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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76613 ***
+
+
+ NATURE’S YEAR
+
+
+
+
+ _Books by John Hay_:
+
+
+ A PRIVATE HISTORY
+ THE RUN
+ NATURE’S YEAR
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ JOHN HAY
+
+ _NATURE’S
+ YEAR_
+
+ _The Seasons of Cape Cod_
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATED BY
+ DAVID GROSE
+
+
+ _1961
+ Doubleday & Company, Inc.
+ Garden City, New York_
+
+
+
+
+ _Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 61-8166
+ Copyright © 1961 by John Hay
+ All Rights Reserved
+ Printed in the United States of America
+ First Edition_
+
+
+
+
+ _For Kristi, Susan, Kitty, Rebecca, and Charles Mark--with me on this
+ journey through the year_
+
+
+
+
+ Contents
+
+
+ _July_ _11_
+
+ A Start on Cape Cod--An Entry--Other Lands within
+ the “Narrow Land”
+
+ _August_ _25_
+
+ A Wild Home Land--The Musicians--A Walk with an
+ Oven Bird--Toward the Sea
+
+ _September_ _47_
+
+ Youth on the Move--An Open Shore--Chipmunks
+
+ _October_ _61_
+
+ Where Is Home?--The Field of Learning--Colors of the
+ Season--The Last Day in October
+
+ _November_ _81_
+
+ The Seed in the Season--The Clouds--The Inconstant
+ Land--The Dead and the Living
+
+ _December_ _97_
+
+ An Old Place, an Old Man--Night in the Afternoon--Two
+ Encounters
+
+ _January_ _113_
+
+ Exposure--Ice on the Ponds--Contrast and Response
+
+ _February_ _127_
+
+ Secrets in the Open--The Sea in the Ground--Need--Death,
+ Man Made
+
+ _March_ _143_
+
+ Restless Days--An Extravagance--Interpretation--Response
+
+ _April_ _161_
+
+ Deeper News--April Light--“Frightened Away”
+
+ _May_ _173_
+
+ Declarations--Facets of Expression--Travel
+
+ _June_ _187_
+
+ The Garden--Room to Spare--The Binding Rain
+
+
+
+
+ _July_
+
+
+
+
+ _A Start on Cape Cod_
+
+
+I drove to Cape Cod with travelers from everywhere. I came to this
+narrow peninsula over the blistering, insatiable roads of America with
+the summer crowd--in my shirt sleeves, with dark glasses to protect my
+sight--conscious of almost nothing but cars, and casualties ... our
+migrations have them too, like the birds and fish.
+
+I saw an accident so terrible I could not describe it. Machines were
+flung into the air and smashed. A life was tossed away, a human being
+crushed like a doll. Human relationships were pathetically severed
+by the brutality of chance. Then we were allowed to go on--travelers
+racing down the highway through the blood-boiling heat of the sun. We
+come in with speed and we go away with speed, and we are both afraid
+and desirous of it. The human run in its relentless self-absorption
+seems more abstracted than any other natural force.
+
+The resident population of Cape Cod is some 80,000, and in July the
+number increases to an estimated 250,000 or more, a kind of barometric
+rise that is equivalent to what is happening in the earth at large.
+After Labor Day, when the summer tribe has gone back to the cities,
+relief comes. You can cross the road in comparative safety. Then,
+something like apathy pervades the Cape, as if its diminished society
+were trying to recover from an encounter with enormous odds.
+
+Now I am off the road and back on the 110-foot hill where we put our
+house--part of a ridge that runs along the glacial moraine about a mile
+back from Cape Cod Bay. Dry Hill was its local name, and in fact,
+driving a well, we found a constant source of water only at 130 feet.
+This evening the yellow light runs liquidly through the oak trees and
+the pitch pines around us. I can hear the voices of some of my travel
+companions lifting from the shore, calling, pleading, protesting. A
+snatch of radio music comes in. A plane drones overhead. The warm air
+seems to breathe hard, as if to compete with human breath.
+
+I often wonder, when I am back on the Cape again, whether I chose the
+right place in which to live. It looks bare and scrubby, lean and
+poor, in comparison with those lands to the north and west of us which
+are far prouder in their trees. It has been burned over, cut down,
+and generally abused by man, and most of its healthy trees will never
+attain full growth because of the salt spray that the winds drive over
+them in many storms. And the sea, for all its surrounding presence,
+seems a mere backdrop a great deal of the time, a flatness along the
+horizon, but it is indomitably there. All the winds, the plants, the
+shores, the contours of this low land, are influenced by it, and
+because of it we are carried out into a distance in spite of ourselves.
+The sea mitigates our insularity.
+
+Cape Cod reefs out into the Atlantic. I saw our house when it was
+new as a ship above the trees. I imagined a voyage. I recognize that
+although there are some true fishermen here who sail the year around,
+the rest of us are summer sailors, with no lasting allegiance or
+commitment to the dangers of salt water. Yet the Cape provides space
+for whoever might take the risk or pleasure of finding it. The sea and
+sky are very wide. The winds blow in from all quarters.
+
+The yellow evening lowers now, through the young, shining leaves of
+the oak trees, creating new recesses of darkness. Tides of fire hang
+above the water. There are snatches of bird song through the woods: a
+robin; the silver pealing of a wood thrush; a towhee; a whippoorwill,
+starting in on its over-and-over-again, the loud repetitious whistling
+that makes the night known even as the day hangs on. And finally faint
+stirrings here and there, easings down, last faint pips and trills
+before the dark. I am conscious of the tenancy of nature, in which
+there is more putting forth, more endurance, more population, in
+fact, than any visitor or local man might ever begin to realize. The
+great world we live in is no longer one for hide-outs. If this makes
+for intolerable pressure and despair, it also brings much more into
+view. Local recognition becomes a general need, and there are more
+possibilities in it than we have been told. While the human race has
+been approaching three billions in number, and making ready to put its
+mark on the moon or hang its hearing aids off Venus, I seem to have
+spent many years missing, or unwittingly avoiding, almost as many lives
+and chances close to home. How can I begin to compensate?
+
+
+ _An Entry_
+
+I had decided to start this book in July, with the idea that this was
+the time embodying the full, crowded height of life--the noise, the
+color, the jostle of creatures in wonderful variety, just like that
+load of passengers getting off the boat at Provincetown to see the
+sights. The leaves are fresh. The motions of greed and fulfillment are
+in full course. Even so, I hardly knew what riches to snatch at first.
+In fact, another bold, heat-heavy day, with its crowds and its pride of
+accident, had the effect of making me recoil. I was muttering: “Slow
+down. Slow down. Why so thick and fast?”
+
+On my way back from walking to the mailbox just now, I stepped off the
+road into the oak trees through which it runs, dropped the newspapers
+and the letters, watched and waited. I sat on the upper edge of a
+hollow where dappled shadows rocked lightly between the trees, on their
+gray trunks, and across the sloping ground. There was a pervading swish
+of leaves around me, an occasional stirring at the tree tops. I heard
+the slow, dragged caroling of a red-eyed vireo. Filtered light played
+on the low growth of sarsaparilla, hazelnut, huckleberry, and bracken,
+or dry land fern, with the brown floor of oak leaves in dead but useful
+attendance, holding moisture, shelter, and fruition in reserve.
+
+The wood had a climate of its own, cooler, darker than the hot, damp,
+wide open world of road and shore. There are climates within climates,
+as there are worlds within worlds. Under the bark of a tree the beetle
+inhabits a place that has special atmospheric conditions differing from
+the woods outside it; and so it is with the woodchuck in its hole, the
+ants in their hill. Any place, of whatever size, however endowed in
+our scheme of things with grandeur or insignificance, any home, may be
+greatly subtle in its variance.
+
+A sweet, plaintive “pee-a-wee,” and a wood peewee, a neat little bird,
+black, light gray, and white like a phoebe, but with white wing bars,
+flew in quickly and lightly, to perch on a gray limb. The bird would
+tuck its head down, and then move it from side to side, looking for
+flying insects, repeating its song every five seconds or so. Its tail,
+not bobbing like a phoebe’s, twitched very slightly when its head
+moved. Then, in brief action, it fluttered out, caught an insect, and
+returned to its perch. These little flights covered most of the area
+around its tree, almost methodically. Once I heard the crack of its
+bill as it chased a fly almost down to the ground, halfway across the
+wood. It alighted on a new branch--to try out another base of action?
+But then another peewee flew in, perched, and sang at a far corner of
+the hollow, and the first one hurriedly flew back to its original perch
+as if it had been threatened and was making sure of its position. The
+wood seemed strung together by the intangible threads of their motion.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+These were some of the ways by which a wood peewee follows its
+destiny, employing its chosen place, attending to minutiae, to duty
+and performance. This was appropriate use, measured necessity. And
+as the outer earth led to this part of the wood, and it in turn to
+the “micro-climates” within it, so the birds drew my attention to the
+insects. I had been bitten a little, just enough to remind me, in my
+enjoyment, that the place was not unnaturally hospitable; and there
+were unseen spider mites that would leave me some inflammations to
+remember them by. Now I searched the space above me, aware, through
+the flights of the peewee, of the flying life it pursued. Some flies
+hovered, rocking lightly in the air, and then swung abruptly to one
+side, or dropped away, buzzing insistently. Tiny midges, illumined by
+sunlight, waggled between the trees. Moths fluttered down briefly to
+touch the pale leaves they resembled.
+
+So I had been filled, as I sat there, with a sense of employment.
+I was part of a quiet, steady, structure of action. What better
+“security” could I find than that--learning, feeling, that a prodigious
+energy held all component parts in place and made them dance. In the
+neatness, discipline, almost detachment, of the bird’s little game as
+it pursued its subsistence, I saw the working out of natural law in
+numberless parallels.
+
+Perhaps there was a law to be learned for _me_. If nature is more than
+just a background for human thought and endeavor, then it requires a
+special commitment, a stepping down, a silent, respectful approach.
+Otherwise we are liable to hear ourselves first, and be put off.
+
+I have been given an entry, but not on my own terms.
+
+
+ _Other Lands within the “Narrow Land”_
+
+To answer the question “Where am I?” seems not to be an easy thing.
+“Obviously” this is the vacation land of Cape Cod where the sun sends
+the bathers to the beaches and the rain drives them back inland to buy
+souvenirs, where the harbors are crowded with pleasure craft and the
+highways with cars--an area whose purpose it is to attend to human
+distraction. Yet right in the middle of it the action of a small bird
+reveals a land of its own; and how many others are there still unmet?
+
+It is very strange to me that I have known so little about what was
+around me, and that I took so long merely to make some inquiries ...
+about a few names, a few alliances between living things, just enough
+to give me a hint or two about the growing we are never finished with.
+We live in a common realm about which we are still half ignorant and
+half afraid.
+
+A little girl at the beach comes running through the shallow waters
+crying: “Something touched me, and it wasn’t Daddy!”
+
+Later on, her mother wonders aloud if crabs bite. She picks one up
+and when she gets her answer, screams with pain and anger at all the
+“unnatural” and the unknown.
+
+Just the other side of us is not only a bewildering variety but a
+space, which we have still to find, filled with an unfamiliar silence,
+or random sounds, seemingly disconnected motions, sudden flights that
+we witness out of the corner of an eye. When we only assign the word
+“purpose” to ourselves, it is hard to understand just what credit to
+give that which only stands and waits, or moves from one place to
+another. I sit on the beach, moving a little away from a portable
+radio that a man has brought to assure himself of his continuous hold
+on human affairs, and look out over the hazy surface of the water, past
+a long border of waves that lollop on the sand. There is a large bird
+standing on a rock not far offshore. I know it as a great black-backed
+gull, a scavenger, a predator, which sometimes eats the eggs and kills
+the young of other species of gulls whose nesting islands it shares,
+and robs other birds of their food ... and that is about all I know,
+aside from having watched its splendid, easy flight. So it stands, and
+may stand, for an hour or more at a time, sea-surrounded, glaring out
+with expressionless yellow eyes. Is it digesting a heavy meal? Is it
+waiting for low tide so that its feeding grounds will be uncovered? Is
+it greedy, savage, lazy, and bold? All such questions are tentative.
+The subject is aloof.
+
+Why is there so much hanging around and waiting, so much suspension
+in nature? It comes as an occasional surprise to us timekeepers. In
+the gull we suspect obliviousness, and yet it may be prompted by the
+demands of a space of water, light, air, stretching before and around
+it, in its being, of whose motion and sense we are scarcely aware.
+
+We see very little. I am told that the very sands we sit on are full of
+minute organisms. The visible life, perhaps in the form of a few beach
+fleas, represents an extremely small percentage of the life unseen,
+a condition which has its parallel in the soil. But a short walk or
+wade along the shore can give you proof enough, without the need of a
+nip from a crab, that the tidal grounds are covered and circulating
+with life, a life which in its marine forms might seem small, simple,
+primitive, and unallied with much that we landed mammals can understand.
+
+I cannot inquire much of the moon snail, blindly, slowly moving
+across the sands under the tidal waters, with its large foot feeling
+for a clam. It only reveals itself to me by outward acts and signs
+which do not seem to have much variety. A small hole, countersunk in
+a shell, is common proof that a moon snail has drilled in and then
+eaten the occupant. When you see a “sand collar,” which this animal
+forms of sand grains and eggs, you know another side of its existence.
+Perhaps that is all there is to it--eating and reproduction--the round
+shellfish mindlessly carrying out its destiny. If it says anything
+at all to me it is only out of undeciphered darkness, silence, and
+original need.
+
+A tiny, shrimplike animal hovers in the water, then darts over my
+foot, only describing itself to me by its quick motion, and that is
+all I know of it. It suddenly buries itself in the sandy bottom, where
+reflected sunlight makes golden nets, that stretch and tremble through
+the constantly flowing waters.
+
+The tide ebbs. The sun starts to evaporate the moisture from the top
+surface of a big rock, part of a jetty that thrusts out from the beach.
+I see a number of dark periwinkles around and under an algae-sheathed,
+water-soaked branch that lies there, a source of food for these
+browsers and vegetarians. They are a common marine snail, used for
+human food in many parts of the world, and usually so numerous and
+well known as to be taken for granted. As the water recedes and sinks
+below the surface of the jetty, the sun beats down, drying the rock.
+Some of the animals stay under the shade and moisture of the stick, but
+more begin to move slowly away from it. When these travelers finally
+reach the edge of the rock, they start down its shaded face. Their
+dark, whorled shells, though an intrinsic part of them, are hoisted,
+moved around, almost in a full circle, seeming to slip loosely over
+their bodies as they move down. Their black tentacles, like antennae
+on insects, wave slightly on their snouts, and their slimy foot works
+slowly down. Their motion is a curious combination of probing, oozing,
+gliding, and at the same time, holding on, assuring the grip, with a
+kind of portentous caution. Since I can easily tip one off with my
+finger, I also feel a tenuousness about them, in their relation to this
+realm of tidal power with its constant displacements--but adaptability
+is probably a better way to think of it. They have lasted, in their
+loose wandering, through a period of time which we can only estimate.
+They have a special authority. As I watch them it seems to me that no
+other action is of any more pressing importance during this moment in
+the scheme of things.
+
+These personifications of motion, these strangers, have untouched lands
+of their own.
+
+That silent sea at my side is colossal, inscrutable, and holds out
+no solace or advice. We only have our toes in, on a tiny section of
+its summer shore. Most of us barely touch its surface. Even so, it
+offers as much to a traveling human as to a snail. It is still an old
+space unexplored, and if we leave the vacation sands and set out on an
+afternoon’s sail, we may be following some need of wind and water in
+us, some unused acquaintance.
+
+There is a well-known sand bar to steer by in the hazy distance across
+Cape Cod Bay. We buck the steely waves upwind, close hauled, half hot
+in the sun, half cold and shivering when the water thrashes in over the
+bow of the boat. Ropes creak slightly through the boom and the mast.
+The wake bubbles. Wood strains through water. The west wind blows stiff
+over conflicting waves. The time passes with a certain monotony but for
+the craft of sailors and its requirements. There is nothing called for
+but to sail, with no other distractions on this immediate flat world of
+light, no concern ... and yet we sense some ultimate demand that comes
+from this blue giant, whose depths and tricks are still unfathomed.
+
+The flat necessity of it makes sailing its own satisfaction. It becomes
+physical. We fly, we feel, we calculate, by sinew, flesh, and bones,
+and through the salty blood in our veins. We may be a degree closer to
+the black-backed gull.
+
+There on arrival are great white sheets of sand curving up into a
+barrier of dunes back of a pebbly beach, where a beach buggy rolls
+along scaring up clouds and crowds of terns, and sanderlings in
+spinning flight. The jeep stops and teen-agers jump down and out,
+crying stridently. We anchor the boat just off the beach. The water is
+clear and cold. The dunes are sun reflectors, clean and warm, and we
+find whitish-gray grasshoppers on them, flecked like the sand.
+
+Sailing back again in late afternoon, the boat goes fast and free
+before the wind over the water now turned green, a blend of sky blue
+and the yellow of a falling sun. The bay lies out like an enormous
+garden, patched with color and motion, the salt waters full of
+latent power, ready with every kind of mood, flowing by and over,
+interwrought, crossing time and circumstance. We pass a clanging bell
+buoy. Evening comes on. Gold icicles on the water are turning and
+softening to shades of pink and purple. It is like striding over a wide
+land of peace and plenty, before we tack into the harbor.
+
+
+
+
+ _August_
+
+
+ _A Wild Home Land_
+
+What I wanted to do was follow the year around, recognizing that hours,
+days, months, or years are as elusive as unseen atoms (even though,
+universal law being consistent, we deduce their behavior with some
+success). I am not sure where July left off and August began. Summer
+flies away from me, like an unknown bird.
+
+Out into August then, while there is time. When I step into it as if
+into something new, I sense thousands and thousands of roving lives,
+taking their opportunities where and when they can. The day is hot
+and shining. The oak leaves, no longer fresh and young, but spotted
+with growths, chewed by insects, frayed and scarred, are still tough,
+deeply green, harnessing the sun, under a stir and slide of air. Two
+big red-tailed hawks sail high overhead, screaming constantly. A blue
+jay screams, in a fair likeness. The hawks wheel lower down along the
+trees, inside the horizon. Then two little tree sparrows flit by.
+Insects drone, stir, and buzz. There is a dragging, rattling sound of
+leaves as a box turtle moves slowly along. A cicada chorus rises like a
+sudden breeze from the southeast and then subsides. Two black and white
+warblers go through the cover of the woods in a quick butterfly flight
+together. The “Tock! Tock!” of a chipmunk sounds behind a brush pile,
+almost like the end notes of a whippoorwill’s song.
+
+I feel a balance in space between them all: the roamers, hawks, or
+gulls, in the sky’s great allowance; the spider swinging on a thread
+and making its own web of a world; colorful, elusive warblers through
+the trees; the chipmunk on its chosen ground. These sounds, synonymous
+with motion, seem to hold them in mutual alliance, round in a lightness
+of air that is strict and easy in its coming and release, like the
+cicadas; but there is an intensity here that makes my heart beat faster.
+
+A jay jumps down to a branch, cocks its crested head, with those black
+eyes full of readiness, and brays. The spider wraps up a captured
+moth with rapid skill. A robber fly waits on a leaf with throbbing
+abdomen and a look of contained vitality. It is not to be known. I see
+the brown, glazed wings folded back in the sunlight, and two black,
+sky-light eyes on top of its head. It seems preternaturally lean. It
+stays there for ten minutes and I watch it closely, almost suspended
+with it in my attention. A robber fly is a tough predator, but to call
+it cold, indifferent to pain, careless of life, darkness personified?
+Our terms are useless. I do not know. Then my attention is cut, as it
+abruptly darts off, swinging in an arc, perhaps to catch a housefly a
+hundred feet away.
+
+In the buzz, the running light, the stir of summer, I feel as if
+each motion, each event had its own pressing concern. This homeland,
+no longer graced with the name of wilderness, is full of wild,
+unparalleled desire.
+
+Everyone knows that the month of August is loaded with insects,
+although they come under the heading of “bugs,” a menace to human
+society. Their fibrous trills are incessant in the grass. Their high,
+shrill sounds announce the heated air. Those two species that we hate
+more than most, just for their familiarity, the flies and mosquitoes,
+drone around us. In the heat of noon our senses are a little clouded.
+We may be mumbling something about “the will of life be done,” and it
+is being done ... in great part by the insects. The summer rage to
+take and to share in taking is carried out in minute detail, from the
+tiniest mite in the soil to the dragonfly.
+
+Manifest energy, using its short summer span, fills our surroundings
+with its wealth of insects. It has not been long since I was taught
+the modicum of knowledge needed to name a few of them, to start in
+on a fraction of the 680,000 species that fill the earth; but it was
+enough to add to my sight. I had never realized that such foreign and
+incredible variety existed so close to me.
+
+A yellow jacket tugs furiously at a dead cricket on the road, like a
+hungry dog with raw meat. Delicate aphids waver on flower stalks. A big
+striped cicada killer roams through the oaks. Other wasps sip juice or
+nibble carrion. Dragonflies dart across both land and water on their
+tangential licks of speed. The cabbage butterflies flutter and alight
+with pale, yellow wings held together like one thin sail against the
+sunlight. Over and under, in and out, flying, crawling, suspended
+in plants and in the growth of plants, seizing their time, waiting,
+indefinitely if need be, held in chrysalis or egg, emerging, feeding,
+adding to death and life in death ... what are these strangers?
+
+There are wasps as red as rubies; flies of a more scintillating,
+vibrant green than emeralds; and shiny bronze or golden beetles which
+are the envy of human art. If color is life, to make the human eyes
+ring and the body respond, they have it, and they also lack it. Some
+are so diaphanous as to belong only to the sunlit air, and some are so
+dark, as though part of unseen depths, that all color is only a dance,
+springing away.
+
+We use up constant, frustrated energy keeping them in check. Their dry
+throbbing annoys us. They eat our crops, transmit disease, and drive
+us away from our pleasures: although in the bold stare of nature they
+are effective employees. We might, slapping a mosquito, recognize their
+necessity as pollinators, earth movers, or food, respect the role they
+play in decomposition and growth ... then we must turn around and
+invent new poisons. Insects are redoubtable enemies. We are never quite
+sure which of us is in the ascendancy, just as we are never sure of
+what they are.
+
+Still we can look and marvel at their complex detail: these wings like
+lace or spun glass; wings cut short and wide or thin as a hair; wings
+with the pattern of flowers, or veins of a leaf; bodies round and
+narrow, oval or oblong; strange truncated abdomens; huge, compound
+eyes; legs impossibly thin and long, or unbelievable in number and
+still co-ordinated; heads like alligators; bodies like sticks; false
+eyes; false horns; repulsive, intangible, unreal.
+
+Here seems to be automatic, nerve-end response in unreflecting zeros,
+whose lives pass with their deaths, but still, on this earth crust they
+are affiliated with everything. That which may frighten or startle
+a bird, like the eye spots on a moth’s wing, is related to a bird.
+Animals are adapted to their environments and the medium in which they
+live and act; but so many tricks and curiosities are embodied in the
+insects, so many far-fetched connections of shape and motion, as to
+leave all particular environments behind.
+
+In their variety they are in balance with our imagination. Don’t
+they show as many bursts, tricks, starts, halts, and fires, as
+much somnolence and surprise in their color, shape, and action as
+we desire in the exercise of our consciousness? Nature is unbiased
+in its attention, concentrating equal power on all forms of its
+expression. When we begin to conceive of nature in terms of creative
+process--continually evolving, fantastically complex, immensely
+resourceful--then we recognize our counterparts wherever the sunlight
+strikes across the air. We share in a communication.
+
+Last month I noticed a group of small butterflies on the mauve flower
+of a milkweed. They were, as I found out, hairstreak butterflies, with
+a dusky, grayish-lavender coloration, and little orange patches on
+the lower edge of their wings. When the wings are folded, their hind
+tips have tails resembling antennae, which may have the effect of a
+protective device to confuse a predator. After I frightened them off,
+they returned in a little while to rest on the very same flower. Their
+color was not the same as a milkweed’s but in tone and value it was
+close enough so as to hide them from view at a fairly short distance.
+The flower and the animal were united in a sensitive embodiment of
+contrast.
+
+A few days later I noticed that the flower was gradually paling. Then,
+on the twenty-fifth of July, the last blossoms dropped off, and the
+butterflies were gone. An obvious affinity, and a mystery at the same
+time, of two forms of life in a unique response to nature’s web of
+motion.
+
+It took me a long time to become aware of just how much these
+affiliations and responses made up the life of earth, how much of an
+elaboration they amounted to. In the past also, when I saw a robin
+hop across the lawn, a frog jump into the water, or a tree swallow
+glide through the air, I reacted with pleasure or disregard--by
+chance, in other words--without realizing just how big a role chance
+played in their appearance. In the same sense the obvious upheavals
+of a season--drought, or heavy rains--meant little to me beyond their
+immediate, local effect. After a while I began to be aware of all the
+circumstances that must surround me. One dull day I realized their
+unlimited context, and thought how slow and agonizing my own changes
+were in comparison.
+
+Expected things happen. But the variations are just as compelling as
+the stable order from which they come. This June, for example, was
+cold and wet, and the rains continued into the summer months. The
+hatching of insects was delayed and the development of some plants and
+grasses. Many fledgling tree swallows were found dead in their nests,
+a disaster which seems to have been caused directly by the weather.
+Aquatic insects are a favorite food of the tree swallows, but in cold,
+wet weather these insects tend to remain in immature stages and do
+not develop into flying adults. (Swallows chase after their food in
+flight.) And, in fact, when insects are few, the tree swallows seem to
+be discouraged from looking for them. If such conditions keep up, they
+may leave a nesting area to look for food elsewhere.
+
+Our local run of alewives, those inland herring that migrate from salt
+water every spring to spawn in fresh-water ponds, seemed to be a little
+later than usual; and the young, hatched from the eggs they left behind
+them, started down to salt water past schedule in July. If the ponds
+are colder in temperature than is normal, it probably affects the young
+alewives’ size and chance of survival. They grow larger and healthier
+in warm-water ponds because they are started sooner and have a richer
+supply of food. A smaller, slightly weaker fish is more easily caught
+by a predator.
+
+Because this spring was somewhat off the average mark (and in a sense
+there is no average), many of the relationships between plants and
+animals dependent on it were altered. Some of the effects, in animal
+population or health, might be felt for a long time to come.
+
+Although ice, fire, storms, hurricanes, unusually wet or dry seasons,
+and now the hand of man, may alter the local earth almost beyond
+recognition and bring its inhabitants to disaster, natural occurrence
+has an indomitable will. Its changes outlast all others. Uncounted
+lives are sent ahead, balanced always, but with relationships through
+time and space that are never exactly the same. A leaf drops earlier.
+Frogs start to shed their skins, or migrate locally at a time that
+depends on new climactic conditions. Why have I seen so few mole runs
+this year? Last year there were comparatively few baltimore orioles.
+This year in orange pride they were leaf calling and diving everywhere.
+I have seen very few phoebes in our vicinity of late, and scarcely
+any bluebirds. There may be more mosquitoes this summer and fewer
+grasshoppers than usual. I can inquire, for each species, and find out
+what I want to know, if there is logic, and cause and effect to its
+behavior; but all are related in a realm that is wider than I ever
+imagined.
+
+
+ _The Musicians_
+
+Many Augusts, singing loud, have passed me by without my giving them
+a shred of attention. What made the sound? The air, or the trees,
+the month itself, embodied in unknown voices? I don’t think I knew
+much more than that, although I suppose I was aware of what a cricket
+sounded like. Perhaps it is time to find out more. I know now, as I
+did then, that at night when the air is soft and cool, a multitude of
+separate actions having died down, and when the earth is relieved of
+a fire taken to the stars, a plainsong goes up and the night takes
+substance in pulsing sound.
+
+When I listen, I see that in detail the sounding of an August night
+is not melodious. It is full of clicks, dry rasps, ratchets, reedy,
+resinous scrapings, and except for countless populations playing on
+one string, disassociated. There is only one phrase for each species
+of insect. The over-all sound is occasionally reminiscent of telegraph
+wires, mechanically shrill and tense; but in the context of the night,
+speckled with stars, it becomes as wide, warm, and luminous as any
+symphony.
+
+Having heard of using a flashlight to search for these musicians, I
+go out, sometime after eight-thirty, and start training it on sounds,
+with complete lack of success at first. Either the sound stops, or the
+animal that makes it is invisible to me. A bat flies overhead, chasing
+insects. It is known for accuracy, having ears with a receptiveness
+like radar, tuned to the finest measurements of space, but its flight
+seems frantic. It beats back and forth, around, over and under.
+Suddenly it is very close, perhaps a few inches over my head. I duck
+at the leathery, fluttering sound, something like the rippling folds
+of a taut chute, despite my knowing that only in lingering myth and
+hearsay do bats catch in human hair. Then it is off again, with its
+violent, erratic flight.
+
+The darkness takes deeper hold. It is full of the loud throbbing, the
+insistently high-pitched rasping of the insects, with an occasional
+tree frog sounding a contrapuntal “Ek-ek.” Playing my flashlight under
+the trees shows up a spider web in beautiful detail. The silk strands
+are clear against the black night, their swoops and whorls all held
+together by long perfected execution, with the tiny engineer way up on
+his round span, his semblance of the globe in its vast waters.
+
+In high suspension, in the larger silences of the sky, all rings well
+in consonance, and the pulse of living instruments is with the massed
+stars that run out and dive away above all heads, and with the ground,
+my heart and ear, my blood and bone.
+
+A persistent light racheting makes me concentrate on one bush, where I
+eventually find a green, well-camouflaged, long-horned grasshopper with
+orange eyes--a male, since it has no ovipositor on its abdomen. The
+females are silent, with the honored role of being courted and invited.
+
+The flashlight seems to have no effect on him. The front wings are
+slightly apart, raised up a little, and vibrating ... a kind of
+fast, dry shuddering. The sound is a light “zzz,” ending with a
+rapid “tic-tic-tic.” This grasshopper is a waxy green. His antennae,
+almost twice as long as his body, go up in sweeping curves, and wave,
+sometimes both together in a semicircle, sometimes singly in both
+directions, as he stops his playing, and begins to move slightly down a
+twig. Then I notice a female moving in his direction. Had he increased
+the tempo of his playing when she came near? Did he sense success?
+
+Still harder to spot--almost impossible by day, and difficult enough
+at night--are the snowy tree crickets, but they are numerous in this
+low-treed, shrubby area. Where the long-horned grasshoppers sound at
+intervals, the combined chorus of snowy tree crickets pulses on. They
+are slender little creatures, a very pale, almost immaterial, green,
+but their fragile, transparent, membranous wings, raised higher than
+those of a long-horned when it plays, make a cry that rises up like
+peepers in the spring. This is the famous “temperature cricket” whose
+song speeds up or slows down in response to heat or cold. According
+to the field manuals, you can divide the number of notes per minute
+by four and then add forty, which will give you the approximate
+temperature in degrees Fahrenheit.
+
+So this great scraping and fiddling perpetuates a dance. The first
+frost will end the lives of most of these musicians. August’s
+high sounding means a coming end, but all of its connections and
+associations join in sending on the year. This is what the month means,
+as well as the hum of tourists driving down the Cape and back again.
+Listen to the chosen string.
+
+There is a miraculous sensitivity in the cricket that slows down when
+the temperature begins to cool at night, or even when a cloud passes
+over the sun by day. The male calls to attract the female, though it
+is apparently not known whether her arrival may not be the result of
+happenstance. His playing is as much a part of general expression as
+individual intention or reaction. In any case the eggs are laid, which
+will stay dormant throughout the winter, to hatch in the spring. The
+organic cycle continues, making an announcement, sending up a music
+whose players are so attuned to light and dark, sunlit or clouded
+skies, warm air or cold, day or night, that their existence depends
+upon the slightest change.
+
+
+ _A Walk with an Oven Bird_
+
+The broader aspects of the weather are more apparent to my kind
+of receptiveness, which is less mortally tuned to degrees than a
+grasshopper. There is still an abnormal amount of rain as the month
+goes on. Their sun blotted out, many tourists have left the Cape
+earlier than usual. I notice that the days are shorter and cooler. The
+prevailing wind, southwest in fair weather, southeast before a storm,
+blows gently, or in gusts when it rains. A big mud puddle on our wood
+road has collected a whole population of green frogs. At night there is
+great frog carnage on the wet highways. I have noticed in the past that
+this is their season for traveling, whether it is wet or dry, but heavy
+rains encourage their migration, sending them far and wide. There is a
+multitude of garden toads around the house. One night it cools down to
+about 50 degrees and in the dawn hour the leaves are bluish gray with
+dew. A hurricane, spawned in the Bahamas, is two hundred miles east of
+Florida, but beginning to turn slightly to the north, away from the
+eastern seaboard. High seas are predicted in three or four days’ time.
+
+I feel as though we were hesitating on the brink of new necessities,
+swinging between one resolution and another not yet found. The season
+is beginning to join the winds. Some migrant birds have already flown
+away. Other birds fly through the leaf canopy feeding seriously and
+silently. A warbler, a female yellow-throat, skips lightly along a
+patch of briar and vines. A brilliant oriole jumps into a patch of oaks
+and moves on down sunlight-yellow ramps of leaves, and a black-billed
+cuckoo, a large brown bird with a handsome, long tail, stops in on
+a branch with a look of eagerness and seeking, then flashes off again.
+There is a change in their action and timing. The adults are long since
+through with the claiming and proclaiming that rang in the woods before
+they nested. The steady, constant business of feeding their young is
+about over for most species, though I see a flicker, or yellowhammer,
+come through the trees in diving, shooting flight, with a young one
+following loudly after it. There are many fledglings, but on the whole
+the birds, many of them starting to molt, are silent compared with
+spring and early summer.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+This wood road of ours, where the birds fly through, is used every
+school-day morning by our children on their way to catch the bus. It is
+a kind of open line through change. It rides the side of a low ridge,
+and glacial hollows dip away from it. It once served as a wagon road
+for woodcutters, and is still shaded by the insistent, if none too
+“sturdy,” oaks, which come back again and again, no matter how many
+times they are cut. They make the road a green tunnel in summer, and
+their gray branches with knotted fingers rattle and sway above it in
+the wintertime. It receives many travelers by land and some by sea. (A
+few Januaries ago I found a dovekie there, a little sea bird with the
+black back, short black wings, and white breast of a penguin. It is one
+of the members of the auk family, breeding in Greenland and migrating
+down from the ice-locked waters of the Arctic Circle to feed in the
+Atlantic during the winter. Its short wings are meant for swimming,
+diving, and flying in and out of waves, so they are not very effective
+when blown inland by a storm. The dovekie I found was unable to take
+off, and in any case weak and hungry. So after a futile effort to feed
+it, I took it back to Cape Cod Bay, where it started to fly along the
+surface of the water, though weakly, in short, floundering dashes.)
+
+With a half mile of concentrated road it is easier to take cognizance
+of friends and strangers than when you are trying to make California
+on the transcontinental highway. You can see how it is used by skunk,
+squirrel, deer, and the hunters of deer. I walk it in expectation.
+One of the animals that constantly move across the road and live
+in the woods beside it is that bird which looks like a tiny thrush
+but is classified as a wood warbler, the oven bird. Its “Teacher!
+Teacher!” rings out in spring and early summer. It was named after its
+leaf-hidden nest, made on the ground, with a hole going in at the side
+like a Dutch oven.
+
+Here is an oven bird, tail bobbing slightly, perched on the lower
+branches of a red maple beside the road ... a little more out in the
+open than usual, less concentrated on its earlier nesting territory.
+It flutters down to the road. This is one of those birds that have
+the distinction, if that is what it is, of being able to walk, rather
+than hop or run. So it starts walking, through the dappled shadows on
+the road, as I keep a respectable distance behind it. Or perhaps I
+walk and it attends to business. The oven bird goes back and forth,
+pecking insects, with a quick meandering, interrupted by an occasional
+little jump at the leaves of an overhanging shrub or plant. This is not
+a straight walker, no Indian with a destination, but its body moves
+constantly from left to right in purposeful flexibility.
+
+“How well you see!” I think to myself. I can see nothing at my level
+but a tiny yellow caterpillar swinging through the air on a silken
+thread. But it is clear to me that the oven bird works the road with
+clear results. We keep going. We come to a stretch in full sunlight
+where the trees stand off to the side, and my companion keeps to the
+shadows with determination, pecking away at insects along the few
+inches of shaded bank to one side. A flicker bursts through, shouting:
+“Tawicka! Tawicka!” and the oven bird flies ahead a few feet and then
+goes on walking.
+
+We have now traveled about an eighth of a mile. Under a heavy weave
+of leaves the bird moves to left and right over the road, pecking for
+insects, working, progressing. Olive brown; capped with an orange
+stripe; with speckled breast and pale pink legs ... a shadow bird,
+a leaf litter bird; and now a fellow walker, that has made more use
+of this road than any of us and our omnivorous machines. At a sharp
+bend in the road where it leads up to the house, the oven bird finally
+flies off and disappears in the trees, in a southerly direction by
+coincidence. Our walk is over, but the flight of birds will leave all
+cars behind.
+
+
+ _Toward the Sea_
+
+There is “man” and there is “nature.” But do we really know where the
+climate of existence starts, where its storms are brewed? All weather
+is unexpected. Another variation in the known routine, another change
+in use, and we may move, reluctantly, into some new awareness while
+primal energy bowls on with infinite capacity.
+
+Among the oaks the leaves on the top branches sway and rustle, while
+those on the wood floor scarcely lift at all, but there is a constant
+sound of air among them, and it might be possible to hear a ferment in
+the ground. Small suns blaze through round leaf lobes. Standing on a
+slope toward the north from which the glaciers came, and the auroras
+crackle, shimmer, and flow, and the cold from Canada will have its
+way, I have a feeling of portentous motion, of being sledded out on a
+speeding globe.
+
+The hurricane veered off. There was rain, but no great winds. The mud
+puddle in the road dried up after several sunny days, and the green
+frogs left; but when it filled up again they had not returned. The
+frogs have a different motion in them and will not come back to suit my
+metronome.
+
+Many vacationers are going home. We can almost walk across the highway
+without fear. There is still the press, the fevered demands of summer
+in the air, but something else is going to have its way.
+
+A changing light, a shifting wind, calls me out to meet more of this
+earth than I know. Habit stifles me. My round needs to be recharged.
+So I take a walk, like the oven bird, though not to gather any more
+food than my senses and my spirit need. There is a lobe of land a mile
+away, through the oaks, over the shore road, and across to sea level,
+called the Crow Pasture. It is bordered by a tidal inlet and marsh on
+one side and the sands of Cape Cod Bay on the other. It is covered with
+low, wind-topped growth, blueberry bushes, beach plums, stands of pitch
+pine, and stunted oak; and it is flushed with moving light and shadow,
+hovered over and hunted by great clouds. The Crow Pasture is without
+houses so far, and it is a bare recipient of high events, the range of
+storms, the distances that come in and declare themselves by wind or
+flight, the summer vaunting of the sun, the cold appeal of the moon.
+Narrow, rutted dirt roads lead into it and take you on.
+
+This land, once used for pasturing cows, now domesticated only by
+sparrows, robins, and chickadees, has final summer abundance in it.
+Locusts bound from dry land grasses with rattling wings. Green head
+flies buzz in savage haste. A yellow and black goldfinch flies over,
+bouncing along.
