, you repeat the words. No answer. But the
-man is taking down checks from their peg, and
-in due time, stepping as to the measure of a
-dirge, he marches with them down the platform.
-“These are mine,” you say, keeping an uneasy
-pace or two in advance and pointing to the
-trunks on the truck. No answer—not so much
-as a look. Nor is there need of any. You are
-silenced. That implacable manner carries all
-before it. You could not speak again, even to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-claim your soul. But finally the man himself
-speaks. You are relieved to know he can. He
-is addressing you. The minute hand is at twelve
-and the clock strikes. “These are yours?” he
-asks. You reply in the affirmative, as best you
-are able. “For Bethlehem?” he asks, and you
-answer “Yes.” And then, after one more set of
-machine-like motions, the mighty work is accomplished.
-The checks are yours. Fortunately, the
-train has not yet pulled away, though it is past
-the time, and at the last moment you see the
-trunks on board.</p>
-
-<p>Trifles like these would have been as nothing, of
-course, to ordinary travelers; but to us, innocent
-Carthusians, fresh from the unearthly quiet of a
-mountain-top, they were little short of tragical.
-And how intolerably hot and close the car was!
-Things were growing worse and worse with us.
-Should we live to reach Bethlehem, with nothing
-but this blast out of Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace
-in our nostrils? Why had we not remained
-where existence was not a struggle, but a dream
-of pleasure; where the air had not to be gasped
-for, but came of itself to be sweetly inhaled?
-Nevertheless, we survived the passage,—the conductor
-helping to pass the time by stopping in
-the aisle to make inquiries touching a little flock
-of puzzling birds, crossbills, perhaps, lately seen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-in his apple orchard,—and at Bethlehem the
-carriage awaited us. This was a welcome change,
-but even so we still found it difficult to draw
-breath; and when the horses started, what a
-dust they set flying! Truly, between the heat
-and the drought, this lower world was in an evil
-case. It was a road of sighs all the six miles to
-Franconia.</p>
-
-<p>Once there, however, and supper eaten, I
-stepped out upon the piazza and looked westward.
-Venus was bright just above the near
-horizon (the <i>near</i> horizon!), and against the
-sunset sky stood a line of low woods, with detached
-pine trees towering over the rest. And in
-that sight I discovered anew, all in a moment,
-the charm of this valley world. I had seen nothing
-like this from the mountain-top. Yes, good
-as the summit prospect was, this was in some
-respects better. If that was more magnificent,
-more soul-expanding, this was more home-felt
-and beautiful. And as I looked and looked, while
-the light faded out of the sky, I was conscious
-of a new contentment. Mountain-tops for visits,
-I said, and may I enjoy them often; but the
-valley to live in.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning I was no sooner abroad
-than this happy impression was renewed and
-deepened. It was a comfort to the feet to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-going neither uphill nor downhill, and it rested
-the eyes to be looking not at remote peaks and
-dimly discovered sheets of water, but into green
-branches so near that the leaves could be seen,
-and the blue sky through them. How sweetly
-the ripple of the brook came to my ears as it
-ran over its stony bed just beyond the velvety,
-smooth meadow! And the cawing of a dozen or
-two of crows, who were talking politics among the
-pines on the hillside, affected me most agreeably.
-There was something of real neighborliness about
-it. I would gladly have taken a hand in the discussion,
-if they would have let me. When a song
-sparrow started out of the hedge at my elbow
-it gave me a start of surprise. I had become so
-unused to such movements! A robin’s sudden
-cackle I thought almost the sweetest of music;
-the careless warble of a bluebird was nothing
-less than a voice from heaven; and a squirrel
-sputtering defiance from the stone wall set me
-laughing with pleasure. None of these sounds,
-nor anything akin to them, was to be heard on
-the desolate, boulder-covered top of Mount
-Washington.</p>
-
-<p>Now the trees interlaced their branches over
-my head. Nothing could be prettier; and the
-effect was so novel! I stopped short to admire
-it. And anon, as the road made a little ascent,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-scarcely noticeable to one fresh from the steepness
-of a mountain cone, I found myself gazing
-down upon one of the most engaging scenes in
-the world; a sequestered valley farm, thrifty-looking,
-snugly kept, nestled among low hills,
-with a mountain river winding along the farther
-side of it, between the meadow and the woodland,
-now lost to sight, now shining in the sun. I had
-known the place for years, as I had known the
-worthy man who owns it; and I had looked at
-it many times from this very point; but I had
-never seen it till this morning. A pleasant thing
-it is when an old picture or an old poem, or both
-in one, is thus made new. If our eyes could but
-oftener be anointed!</p>
-
-<p>The softness of the meadow, freshly sprung
-after the summer mowing, the glistening of the
-corn leaves, the narrow road,—a brown ribbon
-laid upon the green carpet,—that runs to the
-door and stops (for nothing goes by—nothing
-but the river, the clouds, and the birds), the shade
-trees clustered lovingly about the house, the whole
-pastoral scene, I saw it all with the vision of one
-who had been looking at a vaguely defined, far-away
-world, over which the eye wandered as the
-dove wandered over the face of the waters, and
-now had come suddenly in sight of home.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, distance is a good painter, but nearness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-is a better one. So I felt for the time being, at
-all events, falling in with the mood of the hour;
-for it is well that moods alter, as it is well that
-the earth goes round the sun and season gives
-place to season. Man was not made to see one
-kind of beauty, or to believe in one kind of goodness.
-The whole world is hid in his heart. All
-things are his. The small and the great, the near
-and the far, light and darkness, good and evil,
-the intimacies of home and the isolations of infinite
-space, all are parts of the Creator’s work,
-and equally parts of the creature’s inheritance.</p>
-
-<p>For to-day, then, I praise the valley. I am for
-having the hills close about me, rather than afar
-off and far below. I like to see the trees, and the
-leaves on them, rather than leagues on leagues
-of barely discernible forest; and a lonely pool of
-still water at my feet, with alders reflected in it,
-is more in my eyes than Lake Umbagog itself,
-hardly better than a blur upon the landscape,
-fifty miles away. To-morrow I may feel differently,
-but for to-day let me listen to the breeze in the
-pine branches and the brook pattering over stones,
-rather than to the eternal silences of the bare
-mountain-top and the brooding sky.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">IN THE MOUNT LAFAYETTE FOREST</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is one of the cool mornings that descend
-rather suddenly upon our White Mountain
-country with the coming of autumn; cool mornings
-that are liable to be followed by warm days.
-I was in doubt how to dress as I set out, and
-for the first mile or two almost regretted that I
-had not taken an extra garment. Then all at
-once the sun broke through the clouds, and even
-the one coat became superfluous and was thrown
-over my arm. This state of things lasted till I
-had crossed the golf links and entered the woods.
-At that point the sun withdrew his shining, and
-now, between the clouds and the shadow and
-dampness of the forest, I have put on my coat
-again and buttoned it up; and what counts for
-more, I am driven to walk less slowly than one
-would always prefer to do in such a place.</p>
-
-<p>A fresh breeze stirs the tree-tops, so that I am
-not without music, let the birds be as silent as
-they will. Nearly or quite the only voice I have
-so far heard was that of an unseen Maryland
-yellow-throat, some distance back, who sprang
-into the air and delivered himself of a song with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-variations, all in his most rapturous June manner.
-Why the fellow should have been in anything
-like an ecstasy at that precise moment is
-quite beyond my guessing. Possibly it would be
-equally beyond his, if he were to stop to think
-about it. Some sudden stirring of memory, perhaps.
-Natural beings seldom know just why
-they are happy. I recall the fact, unthought of
-till now, that I have not heard a yellow-throat
-sing before for several weeks, though I have
-seen the birds often. They are among the late
-stayers, and at this season have a more or less
-lonesome look, being commonly found not as
-members of a flock or family, after the manner
-of autumnal warblers in general, but here and
-there one, dodging about in a roadside thicket,
-or peeping out curiously at a casual passer-by.</p>
-
-<p>Just as I am remarking upon the unusual
-silence my ear catches in the far distance the
-song of a white-throated sparrow. So very far
-off it is that the sound barely reaches me. Indeed,
-I do not so much hear it as become vaguely
-conscious that I should hear it if the bird were
-ever so little nearer. Yet I am sure he sang—as
-sure as if I had seen him. Probably experienced
-readers will divine what I mean, although
-I seem unable to express it.</p>
-
-<p>The road is bordered with the dead tops of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-trees, thrown there in heaps by the road-makers.
-They form an unsightly hedge, which birds of
-various kinds resort to for cover. At this minute
-two winter wrens, pert-looking, bob-tailed things,
-scold at me out of it. My passing is a trespass,
-they consider, and they tell me so with emphasis.
-For the sake of stirring them up to protest even
-more vigorously (such an eloquent gesticulatory
-manner as they have), I stand still and squeak
-to them. Few birds can be quiet under such insults;
-and the winter wren is not one of them.
-There is nothing phlegmatic about his disposition.
-He is like some beings of a higher class:
-it takes very little to set him in a flutter. So I
-squeak and squeak, and the pair vociferate <i>tut,
-tut</i>, till I have had enough and go on my way
-laughing. Touchy people were made for teasing.</p>
-
-<p>I have hardly started before a hairy woodpecker’s
-sharp signal is heard, and within a minute
-a sapsucker on the opposite side of the way
-utters a snarling note, which by a slight effort
-of the imagination might be taken for the voice
-of an angry cat. To my ear it is not in the
-smallest degree woodpeckerish. I see the bird a
-moment later as he flies across the road.</p>
-
-<p>In a mountain-side forest like this, near the
-mountain’s foot, the traveler, if he is not climbing
-the slope but crossing it transversely, is certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-to come now and then upon a brook. I am
-on the edge of one now, and as the sun at this
-moment shines out between two clouds I stand
-still to enjoy the warmth while it lasts, and at the
-same time to hear the singing of the water. Good
-music, I call it, and fear no contradiction. It has
-the quality of some of the best verse—liquidity.
-It is broken unevenly into syllables, yet it is true
-to the beat, and it flows. In short, it is smooth,
-yet not too smooth—with the smoothness of
-water, not of oil. It speaks to every boulder as
-it passes. I wish my ear were more at home in
-the language.</p>
-
-<p>There is seldom a minute when, if I pause to
-listen, I cannot hear from one direction or another
-the quaint, homely, twangy, countryfied,
-yet to me always agreeable voice of Canadian
-nuthatches. At frequent intervals one or two
-come near enough so that I see them creeping
-about over the trees, bodies bent, heads down,
-always in search of a mouthful, yet keeping up,
-every one, his share of the universal chorus. As
-well as I can judge, all the evergreen forests of
-this Northern country are now alive with these
-pretty creatures; for they really are pretty. In
-fact, there are few forest birds for whom I cherish
-a kindlier feeling. It is too bad they do not
-summer in our Massachusetts woods, though possibly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-I should care less for them if they made
-themselves neighborly the whole year long, like
-their relatives, the white-breasts.</p>
-
-<p>A goldfinch is passing far above, dropping
-music as he goes. He is one of the high-fliers.
-Wherever you may happen to be, at the summit
-of Mount Washington or where not, you will
-pretty often hear his sweet voice as he wanders
-under the sky, dipping and rising, dipping and
-rising, voice and wing keeping step together.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there one or two clouded-sulphur
-butterflies (Philodice) take wing as I disturb
-them. They have been most extraordinarily
-abundant of late. A fortnight ago we drove for
-almost a whole forenoon through clouds of them,
-bunches of twenty or more constantly rising from
-damp spots of earth by the wayside; and in a
-meadow all bespangled with purple asters they
-were so thick as almost to conceal the flowers.
-Twinkling in the sunlight, they looked a thousand
-times more like stars than the asters themselves.
-Even the entomologists of the valley, in whose
-company I was driving, had never seen the like.
-Here in this shaded road such lovers of the sun
-are naturally less numerous. In truth, the wonder
-is that they should be here at all. And yet
-the wonder is not so very great; they wander at
-their own will, and the will of the wind. Only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-last week, I am told, in the midst of a driving
-snowstorm, one took shelter in the Summit House
-on Mount Washington. After all, a butterfly is
-not exactly a fool; it knows enough to go into
-the house when it snows.</p>
-
-<p>Now I come upon a few snowbirds, hopping
-in silence about the twigs of a brush-heap, snapping
-their tails nervously, as if proud to show
-the white feather; and shortly beyond are two
-or three white-throated sparrows. They also are
-silent. Perhaps they perceive that a red squirrel
-close by is talking enough for them and himself
-too. He says a good many things, some of
-which I feel sure would be highly interesting to
-a competent listener. Among forest folk, as
-among church folk, the rule is, “He that hath
-ears to hear, let him hear.” As for me, I can
-only lament my deficiency. A solitary vireo is
-chattering sweetly (with him music is its own
-reward), and all the while, whoever else speaks
-or keeps silence, the nuthatch chorus goes on.
-Taking New England together, we may safely
-say that just at present hundreds of thousands,
-yea, millions of <i>ank-anks</i> go up to heaven every
-minute of every day, from sunrise to sunset.</p>
-
-<p>I walk but a few rods farther before I am delighted
-by the sight of four winter wrens in an
-overturned tree-top. In my experience it is something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-extremely out of the common course to see
-so many together, and—as I did with the two
-a quarter of a mile back—I work upon this
-quartet’s sensibilities till they fairly dance with
-curiosity and indignation. I wonder if they are
-a family group.</p>
-
-<p>I bethink myself that I am saying nothing
-about the forest itself. Its presence is felt rather
-than seen, a grateful solemnity; but the temperature
-will not suffer me to sit down and
-enjoy it as a Christian should. And just here I
-emerge into territory over which a fire has swept
-within a few years. Under these dead trees I
-get the sun again, and can go slowly. Nothing
-in the way of physical comfort is more grateful
-than warmth after coolness, unless it be coolness
-after warmth. A pine siskin calls, the first for
-some weeks, and another hairy woodpecker shows
-himself. Not a warbler has been seen since I
-entered the woods. Of the flycatchers, too,—olive-sides
-and wood pewees,—which were always
-conspicuous in this burning in August and
-early September, there is neither sight nor sound.
-Their season is done. Crossbill notes lead me to
-look upward, and I see four birds flying past.
-Restless, nomadic souls! Like the saints, they
-have “no continuing city.”</p>
-
-<p>Another half-mile in the leafy forest, and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-reach the foot of Echo Lake, where as I pass a
-cluster of balsam firs I am saluted by the busy,
-hurried calls of golden-crowned kinglets. A wren
-is here also, irritable as ever, and hearing a
-chickadee’s voice, I whistle and chirp to him.
-If I can set him to scolding, all the birds in the
-neighborhood will flock this way to ascertain
-what the trouble is. The device works to a
-charm; in half a minute the excitement is
-intense. Nuthatches, white-throats, chickadees,
-kinglets, and wren, all take a hand in vituperating
-the intruder, and a youthful redstart comes
-from the opposite side of the way to satisfy his
-more gentle curiosity. One creature, strangely
-enough, remains neutral: a red squirrel, who
-sits on end at the top of a stump and gazes at
-me in silence. He holds one hand upon his heart,
-like an opera singer, and looks and looks. “You
-sentimental goose!” I say; “who taught you
-that trick?” and I laugh at him and pass on.
-This is near the corner of the old Notch road,
-and as I round it and face the cold northerly
-wind I button my coat about me and start
-homeward at a quicker pace.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">ON BALD MOUNTAIN</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Four</span> inches of snow at the Profile House:”
-such was the word brought to us at the breakfast
-table, the driver of the “stage” having
-communicated the intelligence as he passed the
-hotel an hour or two earlier. We were not
-surprised. It rained in Franconia night before
-last, and yesterday, when the clouds now and
-then lifted a little, the sides of the mountains
-were seen to be white. This morning (October
-7), although even the lower slopes were veiled,
-the day promised well, and at the first minute I
-set out for the Notch.</p>
-
-<p>It was evident almost immediately that at
-some time within the last forty-eight hours there
-had been a great influx of migrating birds.
-Song sparrows, white-throated sparrows, snowbirds,
-bluebirds, and myrtle warblers were in
-extraordinary force. Soon I began to hear the
-wrennish calls of ruby-crowned kinglets,—which
-have been very scarce hitherto,—and
-presently more than one was heard rehearsing
-its pretty song. What with bluebird voices,
-song sparrows’ warblings (no set tune, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-“continuous melody”), the cackle of robins,
-and the croaking of rusty blackbirds, the air
-was loud. To these travelers, as to me, the
-weather seemed to be changing for the better,
-though the sun did not yet show itself, and finding
-themselves in so delectable a valley, they
-were in exuberant spirits.</p>
-
-<p>Just above the Profile House farm the road
-took me into a flock of birds that proved to be
-the better part of half a mile in length. The
-wayside hedges were literally in a flutter, snowbirds
-being the most abundant, I think, with
-white-throats and myrtle warblers not far
-behind. Hermit thrushes, winter wrens, chipping
-sparrows, song sparrows, and ruby-crowns
-were continually in sight, and an unseen purple
-finch was practicing niggardly, disconnected,
-vireo-like phrases, as the manner of his kind is
-in the autumnal season.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the older forest was reached,
-there came an interval of silence, broken at last
-by the distant, or distant-seeming, voice of a
-red-breasted nuthatch and the cheerful notes of
-chickadees. Soon two hermits showed themselves,
-facing me on a low perch, and lifting
-their tails solemnly in response to my chirping;
-and not far away were a winter wren or two,
-and a flock of white-throats and snowbirds. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-had never seen the dear old road birdier, even
-in May, though of course I had often seen the
-number of species very much larger.</p>
-
-<p>At the height of land I came upon the first
-snow, a ragged fringe left on the shady side of
-the way. I made a snowball, for the sake of
-doing it (or, as I said to myself, suiting the boyish
-act with a boyish word, “for greens”), and
-decided all at once not to go down into the
-Notch, but up to the top of Bald Mountain.
-From that point, if the sky cleared, as I felt
-hopeful it would, there would be sights worth
-remembering.</p>
-
-<p>The mountain is only a little one, but it is
-steep enough—the upper half, at all events—to
-give the eager pedestrian a puff for his
-money. For myself, I had time to spare, and,
-fortunately or unfortunately, had been over the
-path too often to be subject to the state of
-mind (I know it well) which we may characterize
-as climbers’ impatience. Unless something
-unforeseen should happen, the summit would
-wait for me. Halfway up, also, a flock of blue
-jays, five or six at least, who were holding a
-long and mysterious confabulation close by the
-path, afforded me a comfortable breathing spell.
-For a moment I suspected the presence of an
-owl, against whom the rascals were plotting mischief;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-but their voices were much of the time
-too soft, too intimate-sounding, too lacking in
-belligerency. Some of the birds might even have
-been communing with themselves. Their whole
-behavior had an air of preternatural gravity and
-cunning, and their remarks, whatever the purport
-of them, were in the highest degree varied.
-One fellow was a masterly performer upon the
-bones (jay scholars will understand what I mean,
-and I should despair of explaining myself in a
-few words to any one else), while another furnished
-me with a genuine surprise by whistling
-again and again in the manner of a red-tailed
-hawk.</p>
-
-<p>Well, the conspirators dispersed, the solitary
-climber pocketed his curiosity, and in a few
-minutes longer his feet were at the top. The
-rocky cone of Lafayette was still densely
-capped, but under the fringed edges of the
-cloud there was plenty of snow in sight. All the
-upper slopes of Kinsman, Cannon, and Lafayette
-were covered with it, except that the deciduous
-trees (broad patches of yellow) stood
-bare. Apparently the snow had stuck only upon
-the evergreens, and the effect at this distance
-was very striking, the white over the green producing
-a beautiful gray. I could never have
-imagined it. The hotel and its cottages, nestled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-between the mountains, all had white roofs, but
-the landscape as a whole was anything but wintry.
-Everywhere below me the great forest still
-showed an abundance of bright hues,—red, yellow,
-and russet,—a piece of glorious pageantry,
-though many shades less brilliant than I had
-seen it two days before.</p>
-
-<p>So I am saying to myself when suddenly I
-look upward, and behold, the cap is lifted from
-Lafayette, and the mountain-top is clear white,
-shining in the sunlight against the blue sky; a
-vision, it seems; something not of this world;
-splendor immaculate, unearthly, unspeakable.
-I feel like shouting, or tell myself that I do;
-but for some reason I keep silence. Clouds
-still hang about the mountains, their shapes
-altering from glory to glory with every minute.
-Now a band lies clean across Lafayette, immediately
-below the cone, detaching the white mass
-from everything underneath, and leaving it, as
-it were, floating in the air.</p>
-
-<p>A sharp-shinned hawk sails past me, nuthatches
-call from the valley woods, a snowbird
-perches on a dwarf spruce at my elbow, a red
-squirrel breaks into sudden spluttering, and then,
-with hands uplifted, sits silent and motionless.
-I mention these details, but they are nothing.
-What I really see and feel is the world I am living<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-in: the sunshine, the stillness, the temperate
-airs, the bright encircling forest, in which
-my little hilltop is cradled, and the white peak
-yonder in the sky. The snow lends it lightness,
-airiness, buoyancy. As I said just now, it seems
-almost to float in the ether.</p>
-
-<p>I remained with this beauty for an hour, divided
-at the last between the luminous, snowy
-peak above me and the soft—ineffably soft—world
-of leafy tree-tops below. Then, as I had
-done only day before yesterday, I bade the place
-good-by. Probably I should not come this way
-again till next summer, at the soonest. Good-by,
-old mountain. Good-by, old woods. No doubt
-you have many worthier lovers, but let me be
-counted as one of the faithful.</p>
-
-<p>I was still on the cone, making my way downward,
-when a grouse drummed and in a minute
-or two repeated himself. The sound struck me
-as curiously wanting in resonance, as if the log
-were water-soaked (though I do not believe he
-was striking one), or his breast not fully inflated.
-Perhaps he was a young fellow, a new hand with
-the drumsticks, and so excusable. Certainly the
-difficulty lay not in the matter of distance, for
-between two of the performances I turned a sharp
-corner, effectively triangulating the bird, and it
-was impossible that he should be more than a few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-yards away. On all sides the little nuthatches
-were calling to each other in their quaint childish
-treble. I love to hear them, and the goldcrests
-also; but here, as on the heights above, the birds
-were less than the forest. I was in a susceptible
-mood, I suppose. The mere sight of the tall,
-straight trunks, with the lights and shadows on
-them, gave me a pleasure indescribable. Though
-the friend who had been my walking companion
-for a week past (and no man could wish a better
-one) is sure to read this column, I cannot refrain
-from saying that solitariness has its merciful alleviations.
-I was no longer tempted to babble,
-and the wise old trees took their turn at talking.
-If I could only repeat what they said!</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">BIRDS AND BRIGHT LEAVES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> the red maple trees and the yellow birches
-are mostly bare, and the greater part of the sugar
-groves have passed the zenith of their brilliancy,
-then the poplars come to the rescue. The hills are
-all at once bright again with a second crop of
-color, an aftermath of splendid sun-bright yellow.
-I knew nothing about this beforehand, and am
-delighted over the discovery. From my Franconia
-window I am looking at as pretty an autumnal
-wood as any man need wish to see, and it is a
-wood the seasonable glories of which were ended,
-I thought, more than a week ago. As I look at
-it I feel sorry for my last week’s companion, who
-went home too soon. Since his departure the
-days have been outdoing one another in the softness
-of their airs and the beauty of their lights.
-Mother Earth has been in her most amiable
-mood. Nothing is too good for her children. I
-have never seen fairer weather; though some,
-I dare say, might criticise it as a few degrees too
-warm. It is hard, I admit, for a walker to keep
-a coat on his back, far along as the season is getting,
-when the sun wrestles with him for it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>An interesting thing to me has been the tardy
-brightening of individual maple trees. It is one
-more manifestation, I assume, of Nature’s gift
-of versatility, her faculty of variation, to which,
-all but universal as it is, scientific men attribute
-so much potency in the evolving of so-called species.
-What I notice just now is that, as some
-bushes and trees mature their fruit later than
-others of the same kind, living apparently under
-the same conditions, so some maple trees are a
-week or two behind their immediate neighbors in
-ripening their foliage. I have passed within a
-day or two both sugar maples and red maples
-that were just donning their gay robes. Well
-done, I am moved to say, as my eye lights on
-them. They and the poplars, together with certain
-extensive maple groves on the higher levels,
-still keep the world arrayed in a really barbaric
-splendor. Two weeks ago I should have prophesied
-that before this time the landscape would be
-stripped for winter; and so it would have been,
-perhaps, if a cold storm had supervened instead
-of this period of summery brightness and calm.
-Great is weather. There is nothing like it. It
-makes a man—and a tree, too, for aught I know—glad
-to be alive.</p>
-
-<p>That it makes the birds happy is beyond dispute.
-You can see it with half an eye. Many of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-them are gone, it is true, but many others are
-left; and wherever you take your walk you may
-have joy of them. You will need to be blind and
-deaf, or of a hopelessly sour temper, not to catch
-a little of their cheeriness. Three days ago (it
-was an anniversary with me, and I was early
-abroad) I went into the kitchen garden before
-breakfast, as I have been doing frequently of
-late, to see what birds might be there. For a
-month and more, as the coarse grasses and weeds
-have ripened their crop (the garden, luckily for
-me, having been allowed to go untended), the
-place has been a favorite resort of sparrows.
-There I saw the Lincoln finches in their time,—on
-September 5 and subsequently,—and there
-for a fortnight past I have always been able to
-begin the day with a few white-crowns.</p>
-
-<p>Well, on the morning in question one of the
-first things I heard was a brief, uncharacteristic,
-autumnal-sounding ditty which, being too short
-for a song sparrow’s work, I at once credited to
-a white-crown; and, to be sure, when I looked
-that way, there the bird stood on a top stone of
-the wall, a young fellow, not yet “crowned,”
-practicing his first musical exercises. The morning
-was cool,—the ground had stiffened overnight,—and
-every time he opened his mouth to
-sing, a tiny cloud of vapor could be seen rising<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-from it. It was visible music. Again and again
-I watched him. The dear little chorister! Nobody’s
-birthday was ever more prettily honored.
-He “sang to my eye” indeed—in a daintily
-literal sense such as the poet never thought of. I
-wonder if any one, anywhere, ever saw and heard
-the like.</p>
-
-<p>The white-crowns have been surprisingly musical
-(the weather, no doubt, being a provocation),
-but I have not once heard their spring song, or
-anything which to my ear—none too well accustomed
-to it—has seemed to bear any relation
-thereto. Song sparrows, on the other hand, while
-mostly contenting themselves with incoherent,
-<i>sotto voce</i> twitterings, have now and then—almost
-daily, I think—varied the programme
-with more or less successful attempts at a fuller-voiced
-and more formal melody. As for the vesper
-sparrows, they have mainly kept silence, but
-on one or two bright mornings have sung as
-sweetly as ever they do in May. Indeed, I might
-truthfully say more than that; for at this season,
-when all bright things are taking leave, a strain
-of wild music is more grateful to the ear than by
-any possibility it can be when every newly green
-bush is part of the universal choir gallery.</p>
-
-<p>To us who have been in the habit of coming to
-this valley in bright-leaf time nothing is more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-characteristic, as nothing is more welcome, than
-the continual familiar presence of bluebirds.
-This year, because I have stayed later than usual,
-it may be, they have seemed uncommonly abundant.
-Their voices are sure to be among the first
-to be heard as I step out of the door in the morning,
-and wherever I walk—in the open country—I
-find myself surrounded at frequent intervals
-by a larger or smaller flock. Two days ago I
-counted forty in sight at once; and a bunch of
-forty bluebirds—well, there may be pleasanter
-sights for a bird-lover (a flock of sixty, for example),
-but it is a sight to raise low spirits, especially
-for a man who remembers the time—after
-a cruel winter—when the vision of a single bird
-was accepted by all of us as an event to talk about.</p>
-
-<p>Myrtle warblers (yellow-rumps) are still more
-numerous, and if a bluebird quits a perch and
-takes wing it is almost an even chance that a
-yellow-rump, who has been sitting near at hand,
-waiting for this to happen, will be seen dashing
-in pursuit. You may go down the village street
-and watch the trick repeated half a dozen times
-within half a mile. To my walking companion
-and myself the sight has come to be part of a
-Franconia autumn. If you are pretty close to the
-birds you may hear a bill snapping (the warbler’s,
-I think), as if in anger, but on the whole I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-inclined to believe that the thing is no more than
-an innocent, though one-sided, game of tag. All
-young creatures must have something to play
-with, somebody to make game of. So it is with
-yellow-rumps, I dare say; but why should they
-so universally pitch upon the inoffensive bluebird,
-I should like to know. It is to be added, however,
-to make the story truthful, that if there are no
-bluebirds handy, the warblers take it out by a
-free chasing of each other. To watch them, one
-would think that life, by their apprehension of
-it, were all a holiday.</p>
-
-<p>And while I am talking of bluebirds I ought to
-mention their habit of hanging about bird boxes
-in these last days of their Northern season. Only
-this forenoon, since the foregoing paragraphs
-were written, I passed a box perched upon a
-pole beside a house, and at least six bluebirds
-were sitting upon its platform, or investigating
-its different apartments. Sometimes a pair (so
-they looked, one bright colored, the other dull)
-sat side by side before a door, like married lovers.
-Sometimes one would go inside, sometimes both,
-while out of the next door another bird would be
-peeping. The box was very unlikely to have
-been their home; the countryside is overrun
-with bluebirds, too many by half to have summered
-hereabout; but evidently the sight of it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-had suggested family pleasures. Perhaps they
-were living over the past, perhaps forecasting
-the future. Bluebirds have their full share of
-sentiment, or both voice and behavior are rank
-deceivers. Concerning this aspect of the case,
-however, the frivolous yellow-rumps cared not a
-farthing. They sat in a small apple tree conveniently
-near, and as often as a bluebird ventured
-upon the wing, one or two of them started instantly
-in pursuit. If he alighted upon a fence-post,
-down they dropped upon the next rail and
-waited for him to make another sally. Once I
-heard a bluebird utter a pretty sharp note of
-remonstrance, but that, we may guess, only made
-the fun the greater. Birds will be birds.</p>
-
-<p>My morning stroll (it is October 13, my last
-day in Franconia) showed me, in addition to
-the birds already named, one lonesome-mannered
-hermit thrush, a few robins, two or three ruby-crowned
-kinglets, one of them running over with
-his musical <i>twittity, twittity, twittity</i>, a single
-yellow palm warbler (this and the myrtle have
-been the only warblers of the month), a red cross-bill,
-going somewhere, as usual, and leaving word
-behind him as he went, a small flock of pine siskins,
-a strangely few song sparrows, one vesper
-sparrow, one white-crown, a multitude of snowbirds,
-a purple finch or two, a goldfinch, and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-grouse, with the inevitable crows, jays, chickadees,
-and red-breasted nuthatches. Had my walk been
-longer and into a more varied country, I should
-have found gold-crested kinglets, winter wrens,
-brown creepers, titlarks (perhaps), white-throated
-sparrows, field sparrows, chippers, tree sparrows
-(probably), and three or four kinds of woodpeckers.</p>
-
-<p>And speaking of woodpeckers, I must allow
-myself to boast that within the last few days I
-have had exceptional luck with the big fellow of
-them all, known in books as the pileated. On
-the 9th I saw one and heard the halloo of another,
-and on the 11th I saw two (together) and
-heard a third. One of those seen on the 11th
-shouted at full length, and at the top of his voice
-while flying.</p>
-
-<p>The pileated woodpecker is a splendid bird.
-A pity he cannot find himself at home in our
-Massachusetts country. To see him here in New
-Hampshire one might imagine that he belonged
-with the mountains and would be homesick in
-other company; but if you would see him oftener
-than anywhere else, you may go to a land where
-there is scarcely so much as a hillock—to the
-peninsula of Florida. There or here, he is a great
-bird. The brightest maple leaf that ever took
-color was not so bright as his crest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">FLORIDA</h2>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-<h3 class="nobreak">FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF MIAMI</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is Sunday, the 19th of January. A week ago
-I was sitting before a fire, watching the snow
-fall outside, in winter-bound Massachusetts.
-This forenoon I am reclining in the shade of a
-cocoanut palm, looking across the smooth blue
-waters of Biscayne Bay to a line of woods, I
-know not how many miles distant, broken in the
-midst by a narrow cut or inlet (Norris Cut, a
-passer-by tells me it is called), through which is
-to be seen the open Atlantic. The air is motionless,
-the sky cloudless, the temperature ideal.
-“This is the day the Lord hath made,” I repeat
-to myself. He has seldom done better.</p>
-
-<p>I left Boston Monday morning, spent that
-night and the next day in Washington, slept in
-St. Augustine Wednesday night, and on Thursday
-took the long, all-day ride down the east
-coast of Florida, past miles on miles of orange
-groves and pineapple plantations, to the terminus
-of the railroad, the new and flourishing city
-of Miami.</p>
-
-<p>My visit, it must be owned, began rather inauspiciously.
-It was nobody’s fault, of course,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-but the “magic city” did not put its best foot
-forward. Friday morning the mercury stood at
-forty-five, and although the day was abundantly
-warm out of doors,—so warm that a walker naturally
-took off his coat,—an oil stove proved a
-comfort at nightfall. In short, the day was exactly
-like a White Mountain day in late September,
-hot in the middle and cool at both ends.
-Yesterday, however, was a piece of Massachusetts
-June, while this morning is so perfect that every
-one, visitor or resident, passes comments upon
-it. Perfection of any kind is a rare and precious
-thing,—in this world, at least,—and though it
-be merely a bit of weather, it should never go
-unspoken of. So I say to myself as I lie in the
-shade, and look and breathe.</p>
-
-<p>In truth, I can hardly feel it credible that I
-was in the midst of snowstorms less than a week
-ago. For a long two days winter has seemed
-a thing utterly past and forgotten. Only now
-and then it comes upon me, with the shock of
-unexpected news, that this is not summer, but
-January.</p>
-
-<p>The bay, for some reason to me unknown, is
-almost without birds. The only one just now in
-sight is a cormorant pretty far offshore, diving
-and swimming by turns. I imagine him to be a
-loon till suddenly he takes wing, with outstretched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-neck, and after a long flight comes to rest, not
-in the water, but at the top of a stake. Somewhere
-behind me a flicker is shouting as in
-springtime, and on one side a mockingbird is
-calling (“smacking” is the word that comes of
-itself to my pencil), and a blue-gray gnatcatcher
-utters now and then a fine, thread-like ejaculation.</p>
-
-<p>The stillness is really a relief, even to my ornithological
-ears; for though they had been
-starved for two or three months in Massachusetts,
-they have been so dinned with bird voices
-for the last two days that a brief period of silence
-is grateful. The centre of the town, where
-I have taken up my abode, literally swarms with
-fish crows and boat-tailed grackles, every one
-trying, as it seems, to outdo its rivals in noisiness.
-I remember the day, eight or nine years
-ago, when in the flatwoods of New Smyrna I
-spent an hour of almost painful excitement in
-taking observations upon the first boat-tail I had
-ever seen. It would have been hard at that
-moment for me to imagine that so clever and interesting
-a bird could ever become a nuisance.
-Fortunately, both crow and grackle retire to
-roost early and are comparatively late risers;
-otherwise the people of Miami might be driven
-to violent measures, as against a plague. As
-things are, the birds have no fears. They alight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-in the shade trees before the windows, or gather
-about the kitchen door, crows and blackbirds
-alike (and the male blackbirds, with their overgrown
-tails, are almost or quite as large as the
-crows), as fearless as so many English sparrows.</p>
-
-<p>After them the abundant birds hereabout, so
-far as I have yet discovered, are buzzards, carrion
-crows (black vultures), blue jays, catbirds
-(which I have never seen half so plentiful), palm
-warblers, myrtle warblers, and blue-gray gnatcatchers.
-Less numerous, but still decidedly common,
-are flickers, red-bellied woodpeckers, mockingbirds,
-Florida yellow-throats, hummingbirds,
-ground doves, and phœbes. Day before yesterday
-a long procession of tree swallows straggled past
-me as I wandered along the bay shore, and in the
-same place a flock of masculine red-winged blackbirds
-were holding a vociferous mid-winter convention
-in a thicket of tall reeds. White-eyed
-vireos are well distributed, and sing as saucily
-as if the month were May instead of January.
-Solitary vireos are present likewise, but I have
-seen only one, and he was not yet in tune.</p>
-
-<p>Out in the pine lands I came upon a single
-group of pine warblers and half a dozen bluebirds,
-both singing freely. What a voice the
-bluebird has! It does a Yankee’s heart good to
-hear it. I have yet to see a robin or a chickadee.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>All in all, notwithstanding the woods are alive
-with wings, there is surprisingly little music.
-The season of song is not yet come. Phœbes, for
-some reason, form a bright exception to the rule,
-and now and then a cardinal grosbeak whistles
-with a sweetness that beggars words. Twice, I
-think, I have heard a distant mockingbird singing,
-and yesterday, in front of the hotel, I stopped
-to watch a pair that seemed to be in what I
-should call a decidedly lyrical mood, though they
-were silent as dead men. They stood on the
-pavement a foot or so apart, and took turns in a
-very original and pretty kind of dance. One and
-then the other suddenly hopped straight upward
-for an inch or two, both feet at once. Between
-whiles they stood motionless, or sometimes one
-(always the same) moved a little away from its
-partner. Plainly they were much in earnest, and
-without question the ceremony, simple, and almost
-laughable, as it looked, had some deep and
-perfectly understood significance. Ritualism is
-not confined to churches. Everywhere the heart
-speaks by attitude and gesticulation.</p>
-
-<p>A noble concert it will be when all these thousands
-of song-birds recover their voices. May I
-be here to enjoy it. For the present I am contented
-to wait. It is sufficient just now to be in
-so strange a land in so lovely a season, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-acres of morning-glories and moon-flowers all
-about, roses and marigolds in the gardens, birds
-in every bush (not an English sparrow among
-them), airs gratefully cool from the sea, and
-bright summer weather. For a winter-killed
-Yankee, this is what old Omar would have
-called “Paradise enow.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A FROSTY MORNING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> is nothing like weather. It is man’s comfort
-and his misery; more important still, perhaps,
-it is his prosperity and his ruin. Indeed,
-it has almost divine prerogatives. It wounds and
-it heals; it kills and it makes alive. And this,
-which in good degree is true everywhere, is especially
-true in a country like southern Florida,
-the Mecca at once of pleasure-seeking winter
-vacationers, health-seeking tourists, and livelihood-seeking
-settlers. For all these, Florida is
-what it is because of its climate, that is to say,
-its weather. Speak with whom you will, weather
-is the topic that naturally comes uppermost.</p>
-
-<p>Yesterday (January 22) was one of the most
-delightful days imaginable; for a pedestrian, I
-mean to say. I know an insect collector, a gentle
-soul, little used to complaining against the order
-of the world, who pronounced it “horrid.” For
-the successful prosecution of her industry there
-lacked a few degrees of warmth. Florida insects,
-it appears, are much less hardy than their Northern
-cousins, keeping indoors, and so out of the
-net, in temperature such as a Yankee butterfly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-or beetle, thicker-skinned or thicker-blooded,
-would scorn to be afraid of. But if yesterday
-was perfect, to-day, by my reckoning, at least,
-has been finer still—perfection heaped upon
-perfection. Yet every one hereabout is more or
-less unhappy, and with more or less reason. In
-the night between these two perfect days an air
-from the North descended suddenly upon us, and
-the temperature took an alarming drop, some say
-to 38°, some to 31°—a drop which meant discomfort
-to all, and disaster to many. When I
-put my head out of doors at seven o’clock this
-morning, on my way to the post office, I was
-startled. My first thought was to run back for
-an overcoat. Instead of that I put on steam.</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast over, I betook myself to the pine
-lands, my rule being to improve cool days in
-that sunny region, leaving the shady hammock
-woods for hotter weather. It was cold enough
-for overcoat and mittens. In Massachusetts, with
-anything like the same temperature, I should
-certainly have worn them. Here, however, it was
-not so plain a case. I was to be on foot till noon,
-and I felt sure that long before that time the
-lightest outer garment would become intolerable.
-So I buttoned my one coat tightly about me,
-stuffed my hands into my pockets, and hastened
-my steps. For a mile, perhaps, I kept up the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-pace. By that time the sun had begun to make
-itself felt. At the end of the second mile the
-temperature was nothing less than summer-like,
-and before the third mile was finished my coat
-was on my arm; and as I came down one of the
-city streets, on my return at noon, and met two
-Seminole Indians walking abroad dressed, after
-their airy fashion, in nothing but waistcoat and
-shirt, the sight of their comfortable uncivilized
-legs was calculated to make a perspiring man
-envious.</p>
-
-<p>By nine o’clock, indeed, the weather was
-superb; but presently I came to an opening in
-the woods. Here was a field of tomato plants in
-front of a new, unpainted house. Some recent
-settler had cleared a piece of ground and established
-a home in this land of perpetual summer.
-And to support himself and his family he had
-“gone into early tomatoes.” So much was to be
-seen at a glance. And yes, there stood the man
-himself in the midst of his plantation. I went
-near and accosted him, expressing my hope that
-the frost (for by this time it was plain there had
-been one) had not damaged his crop. He had
-been badly frightened in the night, he confessed,
-but thought he had mostly escaped harm. “I
-was glad,” he said, dwelling upon the verb with
-a pleasant foreign accent, “when I saw the thermometer”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-(pronounced etymologically, with the
-accent on the penult). I fear he was worse hit
-than he knew. At all events there were many
-acres of wilting tomato plants only a mile away
-on the same road. One man, whom I saw looking
-over his field, was calling the attention of
-a solicitous neighbor to the fact that a certain
-part of the plantation had fared better than the
-rest. A few burning stumps had happened to be
-left smouldering on one edge of the field overnight,
-and the wind had drifted a light blanket
-of smoke across that corner.</p>
-
-<p>But even in unprotected gardens the different
-parts had not fared alike. Here the tender plants
-were wilting as the sun shone on them, and yonder,
-only five or ten yards away, there was no
-symptom of blight. So true is it of tomato vines,
-as of nobler creations, that one shall be taken and
-the other left. The frost is like the wind, it striketh
-where it listeth, and thou seest the effect thereof;
-and the poor man suffereth with the rich.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the cruel uncertainties of truck farming
-in this sub-tropical region, far down toward
-the very tip of Florida. Like the speculator in
-copper or in oil, the farmer goes to bed rich and
-gets up poor. But, like the dabbler in “shares,”
-the farmer is not easily discouraged. Though he
-has moved from one point to another, farther<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-and farther down the peninsula, the frost pursuing
-him, he will still try again. There is one
-thing to be depended upon (let us be thankful
-to say it)—a sanguine man’s hope.</p>
-
-<p>So much for tillers of the soil. For the rest
-of us, mere idlers and wayfarers, concerned only
-with questions of sight-seeing and momentary
-comfort, a day like the present needs no bettering.
-My own course, as I have said, lay through
-the pine woods—sunny, spacious, not in the
-least like anything that a New Englander would
-call a forest. At short intervals the road, white
-and hard, ran past a small clearing, generally
-with a house upon it. Here would be orange
-trees, mango trees (just now in bloom), splendid
-hibiscus shrubs, pineapples, perhaps, with other
-novelties pleasant for Northern eyes to look
-upon, or, quite as likely, a field of tomatoes (the
-fruit nearly grown), or a sweet-potato patch.</p>
-
-<p>Near one of the houses the loud cries of some
-strange bird troubled my curiosity. The opera-glass
-showed me nothing, and I was none the
-wiser till beside a second house I heard the same
-voice again. This time I put aside my scruples
-and made a set attempt to solve the mystery. A
-woman before the door was inquisitive about
-the stranger, but the stranger was still more inquisitive
-about the bird; and by and by, on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-lower perch than I had thought, there the fellow
-stood at the top of a shrub, directly before my
-eyes, a Florida jay. It was nine years since I
-had seen a bird of his kind, and the sight was
-welcome accordingly. Perhaps he knew it. At
-any rate, whether for my pleasure or his own,
-he held his ground and kept up his harsh,
-shrikely vociferations.</p>
-
-<p>The Florida jay (a crestless bird, not at all
-the same as the Florida blue jay, which abounds
-everywhere and is everywhere noisy, especially
-in the villages) is strictly a bird of the peninsula,
-being found nowhere else—a remarkable instance
-of extreme localization. I ran upon still
-another individual before reaching the end of
-my jaunt,—on the outskirts of Lemon City,—and
-all three were in dooryards. Oak scrub
-(where you may look out for rattlesnakes) and
-human neighborhood, these, as I read the signs,
-are the Florida jay’s desiderata.</p>
-
-<p>In general, as compared with the hammock
-woods, the pine lands are nearly birdless. An
-occasional sparrow hawk (another strangely trustful
-creature, very common in this country<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>), an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-occasional mockingbird (more than once in
-splendid song), a shrike now and then, a flock
-of myrtle-birds, and another of palm warblers,
-a good many white-breasted swallows and turkey
-buzzards overhead, with a bunch of silent sparrows
-skulking beneath the dwarf palmettoes,—these
-are what I now remember.</p>
-
-<p>Birds or no birds, flowers or no flowers, I
-should have enjoyed the eight miles. The bright
-sunshine, the temperate, genial warmth, the
-endless, widely spaced woods, the blue sky, and
-on one side the blue expanse of Biscayne Bay,—summer
-in winter,—I am not so long from
-snowy Massachusetts but that these things are
-enough to make for me a kind of perpetual fiesta.
-As I said to begin with (and it is as true of
-thoughts and feelings as of the tenderest of
-garden crops), there is nothing like weather.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">BEWILDERMENT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">If</span> any untraveled Northern botanist wishes to
-be puzzled, hopelessly confused, clean put out
-of his reckoning, let him come to Miami. His
-knowledge will drop away from him till not a
-rag is left. Let him arrive, as I did, after dark,
-and in the morning take the road southward to
-Cocoanut Grove. The distance is only five miles,
-and the walking excellent. I should like to go
-with him, and listen to his exclamations and
-comments.</p>
-
-<p>The cocoanut palms before the hotel, as he
-leaves the piazza, he has no need to inquire
-about; such things he has at least seen in pictures.
-And the parti-colored crotons, likewise,
-are nothing new; he has seen the like in hot-houses,
-if nowhere else. And the scores of big,
-round hibiscus bushes, each with its score or two
-of regal scarlet blossoms,—these, or poverty-stricken
-imitations of them, he has admired before
-now in the Boston Public Garden and elsewhere.
-The acalypha shrubs, also, he will perhaps recognize
-upon a second look, though he has never
-before seen them growing as a hedge, carefully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-squared, three or four feet high, and as many
-feet thick. Yonder euphorbia bush, too (<i>Poinsettia</i>),
-with its flaring, flaming rosettes of scarlet
-floral leaves at the tips of the stems—this,
-like the crotons, he is more or less familiar with
-under glass. All these are cultivated plants,
-pleasant to look upon out of doors in mid-winter,
-but of themselves not especially interesting, perhaps,
-to a botanist.</p>
-
-<p>But now, at the foot of Thirteenth or Fourteenth
-Street, less than a quarter of a mile from
-the hotel, we come to some vacant lots. Here
-are a few dingy live-oaks (still with last year’s
-leaves on), and in their shadow, sprawling over
-the tangled undergrowth, a wilderness of gadding
-morning-glory vines. How lovely the flowers are—pink
-and blue! Unless it be the ubiquitous
-fish crow, there is nothing else so common in this
-Miami country as the morning-glory; and the
-vines, acres on acres, hold in bloom, one kind
-and another, so I am given to understand, almost
-or quite the whole year round.</p>
-
-<p>Now we leave the sidewalk and are in the pine
-woods. The trees—long-leaved pines—our
-botanist knows well enough, the train having
-brought him past a thousand miles of such, on
-his way hither; though, even so, he might be
-puzzled to tell to which of two related species<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-(<i>Palustris</i> and <i>Elliottii</i>) they belong. From the
-rude bridge, as we cross the Miami River, he
-admires the myriad-footed, glossy-leaved mangrove
-thickets that line the banks, especially as
-he looks up the stream. Just beyond are ancient
-live-oaks, the huge spreading branches of which
-support a profusion of air-plants (poor relations
-of the pineapple), with here and there an orchid.
-I should like to show him an <i>Epidendrum</i> such
-as I secured ten days ago—an open spray of a
-dozen blooms, handsome enough to grace the
-finest of hothouse collections; but I have not
-been able to find a second specimen, with all my
-searching. However, a smaller, one-flowered species
-is common enough, and if he is sufficiently
-enterprising he will climb one of the trees for it,
-or—as I did—cut a stick by means of which,
-with more or less hard work, he can pry the
-bulbous root from its foothold.</p>
-
-<p>“What is this yellow flower?” he asks, as
-we go on.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” is my answer. “Some member
-of the pulse family.”</p>
-
-<p>My companion knew as much as that already.</p>
-
-<p>“And this bush, with its strangely contorted
-pods?”</p>
-
-<p>Here I am more at home, and proud to
-show it. The plant is <i>Pithecolobium Unguis-Cati</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-I tell him. Small wonder the pods are
-twisted.</p>
-
-<p>With this we come to more live-oaks, on which
-are more air-plants and orchids, and just beyond
-is a confusion of thick-leaved trees and
-shrubs.</p>
-
-<p>“What is this?” he asks; “and this? and
-this?”</p>
-
-<p>I have no idea, I am obliged to answer. But
-the tall tree a little farther on is <i>Ficus aurea</i>, I
-hasten to remark, with a show of extreme erudition.</p>
-
-<p>“A fig-tree?” he answers, in a tone of surprise;
-for, being a botanist, he knows, of course,
-that <i>ficus</i> is fig.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, I assure him, it is a <i>kind</i> of fig (rubber
-tree, it is otherwise called), though the leaf is
-small and, as botanists say, “entire,” not in
-the least resembling the modest fig-leaf of convention.
-I know the tree’s name, as I know that
-of the shrub before mentioned, because I was
-told it yesterday. One’s knowledge (of names)
-increases rapidly under favorable circumstances,
-in a country like this.</p>
-
-<p>Yonder very noticeable shrub, bearing large
-globular bunches of small bright-purplish berries
-(no eye could miss them), is the French mulberry,
-so called (<i>Callicarpa Americana</i>); and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-the larger and leafier bush near it, set along
-the branches with more loosely disposed orange-colored
-berries, is <i>Trema micrantha</i>, a plant
-which Chapman’s Flora credits to but one place
-in the United States,—“Shellmounds in Lastero
-Bay, South Florida,”—though hereabout
-it is one of the commonest of the common.
-Both it and the French mulberry are prime
-favorites with various kinds of birds. Mockingbirds
-and catbirds are feasting on the berries at
-this moment.</p>
-
-<p>And yes, here is a tree that I knew would excite
-my companion’s curiosity. No stranger ever
-drove over this road (and the first drive of every
-newcomer to Miami is taken this way) without
-asking his driver about it: a large tree, all its
-leafy branches far above the ground, with a
-strangely conspicuous mahogany-colored bark,
-the outermost layers of which peel off in loose
-papery flakes, after the manner of the canoe birch.
-On my first jaunt into the hammock I heard more
-than one driver pronounce its eloquent name—gumbo-limbo.
-The two or three men of whom I
-made inquiries could tell me nothing more, till
-my host, who professed no botany, modestly suggested
-a reference to the dictionary. There, sure
-enough, I found the clue I was seeking. The tree
-is <i>Bursera gummifera</i>, or Jamaica birch, one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-two Florida representatives of the tropical torch-wood
-family. It is among the chief of my South
-Florida admirations, especially for its color. It
-and the Seminoles should be of kindred stock.
-In the lobby of the hotel, the other evening, I
-heard one man rallying another (who had been
-fishing and playing golf bareheaded) upon the
-magnificent complexion he had put on. “Your
-face reminds me of the gumbo-limbo,” the joker
-said. The comparison was obvious. I had been
-thinking the same thing.</p>
-
-<p>Our course takes us through a brief tract of
-pine land largely occupied by bayberry bushes,
-about which there are always many myrtle warblers
-(which is the same as to say bayberry warblers);
-and presently we are in a dense tropical
-forest. This is the place I have desired my companion
-to see; and here, after a few minutes of
-silent wonderment, his curiosity begins to play.
-“What is this? What is this? What is this?”
-His interrogations come in crowds; and to every
-one my answer is ready—“I don’t know.” I
-am in the case of the poor fellow whose sarcastic
-French instructor promised to teach him in one
-sentence how to answer correctly every question
-he might be asked. Like him I have only to respond,
-“<i>Je ne sais pas.</i>” Trees, shrubs, and
-vines are all far out of my range. During the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-fortnight that I have been here, to be sure, I
-have begun to distinguish differences among
-them, and even to recognize individuality; but
-as to what they are, and what their names are, I
-know absolutely nothing.</p>
-
-<p>It is a strange sensation, so delightfully, tantalizingly
-strange that I can hardly keep away
-from the place. Day after day, in spite of the
-dust and (sometimes) the scorching heat, my
-steps turn in this direction. “Where have you
-been?” my new acquaintances say to me at the
-dinner table; and I answer, almost of course,
-“Down in the hammock.”</p>
-
-<p>Here and there, wherever there is a favorable
-opening, I venture a few steps into the jungle;
-but sometimes I cannot stay. A feeling of something
-like superstitious terror comes over me,
-the wood is so dense and dark and strange. I
-am glad to get back into the dusty road. My
-supposititious companion will be braver than I,
-I dare say, but he will be with me in confessing
-how confusingly alike all the trees look, and how
-utterly unavailable all his previous knowledge
-proves to be. On this point I have talked with
-two botanists, and they have both assured me
-that, although they had lived much in upper Florida,
-they found themselves here in a world they
-knew nothing about. With me, who am not a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-botanist, or only the sheerest dabbler in the science,
-it is literally true that in this sub-tropical
-forest I cannot guess at so much as the family
-relationship of one plant in twenty.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">WAITING FOR THE MUSIC</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I am</span> impatient for the concert to begin. It is
-the 7th of February. For three weeks I have
-been in Miami; birds are plentiful; the country,
-one may almost say, is full of them; the weather,
-mostly a few shades too warm for a pedestrian’s
-comfort, seems to be all that birds could wish;
-but thus far there has been scarcely a sign of the
-grand vernal awakening. Warm or cold, for the
-birds it is still winter. Phœbes, to be sure, have
-sung ever since my arrival, I cannot help wondering
-why; and the same is true of white-eyed
-vireos. It is impossible to walk through the hammock
-woods without getting somewhat more than
-one’s fill of their saucily emphatic deliverances.
-For aught I can see, they are quite as loquacious
-now as they will be two or three months
-hence. Once in a while, hardly oftener than once
-a week, I should say, I have heard a mockingbird
-letting himself loose, and rather more frequently,
-especially during the last few days,
-cardinal grosbeaks have sweetened the air with
-their whistle; but for much the greater part the
-birds are dumb. On the morning of February 1,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-as I stepped out upon the piazza, a house wren
-sang from a live-oak by the kitchen door. I remembered
-the date. “Good!” said I to myself,
-“the time of the singing of birds is come.” But
-I was too much in haste. Since then I have heard
-plenty of wren chattering, but not another note
-of wren music.</p>
-
-<p>Still the opening of the annual concert cannot
-be much longer delayed. When I was in Florida
-nine years ago, mockingbirds were in free song
-at St. Augustine, before the middle of February;
-and at this point, three hundred miles and more
-farther south, the season must be earlier rather
-than later.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the more distinctively Southern of the
-birds about me I am especially desirous of hearing—the
-Florida yellow-throats, for example, a
-local race of the Maryland yellow-throat, so
-called. They are everywhere in sight (the dark
-brown of the flanks distinguishing them readily),
-and as their music is said to be very unlike that
-of their familiar Northern relative, I am naturally
-desirous of adding it to my (memorized)
-collection. It will be nothing great, presumably,
-but it will be something new.</p>
-
-<p>Still more interesting will be the song of the
-painted bunting, or nonpareil, a beauty of beauties
-that I had never seen (a wild one, I mean)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-until this winter. About Miami it is decidedly
-common, though the green females show themselves
-ten times as often as the red, blue, and
-yellow-green males. What a superbly dressed
-creature the masculine nonpareil is! And he
-carries himself as if he knew it. “Dear me,” he
-seems always to be saying; “this Joseph’s coat
-of mine makes me so conspicuous! Some day
-it will be my undoing.” My readers will most
-likely have seen the gorgeous little creature in
-cages (I found one many years ago in the Boston
-Public Garden, I remember), though the
-chances are that they have never seen him in
-anything like his brightest and liveliest feather.
-A bird, like a butterfly, was born to be looked
-at out of doors with the sunlight on him. So far
-I have heard no note from the nonpareil except
-his rather soft chip. The birds frequent weedy
-tangles in open grounds, showing special fondness
-for patches of the white bur-marigold, and seem
-to be well scattered over the country.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day I walk down through the hammock
-(I have spoken of it before, and most
-likely shall do so again) between Miami and
-Cocoanut Grove. Indeed, so constant are my
-peregrinations thither that I begin to find my
-innocent self treated as a kind of mysterious
-personage—one of the “features” of the place,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-so to speak, an “object of interest,” like the
-gumbo-limbos, the air-plants, and the blossoming
-lime trees. Three times, at least, I have overheard
-a driver describing me to his fares as “the
-man who comes down through this hammock
-<i>every day</i>”—with strong emphasis on the last
-two words. One passenger was good enough to
-surmise, quite audibly, that I might be a botanist,
-while another loudly proclaimed his belief that
-I must be “a sort of a bird fiend.” So much
-for being useful in one’s day and generation.
-The tourist mind—like the tourist stomach—abhors
-a vacuum. It must have something to
-browse upon. And the drivers know it. It is a
-bad day for the cow when she loses her cud.</p>
-
-<p>In sober truth the hammock is well worth a
-daily visit; and almost as often as I am here it
-comes over me what a glorious concert hall it will
-be when all these thousands of birds find their
-voices, if they ever do; for it may be, I know,
-that the great majority will start on their journey
-northward before that happy day arrives.
-Here—to name only some of the more common
-species—here are mockingbirds, catbirds, cardinals,
-house wrens, Carolina wrens, ruby-crowned
-kinglets, palm warblers, myrtle warblers, parula
-warblers, prairie warblers, black-and-white warblers,
-Florida yellow-throats, oven-birds, blue-gray<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-gnatcatchers (a host), white-eyed vireos
-(another host), solitary vireos, chewinks, painted
-buntings, phœbes, crested flycatchers, and blue
-jays. What a chorus there would be if the spring
-should get into all their throats at once! Might
-I be here to listen! Then, indeed, I could make
-a list, with the hearing to help the eyesight. Now
-I follow the road, and find only such birds as
-happen to be near it at the moment when I pass.
-Then it would be another story. I should need
-a stenographer. The names would crowd upon
-the pencil.</p>
-
-<p>It is really an astonishing, unnatural-seeming
-thing—this multitude of birds, in this cloudless
-summer weather, with mating-time so close at
-hand, and no impulse to sing. Yet that expression
-is a trifle too strong, or at least too sweeping.
-This forenoon I heard a gnatcatcher warbling
-softly, as if to himself, tuning his instrument, it
-may be, or, more likely, dreaming. The cardinals,
-too, are certainly growing amorous. I see
-the bright males quarreling among themselves
-here and there (they are constantly in the road),
-and not infrequently, as I have said, they whistle
-with all sweetness. At that work there is no
-bird to excel them. How any female heart can
-resist such appeals is more than any bachelor’s
-heart can imagine. I rejoice in their numbers.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-I should love to walk through the hammock and
-hear them all whistling together, a chorus a good
-mile in length and no rod without a bird.</p>
-
-<p>Loggerhead shrikes are paired or pairing.
-The other day I saw one fly up from the ground
-and feed another perched on a telegraph wire.
-He was doing no more than was meet, her cool-appearing,
-unresponsive manner seemed to say.
-Mockingbirds, also, though singing little, are beginning
-to manifest symptoms of jealousy. If all
-the mockers and all the cardinals should break
-into voice at once, the air itself would hardly
-contain the music.</p>
-
-<p>Two pileated woodpeckers that I see every
-few days at a particular spot in the hammock
-have already come to an understanding, or so I
-fancy from certain bits of conduct that I have
-been privileged to witness. This morning I stood
-watching the female as she hammered to pieces
-a decayed branch close by me, when all at once
-her mate called in the distance. Instantly she
-held up her head, as much as to say, “Hark!
-Was that he?” and the next moment she was
-gone. Then I heard low conversational notes,
-followed presently by loud drumming on a resonant
-stub or branch. I thought of what I have
-heard preachers say, that Heaven is a state, not
-a place.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>Pileated woodpeckers are birds good to look
-at, and, wild as they look, it is pleasant to find
-them so approachable. But in fact, this is most
-productive woodpecker country. Here are flickers
-in abundance, red-bellies almost as many, and
-along with them the red-headed, the red-cockaded
-(in the pine lands), the yellow-bellied (least common
-of all), the downy, and the hairy; all, in
-short, that could be expected, with the exception
-of the ivory-billed; and (such is human nature)
-I would give more to see him than all the rest
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I will not wish time away, as the saying
-is. I begin to perceive that I have none to
-spare. But I shall rejoice when some morning I
-go out and find the conductor’s arm lifted, and
-the chorus minding the beat.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">PERIPATETIC BOTANY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> I called upon my friend the entomologist,
-a few evenings ago, she informed me that she had
-passed a very exciting day. While out on her
-usual insect-collecting expedition, along the bay
-shore, she had come suddenly upon an unknown
-plant growing among the mangrove bushes. A
-glance at the blossom showed that it must belong
-to the mallow family, and on getting back to the
-hotel and consulting the manual, she determined
-it at once as <i>Pavonia racemosa</i>,—“Miami and
-Key Biscayne.” Every collector knows the pleasure
-of discovering a plant or other specimen,
-the known habitat of which is entitled to this
-kind of exact specification.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” said I, when she had finished
-the story, “I shall go down to-morrow and look
-at <i>Pavonia racemosa</i> for myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The next afternoon, therefore, saw me at the
-place; but it appeared that I had not sufficiently
-attended to my friend’s instructions. At all
-events, I could find nothing that looked like a
-<i>Malva</i>. In a country so richly and strangely
-furnished as this, however, a visitor cannot turn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-his eyes in any direction without putting them
-upon something he never saw before; and so it
-happened that while I hunted vainly for one
-thing I found another and better; or if it was
-not better in itself, it was more unexpected and
-interesting. This was a shrub, or small tree, bearing
-large, glossy, coriaceous leaves, clustered near
-the ends of the branches, from which depended
-long, smooth, pear-shaped or gourd-shaped buds.
-More careful search revealed a few faded flowers
-and a large pendent green fruit. And then, ten
-minutes afterward, as I was starting away, my
-eyes fell upon a clump of the rare <i>Pavonia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>With that, of course, there was no room for
-difficulty. I had only to compare the specimen
-with the printed description, and check the name.
-But as for the strange shrub, of which I had bud,
-blossom, fruit, and leaf (what more could a man
-desire?), with that I was fairly beaten. Even
-a methodical, schoolboyish use of the “key” was
-without result. The signs brought me, or seemed
-to bring me, to the Bignonia family, and there
-came to nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Happily a professor of botany in one of our
-great universities had arrived in town within the
-last twenty-four hours, and after supper I invited
-him to my room to help me with the puzzle. He
-set about the work just as I had done, only after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-a more workmanlike fashion, and him also the
-key led to the <i>Bignoniaceæ</i>, but no farther. As
-the common saying is, the trail had “run up a
-tree.” In short, with all the facts before us,—leaves,
-buds, blossom, fruit,—we were stumped.
-“It is some representative of the Bignonia family
-not included in Chapman’s Flora,” was the
-professor’s final verdict.</p>
-
-<p>The next forenoon we had agreed to spend
-together in the big hammock, through which I
-had been sauntering by myself for the past five
-weeks. We should pass the Agricultural Experiment
-Station on the way, and I determined to
-carry the troublesome specimen along and submit
-it to the professor in charge. So said, so done;
-but as we stopped at the post office, there stood
-the man himself at the door. “What is this?” I
-asked, scarcely waiting to bid him good-morning.
-“<i>Crescentia</i>,” he answered promptly, “a plant
-of the Bignonia family.” So the other professor
-had been exactly right.</p>
-
-<p>And now for the more dramatic part of the
-story. The day before—at noon of the day on
-which I found the plant in question—I received
-a letter from a Boston friend, himself a university
-professor of botany, to whom I had written,
-begging him to quit his desk, like a reasonable
-man, and join me in this botanical paradise. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-replied that he could not come, and furthermore,
-that he wasn’t so very sorry. New England
-winter is to him a constant refreshment and exhilaration,
-it appears. Happy New Englander!
-“To-day is simply perfect,” he wrote, “and you
-can’t beat it in Miami.” As to that point I reserve
-my opinion. “How changed the place must
-be from what it was when I was there in the
-’80’s,” he continued. “No railroad then within
-hundreds of miles, and none of your modern improvements.
-It is a great place for plants. I
-shan’t forget how delighted I was to find <i>Crescentia
-cucurbitina</i> in flower. I had searched the
-whole range of Keys for it in vain.”</p>
-
-<p>This very plant, of the existence of which I
-had never before heard, I had found, without
-knowing it, within two hours after receiving my
-friend’s letter.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
-
-<p>Winter botanizing by newcomers, in a country
-so foreign as this, where much the greater
-part of the shrubs and trees are West Indian,
-with no better help than Chapman’s Flora, is
-carried on under almost discouraging difficulties.