+
+There are ebony-beaded blackberries on the ground, and a few dark
+berries left on high bush blueberries. A stiff wind from the south
+shakes up the thickets and the wild indigo, a compact, light bouquet of
+a plant with cloverlike leaves and yellow pea flowers. Pointed cedars
+stir and writhe. The air rushes through the bayberries with their
+glossy leaves, and it sweeps down across the marshland ahead through
+purple and yellow grasses that plume and sway, off to the white sands
+beyond.
+
+Open land, wild air, lead ahead until salt water appears, the blue
+barrens that curve beyond sight. Stiff, stunted bushes are backed up
+at the edge of the marsh, hideaways for sparrows, then marsh rosemary,
+or sea lavender, shows in occasional clumps through the eddying stalks
+of grass. One area is thick with mosquitoes, sounding a low melody of
+harassment. In the bed of a ditch, dotted with holes made by fiddler
+crabs, are the tracks of a skunk. All that lives here permanently, not
+foraging like a skunk, or migratory like most of the birds, has to
+stand strong light, harsh winds, and salt spray, that dry, abrase, and
+burn.
+
+The marsh merges with the sand, back of low dunes covered with stiff,
+sharp-tipped beach grass and seaside goldenrod, thick stalked, with
+broad soft leaves, a succulent, related to cacti, made to hold and
+retain moisture. The beach shelves down from the dunes and meets the
+exposed tidal ground, ledges of dark peat which is pitted like volcanic
+rock, and very slippery to walk on. Beyond it at low tide the sand
+flats ease out, stretch and flow, with aisles and purple fingers of
+water rippling, writhing, and probing across them.
+
+Further along the shore a group of gray and white herring gulls stand
+into the wind. Hiding in a clump of peat-rooted grasses a few hundred
+feet from them is a gull in its first year. One of its wings is broken,
+with the primary feathers dragging on the ground. The bird stalks
+slowly along, tripping a little, isolated, a picture of shame and loss.
+When I approach, it moves reluctantly toward the other gulls, then
+stands into the wind slightly behind and to the side of them. Suddenly
+the flock takes to the air, and the young gull stays down, crippled,
+unable to forage for its food, and ultimately doomed. There are various
+kinds of mutual assistance in nature. Some species, like Canada geese,
+may help, or try to help a fallen mate; but there are no hospitals. I
+am told that a sick bee rolls out of a hive if it can, or is pushed
+out by the others. Animals must be deeply aware of death, and they die
+alone, perhaps with an instinctive understanding that they have to pay
+the price of a health which nature ultimately requires.
+
+The landscape slopes on and out from life to life, swept by the air,
+an earth, sand, water, run of interchanging light. Clouds of white
+terns are hovering and diving over the waters of the bay. Suddenly a
+dark-plumaged marsh hawk flies into the midst of them. They harry it in
+the blue, heat-clouded sky. The hawk circles, dodges, flaps on, while
+they dive on it continually. It twists and rises higher and higher
+trying to shake them off, until it plummets down and flies low over the
+surface of the water, making a great round turn back to the shore.
+
+The crippled gull stands and waits with hurt patience. The hawk flies
+back to the marsh behind the beach and begins to beat slowly over it,
+covering the ground methodically, hunting the unwary shrew, mouse, or
+sparrow. The terns dive for fish. The tide waters begin to slip in over
+the sand. Measure for measure. Necessity keeps its component parts in
+order, as the light changes, and the south wind keeps blowing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Down the shore to the east is an inlet called Paine’s Creek, which
+receives the inland migration of alewives in the spring, and takes out
+their young, hatched in early spring and summer, as they swim to salt
+water. The alewife fry, two or three inches long, attract gulls and
+terns. During the month there has been a migratory colony of terns in
+the vicinity, principally common terns, both adult and immature.
+
+In the general Cape Cod area there are two principal nesting places
+every year, at Tern Island, Chatham, and in Plymouth. During the
+season--the birds arrive about the end of April--both terneries have
+populations which number in the thousands. There are in addition a few
+small islands off the Cape and a few comparatively isolated areas where
+smaller groups nest successfully, although terns are sociable birds,
+and breed best in large numbers. In August, beginning with the arctic
+tern, which, I am told, is the earliest to migrate, the birds begin to
+leave their nesting sites in groups or small companies on their way
+south. They spend the winter anywhere from Florida to the edge of the
+Antarctic ice.
+
+So the Paine’s Creek area, with its sand eels and alewife fry,
+represents a way station, a stopping-off place, one leg of a migratory
+journey ... the first for birds hatched during the late spring or early
+summer. Terns reach flying age in a month, but their parents go on
+feeding them for some time. They are slow to mature and do not breed
+until they are about three years old.
+
+The young are not much smaller than their parents, and without a close
+watch it might be hard to tell the difference at first; but their
+heads are gray, as compared with the jet-black napes and crowns on the
+adults. They still spend most of the time waiting to be fed. Some
+make inexperienced, practice flights over the water, plunging in and
+out in an almost kittenish, hit-or-miss way, while their parents dive
+like arrows, pinpointing the surface with little flashes of spray, from
+which they rise up with silver quarries in their sharp bills. But as
+many more of the young terns stand along the beach or on shoals at the
+mouth of the inlet, crying, begging to be fed.
+
+Terns are intensely active and brilliant in performance. They are
+comparatively small birds, but they are capable of migrating over
+thousands of miles of ocean waters, and their long, angled wings beat
+deep, low, and strong. They are all black and white sharpness, flashing
+as bright as the gold circlets of water around sharp grasses at the
+mouth of the inlet. They swing. They dart. They winnow the air. Their
+lovely white shuttlecock tails spread out and settle as they turn
+against the wind, crying: “Kierr! Kierr!”
+
+Two juveniles wait on a shoal, constantly calling in a high-pitched
+tremolo, intensified when a parent bird flies over them. The trim
+expert adult flies past, then swings back down the shore and circles
+back, finally coming in to land between them. It has no food in its
+bill, but stands there for a minute or so, and then begins to move away
+from them, as they crouch and strut after it in an almost elderly way,
+crying their protests. It signals departure with a slight lift of its
+wings and in a few seconds flies up, the thwarted young ones taking off
+behind it.
+
+In this behavior I see the play of learning, the many repetitions that
+precede a balanced natural art. Other adults swing in with sand eels or
+fish in their bills and hover, or circle back, avoiding rivals, then
+drop down next to a twittering, beak-gaping child, giving it the whole
+fish, or holding on to it and flying away, which has the effect of
+teasing the young one to follow after. In this way the fledgling terns,
+some still crouching down in a submissive manner as they did in their
+nests, learn to fly up, to chase, dive, and dodge, to breast the air,
+and beat their wings for all the long voyages their lives may hold.
+
+In a few weeks most of them will suddenly flock away and migrate. In
+the meantime they practice the instinctive measures of growth, training
+in the insistent, excitable ways of a tern, for air and open waters
+over half the earth.
+
+
+
+
+ _September_
+
+
+ _Youth on the Move_
+
+The tourists and the summer residents begin to leave the Cape. This is
+a visible exodus, with many more cars going out than coming in. The
+people in charge of commerce count our summer gains and our losses.
+Those of us who are year-round residents can admit it in public, now
+that the representatives of the humming, spreading urban world have
+departed. Here now is a half-populated place, temporarily, perhaps
+shamefully, consigned to a dull future. And yet, according to the
+practice I have begun to learn by years of residence, I can now look
+around, with room to spare. What fills this emptiness? What will I see
+when I take off my dark glasses?
+
+I notice, by the way, that some of us are now predicting the local
+future with more assurance. I hear a real Cape Codder (meaning someone
+born here, preferably before 1900) pronouncing that there will be a
+frost around the sixteenth, and that “We’ll have a blow pretty soon.”
+
+The night heaves with heat. A half-clouded, half-misted sky shows
+occasional stars. Then an onshore wind begins to blow and the land
+stirs and frets in the darkness. I feel that new revolutions are in
+order, earth-honored, momentous changes.
+
+In the morning the weather vane stands to the north. The sea is kicked
+up, the trees are swaying, and the temperature has dropped into the
+fifties. A new wind is getting in its licks, rolling and lunging
+against us. The air above the sea meets the great air masses from the
+land. Warm and cold, water and air, west and south, north and east,
+join in a game of strength. The whole day is a trial for the future,
+with the running clouds as its pawns. A child asks her father: “Can the
+day blow away?”
+
+When the wind dies down and the clouds clear off, the air has changed
+from a hazy warmth to clarity. The sea turns dark blue, groined with
+white caps. The land seems strict and clean, lifted into pure new skies
+and a new silence, although at night the musical pulsing of the snowy
+tree crickets is still as shrill and loud as spring peepers.
+
+This is a marginal season like the spring. It is full of new
+appearances, as well as late fruitions. The goldenrod, strong flower
+of the sun, still plumes its store of light, and represents me well in
+my country, in spite of congressional inclination to award some puffy,
+manufactured rose with the title of national flower.
+
+Asters, lilac and white, grow abundantly in the sandy soil. Their
+little pin wheel flowers are as crisp and clean as the new dresses of
+the girls when they go off for the first day of school. The novelty,
+after the closed-in summer tempo, is an outwardness. There are many
+immature birds that appear suddenly in various untried places, and not
+necessarily because of the demands of a set migration. Because of these
+fledglings the various bird populations have so increased that they are
+pushed into looking for food beyond their nesting areas.
+
+Immature hermit thrushes appear as if at random, and many robins
+and towhees. The towhee, once called red-eyed, a name that seems to
+have been changed to rufous-sided, is a handsome black, white, and
+terra-cotta bird which likes scrubby areas, thickets, and open woods.
+So we see it frequently. It has a black and white tail with which it
+puts on a spectacular performance, flicking and flashing its feathers
+like a gambler with a deck of cards; and it floats over the brush and
+across the ground with its tail spread wide behind it.
+
+Now the young towhees call “Twee! Twee!” not quite at adult strength
+and clarity, but they are finding themselves. They are on the move.
+
+A covey of young quail suddenly starts across the road, coming out of
+a field still loud with insects. Heads and necks up, they run almost
+trippingly forward with sweet, piping alarm.
+
+A young red-tailed hawk is brought into school by a boy whose father
+found it trapped in his chicken yard and killed it ignominiously
+with a baseball bat. Red tails are big beauties with a thick supply
+of feathers. Their backs are brown, their white bellies flecked with
+brown. The usual place to find them is high up, wheeling around the sky
+on a watch for rodents; and occasionally they fly out of pitch pine
+woods where they roost. The dead one has lost its piercing cry and the
+electric glare in its eyes, but its talons still look formidable. They
+are black, and as sharp-tipped, as wildly curved, as hooks of steel,
+joined in power and flexibility.
+
+Bright days warm the surface of the inland ponds that have their outlet
+in the waters of our local brook and estuary leading through marshes to
+Cape Cod Bay. The sun’s radiance hurries up the alewife fry in their
+ancient impulse to go down to salt water, from which they will return
+in three or four years’ time to spawn like their elders, usually in the
+same fresh-water system where they were hatched. These little silver
+fish, with an unfathomed stare in their big eyes, run out on an ebb
+tide from Paine’s Creek. They attract gulls and terns, which hover in
+crowds against the west wind.
+
+The plumage of the young terns still in the area now shows a more
+definite contrast between black and white. They have become more adept
+at flight. Many are still being fed ... almost continuously during
+those hours of shallow water when fish are easier to catch, so that the
+passivity of those still waiting on the sands looks like a consequence
+of being overstuffed. I get the impression that less food is being
+proffered by the parent birds, but they have certainly not relinquished
+their responsibility. They bring in small fish and their large children
+gulp them down and wait for more. Other young birds are now flying
+readily--chasing after their parents, beseeching attention, but more
+often trying to fish for themselves. Little by little, by rewards and
+refusal, failure and success, they are progressing toward the perfected
+action of mature birds. They are becoming more aggressive, fighting
+for space over a crowded channel, or protecting their catch. The
+adults, whose success in fishing they are beginning to approximate,
+hover over the water, beaks pointing down, then dive suddenly, wings
+partly folded back. They hit the water like small stones, then come up
+again, flying away fast if they have a fish in their bills, chased by
+other birds that cry “Karr! Karr!” with a slightly growling note. It
+is not so much that the young terns are taught, in our sense of the
+word, as that they become more and more a part of the communicable
+rhythm of the whole race of terns. Their circling, diving, hovering, or
+racing downwind are common proficiencies of motion, that fit the great
+environment of air and sea. Growing up is rhythmic practice. There is
+not such a gap between tutelage and its recipients as there might seem
+to be among human beings.
+
+Terns seem involved in a ritualistic performance throughout their
+lives. Much of the behavior they show in getting food as nestlings and
+fledgling birds has its parallels in adulthood. There is the “fish
+flight,” for example, which has its origins in the begging, receiving,
+and then hunting food of a growing bird. (A fish is a master image, a
+center of recognition and attachment, with all the formality of action
+it entails.)
+
+The fish flight is a term which in its strict sense is applied to the
+behavior of birds during pre-courtship. It involves emotional display
+between pairs of birds, as distinct from their food-getting habits in
+general. In detail it includes differences in calls, in the relative
+positions of birds during flight, and in the way they carry a fish. A
+fish in the bill not only represents the fulfillment of need. It may
+also be an offering, a display, and perhaps the instrument for a mutual
+awareness between male and female, even before sex recognition occurs.
+But if the fish flight can be tied down to behavior at a particular
+stage in their lives, the terns also show similar reactions before and
+after it. Mated birds go on offering fish as they fly by one another,
+or begging, so that feeding is used to maintain a bond between them.
+And of course the fish is the basis of all the instinctive training
+of the young. The process of begging and receiving, or offering for
+the uses of recognition, continues on in many forms through their life
+stages. They pursue a formality. Their flights show the grace in action
+of a whole society.
+
+At half tide, when the water recedes over the sand flats, the terns
+flock there, preening and bathing in the tidal pools. Occasionally one
+will lift its wings up beautifully into the wind, receiving the wash
+of air. Some fly back to the inlet and drink the brackish water. The
+community seems to gather more and more closely together as time goes
+on. They all begin to roost densely in one area. At times they take to
+the air, as if alarmed. They rise and circle, crowds of white, crying
+shrilly, and then fly down again. Or they spin like a larger flock of
+sandpipers, a white cloud dancing with dizzy perfection over some fish
+weirs in the distance. Perhaps it could be called communal practice
+for the next journey. In their rhythms they are self-sustained,
+self-protective, like schools of fish, but at the same time bound out,
+under the laws of the wild air. One day soon I will go down to watch
+again, finding that most of them have flown away.
+
+
+ _An Open Shore_
+
+We stay where we are, while the young migrant birds and the men of the
+city leave us. But the days sharpen and change. The nights grow longer
+and cooler. The westerly winds increase. There is a brilliance in the
+air, and the sea makes a clean statement to our senses. “Adjust your
+vision,” the sky seems to say, “to a turn in height and depth and in a
+new area of relentless winds.”
+
+Those migratory birds that are still with us feed actively, fly with
+restless energy, and collect in flocks. In many undisturbed areas,
+down by the barrier beaches and through the salt marshes, treeless,
+open to the sun, you can see a great number using their special
+physical advantages to feed or fly, hide or attack, in the patterns of
+environment.
+
+The U. S. Wildlife Refuge at Monomoy is on a long spit of barrier
+beach and marsh extending south from the town of Chatham ten miles
+into Nantucket Sound. It is wild, unadorned with tourist cabins, and
+so an undisturbed refuge and resting place for migratory birds. At
+first you find warblers, gnat-catchers, orioles, vireos, and other
+land birds, working silently through low oaks, pines, and stunted,
+salt-sprayed shrubbery. Then the marshland sweeps ahead with open
+ground, and curving inlets behind a long beach where the surf pounds
+endlessly, the sands inlaid with the debris of the sea--whelks, surf
+clams, or scallops. Back in the marsh where mud snails stream slowly
+ahead in a long procession, the shore birds race in, or turn quickly in
+a shimmering flock, or settle among the hummocks, and along sandy rims.
+
+Dowitchers stolidly probe the mud with their long bills. That mottled,
+distinctive bird, the ruddy turnstone, pushes, or turns over, pebbles
+and stones--thus proving its name--as it searches for the worms and
+crustaceans underneath. Shy piping plovers, white as oyster shells,
+stand by themselves behind a dune. Sanderlings hurry back and forth
+with little twinkling legs. The yellowlegs fly up and over with short,
+piercing cries, their wings curved like sickles. Or a solitary marbled
+godwit flies by, handsomely patterned on its wings with black and
+white. Least sandpipers, tiny animals with greenish legs, hurry and
+flit along, feeding at the edge of the tide pools and the rim of inlets.
+
+The terns--common, roseate, least--fly at a point where the tide comes
+in through an opening in the beach. Sharp-cut divers, they swoop low,
+dipping into the water again and again. A few ring-billed gulls move
+among the shore birds. They are a little like a small herring gull, but
+their heads are more rounded, like pigeons. They have a lighter flight,
+and a softer look than their raucous, flat-headed relatives. And over
+the ridge of the beach, against up-dune horizons, is a long belt of
+great black-backed gulls, large, proud, and with a look of supreme
+idleness and cruelty.
+
+Here is “function” in all variety, each life to its place, filling a
+niche, with the special form and manner by which it feeds and tries to
+survive. And every bird is a bird of the sun, adapted to this treeless,
+narrow shore that blazes with cutting light, the light of sand, or
+rock turned to sand, of water, roaring and moaning in the sea, rushing
+back through a tidal cut on the ebb, then trickling, evaporating,
+and swelling in again at the flood. Each animal works an open coast,
+across its burning days. The fliers with wings so sharp, energies of
+light, fit the high or low wants of the wind, the curves and sweeps of
+the open marsh, the glaring sands. And they hurry on stilts, or tiny
+short legs. They bob up and down. They run trippingly along--all to
+the rhythm of the watered, indefinite shore, looking for food that is
+rhythmic in myriad ways. Here is a great tribe of searchers.
+
+The human race, as it climbs laughingly into motor boats and roars
+down an inlet, or sits soberly baiting fish hooks in a row boat, or
+basks in the sun, is no less brought in, fitted to this region--for
+all our autonomous great world of threats and shelters. There is some
+compelling call, that springs its lives ahead, and will not be talked
+away. Even the large, extraneous footmarks of seventy male and female
+“birders”--a very special tribe--are evidence of an omnivorousness, a
+searching, communicating, flocking together, from which no animals are
+entirely exempt.
+
+
+ _Chipmunks_
+
+As some of the inhabitants of sea and shore move on to the south,
+inland life adjusts itself to local climate. The leaves on the trees
+are still green, but the bracken, or dry land fern, has turned
+brown, one of the early signs of autumn. My surroundings are full of
+statements of this kind, an end result of preparation. I notice one of
+them. I stop--pleased to be told--and then I wonder what was silently
+going on in August to have placed us with such definition in September.
+Plants and animals move into a new light, a new scene, when I am
+merely groping with their names. Perhaps because I have read too many
+newspapers, I am limited to what we call events. I see some outward
+evidence, and am obliged to go backward in order to reconstruct what
+might have been, when the real show is already over.
+
+So all September’s reassociations and revolutions may just end up
+for me as a clump of locust leaves tugged loose by the wind, or the
+sudden opening in a milkweed pod, or a new chill in the air. One
+day I notice that a milkweed pod--on the same plant where I saw the
+butterflies--erect like a lamp on its bent stem, has developed a
+dimpled line down the middle. The next day it has cracked apart, and
+there in the sheath are the compact seeds, overlapping like fish
+scales, making a kind of cone with a tail of soft silk made up of
+myriads of threads. They are moist at first, in their womb, then
+they dry out and each seed parachutes away, the silky rays darting,
+swirling, racing high, subject to every turn and twist of air. There
+will be new populations, out of old circumstances. What happened
+to the milkweed before this culmination? How many hairstreak and
+monarch butterflies paid it a visit? How did it change with change in
+temperature and moisture and length of days? Where did it come from
+originally? Next year, if I have not been sent ahead myself, I will
+stand watch over the plant so as not to miss what might be the greatest
+show on earth.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+We depend on all too occasional visits to understand other modes and
+rhythms of existence with any depth, although there are times when a
+chance sight goes deep enough to last. This season of the year the
+chipmunks are very active, foraging for grains and nuts to store in
+their hibernation chambers underground. Cats, of which there are far
+too many loose on the Cape, kill so many chipmunks that it is sometimes
+hard to see how the population keeps up. (For one thing, these little
+“ground squirrels” only seem to have one brood a year.) Cats bring
+them home almost daily, teased into a terrible dance, spinning around
+like weary boxers on a revolving stage. A chipmunk’s alert curiosity,
+or habit of freezing into attention, may well be its most vulnerable
+point. Cats will get them when they are out in the open filling their
+cheeks with food. They will also come out of the shelter of a hole, or
+stone wall, to investigate the source of some unusual noise or light
+tapping, or a whistle, or just stay fixed when a man approaches, in a
+kind of actively questioning mood.
+
+I hear a scattered dashing in the leaves, and there it is--a striped,
+bright-looking little animal, tail twitching, arrested in motion,
+quivering and throbbing, its throat pulsing at a furious rate. We watch
+each other for three or four minutes. I too have my share of curiosity.
+Gradually its quick pulsing dies down. It turns its head slightly away,
+with those moist, black, intent little eyes. With a quick flip it is
+around a tree, then drops down to run along the leaves again and jump
+behind a boulder.
+
+It was in no mortal danger that time, but our two lives were brought
+together into relationship by another danger--the dark universe of
+chance. I felt it as almost a kind of love between strangers, in which
+my mental being was in no way divorced from what might lie behind a
+chipmunk’s eye.
+
+I remember another chipmunk, in Vermont this time, whose chosen ground
+was a hillside pasture. I came on the animal when it was carrying
+part of an apple up a slope toward its hole, located in the side of
+a ridge some twenty feet above an old apple tree. When it saw me it
+dropped the apple, which promptly rolled downhill. Then it watched me
+with that silent waiting on chance, that throbbing look of expectation
+which they have, one paw twitching slightly and clutched to its chest.
+I was quiet, and at a respectable distance, so the chipmunk picked up
+its food again and hurried back to the hole; but the apple was too big
+to go in, and it rolled back downhill. This happened four times. The
+apple rolled down. The chipmunk hauled it back up, turned it around,
+put it up against the hole, a little like a man facing the problem of
+moving a large bed through a narrow door. Finally it nibbled bits off
+the edge, slipped sideways into the hole, and pulled the apple in after
+it. I stole up as quietly as I could and saw that it was eating away
+successfully with its food overhead. A problem had been solved, and
+with a fair amount of intelligence.
+
+The illumination we find in nature does not necessarily come from
+comparing degrees of intelligence, in which man always finds himself
+the winner. The light goes deeper. Our analytical ways, our methods of
+order, imitate an order which is indefinitely resourceful. Sometimes
+it shows itself past explanation. It is like this September evening
+after rain. For a short time, ten minutes perhaps, not long before
+dark, the earth is colored with magic, shadowless light. The grass is
+intensely green. The sky turns gray and pink. Distant fields are red
+and astonishingly bright. All colors are sure and strong, joining in
+pure gradations. The evening is full of mystic peace. A kitten watches
+the light, transfixed in the doorway (together, for all I know, with
+some chipmunk by the stone wall outside), arrested by what I in my own
+silence can only think of as an unmatchable glory, never to return in
+quite the same measure.
+
+
+
+
+ _October_
+
+
+ _Where Is Home?_
+
+The ordered days wheel on and fall into patterns consistently new.
+On further acquaintance, the place I live in seems to extend its
+boundaries and add to its store of lives. I struggle to understand.
+The more I add to my list of things as time goes on, the less my crude
+interpretations fit the circumstances. I started here with a tract
+of land. I built a house. I have a family. I am not yet sure of my
+location. The kingfisher says one thing, and the frog another. The
+snake travels a few thousand feet of home area, and the tern thousands
+of miles. They are both on Cape Cod. Then one leaves another. All
+action blows hot and cold with endless variations. A little knowledge
+makes my center rock with uncertainty.
+
+I am not even a native in the strict sense, and cannot be said to
+know my way around by feel, as a man might who was born here. I had
+a talk the other day with a time-honored Cape Codder on the subject
+of how fish or birds found their way. He was not able to give me any
+illumination on the scientific aspects of the subject, but when it came
+to human beings, he did give me some tips on how to avoid getting lost.
+I had confessed that I once set off in a rowboat and was lost in an
+offshore fog for the better part of a morning, rowing steadily in the
+wrong direction.
+
+The next time that happened to me, he suggested, I should drop anchor
+and wait for the fog to lift. In that dense shroud it is also possible,
+if you happen to be wading in shallow water, to lose sight of your boat
+when it is only a few yards away. Under such circumstances he once used
+his fishing line to help him get back to the boat by using the lead
+sinker as the center of a compass, playing out the line and circling
+until he reached it.
+
+The sea can be a trackless wilderness only a few yards offshore.
+Natives have been lost in it as well as newcomers. Still, there is no
+substitute for acquaintance, for knowing the sea’s look and its ways.
+This man claimed he could feel his way in the fog. In other words,
+taking in all factors, familiar or deducible, such as the way the tide
+is running, whether it is ebbing or rising, how the wind goes, and
+from what quarter, or even guessing direction by the ridges on a sand
+bar, he could take the right course, without, as he put it “letting my
+judgment interfere.”
+
+It took me a while just to learn the local compass directions, but
+now that I have my north, south, east, and west inside me, I am not
+sure, even walking through the trees, that I will not bump into my old
+ignorance. It takes time to find your way. A man new to the countryside
+might well be envious of some of the older inhabitants that know where
+they are without trying--a turtle, for example. A box turtle’s slow
+motion over the year seems like a true measure of ancientness. While
+the birds, the fish, the men depart, this dry land reptile seems to
+feel responsible for holding back, for the weight of the earth itself.
+In the springtime I have seen a slow pair approaching each other in
+a mood of affinity, while the rest of the procreative world danced
+overhead, and I have seen a female laying her eggs in a sand bank,
+covering them over with a last shove of her hind legs, then moving
+away, a little more quickly than usual, it seemed to me, as if to
+return to the more agreeable task of waiting things out. When fall
+comes and their cold blood slows, they grow torpid and finally dig out
+of sight into the ground.
+
+On one of these warm days in early October I hear a slow dragging in
+the leaves, and come upon a box turtle eating a mushroom. They have
+beautifully patterned shells, ocher or yellow, sometimes orange, and
+dusty black, almost batik in design, with many variations. I stand
+about eight feet away, while it holds its head and neck straight up,
+watching me. I guess it to be a male, by the bright red little eyes.
+The eyes of a female are a darker reddish brown.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+His wrinkled red neck pulses a little. His yellow beak and curved mouth
+line are tight shut under his flat-topped head, with bits of mushroom
+sticking out on either side. Very comical, he looks; but he stares down
+any inclination in me to laugh out loud. He watches me without moving
+for a full fifteen minutes before I get tired of the experiment and go
+away. Nothing, he seems to realize, can outlast a box turtle. This old
+male, with his wrinkled red jowls, and his soft, puddled-looking feet,
+must represent some antediluvian complacency, or, for all I know, a
+reasonable pride.
+
+In captivity box turtles have exceeded forty years before they died,
+and some grow to be much older than that, if they avoid being crushed
+on the highways or killed by forest fires, since they are otherwise
+invulnerable to most predators, excepting man. This year a box turtle
+was found locally by a man whose deceased relative had carved his
+initials on its shell in 1889, making the turtle seventy-one years old.
+How old the turtle was when so tagged is not known.
+
+They are wanderers--more so, for example, than the water turtles, and
+with a certain assurance. Within their chosen environment, of open
+field, shrubby slope, or marsh periphery, they cover a great deal of
+ground. They seem to carry a staying power with them, and an ancient
+decorum. They are like old natives true to ancestral places. There is
+something enviable about this fittingness to home.
+
+Still, I have enough modern restlessness or rootlessness in me to
+think that a home or piece of land probably has fewer boundaries than
+ever before. We are going to have to know our location “way out,” as
+some of the old Cape Codders used to say. I have an equal envy of the
+terns that are flying toward the Caribbean or the Antarctic. They are
+birds of the world, in which they know their direction by markers
+that are light-years away, or so some scientists believe after much
+investigation. The latest theory is that migrating birds find their
+way by the sun’s changing position during daylight hours and by some
+of the constellations at night. They have a built-in mastery of what
+it took many thousands of years for man to learn, with his surpassing
+intellect. They are readers of the stars. Their home is in the wide
+blind sky.
+
+
+ _The Field of Learning_
+
+We are committed far from home, but for a field of learning, the start
+and the finish is still here, still in place, just as that unique
+season of October, presaging a death in the glory of its color and
+clouds, brings the first frost, as if to say: “Regard necessity, in all
+its aspects. Look no further.”
+
+It never comes without warning. One night a thrashing, thicket-tearing
+wind arrives with much greater cold. Two nights later another wind
+blasts all warmth away, and when it dies down the frost settles in,
+leaving a crisp whiteness on the grass at dawn, and clouds of white
+vapor over the pond waters. The garden beans go limp and the wild
+indigo turns black.
+
+In that wind the low trees are like a sea, pluming and foaming. They
+are tossed and rocked, they pitch and writhe, while the stars in
+ordered majesty stream overhead. When the temperature starts to go
+down there is not a sound from the insect musicians any more, not one
+pizzicato, nor audible dry pulsing in the trees. You might think all
+breeding was over, though generation is latent everywhere.
+
+Then it grows warm again. The insects sound in the grass and in the
+trees, if to a diminished extent. Crows gather in the early morning,
+and their various calls, synchronized in the open air, over the
+treetops, sound highly melodious. I hear a robin caroling, but very
+quietly, almost out of a playfulness, a musing. In spite of inexorable
+change, there are false dawns, days, or hours of deceptive warmth that
+set the long-horned grasshoppers to their buzzing and clicking and the
+flickers to shouting with renewed energy. All through the woods tiny
+tree frogs pipe at intervals from the cover of damp leaves. The pools
+in the fishway at the Brewster Herring Run are loaded with warm October
+sunlight and three-to four-inch alewives going down to salt water. A
+kingfisher planes up from branches above the stream with a rattling cry.
+
+The pattern is one of reduction, depopulation, cutting down to size,
+but like all other shifts in a season, this one is manifested as
+another angle of light, a different feel to the air, a new set of
+circumstances, as much as a stop to all activity. When the fall winds
+swish and swoop along the shore, and I walk the tidal flats, a wide
+space played upon by light--gold, brown, and blue reflections running
+through pools and across long ribs of sand--I am regenerated by all the
+choices that are still ahead of me. Nothing is fixed or finished. It
+seems to me that everything I encounter is driven by indirection, like
+the waves and rivulets, sun tangled, that are crossing each other and
+separating over sand bars during an oncoming tide. Here is the ordered
+complexity which ensures that our findings, or rather, our search, will
+never have an end.
+
+The finding-out process begins in childhood. That is why teaching is
+so great a profession. We intellectual animals have a long period in
+which to learn our wings. The teacher’s role is to bring us toward our
+highest capacity, and the tortures of that are immeasurable, on both
+sides. The field of learning is as wide as the sand flats, and the
+results as hard to catch as the waves; but a teacher has help from his
+pupils in ways over which they themselves have little control. Children
+have new fingers and new eyes and have to be coaxed into using them,
+but the touch and sight they bring cannot be taught in the schools.
+
+I have found out lately, after some attempts at teaching natural
+history, that nature springs in a child and a child in nature. You
+learn that you are teaching both.
+
+Why is one so proud of ignorance, and another of hiding what he knows?
+Some make a violent effort to be noticed; others, to retreat from view.
+You have an ambivalent and groping world to deal with, as hard to tape
+or tie as some of the phenomena you lead it to. But life is present
+tense to them, neither past nor future. They seem to pick up its
+manifestations not with adult skill but on the fly, like a boy casually
+catching a ball after missing ten, and then being surprised at himself.
+How did it happen? Memories, complexities, prejudices, risks taken on
+behalf of the future are largely unknown to them. It is enough to be
+new. There is not even any choice, since all choices are open, being
+new. Children are the unpredicting and the unpredictable. The one thing
+in which they never fail is growth, like the natural environment which
+never fails in its variations on the theme of fertility.
+
+One mild afternoon two of us take out a group of boys on a field trip
+along the shore, a beginners collecting expedition. The class runs
+ahead. They find a dead loon on the beach, with rove beetles, lovers of
+carrion, roaming through its body. These beetles have black and white
+stripes, suggesting a skunk to one boy, who is still young enough to
+admit all affinities.
+
+They run on, with erratic energy. They lend a puzzled ear to our
+explanations of how life forms are related to the places in which
+we find them. They are not quite certain of our terms. What is
+“environment?” What, for that matter, is “life?”
+
+Classifications come hard to them at first. Certain types of
+recognition take a long time to learn. When I think that at the age of
+thirty I didn’t know the difference between one gull and another, not
+to speak of their different calls, I am hardly surprised.
+
+“What’s this?”: a dune-dwelling locust, an ichneumon fly; a slipper
+shell, a shred of kelp, a spider, a scallop shell ... all parts of a
+game, novelties. But when will we know how to fit them all together?
+An impatient teacher might think from these boys, with their degrees
+of inattention, that the game will never get under way, that the
+preparation will never end. Yet their own lesson is that readiness is
+all, and the outcome immaterial.
+
+I am only half acquainted with them, although some of their native
+traits stand out plain to see. In one there is a shade of melancholy
+transplanted from his father, in another courtesy and gaiety. One is
+rough and full of the fever of unregulated competition. Another is
+quiet and slow, or quick and sensitive. Together they share a mystery.
+They are in active flight like young birds, and at this point, this
+moment of being, allowed its own growth without real harm or hindrance,
+they give an offering. It is the act of their unknown selves.
+
+They catch some more insects with their nets. They find the bright
+yellow feathers of a flicker which had been caught and eaten by fox or
+owl in the beach grass. They identify the remains of a young herring
+gull washed onto the upper beach. The tide has ebbed and the sands
+stretch off with glittering lanes and rivulets--gulls stalking in the
+distance, or resting in white flotillas on the water--and blue salt
+water curves beyond, over the earth’s perimeter. The October shadows
+begin to stretch farther down the sands. Light, smoky clouds drift
+over and a strange little shower of rain comes down, running along
+the beach, disturbing no one. Then the sun comes clear again, moving
+westward. Everything we collect, all that we can say about it, is
+only a start, a suggestion, although each sample leads to all others.
+We have left a great deal behind. If the north wind roars in again
+tomorrow, sweeping all warmth away, killing more of life’s visible
+evidence, or making it cower in the earth, and causing colds and
+crabbedness in human society, we will still be setting out.
+
+
+ _Colors of the Season_
+
+There is yellow and peach pink on the leaves of the red maples, and
+some of the oaks begin to show signs of changing, but the most colorful
+plants are the mushrooms. The wet weather has been providential for
+them, and they have come up in some areas where I cannot remember
+having seen them before. They thrust mysteriously but stubbornly
+through the grass in a wide semicircle of white moons. They parade up
+the side of trees, and across the wood floor their cups or parasols
+stand comfortably grounded in dead leaves or decaying wood. (We see
+only the flower of the mushroom protruding above the ground, while
+underneath lies the complex mat of fine fibers from which they blossom,
+the mycelium.)
+
+For such pulpy, soft, almost immaterial-looking plants, mushrooms show
+a strange power to lift, which is caused, in reality, by hydraulic
+pressure within them, amounting to as much as six or eight pounds
+per square inch. They come up through an inch or two of concrete, or
+through the asphalt surface of a road. They move the heavy bark of old
+logs aside. One of them puts up a scaly dome under the edge of a pump
+house eave that almost touches the ground, as if it intended to lift
+the roof off.
+
+When we think of fungi, we have a justifiable association with rot
+and decay, mildew and mold. They lack chlorophyll, that famous green
+substance by which other plants are able to absorb the energy of the
+sunlight and through it convert carbon dioxide and water into food.
+The mushrooms, like other fungi, get their food directly from organic
+matter, rich soil, rotting wood, or leaf mold. They reproduce by
+billions of tiny spores, each of which, or rather, the comparatively
+few that catch, are started in such a matrix. In a sense they are
+procreative flowers of the darkness, annuals which the earth puts forth
+in its own teeming right, regardless of the gay slaves of the sunlight.
+But they are colorful. They wear the earth’s sulfurs, umbers, and
+ochers, its iron rusts, light greens, grays, and whites, as well as
+some startling rose-reds and vermilions.
+
+I find a small one in the wet leaves which is a lavender-blue, named,
+according to my reference book, the violet cortinarius, and good to
+eat--surprisingly enough. Color is no criterion of what is poisonous.
+The deadly amanita does not have the flickering blue-green color of
+something low and ominous, nor is it a dangerous red, a signal for all
+but the most reckless to keep off. Some of the reddest mushrooms, in
+point of fact, are the best to eat. But the deadly amanita is almost
+tempting in appearance. It is white and succulent-looking, and to eat
+enough of it means death.
+
+A strange thing, the mushroom, of short annual appearances (though the
+roots, or mycelium, are perennial), of quick growth and quick decay.
+Some of them are already turned into rotten dark brown, nearly liquid
+heaps. Others will gradually dry up and disappear, but now, on this
+tag end of a moist season, they are the local bounty. They have curled
+edges like cabbage or dead oak leaves. They take the form of single
+stems and fronds like seaweed. They are fringed, scalloped, round or
+flat, thin or fat. They bunch together at the base of an old stump, or
+they climb the side of a tree in shelves. Their heads take the form of
+lima beans, or floppy rabbit ears, fans, umbrellas, trumpets, shaggy
+hats, or cottage roofs. They are scaly, rough, smooth, or silky. They
+have thin stems and dainty heads like flowers; or both head and stem
+look like one great overgrown protuberance. Here and there, coming
+through the leaf litter, are yellow bunches of coral mushrooms, so
+called because they have the look of branched coral; and in the deep
+shade they seem almost luminous. In fact, whether or not any mushrooms
+do have a luminosity, like some fungi, they have a glimmer of decay
+about them in our imagination. They are of the earth unearthly, in
+spite of the fact that many of them provide substantial beds for insect
+larvae, that they are good, if sometimes treacherous food, and that
+they can raise the top off a road.
+
+This year has also been rich in Indian pipes. This is that unreal,
+pure-white plant, which, in more mythical times, has been called the
+corpse plant, or ghost flower. It blooms by itself, though out of the
+moist woodland humus like the mushrooms, lacking chlorophyll as they
+do. There is some dispute apparently, consistent with the Indian pipe’s
+ghostly nature, about what it really is. Some books refer to it as a
+“saprophyte,” which means a plant that absorbs its nutrition from dead
+or decaying organic matter, but in others it is called a “parasite.” A
+parasite gets its nourishment from a living host. The Indian pipe has a
+very small mat of rootlets where the thick stems join together at the
+base of the plant. If you dig it out of the ground it looks as if it
+were resting on bare knuckles. These roots, according to the botanists,
+have an outer layer of funguslike tissue, which means that the fungus
+rather than the roots has actual contact with the soil. So it sounds
+as though the Indian pipe, being dependent for its food on the fungus
+and not the soil or humus, were a parasite. Another alternative, if
+the fungus gets any nourishment from the plant, is that they live in a
+state of mutual association, or symbiosis. Thus science, still trying
+for exactitude, and the Indian pipe, still unaccountable. It seems to
+be on the verge of several worlds rather than an integral part of one,
+a plant you might meet in a dream.