-“If we only had the blossoms!” the professor is
-continually exclaiming. And his pupil responds,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-“Yes, if we only had!” As it is, we content
-ourselves with finding out a few things daily,
-guessing at characters and relationships (no very
-bad practice, by the way), running down all sorts
-of clues, real or imaginary, like detectives on the
-hunt for a murderer, and even asking questions
-freely of chance passers-by, especially of the numerous
-class known by the white people hereabout
-as “Bahama niggers.” They, rather than their
-pale-faced superiors, seem to be observant of
-natural things. It is likely, too, that they or their
-forbears may have brought some traditionary
-knowledge of such matters from the islands where
-the plants are more at home. At all events, it
-is pleasant to notice how ready even the black
-children are, not only to answer questions, but
-to ask them as well, about any flowers that one
-happens to be carrying.</p>
-
-<p>The other day I came suddenly upon a bush,
-the like of which I had seen and wondered over
-a hundred times since my arrival in Miami, remarking
-especially the highly peculiar, almost
-perpendicular carriage of its innumerable thick,
-brightly varnished leaves, a device, as the professor
-had suggested, for protecting them against
-the vertical rays of the sun. I had never seen
-either fruit or blossom, but here, on this particular
-plant, my eye fell upon a few scattered purplish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-drupes. Now, then, here was something to
-go upon. Now, possibly, with a sprinkling more
-of good luck, I might find the name of the bush.
-I was a mile or two from town, on the road to
-Alapattah Prairie, where there are many truck
-farms. A white man came along, one of the
-“truckers,” driving homeward from the city.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what this is?” I inquired,
-showing him the specimen.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>Soon I met another man, and proposed to him
-the same question, with the same result. A third
-attempt was no more successful. Then I overtook
-two colored men talking beside a quarry.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse me,” I said, “but can you tell me
-the name of this plant?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, it is cocoa plum,” answered one of
-them; and the other said, “Yes, cocoa plum.”</p>
-
-<p>And so it was; for on referring to the manual
-I found the bush fully described under that
-name.</p>
-
-<p>Another experiment in this kind of putting
-myself to school, it is fair to add, was less in the
-Bahama colored man’s favor. A tourist whom
-I happened upon resting beside the hammock
-road held in his hand two or three twigs, from
-each of which depended a large, stony, pear-shaped
-fruit, and seeing me curious about the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-novelty, he kindly offered me one. This, also, I
-forthwith carried into the city, stopping passengers
-by the way—like a natural-historical Socrates—to
-ask them about it. No one, white or
-black, could tell me anything till in a fruit shop
-I questioned a white boy. “It’s a seven-year
-apple,” he said. “Some foolish local name,” I
-thought. At all events it could do me no good,
-since it was not to be found in Chapman’s index.
-But that evening, on my showing the specimen
-to the entomologist, and telling her what the boy
-had said, she replied, “Certainly, that is right.
-The plant is <i>Genipa</i>, or seven-year apple.” And
-under the word “Genipa” I found it so spoken
-of in the Standard Dictionary. There the fruit
-is said to be edible, which seems to disprove the
-conjecture of another lady to whom I had shown
-it, that it derives its name from the fact that it
-would take an eater seven years to digest it.
-Apples, like men, are not fairly to be judged
-in the green state.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that this guessing at characters
-and relationships is not a bad discipline. And
-no more is it the worst of fun. Of this I had
-only two days ago a strikingly happy proof.
-Everywhere in the hammock there grows a tall
-tree, noticeable for the peculiar color of its bark
-and its channeled and often fantastically contorted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-trunk. The leafy branches are always far
-overhead (a necessity in so crowded a place), and
-I had seen the purplish, globular drupes only as
-they had dropped one by one to the ground. At
-every opportunity I had made inquiries about the
-tree, but had received no light, nor, after much
-searching, had either the professor or myself been
-able to hit upon so much as a plausible conjecture
-as to its identity. Well, two days ago, as I say,
-we were walking together on the outskirts of the
-city, when we came to a tree of this kind growing
-in the open, the fruit-bearing branches of
-which hung within reach. We pulled one of them
-down, and I exclaimed at once, “Why, this
-should be related to the sea-grape!”—a most
-curious West Indian tree (<i>Coccoloba uvifera</i>, a
-member of the buckwheat family!) which grows
-freely along the shore of Biscayne Bay. “See
-the fruit,” said I, “for all the world like a bunch
-of grapes.” With that we began a detailed examination,
-and, to make a long story short, the
-tree proved to be another species of <i>Coccoloba</i>—<i>C.
-Floridana</i>.</p>
-
-<p>That was pretty good guessing, based as it
-was on nothing better than an “external character,”
-as the professor rather slightingly called
-it. For five weeks my curiosity had been exercised
-over the puzzle, and in five seconds I had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-found the needed clue. Who will say that this
-was not better and more interesting, and withal
-more instructive, than to have been told the tree’s
-name on the first day I saw it?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A PEEP AT THE EVERGLADES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My</span> first stroll in Miami was taken under the
-pilotage of a lady who had already spent several
-winters here. In the course of it we came suddenly
-upon a colored man lying face downward
-in the grass, under a blazing sun, fast asleep.
-It was no uncommon happening, my friend remarked;
-she was always stumbling over such
-dusky sleepers. But in this Southern clime the
-luxury of physical inactivity is not appreciated
-by black people alone. I was walking away from
-the city at a rather brisk pace, one morning,
-when I passed a lonesome shanty. A white man
-sat upon the rude piazza, and another man and
-a boy stood near.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to work to-day?” asked the
-boy of the occupant of the piazza.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” was the answer, quick and pithy.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t got time.”</p>
-
-<p>I laid the words up as a treasure; I do not
-expect to hear the philosophy of indolence more
-succinctly and pointedly stated if I live a thousand
-years.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>But though we Northern visitors may sometimes
-envy our Southern brethren their gift of
-happy <i>insouciance</i>, it is not for our possessing.
-We were born under another star. Our lack is
-the precise opposite of theirs; even in our vacation
-hours we have seldom time to sit still.</p>
-
-<p>So it happened that on a sultry, dog-day morning,
-with a south wind blowing, the sky partly
-clouded,—a comfort to the eyes,—the professor
-and the bird-gazer, after an early breakfast,
-set forth upon a reconnoissance of the
-Everglades. We took each a boat and an oarsman,
-planning to go up the Miami River, or
-rather its south branch, till we were among the
-“islands”—small pieces of hammock woods
-scattered amid the wilderness of saw-grass.</p>
-
-<p>As each of us had his own boat, so each had
-his own errand, one botanical, the other lazily
-ornithological. The professor expected to see
-and learn much—especially about the adaptation
-of plants to their surroundings; his associate
-expected to see and learn little—little or
-nothing; and according to each man’s faith, so
-it was unto him.</p>
-
-<p>For the first mile or so—as far as the tide
-runs, perhaps—the river is densely beset on
-either side by a shining green hedge of mangrove
-bushes, every branch sending down “aerial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-roots” of its own, till landing among them is an
-adventure hardly to be thought of. After the
-mangroves come taller hedges of the cocoa plum,
-leafier still, and equally shining.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you glad you know what this bush
-is?” I shouted downstream to the professor.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I am,” he shouted back.</p>
-
-<p>Without this knowledge, which we had acquired
-within a few days, by a kind of accident,
-as before related, our present state of mind
-would have been pitiable. We were surprised
-to find the plant so fond of water, having noticed
-it heretofore in comparatively dry situations.
-Another example of the extreme adaptability of
-tropical plants, the professor remarked.</p>
-
-<p>By and by we came to the first cypress trees,
-the only ones I have seen in this all but swampless
-Miami neighborhood; beautiful in their new
-dress of living green. I rejoiced at the sight.
-Under one of them we landed, admiring the
-“knees” that its roots had sent up till the
-ground was studded with them. These, the professor
-tells me (it is nothing new, by his account
-of the matter, but it is new to me), are believed
-to serve as breathing or aerating organs, supplying
-to the tree the oxygen for lack of which,
-standing in water, as it mostly does, it would
-otherwise drown. All visitors to Florida are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-impressed by the beauty and majesty of the
-cypress, and many have no doubt puzzled themselves
-over the meaning of these strange, apparently
-useless protuberances—as if nature had
-attempted something and failed—that are so
-constantly found underneath. “They never do
-grow to be trees,” my boatman said.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this point, as nearly as I remember,
-that the stream grew narrow and shallow at
-once, till behold, we were laboring up what
-might fairly be called rapids. Here, between the
-awkward crowding of the banks and the swiftness
-of the current (it was good, I said to myself,
-to see water actually <i>running</i> in Florida),
-the men were certainly earning their money.
-Fortunately, both proved equal to the task.
-Then a bend in the stream took us away from
-the neighborhood of the trees (not until, in one
-of the cypresses, I had remarked my first Miami
-nuthatch—a white-breast), and into the very
-midst of the saw-grass. This densely growing,
-sharp-edged, appropriately named grass, higher
-than a man’s head, standing to-day in two or
-three feet of water, is said to cover the Everglades.
-It must render them a frightful place
-in which to lose one’s way. “I should rather
-be lost at sea in a rowboat,” my oarsman declared.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>All this while, of course, I had kept a lookout
-for birds, but, as I had expected, to comparatively
-little purpose. No doubt there were many
-about us, but not for our finding. The shallower
-and quieter edges of the river were covered here
-and there with broad leaves of the yellow lily,
-among which should have been at least a chance
-gallinule, it seemed to me; but neither gallinule
-nor rail showed itself. Here, as everywhere,
-buzzards and vultures were sailing overhead.
-Many white-breasted swallows, too, went hawking
-over the grass, and once a purple martin
-passed near me. Better still, he allowed me, in
-one brief note, to hear his welcome voice. Like
-the new leaves of the cypress, it prophesied of
-spring.</p>
-
-<p>At intervals a heron of one kind or another
-started up far in advance. One was snow-white,
-but whether I was to call it an immature little
-blue heron or a white egret was more than could
-be made sure of at my distance. I recall, too, a
-flock of ducks, a cormorant or two, speeding
-through the air after their usual headlong manner,
-a solitary red-winged blackbird, astray from
-the flock, and the cries of killdeer plovers.
-Kingfishers were not infrequent, two or three
-ospreys came into sight, and once, at least, I
-made sure of a Louisiana heron. A lean showing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-certainly, for what might have been thought
-so promising a place.</p>
-
-<p>And now, as the grass grew shorter, so that
-we could survey the world about us, the water of
-a sudden turned shallow. The professor’s flat-bottomed
-boat still floated prosperously, but my
-own heavier, keeled craft speedily touched bottom.
-The rower put down the oars, took off his
-shoes and stockings, rolled up his trousers, and
-proceeded to lighten the boat of his weight, and
-drag it forward. This expedient answered for a
-rod or two. Then we stuck fast again, and the
-passenger followed his boatman’s example and
-took to the water. So we followed along, the
-water now deeper, now shallower, the bottom
-hard and slimy, till after a little we were at the
-end of our rope. If we were to go farther we
-must leave the boat behind us.</p>
-
-<p>This was hardly worth while, especially as even
-in that way we could not hope to proceed far
-enough to see anything different from what we
-had seen already. “We will go back,” I said,
-“drifting with the current and stopping by the
-way.” And so we did, my boatman and I, leaving
-the professor—who, as it turned out, went
-but a few rods beyond us—to pursue his investigations
-unhindered.</p>
-
-<p>After all, in spite of our indolent intentions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-the return was faster than the upward journey,
-as almost of necessity happens, whether one is
-descending a river or a mountain. The time for
-loitering is in going up. One good thing we saw,
-nevertheless, though it was only for an instant.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?” my man suddenly exclaimed,
-in the eagerest of tones. “Look! Right there!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” I said; “a least bittern.”</p>
-
-<p>It stood crosswise, so to speak, halfway up a
-tall reed, for all the world like a marsh wren.
-Then away it went on the wing, and was lost in
-the grass. It was a good bird to see, besides
-counting as “No. 91” in my Miami list.</p>
-
-<p>“I never did see a bird like that,”<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> the boatman
-said. “Such a little fellow!” he called it.
-It was a pleasure to find him so enthusiastic.</p>
-
-<p>The best thing of the whole trip, notwithstanding,
-was not the sight of any bird, but our lazy,
-careless, albeit too rapid gliding down the stream,
-with the world so bright and calm about us and
-above. Here and there, for our delight, was a
-tuft of fragrant white “lilies” (<i>Crinum</i>) standing
-amid a tuft of handsome upright green leaves.
-More than once, also, we passed boatloads of
-fishermen (and fisherwomen), white and black.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-One elderly and carefully dressed, city-coated
-gentleman I especially remember. He sat in the
-stern of the boat (his African boatman with a
-line out, also), watching the fluctuations of his
-bob as earnestly, I thought, as ever he could
-have watched the fluctuations of the stock market.
-His whole soul was centred upon that bit
-of cork and the possible fish below. He actually
-had a nibble as we passed! What cared he then
-for “coppers” or “industrials”? He must at
-some time or other have been a boy. The lucky
-man! By the look on his face he was happy.
-And happiness, if I am to judge by what I see,
-is one of the main things, in Florida. At all
-events, it was the main thing that I found in the
-Everglades.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">THE BEGINNINGS OF SPRING</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Manifold</span> are the perils of journalism. A few
-weeks ago I filled a letter with the praise, most
-sincerely felt, of a certain tropical hammock on
-the road from Miami to Cocoanut Grove, a place
-full of birds, and destined, so I hoped, to be
-equally full of music. This eulogy, it transpires,
-was read by a bird-loving enthusiast from New
-England, sojourning for the winter at the Hotel
-Ormond; and what should he do but send me
-word, a stranger, that he had packed his trunk
-and was coming down straightway (two hundred
-and fifty miles or more) to inspect the wonder.</p>
-
-<p>In due course he arrived, and as soon as possible
-I led him out of the city, across the river,
-through a stretch of blazing sunshine, and at last
-into the heart of the hammock. It was a long
-jaunt, much longer than he was prepared for, the
-afternoon was hot, and to make matters worse the
-hammock showed almost no sign of that profusion
-of avian existence, with the anticipation of
-which my glowing periods had filled him.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for my reputation, I had forewarned
-him that such would be the case. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-birds, I explained, either because the season had
-advanced, or for some other reason, had pretty
-nearly deserted the jungle of West Indian trees,
-shrubs, and vines,—for such this particular hammock
-is,—and had betaken themselves to the
-more open country, especially to certain groves
-of newly clad live-oaks, whose sturdy, wide-spreading,
-rival-killing, trust-creating, monopolistic
-arms, by the time the trees are of middle age,
-have made for themselves a relatively sunny
-clearing.</p>
-
-<p>I had been growing aware of this change in
-the face of things for a week or two, and now,
-when the newcomer has been three or four days
-in Miami, the reality of it is conclusively established.
-On two mornings of the present week,
-for example, I found in a few minutes’ stroll before
-breakfast a highly interesting flock of perhaps
-twenty kinds of birds in the live-oaks and
-other scattered trees on the very edge of the
-city, within a hundred rods of my own doorstep:
-fish crows, boat-tailed grackles, crow blackbirds,
-red-headed woodpeckers, downy woodpeckers,
-red-bellied woodpeckers, flickers, catbirds, mockingbirds,
-house wrens, cardinals, palm warblers,
-myrtle warblers, parula warblers, prairie warblers,
-black-and-white warblers, yellow-throated
-warblers, solitary vireos, yellow-throated vireos,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-blue jays, phœbes, ground doves, blue-gray gnatcatchers,
-ruby-crowned kinglets, a male nonpareil,
-a Baltimore oriole, a crested flycatcher, a hummingbird,
-and a hermit thrush. A varied bunch
-of feathers, and no mistake.</p>
-
-<p>In the tropical hammock, on the other hand,
-during the same forenoons, I saw, as well as I remember,
-nothing but white-eyed vireos, phœbes,
-catbirds, cardinals, palm and myrtle warblers,
-crested flycatchers, nonpareils, and gnatcatchers.
-So completely has the condition of things been
-reversed with the change of season.</p>
-
-<p>Other signs are not lacking that March has
-brought the spring. Mockingbirds are daily becoming
-more rhapsodical. The other afternoon,
-out among the cabins of the black suburb, I
-stood still while three sang at once on different
-sides. They are friends of the poor, as well as
-of the rich. This morning two yellow-throated
-vireos sang, chattered, and whistled; and a most
-delicious trilled whistle theirs is, soft, musical,
-full of sweet and happy feeling. Better still,
-almost (because more of a novelty), a yellow-throated
-warbler sang his dreamy tune over and
-over. This is one of the most exquisite birds ever
-made; of quiet, modest colors, bluish-black and
-white, with a single bright jewel to set them off—a
-gorget of brilliant yellow. To-day I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-seen as many as ten such beauties, I think. Their
-feeding habits and their movements, as well as
-their black-and-white stripes, are surprisingly
-like those of the black-and-white creeper,—to
-which they ought to be more nearly related than
-the systematists allow,—while their song is in
-the manner of the indigo-bird.</p>
-
-<p>Now, if the nonpareil buntings would only fall
-into line! Thus far they have not favored me
-with a note, and indifferent musicians as I know
-them to be, I believe there is no other bird in
-Miami that I am so desirous of hearing. Such
-feathers as they wear! Once in a while, of late,
-a male has been good enough to take a somewhat
-lofty perch and display himself. If there
-is a more gorgeous bird in the United States I
-should like to see him. Just now there are at
-least three enthusiasts in Miami—a Kentucky
-lady, a Rhode Island man, and a Massachusetts
-man—who are doing their best daily to get their
-fill of his loveliness.</p>
-
-<p>Phœbes have sung much less of late than they
-did in January. Then they seemed to find existence
-a perpetual jubilee. Red-bellied woodpeckers,
-too, are far less talkative than they were a
-month ago. Most likely they are busier. And
-by the by, the Kentucky enthusiast above mentioned
-pleased me by calling this woodpecker the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-“checkerback,” a felicitous name, in common
-use in Kentucky, it appears, and perhaps elsewhere.
-I am happy to adopt it and pass it on.</p>
-
-<p>If there were words wherewith to describe the
-indescribable, I should like to tell of a bluebird
-that I saw a week ago about one of the vegetable
-gardens out on the prairie. The blue of that
-creature’s back and wings is not to be imagined.
-The bluest sky never matched it. I would wager
-that he was Florida born. No Northern bird ever
-owned such a coat. In my recollection he will
-stand as one of the sights of the country, along
-with the “banyan trees,” the snaky green vanilla
-vines, and the tropical jungle.</p>
-
-<p>These letters are of necessity written piecemeal.
-In this hospitable Southern country, where
-the weather and so many things beside are continually
-calling, “Come forth and enjoy us,” one
-cannot stay indoors very long at once. So it
-happened that at the conclusion of the last paragraph
-I put down my pencil and started out for
-another few minutes among the live-oaks. As
-I approached them I descried a man sitting upon
-a heap of coal-ashes dumped along the railway.
-He might have been Job himself, to look at him,
-but at a second glance I perceived that he was
-not actually sitting in the ashes, but on a board,
-and instead of bewailing his afflictions or his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-sins, was peacefully minding the New Testament
-injunction, “Behold the fowls of the air.” In
-short, he was the gentleman from Ormond, with
-his glass, as it happened, focused upon a handsome
-prairie warbler.</p>
-
-<p>We passed the time of day, after the bird had
-flown,—for the field has its courtesies, and we
-respect them,—and he told me that in spite of
-the unfavorable north wind (one of our periodical
-cold spells is upon us, with the mercury in the
-forties) he had ventured out, and had been liberally
-rewarded. He had seen yellow-throated
-warblers, a parula, a prairie, and I forget what
-else, and, to take his word for it, was living in
-clover.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a hawk swooped among the trees,
-and every small bird became invisible as if by
-magic. Then my companion proposed taking a
-turn beyond the fence. This we did, and just as
-we came suddenly upon a huge watch-dog (a
-great Dane, I suppose he would be called), formidable-looking
-and chained, but fawning upon
-us so eagerly that there was nothing for it but to
-pat him on the head and call him a good fellow—just
-as we approached him, I say, I nudged
-the second man to stop. There, straight before
-us, side by side on the rim of an iron kettle of
-water set under the trees for the dog’s benefit,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-stood a male cardinal and a male nonpareil.
-Perhaps they were not a glorious pair! Them
-also I shall remember, along with the miraculous
-bluebird.</p>
-
-<p>Less brilliant, but even more memorable, was
-my one Bachman’s warbler. I had stopped under
-a live-oak,—on a return from the big hammock,—and
-was putting my glass upon one bird after
-another feeding among its blossoms (parulas,
-yellow-throats, ruby-crowns, gnatcatchers, and
-myrtle-birds), when in the very topmost spray I
-sighted a spot of coal-black set in bright yellow.
-Here was something new. From twig to twig
-the stranger went,—rather deliberately, for a
-warbler,—the glass following, till after submitting
-for perhaps ten minutes to my eager inspection
-he slipped away, as birds have a knack of
-doing, without my seeing him go. However, he
-had shown himself perfectly—the jet breastplate,
-the yellow forehead, the black crown, the lustrous
-olive of the upper parts, and the yellow patch
-upon the wing. He was a bird that I had never
-expected to see. Comparatively few ornithologists
-have been so happy.</p>
-
-<p>This was on March 7. For two days we had
-noticed indications of a migratory movement,
-especially among parulas and yellow-throated
-warblers. Probably the Bachman had come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-from farther south. My thanks to him for treating
-me so handsomely, though he might have
-doubled the obligation, at no cost to himself, by
-singing me a tune.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">FAIR ORMOND</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> nearly two months in the extreme south
-of Florida I have turned my face northward, and
-here I am at Ormond, fair Ormond-on-the-Halifax.
-No more bewildering jungles of nameless
-West Indian trees and climbers, no more cocoanut
-palms, no more acres of wild morning-glory
-vines. It gave me a start of pleasurable surprise
-when, somewhere on this side of Palm Beach, I
-do not remember where, I saw from the car window
-a stately sweet-gum tree all freshly green. It
-had not occurred to me till then that I had found
-nothing at Miami of this handsome and characteristic
-Southerner, always one of my favorites.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, I have come to a different world. I
-am no longer in a foreign country. Here are
-lordly magnolias, not yet in blossom, to be sure,
-but proudly beautiful in the leaf. Here, too, are
-Cherokee roses, loveliest of all flowers, just coming
-into their kingdom. At sight of the first glossy-leaved
-bush, which happened to stand near a
-house, I made up to the door, not stopping twice
-to consider, and asked the privilege of picking a
-flower and a bud. The householder was generous,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-and the bush even more so. “Take another, and
-another,” it seemed to say, catching me again
-and again by the sleeve; “I have enough and
-to spare.” It was hard work for me to get away.
-Here, also, is the yellow jessamine, only less
-beautiful than the rose, hanging the tall forest
-trees full of golden, fragrant bells. And here,
-sprinkled along the wayside, are stores of blue
-violets. None of these things are to be seen on
-the shores of Biscayne Bay. Yes, I am glad to
-be here.</p>
-
-<p>And the phlox, likewise, the pretty Drummond’s
-phlox of our Northern gardens, dear to
-me of old, let me not forget that. It is not indigenous
-to the country, I suppose, but, like the
-garden verbena, being here it makes itself most
-comfortably at home, delighting to overrun forsaken
-orange groves and similar unoccupied waste
-places. How sweetly it looks up at us with its
-innocent child’s face! Just now one of the guests
-of the hotel came in with a broad market-basket
-loaded with it, a good half-bushel, at the very
-least. “I have counted twenty-six varieties,” he
-said (he was thinking of diversities of color),
-and there must be somewhere near that number
-in the crowded vase that he has sent down to
-brighten my writing-table.</p>
-
-<p>Here, too, is the Atlantic beach. In ten minutes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-I cross the peninsula and am on the sands;
-or, if I stroll up or down the river shore,—on
-the western side of the peninsula,—I can hear
-all the while the pounding of the surf.</p>
-
-<p>I have been in Ormond two days,—two perfect
-days of temperate summer weather,—and
-have walked hither and thither, up the river,
-down the river, across the river, and on the beach,
-seeing comparatively little of the country as yet,
-but enough to be able to say that I have never
-found any place in Florida where a walking man
-should be better contented. There are paths and
-roads everywhere,—a convenience not to be
-taken for granted in this Southern country,—and
-be his states of mind never so variable, he
-may here suit the jaunt to the mood.</p>
-
-<p>A visit to Ormond was not in my plans for
-the winter, and I left Miami with regret. Migratory
-birds were arriving, and I seemed to be
-running away just when there was most to detain
-me; those tropical plants, too, were certain
-to become more and more interesting as the season
-grew older; but, like the verbena and the
-phlox, being here I am thankful. If I have taken
-leave of some splendid birds (those painted
-buntings are in my eye as I write), I have found
-some old friends in their place. It is good to
-see brown thrashers again, with song sparrows,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-white-throats, and chickadees. One of a bird-loving
-man’s strangest sensations at Miami is
-the absence of chickadees and tufted titmice.
-I had never been in such a place before. (For
-eight weeks, let me say in passing, I have seen
-no English sparrows. Unfortunately I have not
-yet forgotten how they look.)</p>
-
-<p>In my two days here I have counted but fifty
-kinds of birds. A goodly number that I know
-to be present, and even common, I have so far
-happened to miss. But in the middle of March
-even fifty birds make something like a festival.
-Mockers, cardinals, and Carolina wrens—the
-great Southern trio—are tuneful, of course.
-Even as I write, a wren is whistling an accompaniment
-to my pencil. If I could only put the
-music on the paper! If it would only “modulate
-my periods!” as Charles Lamb said. When I
-sit in the shade of a moss-hung live-oak, letting
-the sea breeze fan me, and listen to an assembly
-of red-winged blackbirds rehearsing their breezy
-<i>conkaree</i> among the reeds along the Halifax
-(though it is not a simple <i>conkaree</i>, either, but
-<i>conkaree-dah</i>, the old tune with a new coda),
-I think of swamps in far Massachusetts where
-on this very 12th of March other redwings are
-opening the musical season in a very different
-atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>Chewinks of both kinds (red-eyes and white-eyes,
-Northerners and Southerners) are calling
-and singing. Blue yellow-backed warblers are
-musical after their manner (they hardly need to
-be singers, being so exquisite in color, form, and
-motion), and white-eyed vireos are numerous
-enough, though nothing like so plentiful as at
-Miami. Here, as there, they have no thought of
-hiding their light under a bushel.</p>
-
-<p>It is like old times to see Florida jays sitting
-on the chimney-tops of the summer cottages along
-the dunes behind the beach. Thus it was that I
-saw them first, at Daytona, nine years ago. As a
-friend and I stopped this morning to rest in the
-shade of a piazza, one came and stood upon the
-railing and eyed us long and curiously. “Have
-you nothing edible about you?” he seemed to
-say. If we had had anything to offer the beggar,
-I am confident he would have hopped upon our
-knees.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> As it was, he approached within five or
-six feet while we chirped and talked to him.
-Florida jays are strange creatures for tameness,
-and if it were thought worth while could readily
-be domesticated.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed natural, also, to see pelicans flying in
-small flocks up the beach, just over the breakers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-so that half the time they were invisible, lost
-in the trough of the sea; moving always in
-Indian file, flapping their wings and scaling by
-turns. And still another remembrancer of my
-previous visit to this part of Florida was the
-sight of a bald eagle robbing a fishhawk. The
-hawk made a stubborn defense, dodging this way
-and that, rising and falling, but in the end the
-eagle, an old white-headed fellow, was more than
-a match for his victim; for though they were
-far away, the motions of the contestants showed
-plainly enough how the struggle terminated.</p>
-
-<p>On the beach, halfway to his knees in water,
-stood a great blue heron, leaning seaward, waiting
-for a fish. He might have been standing
-there for nine years. At all events I left him
-in the same position that length of time ago.
-“Ay, and you,” he might rejoin, “you haven’t
-changed, either. You have still nothing better
-to do than to go wandering up and down the
-earth, shooting birds with an opera-glass?”
-True enough. Heron and man, after nine years
-each is the same old sixpence. “The thing that
-hath been it is that which shall be, and there is
-nothing new under the sun.” Well, so be it.
-Only let me find new pleasure in the old places
-and the old pursuits.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A DAY IN THE WOODS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I was</span> well within the truth when I said, a week
-ago, that there could not be many places in Florida
-where a walking man would find his wants
-so generously provided for as at Ormond. Here
-he may spend a half-day in idling over a round
-of a mile or two,—sea beach, river bank, and
-woodland,—or he may foot it as industriously
-as he pleases from morning till night; and the
-next day and the day after he will have plenty
-of invitations to “fresh woods,” though hardly
-to “pastures new.” Pastures, whether new or
-old, he may look for elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>But at Ormond a man may not only walk,
-he may drive; and this forenoon (March 19) a
-pair of horses have taken me over such a road
-as I do not expect soon to find the like of, either
-in Florida or anywhere else; a course of twelve
-or fifteen miles, the whole of it (as soon as the
-bridge over the Halifax was crossed) through
-most beautiful forest. The road was wide enough
-for the carriage and no more; soft as a carpet,
-so that the wheels made no noise, with big trunks
-of pines, palmettoes, oaks, sweet-gums, magnolias,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-and what not crowding upon the track so closely
-that we could almost put out our hands and touch
-them as we passed. In the whole distance, to
-the best of my recollection, we met neither carriage
-nor foot-passenger.</p>
-
-<p>We drove as we pleased, stopped as we pleased,
-talked or kept silence, listened to the birds, admired
-the flowers and the new leafage (there are
-no words wherewith to intimate its freshness and
-beauty), and withal dreamed of the time when all
-the land about us was the scene of busy labors,
-when sugar and rice and cotton were cultivated
-here by hundreds of slaves, and those who owned
-the land, as they imagined, had no thought of a
-day when the forest should again claim all their
-fair possessions. We drove to Mount Oswald, so
-called, near the mouth of the Tomoka River,
-thence over the famous old causeway, set with
-palmettoes, to Buckhead Bluff, at which point the
-King’s road to St. Augustine is supposed (or
-known) to have crossed the river a hundred years
-ago. I was glad to see the river (I shall see more
-of it, if I live a day or two longer), but the great
-thing was the forest, with its present beauty and
-its whisperings of past romance.</p>
-
-<p>Now it is afternoon, and I am in the same
-woods. No lover of wild life ever drove over a
-beautiful country road for the first time without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-saying to himself again and again, “I must
-come this way on foot.” A carriage is well
-enough in its place, but really to see things a
-man must be on his own legs. Immediately after
-luncheon, therefore, with a merry company of
-golfers (a flourishing sect in Florida), I took the
-little one-horse street-car to the railway station,
-and now, having crossed a narrow field and left
-the golfers at their afternoon devotions, I am
-in the Volusia road, in the noblest of hammock
-woods.</p>
-
-<p>The first half-mile of the way I have walked
-over more than once already, and having in mind
-the shortness of the afternoon I quicken my steps.
-The doing so is no hardship. For the last forty-eight
-hours the wind has blown from the north;
-during the night the mercury settled to 38°;
-and though it is considerably warmer than that
-now, a pretty brisk movement is still not uncomfortable.</p>
-
-<p>Here I pass a mournful sight—an old orange
-grove, of which nothing remains but the sandy
-soil and a few blackened stumps. The “great
-freeze” of six or seven years ago killed the trees
-to the roots. Nearly opposite, to add to the forlornness
-of the impression, stands a deserted
-house; and not far along is another, that looks
-only less unthrifty and disconsolate, with an old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-woman smoking a pipe on the piazza. It would
-be a strict moralist who should grudge her that
-one comfort.</p>
-
-<p>Now I have left the last human habitation behind
-me, and in front stretches the narrow road
-arched with greenness, running away and away
-till it runs out of sight. What lofty oaks and
-sweet-gums! And what beautiful lichens cover
-them with wise-looking hieroglyphics! If we
-could only decipher their meaning! I note especially
-the ribbed, muscular-seeming trunks of the
-hornbeams, one of which, the largest, is riddled
-with uncountable perforations, the work of some
-sap-loving woodpecker; and I turn about more
-than once to admire the proportions of a magnificent
-magnolia, one of the largest I have ever
-seen. My thanks to the highway surveyor who
-went a few feet out of his way to leave it standing.
-A rod or two more, and I stop to look up
-at some exceptionally tall pines and live-oaks, a
-noticeable group, in the altitude of which I have
-before found a pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>How they soar, as if to see which shall go
-highest! And as high as the oak branches go, so
-high the gray moss follows.</p>
-
-<p>Now I am at the fork of the road. My course
-is to the right. “Old Stage Road to Buckhead
-Bluff on the Tomoka River at the crossing of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-the ‘old King’s road’ to St. Augustine.” So the
-guideboard reads, with commendable particularity.
-“Old” is the word. Even the wind in the
-tree-tops seems to be whispering stories of things
-that happened long, long ago. And the trees
-answer, “Yes, so the fathers have told us.” To
-think of all those busy people! And every one
-of them dead!</p>
-
-<p>Here is a bit of clearing where the sun strikes
-in. It feels good. This is the right kind of outdoor
-weather—shade not uncomfortable and
-the sun’s heat welcome. A white-eyed chewink,
-happy Floridian, is whistling from the brush.
-Holly trees are common, and the sweet-bay is
-everywhere. Its shining leaves are of a most
-salubrious odor, as if they might be for the healing
-of the nations. I am continually plucking
-them and rolling them in my fingers.</p>
-
-<p>And yonder is the maker of the clearing—a
-colored man, standing beside a woodpile. I hail
-him to remark that it is a fine day, and he answers,
-“Yes, very nice.” Strange that when two
-men meet for the only time in their lives they
-should find nothing more important to communicate
-than that it rains, or that the sun is shining.
-But weather is the thing, after all, especially in
-Florida. Perhaps it deserves all that is said about
-it. Anyhow, the woodcutter and the stroller have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-expressed a feeling of neighborliness and have
-told each other no lies.</p>
-
-<p>With every rod the wood changes from glory
-to glory. I remark with special joy a grove of
-tall, slender, smooth-barked water-oaks, every
-one in new leaf. Height rather than girth is their
-aim. “We must have the sun,” they say, “and
-we climb to get it.” How good the sun is, let
-their leaves testify; those millions on millions of
-shining leaves, every one new. Yes, every one
-new. I cannot write the word too often. And
-many times as I write it, the Northern reader
-will have but an insufficient sense of its meaning.
-Such freshness and greenness! Neither memory
-nor imagination can body it forth. Happy are
-the eyes that behold the miracle twice in a single
-spring. It is like doubling one’s year.</p>
-
-<p>A Carolina wren whistles, near at hand, but
-invisible (invisibility is the wren’s trick), and a
-red-eyed vireo, farther away, has begun his reiterative,
-summer-long exhortation. I was taken by
-surprise, two or three days ago, when I heard the
-first of his kind in this same hammock; I was not
-looking for him so early. His irrepressible cousin,
-the white-eye, has been abundantly vocal for at
-least two months. At this very minute one is rehearsing
-a strain with a pretty and decidedly original
-quirk at the end. And, by the by, I notice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-that many white-eyes hereabout practice a deceptive
-imitation of the crested flycatcher’s loud
-whistle, while others, or perhaps the same ones,
-sometimes begin with a broken measure, such as
-I think I never heard from a Massachusetts white-eye,
-strongly suggestive of the summer tanager.
-Call him pert, saucy, a chatter-box, Old Volubility,
-what you will, the white-eye is indisputably
-a genius.</p>
-
-<p>But for to-day, and for me, none of the birds
-sing quite so feelingly or so well as the wind in
-the tree-tops. I stop again and again to listen to
-it, and would stop oftener still but for the brevity
-of the afternoon and the uncertainty I am in as
-to the length of the walk before me.</p>
-
-<p>Hickory nuts, split in halves and lying blackened
-in the sand, lead me to look upward. Yes,
-there are the trees, still with bare boughs. Their
-tender leafage does well to be late in sprouting,
-even in this Southern country. There is no tree
-but knows a thing or two. Every kind has a wisdom
-of its own. <i>Experientia docet</i> is true of
-them as of us.</p>
-
-<p>And now I suddenly find myself nearing the
-railroad, and having consulted my watch conclude
-to go back over the sleepers. It will be my
-shortest course, and will have the further advantage
-of taking me past a swamp, on the edge of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-which I caught glimpses of sora rails a few days
-ago. This time I will be more cautious in my
-approaches.</p>
-
-<p>A cardinal is whistling, a checkerback is
-chattering, many warblers are in the sunny tree-tops,
-and from somewhere in the depths of the
-forest comes the deep, oracular voice of an owl,
-though the sun is at least half an hour high.
-<i>Whoo, whoo, who-who</i>, he calls. I love to hear
-him. On the wire fence is a yellow jessamine
-vine, still sporting a few last blossoms, and for
-rods together the sandy railway embankment is
-draped with exquisite white “bramble roses,”
-the flowers of the creeping blackberry. Later
-comers will find berries on the vines, but perhaps
-I have the better part of the crop.</p>
-
-<p>I am well satisfied, at all events, and am still
-feasting upon the sight when out of the tall grass
-on my left hand comes a rail’s voice—the voice
-of one crying in the wilderness. I am drawing
-near the swamp, and make haste to cover with
-my field-glass the spaces of open water among
-the dead flags. Yes, there are birds—one, two,
-three, four. But they are not rails. I see as
-much as that before I have finished my count.
-Three of them are swimming. They are gallinules;
-and when one of them turns, and the sunlight
-strikes him, I see the red plate on his forehead.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-They are Florida gallinules, my first ones
-for nine years. My glass follows their movements
-jealously till the thunder of an approaching train
-startles them and they fly to the shelter of the
-tall grass. I shall come this way again, and not
-only see but hear them. Their language is various
-and interesting, though most of it has the
-accent of the barnyard.</p>
-
-<p>A pileated woodpecker crosses the track just
-before me, with all his colors flying, a pair of
-bluebirds sit in their accustomed place upon the
-telegraph wire, and from the neighboring pines
-I catch the finch-like twitters of a brown-headed
-nuthatch. This is close upon the railway station
-and the golf links. My afternoon is done, but
-the golf players are still making the most of daylight.
-I blush to confess it, but there are some
-enthusiasms with which even that of a strolling
-naturalist will hardly endure comparison.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">PICTURE AND SONG</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">What</span> seek we in Florida? The same that we
-seek everywhere—sensations. Life is made of
-them. In proportion as they are lively and
-pleasurable we find it good. The higher their
-quality, the nobler the part that feels them, the
-less physical they are, the less they have to do
-with eating and drinking and being clothed, the
-more truly we are alive and not dead.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the people that we meet in Florida
-are vacationers like ourselves. At home they
-may be in the wool business, in shoes, or in
-dyestuffs; here they have no occupation but to
-amuse themselves. In the daytime they fish,
-play golf, drive, or lounge upon the hotel piazza.
-In the evening they sit in the lobby, listen
-(possibly) to the music, admire (or not) the
-gowns and jewels of the ladies (the self-sacrificing
-creatures are all on parade, like so many
-Queens of Sheba), take a hand at cards, or
-gossip about something or nothing with a traveling
-companion or a chance acquaintance. At
-the worst they dawdle over a newspaper or a
-novel, and consume the hour in smoke. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-judge by appearances their sensations are not
-poignant, though the anglers and the golfers,
-and even the shuffle-board players, no doubt
-have their exciting moments; but on the whole
-the winter passes rather quickly. When there
-is nothing else to do, and the time drags, one
-can always cheer one’s self by thinking how
-intemperate the season is at home. The most
-refreshing parts of the Northern newspapers are
-their reports of snowstorms and blizzards.</p>
-
-<p>For my own part, I admire the ladies’ gowns
-(in one sense or other of the word, who could
-help it?), but what my untutored mind is most
-taken with is the beauty of the natural world,
-the world as God made it, rather than as man,
-even the man-milliner, has improved it. I love
-to look up or down the moss-hung vista of the
-river road (I am still at Ormond), or, turning
-my head, to gaze across the smooth water at the
-freshly green, happy-looking oak woods and the
-overtopping pines. These are pictures that I
-hope never to forget.</p>
-
-<p>The other day an old friend, a settler in these
-parts, rowed me down the river a few miles.
-There we took an untraveled road through the
-forest, and by and by came suddenly to a clearing,
-in the middle of which stood an abandoned
-house. The place had once been an orange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-orchard, I suppose; and even now, although
-there was hardly so much as a stump left to tell
-the tale, it remained in its own way a paradise
-of beauty. From end to end the five or six
-sandy acres were thickly overgrown with Drummond’s
-phlox, all in fullest bloom, a rosy wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pretty show. We exclaimed over it,
-and gathered handfuls of the lovely flowers, but
-as we rowed homeward we were favored with a
-spectacle to which it would be a profanation to
-apply such epithets. The afternoon, which began
-doubtfully, had turned out a marvel of perfection.
-The wind had gone down, the river was
-like glass, and the level rays of the sun touched
-all the shore woods to an almost unearthly
-beauty. And withal, the sky was full of the
-softest, most exquisitely shaded, finely broken
-clouds. It was an hour such as comes once and
-is never repeated. In my mind the memory of
-it has already taken its place beside the memory
-of a sunset seen many years ago from a Massachusetts
-mountain-top. These are some of the
-“sensations” of which I spoke. They are the
-sufficient rewards of travel, though now and
-then, the Fates favoring, we may have them at
-home also, without money and without price.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, or the next but one, I strolled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-about two miles up the river northward, to the
-house where, on my first day at Ormond, I had
-seen a Cherokee rosebush just breaking into
-flower. This time it was at the top of its glory,
-such a glory as I have no hope of describing.
-At a moderate calculation the mound of leafy
-stems must have borne four or five thousand
-roses, every one the very image of purity and
-sweetness. Those who are familiar with the
-Cherokee rose will perhaps be able to imagine
-the picture of loveliness here presented; and
-such readers will be glad to know that a lover of
-beauty (not an idle, time-killing tourist, but a
-man at home and at work), having heard my
-report of the bush, walked four or five miles on
-purpose to see it, and declared himself amply
-repaid for his labor. “The poetry of earth is
-never dead;” and there is never wanting some
-poet’s soul to enjoy it, and so to make it twice
-alive.</p>
-
-<p>Though it is near the end of March there is
-comparatively little sign of bird migration.
-Chuck-will’s-widows—Southern whippoorwills,
-if one chooses to call them so—have arrived
-and are abundantly in voice. The nights are
-scarcely long enough for all they have to say. I
-hear of a cottager who is awakened by one so
-persistently and so early in the morning that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-is devising means to kill it. I hope he will not
-succeed, although if the bird is close to his open
-window and begins to unburden himself at half-past
-two, as one does within hearing from my
-bed, I cannot very seriously blame him for the
-attempt. He goes out in his night-clothes, I am
-told, and tries to “shoo” it away; but the bird
-has a message, as truly as Poe’s raven, and is
-bound to deliver it, whether men will hear or
-forbear.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of March 26, in an ante-breakfast
-stroll, I found among the pines immediately
-in the rear of the hotel the first summer
-tanager of the season. The splendid creature,
-bright red throughout, was flitting from tree to
-tree, singing a measure or two from each. He
-acted as if he were happy to be back in Ormond,
-and I did not wonder. A red-eyed vireo was
-singing on the 15th, and since then birds of the
-same kind have become moderately common.
-Considering that the red-eye is not supposed to
-winter anywhere in the United States (I saw
-nothing of it at Miami), and arrives so late in
-New England, it seems to have reached Ormond
-surprisingly early.</p>
-
-<p>For some time the woods have been alive in
-spots with busy crowds of warblers. Parulas especially
-have been present in enormous force,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-and have sung literally in chorus. I have seen
-many yellow-throated warblers also, and many
-myrtles, with a fair sprinkling of prairies and
-black-and-white creepers. But the birds that
-have sung best—after the mocker and the
-thrasher, perhaps—are not spring comers, but
-our faithful winter friends, the cardinal grosbeak
-and the Carolina wren. Indeed, of all Southern
-songsters I believe that the cardinal stands first
-in my affections. Sweetness, tenderness, affectionateness,
-and variety, these are his gifts, and
-they are good ones, even if they are not the
-highest.</p>
-
-<p>Out in the flatwoods, a few days ago, we suddenly
-heard, coming from a thicket of dwarf palmetto
-on the edge of water, a quite unexpected
-strain, a loud, short trill. “What was that?”
-asked my companions, as we looked at one another;
-for there were three pairs of field-glasses
-in the carriage. “It sounded like a swamp sparrow,”
-said I, with doubt in my voice. At that
-moment the measure was given out again, prefaced
-this time by a peculiar indrawn whistle.
-Then the truth flashed upon me. It was the song
-of a pine-wood sparrow. I had not heard it for
-many years. In the same place meadow larks
-were in tune, bluebirds warbled, and pine warblers
-and brown-headed nuthatches were in voice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-among the pine trees. Here, too, I was glad to
-hear, for the first time in Florida, the caw of a
-real crow, a bird with a roof to his mouth and a
-voice that sounded like home.</p>
-
-<p>Such are some of a bird-loving man’s early
-spring pleasures in this Southern country. I do
-not mean to praise the season unduly. New England
-can beat it when the time comes; at least,
-I know one New Englander who thinks so; but
-not in March.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">TEXAS AND ARIZONA</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-<h3 class="nobreak">IN OLD SAN ANTONIO</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> three days and four nights in a sleeping-car
-it is good to breathe air again. Not that I
-mean to speak ill of the modern necessity known
-in railway offices as a “sleeper”; it has done
-me too many a service; but, for all that,—though
-it is a bridge that has carried me over,—well,
-as I said, it is a luxury to breathe air
-again.</p>
-
-<p>So I thought this January afternoon as I sat
-upon the top rail (a pretty thin board) of a tall
-fence at the summit of what I take to be one of
-the highest elevations (it would be exceeding the
-truth, perhaps, to call it a hill) in the immediate
-neighborhood of this venerable but young and
-vigorous Texas city, known in geographies and
-gazetteers as San Antonio, but among railroad
-men, with whom time and breath are precious,
-as “San Antone.”</p>
-
-<p>The city itself lay all before me, and an excellent
-showing it made, with its many stately and
-handsome buildings and its general air of prosperity;
-but for the most part my eyes traveled
-beyond it, or in other directions. The landscape<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-was wide, whichever way I turned, and the transparency
-of the atmosphere, of a kind never enjoyed
-in New England except on some half-dozen
-days in a year, made it the wider and more alluring.
-It surprised me to see imposing public
-buildings scattered about over the country. The
-nearest must have been several miles from the
-town, and each, so far as I could see, stood entirely
-by itself. Here and there, also, miles
-apart, were fine dwelling-houses, with outbuildings
-and windmills; each, like the public institutions
-just mentioned, standing alone, as if its
-proprietor were also the proprietor of the entire
-tract of country roundabout. Rich men’s ranches,
-they should perhaps be called. All these, or
-most of them, would have been invisible from
-my fence-rail perch, but for the fact, which really
-made the strangeness of the whole spectacle to a
-New England man’s eyes, that the rolling land
-is all unwooded—a broad landscape, stretching
-away and away, north, south, east, and west, and
-no forest! The slopes look, at a little distance,—just
-as the one on which I was now sitting
-had looked to me half a mile back,—as if they
-might be planted with young peach orchards.
-They are really covered loosely with wild shrubs
-ten or fifteen feet high, now budded and in pale
-green leaf (Huisache, I understand their Mexican<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-name to be,<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> though I may err in the spelling),
-with lower shrubs of different sorts, mostly
-thorny, scattered loosely among them, the whole
-constituting (or so I suppose) what is known in
-this part of the world as chaparral; which is
-very like what in our Northern country we speak
-of, less respectfully, as “scrub.”</p>
-
-<p>It is a godsend to a man on my errand, that
-chaparral, as it grows about San Antonio, at all
-events, is not a dense thicket. It can be walked
-through or ridden through in all directions with
-perfect ease, though one cannot keep a straight
-course for more than a rod or two together.</p>
-
-<p>I had been strolling over exactly such a hill
-half an hour before, circling one cluster of shrubs
-after another, opera-glass in hand, on the alert
-for any bird that might show itself (it was likely
-as not to be a stranger), when all at once—how
-it came about I shall never be able to tell—there,
-just before me on the ground, twenty or thirty
-feet away, stood one of the birds that I had
-most desired to see in this novel Southwestern
-world—a road-runner. I have found some puzzles
-since my arrival at San Antonio, three days
-ago, but this was not one of them. As our good
-common saying is, the fellow looked “as natural<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-as life.” Mr. Fuertes’s drawing had stepped out
-of the book. I could have shouted with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>The bird was true to his name. There was no
-road, to be sure, but he knew what was expected
-of him, and started off at once at a lively trot;
-then, within ten or fifteen feet, he stopped short,
-lifted his ridiculously long tail till it stood at
-right angles with his body,—the white “thumb-marks”
-at the ends of the feathers making a
-brave show, in spite of the almost indecent absurdity
-of his attitude,—and after a moment started
-on again. Two or three times he repeated these
-manœuvres; and then, without my knowing how
-he did it, he escaped me altogether, although the
-bit of shrubbery into which he had vanished was
-only a few feet in diameter. “Never mind,” I
-thought, “I have seen him.” And he was every
-whit as oddly behaved a piece as my fancy had
-painted him.</p>
-
-<p>The road-runner, it should be said, is an overgrown
-member of the cuckoo family. Its length
-from the tip of its bill to the end of its tail is
-about two feet. It wears what may be described
-as a frightened-looking crest, its plumage is conspicuously
-mottled, and, what gives it its special
-character, its tail is a foot long. As Mrs. Bailey
-well says, it is “one of the most original and
-entertaining of Western birds. The newcomer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-is amazed when the long-tailed creature darts
-out of the brush and races the horses down the
-road, easily keeping ahead as they trot, and
-when tired turns out into the brush and throws
-his tail over his back to stop himself.”</p>
-
-<p>My bird’s performance was less theatrical than
-that, perhaps because I was on foot, perhaps because
-the day was Sunday, perhaps because of the
-absence of a thoroughfare; but I was well pleased.</p>
-
-<p>It is noticeable how birds, not less than men,
-tend to become specialists. To accomplish one
-thing supremely well,—that is certainly the way
-to make one’s self famous. And that is what the
-road-runner does. He has chosen a hobby, and
-he rides it. His legs are proportionally no longer
-than other birds’, but that does not matter. Such
-as they are, he will make the most of them.</p>
-
-<p>He is like a certain Maine farmer of whom I
-have heard, a plain tiller of the soil, who feels,
-nevertheless, that he was born for better things;
-not for a cart-horse, if you please, but for a race-horse.
-He may be working on his farm, at the
-plough, we will say; suddenly the impulse comes
-upon him, as inspiration is said to come upon a
-poet; there is nothing for it but he must start
-and run; and so he does. Once every summer
-he travels from Maine to Mount Washington,
-for the great event of the year. When he appears<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-at the Summit House, every one knows
-what is to happen. So-and-so is going to run
-down the mountain. The daily newspaper chronicles
-his arrival and announces the hour of the
-annual event. Then, at the minute agreed upon,
-all hands gather before the door, a man appointed
-for the purpose holds the watch and
-gives the signal, and down the steep road starts
-the farmer, his invariable “tall hat” on his
-head, and his coat-tails flying. At the Half-Way
-House, and again at the base, his time is taken.
-If it is shorter than last year’s, so much the
-more glory. If it is longer,—well, he has run;
-and presumably, like Cincinnatus before him, he
-goes back to his plough contented.</p>
-
-<p>The road-runner, I suspect (the running
-cuckoo!), is subject to the same irresistible
-ambulatory impulses, and by a curious coincidence
-he, too, wears what we may term a “tall
-hat.” I should like to see him racing down the
-Mount Washington road, putting on the brakes
-now and then, at the sharper turns, by a sudden
-cocking of his tail!</p>
-
-<p>The temperature here—for temperature must
-always be mentioned in writing of one’s travels—has
-thus far been pretty comfortable for a
-walker, though not without something of the contradictoriness
-which seems to belong to weather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-conditions everywhere and always: roses in all
-the gardens, and steam in the radiators; children,
-black and white, paddling about in the
-mud barefooted and barelegged, and gentlemen
-with heavy overcoats on, and, not unlikely, collars
-turned up. Concerning such things, here in
-“San Antone,” you take your choice. For myself
-I have compromised the matter, keeping my
-boots on and wearing, except when the sun has
-been more than commonly persuasive, the lightest
-of spring overcoats.</p>
-
-<p>The great drawback to a walking man’s comfort,
-and just now the most impressive “feature”
-of the city,—more impressive by far than the old
-Spanish missions, the most famous of which, the
-Alamo, is directly at my door,—has been the
-mud; deep and black, and more adhesive than glue.
-If you go outside the city your shoes gather it
-as a rolling snowball gathers snow (“to him that
-hath shall be given,” you repeat to yourself),
-and it is like one of the labors of Hercules to
-get it off. I walk about, scuffing and kicking,
-with pounds of it on either overshoe, like a dark
-fringe, and fancy I know how it feels to drag a
-ball and chain. However, conditions are bettering
-in this respect, and in any case, things might
-easily be worse. Yesterday morning, seeing the
-sky clouded, I remarked to the elevator boy on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-my way down to breakfast, that I believed it
-was going to rain; and I added, sententiously,
-“More rain, more mud.” “Yes,” said the boy,
-quick to resent an imputation upon the climate
-of Texas, “and the more rain, the better crops.”
-The State, it appears, has suffered greatly from
-drought for the past few seasons, and no doubt
-its people can well afford to play the mud-lark
-for a week now and then in winter. It makes a
-difference whether you are a selfish, pleasure-seeking
-tourist, thinking only of to-day’s comfort,
-or a man with his living to make out of a
-cotton plantation or a market garden.</p>
-
-<p>For the present, if the tourist wishes, as I do,
-to walk in the country, he may do worse than
-betake himself to one of the numerous railroad
-tracks.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> These have carried me into good places
-and shown me many interesting birds; but they
-would be more convenient if they were not walled
-in, mile after mile, except as a highway or a plantation
-road crosses them, by an excessively high
-and close barbed-wire fence. Yet even this hateful
-obstruction has served me one slight good turn.</p>
-
-<p>A man of something like my own age and build<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-was trudging along the track in front of me, a
-day or two ago (by his gait and general appearance
-he was used to trudging), when I saw him approach
-the fence as if he meant in some way to
-force a passage. “You’ll never do it,” I thought.
-Really, there seemed not to be space enough
-between the wires, even if they had not been
-barbed, for a human body to squeeze through;
-but to my astonishment the fellow slipped between
-them without the slightest fumbling or
-hesitation, and without so much as a barb’s
-touching him. He must have been a specialist, I
-am sure. I could not have followed suit without
-tearing my clothing to tatters, if all the wealth of
-the East, “barbaric pearl and gold,” had been
-spread out before my itching fingers on the farther
-side. I have not yet ceased wondering at the
-rogue’s address. Such practice as he must have
-had! I hope he was never in jail. It was like
-the neatest of Japanese jugglery, or the famous
-passage through the eye of a needle. Behold,
-said I, the compensations of poverty. No rich
-man could have done it.</p>
-
-<p>The greater part of the passengers that one
-meets in such out-of-the-way places are short,
-swarthy Mexicans. Usually they are able to bid
-you “good-morning,” or to ask how you “do,”
-but now and then you will hear a “<i>buenos dias</i>.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-In the city one finds them at every corner selling
-peculiar-looking confections. Whether one likes
-their wares or not,—and for myself, I must confess
-that “my own particular lip” has not yet
-made up its mind to try the experiment,—their
-presence gives one an agreeable sense of being
-far from home. Two days ago I was wandering
-about San Pedro Park at noon, and noticed
-for the first time a few butterflies on the wing.
-Most of them were much like our common yellow
-one,—evidently some species of Colias,—but
-by and by I noticed a dark one, showing a touch
-of red as it flew. I took chase, and came up with
-it just as it dropped to rest directly in front of
-two Mexicans seated upon the grass. I stepped
-near to see it (a common red admiral, for aught
-I could discover), and perceiving that the men
-were inquisitive, I pointed to it with my finger.
-One of them imitated the gesture, as much as to
-say “That, do you mean?” I nodded, and he
-said, with a smile, “<i>Mariposa</i>.” “Yes,” said I,
-“a butterfly.” That was beyond him, and he repeated
-his incomparably prettier word, “<i>mariposa</i>.”
-“Very good,” said I to myself, “I am glad
-to find that I understand Spanish when I hear it
-spoken!” A solitary traveler, of all men, should
-know how to amuse himself with trifles.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A BIRD-GAZER’S PUZZLES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> days of my youth have come back to me. I
-am again at the foot of the ladder, a boy in the
-primary school, a speller of a-b-abs. The experience
-is pleasant, but not unmixedly so; it is
-sweet, with a suggestion of bitter. I am finding
-out daily that one is never too old to be mistaken.
-I knew it before, of course; but I am
-still finding it out; for the two things are not
-incompatible. One may know a thing, and still
-have need to learn it. It is possible that the
-most erudite scholar has never more than begun
-to apprehend his own ignorance; nay, that he
-would never make more than a beginning in that
-salutary study were he to burn the midnight oil
-for a thousand years. In that time he might
-square the circle and discover the philosopher’s
-stone, but he would not discover how little he
-knew. In that respect, in respect to what we do
-not know, human capacity is unlimited. Finite
-creatures that we are, we are endowed with a
-kind of negative infinity. And, for one, I wish to
-make the most of my greatest gift. It shall not
-be “lodged with me useless,” if I can help it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>I saw a strange warbler the other day. That
-is to say, I thought I saw one. I had been wandering
-for a whole forenoon amid the chaparral
-just outside the city of San Antonio, and had
-enjoyed a good number of novel sensations, when
-suddenly (such things always come suddenly, but
-it seems necessary to repeat the word) a tiny
-bird moved in a low bush directly before me.
-“A gray warbler with no wing-marks,” I said;
-and the next instant I saw that its crown was
-light yellow. It moved again, and the forward
-parts came into view. Its throat also was yellow.
-At that moment it was eating a yellow berry.
-Its ground color was near the shade worn by a
-juvenile chestnut-sided warbler, and the yellow
-of the crown and throat was very lightly laid on
-over the gray, so to express it, just as it is in the
-chestnut-side’s case.</p>
-
-<p>Now what kind of warbler can this be? I
-asked myself: a gray warbler with a yellow crown
-and a yellow throat, and no other adornments.
-And with the question there came into my mind,
-as by the effect of immediate inspiration, the
-word Calaveras. Whether it was Calaveras or
-something else, there could be no doubt of my
-being able to clear up the question, once I should
-have a book in my hand.</p>
-
-<p>I resumed my peregrinations, therefore, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-bird having moved on, as birds do, being provided
-with wings for that very purpose, and by
-and by, walking at a venture round one clump
-of bushes after another, I came again upon the
-stranger, who, it should be said, was of a peculiarly
-unsuspicious disposition, and this time was
-swallowing piecemeal what seemed to my New
-England mind a very unseasonable caterpillar.
-And now I made a further discovery: the shoulder
-of the bird’s wing was edged with a line of
-pretty bright red, of a shade between chestnut
-and carmine! Surely, it was only a matter of
-surviving to reach the hotel and the mystery
-would be solved. Calaveras or what not, it was
-impossible that there should be two warblers
-marked in this singular manner.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I got back to my room, and sure enough,
-not only were there not two warblers thus marked,
-there was not even one. Calaveras was nothing
-to the purpose. My inspiration must have come
-from the wrong place. At any rate, it was unprofitable
-for instruction. It wasn’t far to go,
-you may say, but I was at my wits’ end.</p>
-
-<p>That evening I had occasion to answer a letter
-from an eminent ornithologist, who has herself
-worked much in the Southwest, and besides has
-at her elbow the best of American bird collections.
-She would be able to help me out of my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-difficulty. In all innocence, therefore, I stated
-my case. It was possible, I admitted (thrice
-lucky admission—it is always politic to seem
-modest, however one may feel), that the bird
-was not a warbler, after all, though, if it were
-not, I had no idea what it could be.</p>
-
-<p>Well, the next day I was out in the country
-again, this time in a pecan grove, with tall seed-bearing
-weeds standing by the acre under the tall,
-leafless trees (a paradise for sparrows), when
-I heard a chickadee whistling his four notes in
-the distance. “How closely his music resembles
-that of his relative as we hear it in Florida,”
-I said to myself. And this reflection set me
-asking, “Where is that odd little titmouse, the
-verdin, that was said to be common about San
-Antonio at all seasons?” And then, like a flash,
-came the answer: “Why, man, that was a verdin
-you saw yesterday, out in the chaparral, and
-mistook for a warbler.” And so it turned out.
-Red shoulder-strap and all, everything suited.
-The verdin, by the by, is a distinctively Southwestern
-species, not <i>Parus</i>, but <i>Auriparus</i>. My
-bird had been a female, I suppose, showing less
-yellow than her mate would have done. Perhaps
-if I had seen him instead of her, I should not
-have been so befooled.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was the puzzle thus satisfactorily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-solved, than I began to meditate, with something
-less of satisfaction, upon the letter I had written
-the evening before. I thought, too, of the many
-more or less foolish letters that I had myself received
-(and sometimes smiled at, I fear) in the
-past twenty years, letters in which eager searchers
-after ornithological knowledge had confided
-to me marvelous accounts of the wonders they
-had seen afield, and by an unhappy fate could
-find no description of when they returned to the
-study. Not many of these correspondents, as well
-as I could now remember, had ever mistaken a
-titmouse for a warbler! I must dispatch a postscript
-to my letter by the earliest mail. And so
-I did, ostensibly, of course, to save my friend
-the trouble of a reply, but really to prove to her
-that, though I was capable of blundering, I was
-also capable of a second thought.</p>
-
-<p>And now, having made my confession, I am
-bound to add that some who may laugh at me
-would possibly have been little wiser than I, had
-they stood in my shoes; for the verdin does not
-look the least in the world like anything that
-goes by the name of titmouse or chickadee up in
-our Northern country. I hope to see more of it,
-and especially to hear its song, which is said to
-be of surprising volume.</p>
-
-<p>Really (and this is why I have told this not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-very exciting tale at such length), it is the chief
-delight of bird-gazing in a strange country that
-one has to begin, as it were, all one’s studies over
-again; as I have seen a professor of botany in
-similar circumstances fingering the leaves of the
-manual like the veriest schoolboy, as for the time
-being he was. It is not the proudest way of renewing
-one’s youth, but it will answer. And conditions
-being as they are, nothing else will answer.</p>
-
-<p>Such is my present case here in Texas. Even
-now, in the dead of winter, with the number of
-species greatly reduced, the novelties seen in one
-walk are so many that the man who uses no gun,
-and so can take no specimens home with him for
-inspection, is often put to his trumps when he
-comes to run over his day’s notes. Though he
-may have done his best, he is certain to have
-overlooked or forgotten some detail which, with
-the book before him, turns out to be all important.
-What a pity he did not note with more
-exactness the proportion of white on the tail
-feathers, or the position of a certain black spot
-on the side of the head! He must go out again,
-and—if he is fortunate enough to find the bird—secure
-a stricter and more intelligent observation.
-It is plaguing fun, but it is fun, nevertheless,
-and good practice, besides; and withal,
-it leaves work for to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>It must be admitted, moreover, if the truth is
-to be told,—and it is sometimes better to tell
-it,—that no amount of observation in the field
-will be likely, in a month or two, at any rate, to
-settle all the nice questions that confront the student
-in a new region in these latter days; especially
-if the region happens to be, like this about
-San Antonio, one in which Eastern and Western
-forms of the same species are to be found overlapping
-each other. It was very well for Emerson
-to speak, poetically, of naming all the birds without
-a gun. He lived before the day of trinomials;
-or if that be not quite true, before our younger
-brood of ambitious closet ornithologists had set
-themselves so zealously at the work of dividing
-and subdividing. Time was when a song sparrow
-was a song sparrow, and there was an end of it.
-Now to call a bird by that name is only the beginning
-of sorrows. What kind of song sparrow
-is it? My Western handbook enumerates about
-fifteen sub-species, and the differences, I suspect,
-are many of them almost too fine for opera-glass
-determination. For what I know, a microscope
-might be more to the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The man who refuses a gun must accept the
-limitations that go with that refusal. Time and
-repeated observation will do much; a good ear
-will help—in some cases it will do the larger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-half of the work; but he must not expect to accomplish
-with a glass and patience exactly what
-another man accomplishes with powder and shot
-and a pair of dividers. In the study of ornithology,
-as elsewhere, there are diversities of
-operations, and possibly not the same spirit.</p>
-
-<p>If I cannot be certain whether the vesper
-sparrows I saw to-day were light-colored enough
-to pass for <i>Poœcetes gramineus confinis</i>, or were
-probably nothing but plain <i>Poœcetes gramineus</i>,
-I must put up with my ignorance, distressing as
-it is. Possibly, if I were to see species and sub-species
-side by side, even in the field, I could tell
-them apart; possibly I could not. Whether their
-songs differ, is a point concerning which my book,
-after the manner of books, has nothing to offer;
-and as the birds are now dumb, there is nothing
-for me to do but to call them vesper sparrows,
-and await developments.</p>
-
-<p>And some things can be settled, even in Texas,
-with no weapon but a field-glass. I know, for
-example, that I have to-day seen Mexican goldfinches,
-and Arctic towhees, and red-shafted
-flickers. That is more than half a loaf, by a good
-deal, and several times better than no bread.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">LUCK ON THE PRAIRIE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A well-groomed</span> hobby will carry its rider comfortably
-over many a slough.</p>
-
-<p>I was on my way westward to El Paso, and
-knowing that the train was due there before daylight,
-I left my berth early, and had gone out upon
-the porch of the observation car to catch a bite
-of fresh air and enjoy the first faint flushes of
-the dawn, when a train-hand, passing in the semi-darkness,
-informed me that the wreck of a freight
-train was on the track in front of us, and that
-we should probably not be able to move for eight
-or nine hours. I had noticed that we were standing
-still upon a “siding,” but such halts are not
-infrequent on a single-track road, and having my
-mind upon pleasanter themes, I had passed the
-circumstance by without further thought.</p>
-
-<p>The news of our trouble spread, as one passenger
-after another made his unhandsome, half-civilized
-appearance from behind the curtains,
-and though we proved to be a pretty philosophical
-company, as transcontinental travelers have
-need to be, the general run of comment was not
-hilarious.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>A turn outside, as it grew lighter, showed that
-we were at a station called San Elizario (a pleasing
-name, surely), some three thousand two hundred
-feet above sea-level. The westerly breeze
-was a refreshment, and three or four ranges of
-jagged mountains glorified the horizon. If we
-must be delayed, the Fates had chosen a favorable
-place for us.</p>
-
-<p>I, for one, soon began to feel reconciled to
-the turn affairs had taken, and went back to the
-car for an opera-glass. It must be a dull day in
-Texas when a tender-footed bird-gazer cannot
-find at least one novelty, and till the “first call
-for breakfast” I would be out trying my luck.</p>
-
-<p>An adobe building, windowless and unoccupied,
-stood not far off, and near it was a cottonwood
-tree, still holding, in spite of all those Texas
-winds, part of its last season’s crop of dry leaves.