+
+Other old and once popular names for it are: Dutchman’s-pipe; fairy
+smoke; convulsion weed; eyebright; bird’s nest; and American ice
+plant. It was called ice plant, according to Alice O. Albertson in her
+_Nantucket Wild Flowers_ (1921), because “it resembles frozen jelly
+and is juicy and tender and dissolves in the hands like ice.” One
+contemporary authority calls it “clammy,” which is accurate enough,
+and keeps it in the realm of ghosts and chills, but I think it was an
+exaggeration to say that it dissolves in the hands. I find it solid
+enough, not fragile or perishable to the touch. Its stems have a
+fibrous, tough core, which is sometimes hard to tear. It also has a
+pungent, woody smell, though this probably comes from the soil it grows
+in.
+
+All the same, it is an elusive, beautiful flower, a miraculous
+specialty. Coral pink shines almost translucently through the stems,
+which are covered with tiny white bracts, or scales, taking the place
+of leaves--scales of a tiny albino fish perhaps--and the bell-like
+flowers hang their stiff white heads straight down, with pink seed pods
+standing up between them, round, decoratively grooved little crowns.
+When the plant dies, it stands for months as a thin, brownish black
+string, having turned from beautiful ghost to lifeless reality.
+
+Over the mushrooms and Indian pipes, in subtle relationship to them,
+the leaves are losing their green chlorophyll and revealing the other,
+more stable pigments that last out long enough to make the familiar
+glory of the autumn. There is not so much a general “dying” in the
+fall, as an adjustment. Insect eggs are in the bark or ground, the
+mushroom spores are being carried through the air, the grasses are
+heavy with seed, acorns drop to the ground. One day last October I was
+hit with a shower of acorns from the white oaks. This year, since oaks
+fruit heavily on different years, I notice more acorns from the black
+oaks. How fast these acorns get to work! A little curling, probing,
+adventurous sprout comes from the nut, and in a short time has grown
+several inches. A few manage to take hold before the ground is frozen.
+A multitude of others provide food for squirrels, chipmunks, or blue
+jays. The measure of these arrangements is complex and elaborate.
+Between the leaf of a tree and a mushroom, worlds apart in function,
+there are connections of rainfall, temperature, or sunlight, in a
+context continually new, and though the ground colors fade, sunsets,
+seas, and inland waters will take over their active play.
+
+That great bonfire of a maple tree--one special to my boyhood--that
+I used to marvel at in the New Hampshire fall, is here replaced by
+second-or third-growth oaks. I now live in a stunted land; but as it is
+the sea which surrounds it, so, in its long low stretches, its glacial
+hollows and running hills, it rides ahead like open billows. The early
+splashes of color come from the red of the sumac and the purple-reds of
+the huckleberries and blueberries. Then color begins to spread through
+the oaks, that war with yellow-green pitch pines for living space.
+Yellow or red streaks show in the leaves of the white oak, orange in
+the waxy leaves of the post oak, brilliant red in the scarlet oak. Then
+deep reds, maroons, cowhide yellows and browns pervade them, and our
+woodland surroundings seem full of a beautiful propriety, a beauty in
+necessity.
+
+Occasional copses of beech trees are shining with golden bronze; and
+tupelo, or black gum, trees, with scraggy, undulant branches, have
+little leaves that are a blazing, livid red. Over bare hillsides the
+“hog cranberry,” or bearberry, a perennial ground cover with shiny
+leaves, is hung with cherry-red fruit. The cultivated cranberry bogs
+show broad stretches of purple-red, shaped, depending on the area, in
+squares, circles, or oblongs, all, if well cared for, neatly ditched.
+The tidal inlets and marshes run with flaxen and gold, spotted at their
+edges with light festival red from the berries of black alder, a form
+of holly.
+
+These flaming revelations signal the trees’ reaction to the decrease
+in light’s intensity, or the colder temperature of the soil. The leaf
+decomposes. The tree withdraws and makes ready for a leaner season;
+but it is too big a display for mere “adjustment.” You will not find
+the category of color in a historical dictionary or the encyclopedia
+of social sciences, but in this temperate zone at least, it is now an
+integral part of the history of change, and of natural society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is a deep little hollow nearby called Berry’s Hole. Many years
+ago it contained a cranberry bog, and it is still wet bottom land with
+water around its edge, and a center choked with moisture-loving shrubs
+and reeds. Frogs take advantage of it, as well as water insects and
+their larvae. Wood peewees nest around it in the springtime. Now it
+is radiant with its special version of the fall. In the middle of
+October, sheep laurel is still green on the surrounding slopes, through
+the purple huckleberry bushes. I walk down them into a raining screen
+of leaves. Berry’s Hole is circled by red, also called swamp, maples,
+and their red and yellow leaves, light and delicate compared to those
+of the oak trees on dry slopes above them, slip down constantly through
+the bright air, drift, eddy, and finally touch the ground, or fill the
+brown water with loose-lying, sinking rafts of color.
+
+A green frog leaps into the water with a squeak. I notice a box turtle
+on the bank, with its head determinedly locked in this time. Its
+markings, on an almost black shell, are dashes of yellow, and a rich
+reddish orange that reminds me of a Blackburnian warbler.
+
+Response to color is response to energy, the radiance and the
+reflection of light. I close my eyes after looking across the sun and
+see red, the color of warmth and desire. Around the eye of Berry’s Hole
+is the red of blood and the yellow of the sun.
+
+
+ _The Last Day in October_
+
+The night, after a deceptively bright and soothing day, seems suddenly
+withdrawn. The wind has a hard feel to it, as if a northern authority
+had come to stay. Heavy rolls of cumulus clouds hang in the sky when
+morning breaks, and the Cape begins to look like my winter image of it,
+dank and cold, with inert, slate-colored seas investing its shores. The
+oak leaves have turned a darker, more lifeless red, or they are light
+brown. I notice that the leaves of the white oaks are among the first
+to die, beginning to curl up like stiff, ancient hands, with an ashy
+pallor on them. The scarlet oaks are the last to lose their color.
+
+As a result of their definite adjustment, insisting on certain rules
+of change before many of the rest of us are quite ready, the oak
+woods seem to have a dark, plenipotentiary look. The trees stand in
+self-saved, stiff company, although the animals that visit them are
+lively enough. I watch a gray squirrel burying acorns in loose dirt
+at the edge of the road. He has that continually twitching, starting
+and stopping, restless being of his rodent relatives the red squirrels
+and the chipmunks. He runs back and forth over the sandy earth burying
+the acorns, and then, as if unsatisfied with the places he put them,
+bringing them out again.
+
+The squirrel’s gray, fur-clad body flows with suppleness. The big gray
+tail is sudden too in its motion, stretching out behind, or up, with
+curled tip when the animal stops to sit. He quits his activity, and
+with a long bound and dive he is up a tree. Along with its slapdash
+motion, but provident method, the gray squirrel may also have a touch
+of foolhardiness in its nature, though even the most practiced make
+their slips. I have never seen it happen myself, but a friend tells me
+that he has seen gray squirrels miss their leap occasionally in high
+trees near his house and fall to their death.
+
+The leaf litter still fairly jumps with mice and shrews. A little blind
+shrew with dark gray pelt and pink nose slips out of a bank of leaves
+where I walk. It swerves with astonishing speed and squeaks angrily at
+me before it dives out of sight into the leaves. This, in contrast to
+other members of the mouse family, is a fighter.
+
+I go into a part of the oak wood which has been a little more protected
+... a hollow fenced in and fringed by strands of bull briar. It is an
+open space where deer have come in to paw the ground and settle down at
+night. Skunks have left little holes where they clawed into the leaf
+mold on their hunt for grubs. Towhees have scratched the leaves apart.
+Cottontails have stopped here, hopped, nibbled, and jumped away.
+
+This land is mine. The deed is recorded in my name. But I cannot claim
+to have put it to better use than the animals to whom it is public
+property. It belongs to the deer, the skunk, the rabbit, and the
+towhee, who eat, pass through, or take shelter there. With my approach,
+of course, the whole question of tenure is rudely solved, except for
+the countless stay-at-home organisms in the ground beneath me. The deer
+turns once with a large gaze, then bounds away with its white, electric
+brush of a tail flung up. “Boom!” a partridge thunders up, cuffing
+leaves and twigs with its wings, and hurtles off through the trees.
+A crow gives a warning call as it flies overhead. I am allowed the
+land if I want it, though not much trust is involved. But why should I
+expect comfort or acceptance, in this open realm of risk? Neither man
+nor deer was mother to the skunk. It knew its own. Chance meetings will
+do, for the love I find in them.
+
+On the calendar this is the last day of October, and it has some
+justice to the title. The lunar months mirror the general character of
+the year’s transitions. In spite of the fact that all single days are
+lost in the passage of light and we are left behind, this one seems
+full of an end and a turn to something else. The local life is making
+its last forays, before a time of dormancy, hibernation, or struggle
+to survive. A mourning cloak butterfly beats lightly by, with no other
+companions to be seen. I find some mud dauber wasps, flies, and a
+cicada killer, all hibernating in a pile of rotten logs. The woods
+are full of the intermittent beauty of the last oak leaves, red, with
+a deep tone in the gray day, and the sumacs still show their shining
+raspberry color on the surrounding slopes.
+
+The late afternoon is cold and quiet. I regret the shorter day and the
+need to leave the great air so soon. But underneath lowering clouds is
+a growing gap of swirling orange toward the west. As the light recedes
+around us, the sunset begins to show the power and surge of pattern
+in the sky. Coils and whips of gold at first--bold, bright, far away.
+Then spun gold behind dark barriers--the ribs of whales, giant minnows,
+plumes tinted with salmon, the curving timbers of ships, and all things
+rare and imaginary plunging through an oceanic fire. Also I see golden
+October going, in fields of last excitement. But what this and many
+other sunsets say is “Come on!” However you use your days and nights,
+in speed or muddled preoccupations, come. It will be too late soon for
+the feast that is now, whose fires are always carrying over to the
+other side of the world.
+
+
+
+
+ _November_
+
+
+ _The Seed in the Season_
+
+The glory goes, and there comes the first sudden plucking out of dead
+leaves. They scud and sail. They lift and fall to the ground, where
+they sometimes scuttle unexpectedly like mice.
+
+November rolls into view with cool, solemn, formal consistency. When
+it rains they say: “I’m glad it’s not that white stuff,” although Cape
+Cod is not noted for its snow. There is no deep and heavy frost as yet,
+no northeast gales driving wet flakes at our eyes. A number of Cape
+Codders migrate to Florida for the winter. Daylight diminishes. As the
+leaves drop off we begin to see more distinctly between the trees. I
+find two spotted turtles moving very slowly through the waters of a
+ditch at one side of an abandoned cranberry bog. In one open field
+there are a few red-legged grasshoppers, much less active than a few
+weeks before. An occasional cricket, grasshopper, or spider is spotted
+and animated by the rays of the sun when it bursts through drifting
+clouds. Here and there a violet aster or late goldenrod stands in bloom
+between innumerable plants that are fuzzy with seed. The milkweed still
+sends crowds of little silk parachutes shining on the wind.
+
+We are now in a genuine country state of which the urban power talks
+with both scorn and ignorant nostalgia. The summer no longer pounds at
+our temples. The fall color is gone. There is nothing to look at, and
+very little to hear except the wind, or a plane in the distance, a car
+on the highway. To a city lover it is silent and deadly dull.
+
+As to the nostalgia, I doubt that there is much stress any more on
+the virtue implicit in country living. Since all men now dwell in all
+places, they question virtue everywhere; but some still talk as though
+the country were a place for that intangible peace and moral order that
+they think is lacking in the world. The country, however, is in the
+grip of a power that has no moral values and is greater than morality.
+It is false and true. It is benign and it is terrible. It cures and it
+kills. And I do not suppose that whether or not the earth is made up of
+human cities can make much difference to it. I am waiting for a deeper
+tone than hope.
+
+There is no noise or compelling distraction in a field or stand of
+trees. Still, a forester suggested to me that if trees could make
+themselves heard, in their internal growth and adjustments, the roar
+would be deafening. The same thought has been applied to life in the
+ground, with its countless microorganisms, in a state of continual
+displacement and turmoil, growing and dying, consuming and being
+consumed. They too might roar. We have enough at hand and under our
+feet to make general tumult no surprise.
+
+The point about this countryside is not its isolation but its
+potentiality. It is in charge of origins. What is more dramatic than
+the production of seeds in plants and grasses over one small field?
+The seeds are in uncountable numbers, and each one is a miniature
+plant, an embryo, surrounded by food and a protective coating. It is an
+embodiment of force. It eats and breathes, and now goes into a period
+of dormancy like an animal, ready to germinate in the spring when
+conditions are favorable. Such facts are part of elementary biology,
+but they cover up the stir and momentum of the globe.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+These seeds, on grass and weeds now growing thinner, drier, more
+colorless, are not only rich in generation, on their own account, but
+they provide beyond themselves. The juncos, or snow birds, that come
+down from the north will survive on a seed diet throughout the winter,
+with the sparrows, and that sustaining food the mice, preyed upon by
+fox, weasel, or hawk. The simplest “food chain” suggests the links in
+many others. In fact there is no fundamental separation anywhere in
+this common world of life, despite the greatly various environments
+of water and land that we use to help us differentiate between the
+species. Winds blow through. Tides lap over. Each plant and animal is
+proof of general contact and association.
+
+The insignificant seed has energy and sustenance enough to perpetuate
+many worlds. It makes me look at mere grass with more interest than
+I did. I believe there are some fourteen hundred species of grasses
+in the United States, of which I know less than a dozen. There is one
+grass which grows in many areas of the Cape, through open slopes, pine
+woods, sandy, run-down fields, that I have heard called beard, or
+prairie grass. I have walked by it, on it, and through it for years
+without knowing its name, though its nameless, light-catching beauty
+often caught my attention. It turns out to be broom sedge (_Andropogon
+scoparius_), a plant that reaches from here and the Middle Atlantic
+States south to Texas and across the southeast to California. It is
+a poor soil, poor forage grass, appropriate to this nonagricultural
+region. Its stems rise from a bunch of curving, rustling leaf blades,
+and are covered with tiny florets that go to seed in the fall, little
+feathery tufts. As the autumn months progress it grows more colorful,
+deepening to tawny pink, with a touch of purple, before it takes on its
+straw-colored midwinter hue. The little silky feathery tufts shine in
+the sunlight like the slightest spits and sparkles on a pool, or tiny
+plumes of frost, intangibly gentle, sustaining their brightness as the
+winter comes on. The stems are two to three feet tall, and with their
+delicate adornments, they stand the year around, stirring, curving
+forward, nodding back, with the utmost refinement. So I praise what is
+for me a new discovery, though it has stood near me in its own praise
+for many years--a country eloquence.
+
+Almost all local preparations are done. The seed is sown and made
+ready. The time for persistence is coming, when those grasses we
+take so much for granted will hold our earth together. When the sun
+warms them, drying on slopes and through old fields, they smell sweet
+underfoot, a natural, uncut hay.
+
+
+ _The Clouds_
+
+The power of sending on is latent in the seed, but the weather itself
+is always openly manifest, and when the leaves fall, when the summer
+nests begin to show up in unexpected places, then it hits us even
+harder. The northeast winds are beginning to be something to hide from.
+The sky stares with a wider, colder eye.
+
+When it is cloudy I hear the dull drone of unseen planes far above
+me, and I think of a world at large that is teeming with meetings and
+negotiations, losing decisions, waiting on results. The immediate earth
+seems to shift, tack, and decide according to its clouds, that slant
+up the sky in fibrous strands, hang deep and low, or lift across the
+sunlight.
+
+The sun’s rays slant lower between the open aisles of the trees, and
+there is a keener, icier edge to the light. I walk out through a
+hollowed, dipping and waving landscape onto gray-green lichens, and
+dry, sweet-smelling grasses of an old field laced with briars, and
+the pale blue sky is on top of me with intoxicating height. The vapor
+trail of a jet plane cuts across the sky for miles, while slower clouds
+ease and change across the November blue, allowing lazy time for the
+imagination.
+
+But if to imagine is a dispensation from nature that allows us to
+take part in her intricate creativeness, then it is no idleness.
+Rationally, a cloud, whether cumulus, stratus, cirrus, nimbus, or a
+combination thereof, is what it is: a collection of drops of water,
+or ice particles, suspended in the air. Meteorology as a science must
+be one of the most intriguing, since its subjects never sit still. I
+would, if I could, make an analysis of the clouds that are typical
+of a season, the changes in pace that make themselves known overhead;
+though the old maritime men of Cape Cod could do a better job. They
+knew what they depended on, in the way of calm or storm, and predicted
+what they felt. Subjective interpretation is suspect these days, but
+it implies a common familiarity for which objective analysis offers no
+substitute. The sensate imagination, with its head in the clouds, finds
+interconnections past their specialty and name.
+
+Clouds, collecting moisture from the ponds, lakes, or ocean waters,
+have many of the shapes and patterns of the land, or head, if you like,
+that they come from. We can find faces in them, as well as in the dregs
+of a teacup; but they are the images of an invention that is more fluid
+than our own. Their texture may cause them to look like scratched,
+glacial rocks, or they are wooly and fibrous at the same time. They
+might suggest cocoons or the nest of fall webworms. They hang in
+snowy shoals or in striated banks. They ripple like the sands at low
+tide. They look like whitecaps on the sea. They move as slowly and
+inexorably as fields of ice, or in quick bursts ahead of the wind. They
+roll in mountainous abundance, or fan out like a river’s long fingers
+stretching out across a delta.
+
+Clouds suggest seaweed, grasses, wings. Occasionally they remind me of
+ferns, and of the fernlike patterns that the frost makes on a window,
+or they resemble some basic structure of a living thing. As plants
+and animals are united in fundamental physical laws and in their
+chemical composition, so clouds, for all their evanescence, cannot be
+separated from the world of life. Clouds are announcements of progress
+and decline. They show the sky’s adventures. There is more to them
+than my fancy. The light, the wind, the altitude, temperature, time
+of day or year commit them to a definite size, shape, and existence.
+They are images of substance, in a motion which casts everything into
+its weather, including that human sign on the sky, the jet’s trail,
+imposing an abstract scar ten miles across.
+
+
+ _The Inconstant Land_
+
+When the clouds cover the sky like gun smoke and the air feels cold
+and restricting, I am reminded that the character of Cape Cod has
+nothing to offer an uncertain world except uncertainty. Its trees are
+not of a size to hang on to, and its dunes shift like the waves. It is
+a land that men have ravaged with fire, not excluding the Indians who
+preceded us, and abused without compunction. It is said there used to
+be great stands of trees on the Cape, hardwoods, hemlocks and pine. The
+remnants of submerged Atlantic white cedar forests have been found as
+far as three miles out in Cape Cod Bay, and bog borings have revealed
+the evidence of timber in some areas where trees now have only a bare
+subsistence. But during the nineteenth century, judging by photographs
+and local account, this peninsula was much poorer in trees than it is
+now, even though our local woods cannot be given credit for much height
+and dignity.
+
+A man from New Hampshire visited me briefly a few years ago and said:
+“What in the world are you living here for? There aren’t any trees!” I
+pointed out to him that we had the sea, but the place seemed poor and
+flat to him, and he headed back to the mountains and tall timber as
+fast as he could, though he first chose to have a lunch of seafood, on
+his way out.
+
+When I bought the land I live on, it had a desolate appearance aside
+from a long view of the water, but its high wildness appealed to me.
+It was covered with dead oaks, standing everywhere like stripped
+spars. They had been killed off by a severe infestation of gypsy
+moths, and were, in any case, weak, cutover growth to begin with. The
+local landowners cut the woods down almost completely, then waited,
+twenty-five years in many cases, to cut them again. Others cut for
+firewood whenever they needed it. This area is covered like a rabbit
+warren with tracks made by wagons coming in to take out wood. I talked
+with a man recently who used to ride on the wagon seat with his
+grandfather when he was a boy. They liked to pull trees out when the
+frost was in the ground. Even then the wagon would be so heavily loaded
+that it sank in almost to the axles, with the horse pulling hard in
+the middle. The deep ruts are still to be seen. Besides taking out the
+wood for sale and for their own use, the owners would sell it “on the
+stump,” letting individuals go on their land and cut.
+
+Since this was a country whose inhabitants often made a sparse living
+out of livestock as well as fish, the land was also used for grazing.
+Cattle and sheep kept the brush and ground cover down. Many sandy
+hillsides were not only bare, but beginning to erode badly.
+
+In his _Cape Cod_, Thoreau speaks of the country between the towns of
+Barnstable and Orleans on the bay side as being “bare, or with only a
+little scrubby wood left on the hills.” “Generally,” he writes, “the
+ploughed fields of the Cape look white and yellow, like a mixture of
+salt and Indian meal. This is called soil. All an inlander’s notions of
+soil and fertility will be confounded by a visit to these parts, and he
+will not be able, for some time afterwards, to distinguish soil from
+sand.”
+
+Fire has tormented the Cape, ever since the Indians, who used it to
+clear areas for corn, or to increase the visibility when hunting game.
+When the humus on the woodland floor is thin, and the trees not healthy
+or high enough to provide protective shade, thus retaining moisture
+in the ground, a severe drought may make them ripe for burning. I
+have heard it said that fires used to be set deliberately in order to
+improve the blueberry crop. And a neighbor tells me that he has seen
+thirty or more fires set by the sparks from a train, chugging down the
+Cape, as he watched from a bare hillside half a century ago.
+
+Oddly enough, the pitch pine owes a great deal of its present
+prosperity to fire. It is one of the few trees whose roots stay alive
+and which comes back after an area has been burned over. Most of its
+competitors, except scrub oaks and black oaks, are killed off. It
+is a tough tree, and when it grows to good height with its rugged,
+wind-whisking look, a beautiful one; but it has its vulnerable points.
+It is very greedy for light, being what the tree experts call an
+“intolerant tree,” and it cannot stand competition. Pitch pines that
+come up under the shade of oaks or even of their own kind, soon die
+off. They demand their own ground. The oaks, especially the white oak,
+are much more tolerant of shade, and may in time push out the pitch
+pine, provided fires are held to a minimum in the future.
+
+The oaks are monumentally persistent. Cut them down fifty times and
+they will sprout back from the roots, which merely spread out a little
+further and send out more shoots. These “sprout hardwoods” have poor
+quality wood. They have fungus diseases, and are subject to attack
+by insect borers. The general attitude toward them is that they are
+worthless. Now that they are not much in demand for firewood, the
+bulldozer, rather than the ax, is their major enemy. But they deserve
+some admiration for holding their own. The first year or two after
+cutting, a sprout oak will grow very fast, but then it settles down
+for a long future, beginning to grow at a slow, insistent rate, taking
+what comes. This is a windy and salty land, where oaks may never grow
+to great girth and height, but they seem eloquent about their right to
+last out the next five thousand years on Cape Cod as well as we, even
+though thirty feet, or in some areas five, may be the maximum they
+reach. This is their chosen land.
+
+The late fall wind makes the brown oak leaves rustle and stir or sound
+like hail, and it soughs through the pitch pines. The whole year is
+full of the collaborative music of air and trees. They may be poor
+trees, low and rangy, subject to great abuse, but in their growth they
+make the land march between its surrounding waters. The gray oak trunks
+go in ranks and tiers for mile after mile down the center of the Cape,
+interspersed by individual pitch pines, or backed up and sided by pines
+in independent woods that look rounded and bunched in the distance,
+pocked with dark green shadows. The oak branches thrust up their
+candelabras of branches and stiff twigs against the pale sky, ready for
+next spring’s sunlight. The pitch pines stand with scaly, dark brown
+trunks and thick needles rocking and switching around, authorities on
+wind, and sandy soil, on impermanence, on taking your chances when and
+where you can.
+
+Geologists say that this truly “narrow land,” no more than a mile wide
+in some sections, seven or eight in others, may vanish under the sea
+in five or six thousand years. Its border of sands is always in the
+process of roaming and shifting. The Cape has no bedrock. Its rocks
+are migrants, brought down from the north by moving ice. In spite of
+the evidence of some once fairly rich timberland and deep topsoil, the
+Cape does not convince you of any depth and permanence other than its
+alliance with salt water.
+
+The sea gives and the sea takes away, breaking through a barrier beach
+during winter storms and roaring into the marsh and sheltered inlet
+behind, cutting down cliffs a foot or two a year, or imperceptibly
+stealing inches from a low-lying shore; while it adds new beaches,
+packs new tons of sand around an outlying spit or shoal. Last year,
+when I accompanied a group of children on their geology class, we
+uncovered a burying pit for horses and cows in the sandbank at the head
+of one of the bay beaches. If there had been a farm in the vicinity,
+a hundred years or more ago, the sea may well have cut in over half a
+mile to reach these bones.
+
+The winds sweep overhead, or merely threaten, the beach waters lap
+gently, or bridle and roar, and the only stability I feel is that of
+the tides, a lasting balance between the give-and-take of water and
+land. The Cape’s ravaged past and stunted present seems transmuted
+into motion. What this spit of land has taught me is an altered sense
+of the context of time. I once saw a tree either as material for the
+woodpile, or something with a growth so slow as to pass notice. Now
+I have begun to see trees moving by the million in a million varied
+places. Natural change is made up of so many circumstances, the
+continuum of life in its vast order is so far from being held down by
+history, that everything requires us to move on into the distance.
+It may well be regretted, but Cape Cod is not so much a place for
+traditionalism as a victim of the beautiful and impatient earth.
+
+
+ _The Dead and the Living_
+
+A cautious solemnity is beginning to take hold, although the weather
+plays new tricks as it alternates between the influences of north
+and south, east and west. Rain pours over the land. Then, on a warm
+day, there is thunder and lightning at noon, succeeded by a furious
+northwest wind after dark, bringing in a deeper cold. The wind hums and
+roars during the night, and with the sky clear and the stars out, the
+Cape has a new swept and running feel to it.
+
+On a night of full moonlight, there are glassy shadows between the
+trees, with a dry surf of air; and if sight brings sound, almost
+tinkling beams of light from the low moon. New stations, new harmonies
+of cold are suggested by stiff trees on their low hills and hummocks,
+standing against persimmon and topaz sunsets, or by a crystal edge on
+the sunlight.
+
+We have had light frosts, but by the end of the month no consistent,
+freezing weather has been reached. Then on the thirtieth the
+temperature drops to 20 degrees. I notice a flower, Queen Anne’s lace,
+still blooming, all by itself in a field of matted grass. During the
+night the surface of the ground is frozen hard ... a cap of reality at
+last, with no more lingering. There is a genuine glittering clarity
+of cold, in cloud, and branch and stone. Out on the bay the low waves
+look as if they had a harder push and pull to make, imbued with new
+heaviness. A boy shows me the frozen body of a red-legged grasshopper,
+perfectly preserved for a little while by a power to which its only
+adaptation is death. What still stands above ground now faces poverty,
+and primitive recalcitrance.
+
+There is a kind of ice sludge being nudged in by the tides along the
+shore and through rippling purple waters of tidal inlets. There are ice
+circlets around the marsh grass. Thin ice sheets form at the rim of
+fresh-water ponds.
+
+The inland world seems either subdued or facing survival’s icy stare,
+and even self-sufficient human society looks ready to draw in and hole
+up for the winter. But since Cape Cod is surrounded by the sea, it has
+another depth, another range, where other populations roam while the
+rest of us wait and shiver. Above water, the more visible migrants are
+those wintering sea birds--auks, scoters, black ducks, eiders, old
+squaws, brant and Canada geese--that feed along the shore, in sheltered
+inlets, or in waters farther out, depending on their habit.
+
+In my locality Canada geese and black ducks are swimming through
+peat-rooted grasses off Paine’s Creek where the terns were fishing two
+months ago. A line of white-winged scoters flies low over the heaving
+waters of the bay. I watch two black ducks in the sky, approaching
+from the north. They are coming over at high speed downwind with wings
+beating hard. Then more ducks fly up across inlet and marsh, taking off
+to windward. They swing back for a short stretch, then up again, as if
+to hold position, like travelers reconnoitering, then fly on and out of
+sight.
+
+Two miles or more from shore I see points of spray going up from the
+surface of the water, and above them many large white birds continually
+turning and diving, from a considerable height. These are the gannets,
+that appear off Cape waters in the autumn after they have nested on
+their island territories in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The immature,
+first-year birds, which can also be seen diving for fish, are almost
+totally black. They are usually not with us for long, since they pass
+to winter feeding grounds, which may be as far south as the Caribbean.
+
+Anyone who has seen them crowding their nesting grounds on Bonaventure
+Island off the Gaspé Peninsula, will know, from close observation,
+how spectacular these birds are. They allow tourists to come almost
+as close to them as chickens in a yard. Thousands of pairs nest at
+the top of high cliffs or along their ledges above the water, each
+with its established square foot or two of nesting territory. A loud,
+rattling cry goes up, out of a multitude of hoarse croaks and groans.
+I felt a great sense of pressure and establishment in this bird city,
+this singular society with its consistent behavior and ceremony. The
+pairs greet one another bowing, or with heads raised and the long thick
+bills fencing. Their stiff carved heads are always in motion, always in
+response to one another. It is a pressing, elaborate spectacle, ancient
+and authoritative.
+
+Gannets are awkward landers. They come in stiffly and do a kind of
+top-heavy tumble when they hit the ground; but as ocean flyers they
+have no superiors. When I see them again silently gliding over the
+waters off the Cape, I greet them for their earth-honored mastery. At
+a distance they might be mistaken for herring gulls, but they are much
+larger, and their long black-ended wings are typical. When you see
+points of spray going up far out on the water, and white birds diving,
+you have unmistakably seen the gannets.
+
+Earlier this month, during an easterly storm, with pouring, blinding,
+deafening wind and rain, a few gannets were flying close to the
+shore off Paine’s Creek where the water was a little calmer and the
+atmosphere less overcast than farther out in the bay. The birds flew
+low, since the fish they were hunting were in shallow water and
+presumably close to the surface. On this stormy morning they flew in
+an almost leisurely way over the surface, flapping their wings and
+gliding. They would turn casually and dive, their wings half spread.
+Then they rose and flew steadily on with power and ease, their wings
+feeling the stiff wind, using it like the ancient professionals they
+were.
+
+Now the north wind is blowing hard in the late afternoon. There are
+slate-gray cloud masses in the sky, with a steely light where the sun
+rays through, and the temperature has dropped to about 40 degrees.
+Offshore over rocking, ponderous, gray waters, I can see the crowds
+of gannets following a shoal line in the distance. They catch the
+light from the sun when it strikes occasionally through the clouds,
+intensifying their whiteness and turning the water green. They seem to
+drift and turn continually, their arrowed bodies plummeting down, the
+splashes appearing against white bordered waves. As I walk inland the
+sun goes westward behind massive clouds and the gannets, far out, high
+and white, keep diving with exact abandon.
+
+The intermittent sunlight wheels in to brighten the yellow grasses and
+make the sand sparkle. To the north it is as if the sky were moving
+down from its Arctic limits and announcing new themes, with iceberg
+clouds, and high walls of cold against which the sun strikes new
+fire, while the wind rushes down to make the message felt. A flock of
+sharp-tailed sparrows lands on the sand, the marsh-side of a dune. They
+fly up into the stiff, cold air, and then drop down into a small hollow
+for protection. They stay there for a while under the great force of
+wind and blown sand, not closely knit so much as spread out in what
+looks like a perilous unanimity. If one sparrow should stray even a
+foot away from the rest, in their over-all, though loose, pattern, I
+feel as if it must be irretrievably lost, blown off, and separated.
+That which holds the sharp-beaked, yellow-headed little birds together
+is in their senses. They intercommunicate as one flock and form. It is
+a control--as lightly manifested as the sparrows themselves, but as
+powerful as the elements against which they stand.
+
+
+
+
+ _December_
+
+
+ _An Old Place, an Old Man_
+
+When the feel of winter comes, in November or early December--though
+by astronomical calculation winter does not start until December
+twenty-second--when the first hard seal is set on the ground, and we
+are settled in with a new plainness, then it is not difficult to bring
+back yesterday and its country living. Winter’s role in the year’s
+wheel is an arresting, for the sake of renewal, a sleep, or half sleep,
+for later waking. It has its own suspense and violence, its roars and
+silences, like the other seasons, but in general its order is of a
+different quality, having an inwardness and resistance, a bare, gray
+need to keep things inside and hidden down. This is the time of year
+that shows a plain connection between human beings and their land.
+
+I see last leaves whipping around the hollows off an old Cape road,
+or walk through the now more oblique rays of the sun that yellow the
+sandy ground held by thin, waving grasses, gray beach plum or bayberry
+bushes, and I recognize what has been left behind.
+
+Here, surrounded by open slopes, is an abandoned house site, now a
+cellar hole, walled by square blocks of glacial granite. Orchard
+grass, timothy, and redtop still engage the old domesticity. Inside
+their circle you can see where children played, water was fetched and
+carried, chickens fed, and voices raised. There are yucca plants close
+to the foundations, and a rose or two. I transplanted such a rose a
+few years ago, and with added nourishment it turned from a slight,
+single-petaled flower to a great bunch of pinkish-purple fragrance.
+
+Unlike some abandoned farm sites in other parts of New England, there
+is nothing left here to show what the inhabitants did. There are no
+harrows, stone bolts, yokes, or farm implements, not even any pots and
+pans. The stones are left, and the faithful grasses, and beyond them
+the crunchy, gray deer moss, and beard grass of indigenous fields.
+It was a small place, of bare subsistence. Whatever the qualities
+of the people who lived there, they left simplicity behind them.
+Not too far away, a bulldozer is making a desert with giant scoops,
+high-tension wires are marching by, and a plane rips the air overhead.
+We are encroaching in our oblivious fashion, without delay. The new
+domesticities may occupy only a tenth of an acre each, but they
+engage all lands. The old domestic wildness cannot be replaced. It
+was a lodgment limited by need, gray outside and dark within, perhaps
+unbearably close and confined at times, but with a knowledge of its
+earth.
+
+It seems to me that as the world has grown outward in recent years,
+even I, a comparative newcomer to Cape Cod, have lost some local life
+to memory. When you live in a place for the first time you see behind
+it to its roots and grain, before the storms of circumstance blow you
+away from it. I remember a few old men who seemed so representative of
+the old Cape that it will never be the same now that they are gone.
+The loss is of a country speech, the flavor of a flesh and blood
+nurtured on locality. What has replaced them can be defined in terms of
+California as well as Cape Cod, which means no detriment to either, for
+what we are now obliged to consider is locality in a wider field. But
+those old men were born as we may not yet be born, sturdily, in custom
+and resignation.
+
+Nathan Black died in October 1957, at the age of ninety-two. He was
+born in 1865, the year Abraham Lincoln was assassinated. He was a near
+neighbor. His land abutted mine, and since he was the proprietor of the
+Black Hills Barber Shop, I could walk down through the woods to get my
+hair cut, for the price, in a trillion-dollar world, of fifty cents.
+He was a heavy man, with bright brown eyes, and a head of curly white
+hair. He fitted the open Cape Cod weather, or the weather fitted him.
+I am not sure of the distinction. Nearly ninety years of change, of
+natural cataclysm, of both peace and abysmal war in the human world,
+had left him in the same place, with the same measure, outwardly at
+least, of stability.
+
+When he left his place, or the customary orbit of work and old friends
+that constituted his life, perhaps to drive out on a new highway or
+to the chain store, he may never have stopped being surprised. I
+remember his looking at me with a kind of amused questioning--but no
+alarm--and saying something about no one belonging here any more. The
+new population didn’t quite make sense to him.
+
+In the way of old countrymen who knew their boundaries, he was tough
+and unforgiving in his role of landowner. He had his rights, “By
+gawly!” and he would know when someone did him wrong. He held on hard,
+and I suspect there were neighbors who felt the possessiveness too
+strongly, but this being none of my business, I will go in and get my
+hair cut.
+
+The shop, with a tool shed under the same roof, where “Nate” used
+to grind knives and axes, stood, and still stands, across the yard
+from the house where he was born. There are some other gray-shingled,
+outlying buildings on both sides of a dirt road that runs through
+scrubby woods and hollows, dry hills sloping down to marshy bottom land
+... wood-lot country. One December day I rapped at the door, and he
+put his jacket on and walked across the yard with me, where two white
+ducks were parading and some red chickens giving the frozen ground a
+going over. The old man bent down a little and spoke to his dog Bonnie,
+a cream-colored spaniel, which had just wagged up to him: “Did you get
+it?”
+
+Then, to me: “I lost an egg. Picked up five eggs, out of the hen yard
+this mornin’, and came back with four. Maybe there was a hole in these
+old pants of mine.”
+
+The barber shop was small, long and narrow, but he had a stove in
+there that kept it warm. There were some old magazines on a bench
+against the wall, with a black Homburg hat hanging on a peg. It had
+been given him by an old customer, a wealthy man who had lived on the
+Cape during the summer and had come in to have his hair cut for many
+years before he died. There was a photograph on the wall of the two of
+them with an inscription underneath that read: “Established 1884. A
+satisfied customer is our best advertisement.” They were standing out
+in front of the shop, smiling in the sun.
+
+“Feller came here yesterday and I had to clip him in the kitchen. Shop
+was too cold,” Nate said.
+
+The calm of the place was comforting. It came, I suppose, from an
+acceptance that emanated from him, and brought in many old friends, who
+would sit down to say: “Nate, just thought I’d come over and pass the
+time of day.”
+
+Whatever he had to say about other people never left them without the
+honor of human circumstances. “Pretty close, he is,” he would say with
+a little laugh, or “I guess he had a shade on” (a Cape Cod expression
+for being drunk). “Guess you can’t hold on to nothin’,” he said about
+some local theft, in a way that insisted on not being roused beyond
+necessity.
+
+His origins were out of a kind of history of which there was very
+little left intact except himself. He once showed me a tintype of his
+mother, a handsome girl named Bridget Malady, who had emigrated from
+Ireland in 1862. His father, Timothy Black, was born in Yarmouth, on
+the Cape. At the age of ten he signed on as a cook aboard the packet
+which sailed between East Dennis and Boston, and seems to have spent
+a good deal of his life on intermittent voyages at sea. He was also
+in the butchering and slaughtering business with his two sons. In the
+autumn they used to butcher eighty-five hogs or more, at the rate of
+three a day. And in some rough but related way, Timothy Black started
+his son in the barbering business. Nate remembered how his father used
+to cut his hair in the kitchen, long before the Black Hills emporium
+was established: “I used to sit there while he was sort of pummeling
+at me on the back of the neck. By gol! I sure did cringe when he was
+chopping me with those women’s scissors.”
+
+While I, seventy or eighty years later, was sitting in the barber’s
+chair, getting more expert and calmer work done on me, I assembled a
+little of the past. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries an
+expedition to the post office or the store took up a large part of the
+day. That was the time when you could hitch the horse up to a post and
+stop for a long chat, “having the capacity to waste time” as I heard a
+Texan phrase it about some of his countrymen in the western part of the
+state. People walked between their houses--there are foot paths still
+showing--on barren hills. They had small herds of cows that foraged
+on the sloping fields. Families used to picnic together by the ponds,
+and there were barn dances on Saturday nights, which were sometimes
+the occasion for a rip-roaring fight. I have heard it said that Nate
+Black was the strongest fighter in the region, when outraged beyond his
+normal patience, but he would reveal none of this prowess to me.
+
+The Black family also held dances in their kitchen. The father of
+the house played the violin. On such occasions they would have plum
+porridge suppers, or they served crackers, milk, and raisins, and
+sometimes hulled corn.
+
+He was of a piece with his surroundings. I think of many things he
+talked about while I was having my hair cut and they all meant the
+gray, sea-girded land, and a human closeness to it. I think of the
+deer that ate his beans, of his duck that was carried off by a fox, of
+foxes being reduced in population by the mange, of a watering place
+for horses by Cedar Pond in East Dennis (a beautiful pond with ranks
+of dark cedars backing it up, and now being encroached upon by house
+lots); and he talked about the big eels waiting to eat young herrin’
+(or alewives) at the mouth of a pond, and of sounding the depths of
+Round Pond here in West Brewster.
+
+And then there was his dog which had to be chained up because it got
+so wildly excited chasing rabbits through the woods that it was
+constantly lost, having once been picked up nearly ten miles away; and
+the coon that climbed a tree after a hen; and his little granddaughter
+wanting to shine a flashlight through the window one night and
+take a picture of a coon she saw outdoors, because it was “such a
+pretty-looking animal.”
+
+There also come to mind the fishing boats all-over white with screaming
+gulls, that he once spoke about with real excitement, and, of course,
+the yearly work on his cranberry bogs ... he and his tart and lively
+wife used to pick them together; and the shifting price of cranberries,
+and his wood lots, and who was after him to buy some of his land.
+
+“Yes yes” he would say, in the Cape Cod fashion, and always, when a
+customer was leaving the shop: “Come again.”
+
+His wife Emily died two years before him. Some time before that I
+stopped to talk with him when he was scything the family plot in Red
+Top Cemetery, which lies at the junction of two country roads, on a
+little hill or high knoll up in the sky and the ocean winds. He told
+me two women had come up one day while he was there and said: “What a
+nice place!” He and his wife are buried there, in a place which has no
+more permanence than any other, but for them and by them had the simple
+power of acquaintance.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+ _Night in the Afternoon_
+
+If I have left Nathan Black in the nineteenth century (although when
+I last saw him he was deeply involved with a television set) or at
+least in a tradition which no longer appears to sustain us, it is not
+to emphasize that all continuity is lost. He has left us transients to
+make what we can of the Cape Cod weather, without assistance, but the
+examples it still offers are both patient and surprising. Storms and
+stars never fail us.
+
+The theme this month is a growing cold, but whether we are to have rain
+or snow, hard frosts, or comparative mildness is not known. If you
+listen to what people say about the weather you go from apprehension to
+apprehension. It is as though we were already working to keep our lives
+open until spring. I suspect that by March we get tired of comment. In
+any case it represents a communication with the forces around us, and I
+am not one to disparage such banalities.
+
+“Good morning.” “What’s good about it?” Dead oak leaves hang like wet
+rags in the cold rain. After the rain stops there is a cold moisture
+suspended in the air with its own whiteness. There is a silence
+everywhere, except for a chickadee’s harsh split trills nearby, the low
+tone of offshore waters, and the indiscriminate sound of engines on
+roads or in the sky. The woodchuck, the box turtle, and the chipmunk
+are asleep. There are no insects above ground to catch the eye. The day
+shortens, and we who are always calling for more sunshine, pleased at
+the idea of some perpetual, impossible comfort, are obliged to confront
+night in the afternoon. Life is quiet, stripped of redundancy. There
+is a new restraint about our depopulated local world, and at the same
+time new openings afforded. At least the season seems to offer another
+quality for interpretation. Perhaps, for example, because the trees are
+bare and the ground devitalized, we are to look up and find the sky.
+
+I come home one night under vast black reaches full of stars, almost as
+thick as wet snowflakes. It is very still around me, a cold stillness
+through the ground, but overhead the infinite dome almost resounds. It
+is blazing, bounding, soaring with the means and light of existence.
+I am not troubled at all that I look out from an unimportant planet
+dependent on a common star, and am only able to see a few light-years
+away, each light-year being a distance of six million million miles.
+There is sight past sight. The strongest telescope is still an
+extension of the human eye. Our measurements themselves are a form of
+participation in that fantastic distance, which may not make us any
+less lonely, but we have a mind in space; and since men calculate, by
+observation of the heavens and of their earth, that the laws of life
+are the same as far and farther than they can see, then they have
+hearts and blood there too. I stand here on the cold ground, and take
+sensual note of the universe.
+
+Then I move back into my domestic hole to do a little hibernating of my
+own. A winter withdrawal sets in, when outer resources escape me. I am
+drawn inward to human want and its frustrations, to common egotism or
+inertia. The December days progress almost remotely. Who cares about
+the secrets of that cold and darkening earth outside? Our problems are
+sufficient unto themselves.
+
+But there is a natural complex of greed, a provision for appetite,
+that brings men and earth to mutuality. Manifested by the weather, it
+sometimes puts us out of doors to understand real fortitude. Instead
+of easing on toward January, December begins to tug and roar. It snows
+all day and there are north winds of from thirty to forty miles an hour
+driving the snow against our houses, suggesting an extra struggle we
+might not be quite ready for. Then it warms up to 2 or 4 degrees above
+freezing, and the following morning begins with a cold rain and sleet
+falling down with hissing, disheartening force. The temperature drops.
+The sleet turns to snow, driving in violently from the north, hitting
+the trees like bullets. The sky closes in. There is no horizon. The
+wind swirls. Trees rock and bend. This is a storm with a great rush of
+savagery, setting wild, grim traps for the unprotected. “Now,” it says,
+“I have you. Try some adventures in this.”
+
+There is ice or cemented snow along the tree trunks in the direction
+of the storm, so that by sight and feel I know the wind is from the
+northeast quarter, without need of instruments. My hand tells me where
+the present power is coming from.
+
+When the snow and wind let up a little, I head for the shore and find
+signs down, gutters yanked out, and telegraph wires dangling across
+the road. Salt water ahead of me is churning, tossing white spume
+against the open shore, while the wind seethes, whines, and howls with
+growing intensity. The feeling of conflict is everywhere around me--a
+hurling and letting go, a bend and give, a clash, a holding against
+insufferable strain. The sand on the upper beach is whipped into
+stinging strength. The sea is almost boiling, its racing, conflicting
+edges spray-lined. On top of an exceptionally high tide, great waves
+run in over a sheltered inlet, sending their combers farther toward
+the land. All points of contact and withdrawal, rise and fall, seem
+to be concentrated in this monumental turbulence, a force that is
+almost uncontained. Is it a replica in violence of the normally
+unseen stresses and strains lying under a peaceful season, or a life?
+Our bodies are made of air and salt water, in their components of
+hydrogen and oxygen, carbon and nitrogen. A storm should be our organic
+companion. But this cold screaming fury makes me take refuge behind a
+wall. Man may have overcome the elements, but not his elemental frailty.
+
+Out over the gray and white waters, hovering against the wind in an
+almost idle way, are several herring gulls. And, at the mouth of the
+inlet, riding calmly on the roaring, running tide, facing up against a
+thirty-five-mile-an-hour wind, is a loon--close-reefed, well fitted in
+all respects to weather the worst.
+
+
+ _Two Encounters_
+
+After the storm a hard cold sets in for many days. As a rule our
+Decembers are comparatively mild, with the days alternating between
+light rain and cool sunshine. Now the very great plunges of the cold,
+driving the frost deep into the ground, freezing the pond waters,
+starting a rim of pack ice around Cape Cod Bay, comes as a surprise,
+something not known before. The weather bureau, explaining the cold
+as being the result of a vast Canadian high-pressure system, speaks
+of its unusual “fetch and intensity.” Ten degrees above zero is not
+severe as compared with conditions in other parts of the world, but
+this unseasonal extreme is a local reminder of the earth’s potential,
+and just how much we depend on the normal rhythms of the year. We gasp
+with cold, turn up the heat, and think that cataclysm is a small thing
+to the universe.
+
+The cold around us creates a different earth. It demands a readjustment
+of the senses, as though it were ready with amazing new suggestions.
+One sharply cold morning when snow lies fresh on the ground I stop by
+the cemetery where the Blacks are buried, on my way to town. There
+is something about this day that asks attention. It sings. Pure
+crystalline masses creak underfoot. The tune of the cold finds an edge
+on my bones. Pines, stiff cedars, locust trees, hard ground and stone,
+all share in resonance, being forged and tempered by the cold. The
+little graveyard hill is a tympanum, or sounding board, very highly
+pitched, so powerfully taut, being plucked very lightly by the air with
+sharp whispers and twanging sounds being sent across the snow, that it
+might be ready to send one chord, incomparably new, into the whole sky.
+
+I start to go away, but a tiny, almost casual trill separates itself
+from the vibrations of the cold. I keep listening and in a few seconds
+see a bird rounding the branch of a cedar tree, not twenty feet
+away. Working in and out of the branches, coming in to view and then
+disappearing again, is a flock of purple finches, eating cedar berries.
+The males are washed with a raspberry color that keeps appearing
+through the dark green masses of the tree like intermittent lights,
+hints of fruitfulness in the winter’s containment.
+
+Suddenly, surprisingly, a light brown, speckled veery appears on the
+open branch of a locust. This summer bird, out in the glittering cold,
+seems to have a startled, wildly timid look in its eyes. Its slim body
+hesitates, with the problem of aloneness perhaps, or direction, or food
+in this white earth that has cut so cruelly into its subsistence. Then
+it flies off into a wood of pitch pines, and I hear a low sound, the
+mere snatch of a thrush’s warbling.
+
+Just by stopping for ten minutes instead of hurrying on, I have been
+put into a new relation with the morning, and have seen a singularity
+and sacredness to all its parts. It could happen in Moscow or New York.
+
+A day or two later I am in the city, just before Christmas, when the
+stores are rushed and jammed with shoppers. It is late afternoon and
+yellow lights flood out of great glass windows and crowded doors. There
+is a tinkling of bells, cups, and tambourines, a tooting of horns
+through the general confused roaring of the streets. Just as I pass a
+huge department store, I hear an odd, disassociated center of pipings
+and cries. I can connect it with none of the turmoil around me.
+
+I stand and listen. There, across the street, like a theatrical
+backdrop, is an abandoned brownstone building, four or five stories
+high, with a grimy, ponderous façade. It is covered with ledges and
+its dark, empty windows reflect the pond-dark evening skies ... every
+now and then a white cloud moves across them with disembodied calm.
+On the ledges are hundreds of starlings, pushing, crowding, hopping,
+flying up against the windows, perched all along the heavy front of
+the building--dingy birds, with their lost Christmas cries. There they
+are, adapted almost domestically to man’s world, tough in a way that a
+purple finch or a veery cannot be, but still a race apart.
+
+Then I am back down the street again with my own tribe that teems with
+general might and inner purposes of its own, going and returning--out
+continually--representatives of a force of mind that can gauge the
+mechanics of the universe, and in animal power overrunning the earth. I
+see in these shoppers an evolutionary line of vision never satisfied,
+a history of cities, ledges of light running to unknown futures.
+The world is in the hands of these omnipresent and familiar beings,
+the young and the old, black-haired, brown, yellow, or gray, in the
+indefinite shapes and interchanges of their lives--the human race
+hurrying through its own lighted ways. And if I shouted: “Stop! Look
+away from yourselves. Consider the starlings!” with what sort of mild
+madness would I be credited?
+
+
+
+
+ _January_
+
+
+ _Exposure_
+
+It is said that winter, being the season when the sun shines on us
+obliquely, is a period of death, or, as the dictionary puts it, of
+“dreariness, old age and decay.” We are being deprived of a portion of
+original energy, and recognize occasionally that if we were out far
+enough, in as extreme and bare a relationship to the cold as the birds,
+but without their equivalent in insulation, we would have a hard time
+surviving (though birds are also perishable and have their share of
+disease and death from starvation). But we take care of ourselves, in
+such an elaborate and consuming way, that the grand extremes of weather
+may only succeed in being a nuisance. The freezing weather deepens this
+month, after a few days of moderate warmth at the start, and I am free
+to complain about the heat bills. The car skids and turns a half circle
+on the highway, which is covered with glare ice one morning, and I am
+afraid, not for myself so much as for my new car. How could I manage
+that ten miles back without it? Self-protection may be all that winter
+means to us, though it is a term that can only be comparative in an age
+of manufactured violence.
+
+Suddenly there is a tremendous thud above us that jars and rocks the
+house. It seems to tug at the vitals of the earth and would cause us
+more than mere shock if we were not aware that it is a plane breaking
+the sound barrier, thousands of feet in the air. A minute or two later
+I hear a familiar gabbling, a mixed bugling, overhead, and run out to
+see twenty Canada geese, hurrying fast down the north wind in four
+separate flocks aligned in flight. With their long necks stretched out
+and strong wings beating they are fleeing for their lives, frightened
+up from winter feeding grounds along the shores of Cape Cod Bay. The
+earth, for the time being at least, is committed to mankind. The geese
+cannot so frighten _us_. They are innocent of ways to “control their
+environment.”
+
+Then there is almost complete silence again, and I understand what is
+meant by the “dead of winter.” Under the cold blue stare of the sky
+nothing seems to be happening. Each sound--a crow cawing, a car on the
+road, the rustle and clink of a clump of dead oak leaves--is by itself,
+occupying wide, unpopulated plains. Without the wind, the air too
+presses on me, with a cold weight. I walk through its depths, feeling
+it against my face, and suddenly realize that limited sea of oxygen in
+which we live, this side of outer space and its violet darkness.
+
+This silence may be just as alarming to some people as a “sonic boom.”
+Nothing seems to be going on. There is an intensity of rest. The demand
+for something new is unsatisfied. There are men who stray into nature
+from a city’s booming, reassuring hive, and are frightened by being
+caught in necessity--one of the year’s cold, unspeaking tides. Perhaps
+they also recognize how much the sun provides us with other than
+pleasant company. There is a winter in us from which we will not soon
+escape into warmth and joy.
+
+Still, this frozen land contributes to a global art. It is cold and
+silent here because it is hot and loud in India. And how can we spread
+our wings without a knowledge of deprivation? While I am closed in
+I know there are redstarts wintering in Mexico and arctic terns in
+the Antarctic, and when I greet them on their return it will not be
+only because they have come home (a bird’s nest is not a house but a
+platform from which to start), but because home comprises so large
+an area. Some birds, if they survive their first year, will reappear
+in the vicinity of the place where they were reared. So will salmon,
+shad, and alewives, returning to their parent stream after years
+of absence. We are conscious of the great amount of space their
+journeying requires. Species of fish or birds show great variation in
+the extent of their migrations, and the whole pattern is wider than
+a continent. Their movements are not only consistent with periodic
+motions of climate, weather, the tides, but may be visible evidence
+of earth changes that go back for incredible lengths of time. They
+require an unrestricted measure for their lives and deaths. Men alter,
+restrict, or use up, to suit their needs and fancy. Then they move
+elsewhere. I see that one of the young men who has been designated
+for training in space flight, an “Astronaut,” says he accepted the
+challenge of being sent aloft in a capsule because we were “running
+out of interesting things to do down here.” The destruction and denial
+of earth’s resources must have gone farther than we realize. But the
+life journeys continue, from one sunny round to another, over the earth
+and its wide-ranging waters. How much we must be missing, even in the
+wintertime!
+
+Before dawn, after the windless day, the temperature drops to 10
+degrees. A walloping, tugging, brutal wind sets in. The frost so
+rigidifies the needles of the pines, burning into their cells, that
+they look dark and scorched. I feel as if the rigid and dizzy earth
+were being kicked around, rocked like a topheavy boat--the trees its
+masts. The wind cries: “Remember poverty!” and I go gasping for breath
+through the fierce air, feeling as perishable as a moth. We may be
+having the mere taste of an extreme, but this penury weather is huge
+and mighty all the same. It is the result of a Labrador storm one
+thousand to two thousand miles in extent. Its balanced fury tests all
+it meets.
+
+On this kind of day I am an inland lover. To be wind-cut and
+sandblasted serves no good human end. As if in general proof of that,
+I meet no more than a car or two on the highway, and see no one on the
+streets of the town. The shore is desolate, hissing with driven sand.
+On the surface the bay waters in the distance are being stiff-armed
+and flung away. New ice, morose and slow, is nudged by an outgoing
+tide in the inlet at Paine’s Creek. Gulls drift slowly upwind like
+clouds. And on the wide tidal flats--the searing, biting, turbulent
+grounds--groups of Canada geese are stalking through shallow purple
+waters that reach, wind-scudded, over shoals of peat. Then a new
+group wheels in low and settles down with the rest. I can hear their
+honking under the sound of wind and sand. Beyond them, in steely waters
+speckled green, is a small flock of black ducks.
+
+This is no inanimate landscape. Under the given power, the
+abandon of the wind, the restrictiveness of the cold, is still an
+all-containing balance. I listen to those famous travelers the geese
+as they communicate and am taken a little further out on violent and
+unreceptive grounds, past my own shivering.
+
+Inland again, listening, taking shelter in the lee of the wind, just
+as a rabbit jumps away from me and runs under a tangle of bull briar,
+I am conscious of all the unseen hiding and endurance around me. What
+else moves here, beside the wind that suddenly rushes in and roars so
+loud that it makes the trees groan and the large round clouds hurry
+on? The trees, swaying and creaking, are the most obvious, the most
+exposed. They are half dead, rigid, hard, inert. The sap coagulates
+in the extreme cold. I cut a twig with my knife and the pitch is dark
+and frozen. The trees in their containment, adapted to less water and
+light, getting scarcely any nutriment, are able to make their stand in
+the open while other lives must hide.
+
+In the late afternoon the ground stirs harshly. Leaves run in dead
+abandon. The wind seems to sound a burst of doom, and then seethes in
+lively rage. A dead limb cracks. I am on the trigger edge of ultimate
+need. Blue-gray clouds hang over the shaking fingers of the trees.
+There is a collective power that flays us all, without discrimination.
+
+The shadows have left the earth. Light stays in the sky, and then
+begins to go. There are rims of pale electric light in the west. Long
+cloud shoals, now white and pearly gray, stand against wide bands of
+blue and mauve and pink, like the baked desert cliffs of the Southwest.
+Finally, and I feel all finality, as the ringing air sheds down
+enormous heavy cold, received numbly by the earth, the sky turns a
+startling gemlike blue. We are turned into night. The sky’s mineral
+beauty shifts to pure blackness lighted by the stars. There is an
+almost shrilling intensity in the air above the earth-binding wind, and
+I am conscious of nothing but height, height beyond reach.
+
+
+ _Ice on the Ponds_
+
+The air is crystalline and the sunlight through the pitch pine needles
+gives them a glassy sheen. This is one of those rare times when almost
+all of Cape Cod’s innumerable ponds are iced over and the children can
+go skating after school. It has been consistently cold for weeks, with
+comparatively little snow, and the pond surfaces tempt all skaters to
+soar.
+
+But we have had a day and a half of thawing weather. When my young
+daughter and I go to a pond to skate, we hear its fine whomping sound
+as it expands under the sun’s warmth. What looks like jagged broken
+bits of crystal, catching light on the surface, turn out to be part
+of the ice structure, thawing ice refrozen. We find hundreds of water
+spiders frozen in around the edge where yesterday they had been brought
+out into the water by rain and comparative warmth, and on the way we
+found a dead worm on top of frozen ground. So some animals are flung
+around with the season and respond fatally to chance. They belong to an
+allowance left over from December. Then it ends, and the day hardens
+like the ice. It is as though the helpless were not to be allowed their
+helplessness for some time to come.
+
+To skate on a long stretch of unmarked ice, over green reflected
+clouds, with the sound of clear air swishing past your face, is to
+voyage, full sail. It is a shining freedom, and our only competition
+is in play, to skid and turn and rush like water birds in the
+springtime--the only hardship a bruising fall. Under black holes we can
+see down to the bottom of the pond, where there are little forests of
+green moss and water plants, very still and soft. Suddenly a diving
+beetle swims quickly and erratically across and then a slow tadpole
+moves into sight. There is enough sun-induced warmth in the shallow
+water at the pond’s edge to allow life more play, though in that
+respect a pond is easier on its inhabitants than the land. With its
+cover of ice it is now in a state of “winter stagnation.” There are
+frogs buried in the mud and fish moving sluggishly in cold, stabilized
+waters. But this is an environment which always allows activity in at
+least some of its inhabitants throughout the year. Its extremes and
+revolutions of temperature bear little comparison with those of the
+land. Our hazards are of a sterner kind.
+
+When we kneel on the ice, where the mobile sky is reflected, and
+look down in, the water world seems half awake and half asleep, half
+tropical and half glacial. The waters are almost motionless over
+intermittent green carpets and through their black depths. The whole
+being of the pond seems to move independently of our surface storms. It
+has a heart of its own.
+
+The winter land is a harder environment, though we sometimes make
+more of its rigidity than we need to. At the pond’s edge I brush past
+a bayberry bush, and its dried, dark gray berries smell as pungently
+and herbaceously as they did when ripe--waxen and pewter colored--in
+the fall. There are checkerberry or partridgeberry plants rimming the
+pond. In fact they grow well through the acid earth of these woodlands,
+and their shiny leaves stay green throughout the winter. They are also
+called wintergreen, or mountain tea, and their leaves taste spicy and
+aromatic. Are we still common enough to make new names instead of
+numbers, implying that familiarity, touch, and association have not
+been left behind?
+
+You know the checkerberry, hugging the ground with shiny, flavored
+leaves, tiny bell-like flowers pure white in the late spring, bright
+red berries in the autumn. Something to say hello to, and not
+merely to recognize as _Gaultheria procumbens_ and pass by. To name
+means to know, love--perhaps even to laugh at. The fact that the
+checkerberry has so many other common names is a human distinction.
+Consider: grouseberry, spiceberry, oneberry, chicken-berry, deerberry,
+groundberry, hillberry, ivyberry, boxberry, teaberry, greenberry,
+ivy-plum, chinks, drunkards, red pollen, rapper-dandies, wax cluster,
+redberry tea, Canadian tea. They dance in friendship. I have been told
+that the name “Drunkards” comes from the use of checkerberry tea as a
+remedy for a hangover, but am unable to corroborate it.
+
+While I am pulling off my skates and chewing on a spicy leaf, a trim,
+round little chickadee comes within four feet of me and twitters and
+scolds. Then two warier golden-crowned kinglets show up suddenly in a
+nearby shrub, crying: “Tseet! Tseet!” and flit away. We climb up the
+steep sides of the pond and face the slopes toward the north. Bold
+gusts of wind strike us. Stiff briars and branches whip us as we walk
+along a narrow path, and the play of winter sunlight through the clouds
+goes lively across the grasses and through the gray trees.
+
+
+ _Contrast and Response_
+
+January seems grim and contained. This is not the time to expect life
+to declare itself. Even local human circumstances are such as to
+prove a kind of gray waiting. While the rest of the world retires in
+Florida, counts change in New York, or struggles with vast new shifts
+and divided aims, Cape Cod stays down, and holds on. The population
+is five times less than that of the summer. It is the barren, exposed
+peninsula it used to be, with the exception of the new woodlands and
+all the cottages. We are linked by highway and modern communicatory
+apparatus with the rest of the continent, but in this season there is
+a feeling of diminished wants. The human pulse begins to rise in April
+or May, when people paint and refurbish their motels and cottages in
+preparation for the great migration of vacationists. Now the economy
+subsists more on expectation than fulfillment. The human squirrels
+have stored away their acorns. The forage is thin in January for all
+inhabitants.
+
+The weather roams still, with our surrounding waters. Why live here but
+for the reason that there is always an element of sufficient grandeur?
+Although the sea might not be visible for the motels and trailers
+before your eyes, a few miles, or a few yards, brings its untouched
+enormity into view. The sky is wide, and the ocean waters are still
+breathing loud or low with fruitful magnitude. They are at the end of
+every road. And when the foghorn bawls from Chatham like a lost cow, we
+know that there are still headlands and ships, the uncalculated and the
+unknown.
+
+On the Cape’s south side, facing the heavy Atlantic swells and
+breakers, the high cliffs are often covered with miniature scrub oak
+forests, or thickets--they are scarcely more than two feet high, as
+well as stunted pitch pine with a mustard tinge to their needles. Dark
+clumps of hudsonia, a heath, resembling heather, cover the hollows
+and slopes, the billowing mounds on cliff tops above the beach. The
+vegetation lies low against wind and salt spray. It looks rusty and
+tormented. On the steep slopes to the beach there are milky films of
+snow, and then patches of white foam at the bottom. The surf roars in,
+sidling with great licks and washes along the sands.
+
+The sea beyond is full of long waves that take the low sunlight of late
+afternoon and swoop and fall with it. They come in from the distance
+and then rise as they approach the shore, showing their marbled, curved
+surfaces, to pause at the crest and plunge down. A stiff north wind
+holds them back a little. Manes of spray whip back at their cresting
+and when they fall the spray rises up almost vertically. Just inshore,
+where the breakers fling in their prows along the sloping beach, the
+waters foam with constant movement, in and out, all bubbling and
+shifting with a turbulent milk, whose surface looks opalescent--colors
+of blue, green, and pink bordered by heavy pearl. And what a sound! A
+thundering, a loud fermentation, with an occasional great soft clash of
+waves like cymbals, the long surf roaming and lunging in the evening
+light for miles and miles. From where I stand on the cliff top I can
+see a little group of men and children jumping and throwing sticks and
+stones into the surf. They run back and forth with its rhythm, playing
+touch and go with it, running to keep warm in the wind, playing as if
+they had to, dancing for the surf’s thunder. They laugh, shout, hurl
+driftwood into it. They jump and wave their arms as the water reflects
+their images, just on the fringe of an immense, terrible beauty,
+responding with an antic kind of love.
+
+The sea provides a cold, unfathomed latitude in the tightness of
+January. On land too there is a kind of under-rhythm of things allowed,
+or rather a special winter pace and timing, each life with its
+relation to the cold. The thin light and air seem to define the leeway.
+Thick snow showers slant in. Sky, hills, and shore are blotted out.
+There is nothing to be seen but the naked trees, the oak leaves like
+tattered old flags holding against the wind that kicks the flakes
+ahead. The storm abates into gusts, and occasional sweeps of snow
+with blue patches blown clear in the sky. At each advent of this blue
+clarity, with sharp spun strands of light coming in from the sun, the
+birds respond. Snow swirls. Wind seethes. There is nothing to be seen
+but a tree sparrow or a chickadee at the bird feeder. Then the blue
+patches show again and the earth clears to vision. A flock of juncos
+fly in, or a blue jay glides through; a red-tailed hawk screams in the
+sky. It is as if they were all puppets dancing for their master light.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Special response is as much a part of winter as extreme reaction or
+withdrawal. I see this in the birds. I hear it in the yawing creaks of
+a pine, in dead leaf stir, wind speech, in their collaboration. I feel
+it in the quality of the season, its rigid shocks, its holding hard and
+letting go, its suspense and trigger edges, the obedience it calls for,
+the inertness and tight compliance.
+
+Within the temperature range permitted it, life now shows many
+hairbreadth balances. Some marine animals “deactivate” during the
+winter--the equivalent of that coma and lowered metabolism which is
+called hibernation in the woodchuck or the chipmunk. If no ice blocks
+are in the way, and I can walk out over the offshore flats, I find
+periwinkles still holding on to rocks or driftwood, but obviously
+slowed down almost to a stop. On the other hand, common rock barnacles
+breed during the winter months as far north as Delaware and New Jersey,
+sending out eggs which will hatch in cold sea water into free-swimming
+larvae. And there is a red crab in Boston Harbor which stays active
+throughout the winter.
+
+When it gets abnormally cold, shellfish “supercool.” They have a
+freezing nucleus and will survive if not suddenly jarred.
+
+Adaptation to ranges in temperature varies enormously. Some plants and
+animals die when the temperature drops beyond a certain point, and
+others when they are released too quickly from freezing temperatures.
+Some animals avoid the cold by migrating, or they are able by
+specialized habits to eat and survive as permanent residents.
+
+The conditions of life in its natural environment, whether land or
+water, vary from place to place, although the sea, for example, is
+less extreme and difficult than is the land. Such conditions may show
+dramatic contrasts in areas that are fairly close together. Because
+of the influence of the Labrador Current, the waters to the north of
+Cape Cod are colder than those to the south, where they are influenced
+by the Gulf Stream. As a result, there are some species of marine
+invertebrates which exist on one side of the Cape but not the other.
+
+The frog, a cold-blooded animal whose tissues approximate the
+temperature around it, lies in the cold mud, sometimes in blocks of
+ice, an intrinsic part of winter. The blue jay, on the other hand, is
+less helpless, and is able to forage above the ice and snow. Like man,
+it has an internal temperature of its own, regardless of the weather;
+although man is without the insulation of feathers or fur. A thing
+apart, I run to my house, my city, the tunnels of my society, in order
+to escape the cold. I wonder, though, whether this mental animal, a
+great experiment in complexity, is not as perilously balanced as any
+simple organism, a mussel or a clam, in the extremes of temperature and
+environment.
+
+
+
+
+ _February_
+
+
+ _Secrets in the Open_
+
+Rain comes, heavy, cold, inert. Dirt roads begin to turn to mud.
+Then the vice tightens again. Below freezing temperatures take hold,
+putting a new strain on plants and trees lately thawed. It is not
+steady, continuous cold that now threatens life, but the shifts between
+freezing and thawing--alternates in the caprices of energy. We are not
+allowed to open our pores and eyes too much, lest we be taken unawares,
+stopped as we try to start again.
+
+I am hungry for release from winter’s power. I imagine, hopefully, that
+the buds on the oak trees are a little fatter and the pine needles
+greener. If everything is ready to bloom when permitted, I am ready to
+say the word. But in fact the earth turns, and there has been a gradual
+increase in daylight for two months. The skunk cabbage has already
+reacted. The conical tips of its buds are pushing through frozen
+ground, showing that all life is not confined to pumping hearts. The
+ferment goes on in many ways, although the imperturbable action of a
+skunk cabbage, following the global year’s own pace, is not something
+to give me as much cheer as a blue bird’s song.
+
+Zero and subzero weather is unfamiliar on the Cape and when it comes it
+feels incalculably cold. It is face-burning, dry, and piercing. Icy,
+crackling abysses hang in the air. There is a fire in a neighboring
+town. A small clothing store has caught fire in the early morning when
+the proprietor was away. Leaden gray smoke lifts above it through heavy
+walls and winds of cold into the sky. A small crowd gathers on the
+other side of the street. They stamp hard, hold on to their ears, and
+watch the fire truck hurling tons of water into the black interior of
+the store, a little yellow frame building with nothing left to it but
+its name--the letters still showing on a dirty sign above the door.
+
+A stove caused it, they say. They wonder whether the man had any
+insurance. Was this all he had? They watch in sympathy. They walk away
+saying: “Who cares!” They laugh, and as the fires show signs of going
+out, they cry for more. What is there in us that cries out for disaster
+and responds so readily to accidents?
+
+I hear brutality and kindness, all in the same crowd, cold laughter
+and silent sympathy. Here are our meetings, all in the one extreme of
+a winter day, showing the allowances and shifts in human weather ...
+hidden fires almost seen.
+
+In a day’s time the great cold is gone. Frost still lies deep in the
+ground. The twigs of shrubs and trees shiver wildly and delicately. The
+sun strikes us more directly. It sheathes the tree tops and a running
+slate-blue sea, and the day seems more open, receptive to that release
+I look for; but there might be a magic there that will pass before I
+find it. I spend as much time stumbling as in discovery, stumbling
+over debris, cans, and broken glass, like this stretch of drab ground
+just off the highway, bordering a salt marsh. It has the grim look of
+scalped ground, having been robbed of its topsoil. The only life is a
+starling, perched on a bare sumac. At the edge of the marsh I clamber
+over colorless litter, logs, branches, piles of thatch shoved in and
+rocked by the tides. Things seem tediously dead.
+
+Something says stand and wait, look out and over; and when I do life
+stirs, assembles, and flies. The yellow marsh grasses sway beyond me.
+Ice shines white in the drainage ditches. A flicker, sun loaded, flies
+over to the far side. Tall dry reeds rattle together.
+
+In silence, a female purple finch lands on a tree facing the wind, its
+breast shining in the light. I hear the dry “tik” of a myrtle warbler.
+Then a chickadee swings and loops out of a wind-washed pitch pine above
+me.
+
+Through the thickets of alder, shad, blueberry, and sumac on the
+surrounding banks, I become aware of a sweet spring voice, then of
+small singings here and there, and when I follow them up I realize
+they come from the shrubs themselves. Twigs rustle and touch. Gray
+branches out of frozen ground sing in contact. Even the marsh reeds
+make occasional sharp, squeaking twangs. There is no melody among the
+birds. A robin, although it is as red as it will ever be in spring, and
+fatter, with feathers puffed out on the cold, flies to an alder bush,
+where a few dried berries are still hanging, to perch without a sound.
+
+The music is there, though it may become louder and richer in a later
+context. Musical capacity is not confined to a few animals, or to
+spring and summer. Cold air and frost rehearse with plants as well,
+under the changing sun. The song of light is played in many ways.
+
+
+ _The Sea in the Ground_
+
+It is on just such a day, when hope, interest, renewal seem
+to be afforded, though held in check, that I find other local
+residents--other people, other customs--that are not only in readiness,
+but blooming with color as though it were summertime. The temperature
+is barely at the freezing point. The air is bright and clear, and the
+top of the ground is played over by sunny warmth. In flowing fields
+that skirt the oaks, the reindeer moss, with many branches, perhaps
+suggestive of antlers (though it gets its name because it provides food
+for reindeer and musk oxen in the frozen tundras of the Arctic), is
+gray like dawn dew, or an almost luminous gray-green. Light nests of
+snow with sparkling hexagonal flakes rest between its curly fronds.
+
+The reindeer moss is one of the lichens. A lichen, each separate plant,
+multitudes of which compose the visible growth, is a composite of a
+fungus and an alga, seen only through a microscope. The alga contains
+the coloring matter, or chlorophyll, and can therefore carry out the
+process of photosynthesis, manufacturing food with water and sunlight.
+The fungus, which has no such ability, wraps its threads around the
+alga, protects it from the sun, and stores the moisture for their
+partnership; and, if they are of the rock-growing variety, anchors them
+both securely.
+
+The lichens are tough. They can endure extreme contrasts in
+temperature, and hang on in barren areas where other plants could
+not get a foothold. In fact, they are pioneers of millions of years’
+service. They prepared the way for all the changing elaboration of
+plants with leaves and stems that followed them, after they had broken
+down bare rock with their acids, dissolved it, cracked it, and combined
+their own dead materials with the rock particles to form soil.
+
+In these round-edged plates of lichen that cover rocks or tree trunks
+in the bare February woods, I see a life that is almost independent of
+the season. It goes beyond or behind our immediate knowledge of it into
+a kind of primal security, settling in where little else is possible.
+
+The color of lichens is the color of the green algae of the sea and
+of fresh-water ponds. If their blue-grays, gray-greens, or yellows,
+bring up the cast-steel color of ocean barrens to my imagination, or
+green water lolling at the sand’s edge, or underwater depths running
+with fish and shafts of light, there is knowledge to back me up. The
+progenitors of the lichens and their relatives the mosses--this richly
+green hair-capped moss that soaks up melting snow in the sunlight--were
+unicellular organisms that formed in the sea. The line is direct. The
+algae in lichens need water. Without it they would not be able to make
+food or reproduce.
+
+(The blue-green algae, which as a species is abundant in both marine
+and fresh waters, as well as in the soil, has the ability of lichens
+to endure very difficult environments. It can exist in icy pools or
+hot springs. The latter extreme was brought home very forcibly to me
+not long ago in Nevada, when I saw this plant growing at the edge of
+a fissure from which hydrogen sulphide gas was puffing out. The algae
+was growing where steam condensed near the surface and must have been
+thriving in temperatures of nearly 200 degrees Fahrenheit.)
+
+The color of our inland lichens and mosses changes with the rate of
+moisture. Reindeer moss withdraws in dry months as a method of coping
+with a disadvantageous season, instead of trying to carry on an
+uncertain battle for existence. It shrinks, in other words, turning dry
+and crunchy underfoot, but in wet weather it absorbs, almost drinks up,
+water, and then turns spongelike and its color gleams more richly.
+
+In the absence of leaves filtering the sunlight, the trunks of the
+larger oaks are dappled and spotted with these colors of watery origin.
+I say the larger oaks because the lichens once started may take a long
+time to spread. The golden lichen is a very slow-growing species,
+although there are many stone walls in this region that are covered
+with it. I have watched one spot of golden lichen for two years or
+more. No bigger than a fifty-cent piece, it grows on a stone step
+outside the house, and has hardly expanded at all.
+
+So it is an enduring kind of fertility that shines here, as the gray
+sea waters rock in the distance. And when I turn over a log, or take
+up a handful of spongy oak leaf humus, half thawed in the sunlight,
+there is visible evidence of the life now arrested in the frozen soil.
+I find a millipede, curled up like the shell of a chambered nautilus.
+I hold it in my hand and keep breathing on it, until it comes to life
+and starts moving around, stretching out, its myriad legs moving
+with fantastic synchronization, ready to be busy again, traveling
+seriously with the given purpose of eating bits of leaves, breaking
+down organic matter in the earth. It is suggested that the millipede
+may have been one of the earliest animals to leave the ocean, where all
+life presumably began, and take to the land--one of those statements,
+of course, that leaves millions of years in the balance of human
+guesses, but gives me another approach to ageless tenacity in this
+ocean-bordered wood.
+
+There is another ancient animal, the pill bug, damp bug, or armadillo,
+which I find in semihibernation in the middle of a rotten log. Pill
+bug because it can roll up into a perfect little ball; damp bug for
+its choice of environment; wood louse for its habitat and general
+appearance, although it is no louse but a crustacean, not an insect
+but related to brine shrimp, water fleas, lobsters and crabs. It is
+one of the few members of this family that have become adapted to life
+on land, but it retains a set of gills, or at least respiratory tubes
+with some functional equivalence to gills. It also retains an organic
+affinity for wetness, needing constant moisture in order to breathe,
+and will invariably direct itself to the dampest environment it can
+find. One dry summer day I uncovered a bunch of wood lice way out in
+the middle of a dusty patch of ground that looked like a miniature
+desert. They had taken advantage of the only shelter available, an old
+fragment of a board that held some shade and moisture under it.
+
+In terms of millions of years the development of millipede, or pill
+bug, becomes extremely complex and partly unknown. When did the pill
+bug leave the sea? How did its special breathing apparatus evolve? How,
+in other words, did it gradually adapt itself to life as a land animal?
+The problems of science are manifold. For an observer the very sense of
+a link between primal sea and primal earth embodied in this half-bug,
+half-marine crustacean, gives it great stature. There is thunder and
+depth in the pill bug.
+
+I suddenly feel lost in a wood which does not speak of calendar days or
+the month of February, but endless projection and development.
+
+Not lost too long--because the cold deepens and bites in the late
+afternoon and gray clouds begin to spread and darken, as a raw wind
+rises and shoves at the trees. I am caught again in the immediate. It
+feels like snow.
+
+
+ _Need_
+
+Early next morning the snow begins to fall, thin and glassy, bringing
+in a new kind of quiet, unpredictable intent, spotting the thawed
+surface of the earth. After a few hours the flakes are heavier, and
+their momentum increases. They run down dizzily, with a ticking sound,
+shrouding the distance, pelting dead leaves, collecting in clumps
+between the needles of the pitch pines, coming down steadily and fast.
+The temperature drops quite suddenly, and the snow flakes grow lighter
+again. The wind sharpens, sending them ahead of it, lancing toward the
+south.
+
+Hour after hour the snow collects with mesmerizing totality, and in the
+colder evening the wind drives in with great fury and drifts pile up.