-I walked in that direction, and at the moment
-three birds, with musical, goldfinch-like twitters,
-flew into the tree. A glance showed them to be
-not goldfinches, but small birds of the purple finch
-group, very bright and rosy (the two males),
-and thickly streaked underneath. “The house
-finch!” I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>This is a Western beauty, greatly beloved for
-its color, its music, and its engaging familiarity,
-by all to whom it is a neighbor. I had read of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-its charms, and had freshly in mind an enthusiastic
-eulogy of it by an old friend, now a resident
-of Colorado, whom I had chanced to fall in with
-a fortnight before in a railway car. With those
-three lovely creatures talking to me, I felt that
-the day was saved.</p>
-
-<p>A Say’s phœbe was near by, in a pear orchard
-(for the piece of prairie land on which we so unexpectedly
-found ourselves was under irrigation),
-and as I had met it first only forty-eight hours
-before—at Del Rio—I was glad to see more
-of its very demure and pretty habits, especially
-of its clever trick of hovering at considerable
-length just over the grass. The rather bright
-buff of its under-parts is one of its striking characteristics,
-and now, when I caught sight of it in
-the distance, I had for a moment thoughts of
-some unfamiliar kind of oriole.</p>
-
-<p>There was barely time to pay my respects to
-the phœbe before a flash of blue wings made me
-aware of something more interesting still, a bevy
-of bluebirds. It would be good fortune, surely,
-if they should turn out to be of one of the several
-Western forms that I had never seen. I
-drew near, therefore, with all carefulness, and
-needed but one look to assure myself that such
-was indeed the case. Their backs were not blue,
-but of a chestnut shade. The blue of the wings,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-moreover, was not quite the same as that of our
-common Eastern <i>Sialia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever they were, the color of the backs
-would probably be enough to name them, and I
-returned to the car for breakfast and, first of
-all, to make sure of my new birds’ identity. A
-consultation of the handbook showed it to be
-reasonably certain that they were of the sub-species
-<i>Sialia mexicana bairdi</i>, the chestnut-backed
-bluebird; but I had failed to observe one
-important mark: the throat should have been
-“purplish blue.” I wished very much to see
-them again, but they had disappeared. Doubtless
-they were migrants or stragglers, and by
-this time were far away. A pity I had not been
-more painstaking while I had the opportunity.
-The one safe rule is to note everything, though
-it is a rule more easily laid down than lived up
-to, to be sure, especially in a new place, with
-many distractions. Anyhow, the birds must be
-of the chestnut-backed sub-species, I reassured
-myself, for the sufficient reason that it was impossible,
-here in western Texas, that they should
-be anything else.</p>
-
-<p>Allaying my scruples thus, I started across a
-field toward a farmhouse, and on the way noticed
-a crow flying over. It was the first one I had
-seen since reaching San Antonio,—the chaparral<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-country not favoring birds of the crow-jay
-tribe,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>—and I remarked it with pleasure. And
-then, remembering something I had lately read
-of Arizona, I thought, “But is it a crow, after
-all? Isn’t it one of the white-necked ravens
-that are set down as so common and familiar in
-this part of the world?” And, in fact, it was;
-for the next moment it began calling in a voice
-that put the possibility of its being a common
-American crow, the only one that could possibly
-be met with in all this region, quite out of the
-account. Another new bird! The third within
-half an hour! Surely this was better than getting
-into El Paso on schedule time. Let El
-Paso wait. It would probably last the day out.</p>
-
-<p>But the story was not yet done, for after a little
-the meadow larks, of which there were many
-in the fields (with large flocks of horned larks,
-also), began singing. I was disappointed in the
-song, of the beauty of which I had formed the
-most exalted expectations, but consoled myself
-with believing that the birds were not Western
-meadow larks proper, but the Texan sub-species;
-otherwise I must conclude that their voices were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-still somewhat winter-bound, or at least, not yet
-keyed up to concert pitch.</p>
-
-<p>A sparrow hawk beside the farmhouse before
-mentioned allowed me to stand almost under his
-low tree before he took wing, and when at last
-he did so I had a feeling that he was rather surprisingly
-long. I thought nothing more of the
-matter at the moment, but later, discovering by
-a reference to the handbook that a variety of
-<i>Falco sparverius</i>, somewhat larger and with a
-longer tail, had been described from this region,
-I concluded it probable, not to say certain, that
-my impression had been correct, and that the
-bird was not my old acquaintance of the East,
-but <i>Falco sparverius deserticola</i>. That would
-make the new birds of the morning four instead
-of three.</p>
-
-<p>All this while, it must be understood, there
-was always the possibility that the train might
-start at any moment, no positive information
-upon that point being obtainable, so that I could
-move about only within a narrowly limited area.
-For a man thus tethered I was doing pretty
-well, whatever my unornithological fellow-travelers
-might think of my peculiar movements and
-attitudes. And to increase my enthusiasm, as I
-turned to go back to the train for dinner, in
-crossing an irrigation ditch (now dry), bordered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-with a dense thicket of low shrubs, I caught the
-tinkle of junco voices and presently a glimpse of
-white tail feathers. Now, then, since luck was
-the order of the day, it was as likely as not that
-these were not simple <i>Junco hyemalis</i> such as I
-had found at San Antonio, but one of several
-Western kinds that might, for aught I was
-aware, be looked for hereabout.</p>
-
-<p>And so it proved. The birds were amazingly
-shy and secretive, but with patience I had three
-or four of them under my glass one after another;
-and they were noticeably different from
-our Eastern junco, and belonged, as the book’s
-description made clear, to the variety <i>Junco hyemalis
-connectens</i>, the intermediate junco, so
-(not very poetically) called.</p>
-
-<p>I went to dinner with an excellent appetite,
-and afterward, the delay of the train still continuing,
-though with rumors that its end was
-near, I took one more turn in the field, and this
-time happened upon still another stranger, the
-handsomest of the day, so wonderfully handsome,
-though “handsome” is too cheap a word, that a
-man would have to go far to beat it—an Arizona
-<i>Pyrrhuloxia</i>; a bird—related to the cardinal
-grosbeak group—having no representative
-in the East. It would be a shame to attempt a
-description of it here at the end of a hurried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-sketch, but it made a glorious sixth in my list of
-the day’s findings. I shall see more of it, I trust,
-when I reach the territory to which it more distinctively
-belongs.</p>
-
-<p>One other piece of good fortune I must not
-fail to chronicle, though I have omitted to do so
-in its proper place. Late in the forenoon, after
-I had given the bluebirds up for lost, I discovered
-them sitting, the six together, a lovely company,
-among the leaves of a cottonwood tree, as
-if they had taken shelter from the wind; and the
-book’s description was borne out: their throats
-were “purplish blue.”</p>
-
-<p>The nine hours—for so long the embargo lasted—passed
-all too soon. If I could have had two
-or three hours of free wandering, who knows
-what other bright names I might have brought
-back? I went so far, indeed, as to inquire of the
-postmaster and variety storekeeper—a genial,
-smiling German—whether there was any place
-in the neighborhood where a stranger could be
-put up for the night; but he thought not, and
-advised me, not at all inhospitably, to stick to the
-train. And possibly, after all, I had found more
-rather than less for being compelled to beat a
-small space over again and again, instead of
-ranging farther afield. At all events, I had discovered
-a new use for ornithological enthusiasm,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-and I might almost add for railway accidents. I
-do not expect to find many birdier places, no
-matter where my wanderings take me, than that
-piece of dry, winter-bleached prairie about San
-Elizario.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">OVER THE BORDER</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On</span> my first morning at El Paso, where, by good
-luck, as already explained, I arrived nine or ten
-hours behind time, I made an early start for
-Juarez, the Mexican city on the opposite bank of
-the Rio Grande. As I waited for the car at the
-corner of the street, a rosy house finch stood on
-the top of a telegraph pole overhead, singing
-ecstatically. The pretty creature, it is evident, is
-very much at home in this bustling city, at least
-in winter, for I was hardly in my room on the
-afternoon of my arrival before I heard its warble,
-and looking out of the window beheld the bird
-perched upon the eaves of a building across the
-way, where more than once since then I have
-heard and seen it. I am sorry to add that the
-English sparrow, its most unworthy rival, is here
-also, though for the moment in small numbers.</p>
-
-<p>When the car came along, it proved to be an
-open one.</p>
-
-<p>“A rather cold morning for open cars,” I
-said to the youthful conductor.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, we run open cars all winter,” he answered.
-“But I suppose we don’t mind the cold<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-so much,” he continued, emphasizing the pronoun,
-“because we are out of doors all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>A Northern tenderfoot might naturally be less
-inured to frigidity, he seemed to imply; but I
-remarked that he wore the heaviest of overcoats
-with the collar up. Warm days (much like New
-England June), cool nights, clear skies, constant
-winds, dryness and dust—such is the January
-climate of El Paso, if my four days have given
-me a fair impression of its quality.</p>
-
-<p>Presently we crossed a short bridge.</p>
-
-<p>“Was that the river?” I asked my seatmate,
-a minute afterward, a sudden suspicion coming
-over me, though it seemed so absurd that I was
-half ashamed to betray it.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; that was the Rio Grande. You’re
-in Mexico now,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, and that must have been the Mexican
-Custom House officer whom I had seen step out
-of the door of a small building on the southern
-bank of the river and salute our conductor so
-politely. None of us looked like smugglers, I
-suppose. At all events, the car was not “held
-up,” as happened at the other end of the bridge,
-a day or two later, while two rather boisterous
-young fellows on the rear seat made themselves
-merry over the attempt of Uncle Sam’s official
-representative to collect a duty. International<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-travel, even in an electric street-car, is liable to
-complications.</p>
-
-<p>As for the river, it was practically dry. Pedestrians
-were crossing it—to save toll—on a
-few small stepping-stones at a point where the
-current could not have been ten feet wide nor
-more than half of ten inches deep. My seatmate
-explained that so much water was drawn off
-above this point for irrigation purposes that the
-river had little left for its own use; and in fact,
-more than once afterward I saw its bed absolutely
-dry, so that even the stepping-stones had
-for the day gone out of business. Yet it is a real
-<i>rio grande</i>, for all that, and the life of a long,
-long strip of Texas.</p>
-
-<p>Drought is the mark of this country. A
-friendly citizen (of whom, in my ignorance, I
-had inquired about “suburban trains”!) warned
-me earnestly against wandering far out of the
-town. If some Mexican did not kill me “for
-the sake of the clothes I had on” (an ignoble
-death, surely), I might get lost (an easy matter,
-by my adviser’s tell), in which event, if nothing
-more serious happened to me, I should infallibly
-perish of thirst.</p>
-
-<p>The car took me through the compact little
-<i>ciudad</i> (a five-minute passage, perhaps), and I
-struck out for the country, along the line of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-Mexican Central Railroad, in the direction of the
-mountains, heading my course for a cemetery out
-on the slope, in the midst of the chaparral. White-necked
-ravens were foraging beside the track, as
-little disturbed by human approach as so many
-English sparrows might have been. “How soon
-the strange becomes familiar!” I thought. I
-had never seen a white-necked raven (there is
-no whiteness visible,<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> the bird being a very imp
-of darkness to look at it) till less than twenty-four
-hours ago, and already I was passing it with
-something like indifference. I was far from indifferent,
-however, two afternoons later, when
-for the first time I watched a flock of several
-hundred soaring in mazy circles high overhead,
-after the manner of buzzards or sea-gulls.</p>
-
-<p>No other birds showed themselves till I drew
-near the cemetery gate, when suddenly the bushes
-just in front, straight between me and the sun,
-were alive with sparrows. My eyes, dazzled as
-they were by the sunshine, caught sight of one
-lark bunting as the flock took wing. I must see
-more of it,—it was my first one,—and started
-eagerly in pursuit. But the creatures were timid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-beyond all calculation, and though I pursued
-them with cautious haste for some distance, I
-could never come up with them. Wherever I
-looked, there was nothing but white-crowned
-sparrows; handsome birds, the sight of which is
-almost an event in Massachusetts, but so abundant
-in Texas at this time of the year—as Lincoln
-finches are, also—that I have begun to
-turn away from them as almost a nuisance. It
-becomes vexatious to a man in search of novelties
-when even an old favorite keeps itself too
-persistently under his glass. As the proverb has
-it, there is reason in all things.</p>
-
-<p>While I was beating the chaparral over, still
-in search of those missing white wing-patches, I
-noticed a funeral procession coming from the
-city. Heading the cortege was what in a Massachusetts
-town would be called a “depot carriage.”
-It served the purpose of a hearse, I suppose, and
-in it sat two men bareheaded. It seemed a neighborly
-and Christian act to accompany a brother
-mortal to the grave in this fraternal manner.
-The second carriage was an open buggy, drawn
-by a white horse.</p>
-
-<p>These things I took note of while the procession
-was still a long way off (a military band,
-still farther away, at the barracks, no doubt,
-was playing a march), and meantime I went up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-to the cemetery fence and looked over. The
-monuments were mostly, if not wholly, wooden
-crosses, with the ordinary run of affectionate
-epitaphs. A man, who appeared to be the keeper
-of the place, came out of the one house near at
-hand, and asked me something in Spanish, to
-which I replied in English. We were unable to
-communicate with each other till finally I said,
-“<i>No sabe.</i>” It was not precisely what I intended
-to tell him; but it was all one. He saw for himself
-that I spoke no Spanish, and with that left
-me to myself.</p>
-
-<p>I returned to El Paso on foot, and as I reached
-the northern end of the bridge, walking, as it
-happened, on the far side of the road, with my
-overcoat on my arm, as careless as could be, I
-was hailed by an officer in uniform. I halted,
-and he approached. Then he waited. It was my
-place to speak first, as it seemed, and I began:</p>
-
-<p>“Do you wish to inspect me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did you buy in Mexico?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“A postal-card, and mailed it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was that all you bought?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right.”</p>
-
-<p>The souvenir postal-card industry, though
-comparatively infantile, is not “protected,” it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-appears, although, if I had brought the five-cents’
-worth away with me, I might, for aught I
-positively know, have been called upon for duty.
-The rights of American laboring men must by
-all means be looked after. To think what ruin
-might befall this great republic if its people, with
-all the rest of their freedom, should in some fit
-of madness insist upon the freedom to buy and
-sell!</p>
-
-<p>That was three days ago. Since then I have
-been to Juarez twice, pushing a little farther
-each time into the country southward. On both
-visits I found lark buntings in plenty. They
-move about—and sit about—in peculiarly
-dense flocks. One such, that I saw this morning,
-might have numbered a thousand birds. If
-disturbed, they rise in a cloud, and on coming to
-rest again every one seems to desire a perch at
-the very tip of a bush. As they must all alight
-in the same one or two bunches of scrub, however,
-though there are hundreds of others exactly
-like them all about, there are by no means top
-seats enough to go round, and there is a deal of
-preliminary hovering, accompanied by a grand
-confusion of formless twittering, during which—the
-white patches of the quivering wings and outspread
-tails showing through—the spectacle is
-most animated and pleasing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>As for the city itself, it is squalid, but well
-worth a visit; having so strange and other-worldish
-a look that one seems to have crossed at least
-an ocean rather than a trickling streamlet. The
-white church; the little shops, with their curious
-wares; the game cocks in the street, tethered
-each by a yard of cord to a peg driven into the
-ground on the edge of the sidewalk, crowing defiance
-to each other, and regarded proudly by
-their owners, who now and then take them up
-in their arms, caressing them fondly, or shaking
-one in the face of another, to see the feathers of
-their necks bristle; the bust of Bonito Juarez
-in the fenced plaza, the bust itself of a size to
-adorn a parlor mantel, while the marble pedestal
-is ten or fifteen feet high and at least ten feet
-square at the base; the Spanish signboards and
-placards; best of all, the people themselves, men,
-women, and children—the children, some of
-them, half naked, even on a cold, windy forenoon,
-while the men saunter about, or lean against
-an adobe wall in the sun, wrapped in thick,
-bright-colored blankets (I shall think of a Mexican,
-as long as I live, as leaning against the side
-of a house)—all these go to make a memorable
-picture for a Yankee on his travels.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">FIRST DAYS IN TUCSON</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">What</span> is more fickle than New England weather?
-Nothing, perhaps, or nothing inanimate, unless
-it be the weather of some Southern winter resort,
-say in Florida or Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>I reached Tucson in the evening of January
-31, a stop at El Paso having saved me from
-participation in a railroad accident, as a result
-of which many passengers (nobody knows how
-many) were burned to death. The first of February
-was bright and warm; so that in a long
-forenoon jaunt over the desert a very light overcoat
-quickly became burdensome. The next
-morning, therefore, it was left at home.</p>
-
-<p>My course this time was into the valley of the
-Santa Cruz, where farmers live by irrigation and
-barley fields are already green. I had crossed
-the river, pausing on the bridge to enjoy the
-sight of my first black phœbe,—a handsome,
-highly presentable fellow with a jet-black waistcoat,—when
-all at once the dusty road before
-me was seen to be fast becoming inundated. Beside
-the fence, wading in mud and water, the
-owner of the fields, having taken up arms—a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-long-handled spade—against this sea of troubles,
-appeared to have been working hard to repair
-the mischief. At that moment, however, he had
-given over the attempt in despair and was lifting
-his boots, first one, then the other, out of the
-mire and scraping them, rather ineffectually,
-with the spade.</p>
-
-<p>I ought to have known better, but it is easy
-to see the comical side of other people’s misfortunes,
-and I remarked in a cheerful tone:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, well, you seem to have water to burn.”</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon other floodgates were opened, and
-out poured a stream of language, the greater part
-of it too “colloquial” for print. The substance
-of it all was that a Mexican (the opprobrious
-word being dwelt upon and forcibly qualified)
-had come in the night and let on the water,
-without giving him, the farmer, any notice of the
-unseasonable action. Now the water was all over
-the road, and all over the yard, and close up to
-the back door of the house. He had sent for a
-man to help him.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing nothing better to do, I picked my steps
-among the dust-bounded streams as best I was
-able, and passed by on the other side. I had always
-understood irrigation to be a kind of predictable
-and controllable rain, but it appeared
-that, if this were the rule, the rule had exceptions.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-The sight set me thinking that possibly if the general
-management of the weather were put into
-human hands, as the least presumptuous of us
-are more or less in the habit of wishing were possible,
-it might still be found difficult to escape
-an occasional fault of administration. As for my
-farmer’s emphatic language, I held it excusable.
-He certainly had provocation, and as the Scripture
-says, with commendable toleration, there is
-a time for everything under the sun.</p>
-
-<p>The river valley is narrow, like the river itself,
-and on the farther side is bounded sharply by
-steep foothills, behind which are high mountains.
-I was barely beginning to climb the nearest hill,
-over its loose covering of small stones, when some
-bird broke into voice a little above me; one of
-those peculiar voices, I said to myself, that at a
-first hearing afford almost no indication as to the
-size of their owners.</p>
-
-<p>My uncertainty lasted for some minutes, while
-I made my way cautiously upwards, a step or two
-at a time. The bird proved to be a small wren,—the
-rock wren, so called,—said to be “more
-or less abundant” in this region; “more” rather
-than “less,” I hope, for I fell in love with the
-creature immediately.</p>
-
-<p>One of the birds,—for there were two, talking
-“back and forth,” as we say,—his fit of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-nervousness over, dropped into a lyrical mood,
-and regaled me with a very pleasing bit of simple
-music, all in brief phrases, but with a surprisingly
-wide range of pitch. Some of the measures had
-a peculiar vibrant quality suggestive of the finest
-work of our common Eastern snowbird. But
-withal, I received the impression that the musician
-was rather trying his instrument than aiming
-at a serious performance.</p>
-
-<p>While I stood listening, a bunch of a dozen
-Mexican house finches, more than half the number
-in rosy plumage, happened along with the
-usual chorus of twitters, and alighted in a very
-peculiar and graceful shrub (<i>ocotillo</i>, I am told
-is its Mexican name), which grows in clusters
-of a dozen or so of slender, angular stems, leaning
-away from one another in all directions and
-covered sparsely with reddish leaves, which look
-for all the world like the autumnal foliage of
-the common barberry. The rosy finches, perched
-upon this group of slanting, wandlike, fountain-like
-stems,<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> were exceedingly pretty to look at.</p>
-
-<p>All about me stood tall, fluted columns of the
-giant cactus, fifteen or twenty feet in height, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-large enough for telegraph poles. On the day
-before, my first day in the city, I had turned a
-field-glass in this direction, and to my surprise
-had seen the hills covered with verdure. “Why,”
-said I, noticing what I took for the trunks of
-trees amid the green, “those hills are forested.”
-Now I discovered that the greenness was mostly
-that of the desert-loving creosote bush (a low
-shrub, noticeable for being thornless, which
-covers thousands on thousands of acres hereabouts,
-and just now is putting forth small yellow
-blossoms), while the boles of trees were nothing
-but giant cacti.</p>
-
-<p>Among the stones at my feet grew flowers of
-various unknown sorts, especially a large yellow
-one, apparently an evening primrose, rising no
-more than two inches from the ground, with a
-tuft of leaves at the base of the stem, or rather
-at the bottom of the calyx. The only flower of
-them all that I could certainly name was a pretty
-blue lupine, smaller than our New England
-species, both in blossom and leaf, but so exactly
-like it in other respects that for old acquaintance’
-sake, though the lupine was never one of
-my particular favorites, I plucked it for my buttonhole.
-I believe it is the only natural-looking,
-familiar-looking wild plant that I have so far
-seen in this desert country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>The wrens having become silent, and the
-finches flown away, I descended the hill and took
-the road running along its base northward. It
-must lead, I thought, to another road across the
-valley, and would make a round of my forenoon’s
-walk. And so it did; but first it brought me to
-a large building which proved to be St. Mary’s
-Sanatorium, more commonly known as the Sisters’
-Hospital. I had just passed this and turned
-the corner, facing the town, when all in a moment,
-so far at least as my perception of events was
-concerned, the sky was covered with black clouds,
-and an icy north wind changed the day from summer
-to winter as in the twinkling of an eye.</p>
-
-<p>No more loitering by the way. I did at once
-what every other creature was already doing—I
-hurried. “Now if I only had that overcoat!”
-I thought; but speed also is an extra garment,
-and I put it on.</p>
-
-<p>No more loitering, I said; but I did stop once.
-Halfway across the valley a flock of blackbirds
-were feeding beside a barn, and I turned into
-the yard to look at them.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see what kind of blackbirds these
-are,” I explained to the man of the house, who
-came out of the door at that moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they’re the same kind that is all over
-the universe,” he answered, smiling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>But his generalization was hasty, as generalizations
-are apt to be. They were Brewer’s blackbirds—the
-handsomest of grackles; birds that I
-had seen for the first time, at Del Rio, only the
-week before. I did not stay to admire their iridescence,
-but declining an invitation to ride (it
-was too cold for that, though the man was just
-going to harness up, he said), I buttoned another
-button and hastened on. The two or three persons
-I met each had something to say about the
-weather, but nobody stopped for prolonged comment.
-Short speeches and quick steps, or another
-crack at the mule, were the order of the day.
-Even at the South a man will generally hurry a
-little rather than freeze to death.</p>
-
-<p>Well, the experience was more amusing than
-uncomfortable, after all, and I reached the hotel
-door just as rain began falling. Before night
-snow was mingled with the rain, and the next
-morning I saw a small boy, his eyes dancing with
-brightness, making a tiny snow image to stand
-upon the front-yard fence, while the mountains—that
-fairly surround the city, as they do the
-Holy City in the Hebrew psalm—were dazzling
-white. The mud was beyond belief, the walking
-laborious; but as I paused now and then for
-breath or to recover my footing, and saw all that
-glory about me, I thanked my stars that I was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-here. I was glad to see that even in this arid
-zone (<i>arida zona</i>, as the Mexicans are supposed
-to have begun by calling it) it still knew how
-both to rain and to snow.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now, this was a surprise, wasn’t it?”
-I remarked to a German whom I met in the
-valley road.</p>
-
-<p>“You bet,” he answered; and then, with a
-smile, he added: “but it won’t last only a couple
-of days; that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>His mastery of American idiom recalls what
-another German farmer said on the same forenoon.
-He had been living here and in California
-since ’82, he told me.</p>
-
-<p>“Which place do you like best?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Arizona,” he answered, without hesitation.
-“Things are freer here,” he went on.
-“In Los Angeles, now, you have to dress up
-once in a while; but here, if you dress up, or if
-you don’t dress up, it don’t cut no ice.”</p>
-
-<p>My first man’s confident “couple of days”
-was a trifle too confident. Twice two days have
-passed. In that time we have had summer
-weather (at noon), a pretty hard freeze (at
-night), and another rain and another snowfall,
-both heavier than the first.</p>
-
-<p>The winter visitors, of whom there are many,
-the greater part, alas, ordered here for “lung<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-trouble,” have naturally been put out,—the
-more recent arrivals among them greatly astonished;
-they thought they were coming to a dry
-climate; but the residents proper, if not jubilant,
-have seemed at least reasonably well contented
-with the turn of affairs. There has been a general
-agreement, to be sure (one heard it on all
-hands), that it was “pretty muddy;” the wayfaring
-man, though a fool, could not dispute the
-statement; but so far as the prosperity of Arizona
-is concerned, there is no probability of an
-excessive rainfall. The more the better. So
-much is evident, even to an itinerant ornithologist,
-who may stand, if you will, for the wayfaring
-man before mentioned. What is not so
-clear to his darkened understanding is why the
-weather, no matter where one goes, should be
-every season so strangely exceptional, so utterly
-different from everything that the oldest inhabitant
-can remember.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">MOBBED IN ARIZONA</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> never known a city more orderly seeming,
-more evidently peaceful and law-abiding
-than Tucson. Nowhere have I felt safer in wandering
-about by myself in all sorts of places,
-whether within the city proper or in the surrounding
-country. Here is a town, I have said
-to myself, where the citizen has small need of
-the policeman. And yet I know a man, most
-discreet and inoffensive (not to be shame-faced
-about it, let me admit that I speak of the bird-gazer
-himself), who a few days ago, for no assignable
-reason, was violently set upon, or, to
-speak plainly, mobbed, just outside the city
-limits.</p>
-
-<p>Tucson, it should be premised, is a thriving,
-rapidly growing, modern city—though it has
-an antiquity to boast of, as well—in the midst
-of a desert. Its own site was originally part of
-the desert. The nearest large city is Los Angeles,
-California, five hundred miles distant; the
-nearest village, from what I hear, must be fifty
-or sixty miles away. Many roads run out of the
-town, but only to ranches scattered here and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-there along the two watercourses, or to mining
-camps farther off in the mountains. How a city
-ever came to grow up in a place so isolated, so
-seemingly destitute of anything like local advantages,
-is a riddle beyond my reading; but here
-it is, a city in the desert. North, south, east, or
-west, you may start where you will and go in
-what direction you please, and in fifteen minutes
-you will be out among the creosote bushes and
-the cacti, with nothing but a world of creosote
-and cactus—with perhaps a windmill and a
-roof rising above them somewhere in the distance—between
-you and the mountain range that
-bounds the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Well, this was exactly what I myself did one
-fine morning a week ago. I walked up the main
-street of the city, turned to the right, passed the
-territorial university buildings, and, taking a
-course northward toward the Santa Catalinas,
-sauntered carelessly forward, field-glass in hand,
-to see what might be stirring in the chaparral.</p>
-
-<p>There would not be much, I knew. By daylight,
-at least, and in the winter season, the
-desert is not a stirring place. In the tracts
-where the creosote occupies the ground alone
-there proved, as usual, to be nothing; but presently
-I came to a place where two or three kinds
-of cactus were sprinkled among the creosote<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-bushes, and newly sprung bluish-green grass (I
-call it grass, provisionally, although, like almost
-everything else hereabout, it has an unaccustomed
-look) carpeted or half-carpeted the
-ground. Here were the almost inevitable two
-cactus wrens (how overjoyed I was at the unexpected
-sight of my first one, at San Antonio,
-only three weeks ago, and how soon they have
-become an old story!) perched, one here, one
-there, at the top of branching cactus trees five
-or six feet high, calling antiphonally, as their
-habit is, in a coarse, unmusical, wearisome voice—the
-same churlish phase over and over and
-over. Nothing but the lonesomeness of the desert,
-surely, could ever make that grating, repetitive
-monotony a pleasure-giving sound. What
-the birds will do in the way of song when their
-musical season arrives, if it ever does,<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> is more
-than I know; but, belonging to be so musical a
-family, they ought to be capable of something
-better than this, for music, of all gifts, is a thing
-that runs in the blood. It would be a strange
-wren that could not express his happiness in
-some really lyrical manner.</p>
-
-<p>In the same neighborhood, as has happened on
-several occasions, were a group of five or six sage
-thrashers. It was in this very place, indeed, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-I first formed their acquaintance; and a sorely
-puzzled novelty-seeker I was on that eventful
-afternoon. The whole desert had seemed to be
-devoid of animal existence, I remember, when of
-a sudden there stood those strange birds on the
-ground before me. At the first instant they gave
-me an impression of overgrown titlarks. Then,
-when I watched them running at full speed over
-the grass, all at once pulling themselves up and
-standing erect with a snap of the tail, I said:
-“Why, they must be thrushes of some sort.” In
-attitude and action they were almost exactly like
-so many robins. The only striking characteristic
-of their plumage was the peculiarly dense streaking
-of the under-parts.</p>
-
-<p>The mystery was heightened for me by the
-fact that they maintained an absolute silence.
-Indeed, although I have seen them many times
-since then, I have yet to hear them utter the first
-syllable. For aught I can positively affirm, they
-may every one be mutes. I chased them about
-for half an hour, scrutinizing the least detail of
-their dress, all the while wondering what on earth
-to call them, till finally it came over me, I could
-never tell how, that they must be sage thrashers.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I said, “<i>Oroscoptes!</i> I remember
-that that bird is described as having a short
-bill.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>It was a true guess; and in a strange country
-a man makes so many poor guesses that he may
-reasonably boast a little over every good one.
-To this day, I am bound to add, the birds, with
-their short bills, their extraordinary quickness
-upon their feet, and their upright carriage, have
-to my eye very little the appearance of thrashers.
-Perhaps when I hear them sing, my feeling may
-alter.</p>
-
-<p>There is at least one real thrasher in the desert,
-however, and usually in the same places that
-Oroscoptes affects, places such as I have mentioned,
-where cacti are mingled with the omnipresent
-creosote. This is Palmer’s thrasher,
-so called, a grayish-brown bird, with the characteristic
-thrasher make-up—long bill, long body,
-and long tail. He is one of the common birds
-about Tucson, both in the river valley and on the
-desert, and one of the few that are already in
-song. Even he, I suspect, is not really letting
-himself go as yet, but he is in tune daily; not
-so versatile a performer, seemingly, as our Eastern
-reddish-brown bird; with much less range
-of voice, and more given to repeating the same
-phrase half a dozen times in succession, so that
-his music has less the air of a strict improvisation;
-but a genuine thrasher, nevertheless, with
-a thrasher’s song. As the season progresses he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-will probably grow more ecstatic, though to hear
-him now, one would not expect him ever to become
-so mad a rhapsodist as the crazy bird that
-we admire, and sometimes smile at, in the Eastern
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the thrasher was seen on the day I
-am supposed to be describing, I do not now remember,
-but in all probability he was, for I never
-walk far in the desert without seeing or hearing
-him. If he does not sing, he salutes me with
-volleys of sharp, whip-snapping whistles in the
-style of the wood thrush and the robin. Like
-the wren, he prefers a perch at the top of a cactus.