+Dry snow whirls in and races around the windows, scouring them like a
+dust storm. The wind molds a long drift on the north side of the house,
+like flesh over bone, hip edge out and curving in, a woman’s shape, an
+inanimate body molded by violence into classic beauty, hollowed, not
+for love unless the wind is love, carved, marked down and conquered by
+everything that is latent and unconquered in the storm.
+
+For many days afterward the arctic air reigns over us, and the snow
+is crusted, blindingly white in the sun, a mortal danger to animals
+whose food supply it covers. A long sickle, a new moon, of ice begins
+to appear along the rim of Cape Cod Bay. There is crackling, grinding
+cold, in a day when we rise a little past the sun instead of ahead of
+it. The freezing nights, for some of the animals that have endured the
+winter so far, must be interminable, except for the rabbit, caught
+suddenly in the open by a great-horned owl. I found what was left of
+it in the woods--a burst of little bits of fur in the snow; the owl’s
+tracks; a mold left by the rabbit’s body.
+
+A hermit thrush dies of starvation, all its remnant food at winter’s
+end cut off by the snow. It is pathetically light, held in the hand,
+and when it is dissected only the tiniest patches of red meat show on
+either side of the breast bone.
+
+I find a dead eider duck on the shore. It may have been blown against a
+tree in the storm. One wing is broken, and the feathers buffed and thin
+from beating. After its feeding grounds are frozen over in an inlet
+farther down the Cape, a great blue heron dies on the snow-covered
+shores, wounding its neck in the last throes.
+
+The bird feeder is crowded with intermittent flocks of chickadees,
+juncos, and sparrows, all the ever present winter birds, pecking at
+seed, flying off, hopping on the snow, each with intense, nervous,
+active habits, keeping their wild, interrelated ways, entering in,
+displacing each other, disappearing and returning. A bolt of a bird
+suddenly tears in from nowhere and all the little ones are gone in
+a burst. A sharp-shinned hawk, a small hawk with an appetite for
+songbirds, has attacked in hunger and desperation, but it swerves when
+it reaches the feeder--its aim disturbed by fear as it approaches the
+house--and crashes into the window. It sits on the snow, terribly
+stunned, its head drooping. The body is the light umber of an immature
+bird, the breast streaked red. After a few minutes it stirs a little,
+wing shoulders twitching, head up, and yellow eyes glaring with the
+pure wild look of a hawk. Finally it lifts up quickly and beats away
+toward a line of trees in the distance.
+
+The chickadees are soon back, jumping down to the feeder from an
+overhanging pitch pine and bouncing back up like small puffs of
+snow, having left danger behind with their usual vibrant but sturdy
+acceptance. They are businesslike, determined little birds. If I could
+only get inside that head behind the tiny black eyes, and follow. I
+could swear it has the quickest perception of things. In any case it
+acts as if there were no time for leisure. Its whole body is tripped
+constantly at a staccato rate. The head moves up, down, sideways, in
+the needs of sight and utility. It poises to hammer a seed held between
+its tiny black toes and claws. It rounds the branch of a pine, ready
+for the next find, wonderfully resourceful in the game of survival;
+with a serious intent, gay in action, employing every second with such
+thoroughness as to be completely careless of the outcome of life, and
+so perhaps to surpass it.
+
+The mourning doves, whose low coos I mistook for an owl’s when I first
+heard them, are another of our permanent residents, not often at the
+bird feeder, but fairly ready visitors when they overcome their initial
+fear. One flies in, wings whistling wildly, hesitates, turns back,
+makes another foray, then waits in a shad tree thirty feet away, head
+bobbing, eyes blinking against the sharp sunlight. When a mourning dove
+flies up it shows a blue in its generally buff-colored feathers like
+a blue evening mist after winter rain. It walks with pigeonlike head
+bobbing back and forth, its thin tail standing out behind a tear-shaped
+body like the shaft of a cart, then spreading round and wide at the tip
+when the bird flies off.
+
+While the sturdy chickadees carry on business as usual, the dove, in
+gentle alarm, waits for an hour or two before hunger drives it back to
+stay and feed; and not long after that another dove flies in to join it.
+
+On the south side of the Cape where the open Atlantic surf keeps
+the shore waters fairly free of ice, there are sea ducks, eiders,
+baldpates, mergansers, blacks, or scoters, flying over the sea, or
+settling down on its shifting surfaces. Tiny white buffleheads, which
+make ducking dives into the water, show brilliantly against gray ice
+on the banks of an inlet at Monomoy. A tornado-shaped formation of
+red-backed sandpipers stands over the gun-metal sea. Patterns of wings
+and water run together, while the land is still not broken out of its
+frozen gravity.
+
+For life on land the power of the moment lies in a suspense which can
+kill. Another week of cold, with snow on the ground, and many more
+birds will die. Because this Temperate Zone, influenced by oceanic
+weather, attracts more land birds than otherwise might stay, there is
+a greater margin of arbitrary risk. The weaker individuals will die
+first, by a natural law, but all are subject to unusual violence. The
+comparatively mild coastal climate does not normally have a winter as
+bad as this one, although extreme conditions are no surprise in North
+America, and the risks vary for the lives exposed to them. One winter
+with exceptionally deep frost in the ground, hard winds, and little
+snow cover, is as dangerous to plants as a month of snow would be to
+the birds. And a mild winter may result in death or damage from belated
+storms and cold.
+
+We talk of storms and the hazards of temperature as though nature were
+merely arbitrary, and inconvenience the essence of her plans. Being
+less self-sheltered, life subject to wild nature knows the extremes as
+standards of action. Living things are continually balanced between a
+bold summer and a demanding winter, where storms are the rule and risk
+is constant. They are unable to accept less. This terror has its pride.
+
+
+ _Death, Man Made_
+
+Perhaps winter and death are complimentary, but the other seasons kill
+too, in their degrees of need and fulfillment. General association
+with death is so constant in nature that we could almost deny the
+validity of the word. Death, if it is essential to the consumption
+of energy, is at the least fuel for the fire of life and more likely
+an inseparable part of the fire itself. In the natural year it is
+all-pervasive and yet discreet and nearly invisible to us. We hardly
+pause on its behalf unless its presence becomes spectacular. To see
+a dead animal on the highway, whether or not it was killed by human
+agency, is not something most human beings care about, one way or
+another. This is not necessarily due to wanton disregard of life, or
+inhumane feelings, but because we retain an unconscious acceptance of
+death, as well as a natural ferocity--it is what is left of the animal
+predator in us that beats the stranded fish with a stick, or shoots at
+a bird simply because it is new to us. And yet, that death, which is
+so constant a part of the natural rhythm that we disregard it when we
+pass its evidence, may also become an obtrusive, isolated, and even
+obscene element when caused by human agency. Our technology does not
+represent such a mastery over nature that it is able to replace or
+assume nature’s ascendant ordering of things. We employ the methods
+of disaster with a heavier hand. Grace and accuracy of invention,
+abundance of means, are accompanied by an inordinate amount of plunder
+and pollution. In our power we are weak.
+
+I think of the hundreds of water birds that I have seen this winter
+dying, starving, poisoned, or freezing to death, as a result of
+having their plumage soaked by waste oil from ships. Tankers, merchant
+vessels of all kinds, cause drifting oil slicks on the surface of
+the ocean waters when their bilges are dumped at sea, or when their
+tanks are washed out when approaching port. Oil wastes seem to have
+made serious inroads on some forms of marine life in some areas, not
+to mention their soiling of beaches and shore waters. The sea birds
+drift into oil slicks at night when sleeping, or may even seek them
+out, mistaking them for plankton slicks. Eiders, old squaws, scoters,
+loons, brant, auks, all birds of our winter waters, come by immemorial
+habit to these feeding grounds for fish, plankton, or water plants. And
+because of the enormous and growing human traffic in ships and machines
+they have become endangered by something for which nothing in evolution
+has ever prepared them. Their feathers are tarred by an enormous brush,
+wielded at random.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Almost any day that I visit the shore I find a victim. Out on the sand
+flats at low tide is a female eider duck, crouched down in such a way
+as to make me mistake her at first for a dark brown chunk of driftwood.
+When I walk up she stays there without moving, but her eyes are alive,
+out of an unknown depth of helplessness and misery. The bird is dying.
+Her feathers, which in the female eider, are a handsome reddish brown,
+are not naturally glossy any more, but they shine, sickeningly, with a
+heavy coating of oil.
+
+Some black and white males, whose necks are beautifully tinted, or
+washed with green, as though they had taken it from some of the
+northern sunsets from which they came, are swimming out over the water.
+I see others, both male and female, scattered along the shore. They
+have come on land, pathetically enough, to get warmer, in the sunny
+but freezing winter air. Birds affected by oil pollution have their
+feathers so matted together that they no longer serve as insulation,
+and the cold strikes directly to their skins. Even a spot of oil no
+bigger than a fifty-cent piece may expose them and cause pneumonia. So
+the doomed sea birds huddle up against a sandbank, out of the wind, or
+they waddle into the water when I approach, or stand on rocks just
+offshore, vainly trying to preen dark smudges out of their feathers.
+Another effect of oil on plumage is to make the birds lose their
+buoyancy in the water, so that they swim half submerged, and when
+alarmed they are unable to take off but beat their wings and splash
+ahead with no result but further exhaustion. If the oil invades their
+digestive system, as they feed or preen, they are poisoned by it.
+
+This winter the dying birds have been so conspicuous that many local
+residents have become aware of a situation which might otherwise
+escape their notice, although when it becomes really acute we may only
+recognize it by deduction, because some species of birds will be gone.
+It is reported that oil pollution has killed some 250,000 birds off
+Newfoundland this winter. The razor-billed auk is now thought to be
+virtually wiped out as a breeding bird in that area.
+
+Some families in this area have tried to rescue a duck or an auk,
+having good feelings and a sense of responsibility. Success is none too
+frequent, since it depends on experience and great care in handling. It
+may take weeks to bring a bird back to normal vigor after it has been
+oiled. But the fact that a few individuals care enough to try is worth
+a thousand ships.
+
+“Whoever deals you this death,” I think, looking at some shivering
+eider on the sands or finding its soiled remains, “cannot get by with
+saying: ‘This is just a bird.’” The bird retains that wild distance
+which always seems just beyond our grasp, and it is intrinsically wise.
+Nothing we do to it can alter its original kinship with nature. It is
+in harmonious balance with a complexity of which we are greatly in envy
+and to which our carelessness only makes us strangers.
+
+
+
+
+ _March_
+
+
+ _Restless Days_
+
+Dormant vegetation is supposed to start awakening when the average mean
+temperature rises to 43 degrees, normally occurring in the northeast
+between April 1 and 15. Under unusually mild conditions, with the
+average minimum temperature lingering for some length of time above 32
+degrees, growth begins sooner. This is of course a generality, a law of
+likelihood, which may be applied to an indefinite number of conditions.
+Spring may be spring, and winter winter, but March is a part of both
+February and April. During the warm days in February, the buds of the
+Mayflower or trailing arbutus begin to swell, while the skunk cabbage
+is steadily pushing up through frozen, marshy ground. Life does not
+recur after death so much as show its readiness; but in March the first
+obvious bursts of change begin to show, like those mountainous clouds
+coming up out of the west, with a fresh warm wind.
+
+The huge clouds roll loose and fan upwards in the gold afternoon.
+Then the wind changes. A blowing, whispering snow comes out of the
+southeast, cruel to promise, blotting out the swelling buds, the
+feeling of release in the air, as if to say promise is nothing without
+what is not promised. Nothing is realized without the possibility of
+disaster.
+
+“Ahh!” the indrawn breath of a storm, a swirling and seething to make
+life hide. The snow hisses incessantly into every corner and crevice.
+High-rolling, roaring tides push in. The storm rises to a mountainous
+capacity. The sea is fulsomely moaning, running under a white darkness.
+Comber after comber curls over, spills and plunges down, pounding the
+sands.
+
+The wind seems to pause. It races violently as if to have another try
+at climactical energy. Then hail clicks down, spattering tree trunks
+and ground. The snow is turning to cold rain. We are getting “dirty
+weather.” I feel a load of anger and disgust in me that rivals the
+storm.
+
+I am, to some degree, a subject of these changing days. I come out of
+a kind of hibernation of my own that might not be connected with the
+actual state of the weather, but it has its parallels. It is so with my
+own temper. I hold it for fear of being overwild, and then some outer
+wildness, a change of air, an adjustment to open sunlight, brings me to
+a free delight, a sense of opportunity that I thought was gone.
+
+March may seem cold, raw, and gloomy for most of its duration, but it
+begins consistently to offer evidence of new things. A white moth flies
+up in the headlights of my car one night. A robin jumps down to the
+wet, matted grass of the lawn. I seem to catch a new note of triumph in
+a crow. The chickadees are playing, chasing, constantly flitting from
+tree to tree. They call and answer one another like so many bells. They
+have a call that is sometimes mistaken for a phoebe’s, but with three
+notes: “Fee-a-bee.” And their song has a single phrase: “Here pretty”
+with an occasional syncopated pause followed by: “Pretty, pretty.”
+Sometimes two of them sing at the same time, one on an upper and the
+other on a lower key.
+
+A male blue bird, rare these days, perches on a wire, singing in
+sweet querulous tones, and I hear the continuous, talkative trill of
+a purple finch, a lovely casual song that comes from its throat like
+fast-dripping water.
+
+Snow falls, or sleet, and the songs stop. The weather clears and the
+birds begin again, like chronometers of an underlying spring music.
+The sunlight glitters and I hear them again, just as I notice that the
+waters in the distance have changed from the hard blue of the winter
+and are streaked with green, as if filled with new veins of life. Color
+and music spring and change along with new numbers and demands, part
+of nature’s structure of love, a slowly increasing force, spreading out
+like a fan.
+
+There is a reddening in knotty oak twigs. I notice the leaves on a
+dwarf clover plant, tentatively but surely uncurling. Small eels are
+dashing back and forth in an aquarium with a new excitement, nipping at
+their fellow inmates, a sunfish and a minnow.
+
+This is the time of year that many animals start moving out of winter
+quarters, changing their range. On the highway I see dead muskrats
+that have been hit by cars, as well as some male gray squirrels. The
+squirrels sometimes dash back and forth across the road in a frantic
+kind of dance.
+
+Frost still lies deep in the ground. As they have done throughout the
+winter, quail pipe high, across the swishing, roaring wind. But there
+is a new restlessness abroad. The air itself seems to change now and
+then to an easier, looser abandon. Cold days, arrestations, come, but
+in counterbalance to surges of allowance and release. Life is beginning
+to seek its opportunities.
+
+I am impatient for spring, as raw, unseasonably cold weather continues,
+and then I see a dark little caterpillar on the road, or a mourning
+cloak butterfly, sprung out of hibernation. I hear a pair of mourning
+doves, cooing with slow measure and deliberation, long silences
+between. They seem to say something to me about attention. “What
+will come may not be, as yet. But we know when. And you might if you
+listened.”
+
+If I listened, and if I watched, found each insect as it came out of
+hibernation, comprehended a tree as a living thing, beginning to stir
+and seek, followed the development of buds and roots, the unseen life
+that stirs in egg or chrysalis through every inch of ground.
+
+There is, in common with the rest of the year’s revolutions, nothing
+neat or simple about the process of reawakening. It has started
+already. Raccoons in this area begin to breed in February and start
+foraging for their young in March. The great horned owl nests in
+January and February. During the dead of winter a few animals such
+as skates and barnacles start breeding in offshore waters. Variable
+reaction in this time of change is as complex as the order which
+controls it.
+
+Hibernation itself, that mysterious state which is somewhere between
+death and sleep, differs in various species. Some mammals hibernate not
+because of outside conditions but because of internal changes in their
+blood stream, as if timed not to the weather but the year. Each life is
+cyclical, corresponding accurately to the circling of the globe, but in
+mode and terms it differs vastly. When the frogs begin to stir around
+a local pond, birds, independent of hibernation, move back from other
+climates. Late in March a few alewives swim into fresh water from the
+sea. Late in April large numbers begin to show up, at a time which only
+varies by a few days, year after year. Yet their arrival, like their
+growth and responses, is conditioned by any number of circumstances
+that are not only physically distant from us but may be remote as yet
+from scientific scrutiny. To realize that the slightest changes in
+temperature can affect whole worlds of life, and that this factor is
+only one of many, can make a man feel hopelessly inept.
+
+So spring is not to come now, nor tomorrow, suddenly complete with shy
+warmth and flowers according to our expectations, but will take its
+periodic time, within a wide range and with enormous resources. By
+the same token, no spring comes pleasantly, without a certain amount
+of doom in its wake. A flock of male blue birds flies north too soon.
+They die during a severe snow storm or a week of extreme cold. Thawing
+takes place too suddenly for one form of life, and too quick a drop in
+temperature will kill another.
+
+March is complex and March is in a rage, though I begin to feel a
+universal response, a gradual turn, in the ground, through the trees,
+down by the shore as the wind changes from tearing things loose to a
+peaceful low breathing. I smell salt things on the edge of motion,
+balanced on a tip of allowance. I hear what I am unable to see,
+stirring, tuning up across the land. The response may be hesitant or
+bold, delayed or premature, but it is coming. There is knowledge around
+me, even purpose, whether or not it is working in mindless ways. When
+I see sunlight playing on a blade of grass, I see the component parts
+of wisdom. Then the grass joins the squirrel in its dance. Eels join
+men in restlessness and speculation.
+
+
+ _An Extravagance_
+
+We built a small concrete pool on our place, which is locally known as
+Dry Hill, and so brought the life of water a little closer to us. In
+the summertime the pool nurtures a migrant population of green frogs. I
+have put nothing in it except some sunfish that subsequently died, so
+that the occasional signs of new life it shows, like a water strider,
+or some nymph or larva of an insect that flew by and deposited its
+eggs, always strikes me as a dispensation from the sky. It is a proof
+of life’s pressing, inescapable need to drive into every opening.
+
+Thinking of draining the pool and cleaning it out for the approach of
+spring, I find a life so surprising and sudden as to take all human
+propriety out of my system. There, on the brown, algae-fringed edge
+of the pool, something moves, telling me that this well of water is
+more than ornamental. Light olive-colored insects, scum-covered,
+goggle-eyed, stalk on the edge, or skate very slowly through the
+water--the strangest kind of revelation. What could I clean up now
+without a sense of shame?
+
+The dragonfly larva, or nymph, which turns into an adult after a series
+of molts, is a fantastic-looking creature. I take one out of the pool
+and put it in a jar for observation. What I observe has no familiar
+meaning for me. It stays motionless, except when the jar is moved. I
+wonder again, as I did with a robber fly in the summer, what an insect
+is. Is it only a stereotyped pattern on the changing screen of nature?
+This one exhibits itself as a sort of embodied suspension, careless of
+death or time, like the process of evolution itself. There is no hurry.
+
+The nymph lives for more than a week without food. Through a magnifying
+glass, I look at the flat-bottomed, skiff-shaped body made shaggy by
+algae-covered hair, the jointed legs, the upended tail. It is striped,
+and there are brown markings over and across its goggle eyes, and
+brown on its strange mouth part, which sits in front of its face like
+a catchers mask. This part, or device, is called the labrum. It is
+hinged, equipped with hooks, and can be shot forward rapidly to grab
+and hold the animal’s prey. In the nymph’s case, as with so many other
+things in nature, seemingly endless waiting and suspense precedes
+occasional spurts of lightning rapidity.
+
+As I peer at it, greatly enlarged behind my magnifying glass, its
+jointed legs suddenly flail up in front of me, and I actually feel a
+tremor of alarm--which might be humorous, except for my sense that this
+small dragon is timeless in some awesome way.
+
+As March is proving a seasonal release, at least in starting, so it
+also reveals an extravagance in the form of a dragonfly nymph, and what
+will come from that little insect shows that extravagance may have no
+end. After a series of molts, the number and duration of which depends
+on the species, a nymph will climb up on some green stalk spiking out
+of the water, the skin on its back will crack, and it will emerge from
+a sheath which it leaves behind, a dry, empty counterpart, and turn
+into a big, gauzy-winged dragonfly. It is given two worlds, water and
+air. Its embodied transformation from one into another is as rare a
+thing as the transformation of a caterpillar into a butterfly; and is
+evidence of a daring like the flight of Icarus toward the sun, but more
+successful.
+
+Nature takes the nymph out of itself. It is no goggle-eyed inhabitant
+of some other planet, no knight doomed to expire by weight of armor. I
+see the fantastic in it and also a miraculous reality, which will not
+rest with own products. This water predator will turn into a brightly
+colored, great-eyed hunter, skimming everywhere over land and water,
+darting across the roaring traffic of a city, flying over the surface
+of the ocean miles from land. Time seems suspended in the nymph; and
+this may be appropriate enough. It is the result of ages; but its
+metamorphosis is fresh and new, a successful act of endless creativity.
+
+
+ _Interpretation_
+
+It is in the nature of things to surprise, after temporary
+imprisonments. Surprise is what men look for. It is a need. And this
+puts us somewhat in the position of a dragonfly larva, suspended, until
+sprung out. Since we are not as rigidly and instinctively stuck as the
+insects, relief from our often unblessed condition may come simply
+because we get a chance to look around. Freshness of act, unfailing
+originality, is here, but it takes time to see. After an age of
+inattention it comes like a red squirrel, which I meet unexpectedly one
+raw March morning. Its whole body twitches and shakes. It jumps with
+an extraordinary series of halts and starts; then, like a boy playing
+Indian, it leaps behind a rock as I walk by.
+
+If there is any spare time in a harried world, perhaps it should be
+used in cultivating habits of attention, learning how to keep open
+for possibility, instead of inventing distractions that provide for
+nothing. What is loosely called “nature study” requires discipline
+like any other area of knowledge, and acquaintance with its subjects,
+their names, their habits, their place and performance, may encourage
+extremes of refinement; but it is one good way to begin. It takes you
+out. It shows you what else can be done. By example it may spring you
+into a new mood of action. It provides new acquaintances, showing you
+life, the surprise, where there used to be a wall.
+
+I, as well as my children, am still learning to read. I am still making
+a collection of terms, in order to attempt a rudimentary analysis of
+what I find. First in importance, though, comes an admission that what
+I am considering is not so strangled by human terminology that it does
+not have an identity, a sacredness even, of its own. Discovery gets its
+worth from what it pursues.
+
+I see a pitch pine with different eyes, not because I have learned
+that its clusters have three needles, but because I recognize its
+independent existence. I know that it has needs, and a history, that it
+is not divorced from an infinity of circumstances just because I can
+identify it. We do not need to be vain about our name grubbing, our
+scientific nomenclature; it is only the beginning.
+
+When I go to the edge of a pond I have a pleasurable sense of
+excitement, not only because I have been there before, finding the good
+old tadpoles and water striders, but because I know that I will find
+something unexplained, the same life perhaps, but in new relationships.
+
+There is a swarm of thin little flies dancing in the warm sunlight on a
+March afternoon. They not only tell me something about the lengthening
+days, but the light seems to sit differently on their wings. They are a
+revelation, materializing out of a distance, hovering near.
+
+In the game of identification we have to admit that nature is not an
+exclusively human province. Then we can be led by it, like this class
+of children, boys and girls on file through the woods, exploring new
+land, in expectation.
+
+There has been a light fall of snow, and a cold wind blows off the
+tidal marshes on the north side of the woods, but a warm wind is out
+and it is only half-winter. There is a cover of unmelted snow in shaded
+slopes and hollows. The buds are glassy and on twigs and branches small
+ice capsules reflect the light. Snow blankets the tangles of briar
+where rabbits have their runs. Tiny upmounded tunnels show where mice
+scuttle through the snow’s protection. Pheasant tracks are found on
+the way, and then the odd, creaky, fowl-like call of a pheasant sounds
+in the near distance. Several myrtle warblers are seen in a clearing
+on the south side of the woods, a sheltered area bordering on a tidal
+creek. In a marsh beyond the creek, which is running backwards because
+of the tide, cattails stand with a half cap of snow on their brown
+shako heads, on the side facing away from the sun. There is an icy
+glaze on the buds of a pussy willow. We are between north and south,
+winter and spring, snow and melted snow, arrested in clear parallels
+of beauty, turned toward the willingness of spring. Something calls
+to a slow and gentle attention that has been waiting in us. I wonder
+whether it is the identification of a pheasant’s tracks, or of a
+myrtle warbler, that they will remember in the future, or the special
+character of this day.
+
+It is hard to know what children perceive or retain. Suddenness,
+spontaneity, silence covers an untold number of impressions. Weeks,
+months, years later, they come out with something learned that a
+teacher could not have suspected. Occasionally they reveal an exactness
+which is innately theirs, quite apart from a classroom. I remember a
+little redheaded girl trying to tell us about a big white bird she had
+seen on the Chatham shore of the Cape. All description failed until she
+wagged her head back and forth in a special way, and we realized she
+had seen a snowy owl.
+
+Then there was a boy who characterized the blue jay as being “the
+loudest bird in the East,” which may have brought the jay out of the
+realm of science but not accuracy.
+
+But we lead in to nature through names as well as our senses, and then
+by familiarity with habits, size, shape, color, the order of change,
+the ways of dying out and returning with plants and animals. Knowledge
+is our medium, and we are obliged to question.
+
+What is that tree, strangely bent over along the snowy ground? A wild
+cherry? What happened to it? What is the evidence? Did another tree
+fall on it when it was a sapling, bend it down and force it to grow out
+horizontally? Its thick trunk stretches for six feet parallel to the
+ground, only a few inches above it, then turns and starts up into a
+sky-opening between the thickets beside it, sending up a wild array of
+branches. What else can we say about it?
+
+Then one boy, putting things together, hearing how the tree compensated
+for its difficulties, needed light, and thrusted after it, cries out:
+“Why that sounds as if the tree was alive!” That is what we have been
+looking for. He is well started.
+
+
+ _Response_
+
+March progresses toward its end, gradually adding to the population.
+Dark-headed, deep-colored male robins tug at worms on the lawn.
+Red-winged blackbirds sail low over marshes, or take stations by the
+edge of a pond, with reedy cries. The purple finches sing, along
+with the shrill braying of the blue jays. White-throated sparrows,
+quail, jays, and partridges that have been here all winter are more
+in evidence, especially on sunny days, and begin to be accompanied by
+newcomers, like the grackles. Myrtle warblers flutter up into the air
+and down again, catching insects. But the wind blows. It backs and
+fills. The rain is cold. The turn toward spring is very gradual, hardly
+perceptible at times.
+
+Then a few alewives, a dozen or so, come in out of salt water and show
+up in Stony Brook, familiar strangers, large, pale fish weaving slowly
+up through the narrow stream. It has begun to be a time of declaration.
+New patterns, new arrangements are taking place, however much the
+season seems to lag.
+
+On the evening of the twenty-sixth I hear a high, shrill sound,
+whirring and spinning, suggesting proud activity, presence set free.
+The spring peepers are making it known that a time has arrived, and I
+take joy in the news, having failed to make any definite assurance of
+it myself. Their sound embraces all this changing land, rising above
+the whispered roars of the sea.
+
+Now the perpetrator of this chorus is a tiny tan frog with a smudged
+cross or X on its back, named _Hyla Crucifer_. The male of the species
+has been speaking up on behalf of spring openings for millions of
+years. In that capacity it is authoritative enough. Its voice, almost
+incredibly loud and shrill for an animal that is not much over an inch
+long, is amplified by means of a large bubblelike pouch which acts as
+a resonator. This mechanism is put to use after the animal comes out
+of winter torpor, after warm rain, and as the season itself breathes
+and sounds more freely. The peeper moves around with the earth itself
+and makes a declaration which, it seems to me, does not deserve the
+term automatic any more than the fiddling of grasshoppers in August.
+Both are part of the deep and various play of the year. In any case
+this specialty of voice is something of a marvel in itself. It is not
+like the eyes of an owl that are so made as to make maximum use of
+dim light, or the wings of a herring gull that can ride turbulent air
+currents above the water, or like the fins of a fish, the sensitive
+nose of a dog. The peeper’s vocal parts are not specialized for
+environmental use to that degree. Their primary, specific function is
+to attract the female. Mating and voice are synonymous. But perhaps we
+could also say that this mating cry, this sometimes bell-like sound, is
+fitted to the whole environment, that it belongs unerringly to a new
+earth and a new season. It seems to bring life and place, function and
+expression together. It is unequivocal. It is perfect. It speaks up
+reliably on behalf of everything now springing or about to spring.
+
+For all their vast population in the bogs, ponds, edges, swamps, and
+other wet areas of the Cape, individual spring peepers are very hard to
+find. During a cool evening, as the stars begin to declare themselves,
+I hear the peepers’ collective voice rising up around me, passing into
+the sky. On the banks of Berry’s Hole, that deep, swampy hollow nearby,
+there is a pulsing, piercing, deafening chorus. The wind suddenly blows
+over in a loud torrent, but the peepers keep on. I walk farther down
+and they stop; then they begin again, after I sit still for a minute
+or two. The banks are wet, after a light afternoon rain, and they must
+be covered by frogs, judging by the sound; but I search every bit of
+ground with a flashlight and am unable to find a single one.
+
+A wild, moist spring wind flings around the rim of the hollow, which
+is gray, dusted with fog, and in the clear opening overhead the stars
+fling out and away. Water stands dark and still where the banks end.
+Grass hummocks and shrubs choke the wet areas beyond. I sit for many
+minutes concentrating on one area with my flashlight. The peepers’ cry
+is deafening. Then at last, I see one. It jumps onto my shoes. And then
+another, on a low lying branch, moving along in the light--it displaces
+a third, which is toppled down into the leaves. They seem limp in
+action. A peeper is minute, almost weightless in my hand.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Nearby footsteps will silence them. They react spontaneously like
+tadpoles and minnows that dart off into deep water from a pond’s
+edge when you approach. Yet they are not bothered by the beam of a
+flashlight.
+
+Such a tiny thing, this animal, this cool, moist, anonymous amphibian,
+for so proud a message! I can see that a peeper’s whole body pumps as
+it calls. It is like a bellows, and the vocal sac blows out like a
+blister, bluish-green in the light. “Peep-peep-peep,” and the whole
+night is filled with an insistent, stirring cry. No human statement
+can rival this simple, triumphant mode of revelation. The earth begins
+again.
+
+
+
+
+ _April_
+
+
+ _Deeper News_
+
+I read in the papers that spring is beginning to show its vast capacity
+in the nation behind us, with tornadoes in the west, and floods to the
+south. The way is being cleared with a violence.
+
+And here, heavy fogs invest the Cape during the early morning and at
+night. On the night of the second we are lashed by a savage gale,
+carrying wet snow and rain, and feel a searching, bitter dampness.
+The next morning the sun comes out with promise and radiance. There
+is a faint new fragrance in the air. It would have been nothing but
+that--a sense of mild relief after the pressure of a storm, but for
+another piece of news. At 1 A.M. the Coast Guard had received an
+“incoherent” distress signal, though without exact location, from a
+vessel somewhere on a twenty-five-mile stretch of shore between Cape
+Cod light in Truro and Nauset light in Orleans. It was found before
+dawn, an eighty-three-foot trawler, which had run aground off South
+Wellfleet. Out of a crew of seven, the reports say, two are drowned,
+four survived, and one is missing.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+They were returning to Boston with 38,000 pounds of fish, after
+fishing west of Georges Banks. During the night, through a thick fog,
+a thirty- to forty-mile-an-hour wind, high waves, and heavy rain, the
+radar stopped working and the crewmen were unable to see. The “Back
+Shore” bar, on which the trawler ran aground, is an old graveyard for
+ships. Modern equipment has cut down greatly on losses, along with some
+of the old safeguards against them. Many lighthouses are no longer
+manned by lighthouse keepers and their families. Great beams of light
+swing out over the dark sea and back again with inanimate, unmanned
+precision. Members of Coast Guard rescue crews may no longer be men
+born and bred here who know every inch of their beaches. In fact, they
+are more likely to come from a different state, and to be stationed
+temporarily on the Cape, so that a man hunting for a wreck may not have
+too exact an idea of his location.
+
+During the afternoon, after I hear the news and drive to see the wreck,
+a southwest wind blows over the cliffs that stand above the Wellfleet
+beach, and clouds swirl up across the blue emptiness. Cars line both
+sides of the road. A thin trickle of people walk along the heights,
+sands held by yellow grass and purple patches of bearberry, and there
+are others far down the long beach where the trawler lies, heaved over
+to starboard.
+
+From morning news accounts and a scatter of talk the story of the
+doomed ship and the rescue comes to me a little, from under its
+nighttime shroud of fog and heaving waves. After the radar quit and the
+vessel ran aground on the sand bar, the crew made a futile effort to
+get her off. Then the radio failed. The ship was being knocked around
+in the thrashing darkness. All attempts failed to put dories overboard.
+And the seven men went into the pilothouse, where they stayed for some
+five hours. When day broke, the tide was changing and the seas seemed
+bigger than ever. The men were battered and exhausted. The trawler’s
+decks were awash, and they thought she was beginning to break up. The
+captain then ordered the crew over the sides, at which time the ship
+was some 600 to 700 yards offshore.
+
+A local family, a man, his wife, and twelve-year-old daughter,
+proprietors of summer cottages above the beach, were wakened at four
+forty-five in the morning by two coastguardmen who had seen the wreck
+and stopped in to use the phone. While one of the men drove along the
+heights and trained the spotlights of his jeep on the wreck, the other,
+accompanied by the family, walked down to the shore. The fog had lifted
+a little and they could see white spars rocking above the water, and
+what looked at first like debris, being washed back and forth against
+the shore. Forming a hand-to-hand chain, the four rescuers then
+managed by just standing out far enough in the icy water to pull three
+men in. More Coast Guard personnel came later and rescued the fourth.
+The survivors were terribly numbed by the cold. One of them had to be
+forced into walking so as to save his life. “How much further?” he kept
+mumbling, as he stumbled around in the sands, held up by the mother and
+daughter. Later, the flesh of these survivors was found to be black
+and blue from the pounding they had taken on board the ship and in the
+surf, flung against the sands.
+
+Two other crewmen were found dead on the beach. Another local resident
+saw one of them where he lay at the bottom of a ladder that reached
+down the cliff: “A big man, between thirty and forty. He had coveralls
+on, but no shirt.”
+
+His wife says: “I’ll never complain about the price of fish again!”
+
+There are plenty of fish in evidence, all for free, although not a
+single one is taken away. The boat’s catch must have been broken into
+and scattered by the surf. Every ten yards or so along the wide,
+shelving beach are dead fish, lined up as if they had been placed
+there--a market display, for no taste but dissolution. Gray haddock
+cleaned by the fishermen’s knives. Rose fish, pinkish, orange-red, a
+sunset color, with fringed fins, and enormous jellied eyes rimmed with
+white, like goggles.
+
+A hatch cover floats loose in the water, and a pair of yellow, oiled
+fisherman’s overalls lies on the sand.
+
+The boat, which was shoved and lifted by the seas until it now lies
+a few yards off the beach, is just ahead. We curious onlookers walk
+toward it in growing silence. The surf waters are breaking on the beach
+beside the strong, humble craft, inactive, done, pounded down. I can
+make out her name, _Paulmino_, along the bow. She is banked over hard,
+and the waves, still fairly high, back and fill around the stern. They
+well up, then ease away again. Where water sloshes amidships there are
+tattered nets and bobbing cork floats. The steel masts stand with ropes
+and stays unbroken, and the high, white pilothouse is intact, where
+they spent their terrible night.
+
+I walk away from that scene with a question. Surely they could
+have stayed on board and survived? But time is not waiting for
+could-have-beens. The sea rolls by. The stars burn and roar in their
+distances. Immortal death, an ending, but the source of all questions
+and the answer to them, roars on too without reply. Men in their death,
+or fish, or birds, are the same. They share in universal soundings that
+no mortal fear escapes.
+
+
+ _April Light_
+
+One evening, about nine o’clock, I walk out to listen to the peepers
+again. Their chorus comes up to the hill from all the watery lows
+around it, and through a fog-muffled distance I hear the scrambled
+yelping of herring gulls. It means a run of alewives swimming in to
+Paine’s Creek from the bay, on an incoming tide, two hours before the
+turn. The gulls can get at this feast more easily when the fish are
+crowded and not too far from the surface before complete darkness sets
+in. When I reach the shore, curls and wisps of fog show up in the
+headlights of my car. Gulls cry in alarm and fly back over the water.
+There is hardly any wind. The low, bull-like tones of a foghorn sound
+in the distance. But the stars shine out overhead.
+
+Long semicircular wavelets lap over the wide mouth of the creek where
+it enters the bay, and where the channel curves inland I can hear the
+fish slapping in the water as they swim in, making an occasional splash
+as they rush to the surface. Out in the middle of the stream, some
+twenty feet wide, I can dimly make out the head of an animal--probably
+a harbor seal that has been making a foray after fish in the
+channel--swimming steadily in the direction of the bay. I greet it with
+a yell as its head slips by and out of sight.
+
+A black-crowned night heron starts up with a low harsh “Quok!” where I
+startle it from its fishing stance along the water’s edge. The stars
+are brilliant, the sky above the low fog and bold emptiness of the
+shore is a vast cavern throbbing with light. Cold sea water, high
+spring night--life around me takes its antediluvian chances. The fish
+come on with a proud mission, deliberate in its age, secure in its
+origins.
+
+Then I notice that there are stars underfoot as well. My feet strike
+stars in the damp sand. Everywhere I walk I am shod with light. Now it
+comes to me that these may be some light-emitting marine animals that
+I have read about, a family of protozoa called noctiluca. They are
+microorganisms, and although the sand gleams in my hand, they are not
+to be found or seen with the naked eye. What kind of “phenomenon” is
+this? At once a chemical reaction and a living thing? This illumination
+from mindless lives seems to me to have an incredible vitality. When
+I stamp brutally on the ground the prickly squares of light dim a
+little, but nothing I do can put them out or alter their abundance.
+The sea’s riches touch the shore and leave their fire. I may be in the
+presence of something that is nearly indecipherable, neither matter
+nor antimatter, neither the animate nor the inanimate, but a true
+representative of the sun, and more than the moon, a life in light.
+
+There are these night lights; and the lights of day, like the newly
+arrived tree swallows that shuttle across a stream dipping and diving
+in the air after insects. They have lovely white bellies, backs of a
+beetle’s iridescent green.
+
+Because there is still a tight residue of winter left in the air, the
+warm days when they come seem to promise everything. They come to us
+like a story to a child: “What happens next?” As I look through the
+novel glassy stillness outside the house I can hear the click of a
+bird’s bill as it chases a fly to the ground. It almost seems possible
+to see the grass growing.
+
+There is a rich salt smell coming from tidal marshes, a bolder light on
+their hummocks and stretches of oaten thatch. The sea breeze sounds,
+making the distance stretch with music in the light’s new allowance.
+
+In these opening stages, spring feels to me like a bird settling on
+the water, like a herring gull that drops down to the surface, spins
+a graceful half circle when it lands, adjusts its wings, and settles
+down to rest. Life begins to show easier, freer ways of action which it
+had almost forgotten in the cold and dark. It displays itself, like the
+soft red flowers that hang from the maple trees, or the mourning cloak
+butterfly, come out of hibernation, stretching its wings in the yellow
+sunlight of a path where I am walking.
+
+These are the signs of spring, the illuminations I have been waiting
+for. And its fresh, cool wind, striking my face, seems to carry new
+senses with it. It is beginning to be fragrant and full. It calls up
+in me a new alertness along with a new contentment. But underneath all
+these pleasant surfaces and scattered events, I feel the power of their
+origins. For all I can find and associate with spring, the romantic,
+welcome season, there are vastly more uncounted changes, unrealized
+ways of reaching up and out, responding to a new range of light and
+darkness. The protozoa tell me I have seen nothing yet as to fire. The
+migrant herring coming in at night say this April is ageless and dark.
+Everywhere around me, things deeply silent and unseen begin to share a
+proximity. They move in the waters, while they shoulder the dirt below
+ground. In the structure of their alliances, developed in measure and
+with appropriateness, is the co-ordination of the great globe as it
+spins in space. They respond to a power which not only defines the
+“spring” but will transform it and send it on its way.
+
+
+ “_Frightened Away_”
+
+The swallows freely dip and fall and sail in high wild air, and as a
+southern surprise two adult turkey vultures soar low over the land,
+their wings like great flags, frayed at the tips. The cattail seeds
+begin to fly. Part of April’s cool progression, the tough-leaved
+Mayflowers blossom out of banks and brown leaf litter, with tiny pink
+and white flowers, deep cupped, strong and sweet of scent.
+
+On the twenty-fifth there is a big run of alewives in the brook. It is
+an event that attracts attention. Cars stop by. Small crowds gather
+and walk down to see the fish. This is not as great a day as it used
+to be, when salt herring counted heavily in the economic livelihood of
+Cape Cod, but it brings up remnant feelings. And the fish, after all,
+provide an open ceremony, even though the details of their natural or
+economic history may not be known to everyone. It is a spectacle worth
+leaving a car for, and might even tempt someone to leave his car for
+good, suggesting new roads and means of locomotion not yet considered.
+
+They mass in the shallow water of the brook, with flinty gleams showing
+on their backs and dorsal fins. Eyes staring, mouths gaping, turning
+and wheeling, the foot-long alewives move up through the fishways,
+obeying their great drive for fulfillment. Herring gulls gather above
+the water course by which the fish ascend through marshes and then
+fresh water to their spawning areas in the ponds. They circle overhead
+in the blinding sky, like a prodigal crown.
+
+The alewife multitude always draws a “why” from some visitor. Their
+force is so obvious and yet not quite to be explained by referring to
+them as “poor fish.” Huge numbers are caught in nets where they die in
+a shining, gasping, shivering mass, and then are hauled away in barrels
+for the purposes of bait or cat food. Others attempt impossible rocky
+barriers and die of wounds or exhaustion, and a certain percentage
+have fallen prey to gulls before they arrive. They encounter enormous
+hazards, and the alewives, unlike men, or as men think of themselves,
+are unable to turn back. The plan that put them here seems wasteful
+and even too bold for those who see life in terms of human ascendancy,
+where all problems are subordinate to our conscious attempt to use the
+earth and save ourselves. But there they are, back again so committedly
+as to make the most self-enclosed glimpse something of the primal
+energy that makes all life insist on renewal and advance. Even the
+children who jump down to the water’s edge and try to flip the fish out
+with their hands, treating them sometimes with extraordinary cruelty,
+must feel some attachment to this force, or perhaps they feel it more
+than the rest of us.
+
+After trying to explain the habits of alewives to a group of children
+one day, I asked them why, if all the fish were taken out of the brook
+every day in the week, there would be hardly any fish returning in a
+few years’ time.
+
+I don’t excuse my lack of clarity. In any case, one boy answered:
+“Because they would get so frightened they would all go away and not
+come back.”
+
+Wrong, of course. Someone might even be tempted to cry: “Ridiculous!”
+The answer to the question is that most of the alewives return to the
+stream in whose headwaters they were hatched and where they grew up for
+a few weeks or months of their lives before returning to salt water.
+They then continue to grow in the sea, returning at sexual maturity in
+three or four years’ time. So if all the spawning fish are taken out of
+the brook every day in the week there would be no eggs to hatch out in
+the ponds above the stream, and the population would be decimated.
+
+“No,” you say to the child, “you don’t understand. Let me explain this
+again.”
+
+That the fish are “frightened” does not come into the picture at all,
+aside from the facts, and it is blatant anthropomorphism to try and
+read human response or attributes into a fish. Does a fish take fright?
+Perhaps, although it might be more accurate to call it an alarm, or
+flight reaction, an automatic nerve response inherent in the whole race.
+
+Trying to talk like an adult, I describe the alewives’ running in to
+spawn as “slavery to the reproductive urge.” What happens to them on
+the way is immaterial to this unconscious necessity. Fish that commit
+suicide do not do so out of choice.
+
+And yet, when these fish swing away from me, as my shadow comes over
+them, when they try time after time, sometimes frantically, to climb a
+mound of rocks or a head of water, I wonder about being “frightened,”
+or the noun “fear.” Is this spring stream of life without it? A bird
+trips off a branch in sudden alarm, cries out, and then forgets, to
+start in on a singing joy all over again. Birds are more emotional than
+cold-blooded fish, but if fear is a protective, lifesaving reaction
+inherent in a great many animals, then the fish may not be devoid of
+it. They are one of the foods of the universe, and in balance with that
+function, it is not just that their glands stimulate them to momentary
+activity, or that they flinch before disaster, but that they express in
+their bodies the wild need for freedom to act, to find, to run, to be,
+that manifests itself in highly developed animals, and to some degree
+in the lesser ones. They are in a sense compensating for the uses to
+which they are put as a prey, or element, of universal appetite.
+
+The alewives will not be frightened away, but they will come back with
+fear. It is not wise to be too impatient with a child.
+
+
+
+
+ _May_
+
+
+ _Declarations_
+
+The colder, and still relatively silent world of April is past. Warm
+sunlight runs across trees, sharp shadows, water and sand, with a
+penetrating radiance. The alewives now come up the inland stream day
+after day. Pale, sun laden, they move against the fast-rushing current,
+arousing great excitement in the gulls. The big white and gray birds
+hover over, then dive down in a flock where the fish crowd in shallow
+water on their way up. The valley is full of marauding and assemblies
+and crying out as the fish keep on, rushing and weaving with the stream
+flowing over their backs.
+
+And now the shad blow blooms. Thousands and thousands of these little
+trees are laden, but lightly, with lacy white flowers, looking like
+standing clouds in open woods and valleys throughout the Cape. Pink and
+yellow and silvery-green colors begin to appear on the oaks. Anthers
+are hanging conspicuously from the pitch pines.
+
+Fish, insects, plants, birds are all, if I can personify them so, in
+close and obedient relationship to nature. They count on strength and
+protection when they sing or flower out above the ground. They are
+in confident relationship to the general being. And so they act with
+confidence. They have come. They will be. They declare themselves. The
+birds make the dawns sound with a silvery rain of music. On the morning
+when a thrush wakes me up, its rippling and melodious peals lifting and
+diving through the air, I have an incalculable urge to migrate outward
+and claim new territory. Spring tells me I have not had enough.
+
+The shore birds appear in new flocks all the time, skimming and crying
+along a once empty shore. Colorful little warblers populate the woods,
+each with so mature and particular a color and set of ways. Now, I
+think, they are all back from Mexico or Florida or Patagonia, to help
+us not only in our geography but to extend our senses.
+
+Motion and change of place are a bird’s necessity. Wings insist on
+flight. Yet their recognition of that part of the land or length of
+shore they come to in spring seems as positive as that of any home
+builder on a numbered lot. When they arrive, a large majority claim
+a place with all the resources at their command. In the science of
+ornithology this is called “territorialism.” Male birds, which often
+arrive some days or weeks before the females, select an area of land as
+a nesting site, which they defend against all intruders. Most of the
+songs of spring are advertisements by male birds of the fact of land
+possession.
+
+The towhees are more insistent and vociferous in their claiming than
+most. I hear two males, both perched on low trees, perhaps a hundred
+yards apart, that keep at their singing as if they had a rivalry that
+would never end. Each declares. Each holds its own, as if song is an
+anchor to the earth. They stop me in my tracks. A human being is a
+clumsy, noisy, obstreperous animal. When I walk down a slope or through
+the level fields, I find myself so involved with my own racket as to
+lose all sense of what it was I set out to look for. Where is peace if
+you yourself destroy it? These birds help me to command it. I stop and
+listen to them, squaring off the limits they declare.
+
+“Air_tree_!” the towhees call, and “Tip-your-_tree_!” continually,
+inexhaustibly. There is probably little point in using words like
+pride, challenge, or anticipation in terms of these singers. Who in
+the nonhuman world knows but they? Our music is not theirs, however
+much we have borrowed from them. Still, what I catch at, and what
+starts in me, is feeling. Their songs are an expression of it. The
+towhees are here to establish themselves. Their future is in direct
+relation to the place they have chosen for it, which may also be the
+general area where they were born. Their voices measure place, a real
+and powerful thing to them. Song insists. Song makes known. Song is
+a self-assurance. Since this singing is done in collaboration with
+the arousing, fecund world of spring, it may in its own way be true
+awareness.
+
+In the newly unfolding regions of delicate leaves a prairie warbler
+sings “Tsee-tsee-tsee-tsee-tsee-tsee” very rapidly, on an upward
+crescendo. A slim little bird, with a yellow breast streaked with
+black, its sharp trim beak opens wide as the notes swell out of its
+throat, and it seems to send song as far as it can. I think of constant
+effort, constant quick hearts. It picks up a light green caterpillar
+from the oak leaves and sings as it holds it in its beak. Then the
+warbler beats at the insect a little, pecks and shakes it, then
+swallows it down; and goes on singing.
+
+An oven bird perches on the oaks and sings, with breast uplifted, tail
+shaking, making a glorious effort. How could I dare say that this
+bird or another down the road, which accompanies it, is only singing
+something that sounds to our ears like “Teacher-teacher-teacher”?
+No bird song is alike, even in members of the same species. Each
+individual has its variation and seems to derive strength and pleasure
+from it. And it seems to me that they not only declare their rights
+and titles but are expressing something on behalf of spring. It is as
+if they sang: “It is not I. It is not I” but rather, all flowering,
+crossing, taking or accumulating, all growth. The song is a part of
+earth.
+
+Then there is that bird, a member of the family of mimics, the brown
+thrasher, which seems to make a mockery of the whole business. It is
+a cinnamon-winged, speckled-breasted, long-tailed bird, with a long
+bill and sharp, quick yellow eyes. The male thrasher is certainly as
+intense and serious about the duty of staking out his territory as any
+other species, but what issues loudly from his open bill seems like
+the most comical sort of parody. He may not be as good a mimic as the
+mocking bird--which has been known to imitate a flock of blue jays--but
+he manages a wonderful take-off on the whole race of birds. He is a
+master of a grab bag of trills, chatters, pips and cries, of rasps and
+sweetnesses, of sudden blurts, and obvious pauses as if for effect.
+
+Translated into a rapid tempo of words, his song might sound like
+this: “Jeremy! Jeremy! Ready here. Right here. Wide awake. Wide
+awake. Chipper! Chipper! Shake a leg. Up! Up! Here’s a joker. This
+way. This way.” ... an interpretation which probably makes me as
+ridiculous as he intended, if he is a serious humorist. In the middle
+of this exhortation I hear a comic little “Cucaracha!” or quite a good
+imitation of a whippoorwill, as if he saved his more exact skills for a
+casual moment.
+
+The thrasher may be just as conditioned in his joy and utterances as
+any other bird. His variations on the general bird theme may come out
+abstractly, without any attempt at parody, a limited kind of talent,
+and yet when I listen to it, it seems to me that the bounds of song are
+being just a bit extended. As compared with other birds, the blackpoll
+warbler for example, with only a thin, high note, reminiscent of insect
+sounds in the summer, the thrasher has range and repertoire. He is
+vocal and conversational, even to the extent of tempting at least one
+human animal into reading words and intentions into his performance;
+and this, from a bird’s point of view, might mean that I was extending
+my limits too.
+
+
+ _Facets of Expression_
+
+I make a foolish game out of attaching words to a bird’s song. Perhaps
+it is a way of trying to bring the two of us together in familiarity,
+but to give nature its true respect, every song, color, and action is
+its own master. Understanding, the best human means of communicating
+with other lives, might be most effectively attained by keeping a
+certain distance.
+
+That is the way I feel when I see the alert, tough little chickadees
+coming up to the house and picking up tufts of hair, rope, or wool,
+to use as nesting material. They set to work carding it so busily and
+self-sufficiently that I am restrained from an impulse to join in and
+look things over. I walk off to my own business.
+
+A pair of tree swallows is trying out a birdhouse, and when I stay too
+long in the vicinity, they are given an extra reason for a negative
+decision as to its merits and fly into the distance. This is a time not
+to meddle, tease, interfere, or try to imitate what cannot be imitated.
+
+From that point of view the life of May, free of human embrace, seems
+full of wonderful languages, still to be learned, and they are not
+confined to the uses of sound. Isn’t a flower or wing or new leaf
+articulate? I watch a mourning cloak butterfly that flits and floats
+overhead and then lands on a bare patch of ground in the sunlight.
+The broad wings fold and show their dark, woody, shadow side, with
+little white circles on them, their pattern and texture a blend of
+weather-beaten, drab forest floors, suggestive of niches and corners
+of leaf-decaying darkness. Then the wings spread out again. They are
+a light mahogany-red with shades of brown, bordered by black lines,
+and on their bottom edge they are rimmed with little round dashes of
+purplish blue, like small windows into the sky, and the body is green.
+The butterfly’s antennae have white tips. It has fine hairs on its
+back. Then, with a papery, fluttering sound, it is up with startling
+quickness from the ground; just out of reach, in the frequent manner of
+butterflies, as many a boy with a net has learned from hard experience.
+
+What can we say about the American robin that has not already been
+said? All the same, I know him not. He still appears on the spring
+grass like a stranger. He lands there, then pauses, holding up his head
+for a long time. No worms? Then he runs off on his robin procedure,
+abandoning one area for another, where he pauses rigidly again, then
+cocks his head. The worm is found. This is assessable behavior. By this
+stiff pausing and then tripping ahead, a robin is apparently able to
+detect the slightest motion on the ground. We don’t need to look for
+the emotion or consciousness of a robin beyond the actions to which
+it is stimulated by the immediate need for food. Utility is all. Or
+so I have been told. But the robin, like other birds, expresses its
+relation to the earth in terms of a set of responses which come from a
+head I know nothing about. It is an organism with much higher bodily
+temperatures than ours, with a much faster heart beat, burning up
+energy at a faster rate. Its experiences are entirely different. Down
+there, on that bird level, what is happening? What kind of awareness
+does it have, what kind of close, felt proximity to the stirring
+ground, the shadows, the lightly running wind?
+
+Even the flowers, as if they were special custodians of those fires
+of light that run through May, seem to express more than the value we
+have given them. Trim little violets, white, pale blue, or lilac in
+color, or pink lady’s-slippers blossom out and mark their separate
+places in the sun with beautiful emphasis. Each is significant. Each
+is inviolate. And, in a sense, are they not full of motion? In their
+growth, their seeding, their provision for continuity and change of
+place, are they not free to run away? They fly in the winds. They grow
+and they fight for life.
+
+Tiny white chickweed flowers begin to mantle some of our barren
+areas, and the plants are so quick and strong in growth, establishing
+themselves as if they had too little time, that they seem to be
+partners with fish that school and spawn in the sea, or nesting birds.
+
+All the new tumult and excitement combines in what we call spring. Each
+facet of it, each life in its own right contributes originality, and
+there are communications between them which surprise us--distant, true,
+and unerring. I bear witness to them, without quite understanding. One
+late evening on the shore, the tide pools stand out like mirrors along
+dark sands. The air is cool. Light sparkles over the receding tide.
+The distances there, as always, seem sparse and immeasurable. I hear a
+sharp, wild cry, and then another, perhaps a quarter of a mile farther
+on. Two yellowlegs, I should judge. Theirs are the only sounds, besides
+the continuous breathing of the sea. Did one respond to the other?
+Whether it did or not, they are linked. The curved coast line is their
+orientation, and the wide evening a plane for their cries, and in the
+play of spring’s advance it is a recognition, vibrant and unique.
+
+Perhaps we come to some such realization of the greatness of nature’s
+expression in spite of ourselves. We measure natural phenomenon with
+marvelous accuracy. We are always busy at it, cropping or adding names,
+readjusting interpretations, adding, subtracting, multiplying, and
+dividing. The miracle is still untouched. Why is the mindless flower
+less than ourselves and our assessments, or the bird’s reaction less
+remarkable? That which is without mind is not necessarily heedless.
+Perhaps spring is a manifestation of mind; and its lives, all those
+facets of motion and beauty, behave in its context as familiars. Each
+responds in terms of an alliance intrinsically known, as with the birds
+along their shore.
+
+
+ _Travel_
+
+For all my wonder at it, spring brings me into direct and close
+enjoyment. Down the distance to blue water, the young oak leaves in
+delicate silvery greens and pinks, swing in the full south wind.
+There is a wave of baltimore orioles. They seem to have arrived all
+at once. They dive through the tree tops and chase each other, living
+jubilations in orange and black, shouting out what sounds to me like:
+“This is the birthday of the Lord, Oh Joy!” Then a scarlet tanager
+appears, silently perching on a pink-leaved oak. It has so blinding
+and brilliant a color as to make no sense in terms of camouflage, or
+environmental adaptation, unless like the oriole, it is a treetop,
+sun-high bird, fitted to the colors of the sun, half tropical. Now it
+seems like a gift of extravagance.
+
+Crane flies and gnats are swarming. Moths crowd the windows at night.
+The ground stirs with beetles and spiders. I watch a bumblebee digging
+a tunnel. Every minute or so a tiny yellow pile of sand appears at
+the surface and then tumbles down, pushed back by the bee, which half
+emerges, giving a little whining buzz, like a grunt of exertion, and
+then disappears down its hole again.
+
+Toward evening I see a red-wing blackbird on the far side of a
+cranberry bog, epaulets ablaze against the low sun. It is attacking two
+impervious crows sitting on a tree, who must have just made a meal of
+red-wing eggs. It flies over and around them, back and forth, vainly,
+hopelessly.
+
+A few terns, newly arrived, are courting on the sand flats beyond the
+shore. With light, airy grace, a male flies above a female waiting
+on the sand, offering her a silvery fish. Then they both fly up and
+glide together across the blue and white reaches below them. Inland,
+two iridescent tree swallows go through similar formalities. A female
+perches on an oak post and the male constantly dips down and flutters
+above her, barely touching, performing a kind of aerial caress. Then he
+flies up and around her, with a chittering, trilling, clicking kind of
+sound. She flies down and pecks at the ground. Then both of them, in
+the growing darkness limber with new green and shimmering silver, wheel
+low together, in wide circles against the dying sun.
+
+What I see, what becomes easy to see for any eyes, in the gentle month
+of May, is an approach to prodigality. We are not yet bitten, dulled,
+and pounded down by population, of insects or men. Blistering droughts
+have not come yet, nor excessive rain; but all the component parts
+of nature run ahead. Through the alternately warm and cool sweeps of
+weather, there is a steady pattern of growth. This is the season of
+progression, of fanning out, and as with the trees that have formed
+next year’s buds, of provision for the future. The oak leaves which
+are limp and tiny to begin with, develop gradually. They toughen and
+mature toward their summer function of receiving and storing. They
+stretch, darken, and shine, turning from tenderness to ability. So it
+is with the fish hatched from the egg, or nesting birds, or the grass
+in the ground. To have had a son born this month, as we did, is much in
+keeping.
+
+Birth is now the rule. I smell a sweet salt air. White petals drop
+gently to the ground. Birds, trees, and plants, life in the ground
+below them, are sprung by a constructive light. To follow spring is to
+make use of yourself. Join and be. Here is as much expanding energy as
+the human spirit could desire. Aspiration meets its counterparts, on
+all sides. If, as man says, he represents a climax of sensitivity in
+the evolutionary sense, then let him now employ his consciousness for
+all it is worth, and not delay.
+
+Spring is loud and rich in its coming, but it is exact too, with a
+sustained propriety. Each life is in its place, its shade or full
+light. Each, held in the general change and roaming, to its necessity.
+Fragile star flowers and wind flowers bloom in the shade of a wood of
+beech trees, while out on the open slopes and fields the beach plum
+bushes are heavy with fat white blossoms, inviting the sun’s full
+strength.
+
+In that valley where the alewives run, a narrow cut between low hills
+once made by melt waters from a glacier, and joining fresh-water ponds
+to Cape Cod Bay, there is now such a variety of life in such a variety
+of places as to challenge travel in all the senses. It reaches from the
+fresh-water ponds with their muddy shallows where pickerel weed begins
+to put up its stalks, painted turtles sun themselves on rocks out of
+the water, and sunfish make their nests along the sandy edges--from
+the pond waters gently lapping and smooth surfaces skidded by the
+wind--all the way through tidal marshes to the sea whose massive motion
+stands beyond us. Each area, first the ponds, then the brook, as it
+cascades down rocky slopes, turning as it winds through valley reaches
+into a creek, and then a tidal estuary, meeting the sand flats on the
+bay shore, each definite part of land or shore, has its newly active,
+co-ordinated riches. In the upper end of the valley, just below the
+pond outlet where fish ladders are crowded with migrating alewives,
+there is a wild and loud screaming of gulls. They wheel constantly over
+the stream, and crowds of them settle down on the water, quarreling
+over feasts of fish. Below them, black-crowned night herons bob and
+stand tall in a grove of pitch pines. When startled, they cluck and
+squawk like so many women over a scandal. When one of them flies too
+close to the herring gulls, it is chased away.
+
+Two upland plovers skim in fast, crying high. A black duck whirs
+up, showing the white under its wings. The land at the edge of the
+marsh is full of yellowthroats, warblers with a quick, slurred call:
+“Weewiticha, weewiticha, weewiticha,” as it sounds to me, and sometimes
+a softer “Chichibee, chichibee, chichibee.” I watch one of these trim
+birds. It has a yellow breast and yellow head masked distinctively
+with black. It lands in the leaves, whips around, flits, quick and
+alert. Its colors fit with shade and sunlight as though it had
+been conceived with them--a definite dash of light. In the stream, as
+it winds down toward salt water, subject to the rise and fall of the
+tide, small groups of alewives run quickly and persistently through
+the weaving currents, heading up toward gulls and then the nets and
+fishways beyond. I feel energy and motion demanding me. Seen or unseen,
+a flying, starting, striding, swimming, and inviting, makes of the
+present and its short lives an endlessness.
+
+It is low tide where the channel meets the shore. Warm, hazy air
+rises over the bare landscape into an empty, chalky-blue sky. But the
+wide-ribbed sands are run over lightly by gold braided waters, light
+catchers full of motion, flexing and rippling. Crustaceans dart through
+them. Periwinkle tracks straggle across the sands, and the empty shells
+of razor clams litter the surface, along with the worm cases stuck with
+shells, seaweed and grains of sand, protruding above it; and there are
+black horseshoe crabs partly dug in, waiting for the tide to turn.
+The three-toed tracks of shore birds are everywhere, and farther out,
+through a light wind, a rushing sea sound, I can hear gulls calling
+low, muttering among themselves, and the unmistakable harsh cry of a
+tern.
+
+Sanderlings, black-bellied plovers, ruddy turnstones, are dipping up
+and down, scuttling, or tripping ahead as they feed. In the distance
+the turnstones, mottled black and brown, with short red legs, look a
+little like quail.
+
+Two herring gulls are pulling hard at a sand shark, stranded by a tide,
+or perhaps killed by some fishing boat when it was brought up in the
+nets. They work at it furiously, tugging and tearing from both sides,
+since the sand shark’s hide is like sandpaper and many times as thick
+and tough. When I come up, I can see that they have not managed to
+do much more than tear out some of the flesh from its head and neck.
+Judging by the tracks on the sand, they must have been hauling it
+around for some time.
+
+Far far out, I thought I saw a man digging for clams on the flats, but
+after walking for half a mile in that direction, I am astonished to
+see a yearling deer starting in a leisurely way toward the land. It
+had probably browsed its way out, nibbling at bits of tender seaweed,
+licking salt, encountering no danger in the expansive room that borders
+land and sea. Now, with the motion of its long legs showing in all
+detail as I have never seen them in fields or woods, the deer starts
+to run slowly, with an almost loose loping. It stops, looks around
+uneasily, and then the legs unlimber again, but hesitantly. It looks
+suddenly in my direction; and bounds and bucks away, its legs now
+working with tense speed. Through my field glasses I find a man and a
+boy on the beach. Seeing them, the animal changes course, gathers more
+speed, and when it reaches the shore, dashes up the sloping beach and
+disappears into a green line of shrubs and low trees.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The separations on these sand flats are vast. Where the narrow inland
+water course issues out, nothing is so well defined as space. For the
+variety of action here and in thousands of miles of deep water beyond,
+range is the rule, and the brook leads to the sea as all things lead to
+each other. Our meetings have scarcely begun.
+
+
+
+
+ _June_
+
+
+ _The Garden_
+
+“June, June, I beg your pardon, for walking in your garden” is a phrase
+from an old song, which expresses the delicacy you might feel on
+some moonlit night about treading a path through fragile shadows and
+flowers, or intruding by day on their young beauty. The song expresses
+it succinctly; but the fact of the matter is that the June garden is
+suddenly so rich and widespread that there are no paths to walk on.
+It is unavoidable. I find myself wondering how it happened--how it
+happened that I now take it for granted. My small daughter asked me the
+other day whether or not the trees wore leaves in the wintertime. She
+was not quite sure. We have come back to fruition unawares.
+
+The effort has been made, the strength achieved. In the past three
+months we have gone from death to birth, to unfettered growth, and
+have already forgotten what a great and elaborate process it was. I
+can remember--or I have it in writing (the aid to memory)--that on the
+twenty-fifth of March there was a light snow in the morning, and that
+the temperature was well below freezing, with strong north winds all
+day. The significance of the twenty-fifth comes from its often being
+used as an average date for the first sound of the spring peepers. That
+day the whole idea seemed impossible. And yet they sang, two evenings
+later. Of course the whole year is the scene of birth and growth.
+Spring is not the sole custodian of arrival. There are flowers that
+bloom in the autumn. But that was our last beginning, in immediate
+terms. We have lived through what followed with only the scantiest kind
+of recognition, to arrive now with a great new crowd of shapes and
+sounds filling the distance, in the muscular swing of light. Flowery
+grasses, wild flowers like vetch, daisies, coreopsis, buttercups, and
+hundreds of others, head up, shoot forth, dance in the sun and compete
+with one another for living space--part of the rush and race of life
+we take for granted. The fact that we do take it for granted may be
+the best proof of our deep connection with it, as with all the natural
+rounds of the year. We breathe and give birth and die in terms of the
+same force as these surroundings. It is less articulate with us than
+realized. The new measures have a steady underlying order which pulses
+in us like the tides. So I suddenly look around me and find the whole
+earth peopled with motion and quantity, searching and adjustments, and
+I find it familiar.
+
+In the warm air the land seems bound together by a whir ticked off
+in the grass by field crickets, lighted at night by the slow-dancing
+fireflies, intensified on the millions of new leaf surfaces, petals,
+and stems, where insects alight, crawl, and eat, many races pursuing
+their separate ways, aligned with thousands of life communities in
+function and in act.
+
+June has gone green, with a staggering assumption of authority. The dry
+land ferns stretch stiff and wide like fans. The huckleberry bushes are
+springing with light green. The oaks heave and rise with their bounty
+of fresh leaves. Meadows along the shore are green with samphire; and
+marsh grasses, still low, looking close-cropped above the dark peat or
+through rushing waves at high tide.
+
+On the lee side of a stone jetty thrusting out from the shore the
+water is full of plankton. Tiny marine animals, like barnacle larvae,
+copepods, baby jellyfish, are being gently carried and lifted by the
+surf. They are whirled and drifted in the water as it swells and ebbs.
+There is a beautiful symmetry in these fragile, transparent animals. I
+notice tiny beads of air along the sides of some of the jellyfish.
+
+In some inland waters joined by inlets to the sea, there are massive
+numbers of adult jellyfish at this time of year, pulsing slowly
+through green waters, like transparent animal flowers. The riches of
+the water, fresh or salt, are immeasurable.
+
+More and more adult alewives are returning to the sea after spawning in
+ponds and lakes, running back through marsh lands filled with cattails,
+wild iris, rushes, and arrowheads. Behind them they leave their
+progeny, which have in fact been hatching out for the past two months,
+and are gradually becoming so numerous as to interfere with the sport
+of fishing. These “bait fish” feed bass, pickerel, and perch, which now
+refuse to react to a mere fly or worm, having more than enough to eat.
+
+There are no waters, no wood or square yard of ground not sounding and
+moving with new life. A wild readiness, a fluency is here. Within its
+terrestrial order and confinement everything seems incalculably bold.
+Now is the time to run ahead. Now, even for our special race, is the
+time to take the necessary risk of new connections, new affinities.
+This is a world of alliances.
+
+I walk through a wood of trees--which might be in Cape Cod, Japan, or
+Siberia--their gray trunks spotted with dancing shadows, a naked wealth
+in motion, thinking that a man might find himself for the first time
+in this company, not because of would-be similarities--sap and blood,
+branches and arms--but because of a context which they share. I am an
+organism that can make a choice. The tree is not; nor can it suffer.
+To simplify the matter too much, I am an animal. The tree is a plant.
+But in the whole environment, with its intertwining events, its varying
+energies, each form of life joins and takes part. In this wood, while
+the wind blows across us and yellow light dances through, I think that
+even a man and trees, with their vastly different responses, may be
+together, players in a sunlight game.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+ _Room to Spare_
+
+June is a fullness. There is no part of land and shore not imbued with
+warmth and covered with manifestations of strength and capacity, but
+the season moves on. It changes to new measures continually, beautiful
+in substance but hard to grasp, like a flock of sanderlings swinging
+and spinning in unison along the bright sands, or a school of fish. How
+do they keep together? What is their communication? Even a forest of
+apparently rigid trees has a coherence and order of its own, perhaps a
+sensibility, since it goes through all periods of existence. Everywhere
+I look there is spacing, and at the same time mutual attraction, in
+rhythmic display, as though the laws of space were inherent in every
+action and bound in every organism. The play of the universe is
+what I sense in its living instruments, and my own, often borrowed,
+interpretations stop far short of its magnitude.
+
+Out of the whole possible range of communication (and it seems to me to
+go beyond possibility) each species embodies a special response. Its
+senses react in a unique and selective way toward its surroundings.
+It is true of the frog. What does it hear that we cannot? It is true
+of the fish. How does it orient itself in the water? What does it
+feel? What explains the sensitivity of some plants to touch? Each have
+motions, and in a sense languages, of their own.
+
+How can I understand the hundreds of moths that crowd the screen door
+at night? They have all manner of shapes. When I shine my flashlight
+on them their eyes glow with an amber fire. They flutter against the
+screen, and when I turn the inside light off, fly away immediately.
+This is a sensitivity to light and darkness that has its parallels in
+the butterflies attracted to flowers of a particular color. They are
+selective in their behavior and perhaps restricted at the same time.
+And yet, huddled, crawling, landing, and flying off, concentrated in
+numbers as they are, they suggest a dark realm of action and context to
+me. In spite of their reactions their terms are unknown. It is these
+untouched areas which must attract any man who begins to be aware of
+them--as though we ourselves had something in us not yet understood.
+Where the mystery is, may be the reality.
+
+What we see, even from the outside looking in, is rhythmic performance,
+not a series of static events. Balance and rhythm are the rules of
+action, understood in depth by moth or fish. Each race, unknown to
+the other, plays its own game, follows its own senses, and yet is in
+balance with the rest of life. The rules of natural abundance are the
+rules of space--not almost constant destruction and collision between
+living things but obedience to their given orbits.
+
+Many people have the idea, perhaps because of a human fascination with
+violent events, that nature is compounded of just such rigidities--dog
+eat dog, or tiger eat horse--or obversely, that nothing happens at
+all. Nature is either a menace or a great bore. Could I expect, going
+to some pond or water hole concentrated with life to find all kinds of
+mutual slaughter going on? At the edge of any small pond I see action
+enough this time of year. Many tadpoles hurry off in all directions
+at my footfall. I hear a bullfrog’s noble plucked bass sounding among
+the pickerel weed, while dark gray catbirds cry in thickets along the
+shore. A great antediluvian animal, a snapping turtle, with a fat
+black shell, a thick, fat head and neck, and large lidded eyes like a
+dog, climbs out of the water to lay its eggs on a sandy bank above.
+Its movements are slow and massive, each leg lifted as it goes. Only
+a sudden, lunging, upward snap as I tease it with a stick, shows what
+quick ferocity it is capable of. In the still pond waters there are
+schools of tiny, newly hatched fish, big-eyed, big-headed, with minute
+pin-sized bodies, running and twitching in rhythmic solidarity. A
+yellow perch runs by, and then a horned pout roves through the fry with
+apparent disregard. It passes near a sunfish nest, a little round,
+cleared depression on the bottom. The sunfish sallies after it in a
+short dash and then returns to hover over its nest, its fringed tail
+waving gently. In spite of our expectations, any aggression here is
+latent rather than actual, and need, it is clear, has room and time to
+spare.
+
+Co-ordination is intrinsic to the life of an environment, acted upon
+by every predator. There will be no fight between the sunfish and the
+horned pout, but the sunfish has affirmed its ancient rights to the
+territory that comprises its nest. It is bold in defense of its home,
+up to the point, presumably, that it goes beyond a boundary which its
+feelings establish for it. I am reminded of those birds, like the
+herring gulls and their “threat postures” (described by N. K. Tinbergen
+in _The Herring Gull’s World_, 1954) assumed when two birds defend
+their respective positions on either side of a boundary invisible to
+us but strongly felt by them. In these cases a fight may never result,
+because the two alternate drives of defense and aggression cancel each
+other out. What the trained observer sees as an indication of what is
+going on are “behavior patterns,” types of physical action that show
+him what this gull communication might mean. In any case, up and down
+the scale of life is force and counterforce, action and reaction, in a
+balance that is understood in as many ways as there are species.
+
+The lusty month of June is made up of all its encounters, many of them
+savage in isolation; but we may look for Roman circuses in vain. Wait
+all day and no life seems to devour another. Wait all year and you
+may never see the fight you are looking for. Now and then to be sure,
+as with an abundance of fish and their marauding predators, you can
+see savagery and greed confined, but even so the lesson is the same.
+It is not killing, eating, and aggression which seem paramount but an
+over-all rhythm and balance in which they are only elements. Later on,
+between July and December, the young alewives hatched out this spring
+in pond waters will start returning to the sea. I have often seen
+them as they go down the fish ladders by which their spawning parents
+came up. Perhaps through some attraction to the water’s force where it
+spills down hard over the concrete rims of each pool in the ladder,
+the fingerlings mass and circle before dropping back downstream. It
+is here that a number of eels, some of them of large size, coil and
+slither through the water, and eat large quantities of fish. Eels are
+largely nocturnal in habit, but they do go through periods of feeding
+by day. Sometimes they act like eating machines, methodically grabbing
+one little fish after another; but the alewives continually swim over
+them, unregarding. Where the fish idle in the stream below, in less
+turbulent, clearer water, perfectly capable of seeing any eels lying
+in wait for them, they are in no way affected, so far as I can see.
+The eels themselves, lying on the stream bottom for long periods after
+eating, pay no attention while the little alewives swim over them. Here
+is a strange relation between enemies.
+
+It is perfectly true that a young alewife may not know an eel from a
+stick unless it is directly attacked, being in some respects oblivious
+to much of anything except the need to migrate to salt water. And
+yet the point is not that they are “stupid,” but that their crowd
+lives demand a cohesive rhythm, sensitive enough in action, which
+is paramount to all risks they encounter. It is in fact their main
+protection. They school and eat. They school and escape. They school
+and perpetuate themselves. The solitary alewife is lost. These fish
+move and intercommunicate in a frame of continuity to which they are
+forever held. But can we call it a restriction? Its terms may be quite
+invisible to us.
+
+
+ _The Binding Rain_
+
+So this is, or was, Cape Cod, as June booms with fruition. The nights
+throb; and on a clear one how the long frames of the stars line up
+overhead! There is no end of internment, no end of use and opening out.
+
+It is not the place I came to, out of the city, though its shape,
+like a giant curved arm, or fish hook lying out in the Atlantic, is
+the same. Its oak trees have grown, even in the comparatively few
+years I have lived here. The old, gray-shingled houses are still in
+evidence, but there are many more new ones, seemingly temporary as this
+age goes. The shores are crowded, beginning toward the end of June.
+We are scrambling to take advantage of our summer economy while it
+lasts, although the buzz saw sounds the year through, as well as the
+chickadees, building motels, summer cottages, gas stations, houses for
+the retired. Cape Cod still has a certain itinerant quality, which may
+ally it to its more seagoing past.
+
+In my own terms the Cape is not the same. I have outlived my dependence
+on its past. I go by the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century gravestones
+with less interest. The “old characters” are not around to talk to any
+more. I am not quite so fascinated by grown-over wagon tracks as I used
+to be. Something pleasant is lost--even a blessed continuity. Still, I
+have learned to look for another, which has no particular choice as to
+place, joining them all.
+
+This is not just “natural history” I have found, unless you are also
+willing to call it “natural mystery.” This is life, or death-in-life,
+as well as “nature.” In any case it is bountiful, or niggardly,
+relentless, terrible, but always at hand. Only walk out and see. Cape
+Cod is rife with unknown lives (and what I know about its ocean waters
+is not worth mentioning). Where do we begin? With a first question
+perhaps. To make it is to recover from being afraid of getting or
+giving the wrong answer, a step toward knowledge.
+
+I have not learned much about cell structure, or the delicate
+co-ordination of organisms in their environment, or some of those
+remarkable mechanisms that trigger action in certain plants or animals
+of land and sea; but I have made that first step.
+
+I stand by some pond, wondering how deep it is. Everything around me
+says, in comparative silence: “As deep as you make it,” and I have no
+need to think my questions will delay the source that leads them on.
+
+The rolling energies of nature remind us of our own potentialities.
+In a small country field is all existence and its hazards. Ponderous
+storms, killing balances of cold and heat, great rains or droughts,
+hang over the needs of its competitive inhabitants. A natural,
+unimpeachable violence wipes out untold numbers, or holds them to its
+order. And yet the plants and animals themselves that endure, survive,
+and die prove an essential vigor in the process. It is not only a
+matter of “food gathering” and “competition” for them. They fight the
+winds, in rhythmic unity. They are made to face the universe, with
+the universe inside them. Their motions, their changing adaptation
+to circumstance, are also their great self-expenditure. Live and be
+finished off, but above all live!
+
+This Cape Cod, this special piece of America, has its unexampled
+strength and a “progress” which will not take second place to our
+own. Sun and rain, the capacities of earth, the mindless ways of the
+flower, the strange and short sensitivities of the insects in their
+other world, the brooding sea in its ominous tidal balance held by moon
+and turning globe, all this matrix of energy has its standards and its
+abiding needs.
+
+It rains steadily as the tourists begin to drive down the Cape in ever
+increasing numbers, thus abashing their spirits. Rain is a nuisance.
+It keeps us in and deprives us of perpetual warmth and light. If there
+were no rain? Drought is only on the surface. Water comes from pipes,
+the way milk comes from refrigerator cars.
+
+But the rain will not be stopped. Clean, cool, straight falling,
+pattering on multitudinous leaves, it insists on its own power and
+propriety. There is no wind. The calm gray sky is gently, loosely
+moving, but held dead center with its riches of rain. The fall is
+steady and fast above the treetops, with single drops ticking off from
+each waxen leaf, sliding down the pine needles to end at their tips in
+brilliant crystal eyes. With a thin long seething it spits and spats
+and trickles on, pausing occasionally, then putting forth again. The
+water lands on the dead leaf floor under the trees, or thick beds of
+needles, sliding and soaking through, making gradual displacements
+between litter and soil, stirring gently, providing the life of earth
+its refreshment and guaranteeing its sustenance.