-He prefers it, I say; but in truth it is almost
-Hobson’s choice with him, since the topmost
-spray of a creosote bush, the only other thing
-he <i>could</i> perch on, would hardly support his
-weight. There he stands, at all events, perfectly
-at his ease among the closely set spines, sharp
-as the sharpest needles, though how he manages
-the ticklish feat so adroitly is more than I can
-imagine.</p>
-
-<p>I may have seen two or three desert sparrows,
-also; the black-throated sparrow, that is, with
-some slight variations, imperceptible in the bush,
-that make him, in the language of science, <i>Amphispiza
-bilineata deserticola</i>; and possibly,
-though this is somewhat less to be taken for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-granted, his long-tailed relative, the sage sparrow
-(<i>Amphispiza belli nevadensis</i>), may have teased
-me by his shyness. Both these birds are said to
-be famous enliveners of the desert,—though
-neither of them in their present silent state quite
-lives up to his reputation,—and will doubtless
-become prime favorites with me if I remain here
-long enough really to know them. Where should
-simple, hearty melodies find appreciation, if not
-in the desert?</p>
-
-<p>I am slow in coming to the point of my story;
-and with reason. It is not pleasant to be mobbed;
-there is nothing to boast of in such an adventure;
-nothing to flatter one’s sense of personal
-importance; one is not apt to speak of it <i>con
-amore</i>, as we say. Some things are best slipped
-over in silence. So I have noticed that men who
-have served their country in prison will always
-contrive by one path or another to go round
-the name of that unpopular institution. But I
-have begun, and there is nothing for it but to
-finish.</p>
-
-<p>Well, then, I had walked perhaps a mile and
-a half beyond the university buildings, which is
-the same as to say beyond the limits of the town,
-and found myself approaching a lonely ranch,
-when a flock of ravens, white-necked ravens,
-which abound hereabout—“the multitudinous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-raven,” I have caught myself saying<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>—rose
-from the scrub not far in advance, with the invariable
-hoarse chorus of <i>quark</i>, <i>quark</i>. I thought
-nothing of it, the sight being so much an every-day
-matter, till after a little I began to be aware
-that the whole flock seemed to be concentrating
-its attention upon my unsuspecting, inoffensive
-self. There must have been fifty of the big black
-birds. Round and round they went in circles,
-just above my head, moving forward as I moved,
-vociferating every one as he came near, “quark,
-quark.”</p>
-
-<p>At first I was amused; it was something new
-and interesting. I recalled the time when I
-walked miles on miles over the North Carolina
-mountains in hope of seeing one raven, and here
-were half a hundred almost within hand’s reach;
-I chaffed them as they passed, calling them names
-and quarking back to them in derision. But before
-very long the novelty of the thing wore off;
-the persecution grew tiresome. Enough is as
-good as a feast; and I had had enough. “Quark,
-quark,” they yelled, all the while settling nearer,—or
-so I fancied,—till it seemed as if they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-actually meant violence. They were doing precisely
-what a flock of crows does to an owl or
-a hawk: they were mobbing me. “Quark,
-quark! Hit him, there! Hit him! Pick his eyes
-out!”</p>
-
-<p>The commotion lasted for at least half a mile.
-Then the birds wearied of it, and went off about
-their business. All but one of them, I mean to
-say. He had no such notion. For ten minutes
-longer he stayed by. His persistency was devilish.
-It became almost unbearable. The single
-voice was more exasperating even than the chorus.
-If the famous albatross carried on after any such
-outrageous fashion, I have no stones to throw at
-the Ancient Mariner. He acted well within his
-rights. If I had had a crossbow, and had been
-as good a marksman as he was,—with “his
-glittering eye,”—there would have been one less
-raven in Arizona, and no questions asked. If a
-dead calm had succeeded, so much the better.
-“Quark, quark!” the black villain cried, wagging
-his impish head, and swooping low to spit
-the insult into my ear.</p>
-
-<p>But all things have an end, as leaves have
-their time to fall, and even a raven’s perseverance
-will wear out at last. Perhaps the bird
-grew hungry. At all events he gave over the
-assault, stillness fell upon the desert, and an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-innocent foot-passenger went on his way in
-peace.</p>
-
-<p>And this is how I was mobbed in Arizona. I
-could never have believed it.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">AN IDLE AFTERNOON</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I have</span> heard of a man who invariably begins
-his letters, whether of friendship or business,
-with a bulletin of the day’s weather: it rains, or
-it shines; it is cold or warm; and to my way of
-thinking it is far from certain that the custom is
-not commendable. It is fair to sender and receiver
-alike that the mental conditions under
-which an epistle is written should be understood;
-and there is no man—or no ordinary man, such
-as most of us have the happiness to deal with—whose
-thoughts and language are not more or
-less colored by those skyey influences the sum
-of which we designate by the interrogative name
-of weather. I say “interrogative,” because I
-assume, although, having no dictionary by me,
-I cannot verify the assumption, that the word
-“weather” is only a corruption or variant of the
-older word “whether;” the thing itself being
-an entity so variable and doubtful that remarks
-about it fall naturally, and almost of necessity,
-into a discussion of probabilities, in other words,
-of “whether.”</p>
-
-<p>As to the weather here in Tucson, I could fill<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-all my letters with it, and still leave a world of
-things unsaid. Its fluctuations are so constant
-that they tend to become monotonous; as Thoreau
-said of one of his Concord days, that it was so
-wet you might almost call it dry.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four mornings ago, for example, I
-started early for a seven-mile tramp across the
-desert. I wore overcoat and woolen gloves, and
-needed them. It was so cool, indeed, that I left
-word for an extra garment to be put into the
-carriage that was to come out and fetch me back
-at noon.</p>
-
-<p>That same afternoon I walked down into the
-valley of the Santa Cruz. The sun was blazing,
-and the heat intense. The few cottonwood trees
-scattered along the road were still leafless (I had
-left my umbrella at home—for the last time) and
-the only shelter to be found was on the northeasterly
-side of the telegraph poles. I believe
-I never before complained of such obstructions
-that they were not big enough; but everything
-comes round in its turn. My thoughts ran
-back to the time when a boy of my acquaintance
-used to trudge homeward from berry-picking excursions
-on burning July noons. Also I thought
-of that comfortable Hebrew text about the
-“shadow of a great rock in a weary land.” The
-man who wrote that might have lived in Arizona.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-Finally, out of sheer desperation, I stepped into
-the yard of a little adobe house, and being obliged
-to walk almost to the door, said to the motherly-looking
-woman who came forward to see what
-was wanted, “Excuse me, please, but I only wish
-to stand a few minutes in the shade of your
-house.” She looked surprised, as well she might.
-No doubt she took me for an invalid, as Arizona
-people say, a “lunger.” Probably, sitting indoors,
-and used to summer temperature in these
-parts, she had been thinking of the day as rather
-cool, not to say wintry. Wouldn’t I come in and
-sit awhile? She was sure I should be welcome.
-But I answered no; I only desired to stand a few
-minutes in the shade. And two or three hours
-afterward, within five minutes after the sun went
-down,—though it had been shining in at my
-west window,—I needed a fire.</p>
-
-<p>Forty-eight hours later we had a snowfall,—the
-third within ten days,—the whole world
-white, with “storm rubbers” barely equal to the
-emergency; and the next morning, the snow having
-gone, ice was thick in a big tub of water
-outside my door.</p>
-
-<p>“Cold?” said an Illinois gentleman, with
-whom I fell into conversation yesterday, “I’ve
-been here three weeks, and in that time I’ve suffered
-more from cold than in all my forty years.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>I suspect that he exaggerated. For my own
-part, I haven’t suffered from cold. It is the occasional
-heat that makes me fearful of homesickness.
-Three days like that one afternoon would
-set me packing. All of which may seem not very
-important to a chance reader; but unless he is of
-a hopelessly unimaginative turn he can perhaps
-conceive how interesting and important it must
-be to the parties directly concerned, especially if
-he remembers that this is a winter resort, where
-weather is the one thing needful.</p>
-
-<p>But what a perfect afternoon we had yesterday!—cool,
-yet not too cool; and warm, yet
-not too warm; with a softness and yet a gently
-bracing, uplifting, pulse-quickening, life-reviving
-quality in the air; and the sky, too, clear, but
-not too clear, so that wisps of cloud floated here
-and there over the bare, steep sides of the Santa
-Catalinas, giving them beauty. I was out upon
-the desert in a mood of absolute indolence, contented
-to walk a mile an hour, and breathe and
-breathe, and look. At such times it seems hardly
-too much to say, strange as the words may sound,
-that I am falling in love with the desert, a desert
-bounded only by mountains. Already I can believe
-that men are fascinated by it (the right
-men), and having once been here cannot long
-stay away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>Looking and dreaming, the bird-gazer within
-me pretty well laid asleep, suddenly I heard a
-strange voice in the air, thin, insect-like, unknown.
-By the time it had sounded twice the sleeper was
-wide-awake, with his opera-glass in play. The
-voice came from yonder thin clump of creosote
-bushes. Yes, the bird flits into sight—a gnatcatcher;
-and being a gnatcatcher, with such a
-note, it must be “the other one,” known as the
-plumbeous, which I have been looking for ever
-since my arrival in Tucson. And so it was—a
-pretty creature with a jaunty black cap. I shall
-know him henceforth, I hope, even without seeing
-him. We are fortunate, both of us, I take
-leave to say, to have made each other’s acquaintance
-on so ideal an afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>The gnatcatcher disappeared, and the dreamer
-was just dozing off again, when two large birds
-were seen to be having a hot encounter, high
-overhead. This time the field-glass came into requisition.
-A raven was teasing a red-tailed hawk,
-with all a raven’s pertinacity and spite. Again
-and again and again he swooped upon him, while
-the hawk ducked and turned to avoid the stroke.
-Why the big fellow, biggest of all our hawks,
-larger and stronger in every way than the raven,
-did not face his tormentor and lay him out was a
-mystery. I confess, I should have been glad to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-see him do it. Instead, he made off toward the
-mountains, and after a long chase and much croaking,
-the raven turned away.</p>
-
-<p>This also had passed out of mind, and I was
-on my way homeward, barely putting one foot
-before the other, enjoying the air and the sun,—and
-the mountains,—when, happening to
-glance upward, I beheld a grand sight. “That’s
-the golden eagle,” I said aloud (in the desert a
-man soon falls into the neighborly habit of talking
-to himself), and one look through the field-glass
-proved the words correct. The great bird
-was in perfect light, sailing in circles, so that his
-upper parts came every minute into full view as
-he swung about, the old gold of the head and
-neck, as well as the contrasted brown and black
-of the wings, perfectly displayed, with nothing
-left for guesswork. I was all eyes, and watched
-him and watched him, admiring especially the
-firm set of his wings, till he, too, sailed away, not
-chased, but moving of his own royal will, and
-dropped at last out of sight behind the rolling
-desert.</p>
-
-<p>He was my first golden eagle, in some respects
-one of the noblest of all North American birds. I
-knew him to be not uncommon in the mountains,
-and had hoped some day to see him passing, especially
-when I should be far out on the edge of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-the foothills; and behold, here he was on my idle
-afternoon, close at home. Who says that the lame
-and the lazy are not provided for?</p>
-
-<p>My dreamy saunter was turning out ornithological
-in spite of myself, and as if the gnatcatcher
-and the eagle had not done enough to that end,
-the ubiquitous raven now took a hand at the
-business. My thoughts were just settling back
-into vacancy, when the ravens were seen to be
-commencing their regular afternoon progress to
-their roosting grounds, wherever those may be,
-on the other side of the city. A detachment of
-some scores was already on the move. And presently
-I observed what was to me a strange and
-interesting thing, although, for aught I can affirm
-to the contrary, it may be only an every-day occurrence.</p>
-
-<p>A great part of the birds were playing by twos,
-one chasing the other, as if engaged in a frolic to
-which all parties were perfectly accustomed. I
-had not expected such a pitch of levity on the
-part of these black-suited, and as I should have
-thought, rather gloomy-natured scavengers. But
-they were going to roost, and like children at the
-hour of bedtime, they were making a lark of it.
-Perhaps the day’s picking had been uncommonly
-good; they had been over by a certain cattle-slaughtering
-establishment; something, at all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-events, had put them in high spirits, and so Tom
-was having it out with Dick, and Bob with Harry.
-To look at them, it seemed as much fun as a pillow-fight,
-and as I have said, the greater part of
-the flock were engaged in it.</p>
-
-<p>But the point I started to speak of was not
-the game itself, but a certain acrobatic feat by
-which it was accompanied. Again and again, in
-the course of their doublings and duckings, I
-saw the birds turn what looked to be a complete
-sidewise somersault. It may have been an optical
-illusion; probably it was; but if so, it was absolute.
-Sure I am that more than once I saw a
-bird flat on his back in the air (as flat on his
-back as ever a swimmer was in water), and to all
-appearance, as I say, he did not turn back, but
-came up like a flash on the other side. Fact or
-illusion, clean over or halfway over, it was a
-clever trick, and I could not wonder that the
-birds seemed to take pleasure in its repetition.
-I imagined they were as proud of it as a young
-gymnast ever was of his newly acquired back
-handspring. And why not? A man must be extremely
-well contented with himself, or possess a
-feeble imagination, not to feel sometimes a twinge
-of envy at sight of a bird’s superiorities.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>And while one flock of ravens were playing
-“it” in this brilliant fashion, another and larger
-flock were sailing in mazy circles after the manner
-of sea-gulls; a fascinating spectacle, to be
-witnessed here every afternoon by any who will
-be at the trouble to look up. More than once I
-have watched hundreds of the birds thus engaged,
-not all at the same elevation, be it understood,
-but circle above circle—a kind of Jacob’s ladder—till
-the top ones were almost at heaven’s gate.
-It is a good time to be out on the desert when the
-ravens are going to roost. And what with their
-soarings and tumblings, I have begun to think
-that perhaps the big hawk was not such an absolute
-fool, after all, to decline an aerial combat.
-The white-necked raven may be only a little larger
-kind of crow, but he is a wonder on the wing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-<h3 class="nobreak">SHY LIFE IN THE DESERT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> the desert and the mountains, and some
-of the longer-desired birds, I have enjoyed few
-sights in Arizona more than that of two coyotes.
-Old beaters about the wilds of this Western
-country will be ready to scoff, I dare say, at so
-simple a confession. “Two coyotes, indeed! A
-great sight, that!” So I think I hear them saying.
-Well, they are welcome to their fun. It is
-kindly ordered, the world being mostly a dull
-place, that men shall be mutually amusing, and
-there is no great harm in being laughed at, provided
-it be done behind one’s back.</p>
-
-<p>The fact remains, then, as I state it. To me
-the coyotes were very interesting and unexpected
-beasts. And the pleasure of my encounter with
-them was heightened materially (this, too, is a
-laughable admission; I know it as well as anybody),
-when I learned that hereabouts, whatever
-may be true elsewhere, it was to be esteemed a
-piece of rather extraordinary luck, unlikely to
-be soon repeated. To all men of science, though
-they be nothing but amateurs and dabsters, rarity
-is one of the cardinal virtues of a specimen.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-My good fortune, be it accounted greater or
-less, came about in this way.</p>
-
-<p>Six or seven miles across the desert, where
-the plain comes to an end at the buried Rillito
-River, and the foothills of the Catalinas begin
-to rise from the opposite bank, are the adobe
-ruins (hospital, barracks, and what not) of Old
-Camp Lowell, a relic of the Apache wars. I had
-heard of the place (in fact, I had been happy
-enough to meet a young man who is camping
-there with his brother), and started early one
-morning to visit it.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was because of the earliness of the
-hour, though the sun was well above the horizon;
-at any rate, I had gone but a short distance
-before my steps were arrested by the sight
-of a gray, long-legged, wolfish-looking animal
-not far ahead. He had seen me first, I think
-(strange if he had not, so alert as every motion
-showed him to be), and was already considering
-his course of action, starting away, then stopping
-to look back. My glass covered him at once (he
-was easily within gunshot), and then, following
-a turn of his head, I saw that he had a companion.
-The second one had already crossed the
-trail, and the question between the two seemed
-to be whether he should come back or the other
-should follow him. The point was quickly decided;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-the second one recrossed the trail, and
-the two ran off among the creosote clumps on
-the left, and in a few seconds were lost; but the
-hesitation had given me time to note their color,
-size, build (especially their long, sharp, collie-shaped
-noses), and their general appearance and
-action, all very “doggy.”</p>
-
-<p>This, as I have said, was but a little way beyond
-the university buildings, and, knowing no
-better, I assumed the occurrence to be a common
-one, and spoke of it in a matter-of-fact tone to
-the campers at the fort. They exclaimed at once
-that I had been surprisingly fortunate; they
-themselves, passing their days and nights in the
-desert, seldom or never saw one of the animals,
-though they often heard them barking after
-dark. The circumstantiality of my description,
-and it may be their politeness,—for they were
-gentlemen, “baching it” here for the older
-brother’s health,—made it impossible for them
-to suggest a doubt as to the identity of the animals;
-but I had no difficulty in perceiving that
-if I wished to pass as a man of veracity among
-ordinary dwellers hereabouts I must not see coyotes
-too frequently. In point of fact, the very
-next man to whom I mentioned the circumstance,
-a man who has lived here for several years, on
-the rim of the desert, answered promptly:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-“They weren’t jack rabbits, were they?” He
-had never seen a coyote in Arizona, he said,
-though he had seen plenty in Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>As for the big jack rabbits, if I have not seen
-“plenty” of them (and I cannot truthfully profess
-so much as that), I have seen a good many.
-One cannot walk far in the desert, with his eyes
-ranging, without discovering, to right or left or
-in advance, a pair of long ears, followed by a
-black tail, making quick time out of sight.
-Generally the creatures seem to run by fits and
-starts (“leaps and bounds and sudden stops”
-would express it), but the other morning a fellow
-had evidently been frightened almost out of his
-five senses by something—not by me—when
-a long way from home. There were no stops
-in his schedule. Straight across the desert he
-bounded, going like an express train—a mile a
-minute at the very least.</p>
-
-<p>So lively as these large rabbits are (there is a
-smaller kind that I have not yet seen<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>) they
-would be as interesting as the much larger coyotes
-but for their greater commonness. For
-grace and lightness, as well as speed, their gait
-is next to flying. All the words in the dictionary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-could not describe it. I never see one on the
-move without admiration and an impulse to give
-him three cheers. Surely, man is a slow coach,
-and a race-horse is clumsy.</p>
-
-<p>To one who comes this way for the first time
-in winter, as I have come (and may Heaven save
-me from ever being here in summer, so long
-at least as I am in an embodied state!), the
-desert seems thinly inhabited. Of the scarcity
-of bird-life upon it I have before spoken; and
-the reason is obvious: there is little here for
-birds to feed upon. The smaller quadrupeds,
-too, are of surprising infrequency. Once in a
-long while a striped squirrel, as I should call it,
-with its tail over its back, will be seen squatting
-beside a hole in the ground, ready to slip into it
-long before you can get near; and somewhat
-oftener a gray, rat-tailed, big-eyed squirrel (if it
-<i>is</i> a squirrel—I have only half seen it) will
-dart across an open space, tail in air, barely visible
-before it, too, has ducked into its burrow;
-but two or three such small fry, with as many
-jack rabbits, in the course of a half-day tramp,
-do not go far toward constituting anything to be
-accounted populousness.</p>
-
-<p>One morning I walked out upon the desert
-immediately after a snowfall. It would be a favorable
-time, I thought, to study zoölogical hieroglyphics;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-and I believe I walked a mile before
-I saw a single footprint. Think of doing that, or
-anything like it, in our poor, frost-bitten, winter-killed,
-over-civilized New England! The tracks
-would have been a perfect crisscross.</p>
-
-<p>And, notwithstanding all this, footprints or no
-footprints, the desert is not without its own world
-of little people. It is a desert only to our dull,
-provincial, self-absorbed, self-sufficient, narrow-minded,
-egotistical human apprehension of it.
-So much ought to be plain as day to the most
-undiscerning traveler; for if he so much as looks
-where he steps (lest a snake should bite him), he
-cannot help seeing that the ground all about is
-almost as full of holes as a colander. Larger
-and smaller, the earth is riddled with them. If
-the diggers of the holes happen to be just now
-within doors instead of gadding abroad like so
-many restless tourists, probably their conduct is
-not without a reason. Possibly they object to
-cold feet. More likely they have an eye to bodily
-safety. One thing you may wager upon, homekeepers
-though they be—the sharpness of their
-wits.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever would live on this bare, open plain
-must be as wise as a serpent. The remainder of
-the text may be omitted as locally inapplicable.
-The desert-dweller—<i>Deserticola</i>, as we name<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-him in zoölogical Latin—must know the times
-and the seasons, and catch the scent of danger
-afar off. You will find no trustful innocence in
-these diggings. If there ever was any, it long
-ago perished. Everything is shy, and has need
-to be. “Nature red in tooth and claw” has here
-its ancestral seat. He that cannot fight must
-run; and however it may be elsewhere, in the
-desert the race is to the swift and the battle to
-the strong. In one way or another everything
-goes armed. It may be set with thorns like the
-mesquite and the cactus, or it may have an offensive
-oil like the creosote; it may run like the
-rabbit, or strike like the rattlesnake. If it can
-do nothing else, it must hide. And even the
-strong and the speedy must hide when that which
-is stronger and speedier heaves in sight. The
-desert is open to the sky, but its life is not open.
-Like the currents of the rivers, the current of
-animal existence runs mostly underground.</p>
-
-<p>A Tucson business man was telling me about
-the great antiquity of the town: the oldest settlement
-in the country, I think he called it, with
-the exception of St. Augustine, Florida.</p>
-
-<p>“But how in the world came a city to grow
-up here?” I inquired. “I can see no sufficient
-reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, as if he could think of nothing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-else, “the river comes to the surface here,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke of the Santa Cruz. And it is true.
-The river comes to the surface; the stretch of
-watered farms and the brimming irrigation
-ditches bear witness to the fact; but it does not
-stay there. I have frequent occasion to go over
-the four roads that cross it from the city. On the
-southernmost of these, where Mexican women
-are always to be seen washing clothes, spreading
-the garment over a stone and beating it clean
-with a stick (“mangling,” I should suppose the
-word ought to be), carriages drive through the
-stream, while foot-passengers cross by means of
-stepping-stones; six or eight boulders of the size
-of a man’s head, perhaps, picked up at random
-and laid in a row. The next road is furnished
-with a bridge, though it is hard to see why. The
-other two (they are all within the distance of a
-mile) have neither bridge nor stepping-stones,
-nor need of any. The river bottom, so called,
-though it is rather roof than bottom, is as dry as
-the Sahara.</p>
-
-<p>So it is with the Rillito, and, I suppose, with
-all the rivers of the desert. They are shy creatures.
-They love not the garish day. Like the
-saints of old and the capitalists of our own
-time, they abhor publicity. Water, they think,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-shouldn’t be too much in sight. With the squirrel
-and the rabbit, they live mostly in burrows.</p>
-
-<p>Of certain more highly specialized inhabitants
-of the desert—rattlesnakes, Gila monsters,
-tarantulas, and the like—a winter stroller can
-have little or nothing to relate. They are all
-here, no doubt, and will disport themselves in
-their season. No midsummer sun will be too hot
-for them. For myself, in three weeks’ wandering
-I have seen one lizard, nothing else. And it, too,
-was shy, legging it for shelter; running, literally,
-“like a streak.” That was really all that I saw—a
-streak of brown over the gray sand. I was
-neither a road-runner nor a hawk, and for that
-time the lizard was more scared than hurt.</p>
-
-<p>If this shy life of the desert is happy, as I
-believe it is, after its manner and according to
-its measure, we can only admire once more the
-beneficent effect of use and custom. The safest of
-us are always in danger. Whether we tread the
-sands of the desert or the shaded paths of some
-Garden of Eden, our steps all tend to one end,
-the one event that happeneth alike to all; and
-if we, who look before and after, go on our way
-smiling, why not the humbler and presumably
-less sensitive people whose homes are under the
-roots of the creosote bushes?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A NEW ACQUAINTANCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">A student</span> of nature, differing from some less
-fortunate folk that one meets at wintering places,
-is never at a loss what to do with his day. In a
-strange land, at least (the stranger the better),
-he possesses one of the prime requisites of a contented
-life: he knows every night what is on his
-docket for the morrow. His days, so to express
-it, are all dovetailed together. Tuesday’s work
-is to finish Monday’s; Wednesday’s is to finish
-Tuesday’s; and so the weeks run by. What could
-be simpler, or more conducive to cheerfulness?
-A day should have a motive, as well as a piece
-of music or a poem.</p>
-
-<p>I am still at Tucson. Two mornings ago there
-was but one thing for me to do. I knew it before
-I rose. I must take the half-past seven horse-car,
-ride down town as far as Simpson Street, walk
-thence across the Santa Cruz Valley to the base
-of Tucson Mountain, and from there follow the
-narrow road that winds between the foot of the
-cliffs and the old canal, till I came to a certain
-bush. The name of this bush I cannot give, not
-knowing it, but it bears millions of small, fleshy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-leaves, and, what is more to the present purpose,
-is covered with thousands, if not millions, of
-small purple flowers.</p>
-
-<p>I had noticed it for the first time the forenoon
-before; and I noticed it then because, as I passed,
-I heard to my great surprise and intense gratification
-the buzz of a hummingbird’s wings. I
-was not in the least expecting to see any bird of
-that sort during my brief winter’s stay in Arizona;
-and which is better, ornithologically speaking,
-to find the long expected or the unexpected,
-is a point that wiser heads than mine may settle.
-For myself, either happening will do, so it be not
-too infrequent.</p>
-
-<p>My eyes turned of themselves in the right
-direction, and there at my elbow was the tiny,
-emerald-backed, familiar-looking beauty, hovering
-before the blossoms of this spreading bush.
-It was only for a second or two. Then for another
-such period he perched on the slender tip
-of the nearest mesquite, and then was away on
-the wings of the wind. I waited for his return,
-but not long enough, and came back to the city,
-wondering.</p>
-
-<p>His upper parts, as I say, were green, and he
-looked at a first glance much like our common
-ruby-throat of the East. But in the few seconds
-that my eye followed him—a time too short for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-catching myself up and making sure even of the
-little I had seen—I received an impression (it
-was nothing more) of a black head as well as of
-a black throat. If the impression was correct,
-the bird could not be a ruby-throat, and besides,
-unless my memory was at fault, the ruby-throat
-was not to be looked for in this longitude. I
-must see the handbook.</p>
-
-<p>A reference to that authority showed that eight
-species of hummingbirds had been reported from
-the Catalina Mountains, but not the ruby-throat.
-Of the two or three common ones among the
-eight, the most likely candidate seemed to be the
-black-chinned, <i>Trochilus alexandri</i>, though that
-bird’s crown is not black. Probably my impression
-upon that point had been erroneous; so surprised
-and hurried as I had been, a measure of
-inexactness was rather to be looked for. At all
-events, it was impossible to make out how the
-bird could be any one of the other seven. By
-the rule of exclusion—a pretty safe rule, I told
-myself—he ought to be a black-chin.</p>
-
-<p>So the matter rested, not much to my satisfaction,
-till the next morning. Then, as I have already
-said, I went immediately after breakfast
-to stand beside that blossoming bush until the
-bird should again show himself. If my confidence
-that he would be there, in that precise spot, no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-different from thousands of others in all those
-miles and miles of country, all so exactly alike,
-beside that particular bush, itself like thousands
-of others,—if my confidence seems presumptuous,
-as to many readers I dare say it will, I can
-only profess that it was based upon no small acquaintance
-with the ruby-throat’s habit of frequenting
-day after day the same tree, and even
-the same twig, as a resting-place, or post of observation.
-It was not at all unlikely, I reasoned,
-that the black-chin’s habit would prove to be
-similar. At any rate, there was no harm in proceeding
-upon that hypothesis.</p>
-
-<p>I went at once to the place, therefore, took
-a favorable position with the sun at my back,
-focused my eight-power glass to a nicety upon
-the topmost twig of the mesquite bush (quarter
-seconds might be precious), and waited. As the
-capable reader has already divined, the bird did
-not fail me, nor keep me long in suspense. There
-was a sound of wings, and in another instant the
-hummer stood on the top spray of the mesquite.
-And his crown was black, like his throat. He
-could not be <i>alexandri</i>. But before I had time
-to take in the full awkwardness of my dilemma—since
-I had already ruled the other seven
-species out of the account—the bird turned his
-head to one side, the sun struck him at the right<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-angle, and behold, his gorget had long, flaring
-wings, like the loose ends of a broad necktie, or,
-to use the homely comparison which occurred to
-me at the moment, like a pair of big mutton-chop
-whiskers, and was no longer black, but of a most
-exquisite and brilliant shade of violet. The radiant
-vision shone upon me for an instant; then,
-at another movement of the head, all was black
-again, and in another instant the bird was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Now, then, I began to see daylight. The bird,
-having a ruff, was not of the genus <i>Trochilus</i>,
-and the question was so far simplified, though it
-would be necessary to consult the book again
-before it could be settled. Meanwhile, I must
-by all means have another look at the beauty.
-Such splendor of color was worth waiting for,
-though it came only in flashes. And I waited.
-But though the creature finally returned to the
-mesquite he persisted in sitting with his back to
-the sun, and I came away without seeing him
-again transfigured.</p>
-
-<p>Another reference to the handbook, and I knew
-him for <i>Calypte costæ</i>, the Costa hummingbird.
-But now mark how one day’s work is linked
-with another’s. The book informed me that the
-crown, as well as the gorget and the ruff, was
-“brilliantly burnished amethyst violet.” I had
-not seen that, doubtless because the light had not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-fallen upon the crown at the necessary angle.
-The detail must nevertheless be verified. Here,
-then, was my business for to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>I was late in arriving,—a full hour, at least,
-behind my appointment,—having walked the
-whole distance this time, and by a roundabout
-course; and the hummer was waiting for me.
-“You are late,” I fancied him saying; but of
-course that was my “pathetic fallacy.” In the
-course of my stay he “gave me three sittings,”
-as my penciled memorandum puts it, and I saw
-that his forehead and a spot behind the ear were
-of the same dazzling, indescribably beautiful color
-as the gorget and ruff. The whole crown I did
-not see illuminated, but the forehead sufficed.</p>
-
-<p>At one time a ruby-crowned kinglet came and
-played about in the same bush, and in that comparison
-he seemed almost a giant. “The hummer
-is smaller and smaller,” my pencil remarked,
-“every time I see him.” I might have addressed
-him as Charles Lamb addressed the shade of
-Elliston, when he saw that worthy, all his stage
-trappings removed, seated in Charon’s boat,—“Bless
-me, how little you look.”</p>
-
-<p>The identification was now complete. I had
-doubled my list of hummingbirds, having seen
-but one species in all my previous years, and the
-next morning I might reasonably have turned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-my steps elsewhere. But when the hour came
-round I could think of nothing else I wanted so
-much to do as to see that hummer again. And I
-followed my inclination. It was well I did.</p>
-
-<p>We were both prompt. As I drew near I saw
-the tiny creature perched as usual at the tip of
-the mesquite. How many times he came and
-went during the hour that I stayed by him I fail
-to remember; but on the second or third occasion
-a verdin happened into the neighborhood.
-The hummer descended upon him hotly, drove
-him away in no time, and then, as if in celebration
-of his triumph, mounted straight into the
-air till he was like a dot, and came down again
-almost vertically to his perch. It was a brilliant
-and lovely display, an ebullition of vital spirits
-well worth a forenoon of any man’s life to witness.
-There are city parades, hours in length,
-with martial music and all manner of bright regalia,
-that might better be skipped. And a few
-minutes later, the enemy having returned, the
-entire performance was repeated, ecstatic flight,
-vertical drop and all. The verdin’s presence, it
-appeared, was extremely annoying to the hummer.
-This place was his. Trespassing was forbidden,
-and the verdin ought to know it.</p>
-
-<p>Once, watching for another flash of color, I
-had my glass on the hummer as he sat quiet.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-Suddenly the verdin began sputtering to himself,
-after his manner, a little way off. Quick as
-thought the hummer cocked his head, waited an
-instant as if to make sure he had heard correctly
-(it seemed impossible, I suppose, after such a
-drubbing), and then, like a bullet out of a gun,
-flew at the persistent intruder. His spirit was
-wonderful, and being roused to his work, he finished
-by descending at full speed upon a black
-phœbe that just then blundered innocently along.
-The big flycatcher, many times bigger than the
-hummer,—but so is a man many times bigger
-than a rifle ball,—did not stand upon the order
-of his going, but went at once. I did not wonder.
-The fellow might have driven me away, also, had
-he taken it into his head to try. He was irresistible.
-Talk of a strenuous life!</p>
-
-<p>At another time he darted from his perch in
-a quite unwonted direction, and flew on the line
-to a palo-verde shrub off on the hillside. The
-verdin was there, it turned out, down at the very
-bottom of the bush,—though to my senses he
-had made no sign,—and must be dislodged forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>Why the hummer offered no objection to
-the kinglet’s presence is beyond my knowledge.
-Perhaps he took into account the fact that the
-kinglet was here only for the winter; for it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-impossible not to surmise that the hummer had
-selected this particular spot for his summer
-home, and as such meant to hold it against all
-comers, exercising over it all the rights of sovereignty.
-Let the verdin and the phœbe go
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>The phœbe pretty certainly would have gone
-elsewhere, hummer or no hummer. As to what
-the verdin will conclude to do, things being as
-they are, my mind is less clearly made up. He
-is not so swift as his bullet of a rival, but I fancy
-him to be a pretty dogged fighter, able to be
-whipped a good many times without finding it
-out. Still, as between the two, if I were compelled
-to wager, I think I should risk my money
-on the hummingbird.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">THE DESERT REJOICES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">What</span> was foretold in Judea is fulfilled in
-Arizona—the desert has blossomed like the
-rose.</p>
-
-<p>I could hardly believe it, a month ago, when a
-Tucson business man, who in the kindness of
-his heart had turned the city upside down, almost,
-seeking to find a home for a man who was
-not a consumptive and did not wish to live in a
-hospital or a pest-house—I could hardly believe
-it, I repeat, when he said: “Oh, you mustn’t
-go back to Texas yet. You must stay and see
-the desert in bloom. After these unusual rains
-and snowfalls it will soon be all like a flower
-garden.” “So may it turn out,” I thought;
-“but time will tell.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke, according to the privilege of prophets,
-in the language of hyperbole; for, although
-his prediction has come true, its fulfillment
-is more than a little straitened and stingy.
-The desert has blossomed, but it is like a flower
-garden only in this respect—that there are
-flowers in it. They are numbered by millions,
-indeed; or, rather, they are beyond all thought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-of numeration; but, as far as the appearance of
-the place is concerned, it is scarcely more like a
-flower garden than like a billiard table. A careless
-traveler—and not so very careless, neither—might
-tread the blossoms under his feet for
-miles without seeing so much as one of them.
-They are desert flowers; vegetable Lilliputians;
-minute, almost microscopic, for the most part,
-as if moisture had been doled out to them by
-the drop or the thimbleful, as indeed it has
-been; and the few that are larger have in the
-main a weedy aspect, such as blinds the eye of
-the ordinary non-observer, to whom, rightly or
-wrongly, a flower is one thing and a weed another.
-As for the tiny ones, the overwhelming
-majority, a blossom that you can see in its place
-only by getting down on your knees to look for
-it may be a “flower” to a botanist, but hardly
-to a plain, unlettered, matter-of-fact citizen.</p>
-
-<p>And still, after the prophetic manner, the
-prediction has come true. The desert has blossomed
-abundantly. As it now is, I can imagine
-that it would be a place of unspeakable interest
-to a philosophic botanist. He would know, presumably,
-what I do not, whether these starveling
-races, existers upon nothing, are to be accounted
-species by themselves, or only stunted representatives
-of species that under favoring conditions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-grow to a more considerable size. To his mind
-numberless problems would be suggested touching
-the methods by which plants, sturdy and
-patient beings, adapt themselves to untoward
-circumstances and keep themselves alive—so
-perpetuating the race—upon the chariest of
-encouragement. He would understand the significance
-of the prevailing hairiness of desert-inhabiting
-species, as well as of the all but universal
-light bluish or dusty color of the foliage;
-for, saving the yellow-green creosote, there is
-hardly so much as a bright green leaf from one
-end of the desert to the other.</p>
-
-<p>The state of my own unphilosophic mind is
-peculiar, like the circumstances in which it finds
-itself. It is (or perhaps it would be more honest
-to say, it ought to be) humiliating, but it has
-something of the charm of novelty.</p>
-
-<p>I spoke a month ago of my ornithological predicament
-when, newly arrived in Texas, I found
-myself surrounded by a quite strange set of
-birds. I was back in the primer, I think I said.
-Well, botanically, here in Tucson, I have retrograded
-a long step farther even than that. If I
-may say so, my state is pre-primeric. I am not
-even a primary scholar. I am no scholar at all.
-My condition is what it was in childhood, when
-I had never heard of botany. In those days, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-what for some reason was known as a grammar
-school, we studied reading, writing, arithmetic,
-geography, and grammar. One older girl, long
-since dead (poor child, I can see her now, reciting
-all by herself), studied “Watts on the
-Mind!” At the high school we added algebra,
-geometry, Latin, and Greek. As for “nature
-study,” neither the name nor the thing was ever
-mentioned to us. Mr. Burroughs had not yet
-written, and if Thoreau had written, his books
-were not yet heard of. Botany and Hebrew
-were alike absent from our curriculum. For
-my own part, at any rate, whatever may have
-been true of my cleverer or more home-favored
-contemporaries, I neither knew the names of
-the flowers I saw, nor did I aspire to know
-them. If I ever thought of such knowledge, I
-regarded it as permanently beyond my ken.
-Who was I, that I should be wiser than all my
-betters? I contented myself with liking the
-things themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Then, years afterward, I somehow began to
-“botanize,” as we say, by myself; and from that
-time to the present, whether at home or abroad,
-I have always had a “manual” at my elbow or
-in my trunk. A strange flower must be looked
-up and set in its place.</p>
-
-<p>But now, in Arizona, all this is done. I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-no manual. This carpet of desert plants I walk
-over almost without curiosity, as I might walk
-over a flowery carpet in a parlor. Their names
-are nothing more to me than the jabberings of
-the Mexicans who pass me on the desert with
-loads of wood. Sometimes, indeed, I guess at a
-relationship, as now and then I catch a word of
-Spanish. This flower, I say, may be a <i>Myosotis</i>.
-But nine chances to one I do not so much as
-guess. It’s a pretty red flower, or a dainty white
-blossom, and there’s an end of it. As I said just
-now, the state of my mind is pre-primeric. I am
-too ignorant even to ask questions.</p>
-
-<p>A sad case, certainly, but, like sad cases in
-general, it brings its own partial compensations.
-I have the more leisure for the birds, and for
-looking at the mountains. Two months ago it
-would not have seemed possible, but it has come
-true; I can sit upon the ground with half a
-dozen kinds of unknown flowers about me, and
-gaze upon the Catalinas or the snow-capped
-Santa Ritas as peacefully or rapturously as if I
-had never used a manual or a pocket-lens since
-I was born. Have I been converted, and become
-as a little child? Possibly; but I anticipate a
-speedy backsliding when conditions alter.</p>
-
-<p>Yet I perceive that, like the prophet, I am
-waxing tropical, and using language that requires<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-“interpretation.” There are at least three kinds
-of flowers in the desert that are not microscopic,
-and that I call by name. They are not very
-numerous; you may walk long distances without
-meeting them; but they are there. I mean the
-evening primrose, the lupine, and the California
-poppy. The primrose, which is much the commonest
-of the three, has no stalk, or none that
-is apparent; the large, handsome, lemon-colored
-flower opens directly from a tuft of leaves lying
-flat on the ground. As for the poppies, I should
-hardly speak of them as growing in the desert
-but for the fact that two or three days ago I
-stumbled upon a place (it would be like trying
-to find a spot in the ocean to look for it again)
-where the ground for the space of an acre or
-more was sparsely sprinkled with them. They
-were abnormally small, and very short in the
-stem; but they were bright as the sun, and being
-lighted upon thus unexpectedly they really
-made the spot a garden. As the prophet said,
-the place was “glad for them;” and so was I.</p>
-
-<p>Both poppy and primrose (and the lupine as
-well) are much more at home on the foothills.
-There, too, are many flowers not to be seen at all
-on the desert. I cannot talk about them for lack
-of names. The brightest and showiest of them
-all is of a vivid, but, in my vocabulary, nameless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-shade of red; not scarlet, nor crimson, nor
-orange, nor pink, but red. The plant stands a
-foot or so in height and bears a dozen, more or
-less, of rather large cup-shaped blossoms, the
-lively color of which would attract notice in any
-garden.</p>
-
-<p>A very different favorite of mine (I have been
-intimate with it for a week) is a low—inch-high—composite
-flower, of the size of a ten-cent
-piece, with seven or eight white rays and a yellow
-disk; a dwarf daisy, it looks to be, with
-soft, cottony stem and leaves. It grows in the
-driest and most barren places, and as I sit down
-here and there on the hillsides to rest (looking
-meanwhile at the green barley fields and the ever-glorious
-mountains) I am sensibly happier if I
-see this dainty bit of nature’s loveliness (a child,
-not a dwarf—I take back the word) within my
-hand’s reach. It is the very flower to make a
-pet of; prettier by far than if it were taller and
-showier. Cultivation would spoil it. It was made
-for the desert.</p>
-
-<p>And this reminds me to say that, if the hills
-are to be counted as part of the desert, as in reason
-they may be, then the prophet’s word has
-been fulfilled, not partially but in all strictness.
-The desert has blossomed like the rose. For the
-slopes of the Tucson range are literally on fire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-with blossoms. Patches of sun-bright yellow,
-some of them to all appearance an acre or more
-in extent, can be seen clear across the plain. I
-saw them yesterday afternoon as I started homeward
-from Camp Lowell. The distance could
-hardly be less than eight miles, and probably
-they would have been visible had it been twice
-as far. That the flowers are poppies, and not
-blossoms of a smaller cruciferous plant that is
-very abundant and gregarious hereabout, I am
-confident, not only because I am assured so by
-residents of the city, but because the patches are
-much less conspicuous in the early forenoon,
-when poppies are not wide open, than later in
-the day. Some of the patches (I can see a dozen
-from my window as I write, fully five miles off<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a>)
-are well toward the tops of the mountains, which,
-needless to say, are not of great elevation, perhaps
-four thousand feet.</p>
-
-<p>The poppy is the Tucson flower. Children go
-out upon the hills and bring back bunches to sell
-along the streets and from house to house. Their
-splendid color need not be praised. It is known
-to all Eastern people, who grow the plants in gardens
-(I seem to remember when they came in)
-under the name of <i>Eschscholtzia</i>. And here, on
-the mountain walls of this Arizona desert, are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-hanging-gardens so full of them as to form masses
-of color visible ten or fifteen miles away! “They
-shall blossom abundantly,” said the prophet;
-and who knows but he spoke of the Tucson
-Mountains in poppy time?</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">NESTS AND OTHER MATTERS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">With</span> the first of April approaching, the life of
-Arizona birds takes on a busier complexion. The
-idle season is over; now there are nests to be
-built (no small undertaking, in itself, as a man
-may easily find out by setting himself to build
-one), and a family to be watched over and defended.
-Now the human visitor begins to understand
-what cactuses were made for. As he walks
-among the whitish-green chollas, giving them
-elbow-room, he has only to glance to right and
-left to see what a considerable proportion of them
-are inhabited; this one by a pair of thrashers,
-the other by a pair of cactus wrens. In neither
-case is there any serious attempt at concealment;
-partly because the attempt would be useless;
-partly, we may guess, because concealment is
-unnecessary. If your safe is burglar proof, why
-be at the trouble to hide it? Neither squirrel
-nor snake is likely to climb a cholla cactus, and
-even a man knows enough to approach it with
-caution.</p>
-
-<p>Of the two species of thrasher that live in the
-desert the larger one, known as Palmer’s, seems<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-to be the earlier breeder. I found a nest with
-eggs on the first day of March; and on the ninth,
-I came upon a brood of young birds already out
-of the nest. They were still new to the world,
-acting as if they found it a strange, unintelligible
-place; but they were fully fledged, and when put
-to it, flew from one cholla to another without difficulty.
-Still, they had more faith in cactus
-thorns than in wing-power, and allowed me almost
-to lay hands on them before taking flight.</p>
-
-<p>The two desert-inhabiting thrashers, by the by,
-Palmer’s and Bendire’s, are so much alike (the
-Palmer being somewhat longer and darker than
-its neighbor), that it was some time before I felt
-sure of myself in discriminating between them.
-As to the question of comparative length (one of
-the most uncertain points on which an observer
-can base a determination), I fell back upon an
-old method, which it seems worth while to mention
-here, because I have never seen it referred
-to in print. It has served one man well, and may
-do as much for another.</p>
-
-<p>Two of our Eastern birds that are most troublesome
-to beginners in ornithology are the downy
-and the hairy woodpecker, the only difference
-between them—the only one that can ordinarily
-be seen in the field, I mean to say—being one
-of size. Well, I long ago discovered for myself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-that it was much easier to carry in my eye the
-comparative measurements of the two birds’ bills
-than the comparative measurements of the birds
-themselves. Let me see the head in profile, and
-I could name its owner almost beyond mistake.</p>
-
-<p>This method, as I say, I resorted to in the case
-of my two desert thrashers, and little by little
-(time itself being of great service in such matters),
-I settled the question with myself. And
-still there remained a certain fact that cast a
-shade of doubt over my determination. In Mrs.
-Bailey’s Handbook, the only authority I had
-brought with me, Mr. Herbert Brown, after
-twenty years’ experience with Tucson birds, is
-quoted as saying that the Bendire thrasher almost
-never sings, whereas the birds that I was
-calling by that name were in song continually.
-What was I to think? It seemed a case for a
-gun. Without it, how could I ever be sure of
-my reckoning? I was in a box, as we say. But
-there was a way out. There almost always is.
-The two species lay eggs of different colors. I
-must find them; and with patience I did; first,
-the blue-green eggs of Palmer, and then (two
-sets in one day), the whitish eggs of Bendire;
-and my identification of the owners, made before
-the eggs were examined, turned out to be correct
-in all cases.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>In the way of music, neither bird is equal to
-the brown thrasher of the East. In fact, if I am
-to be judge, one Massachusetts thrasher, in his
-cinnamon-colored suit (and in the top of a gray
-birch), could outsing any half-dozen of the birds
-in this Arizona desert. It is to be said, however,
-that there is a third species here (not on the face
-of the desert itself, but in the thickets along the
-Rillito River), the crissal thrasher so called,
-whose song I have yet to make sure of. He is
-larger even than the Palmer, and to look at him
-should have a fuller voice.</p>
-
-<p>And this reminds me that I had been in Tucson
-more than a month before I saw a mockingbird;
-and even now, when I have been here
-almost two months, I have seen but three. The
-people generally seem to mistake the thrashers
-for mockers. If I speak to them about the
-strangeness of the mocker’s absence, they declare
-that mockers are common here. At least two
-persons have turned upon me with the assertion,
-“Why, there’s one singing out there at this
-minute.” And they point to a thrasher, a bird
-that wears not one of the mocker’s three colors,—gray,
-black, and white,—and for music is as
-much like him as a child’s tin whistle is like a
-master’s flute. And still it is true, at least the
-systematists tell us so, and I have no thought of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-questioning it, that the mockingbird is only a
-nobler kind of thrasher. And thrashers, the
-mocker included, are only larger kinds of wrens.</p>
-
-<p>Arizona is the wrens’ country. During my
-short stay in Tucson I have seen ten species: the
-sage thrasher, the Western mockingbird, the
-Bendire thrasher, the Palmer thrasher, the crissal
-thrasher, the cactus wren, the rock wren, the
-canyon wren, the Baird wren, and the interior
-tule wren.</p>
-
-<p>The sage thrashers, whose mysterious silence
-was commented upon in a previous article, are
-only now beginning to find their voices; for they
-are still (March 21) in the desert, though they
-will go elsewhere to breed. Two days ago, while
-returning from the Rillito Valley, I came upon
-a group of them, and to my great pleasure two
-or three were in song; not letting themselves
-out, to be sure, but running over a medley of
-a tune under their breath in a kind of dumb
-rehearsal. I could barely hear it, but I saw at
-once why the birds, for all their short bills and
-unthrasher-like ways, are called sometimes sage
-thrashers and sometimes mountain mockingbirds.
-I hope their <i>sotto voce</i> preludings will not outlast
-my stay among them.</p>
-
-<p>One of my particular favorites here is the Say
-phœbe. From the first he took my fancy. All<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-his ways please me. As the homely phrase is, I
-like the cut of his jib. His plaintive call is never
-wearisome, though he is exceedingly free with it.
-And I have grown to like him and his mate the
-better because they are fond of certain places
-where I myself am given to spending now and
-then an idle hour. There are four abandoned
-shanties in different parts of the desert, in the
-shade of which I often rest; and every one of
-them has its pair of Say phœbes. I saw the
-birds with building materials in their bills, and
-began by expecting to find the nest inside the
-open building; but by and by I discovered that
-they liked best of all a site down in a well! It
-seems a safe position to begin with—as long as
-the nest contains nothing but eggs; but I ask
-myself about the danger to the little ones when
-they become big enough to be uneasy. If they
-are anything like young robins, for example, a
-pitiful share of them must perish sixty feet
-underground. However, the birds may be presumed
-to understand their own business better
-than any outsider can teach it to them; and
-they unquestionably prefer the well. Of the
-four pairs just mentioned, three have built in
-that position (the wells, it should be understood,
-are not stoned), and the fourth would have done
-likewise, I dare say, only that the well in their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-case happens to be covered. As it is, the nest is
-on one of the joists of a shed, and an impertinent
-stranger has been known to clamber up and
-examine the eggs. “Oh, if that well had only
-been left open!” the birds probably thought, as
-they saw what he was doing.</p>
-
-<p>One kind of nest that is common here is set
-so out in sight that none but a blind man could
-miss it, though from its color it might readily be
-passed as an old one, not worth investigation. I
-do not remember just how many I have seen,—half
-a dozen, it may be,—but I have never
-looked into one. They cannot be looked into,
-unless they are first torn to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>I speak of the verdin’s nest. It is a marvel
-of workmanship: globular, or roughly so, with
-an entrance neatly roofed over well down on one
-side; constructed outwardly—I cannot speak
-beyond that, of course—of countless small
-thorny sticks, and in size and general color resembling
-a large paper-wasps’ nest. The bird,
-as I say, plants it in full sight, in a leafless cat’s-claw
-bush, by preference, though I have seen
-one beauty in a palo-verde tree.</p>
-
-<p>My first one I was directed to by the outcries
-of the owner. The foolish thing—if she <i>was</i>
-foolish—actually went inside, and while there
-scolded me. She took it for granted, I suppose,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-that I had seen her go in, and was determined
-to let me know what she thought of such despicable
-espionage. As a matter of fact, I was busy
-just then with a rarer bird, and might have
-passed her pretty house unnoticed had she held
-her peace. But the verdin is a nervously loquacious
-body, and perhaps would rather talk than
-keep a secret. Such cases have been heard of.
-Whatever else we may say of her, she is an architect
-of something like genius.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-
-<h3 class="nobreak">A FLYCATCHER AND A SPARROW</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I believe</span> I have seen two of the oddest birds in
-Texas—the road-runner and the scissor-tailed
-flycatcher. The first was mentioned some time
-ago in these letters; the second I have but lately
-met with. When I was in San Antonio in January,
-he was absent for the winter. He would
-return, I was informed, shortly after the middle
-of March, and I have kept it fast in mind that I
-must stop here on my way home and make his
-acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>I knew he was odd, but he has turned out to be
-odder even than I supposed. Other places, other
-birds, as a matter of course, but surely this one,
-to use Emerson’s word, is the “otherest.” When
-I saw him first, in San Pedro Park (everything
-is saintly in the Southwest), I thought for an
-instant that I was looking at a bird which had
-seized a long string, or a strip of cloth, and was
-flying away with it to his nest. Seen more fully,
-he looked, I said to myself, like a Japanese kite,
-or some other outlandish plaything. Even now,
-when he has been in sight pretty constantly
-for five or six days, I can hardly say that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-looks like a bird to me. His enormously long tail
-feathers are so fantastic, so almost grotesque!
-They render him a kind of monstrosity. One
-feels as if he had been made, not born; and some
-Oriental must have been the maker.</p>
-
-<p>Yet if ever a bird was alive, he is. His spirits
-are effervescent and apparently inexhaustible.
-Few birds are noisier or more continually on the
-move. When six or eight scissor-tails meet for
-consultation in one small tree, even though it be
-in a cemetery, there are “great doings,” as the
-country phrase is. What the disturbance is all
-about, it is beyond me to tell, but it seems a reasonable
-assumption that it has to do somehow
-with questions of love and marriage. So far as I
-have noticed, such sessions do not last long. In
-the nature of things they cannot. The hubbub increases,
-the discussion, whatever its subject, waxes
-more and more animated, and then, of a sudden,
-the assembly breaks up (I was going to say explodes),
-and away fly the birds (and the birds’
-tails), every one still contending for the last
-word.</p>
-
-<p>But there is no need of six or eight to set the
-pot bubbling. Two are a plenty; and indeed I
-suspect that a single bird would have it out with
-himself rather than forego for an hour or two
-the excitement of a shindy. In temperament the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-scissor-tail, as well as I can determine, is own
-brother to the kingbird. As I said, he is brimming
-over with spirits. If he gave them no vent
-he would burst.</p>
-
-<p>So after a few minutes of quietness, the calm
-that precedes the storm, he darts into the air,
-with vehement, mad gyrations, opening and shutting
-his tail feathers spasmodically, and uttering
-loud cries of one sort and another. Perhaps he
-flies straight upward, or as nearly so as possible
-(this is one of the kingbird’s tricks), and with
-tail outspread comes down headfirst like an arrow.
-He is like a creature full of wine, or like one beside
-himself. What he does, he has to do. There
-is no holding him in.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes, when there are two in the air together,
-and for anything I know at other times,—I
-tell what I have seen,—they utter most
-curious, hollow, throbbing, booming noises, such
-as one would never attribute to any bird of the
-flycatcher family. They utter them, I say, but I
-mean only that they make them. How they do it,
-whether with the throat, the wings, or the tail, is
-something I have yet to discover. The only book
-I have at hand makes no mention of such noises,
-and I was greatly taken aback when I heard
-them.</p>
-
-<p>As the reader perceives, I am dealing in first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-impressions. They are all I have. Most of the
-scissor-tail’s tricks and manners, indeed, I have
-yet to witness. I have not seen him chase a crow,
-for instance, or a raven (he would have to travel
-a hundred miles, I suspect, to find either the one
-or the other), but give him half a chance, and I
-am sure he would do it. One thing I have seen
-him do: I have seen him fly before an English
-sparrow. The action seemed unworthy of him,
-but I dare say he did not so regard it. Perhaps
-it was all a joke. But apparently no bird considers
-it a disgrace to be put to rout by a smaller
-one. The shameful thing is to be afraid of one
-that is larger than yourself. This is not the
-human way of looking at such matters; but
-perhaps that does not prove it a false way. I
-seem to see that much might be said in defense
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>It is surprising how common the scissor-tail is,
-and more surprising yet that nobody seems to
-notice him. I should have thought that all the
-passers-by would be stopping to stare at so half-absurd
-a prodigy. But when he performs his
-craziest evolutions here in the Alamo Plaza, in the
-very heart of the city, nobody appears to mind
-him. The truth is that to these people—to most
-of them, at least—he is an old story, while to
-me he is like a bird invented last week. Wherever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-you notice men, you will perceive that it is
-not the wonderful that attracts their attention,
-but the novel and the out-of-the-way. The moon
-and the stars they are used to, and quite properly
-look upon with indifference; but let a neighbor’s
-hencoop catch fire, and they cannot run fast
-enough to behold the spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>Another and better thing I have accomplished
-during my present brief stay in San Antonio:
-I have heard and seen the Cassin sparrow. A
-Washington ornithologist, familiar with this
-Southwestern country, learning that I was on my
-way thither, wrote to me in January: “On no
-account return without hearing the Cassin sparrow.”
-To confess the truth, I had almost forgotten
-the injunction, emphatic as it was; but a
-few mornings ago, on my way back to the terminus
-of the street-car line after a jaunt into some
-old pecan woods, five or six miles out of the city,
-I stopped short at the sound of a few simple bird
-notes. What a gracious tune! And as novel
-as it was gracious! I had never heard the like:
-a long trill or shake, pitched at the top of the
-scale, and then, after a rest, a phrase of five
-notes in the sweetest of sparrow voices, ending
-with the truest and most unexpected of musical
-intervals. For mnemonic purposes, as my custom
-is (useful to me, if to no one else), I at once put<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-words to the tune: “She” (this for the long
-trill), “pretty, pretty she.”</p>
-
-<p>The birds were in some scattered mesquite
-bushes (very bright now, in their new yellow-green
-leafage), and I hastened to get through the
-fence and make up to them. They proved to be
-very small, and distressingly deficient in marks
-or “characters,” but I took such note of them as
-I could, in a poor light. The main thing, for the
-time being, was the song. That prolonged opening
-note, with its sound of an indrawn whistle,
-ought to be the work of a <i>Pucæa</i>, I told myself,
-remembering the Florida representative of that
-genus, and the singers should therefore be Cassin
-sparrows.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning, having refreshed my memory
-by a reading of the handbook, I took the car
-immediately after breakfast for another visit to
-the place. This, I should have said, was in the
-rear grounds of an asylum for the insane. It was
-Sunday morning, and as I crawled through the
-fence and took up my position among the mesquites,
-I presently found myself under fire from
-the windows and balconies. The distance was too
-great for me to understand what was said, but
-there was no doubt that the inmates of the institution
-regarded me as a queer one. However, I
-believed in my own sanity (as things go in this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-world), and did not propose to be hindered. The
-birds were there, and that was enough.</p>
-
-<p>And now, to my intense satisfaction, I found
-that they were doing just what the handbook described:
-springing into the air for a few feet,
-after the manner of long-billed marsh wrens, and
-with fluttering wings dropping slowly back to the
-perch, uttering their sweet, “She, pretty, pretty
-she,” as they descended. I secured somewhat
-fuller observations of their plumage, also, and became
-morally certain—which means something
-less than scientifically certain, though really,
-taking Mr. Attwater’s list of the birds of San
-Antonio as a guide, there is nothing else they
-can be—that the singers were Cassin sparrows.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a></p>
-
-<p>And glad I am to have heard them. I cannot
-speak for others; judgment in such matters must
-always be largely a question of personal taste;
-but for myself I have heard few bird songs that
-satisfy me so well; so quaint and original, yet so
-true and simple. San Antonio mockingbirds are
-numberless, and their performances are wonderful;
-I think I should never tire of them; but
-somehow those six quiet notes of the sparrow
-seem to go deeper home.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-<h3 class="nobreak">A BUNCH OF BRIGHT BIRDS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Almost</span> or quite the most brilliant bird that I
-saw in Arizona was the vermilion flycatcher. I
-had heard of it as sometimes appearing in the
-neighborhood of Tucson, but entertained small
-hope of meeting it there myself. A stranger,
-straitened for time, and that time in winter,
-blundering about by himself, with no pilot to
-show him the likely places, could hardly expect
-to find many besides the commoner things. So
-I reasoned with myself, aiming to be philosophical.
-Nevertheless, there is always the chance of
-green hand’s luck; I knew it by more than one
-happy experience; and who could tell what
-might happen? Possibly it was not for nothing
-that my eye, as by a kind of magnetic attraction,
-fell so often upon Mrs. Bailey’s opening sentence
-about this particular bird as day after day, on
-one hunt and another, I turned the leaves of her
-Handbook. “Of all the rare Mexican birds seen
-in southern Arizona and Texas,” so I read, “the
-vermilion flycatcher is the gem.”</p>
-
-<p>One thing was certain: this famous Mexican
-rarity was not confusingly like anything else,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-as so many of its Northern relatives have the
-unhandsome trick of being. If I saw it, ever so
-hurriedly, I should recognize it.</p>
-
-<p>Well, I did see it, and almost of course at a
-moment when I was least looking for it. This
-was on the 5th of February, my fifth day in
-Tucson. I had crossed the Santa Cruz Valley,
-west of the city, by one road, and after a stroll
-among the foothills opposite, was returning by
-another, when a bit of flashing red started up
-from the wire fence directly before me. I knew
-what it was, almost before I saw it, as it seemed,
-so eager was I, and so well prepared; and as the
-solitary’s companionable habit is, I spoke aloud.
-“There’s the vermilion flycatcher!” I heard
-myself saying.</p>
-
-<p>The fellow was every whit as splendid as my
-fancy had painted him, and to my joy he seemed
-to be not in the least put out by my approach nor
-chary of displaying himself. He was too innocent
-and too busy; darting into the air to snatch a
-passing insect, and anon returning to his perch,
-which was now a fence-post, now the wire, and
-now, best of all, the topmost, tilting spray of a
-dwarf mesquite. Thus engaged, every motion a
-delight to the eye, he flitted along the road in
-advance of me, till finally, having reached the
-limit of his hunting-ground,—the roadside<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-ditches filled with water from the overflow of irrigated
-barley fields,—he turned back by the way
-he had come.</p>
-
-<p>I went home a happy man; I had added one
-of the choicest and most beautiful of American
-birds to my mental collection. One thing was
-still lacking, however: flycatchers are not song-birds,
-but the humblest of them has a voice, and
-having things to say is apt to say them; my
-new acquaintance had kept his thoughts to himself.</p>
-
-<p>This was in the forenoon, and after luncheon
-I went back to walk again over that muddy road
-between those ditches of muddy water. The bird
-might still be there. And he was,—still catching
-insects, and still silent. But so handsome!
-At first sight most people, I suppose, would compare
-him, as I did, with the scarlet tanager. The
-red parts are of nearly or quite the same shade,—a
-little deeper and richer, if anything,—while
-the wings, tail, and back are dark brown,
-approaching black,—the wings and tail especially,—dark
-enough, at any rate, to afford a
-brilliant contrast. His scientific name is Pyrocephalus,
-which is admirable as far as it goes,
-but falls a long way short of telling the whole
-truth about him; for not only is his head of a
-fiery hue, but his whole body as well, with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-exceptions already noted. In size he ranks between
-the least flycatcher and the wood pewee.
-In liveliness of action he is equal to the spryest
-of his family, with a flirt of the tail which to my
-eye is identical with that of the phœbe. His gorgeous
-color is the more effective because of his
-aerial habits. The tanager is bright sitting on
-the bough, but how much brighter he would look
-if every few minutes he were seen hovering in
-mid-air with the sunlight playing upon him!</p>
-
-<p>Certainly I was in great luck, and I felt it the
-more as day after day I found the dashing beauty
-in the same place. I could not spend my whole
-winter vacation in visiting him, but I saw him
-there at odd times,—nearly as often as I passed,—until
-February 17. Then he disappeared; but
-a week later I discovered him, or another like
-him, in a different part of the valley, and on the
-26th I saw two. The next day, for the first time,
-one of the birds was in voice, uttering a few fine,
-short notes, little remarkable in themselves, but
-thoroughly characteristic; not suggestive of any
-other flycatcher notes known to me; so that,
-from that time to the end of my stay in Tucson,
-I was never in doubt as to their authorship, no
-matter where I heard them.</p>
-
-<p>All these earlier birds were males in full
-plumage. The first female—herself a beauty,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-with a modest tinge of red upon her lower parts,
-enough to mark the relationship—was noticed
-March 5. Males were now becoming common,
-and on the 9th, although my walks covered no
-very wide territory, I counted, of males and females
-together, seventeen. From first to last not
-one was met with on the creosote and cactus-covered
-desert, but after the first few days of
-March they were well distributed over the Santa
-Cruz and Rillito valleys and about the grounds
-of the university. I found no nest until March
-27, although at least two weeks earlier than that
-a female was seen pulling shreds of dry bark from
-a cottonwood limb, while her mate flitted about
-the neighborhood, now here, now there, as if he
-were too happy to contain himself.</p>
-
-<p>The prettiest performance of the male, witnessed
-almost daily, and sometimes many times a
-day, after the arrival of the other sex, was a surprisingly
-protracted ecstatic flight, half flying,
-half hovering, the wings being held unnaturally
-high above the back, as if on purpose to display
-the red body (a most peculiar action, by which
-the bird could be told as far as he could be seen),
-accompanied throughout by a rapid repetition of
-his simple call; all thoroughly in the flycatcher
-manner; exactly such a mad, lyrical outburst as
-one frequently sees indulged in by the chebec, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-instance, and the different species of phœbe. In
-endurance, as well as in passion, Pyrocephalus is
-not behind the best of them, while his exceptional
-bravery of color gives him at such moments a
-glory altogether his own. Sometimes, indeed, he
-seems to be emulous of the skylark himself, he
-rises to such a height, beating his way upward,
-hovering for breath, and then pushing higher and
-still higher. Once I saw him and the large Arizona
-crested flycatcher in the air side by side,
-one as crazy as the other; but the big <i>magister</i>
-was an awkward hand at the business, compared
-with the tiny Pyrocephalus.</p>
-
-<p>It was good to find so showy a bird so little
-disposed to shyness. At Old Camp Lowell, where
-I often rested for an hour at noon in the shade
-of one of the adobe buildings, the bachelor winter
-occupants of which were kind enough to give me
-food and shelter (together with pleasant company)
-whenever my walk took me so far from
-home, our siesta was constantly enlivened by his
-bright presence and engaging tricks. One day,
-as he perched at the top of a low mesquite, on a
-level with our eyes, I put my glass into the hand
-of the younger of my hosts. He broke out in a
-tone of wonder. “Well, now,” said he (he spoke
-to the bird), “you are a peach.” And so he is.
-It is exactly what, in my more old-fashioned and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-less collegiate English, I have been vainly endeavoring
-to say.</p>
-
-<p>And to be a “peach” is a fine thing. A vivacious
-living essayist, it is true, who is probably
-a handsome man himself, at least in the looking-glass,
-declares that “male ugliness is an endearing
-quality.” The remark may be true—in a
-sense; by all means let us hope so, seeing how
-lavish Nature has been with the commodity in
-question; but I am confident that the female
-vermilion flycatcher would never admit it. As
-for her glorious dandy of a husband, there can
-be no doubt what opinion he would hold of such
-an impudent reflection upon feminine perspicacity
-and taste. “A plague upon paradoxes and
-aphorisms,” I hear him answer. “If fine feathers
-don’t make fine birds, what in Heaven’s name
-do they make?”</p>
-
-<p>It was only two days after my discovery of the
-vermilion flycatcher (if I remember correctly I
-was at that moment on my way to enjoy a third
-or fourth look at him) that I first saw a very
-different but scarcely less interesting novelty. I
-was on the sidewalk of Main Street, in the busy
-part of the day, my thoughts running upon a
-batch of delayed letters just received, when suddenly
-I looked up (probably I had heard a voice
-without being conscious of it, for the confirmed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-hobby-rider is sometimes in the saddle unwittingly)
-and caught sight of a few swifts far overhead.
-People were passing, but it was now or
-never with me, and I whipped out my opera-glass.