+
+Between pond lilies and reeds the rain spatters the fresh water. It
+changes the lakes and ponds as it changes the earth. The water level
+moves up and down from year to year depending on the rainfall. In
+a pond it will move up the rim and cover the roots of overhanging
+shrubs--blueberries, alders, or swamp azaleas--then, after a year or
+two, it will recede again, revealing a narrow beach. During the years
+there will be continual, subtle alterations in the nature of plants
+around the pond, and in the habits of the animals dependent on them.
+
+The rain falls through woodland bogs, and open swamps. It trickles
+down bare slopes and thicket-studded valleys. It runs over incessantly
+moving brooks and streams that bear it toward the sea. Its drops bounce
+with silvery emphasis across the waters of the slow, gray tidal inlets.
+They sound like a breath along the sands, and while arrowlike terns are
+excitedly diving for fish, they pock the silver-streaked levels of the
+bay, and then are lost to sight, pattering out over massive waters.
+
+Even and sweet the descent, calm and clean its provision. The rain
+thrusts in and guarantees immediate growth. It binds the birds to
+the insects to the plants, to sun and air, breaking down elements in
+the soil, loosening it for billions of its travelers, making sure of
+sustenance in that release. Rain sound in June, which at other seasons
+may cut like a knife, is one of beatitude. I listen. I accept. It
+carries me on. Out of the hollow mind of the universe what conceptions
+may come in the millions and millions of years ahead? How many, in the
+next spit of timelessness, will fall prey to disaster? Both calm and
+calamity are in the cards. This is acceptable enough to life in nature.
+And who am I to claim some vain detachment?
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+
+ New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
+ public domain.
+
+ Perceived typographical errors have been silently corrected.
+
+ Illustrations have been moved nearer to the text to which they refer.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76613 ***
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76613 ***</div>
+
+
+
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pgs 1-3]</span></p>
+<p class= "center">NATURE’S YEAR</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="Books_by_John_Hay"><i>Books by John Hay</i>:</h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class= "center">A PRIVATE HISTORY</p>
+<p class= "center">THE RUN</p>
+<p class= "center">NATURE’S YEAR</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span></p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i005_frontis" style="max-width: 103.875em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i005_frontis.jpg" alt="Soaring Birds">
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h3>JOHN HAY</h3>
+<br>
+<h1>NATURE’S<br>
+YEAR</h1><br>
+
+<p class= "large center">
+<i>The Seasons of Cape Cod</i></p>
+<br>
+<p class= "center">ILLUSTRATED BY</p>
+<p class= "center">DAVID GROSE</p>
+<br>
+<br>
+<p class= "center"><i>1961</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>Doubleday &amp; Company, Inc.</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>Garden City, New York</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span></p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class= "center"><i>Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 61-8166</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>Copyright © 1961 by John Hay</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>All Rights Reserved</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>Printed in the United States of America</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>First Edition</i></p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pgs 7-8]</span></p>
+
+<p class= "center"><i>For Kristi, Susan, Kitty, Rebecca, and Charles Mark—</i></p>
+<p class= "center"><i>with me on this journey through the year</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<h2><i>Contents</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#July">July</a>&emsp;11</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">A Start on Cape Cod—An Entry—Other Lands within the “Narrow Land”</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#August">August</a>&emsp;25</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">A Wild Home Land—The Musicians—A Walk with an Oven Bird—Toward the Sea</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#September">September</a>&emsp;47</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Youth on the Move—An Open Shore—Chipmunks</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#October">October</a>&emsp;61</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Where Is Home?—The Field of Learning—Colors of the Season—The Last Day in October</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#November">November</a>&emsp;81</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">The Seed in the Season—The Clouds—The Inconstant Land—The Dead and the Living</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#December">December</a>&emsp;97</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">An Old Place, an Old Man—Night in the Afternoon—Two Encounters</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#January">January</a>&emsp;113</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Exposure—Ice on the Ponds—Contrast and Response</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#February">February</a>&emsp;127</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Secrets in the Open—The Sea in the Ground—Need—Death, Man Made</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#March">March</a>&emsp;143</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Restless Days—An Extravagance—Interpretation—Response</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#April">April</a>&emsp;161</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Deeper News—April Light—“Frightened Away”</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#May">May</a>&emsp;173</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">Declarations—Facets of Expression—Travel</p>
+
+<p class="large"><i><a href="#June">June</a>&emsp;187</i></p>
+<p class="blockquot">The Garden—Room to Spare—The Binding Rain</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pgs 11-12]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="July"><i>July</i></h2>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>A Start on Cape Cod</i></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p>I drove to Cape Cod with travelers from everywhere. I came
+to this narrow peninsula over the blistering, insatiable roads of
+America with the summer crowd—in my shirt sleeves, with dark
+glasses to protect my sight—conscious of almost nothing but cars,
+and casualties ... our migrations have them too, like the birds
+and fish.</p>
+
+<p>I saw an accident so terrible I could not describe it. Machines
+were flung into the air and smashed. A life was tossed away, a human
+being crushed like a doll. Human relationships were pathetically
+severed by the brutality of chance. Then we were allowed to
+go on—travelers racing down the highway through the blood-boiling
+heat of the sun. We come in with speed and we go away
+with speed, and we are both afraid and desirous of it. The human
+run in its relentless self-absorption seems more abstracted than any
+other natural force.</p>
+
+<p>The resident population of Cape Cod is some 80,000, and
+in July the number increases to an estimated 250,000 or more, a
+kind of barometric rise that is equivalent to what is happening in
+the earth at large. After Labor Day, when the summer tribe has
+gone back to the cities, relief comes. You can cross the road in
+comparative safety. Then, something like apathy pervades the
+Cape, as if its diminished society were trying to recover from an
+encounter with enormous odds.</p>
+
+<p>Now I am off the road and back on the 110-foot hill where
+we put our house—part of a ridge that runs along the glacial
+moraine about a mile back from Cape Cod Bay. Dry Hill was its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
+local name, and in fact, driving a well, we found a constant source
+of water only at 130 feet. This evening the yellow light runs
+liquidly through the oak trees and the pitch pines around us. I
+can hear the voices of some of my travel companions lifting from
+the shore, calling, pleading, protesting. A snatch of radio music
+comes in. A plane drones overhead. The warm air seems to breathe
+hard, as if to compete with human breath.</p>
+
+<p>I often wonder, when I am back on the Cape again, whether
+I chose the right place in which to live. It looks bare and scrubby,
+lean and poor, in comparison with those lands to the north and
+west of us which are far prouder in their trees. It has been burned
+over, cut down, and generally abused by man, and most of its
+healthy trees will never attain full growth because of the salt spray
+that the winds drive over them in many storms. And the sea, for
+all its surrounding presence, seems a mere backdrop a great deal
+of the time, a flatness along the horizon, but it is indomitably
+there. All the winds, the plants, the shores, the contours of this low
+land, are influenced by it, and because of it we are carried out into
+a distance in spite of ourselves. The sea mitigates our insularity.</p>
+
+<p>Cape Cod reefs out into the Atlantic. I saw our house when
+it was new as a ship above the trees. I imagined a voyage. I recognize
+that although there are some true fishermen here who sail the
+year around, the rest of us are summer sailors, with no lasting
+allegiance or commitment to the dangers of salt water. Yet the
+Cape provides space for whoever might take the risk or pleasure
+of finding it. The sea and sky are very wide. The winds blow in
+from all quarters.</p>
+
+<p>The yellow evening lowers now, through the young, shining
+leaves of the oak trees, creating new recesses of darkness. Tides of
+fire hang above the water. There are snatches of bird song through
+the woods: a robin; the silver pealing of a wood thrush; a towhee; a
+whippoorwill, starting in on its over-and-over-again, the loud repetitious
+whistling that makes the night known even as the day hangs
+on. And finally faint stirrings here and there, easings down, last
+faint pips and trills before the dark. I am conscious of the tenancy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
+of nature, in which there is more putting forth, more endurance,
+more population, in fact, than any visitor or local man might ever
+begin to realize. The great world we live in is no longer one for
+hide-outs. If this makes for intolerable pressure and despair, it also
+brings much more into view. Local recognition becomes a general
+need, and there are more possibilities in it than we have been told.
+While the human race has been approaching three billions in number,
+and making ready to put its mark on the moon or hang its
+hearing aids off Venus, I seem to have spent many years missing,
+or unwittingly avoiding, almost as many lives and chances close
+to home. How can I begin to compensate?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>An Entry</i></h3>
+
+<p>I had decided to start this book in July, with the idea that
+this was the time embodying the full, crowded height of life—the
+noise, the color, the jostle of creatures in wonderful variety,
+just like that load of passengers getting off the boat at Provincetown
+to see the sights. The leaves are fresh. The motions of greed
+and fulfillment are in full course. Even so, I hardly knew what
+riches to snatch at first. In fact, another bold, heat-heavy day, with
+its crowds and its pride of accident, had the effect of making me
+recoil. I was muttering: “Slow down. Slow down. Why so thick
+and fast?”</p>
+
+<p>On my way back from walking to the mailbox just now, I
+stepped off the road into the oak trees through which it runs,
+dropped the newspapers and the letters, watched and waited. I sat
+on the upper edge of a hollow where dappled shadows rocked
+lightly between the trees, on their gray trunks, and across the
+sloping ground. There was a pervading swish of leaves around me,
+an occasional stirring at the tree tops. I heard the slow, dragged
+caroling of a red-eyed vireo. Filtered light played on the low growth
+of sarsaparilla, hazelnut, huckleberry, and bracken, or dry land
+fern, with the brown floor of oak leaves in dead but useful attendance,
+holding moisture, shelter, and fruition in reserve.</p>
+
+<p>The wood had a climate of its own, cooler, darker than the hot,
+damp, wide open world of road and shore. There are climates
+within climates, as there are worlds within worlds. Under the bark
+of a tree the beetle inhabits a place that has special atmospheric
+conditions differing from the woods outside it; and so it is with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
+woodchuck in its hole, the ants in their hill. Any place, of whatever
+size, however endowed in our scheme of things with grandeur
+or insignificance, any home, may be greatly subtle in its variance.</p>
+
+<p>A sweet, plaintive “pee-a-wee,” and a wood peewee, a neat
+little bird, black, light gray, and white like a phoebe, but with
+white wing bars, flew in quickly and lightly, to perch on a gray
+limb. The bird would tuck its head down, and then move it from
+side to side, looking for flying insects, repeating its song every
+five seconds or so. Its tail, not bobbing like a phoebe’s, twitched
+very slightly when its head moved. Then, in brief action, it fluttered
+out, caught an insect, and returned to its perch. These little flights
+covered most of the area around its tree, almost methodically.
+Once I heard the crack of its bill as it chased a fly almost down to
+the ground, halfway across the wood. It alighted on a new branch—to
+try out another base of action? But then another peewee flew
+in, perched, and sang at a far corner of the hollow, and the first
+one hurriedly flew back to its original perch as if it had been
+threatened and was making sure of its position. The wood seemed
+strung together by the intangible threads of their motion.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i018" style="max-width: 101.8125em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i018.jpg" alt="Wood Peewee">
+</figure>
+
+<p>These were some of the ways by which a wood peewee follows
+its destiny, employing its chosen place, attending to minutiae, to
+duty and performance. This was appropriate use, measured necessity.
+And as the outer earth led to this part of the wood, and it
+in turn to the “micro-climates” within it, so the birds drew my
+attention to the insects. I had been bitten a little, just enough
+to remind me, in my enjoyment, that the place was not unnaturally
+hospitable; and there were unseen spider mites that
+would leave me some inflammations to remember them by. Now
+I searched the space above me, aware, through the flights of the
+peewee, of the flying life it pursued. Some flies hovered, rocking
+lightly in the air, and then swung abruptly to one side, or dropped
+away, buzzing insistently. Tiny midges, illumined by sunlight,
+waggled between the trees. Moths fluttered down briefly to touch
+the pale leaves they resembled.</p>
+
+<p>So I had been filled, as I sat there, with a sense of employment.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
+I was part of a quiet, steady, structure of action. What better
+“security” could I find than that—learning, feeling, that a prodigious
+energy held all component parts in place and made them
+dance. In the neatness, discipline, almost detachment, of the bird’s
+little game as it pursued its subsistence, I saw the working out of
+natural law in numberless parallels.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps there was a law to be learned for <i>me</i>. If nature is
+more than just a background for human thought and endeavor,
+then it requires a special commitment, a stepping down, a silent,
+respectful approach. Otherwise we are liable to hear ourselves
+first, and be put off.</p>
+
+<p>I have been given an entry, but not on my own terms.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Other Lands within the “Narrow Land”</i></h3>
+
+<p>To answer the question “Where am I?” seems not to be an
+easy thing. “Obviously” this is the vacation land of Cape Cod
+where the sun sends the bathers to the beaches and the rain drives
+them back inland to buy souvenirs, where the harbors are crowded
+with pleasure craft and the highways with cars—an area whose
+purpose it is to attend to human distraction. Yet right in the middle
+of it the action of a small bird reveals a land of its own; and
+how many others are there still unmet?</p>
+
+<p>It is very strange to me that I have known so little about what
+was around me, and that I took so long merely to make some
+inquiries ... about a few names, a few alliances between living
+things, just enough to give me a hint or two about the growing
+we are never finished with. We live in a common realm about
+which we are still half ignorant and half afraid.</p>
+
+<p>A little girl at the beach comes running through the shallow
+waters crying: “Something touched me, and it wasn’t Daddy!”</p>
+
+<p>Later on, her mother wonders aloud if crabs bite. She picks
+one up and when she gets her answer, screams with pain and
+anger at all the “unnatural” and the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Just the other side of us is not only a bewildering variety
+but a space, which we have still to find, filled with an unfamiliar
+silence, or random sounds, seemingly disconnected motions, sudden
+flights that we witness out of the corner of an eye. When we
+only assign the word “purpose” to ourselves, it is hard to understand
+just what credit to give that which only stands and waits,
+or moves from one place to another. I sit on the beach, moving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
+a little away from a portable radio that a man has brought to
+assure himself of his continuous hold on human affairs, and look
+out over the hazy surface of the water, past a long border of waves
+that lollop on the sand. There is a large bird standing on a rock
+not far offshore. I know it as a great black-backed gull, a scavenger,
+a predator, which sometimes eats the eggs and kills the young of
+other species of gulls whose nesting islands it shares, and robs
+other birds of their food ... and that is about all I know, aside
+from having watched its splendid, easy flight. So it stands, and
+may stand, for an hour or more at a time, sea-surrounded, glaring
+out with expressionless yellow eyes. Is it digesting a heavy meal? Is
+it waiting for low tide so that its feeding grounds will be uncovered?
+Is it greedy, savage, lazy, and bold? All such questions
+are tentative. The subject is aloof.</p>
+
+<p>Why is there so much hanging around and waiting, so much
+suspension in nature? It comes as an occasional surprise to us
+timekeepers. In the gull we suspect obliviousness, and yet it may
+be prompted by the demands of a space of water, light, air,
+stretching before and around it, in its being, of whose motion
+and sense we are scarcely aware.</p>
+
+<p>We see very little. I am told that the very sands we sit on
+are full of minute organisms. The visible life, perhaps in the
+form of a few beach fleas, represents an extremely small percentage
+of the life unseen, a condition which has its parallel in the soil.
+But a short walk or wade along the shore can give you proof
+enough, without the need of a nip from a crab, that the tidal
+grounds are covered and circulating with life, a life which in
+its marine forms might seem small, simple, primitive, and unallied
+with much that we landed mammals can understand.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot inquire much of the moon snail, blindly, slowly
+moving across the sands under the tidal waters, with its large
+foot feeling for a clam. It only reveals itself to me by outward
+acts and signs which do not seem to have much variety. A small
+hole, countersunk in a shell, is common proof that a moon snail
+has drilled in and then eaten the occupant. When you see a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>
+“sand collar,” which this animal forms of sand grains and eggs,
+you know another side of its existence. Perhaps that is all there
+is to it—eating and reproduction—the round shellfish mindlessly
+carrying out its destiny. If it says anything at all to me it is only
+out of undeciphered darkness, silence, and original need.</p>
+
+<p>A tiny, shrimplike animal hovers in the water, then darts over
+my foot, only describing itself to me by its quick motion, and that
+is all I know of it. It suddenly buries itself in the sandy bottom,
+where reflected sunlight makes golden nets, that stretch and tremble
+through the constantly flowing waters.</p>
+
+<p>The tide ebbs. The sun starts to evaporate the moisture
+from the top surface of a big rock, part of a jetty that thrusts
+out from the beach. I see a number of dark periwinkles around
+and under an algae-sheathed, water-soaked branch that lies there,
+a source of food for these browsers and vegetarians. They are a
+common marine snail, used for human food in many parts of the
+world, and usually so numerous and well known as to be taken
+for granted. As the water recedes and sinks below the surface of
+the jetty, the sun beats down, drying the rock. Some of the
+animals stay under the shade and moisture of the stick, but more
+begin to move slowly away from it. When these travelers finally
+reach the edge of the rock, they start down its shaded face. Their
+dark, whorled shells, though an intrinsic part of them, are hoisted,
+moved around, almost in a full circle, seeming to slip loosely over
+their bodies as they move down. Their black tentacles, like antennae
+on insects, wave slightly on their snouts, and their slimy foot
+works slowly down. Their motion is a curious combination of
+probing, oozing, gliding, and at the same time, holding on, assuring
+the grip, with a kind of portentous caution. Since I can easily
+tip one off with my finger, I also feel a tenuousness about them,
+in their relation to this realm of tidal power with its constant
+displacements—but adaptability is probably a better way to think
+of it. They have lasted, in their loose wandering, through a period
+of time which we can only estimate. They have a special authority.
+As I watch them it seems to me that no other action is of any more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
+pressing importance during this moment in the scheme of things.</p>
+
+<p>These personifications of motion, these strangers, have untouched
+lands of their own.</p>
+
+<p>That silent sea at my side is colossal, inscrutable, and holds
+out no solace or advice. We only have our toes in, on a tiny
+section of its summer shore. Most of us barely touch its surface.
+Even so, it offers as much to a traveling human as to a snail.
+It is still an old space unexplored, and if we leave the vacation
+sands and set out on an afternoon’s sail, we may be following
+some need of wind and water in us, some unused acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>There is a well-known sand bar to steer by in the hazy
+distance across Cape Cod Bay. We buck the steely waves upwind,
+close hauled, half hot in the sun, half cold and shivering when
+the water thrashes in over the bow of the boat. Ropes creak
+slightly through the boom and the mast. The wake bubbles. Wood
+strains through water. The west wind blows stiff over conflicting
+waves. The time passes with a certain monotony but for the craft
+of sailors and its requirements. There is nothing called for but to
+sail, with no other distractions on this immediate flat world of
+light, no concern ... and yet we sense some ultimate demand
+that comes from this blue giant, whose depths and tricks are
+still unfathomed.</p>
+
+<p>The flat necessity of it makes sailing its own satisfaction. It
+becomes physical. We fly, we feel, we calculate, by sinew, flesh,
+and bones, and through the salty blood in our veins. We may be
+a degree closer to the black-backed gull.</p>
+
+<p>There on arrival are great white sheets of sand curving up
+into a barrier of dunes back of a pebbly beach, where a beach
+buggy rolls along scaring up clouds and crowds of terns, and
+sanderlings in spinning flight. The jeep stops and teen-agers jump
+down and out, crying stridently. We anchor the boat just off the
+beach. The water is clear and cold. The dunes are sun reflectors,
+clean and warm, and we find whitish-gray grasshoppers on them,
+flecked like the sand.</p>
+
+<p>Sailing back again in late afternoon, the boat goes fast and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pgs 23-24]</span>
+free before the wind over the water now turned green, a blend
+of sky blue and the yellow of a falling sun. The bay lies out like
+an enormous garden, patched with color and motion, the salt
+waters full of latent power, ready with every kind of mood, flowing
+by and over, interwrought, crossing time and circumstance. We
+pass a clanging bell buoy. Evening comes on. Gold icicles on
+the water are turning and softening to shades of pink and purple.
+It is like striding over a wide land of peace and plenty, before
+we tack into the harbor.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pgs 25-26]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="August"><i>August</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
+<h3><i>A Wild Home Land</i></h3>
+
+<p>What I wanted to do was follow the year around, recognizing
+that hours, days, months, or years are as elusive as unseen atoms
+(even though, universal law being consistent, we deduce their
+behavior with some success). I am not sure where July left off
+and August began. Summer flies away from me, like an unknown
+bird.</p>
+
+<p>Out into August then, while there is time. When I step
+into it as if into something new, I sense thousands and thousands
+of roving lives, taking their opportunities where and when they
+can. The day is hot and shining. The oak leaves, no longer fresh
+and young, but spotted with growths, chewed by insects, frayed
+and scarred, are still tough, deeply green, harnessing the sun,
+under a stir and slide of air. Two big red-tailed hawks sail high
+overhead, screaming constantly. A blue jay screams, in a fair
+likeness. The hawks wheel lower down along the trees, inside
+the horizon. Then two little tree sparrows flit by. Insects drone,
+stir, and buzz. There is a dragging, rattling sound of leaves as a
+box turtle moves slowly along. A cicada chorus rises like a sudden
+breeze from the southeast and then subsides. Two black and white
+warblers go through the cover of the woods in a quick butterfly
+flight together. The “Tock! Tock!” of a chipmunk sounds behind a
+brush pile, almost like the end notes of a whippoorwill’s song.</p>
+
+<p>I feel a balance in space between them all: the roamers,
+hawks, or gulls, in the sky’s great allowance; the spider swinging
+on a thread and making its own web of a world; colorful, elusive
+warblers through the trees; the chipmunk on its chosen ground.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
+These sounds, synonymous with motion, seem to hold them in
+mutual alliance, round in a lightness of air that is strict and easy
+in its coming and release, like the cicadas; but there is an intensity
+here that makes my heart beat faster.</p>
+
+<p>A jay jumps down to a branch, cocks its crested head, with
+those black eyes full of readiness, and brays. The spider wraps
+up a captured moth with rapid skill. A robber fly waits on a leaf
+with throbbing abdomen and a look of contained vitality. It is
+not to be known. I see the brown, glazed wings folded back in
+the sunlight, and two black, sky-light eyes on top of its head. It
+seems preternaturally lean. It stays there for ten minutes and I
+watch it closely, almost suspended with it in my attention. A
+robber fly is a tough predator, but to call it cold, indifferent to
+pain, careless of life, darkness personified? Our terms are useless.
+I do not know. Then my attention is cut, as it abruptly darts
+off, swinging in an arc, perhaps to catch a housefly a hundred
+feet away.</p>
+
+<p>In the buzz, the running light, the stir of summer, I feel
+as if each motion, each event had its own pressing concern. This
+homeland, no longer graced with the name of wilderness, is full
+of wild, unparalleled desire.</p>
+
+<p>Everyone knows that the month of August is loaded with
+insects, although they come under the heading of “bugs,” a
+menace to human society. Their fibrous trills are incessant in the
+grass. Their high, shrill sounds announce the heated air. Those two
+species that we hate more than most, just for their familiarity, the
+flies and mosquitoes, drone around us. In the heat of noon our
+senses are a little clouded. We may be mumbling something about
+“the will of life be done,” and it is being done ... in great
+part by the insects. The summer rage to take and to share in
+taking is carried out in minute detail, from the tiniest mite in
+the soil to the dragonfly.</p>
+
+<p>Manifest energy, using its short summer span, fills our
+surroundings with its wealth of insects. It has not been long
+since I was taught the modicum of knowledge needed to name a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
+few of them, to start in on a fraction of the 680,000 species
+that fill the earth; but it was enough to add to my sight. I had
+never realized that such foreign and incredible variety existed so
+close to me.</p>
+
+<p>A yellow jacket tugs furiously at a dead cricket on the road,
+like a hungry dog with raw meat. Delicate aphids waver on flower
+stalks. A big striped cicada killer roams through the oaks. Other
+wasps sip juice or nibble carrion. Dragonflies dart across both land
+and water on their tangential licks of speed. The cabbage butterflies
+flutter and alight with pale, yellow wings held together
+like one thin sail against the sunlight. Over and under, in and out,
+flying, crawling, suspended in plants and in the growth of plants,
+seizing their time, waiting, indefinitely if need be, held in chrysalis
+or egg, emerging, feeding, adding to death and life in death ...
+what are these strangers?</p>
+
+<p>There are wasps as red as rubies; flies of a more scintillating,
+vibrant green than emeralds; and shiny bronze or golden beetles
+which are the envy of human art. If color is life, to make the
+human eyes ring and the body respond, they have it, and they
+also lack it. Some are so diaphanous as to belong only to the
+sunlit air, and some are so dark, as though part of unseen
+depths, that all color is only a dance, springing away.</p>
+
+<p>We use up constant, frustrated energy keeping them in check.
+Their dry throbbing annoys us. They eat our crops, transmit
+disease, and drive us away from our pleasures: although in the
+bold stare of nature they are effective employees. We might,
+slapping a mosquito, recognize their necessity as pollinators, earth
+movers, or food, respect the role they play in decomposition and
+growth ... then we must turn around and invent new poisons.
+Insects are redoubtable enemies. We are never quite sure which
+of us is in the ascendancy, just as we are never sure of what they
+are.</p>
+
+<p>Still we can look and marvel at their complex detail: these
+wings like lace or spun glass; wings cut short and wide or thin
+as a hair; wings with the pattern of flowers, or veins of a leaf;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
+bodies round and narrow, oval or oblong; strange truncated abdomens;
+huge, compound eyes; legs impossibly thin and long, or
+unbelievable in number and still co-ordinated; heads like alligators;
+bodies like sticks; false eyes; false horns; repulsive, intangible,
+unreal.</p>
+
+<p>Here seems to be automatic, nerve-end response in unreflecting
+zeros, whose lives pass with their deaths, but still, on this
+earth crust they are affiliated with everything. That which may
+frighten or startle a bird, like the eye spots on a moth’s wing,
+is related to a bird. Animals are adapted to their environments
+and the medium in which they live and act; but so many tricks
+and curiosities are embodied in the insects, so many far-fetched
+connections of shape and motion, as to leave all particular
+environments behind.</p>
+
+<p>In their variety they are in balance with our imagination.
+Don’t they show as many bursts, tricks, starts, halts, and fires,
+as much somnolence and surprise in their color, shape, and action
+as we desire in the exercise of our consciousness? Nature is
+unbiased in its attention, concentrating equal power on all forms
+of its expression. When we begin to conceive of nature in terms
+of creative process—continually evolving, fantastically complex,
+immensely resourceful—then we recognize our counterparts wherever
+the sunlight strikes across the air. We share in a communication.</p>
+
+<p>Last month I noticed a group of small butterflies on the
+mauve flower of a milkweed. They were, as I found out, hairstreak
+butterflies, with a dusky, grayish-lavender coloration, and little
+orange patches on the lower edge of their wings. When the wings
+are folded, their hind tips have tails resembling antennae, which
+may have the effect of a protective device to confuse a predator.
+After I frightened them off, they returned in a little while to rest
+on the very same flower. Their color was not the same as a
+milkweed’s but in tone and value it was close enough so as to
+hide them from view at a fairly short distance. The flower and the
+animal were united in a sensitive embodiment of contrast.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
+
+<p>A few days later I noticed that the flower was gradually
+paling. Then, on the twenty-fifth of July, the last blossoms dropped
+off, and the butterflies were gone. An obvious affinity, and a
+mystery at the same time, of two forms of life in a unique response
+to nature’s web of motion.</p>
+
+<p>It took me a long time to become aware of just how much
+these affiliations and responses made up the life of earth, how much
+of an elaboration they amounted to. In the past also, when I
+saw a robin hop across the lawn, a frog jump into the water, or
+a tree swallow glide through the air, I reacted with pleasure
+or disregard—by chance, in other words—without realizing just
+how big a role chance played in their appearance. In the same
+sense the obvious upheavals of a season—drought, or heavy rains—meant
+little to me beyond their immediate, local effect. After
+a while I began to be aware of all the circumstances that must
+surround me. One dull day I realized their unlimited context, and
+thought how slow and agonizing my own changes were in
+comparison.</p>
+
+<p>Expected things happen. But the variations are just as compelling
+as the stable order from which they come. This June,
+for example, was cold and wet, and the rains continued into the
+summer months. The hatching of insects was delayed and the
+development of some plants and grasses. Many fledgling tree
+swallows were found dead in their nests, a disaster which seems
+to have been caused directly by the weather. Aquatic insects are
+a favorite food of the tree swallows, but in cold, wet weather these
+insects tend to remain in immature stages and do not develop into
+flying adults. (Swallows chase after their food in flight.) And, in
+fact, when insects are few, the tree swallows seem to be discouraged
+from looking for them. If such conditions keep up, they may leave
+a nesting area to look for food elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Our local run of alewives, those inland herring that migrate
+from salt water every spring to spawn in fresh-water ponds, seemed
+to be a little later than usual; and the young, hatched from the
+eggs they left behind them, started down to salt water past<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span>
+schedule in July. If the ponds are colder in temperature than is
+normal, it probably affects the young alewives’ size and chance of
+survival. They grow larger and healthier in warm-water ponds
+because they are started sooner and have a richer supply of food.
+A smaller, slightly weaker fish is more easily caught by a predator.</p>
+
+<p>Because this spring was somewhat off the average mark (and
+in a sense there is no average), many of the relationships between
+plants and animals dependent on it were altered. Some of the
+effects, in animal population or health, might be felt for a long
+time to come.</p>
+
+<p>Although ice, fire, storms, hurricanes, unusually wet or dry
+seasons, and now the hand of man, may alter the local earth almost
+beyond recognition and bring its inhabitants to disaster, natural
+occurrence has an indomitable will. Its changes outlast all others.
+Uncounted lives are sent ahead, balanced always, but with relationships
+through time and space that are never exactly the same.
+A leaf drops earlier. Frogs start to shed their skins, or migrate
+locally at a time that depends on new climactic conditions. Why
+have I seen so few mole runs this year? Last year there were
+comparatively few baltimore orioles. This year in orange pride
+they were leaf calling and diving everywhere. I have seen very few
+phoebes in our vicinity of late, and scarcely any bluebirds. There
+may be more mosquitoes this summer and fewer grasshoppers
+than usual. I can inquire, for each species, and find out what I
+want to know, if there is logic, and cause and effect to its behavior;
+but all are related in a realm that is wider than I ever imagined.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Musicians</i></h3>
+
+<p>Many Augusts, singing loud, have passed me by without
+my giving them a shred of attention. What made the sound? The
+air, or the trees, the month itself, embodied in unknown voices?
+I don’t think I knew much more than that, although I suppose
+I was aware of what a cricket sounded like. Perhaps it is time to
+find out more. I know now, as I did then, that at night when
+the air is soft and cool, a multitude of separate actions having
+died down, and when the earth is relieved of a fire taken to the
+stars, a plainsong goes up and the night takes substance in
+pulsing sound.</p>
+
+<p>When I listen, I see that in detail the sounding of an August
+night is not melodious. It is full of clicks, dry rasps, ratchets,
+reedy, resinous scrapings, and except for countless populations
+playing on one string, disassociated. There is only one phrase
+for each species of insect. The over-all sound is occasionally
+reminiscent of telegraph wires, mechanically shrill and tense; but
+in the context of the night, speckled with stars, it becomes as
+wide, warm, and luminous as any symphony.</p>
+
+<p>Having heard of using a flashlight to search for these musicians,
+I go out, sometime after eight-thirty, and start training
+it on sounds, with complete lack of success at first. Either the
+sound stops, or the animal that makes it is invisible to me. A
+bat flies overhead, chasing insects. It is known for accuracy, having
+ears with a receptiveness like radar, tuned to the finest measurements
+of space, but its flight seems frantic. It beats back and
+forth, around, over and under. Suddenly it is very close, perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
+a few inches over my head. I duck at the leathery, fluttering
+sound, something like the rippling folds of a taut chute, despite
+my knowing that only in lingering myth and hearsay do bats
+catch in human hair. Then it is off again, with its violent, erratic
+flight.</p>
+
+<p>The darkness takes deeper hold. It is full of the loud throbbing,
+the insistently high-pitched rasping of the insects, with an
+occasional tree frog sounding a contrapuntal “Ek-ek.” Playing my
+flashlight under the trees shows up a spider web in beautiful detail.
+The silk strands are clear against the black night, their swoops and
+whorls all held together by long perfected execution, with the
+tiny engineer way up on his round span, his semblance of the
+globe in its vast waters.</p>
+
+<p>In high suspension, in the larger silences of the sky, all
+rings well in consonance, and the pulse of living instruments
+is with the massed stars that run out and dive away above all
+heads, and with the ground, my heart and ear, my blood and
+bone.</p>
+
+<p>A persistent light racheting makes me concentrate on one
+bush, where I eventually find a green, well-camouflaged, long-horned
+grasshopper with orange eyes—a male, since it has no
+ovipositor on its abdomen. The females are silent, with the honored
+role of being courted and invited.</p>
+
+<p>The flashlight seems to have no effect on him. The front
+wings are slightly apart, raised up a little, and vibrating ... a kind
+of fast, dry shuddering. The sound is a light “zzz,” ending with a
+rapid “tic-tic-tic.” This grasshopper is a waxy green. His antennae,
+almost twice as long as his body, go up in sweeping curves,
+and wave, sometimes both together in a semicircle, sometimes
+singly in both directions, as he stops his playing, and begins to
+move slightly down a twig. Then I notice a female moving in
+his direction. Had he increased the tempo of his playing when she
+came near? Did he sense success?</p>
+
+<p>Still harder to spot—almost impossible by day, and difficult
+enough at night—are the snowy tree crickets, but they are numerous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span>
+in this low-treed, shrubby area. Where the long-horned grasshoppers
+sound at intervals, the combined chorus of snowy tree
+crickets pulses on. They are slender little creatures, a very pale,
+almost immaterial, green, but their fragile, transparent, membranous
+wings, raised higher than those of a long-horned when it
+plays, make a cry that rises up like peepers in the spring. This
+is the famous “temperature cricket” whose song speeds up or
+slows down in response to heat or cold. According to the field
+manuals, you can divide the number of notes per minute by four
+and then add forty, which will give you the approximate temperature
+in degrees Fahrenheit.</p>
+
+<p>So this great scraping and fiddling perpetuates a dance. The
+first frost will end the lives of most of these musicians. August’s
+high sounding means a coming end, but all of its connections
+and associations join in sending on the year. This is what the
+month means, as well as the hum of tourists driving down the
+Cape and back again. Listen to the chosen string.</p>
+
+<p>There is a miraculous sensitivity in the cricket that slows
+down when the temperature begins to cool at night, or even
+when a cloud passes over the sun by day. The male calls to
+attract the female, though it is apparently not known whether
+her arrival may not be the result of happenstance. His playing
+is as much a part of general expression as individual intention
+or reaction. In any case the eggs are laid, which will stay dormant
+throughout the winter, to hatch in the spring. The organic cycle
+continues, making an announcement, sending up a music whose
+players are so attuned to light and dark, sunlit or clouded skies,
+warm air or cold, day or night, that their existence depends upon
+the slightest change.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>A Walk with an Oven Bird</i></h3>
+
+<p>The broader aspects of the weather are more apparent to
+my kind of receptiveness, which is less mortally tuned to degrees
+than a grasshopper. There is still an abnormal amount of rain
+as the month goes on. Their sun blotted out, many tourists
+have left the Cape earlier than usual. I notice that the days
+are shorter and cooler. The prevailing wind, southwest in fair
+weather, southeast before a storm, blows gently, or in gusts when
+it rains. A big mud puddle on our wood road has collected a
+whole population of green frogs. At night there is great frog
+carnage on the wet highways. I have noticed in the past that this
+is their season for traveling, whether it is wet or dry, but heavy
+rains encourage their migration, sending them far and wide. There
+is a multitude of garden toads around the house. One night
+it cools down to about 50 degrees and in the dawn hour the
+leaves are bluish gray with dew. A hurricane, spawned in the
+Bahamas, is two hundred miles east of Florida, but beginning
+to turn slightly to the north, away from the eastern seaboard.
+High seas are predicted in three or four days’ time.</p>
+
+<p>I feel as though we were hesitating on the brink of new
+necessities, swinging between one resolution and another not yet
+found. The season is beginning to join the winds. Some migrant
+birds have already flown away. Other birds fly through the leaf
+canopy feeding seriously and silently. A warbler, a female yellow-throat,
+skips lightly along a patch of briar and vines. A brilliant
+oriole jumps into a patch of oaks and moves on down sunlight-yellow
+ramps of leaves, and a black-billed cuckoo, a large brown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span>
+bird with a handsome, long tail, stops in on a branch with a
+look of eagerness and seeking, then flashes off again. There is a
+change in their action and timing. The adults are long since
+through with the claiming and proclaiming that rang in the woods
+before they nested. The steady, constant business of feeding their
+young is about over for most species, though I see a flicker, or
+yellowhammer, come through the trees in diving, shooting flight,
+with a young one following loudly after it. There are many
+fledglings, but on the whole the birds, many of them starting
+to molt, are silent compared with spring and early summer.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp90" id="i036" style="max-width: 163.75em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i036.jpg" alt="Bird">
+</figure>
+
+<p>This wood road of ours, where the birds fly through, is used
+every school-day morning by our children on their way to catch
+the bus. It is a kind of open line through change. It rides the
+side of a low ridge, and glacial hollows dip away from it. It once
+served as a wagon road for woodcutters, and is still shaded by
+the insistent, if none too “sturdy,” oaks, which come back again
+and again, no matter how many times they are cut. They make
+the road a green tunnel in summer, and their gray branches with
+knotted fingers rattle and sway above it in the wintertime. It
+receives many travelers by land and some by sea. (A few Januaries
+ago I found a dovekie there, a little sea bird with the black back,
+short black wings, and white breast of a penguin. It is one of the
+members of the auk family, breeding in Greenland and migrating
+down from the ice-locked waters of the Arctic Circle to feed in
+the Atlantic during the winter. Its short wings are meant for
+swimming, diving, and flying in and out of waves, so they are
+not very effective when blown inland by a storm. The dovekie I
+found was unable to take off, and in any case weak and hungry.
+So after a futile effort to feed it, I took it back to Cape Cod
+Bay, where it started to fly along the surface of the water, though
+weakly, in short, floundering dashes.)</p>
+
+<p>With a half mile of concentrated road it is easier to take
+cognizance of friends and strangers than when you are trying
+to make California on the transcontinental highway. You can see
+how it is used by skunk, squirrel, deer, and the hunters of deer.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
+I walk it in expectation. One of the animals that constantly
+move across the road and live in the woods beside it is that
+bird which looks like a tiny thrush but is classified as a wood
+warbler, the oven bird. Its “Teacher! Teacher!” rings out in spring
+and early summer. It was named after its leaf-hidden nest, made
+on the ground, with a hole going in at the side like a Dutch
+oven.</p>
+
+<p>Here is an oven bird, tail bobbing slightly, perched on the
+lower branches of a red maple beside the road ... a little
+more out in the open than usual, less concentrated on its earlier
+nesting territory. It flutters down to the road. This is one of
+those birds that have the distinction, if that is what it is, of being
+able to walk, rather than hop or run. So it starts walking, through
+the dappled shadows on the road, as I keep a respectable distance
+behind it. Or perhaps I walk and it attends to business. The
+oven bird goes back and forth, pecking insects, with a quick
+meandering, interrupted by an occasional little jump at the leaves
+of an overhanging shrub or plant. This is not a straight walker,
+no Indian with a destination, but its body moves constantly from
+left to right in purposeful flexibility.</p>
+
+<p>“How well you see!” I think to myself. I can see nothing
+at my level but a tiny yellow caterpillar swinging through the air
+on a silken thread. But it is clear to me that the oven bird
+works the road with clear results. We keep going. We come to a
+stretch in full sunlight where the trees stand off to the side, and
+my companion keeps to the shadows with determination, pecking
+away at insects along the few inches of shaded bank to one side.