-There were six of the birds, and their throats were
-white. So much I saw, having known what to
-look for, and then they were gone,—as if the
-heavens had opened and swallowed them up. It
-was a niggardly interview, at pretty long range,
-but a deal better than nothing; enough, at all
-events, for an identification. They were white-throated
-swifts,—<i>Aëronautes melanoleucus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Three days later a flock of at least seventeen
-birds of the same species were hawking over the
-Santa Cruz Valley, and now, as they swept this
-way and that at their feeding, there was leisure
-for the field-glass and something like a real examination.
-To my surprise (surprise is the compensation
-of ignorance) I discovered that they
-had not only white throats, as their name implies,
-but white breasts, and more noticeable still, white
-rumps. Those who are familiar with our common
-dingy, soot-colored chimney swift of the East will
-be able to form some idea of the distinguished
-appearance of this Westerner: a considerably
-larger bird, built on the same rakish lines, shooting
-about the sky in the same lightning-like zigzags,
-and marked in this striking and original<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-manner with white. I saw the birds only four
-times afterward, the last time on the 17th of February.
-So I say, speaking after the manner of
-men; but in truth I can see them now, their white
-rumps lighting up as they wheel and catch the
-sun. It pleases me to learn that it is next to
-impossible to shoot them, and that they are scarce
-in collections. So may they continue. They were
-made for better things.</p>
-
-<p>The most <i>beautiful</i> bird that I found in Arizona,
-though judgments of this kind are of necessity
-liable to revision as one’s mood changes,
-was the Arizona Pyrrhuloxia. I should be glad
-to give the reader, as well as to have for my own
-use, an English name for it, but so far as I am
-aware it has none. It has lived beyond the range
-of the vernacular. My delight in its beauty was
-less keen than naturally it would have been, because
-I had spent my first raptures upon its
-equally handsome Texas relative of the same
-name a few weeks before. This was at San Antonio,
-in the chaparral just outside the city. I
-had been listening to a flock of lark sparrows,
-I remember, and looking at sundry things, where
-almost everything was new, when all at once I
-saw before me at the foot of a bush the loveliest
-bunch of feathers that I had ever set eyes on.
-Without the least thought of what I was doing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-I began repeating to myself under my breath,
-“O my soul! O my soul!” And in sober truth
-the creature was deserving of all the admiration
-it excited: a bird of the cardinal’s size and build,
-dressed not in gaudy red, but in the most exquisite
-shade of gray, with a plentiful spilling of
-an equally exquisite rose color over its under-parts.
-Its bright orange bill was surrounded at
-the base by a double ring of black and rose,
-and on its head was a most distinguished-looking,
-divided crest, tipped with rose color of a deeper
-shade. It was loveliness to wonder at. I cannot
-profess that I was awe-struck (not being sure
-that I know just what that excellent word means),
-but it would hardly be too much to say that “as
-I passed, I worshiped.”</p>
-
-<p>The Arizona bird, unhappily, was not often
-seen (the Texas bird treated me better), though
-when I did come upon it, it was generally in accessible
-places (in wayside hedgerows) not far
-from houses. It would be impossible to see either
-the Texas or the Arizona bird for the first time
-without comparing it with the cardinal, the two
-are so much alike, and yet so different. The
-cardinal is brighter, but for beauty give me
-Pyrrhuloxia. I do not expect the sight of any
-other bird ever to fill me with quite so rapturous
-a delight in pure color as that first unlooked-for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
-Pyrrhuloxia did in the San Antonio chaparral.
-It was like the joy that comes from falling suddenly
-upon a stanza of magical verse, or catching
-from some unexpected quarter a strain of
-heavenly music.</p>
-
-<p>If Pyrocephalus was the brightest and Pyrrhuloxia
-the most beautiful of my Arizona birds,
-Phainopepla must be called the most elegant,
-the most supremely graceful, if I may be pardoned
-such an application of the word, the most
-incomparably genteel. I saw it first at Old Camp
-Lowell, before mentioned, near the Rillito, at the
-base of the low foothills of the Santa Catalina
-Mountains. At my first visit to the camp, which
-is six or seven miles from the city of Tucson,
-straight across the desert, I mistook my way at
-the last and approached the place from the farther
-end by a cross-cut through the creosote
-bushes. Just as I reached the adobe ruins, all
-that is left of the old camp, I descried a black
-bird balancing itself daintily at the tip of a
-mesquite. I lifted my glass, caught sight of
-the bird’s crest, and knew it for a Phainopepla.
-How good it is to find something you have greatly
-desired and little expected!</p>
-
-<p>The Phainopepla (like the Pyrrhuloxia it has
-no vernacular appellation, living only in that
-sparsely settled, Spanish-speaking corner of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-world) is ranked with the waxwings, though except
-for its crest there is little or nothing in its
-outward appearance to suggest such a relationship;
-and the crest itself bears but a moderate resemblance
-to the pointed topknot of our familiar
-cedar-bird. What I call the Phainopepla’s elegance
-comes partly from its form, which is the
-very perfection of shapeliness, having in the
-highest degree that elusive quality which in semi-slang
-phrase is designated as “style;” partly
-from its motions, all prettily conscious and in a
-pleasing sense affected, like the movements of a
-dancing-master; and partly from its color, which
-is black with the most exquisite bluish sheen, set
-off in the finest manner by broad wing-patches
-of white. These wing-patches are noticeable,
-furthermore, for being divided into a kind of
-network by black lines. It is for this reason, I
-suppose, that they have a peculiar gauzy look (I
-speak of their appearance while in action) such
-as I have never seen in the case of any other bird,
-and which often made me think of the ribbed,
-translucent wings of certain dragon flies.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless this peculiar appearance was heightened
-to my eyes, because of the mincing, wavering,
-over-buoyant method of flight (the wings
-being carried unusually high) to which I have
-alluded, and which always suggested to me the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-studied movements of a dance. I think I never
-saw one of the birds so far forget itself as to take
-a direct, straightforward course from one point
-to another. No matter where they might be
-going, though the flight were only a matter of a
-hundred yards, they progressed always in pretty
-zigzags, making so many little, unexpected, indecisive
-tacks and turns by the way, butterfly
-fashion, that you began to wonder where they
-would finally come to rest.</p>
-
-<p>The two birds first seen—the female in lovely
-gray—were evidently at home about the camp.
-The berry-bearing parasitic plants in the mesquites
-seemed to furnish them with food, and
-no doubt they were settled there for the season;
-and at least two more were wintering out among
-the Chinese kitchen gardens, not far away. And
-some weeks afterward I came upon a third pair,
-also in a mesquite grove, on the Santa Cruz side
-of the desert. But though in the two river valleys
-I passed a good many hours in their society,
-I never once heard them sing, nor, so far as I
-can now recall, did they ever utter any sound
-save a mellow <i>pip</i>, almost exactly like a certain
-call of the robin; so like it, in fact, that to the
-very last I never heard it suddenly given, but
-my first thought was of that common Eastern
-bird, whose voice in those early spring days it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-would have been so natural and so pleasant to
-hear. I could have spared a dozen or two of
-thrashers, I thought (not <i>brown</i> thrashers), for
-a pair of robins and a pair of bluebirds. But
-southern Arizona is a kind of thrasher paradise,
-while robins and bluebirds desire a better country,
-and seemingly know where to find it.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the last week of March, however, there
-took place, as well as I could judge, a concerted
-movement of Phainopeplas northward. They
-showed themselves in the Santa Cruz Valley,
-here and there a pair, until they became, not
-abundant, indeed, but a counted-upon, every-day
-sight. Those that I had heretofore seen, it appeared,
-were only a few winter “stay-overs.” Now
-the season had opened; and now the birds began
-singing. For curiosity’s sake it pleased me
-to hear them, but the brief measure, in a thin,
-squeaky voice, was nothing for any bird to be
-proud of. They sing best to the eye. “Birds of
-the shining robes,” their Greek name calls them;
-and worthily do they wear it, under that unclouded
-Arizona sun, perching, as they habitually
-do, at the tip of some tree or bush, where the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-man with birds in his eye can hardly fail to sight
-them and name them, across the widest barley
-field.</p>
-
-<p>One of the birds whose acquaintance I chiefly
-wished to make on this my first Western journey
-was the famous canyon wren,—famous not
-for its beauty (beauty is not the wren family’s
-mark), but for its voice. Whether my wish
-would be gratified was of course a question, especially
-as my very modest itinerary included
-no exploration of canyons; but I was not without
-hope.</p>
-
-<p>I had been in Tucson nearly a week, when one
-cool morning after a cold night (it was February
-7) I went down into the Santa Cruz Valley and
-took the road that winds—where there is barely
-room for it—between the base of Tucson
-Mountain and the river. Steep, broken cliffs,
-perhaps a hundred feet high, were on my right
-hand, and the deep bed of the shallow river lay
-below me on my left. Here I was enjoying the
-sun, and keeping my eyes open, when a set of
-loud, clear bird notes in a descending scale fell
-upon my ears from overhead. I stopped, pulled
-myself together, and said, “A canyon wren.” I
-remembered a description of that descending
-scale. The next instant a small hawk took wing
-from the spot on the cliff whence the notes had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-seemed to fall. My mind wavered, but only for
-a moment. “No, no,” I said, “it is not in any
-hawk’s throat to produce sounds of that quality;”
-and I waited. A rock wren began calling, but
-rock wrens did not count with me at that moment.
-Then, in a very different voice, a wren, presumably
-the one I was in search of, began fretting,
-unseen, somewhere above my head; and then,
-silence. I waited and waited. Finally I tried an
-old trick—I started on. If the bird was watching
-me, as likely enough he was, a movement to
-leave his neighborhood would perhaps excite him
-pleasurably. And so it did; or so it seemed; for
-almost at once the song was given out and repeated:
-a hurried introductory phrase, and then
-the fuller, longer, more liquid notes, tripping in
-procession down the scale.</p>
-
-<p>The singer could be no other than the canyon
-wren; but of course I must see him. At last,
-my patience outwearing his, he fell to scolding
-again, and glancing up in the direction of the
-sound, I saw him on the jutting top of the very
-highest stone, his white throat and breast flashing
-in the sun, and the dark, rich brown of his
-lower parts setting the whiteness off to marvelous
-advantage. There he stood, calling and bobbing,
-calling and bobbing, after the familiar wren
-manner, though why he should resent an innocent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-man’s presence so far below was more than
-any innocent man could imagine.</p>
-
-<p>It would be an offense against the truth not
-to confess that the celebrated song fell at first a
-little short of my expectations. Perhaps I had
-heard it celebrated somewhat too loudly and too
-often. It was very pleasing; the voice beautifully
-clear and full, and the cadence of the sweetest;
-it had the grace of simplicity; indeed, there was
-nothing to be said against it, except that I had
-supposed it would be—well, I hardly know
-what, but somehow wilder and more telling.</p>
-
-<p>Within a few days I discovered a second pair
-of the birds not far away, about an old, long-disused
-adobe mill. They were already building
-a nest somewhere inside, entering by a crack over
-one of the windows. The female appeared to be
-doing the greater part of the work, while her
-mate sat upon the edge of the flat roof and sang
-for her encouragement, or railed at me for my
-too assiduous lounging about the premises. The
-more I listened to the song, the better I enjoyed
-it; it is certainly a song by itself; I have never
-heard anything with which to compare it; and I
-was especially pleased to see how many variations
-the performer was able to introduce into
-his music, and yet leave it always the same.</p>
-
-<p>The first pair, on the precipitous face of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-mountain, had chosen the more romantic site, and
-I often stopped to admire their address in climbing
-about over the almost perpendicular surface
-of the rock; now disappearing for a few seconds,
-now popping into sight again a little further on;
-finding a foothold everywhere, no matter how
-smooth and steep the rock might look.</p>
-
-<p>The canyon wren is a darling bird and a musical
-genius; and now that I have ceased to
-measure his song by my extravagant expectations
-concerning it, I do not wish it in any wise altered.
-His natural home is by the side of falling water
-(I have heard him since, where I should have
-heard him first, in a canyon), and his notes fall
-with it. I seem to hear them dropping one by
-one, every note by itself, as I write about them.
-If they are not of a kind to be ecstatic over at a
-first hearing (a little too simple for that), they
-are all the surer of a long welcome. Indeed, I
-am half ashamed to have so much as referred to
-my own early lack of appreciation of their excellence.
-Perhaps this was one of the times when
-the truth should not have been spoken.</p>
-
-<p>My mention just now of the wren’s cleverness
-in traveling over the steep side of Tucson Mountain
-called to mind a similar performance on the
-part of a very different bird—a road-runner—in
-the same place; and though it was not in my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-plan to name that bird in this paper, I cannot
-deny myself the digression.</p>
-
-<p>I had taken a friend, newly inoculated with
-ornithological fever, down to this mountain-side
-road to show him a black-chinned hummingbird.
-We had seen it, to his amazement, on the
-very mesquite where I had told him it would
-be (“Well!” he said,—and a most eloquent
-“well” it was,—when I pointed the bird out,
-scarcely more than a speck, as we came in sight
-of the bush), and were driving further, when I
-laid my hand on the reins and bade him look up.
-There, halfway up the precipitous, broken cliff,
-was the big, mottled, long-tailed bird, looking
-strangely out of place to both of us, who had
-never seen him before except in the lowlands,
-running along the road, or dodging among clumps
-of bushes. Then of a sudden, he began climbing,
-and almost in no time was on the very topmost
-stone, at the base of a stunted palo-verde. There
-he fell to cooing (like a dove, I said, forgetting
-at the moment that the road-runner is a kind of
-cuckoo), and by the time he had repeated the
-phrase three or four times we remarked that
-before doing so he invariably lowered his head.
-We sat and watched and listened (“There!” one
-or the other would say, as the head was ducked)
-for I know not how many minutes, commenting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-upon the droll appearance of the bird, perched
-thus above the world, and cooing in this (for
-him) ridiculous, lovelorn, gesticulatory manner.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as we drove on, I recalled the strangely
-rapid and effortless gait with which he had gone
-up the mountain. “He didn’t use his wings, did
-he?” I asked; and my companion thought not.
-I was reminded of a bird of the same kind that
-I had seen a few days before cross a deep gully
-perhaps twenty feet in width. “He seemed to
-slide across,” said the man who was with me.
-That was exactly the word. He did not lift a
-wing, to the best of our noticing, nor rise so much
-as an inch into the air, but as it were stepped
-from one bank to the other. So this second bird
-went up the mountain-side almost without our
-seeing how he did it. A few steps, and he was
-there, as by the exercise of some special gift of
-specific levity. He did not fly; and yet it might
-have “<i>seemed</i> he flew, the way so easy was.”
-Take him how you will, the road-runner’s looks
-do not belie him: he is an odd one; and never
-odder, I should guess, than when he stands upon
-a mountain-top and with lowered head pours out
-his amorous soul in coos as gentle as a sucking
-dove’s. I count myself happy to have witnessed
-the moving spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>I am running into superlatives, but no matter.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-The feeling against their use is largely prejudice.
-Let me suit myself with one or two more, therefore,
-and say that the rarest and most exciting
-bird seen by me in Arizona was a painted redstart,
-<i>Setophaga picta</i>. It was at the base of
-Tucson Mountain, close by the canyon wrens’ old
-mill. The vermilion flycatcher, rare as I considered
-it at first, became after a while almost
-excessively common. I believe it is no exaggeration
-to say that forty or fifty pairs must have
-been living in and about Tucson before the first
-of April. Unless you were out upon the desert,
-you could hardly turn round without seeing or
-hearing them. But there was no danger of the
-painted redstart’s cheapening itself after this
-fashion. I saw it twice, for perhaps ten minutes
-in all, and as long as I live I shall be thankful
-for the sight.</p>
-
-<p>I was playing the spy upon a pair of what I
-took to be Arkansas goldfinches, and the question
-being a nice one, had got over a wire fence
-to have the sun at my back. There I had barely
-focused my eight-power glass upon a leafless willow
-beside an irrigation ditch, when all at once
-there moved into its field such a piece of absolute
-gorgeousness as I have no hope of making my
-reader see by means of any description: a small
-bird in three colors,—deep, velvety black, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-snowiest white, and the most brilliant red. Its
-glory lay in the depth and purity of the three
-colors; its singularity lay in a point not mentioned
-in book descriptions, being inconspicuous,
-I suppose, in cabinet specimens: a line (almost
-literally a line) of white below the eye. From its
-position and its extreme tenuity I took it for the
-lower eyelid, but as to that I cannot speak with
-positiveness. It would hardly have showed, even
-in life, I dare say, but for its intensely black surroundings.
-As it was, it fairly stared at me. I
-cannot affirm that it added to the bird’s beauty.
-Apart from it the colors were all what I may call
-solid,—laid on in broad masses, that is: a red
-belly, a long white band (not a bar) on each
-wing, some white tail feathers, white lower tail
-coverts, and everything else black. It does not
-sound like anything so very extraordinary, I confess.
-But the reader should have <i>seen</i> it. Unless
-he is a very dry stick indeed, he would have let
-off an exclamation or two, I can warrant. There
-are cases in which the whole is a good deal more
-than the sum of all its parts.</p>
-
-<p>The bird was on one of the larger branches,
-over which it moved in something of the black-and-white
-creeper’s manner, turning its head to
-one side and the other alternately as it progressed.
-Then it sat still a long time (a long time for a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-warbler), so near me that the glass brought it almost
-into my hand, while I devoured its beauty;
-and then, of a sudden, it took flight into the
-dense, leafy top of a tall cottonwood, and I saw
-it no more. No more for that time, that is to say.
-In my mind, indeed, I bade it good-by forever.
-It was not to be thought of that such a bit of
-splendor (I had read of it as a mountain bird)
-should happen in my way more than once. But
-eight days afterward (March 28), in nearly the
-same place, it appeared again, straight over my
-head; and I was almost as much astonished as
-before. It was exploring the bare branches of a
-row of roadside ash trees, and I followed it, or
-rather preceded it, backing away as it flitted from
-one tree to the next, keeping the sun behind me.
-It carried itself now much like the common redstart;
-a little more inclined to moments of inactivity,
-perhaps, but at short intervals darting into
-the air after a passing insect with all conceivable
-quickness.</p>
-
-<p>And such colors! Such an unspeakable red,
-so intense a black, and so pure a white! If I said
-that the vermilion flycatcher was the brightest
-bird I saw in Arizona, I was like the Hebrew
-psalmist. I said it in my haste.</p>
-
-<p>This time the redstart was in a singing mood.
-On the previous occasion it had kept silence, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-I had thought I was glad to have it so, feeling
-that no voice could be good enough to go with
-such feathers. In its way the feeling was justified;
-but, after all, it would have been too bad
-to miss the song. Curiosity has its claims, no less
-than sentiment. And happily the song proved to
-be a very pretty one; similar to that of the
-Eastern bird, to be sure, but less hurried (so it
-seemed to me), less over-emphatic, and in a voice
-less sharp and thin; a very pretty song (for a
-warbler), though, as is true of the Phainopepla
-and most other brilliantly handsome birds (and
-all good children), the redstart’s proper appeal is
-to the eye. So far as human appreciation is concerned,
-it need make no other.</p>
-
-<p>I have heard a canyon wren in a canyon, I
-said. It was a glorious day in a glorious place,—Sabino
-Canyon, it is called, in the Santa
-Catalina Mountains. And it was there, where
-the ground was all a flower garden, and the dashing
-brook a doubly delightful sight and sound
-after so much wandering over the desert and so
-many crossings of dry, sandy river-beds,—it was
-there, amid a cluster of leafy oaks (strange oak
-leaves they were) and leafless hackberry trees,
-that I saw my first and only solitaire,—<i>Myadestes
-townsendii</i>. I have praised other birds for
-their brightness and song; this one I must praise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-for a certain nameless dignity and, as the present-day
-word is, distinction. He did not deign to
-break silence, or to notice in any manner, unless
-it were by an added touch of patrician reserve,
-the presence of three human intruders. I stared
-at him,—exercising a cat’s privilege,—for all
-his hauteur, admiring his gray colors, his conspicuous
-white eye-ring, and his manner. I say
-“manner,” not “manners.” You would never
-liken <i>him</i> to a dancing-master.</p>
-
-<p>He was the solitaire, I somehow felt certain
-(certain with a lingering of uncertainty), though
-I had forgotten all description of that bird’s appearance.
-It was the place for him, and his looks
-went with the name. Moreover, to confess a more
-prosaic consideration, there was nothing else he
-could be.</p>
-
-<p>“Myadestes,” I said to my two companions,
-both unacquainted with such matters; “I think
-it is Myadestes, though I can’t exactly tell why I
-think so.”</p>
-
-<p>We must go into the canyon a little way, gazing
-up at the walls, picking a few of the more
-beautiful flowers, feeling the place itself (the best
-thing one <i>can</i> do, whether in a canyon or on a
-mountain-top); then we came back to the hackberry
-trees, but the solitaire was no longer in
-them. I had had my opportunity, and perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-had made too little of it. It is altogether likely
-that I shall never see another bird of his kind.</p>
-
-<p>For now those cloudless Arizona days, the
-creosote-covered desert, and the mountain ranges
-standing round about it, are all for me as things
-past and done; a bright memory, and no more.
-One event conspired with another to put a sudden
-end to my visit (which was already longer than
-I had planned), and on the last day of March I
-walked for the last time under that row of “leafless
-ash trees,”—no longer quite leafless, and no
-longer with a painted redstart in them,—and
-over that piece of winding road between the
-craggy hill and the river. Now I courted not the
-sun, but the shade; it was the sun, more than
-anything else, that was hurrying me away, when
-I would gladly have stayed longer; but sunny
-or shady, I stopped a bit in each of the more
-familiar places. Nobody knew or cared that I
-was taking leave. All things remained as they
-had been. The same rock wrens were practicing
-endless vocal variations here and there upon
-the stony hillside; the same fretful verdin was
-talking about something, it was beyond me to
-tell what, with the old emphatic monotony; the
-hummingbird stood on the tip of his mesquite
-bush, still turning his head eagerly from side to
-side, as if he expected her, and wondered why on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-earth she was so long in coming; the mocker
-across the field (one of no more than half a dozen
-that I saw about Tucson!) was bringing out of
-his treasury things new and old (a great bird
-that, always with another shot in his locker);
-the Lucy warbler, daintiest of the dainty, sang
-softly amid the willow catkins, a chorus of bees
-accompanying; the black cap of the pileolated
-warbler was <i>not</i> in the blossoming quince-bush
-hedge (that was a pity); the desert-loving sparrow
-hawk sat at the top of a giant cactus, as if
-its thorns were nothing but a cushion; the happy
-little Mexican boy, who lived in one corner of the
-old mill, came down the road with his usual smile
-of welcome (we were almost old friends by this
-time) and a glance into the trees, meaning to
-say, what he could not express in English, nor I
-understand in Spanish, “I know what you are
-doing;” and then, as I rounded the bend, under
-the beetling crags, the same canyon wren, my first
-one, not dreaming what a favor he was conferring
-upon the man he had so often chided as a trespasser,
-let fall a few measures of his lovely song.
-How sweet and cool the notes were! Unless it
-was the sound of the brook in the Sabino Canyon,
-I believe I heard nothing else so good in Arizona.</p>
-
-<p>But at San Antonio, on my way homeward, I
-heard notes not to be called musical, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-smaller and more ordinary sense of the word; as
-unlike as possible, certainly, to the classic sweetness
-of the canyon wren’s tune; but to me even
-more exciting and memorable. On a sultry, indolent
-afternoon (April 9) I had betaken myself
-to Cemetery Hill for a lazy stroll, and had barely
-alighted from the electric car, when I heard
-strange noises somewhere near at hand. In my
-confusion I thought for an instant of the scissor-tailed
-flycatchers, with whose various outlandish
-outcries and antics I had been for several days
-amusing myself. Then I discovered that the
-sound came from above, and looking up, saw
-straight over my head, between the hilltop and
-the clouds, a wedge-shaped flock of large birds.
-Long slender necks and bills, feet drawn up and
-projecting out behind the tails, wing-action moderate
-(after the manner of geese rather than
-ducks), color dark,—so much, and no more, the
-glass showed me, while the birds, sixty or more
-in number, as I guessed, were fast receding northward.
-They should be cranes, I said to myself,
-since they were surely not herons, and then, like
-a flash, it came over me that I knew the voice.
-By good luck I had lived the winter before where
-I heard continually the lusty shouts of a captive
-sandhill crane; and it was to a chorus of sandhill
-cranes that I was now listening.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>The flock disappeared, the tumult lessened and
-ceased, and I passed on. But fifteen minutes
-afterward, as I was retracing my steps over the
-hill, suddenly I heard the same resounding chorus
-again. A second flock of cranes was passing.
-This, too, was in a V-shaped line, though for
-some reason it fell into disorder almost immediately.
-Now I essayed a count, and had just concluded
-that there were some eighty of the birds,
-when a commotion behind me caused me to turn
-my head. To my amazement, a third and much
-larger flock was following close behind the
-second. There was no numbering it with exactness,
-but I ran my glass down the long, wavering
-line, as best I could, and counted one hundred
-and fifteen.</p>
-
-<p>An hour before I had never seen a sandhill
-crane in its native wildness (a creature nearly
-or quite as tall as myself), and behold, here was
-the sky full of them. And what a judgment-day
-trumpeting they made! Angels and archangels,
-cherubim and seraphim! Perhaps I did not enjoy
-it,—there, with the white gravestones standing
-all about me. After all, there is something in
-mere volume of sound. If it does not feed the
-soul, at least it stirs the blood. And that is a
-good thing, also. I wonder if Michelangelo did
-not at some time or other see and hear the like.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-<h3 class="nobreak">INDEX</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-Adder’s-tongue, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Anemone, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Azalea, Lapland, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Bayberry, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Bellwort, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Birch, yellow, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Bittern, least, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Blackbird, Brewer’s, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">crow, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-winged, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">rusty, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Bluebird, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">chestnut-backed, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Western, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Butterfly, clouded-sulphur, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">red admiral, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Buzzard, turkey, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Cactus, giant, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Callicarpa, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Catbird, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Chewink, Arctic, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-eyed, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">white-eyed, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Chickadee, black-capped, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Hudsonian, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Chuck-will’s-widow, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Clintonia, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Coccoloba, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cocoa plum, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cormorant, Florida, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Coyote, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Cranberry, mountain, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crane, sandhill, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Creosote bush, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crescentia, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crinum, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crossbill, red, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Crow, American, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">carrion, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">fish, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Cypress, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Diapensia, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Dove, ground, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Dutchman’s-breeches, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Eagle, bald, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">golden, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Evening primrose, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Eyebright, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Ficus aurea, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Finch, Lincoln, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">purple, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Flicker, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-shafted, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Flycatcher, Arizona crested, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">crested, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">olive-sided, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">scissor-tailed, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">vermilion, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Gallinule, Florida, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Gnatcatcher, blue-gray, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">plumbeous, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Goldfinch, American, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Goldfinch, Mexican, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span><br>
-<br>
-Grackle, boat-tailed, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Grosbeak, cardinal, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">rose-breasted, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Grouse, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Gumbo-limbo, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Hawk, desert sparrow, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">sharp-shinned, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">sparrow, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Western red-tailed, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Heron, great blue, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Louisiana, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Hickory, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Hornbeam, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br>
-<br>
-House finch, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Huisache, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Hummingbird, black-chinned, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Costa, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">ruby-throated, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Jay, blue, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Florida, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Jessamine, yellow, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Junco, intermediate, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Kingfisher, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Kinglet, golden-crowned, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">ruby-crowned, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Lark bunting, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Lupine, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Mangrove, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Martin, purple, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Meadow lark, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Mockingbird, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>,
-<a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Western, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Moon-flower, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Morning-glory, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Nonpareil, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Nuthatch, brown-headed, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Canadian (red-breasted), <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Carolina (white-breasted), <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Ocotillo, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Orchids, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Oriole, Baltimore, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Osprey, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Oven-bird, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Pavonia, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Pelican, brown, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Phainopepla, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Phlox, Drummond, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Phœbe, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">black, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Say’s, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Pithecolobium, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Plover, killdeer, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Poppy, California, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Porcupine, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Pyrrhuloxia, Arizona, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Texas, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Rabbits, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Rail, Carolina, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Raven, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">white-necked, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Redstart, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">painted, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Road-runner, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span><br>
-<br>
-Robin, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Western, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Rose, Cherokee, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Sandwort, Greenland, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Sapsucker, yellow-bellied, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Seven-year apple, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Shrike, loggerhead, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Siskin, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Snowbird, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Solitaire, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Sparrow, Cassin, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">chipping, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">desert, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">pine-wood, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">sage, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">savanna, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">song, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">vesper, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">white-crowned, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">white-throated, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Swallow, barn, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">tree, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Sweet-bay, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Sweet-gum, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Swift, white-throated, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.<br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Tanager, summer, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Thrasher, Bendire, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">brown, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">crissal, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Palmer, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">sage, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Thrush, Bicknell’s, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">hermit, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Swainson’s, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Titmouse, tufted, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Trema, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Trillium, painted, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">purple, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Vaccinium cæspitosum, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Verdin, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.<br>
-<br>
-Violet, round-leaved, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Selkirk’s, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Vireo, blue-headed (solitary), <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-eyed, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">yellow-throated, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">white-eyed, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Warbler, Bachman’s, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">bay-breasted, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">black-and-white, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Blackburnian, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">black-throated blue, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">black-throated green, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Lucy, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">myrtle, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">palm, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">parula, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">pileolated, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">pine, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">prairie, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">yellow palm, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">yellow-throated, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Woodpecker, downy, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">hairy, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">ivory-billed, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">pileated, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-bellied, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-cockaded, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">red-headed, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-Wood pewee, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span><br>
-<br>
-Wren, Baird, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">cactus, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">canyon, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">Carolina, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">house, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">interior tule, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">rock, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</span><br>
-<span class="indexindent">winter, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</span><br>
-<br>
-<br>
-Yellow-throat, Florida, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.<br>
-<span class="indexindent">Maryland, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</span><br>
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1">FOOTNOTES:</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> 1900.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> It may have been some species of <i>Pellia</i>, to judge by the
-plate in <i>Gray’s Manual</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> And if New Hampshire people will call the mountain
-“Moose Hillock,” as, alas, they will, then we have here another
-proof of the degeneracy which follows the white man’s addiction
-to the punning habit.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> And so it was; for though I <i>felt</i> sure, I wanted to <i>be</i> sure,
-and submitted it to an expert.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> One was living in the greenhouse connected with the big
-hotel. The gardener told me that it had come in of itself, and
-persisted in staying. He had tried in vain to get rid of it.
-Tossed out of doors, it would at once return and make itself
-at home.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> And after all this talk about the plant I must in candor
-add that it turned out to be by no means rare along the bay
-shore. I think I am not wrong in remembering to have heard
-it called the calabash tree.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> One of the most striking peculiarities of Southern speech
-among the illiterate classes (I have observed it in other states
-besides Florida) is the almost total absence of the word “saw.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> We often fed the birds afterward, and one or two, at least,
-were never shy about coming into our laps.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> <i>Vachellia Farnesiana</i>, sparingly naturalized in Florida,
-where it goes by the name of Opopanax.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> Since this letter was first printed I have been warned more
-than once that walking upon railroad tracks, in the Southwestern
-country, at least, is an unsafe proceeding, for a man
-alone and unarmed; and I think it right to pass along the
-caution.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> I could hardly believe it anything but an accidental omission
-when I noticed the total absence of jays, crows, and ravens
-from Mr. Attwater’s list of the birds of San Antonio and
-vicinity. See <i>The Auk</i>, vol. ix, p. 229.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> True as a general statement; but once, at Tucson, I saw
-a bird standing on the top of a telegraph pole facing a pretty
-stiff breeze, which blew the feathers of the throat apart till
-they showed a snow-white spot as large as a silver dollar.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> Botanically, if I am correctly informed, the plant is <i>Fouquiera
-splendens</i>, otherwise known as candlewood, Jacob’s staff,
-and coach-whip. Like the giant cactus it seems to be restricted
-to the foothills.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Alas, it never does.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> There is another raven in Arizona, rarer and larger,—a
-<i>real</i> raven, so to speak,—but I saw it only a few times, always
-high in air, as if it were passing from one mountain
-range to another.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> The trick was seen to fuller advantage on subsequent occasions,
-and I came to the settled conclusion that the birds turned
-but halfway over; that is to say, they lay on their backs for
-an instant, and then, as by the recoil of a spring, recovered
-themselves. How they acquired the trick, and for what purpose
-they practice it, are questions beyond my answering.
-Since my return home, indeed, I have discovered that Gilbert
-White, who noted so many things, noted this same habit on
-the part of the European raven. According to him, the birds
-“lose the centre of gravity” while “scratching themselves
-with one foot.” How he knows this he does not inform us, and
-I must confess myself unconvinced.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> They are not to be found on the desert, I afterward
-learned, but along the watercourses. There I often saw
-them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> I visited more than one of them afterward.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> And so they were, on the testimony of the Washington
-ornithologist above quoted, who knows both bird and song.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> It should be said, nevertheless, that straggling flocks of
-Western bluebirds—lovely creatures—were met with on the
-desert on rare occasions, and once, at Old Camp Lowell, three
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