+A flicker bursts through, shouting: “Tawicka! Tawicka!” and the
+oven bird flies ahead a few feet and then goes on walking.</p>
+
+<p>We have now traveled about an eighth of a mile. Under
+a heavy weave of leaves the bird moves to left and right over the
+road, pecking for insects, working, progressing. Olive brown;
+capped with an orange stripe; with speckled breast and pale
+pink legs ... a shadow bird, a leaf litter bird; and now a fellow
+walker, that has made more use of this road than any of us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
+and our omnivorous machines. At a sharp bend in the road where
+it leads up to the house, the oven bird finally flies off and disappears
+in the trees, in a southerly direction by coincidence. Our walk is
+over, but the flight of birds will leave all cars behind.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Toward the Sea</i></h3>
+
+<p>There is “man” and there is “nature.” But do we really
+know where the climate of existence starts, where its storms are
+brewed? All weather is unexpected. Another variation in the known
+routine, another change in use, and we may move, reluctantly,
+into some new awareness while primal energy bowls on with
+infinite capacity.</p>
+
+<p>Among the oaks the leaves on the top branches sway and
+rustle, while those on the wood floor scarcely lift at all, but there
+is a constant sound of air among them, and it might be possible
+to hear a ferment in the ground. Small suns blaze through round
+leaf lobes. Standing on a slope toward the north from which the
+glaciers came, and the auroras crackle, shimmer, and flow, and
+the cold from Canada will have its way, I have a feeling of portentous
+motion, of being sledded out on a speeding globe.</p>
+
+<p>The hurricane veered off. There was rain, but no great winds.
+The mud puddle in the road dried up after several sunny days,
+and the green frogs left; but when it filled up again they had not
+returned. The frogs have a different motion in them and will not
+come back to suit my metronome.</p>
+
+<p>Many vacationers are going home. We can almost walk across
+the highway without fear. There is still the press, the fevered demands
+of summer in the air, but something else is going to have
+its way.</p>
+
+<p>A changing light, a shifting wind, calls me out to meet more of
+this earth than I know. Habit stifles me. My round needs to be
+recharged. So I take a walk, like the oven bird, though not to gather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
+any more food than my senses and my spirit need. There is a lobe
+of land a mile away, through the oaks, over the shore road, and
+across to sea level, called the Crow Pasture. It is bordered by a
+tidal inlet and marsh on one side and the sands of Cape Cod Bay
+on the other. It is covered with low, wind-topped growth, blueberry
+bushes, beach plums, stands of pitch pine, and stunted oak;
+and it is flushed with moving light and shadow, hovered over and
+hunted by great clouds. The Crow Pasture is without houses so
+far, and it is a bare recipient of high events, the range of storms,
+the distances that come in and declare themselves by wind or flight,
+the summer vaunting of the sun, the cold appeal of the moon. Narrow,
+rutted dirt roads lead into it and take you on.</p>
+
+<p>This land, once used for pasturing cows, now domesticated
+only by sparrows, robins, and chickadees, has final summer abundance
+in it. Locusts bound from dry land grasses with rattling
+wings. Green head flies buzz in savage haste. A yellow and black
+goldfinch flies over, bouncing along.</p>
+
+<p>There are ebony-beaded blackberries on the ground, and a few
+dark berries left on high bush blueberries. A stiff wind from the
+south shakes up the thickets and the wild indigo, a compact, light
+bouquet of a plant with cloverlike leaves and yellow pea flowers.
+Pointed cedars stir and writhe. The air rushes through the bayberries
+with their glossy leaves, and it sweeps down across the
+marshland ahead through purple and yellow grasses that plume
+and sway, off to the white sands beyond.</p>
+
+<p>Open land, wild air, lead ahead until salt water appears, the
+blue barrens that curve beyond sight. Stiff, stunted bushes are
+backed up at the edge of the marsh, hideaways for sparrows, then
+marsh rosemary, or sea lavender, shows in occasional clumps
+through the eddying stalks of grass. One area is thick with mosquitoes,
+sounding a low melody of harassment. In the bed of a
+ditch, dotted with holes made by fiddler crabs, are the tracks of
+a skunk. All that lives here permanently, not foraging like a skunk,
+or migratory like most of the birds, has to stand strong light,
+harsh winds, and salt spray, that dry, abrase, and burn.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span></p>
+
+<p>The marsh merges with the sand, back of low dunes covered
+with stiff, sharp-tipped beach grass and seaside goldenrod, thick
+stalked, with broad soft leaves, a succulent, related to cacti, made
+to hold and retain moisture. The beach shelves down from the
+dunes and meets the exposed tidal ground, ledges of dark peat
+which is pitted like volcanic rock, and very slippery to walk on.
+Beyond it at low tide the sand flats ease out, stretch and flow,
+with aisles and purple fingers of water rippling, writhing, and
+probing across them.</p>
+
+<p>Further along the shore a group of gray and white herring
+gulls stand into the wind. Hiding in a clump of peat-rooted grasses
+a few hundred feet from them is a gull in its first year. One of its
+wings is broken, with the primary feathers dragging on the ground.
+The bird stalks slowly along, tripping a little, isolated, a picture of
+shame and loss. When I approach, it moves reluctantly toward the
+other gulls, then stands into the wind slightly behind and to the
+side of them. Suddenly the flock takes to the air, and the young
+gull stays down, crippled, unable to forage for its food, and ultimately
+doomed. There are various kinds of mutual assistance in
+nature. Some species, like Canada geese, may help, or try to help
+a fallen mate; but there are no hospitals. I am told that a sick bee
+rolls out of a hive if it can, or is pushed out by the others. Animals
+must be deeply aware of death, and they die alone, perhaps with
+an instinctive understanding that they have to pay the price of a
+health which nature ultimately requires.</p>
+
+<p>The landscape slopes on and out from life to life, swept by
+the air, an earth, sand, water, run of interchanging light. Clouds
+of white terns are hovering and diving over the waters of the bay.
+Suddenly a dark-plumaged marsh hawk flies into the midst of
+them. They harry it in the blue, heat-clouded sky. The hawk circles,
+dodges, flaps on, while they dive on it continually. It twists
+and rises higher and higher trying to shake them off, until it plummets
+down and flies low over the surface of the water, making a
+great round turn back to the shore.</p>
+
+<p>The crippled gull stands and waits with hurt patience. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
+hawk flies back to the marsh behind the beach and begins to beat
+slowly over it, covering the ground methodically, hunting the unwary
+shrew, mouse, or sparrow. The terns dive for fish. The tide
+waters begin to slip in over the sand. Measure for measure. Necessity
+keeps its component parts in order, as the light changes, and
+the south wind keeps blowing.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Down the shore to the east is an inlet called Paine’s Creek,
+which receives the inland migration of alewives in the spring, and
+takes out their young, hatched in early spring and summer, as they
+swim to salt water. The alewife fry, two or three inches long, attract
+gulls and terns. During the month there has been a migratory
+colony of terns in the vicinity, principally common terns, both
+adult and immature.</p>
+
+<p>In the general Cape Cod area there are two principal nesting
+places every year, at Tern Island, Chatham, and in Plymouth.
+During the season—the birds arrive about the end of April—both
+terneries have populations which number in the thousands. There
+are in addition a few small islands off the Cape and a few comparatively
+isolated areas where smaller groups nest successfully, although
+terns are sociable birds, and breed best in large numbers.
+In August, beginning with the arctic tern, which, I am told, is the
+earliest to migrate, the birds begin to leave their nesting sites in
+groups or small companies on their way south. They spend the
+winter anywhere from Florida to the edge of the Antarctic ice.</p>
+
+<p>So the Paine’s Creek area, with its sand eels and alewife fry,
+represents a way station, a stopping-off place, one leg of a migratory
+journey ... the first for birds hatched during the late spring
+or early summer. Terns reach flying age in a month, but their parents
+go on feeding them for some time. They are slow to mature
+and do not breed until they are about three years old.</p>
+
+<p>The young are not much smaller than their parents, and without
+a close watch it might be hard to tell the difference at first; but
+their heads are gray, as compared with the jet-black napes and
+crowns on the adults. They still spend most of the time waiting to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
+be fed. Some make inexperienced, practice flights over the water,
+plunging in and out in an almost kittenish, hit-or-miss way, while
+their parents dive like arrows, pinpointing the surface with little
+flashes of spray, from which they rise up with silver quarries in their
+sharp bills. But as many more of the young terns stand along the
+beach or on shoals at the mouth of the inlet, crying, begging to be
+fed.</p>
+
+<p>Terns are intensely active and brilliant in performance. They
+are comparatively small birds, but they are capable of migrating
+over thousands of miles of ocean waters, and their long, angled
+wings beat deep, low, and strong. They are all black and white
+sharpness, flashing as bright as the gold circlets of water around
+sharp grasses at the mouth of the inlet. They swing. They dart.
+They winnow the air. Their lovely white shuttlecock tails spread
+out and settle as they turn against the wind, crying: “Kierr! Kierr!”</p>
+
+<p>Two juveniles wait on a shoal, constantly calling in a high-pitched
+tremolo, intensified when a parent bird flies over them.
+The trim expert adult flies past, then swings back down the shore
+and circles back, finally coming in to land between them. It has
+no food in its bill, but stands there for a minute or so, and then begins
+to move away from them, as they crouch and strut after it in
+an almost elderly way, crying their protests. It signals departure
+with a slight lift of its wings and in a few seconds flies up, the
+thwarted young ones taking off behind it.</p>
+
+<p>In this behavior I see the play of learning, the many repetitions
+that precede a balanced natural art. Other adults swing in
+with sand eels or fish in their bills and hover, or circle back, avoiding
+rivals, then drop down next to a twittering, beak-gaping child,
+giving it the whole fish, or holding on to it and flying away, which
+has the effect of teasing the young one to follow after. In this way
+the fledgling terns, some still crouching down in a submissive
+manner as they did in their nests, learn to fly up, to chase, dive,
+and dodge, to breast the air, and beat their wings for all the long
+voyages their lives may hold.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pgs 45-46]</span></p>
+
+<p>In a few weeks most of them will suddenly flock away and
+migrate. In the meantime they practice the instinctive measures of
+growth, training in the insistent, excitable ways of a tern, for air
+and open waters over half the earth.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pgs 47-48]</span></p>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="September"><i>September</i></h2>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span></p>
+
+<h3><i>Youth on the Move</i></h3>
+
+<p>The tourists and the summer residents begin to leave the
+Cape. This is a visible exodus, with many more cars going out than
+coming in. The people in charge of commerce count our summer
+gains and our losses. Those of us who are year-round residents can
+admit it in public, now that the representatives of the humming,
+spreading urban world have departed. Here now is a half-populated
+place, temporarily, perhaps shamefully, consigned to a dull
+future. And yet, according to the practice I have begun to learn
+by years of residence, I can now look around, with room to spare.
+What fills this emptiness? What will I see when I take off my dark
+glasses?</p>
+
+<p>I notice, by the way, that some of us are now predicting the
+local future with more assurance. I hear a real Cape Codder (meaning
+someone born here, preferably before 1900) pronouncing that
+there will be a frost around the sixteenth, and that “We’ll have a
+blow pretty soon.”</p>
+
+<p>The night heaves with heat. A half-clouded, half-misted sky
+shows occasional stars. Then an onshore wind begins to blow and
+the land stirs and frets in the darkness. I feel that new revolutions
+are in order, earth-honored, momentous changes.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning the weather vane stands to the north. The
+sea is kicked up, the trees are swaying, and the temperature has
+dropped into the fifties. A new wind is getting in its licks, rolling
+and lunging against us. The air above the sea meets the great air
+masses from the land. Warm and cold, water and air, west and
+south, north and east, join in a game of strength. The whole day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
+is a trial for the future, with the running clouds as its pawns. A
+child asks her father: “Can the day blow away?”</p>
+
+<p>When the wind dies down and the clouds clear off, the air
+has changed from a hazy warmth to clarity. The sea turns dark
+blue, groined with white caps. The land seems strict and clean,
+lifted into pure new skies and a new silence, although at night the
+musical pulsing of the snowy tree crickets is still as shrill and loud
+as spring peepers.</p>
+
+<p>This is a marginal season like the spring. It is full of new appearances,
+as well as late fruitions. The goldenrod, strong flower of
+the sun, still plumes its store of light, and represents me well
+in my country, in spite of congressional inclination to award some
+puffy, manufactured rose with the title of national flower.</p>
+
+<p>Asters, lilac and white, grow abundantly in the sandy soil.
+Their little pin wheel flowers are as crisp and clean as the new
+dresses of the girls when they go off for the first day of school. The
+novelty, after the closed-in summer tempo, is an outwardness.
+There are many immature birds that appear suddenly in various
+untried places, and not necessarily because of the demands of a set
+migration. Because of these fledglings the various bird populations
+have so increased that they are pushed into looking for food beyond
+their nesting areas.</p>
+
+<p>Immature hermit thrushes appear as if at random, and many
+robins and towhees. The towhee, once called red-eyed, a name
+that seems to have been changed to rufous-sided, is a handsome
+black, white, and terra-cotta bird which likes scrubby areas, thickets,
+and open woods. So we see it frequently. It has a black and white
+tail with which it puts on a spectacular performance, flicking and
+flashing its feathers like a gambler with a deck of cards; and it
+floats over the brush and across the ground with its tail spread
+wide behind it.</p>
+
+<p>Now the young towhees call “Twee! Twee!” not quite at
+adult strength and clarity, but they are finding themselves. They
+are on the move.</p>
+
+<p>A covey of young quail suddenly starts across the road, coming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
+out of a field still loud with insects. Heads and necks up, they run
+almost trippingly forward with sweet, piping alarm.</p>
+
+<p>A young red-tailed hawk is brought into school by a boy
+whose father found it trapped in his chicken yard and killed it ignominiously
+with a baseball bat. Red tails are big beauties with a
+thick supply of feathers. Their backs are brown, their white bellies
+flecked with brown. The usual place to find them is high up, wheeling
+around the sky on a watch for rodents; and occasionally they
+fly out of pitch pine woods where they roost. The dead one has
+lost its piercing cry and the electric glare in its eyes, but its talons
+still look formidable. They are black, and as sharp-tipped, as wildly
+curved, as hooks of steel, joined in power and flexibility.</p>
+
+<p>Bright days warm the surface of the inland ponds that have
+their outlet in the waters of our local brook and estuary leading
+through marshes to Cape Cod Bay. The sun’s radiance hurries up
+the alewife fry in their ancient impulse to go down to salt water,
+from which they will return in three or four years’ time to spawn
+like their elders, usually in the same fresh-water system where they
+were hatched. These little silver fish, with an unfathomed stare
+in their big eyes, run out on an ebb tide from Paine’s Creek. They
+attract gulls and terns, which hover in crowds against the west
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>The plumage of the young terns still in the area now shows
+a more definite contrast between black and white. They have become
+more adept at flight. Many are still being fed ... almost
+continuously during those hours of shallow water when fish are
+easier to catch, so that the passivity of those still waiting on the
+sands looks like a consequence of being overstuffed. I get the impression
+that less food is being proffered by the parent birds, but
+they have certainly not relinquished their responsibility. They
+bring in small fish and their large children gulp them down and
+wait for more. Other young birds are now flying readily—chasing
+after their parents, beseeching attention, but more often trying to
+fish for themselves. Little by little, by rewards and refusal, failure
+and success, they are progressing toward the perfected action of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
+mature birds. They are becoming more aggressive, fighting for
+space over a crowded channel, or protecting their catch. The
+adults, whose success in fishing they are beginning to approximate,
+hover over the water, beaks pointing down, then dive suddenly,
+wings partly folded back. They hit the water like small stones, then
+come up again, flying away fast if they have a fish in their bills,
+chased by other birds that cry “Karr! Karr!” with a slightly growling
+note. It is not so much that the young terns are taught, in our
+sense of the word, as that they become more and more a part of
+the communicable rhythm of the whole race of terns. Their circling,
+diving, hovering, or racing downwind are common proficiencies
+of motion, that fit the great environment of air and sea.
+Growing up is rhythmic practice. There is not such a gap between
+tutelage and its recipients as there might seem to be among human
+beings.</p>
+
+<p>Terns seem involved in a ritualistic performance throughout
+their lives. Much of the behavior they show in getting food as
+nestlings and fledgling birds has its parallels in adulthood. There
+is the “fish flight,” for example, which has its origins in the begging,
+receiving, and then hunting food of a growing bird. (A
+fish is a master image, a center of recognition and attachment,
+with all the formality of action it entails.)</p>
+
+<p>The fish flight is a term which in its strict sense is applied to
+the behavior of birds during pre-courtship. It involves emotional
+display between pairs of birds, as distinct from their food-getting
+habits in general. In detail it includes differences in calls, in the
+relative positions of birds during flight, and in the way they carry
+a fish. A fish in the bill not only represents the fulfillment of need.
+It may also be an offering, a display, and perhaps the instrument
+for a mutual awareness between male and female, even before sex
+recognition occurs. But if the fish flight can be tied down to behavior
+at a particular stage in their lives, the terns also show similar
+reactions before and after it. Mated birds go on offering fish as
+they fly by one another, or begging, so that feeding is used to
+maintain a bond between them. And of course the fish is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
+basis of all the instinctive training of the young. The process of
+begging and receiving, or offering for the uses of recognition, continues
+on in many forms through their life stages. They pursue a
+formality. Their flights show the grace in action of a whole society.</p>
+
+<p>At half tide, when the water recedes over the sand flats, the
+terns flock there, preening and bathing in the tidal pools. Occasionally
+one will lift its wings up beautifully into the wind, receiving
+the wash of air. Some fly back to the inlet and drink the
+brackish water. The community seems to gather more and more
+closely together as time goes on. They all begin to roost densely
+in one area. At times they take to the air, as if alarmed. They
+rise and circle, crowds of white, crying shrilly, and then fly down
+again. Or they spin like a larger flock of sandpipers, a white cloud
+dancing with dizzy perfection over some fish weirs in the distance.
+Perhaps it could be called communal practice for the next journey.
+In their rhythms they are self-sustained, self-protective, like schools
+of fish, but at the same time bound out, under the laws of the wild
+air. One day soon I will go down to watch again, finding that
+most of them have flown away.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>An Open Shore</i></h3>
+
+<p>We stay where we are, while the young migrant birds and the
+men of the city leave us. But the days sharpen and change. The
+nights grow longer and cooler. The westerly winds increase.
+There is a brilliance in the air, and the sea makes a clean statement
+to our senses. “Adjust your vision,” the sky seems to say, “to
+a turn in height and depth and in a new area of relentless winds.”</p>
+
+<p>Those migratory birds that are still with us feed actively, fly
+with restless energy, and collect in flocks. In many undisturbed
+areas, down by the barrier beaches and through the salt marshes,
+treeless, open to the sun, you can see a great number using their
+special physical advantages to feed or fly, hide or attack, in the
+patterns of environment.</p>
+
+<p>The U. S. Wildlife Refuge at Monomoy is on a long spit of
+barrier beach and marsh extending south from the town of Chatham
+ten miles into Nantucket Sound. It is wild, unadorned with
+tourist cabins, and so an undisturbed refuge and resting place for
+migratory birds. At first you find warblers, gnat-catchers, orioles,
+vireos, and other land birds, working silently through low oaks,
+pines, and stunted, salt-sprayed shrubbery. Then the marshland
+sweeps ahead with open ground, and curving inlets behind a long
+beach where the surf pounds endlessly, the sands inlaid with the
+debris of the sea—whelks, surf clams, or scallops. Back in the marsh
+where mud snails stream slowly ahead in a long procession, the
+shore birds race in, or turn quickly in a shimmering flock, or settle
+among the hummocks, and along sandy rims.</p>
+
+<p>Dowitchers stolidly probe the mud with their long bills. That<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
+mottled, distinctive bird, the ruddy turnstone, pushes, or turns
+over, pebbles and stones—thus proving its name—as it searches for
+the worms and crustaceans underneath. Shy piping plovers, white
+as oyster shells, stand by themselves behind a dune. Sanderlings
+hurry back and forth with little twinkling legs. The yellowlegs fly
+up and over with short, piercing cries, their wings curved like
+sickles. Or a solitary marbled godwit flies by, handsomely patterned
+on its wings with black and white. Least sandpipers, tiny animals
+with greenish legs, hurry and flit along, feeding at the edge of the
+tide pools and the rim of inlets.</p>
+
+<p>The terns—common, roseate, least—fly at a point where the
+tide comes in through an opening in the beach. Sharp-cut divers,
+they swoop low, dipping into the water again and again. A few
+ring-billed gulls move among the shore birds. They are a little like
+a small herring gull, but their heads are more rounded, like pigeons.
+They have a lighter flight, and a softer look than their
+raucous, flat-headed relatives. And over the ridge of the beach,
+against up-dune horizons, is a long belt of great black-backed gulls,
+large, proud, and with a look of supreme idleness and cruelty.</p>
+
+<p>Here is “function” in all variety, each life to its place, filling a
+niche, with the special form and manner by which it feeds and
+tries to survive. And every bird is a bird of the sun, adapted to this
+treeless, narrow shore that blazes with cutting light, the light of
+sand, or rock turned to sand, of water, roaring and moaning in the
+sea, rushing back through a tidal cut on the ebb, then trickling,
+evaporating, and swelling in again at the flood. Each animal works
+an open coast, across its burning days. The fliers with wings so
+sharp, energies of light, fit the high or low wants of the wind, the
+curves and sweeps of the open marsh, the glaring sands. And they
+hurry on stilts, or tiny short legs. They bob up and down. They
+run trippingly along—all to the rhythm of the watered, indefinite
+shore, looking for food that is rhythmic in myriad ways. Here is a
+great tribe of searchers.</p>
+
+<p>The human race, as it climbs laughingly into motor boats
+and roars down an inlet, or sits soberly baiting fish hooks in a row<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
+boat, or basks in the sun, is no less brought in, fitted to this region—for
+all our autonomous great world of threats and shelters.
+There is some compelling call, that springs its lives ahead, and
+will not be talked away. Even the large, extraneous footmarks of
+seventy male and female “birders”—a very special tribe—are evidence
+of an omnivorousness, a searching, communicating, flocking
+together, from which no animals are entirely exempt.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Chipmunks</i></h3>
+
+<p>As some of the inhabitants of sea and shore move on to the
+south, inland life adjusts itself to local climate. The leaves on the
+trees are still green, but the bracken, or dry land fern, has turned
+brown, one of the early signs of autumn. My surroundings are
+full of statements of this kind, an end result of preparation. I notice
+one of them. I stop—pleased to be told—and then I wonder
+what was silently going on in August to have placed us with such
+definition in September. Plants and animals move into a new light,
+a new scene, when I am merely groping with their names. Perhaps
+because I have read too many newspapers, I am limited to what
+we call events. I see some outward evidence, and am obliged to
+go backward in order to reconstruct what might have been, when
+the real show is already over.</p>
+
+<p>So all September’s reassociations and revolutions may just
+end up for me as a clump of locust leaves tugged loose by the wind,
+or the sudden opening in a milkweed pod, or a new chill in the air.
+One day I notice that a milkweed pod—on the same plant where
+I saw the butterflies—erect like a lamp on its bent stem, has developed
+a dimpled line down the middle. The next day it has
+cracked apart, and there in the sheath are the compact seeds, overlapping
+like fish scales, making a kind of cone with a tail of soft
+silk made up of myriads of threads. They are moist at first, in
+their womb, then they dry out and each seed parachutes away,
+the silky rays darting, swirling, racing high, subject to every turn
+and twist of air. There will be new populations, out of old circumstances.
+What happened to the milkweed before this culmination?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
+How many hairstreak and monarch butterflies paid it a visit?
+How did it change with change in temperature and moisture and
+length of days? Where did it come from originally? Next year, if
+I have not been sent ahead myself, I will stand watch over the
+plant so as not to miss what might be the greatest show on earth.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i058" style="max-width: 102.3125em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i058.jpg" alt="Milkweed">
+</figure>
+
+<p>We depend on all too occasional visits to understand other
+modes and rhythms of existence with any depth, although there
+are times when a chance sight goes deep enough to last. This season
+of the year the chipmunks are very active, foraging for grains
+and nuts to store in their hibernation chambers underground. Cats,
+of which there are far too many loose on the Cape, kill so many
+chipmunks that it is sometimes hard to see how the population
+keeps up. (For one thing, these little “ground squirrels” only seem
+to have one brood a year.) Cats bring them home almost daily,
+teased into a terrible dance, spinning around like weary boxers on
+a revolving stage. A chipmunk’s alert curiosity, or habit of freezing
+into attention, may well be its most vulnerable point. Cats will get
+them when they are out in the open filling their cheeks with food.
+They will also come out of the shelter of a hole, or stone wall, to
+investigate the source of some unusual noise or light tapping, or
+a whistle, or just stay fixed when a man approaches, in a kind of
+actively questioning mood.</p>
+
+<p>I hear a scattered dashing in the leaves, and there it is—a
+striped, bright-looking little animal, tail twitching, arrested in
+motion, quivering and throbbing, its throat pulsing at a furious
+rate. We watch each other for three or four minutes. I too have
+my share of curiosity. Gradually its quick pulsing dies down. It
+turns its head slightly away, with those moist, black, intent little
+eyes. With a quick flip it is around a tree, then drops down to
+run along the leaves again and jump behind a boulder.</p>
+
+<p>It was in no mortal danger that time, but our two lives were
+brought together into relationship by another danger—the dark
+universe of chance. I felt it as almost a kind of love between strangers,
+in which my mental being was in no way divorced from what
+might lie behind a chipmunk’s eye.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pgs 59-60]</span></p>
+
+<p>I remember another chipmunk, in Vermont this time, whose
+chosen ground was a hillside pasture. I came on the animal when
+it was carrying part of an apple up a slope toward its hole, located
+in the side of a ridge some twenty feet above an old apple tree.
+When it saw me it dropped the apple, which promptly rolled
+downhill. Then it watched me with that silent waiting on chance,
+that throbbing look of expectation which they have, one paw
+twitching slightly and clutched to its chest. I was quiet, and at a
+respectable distance, so the chipmunk picked up its food again
+and hurried back to the hole; but the apple was too big to go in,
+and it rolled back downhill. This happened four times. The apple
+rolled down. The chipmunk hauled it back up, turned it around,
+put it up against the hole, a little like a man facing the problem
+of moving a large bed through a narrow door. Finally it nibbled
+bits off the edge, slipped sideways into the hole, and pulled the
+apple in after it. I stole up as quietly as I could and saw that it was
+eating away successfully with its food overhead. A problem had
+been solved, and with a fair amount of intelligence.</p>
+
+<p>The illumination we find in nature does not necessarily come
+from comparing degrees of intelligence, in which man always finds
+himself the winner. The light goes deeper. Our analytical ways,
+our methods of order, imitate an order which is indefinitely resourceful.
+Sometimes it shows itself past explanation. It is like this
+September evening after rain. For a short time, ten minutes perhaps,
+not long before dark, the earth is colored with magic, shadowless
+light. The grass is intensely green. The sky turns gray and
+pink. Distant fields are red and astonishingly bright. All colors are
+sure and strong, joining in pure gradations. The evening is full of
+mystic peace. A kitten watches the light, transfixed in the doorway
+(together, for all I know, with some chipmunk by the stone wall
+outside), arrested by what I in my own silence can only think of
+as an unmatchable glory, never to return in quite the same measure.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pgs 61-62]</span></p>
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="October"><i>October</i></h2>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span></p>
+
+<h3><i>Where Is Home?</i></h3>
+
+<p>The ordered days wheel on and fall into patterns consistently
+new. On further acquaintance, the place I live in seems to extend
+its boundaries and add to its store of lives. I struggle to understand.
+The more I add to my list of things as time goes on, the less
+my crude interpretations fit the circumstances. I started here with
+a tract of land. I built a house. I have a family. I am not yet sure
+of my location. The kingfisher says one thing, and the frog another.
+The snake travels a few thousand feet of home area, and the
+tern thousands of miles. They are both on Cape Cod. Then one
+leaves another. All action blows hot and cold with endless variations.
+A little knowledge makes my center rock with uncertainty.</p>
+
+<p>I am not even a native in the strict sense, and cannot be said
+to know my way around by feel, as a man might who was born
+here. I had a talk the other day with a time-honored Cape Codder
+on the subject of how fish or birds found their way. He was not
+able to give me any illumination on the scientific aspects of the
+subject, but when it came to human beings, he did give me some
+tips on how to avoid getting lost. I had confessed that I once set
+off in a rowboat and was lost in an offshore fog for the better part
+of a morning, rowing steadily in the wrong direction.</p>
+
+<p>The next time that happened to me, he suggested, I should
+drop anchor and wait for the fog to lift. In that dense shroud it
+is also possible, if you happen to be wading in shallow water, to
+lose sight of your boat when it is only a few yards away. Under
+such circumstances he once used his fishing line to help him get<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
+back to the boat by using the lead sinker as the center of a compass,
+playing out the line and circling until he reached it.</p>
+
+<p>The sea can be a trackless wilderness only a few yards offshore.
+Natives have been lost in it as well as newcomers. Still,
+there is no substitute for acquaintance, for knowing the sea’s look
+and its ways. This man claimed he could feel his way in the fog.
+In other words, taking in all factors, familiar or deducible, such as
+the way the tide is running, whether it is ebbing or rising, how the
+wind goes, and from what quarter, or even guessing direction by
+the ridges on a sand bar, he could take the right course, without,
+as he put it “letting my judgment interfere.”</p>
+
+<p>It took me a while just to learn the local compass directions,
+but now that I have my north, south, east, and west inside me, I
+am not sure, even walking through the trees, that I will not bump
+into my old ignorance. It takes time to find your way. A man new
+to the countryside might well be envious of some of the older
+inhabitants that know where they are without trying—a turtle, for
+example. A box turtle’s slow motion over the year seems like a true
+measure of ancientness. While the birds, the fish, the men depart,
+this dry land reptile seems to feel responsible for holding back, for
+the weight of the earth itself. In the springtime I have seen a slow
+pair approaching each other in a mood of affinity, while the rest
+of the procreative world danced overhead, and I have seen a female
+laying her eggs in a sand bank, covering them over with
+a last shove of her hind legs, then moving away, a little more
+quickly than usual, it seemed to me, as if to return to the more
+agreeable task of waiting things out. When fall comes and their
+cold blood slows, they grow torpid and finally dig out of sight into
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>On one of these warm days in early October I hear a slow
+dragging in the leaves, and come upon a box turtle eating a mushroom.
+They have beautifully patterned shells, ocher or yellow,
+sometimes orange, and dusty black, almost batik in design, with
+many variations. I stand about eight feet away, while it holds its
+head and neck straight up, watching me. I guess it to be a male,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
+by the bright red little eyes. The eyes of a female are a darker reddish
+brown.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i064" style="max-width: 102.6875em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i064.jpg" alt="Turtle and Mushrooms">
+</figure>
+
+<p>His wrinkled red neck pulses a little. His yellow beak and
+curved mouth line are tight shut under his flat-topped head, with
+bits of mushroom sticking out on either side. Very comical, he
+looks; but he stares down any inclination in me to laugh out loud.
+He watches me without moving for a full fifteen minutes before
+I get tired of the experiment and go away. Nothing, he seems to
+realize, can outlast a box turtle. This old male, with his wrinkled
+red jowls, and his soft, puddled-looking feet, must represent some
+antediluvian complacency, or, for all I know, a reasonable pride.</p>
+
+<p>In captivity box turtles have exceeded forty years before they
+died, and some grow to be much older than that, if they avoid
+being crushed on the highways or killed by forest fires, since they
+are otherwise invulnerable to most predators, excepting man. This
+year a box turtle was found locally by a man whose deceased relative
+had carved his initials on its shell in 1889, making the turtle
+seventy-one years old. How old the turtle was when so tagged is
+not known.</p>
+
+<p>They are wanderers—more so, for example, than the water
+turtles, and with a certain assurance. Within their chosen environment,
+of open field, shrubby slope, or marsh periphery, they cover
+a great deal of ground. They seem to carry a staying power with
+them, and an ancient decorum. They are like old natives true to
+ancestral places. There is something enviable about this fittingness
+to home.</p>
+
+<p>Still, I have enough modern restlessness or rootlessness in me
+to think that a home or piece of land probably has fewer boundaries
+than ever before. We are going to have to know our location
+“way out,” as some of the old Cape Codders used to say. I have
+an equal envy of the terns that are flying toward the Caribbean or
+the Antarctic. They are birds of the world, in which they know
+their direction by markers that are light-years away, or so some
+scientists believe after much investigation. The latest theory is that
+migrating birds find their way by the sun’s changing position during<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
+daylight hours and by some of the constellations at night. They
+have a built-in mastery of what it took many thousands of years
+for man to learn, with his surpassing intellect. They are readers of
+the stars. Their home is in the wide blind sky.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Field of Learning</i></h3>
+
+<p>We are committed far from home, but for a field of learning,
+the start and the finish is still here, still in place, just as that unique
+season of October, presaging a death in the glory of its color and
+clouds, brings the first frost, as if to say: “Regard necessity, in all
+its aspects. Look no further.”</p>
+
+<p>It never comes without warning. One night a thrashing,
+thicket-tearing wind arrives with much greater cold. Two nights
+later another wind blasts all warmth away, and when it dies down
+the frost settles in, leaving a crisp whiteness on the grass at dawn,
+and clouds of white vapor over the pond waters. The garden
+beans go limp and the wild indigo turns black.</p>
+
+<p>In that wind the low trees are like a sea, pluming and foaming.
+They are tossed and rocked, they pitch and writhe, while the
+stars in ordered majesty stream overhead. When the temperature
+starts to go down there is not a sound from the insect musicians
+any more, not one pizzicato, nor audible dry pulsing in the trees.
+You might think all breeding was over, though generation is latent
+everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Then it grows warm again. The insects sound in the grass and
+in the trees, if to a diminished extent. Crows gather in the early
+morning, and their various calls, synchronized in the open air, over
+the treetops, sound highly melodious. I hear a robin caroling, but
+very quietly, almost out of a playfulness, a musing. In spite of inexorable
+change, there are false dawns, days, or hours of deceptive
+warmth that set the long-horned grasshoppers to their buzzing and
+clicking and the flickers to shouting with renewed energy. All<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span>
+through the woods tiny tree frogs pipe at intervals from the cover
+of damp leaves. The pools in the fishway at the Brewster Herring
+Run are loaded with warm October sunlight and three-to four-inch
+alewives going down to salt water. A kingfisher planes up
+from branches above the stream with a rattling cry.</p>
+
+<p>The pattern is one of reduction, depopulation, cutting down
+to size, but like all other shifts in a season, this one is manifested
+as another angle of light, a different feel to the air, a new set of
+circumstances, as much as a stop to all activity. When the fall
+winds swish and swoop along the shore, and I walk the tidal flats,
+a wide space played upon by light—gold, brown, and blue reflections
+running through pools and across long ribs of sand—I am
+regenerated by all the choices that are still ahead of me. Nothing
+is fixed or finished. It seems to me that everything I encounter is
+driven by indirection, like the waves and rivulets, sun tangled, that
+are crossing each other and separating over sand bars during an
+oncoming tide. Here is the ordered complexity which ensures that
+our findings, or rather, our search, will never have an end.</p>
+
+<p>The finding-out process begins in childhood. That is why
+teaching is so great a profession. We intellectual animals have a
+long period in which to learn our wings. The teacher’s role is to
+bring us toward our highest capacity, and the tortures of that are
+immeasurable, on both sides. The field of learning is as wide as
+the sand flats, and the results as hard to catch as the waves; but
+a teacher has help from his pupils in ways over which they themselves
+have little control. Children have new fingers and new eyes
+and have to be coaxed into using them, but the touch and sight
+they bring cannot be taught in the schools.</p>
+
+<p>I have found out lately, after some attempts at teaching natural
+history, that nature springs in a child and a child in nature.
+You learn that you are teaching both.</p>
+
+<p>Why is one so proud of ignorance, and another of hiding
+what he knows? Some make a violent effort to be noticed; others,
+to retreat from view. You have an ambivalent and groping world
+to deal with, as hard to tape or tie as some of the phenomena<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
+you lead it to. But life is present tense to them, neither past nor
+future. They seem to pick up its manifestations not with adult
+skill but on the fly, like a boy casually catching a ball after missing
+ten, and then being surprised at himself. How did it happen?
+Memories, complexities, prejudices, risks taken on behalf of the future
+are largely unknown to them. It is enough to be new. There
+is not even any choice, since all choices are open, being new. Children
+are the unpredicting and the unpredictable. The one thing
+in which they never fail is growth, like the natural environment
+which never fails in its variations on the theme of fertility.</p>
+
+<p>One mild afternoon two of us take out a group of boys on a
+field trip along the shore, a beginners collecting expedition. The
+class runs ahead. They find a dead loon on the beach, with rove
+beetles, lovers of carrion, roaming through its body. These beetles
+have black and white stripes, suggesting a skunk to one boy, who
+is still young enough to admit all affinities.</p>
+
+<p>They run on, with erratic energy. They lend a puzzled ear to
+our explanations of how life forms are related to the places in
+which we find them. They are not quite certain of our terms.
+What is “environment?” What, for that matter, is “life?”</p>
+
+<p>Classifications come hard to them at first. Certain types of
+recognition take a long time to learn. When I think that at the age
+of thirty I didn’t know the difference between one gull and another,
+not to speak of their different calls, I am hardly surprised.</p>
+
+<p>“What’s this?”: a dune-dwelling locust, an ichneumon fly; a
+slipper shell, a shred of kelp, a spider, a scallop shell ... all parts
+of a game, novelties. But when will we know how to fit them all
+together? An impatient teacher might think from these boys, with
+their degrees of inattention, that the game will never get under
+way, that the preparation will never end. Yet their own lesson is
+that readiness is all, and the outcome immaterial.</p>
+
+<p>I am only half acquainted with them, although some of their
+native traits stand out plain to see. In one there is a shade of
+melancholy transplanted from his father, in another courtesy and
+gaiety. One is rough and full of the fever of unregulated competition.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
+Another is quiet and slow, or quick and sensitive. Together
+they share a mystery. They are in active flight like young birds,
+and at this point, this moment of being, allowed its own growth
+without real harm or hindrance, they give an offering. It is the act
+of their unknown selves.</p>
+
+<p>They catch some more insects with their nets. They find the
+bright yellow feathers of a flicker which had been caught and eaten
+by fox or owl in the beach grass. They identify the remains of a
+young herring gull washed onto the upper beach. The tide has
+ebbed and the sands stretch off with glittering lanes and rivulets—gulls
+stalking in the distance, or resting in white flotillas on the
+water—and blue salt water curves beyond, over the earth’s perimeter.
+The October shadows begin to stretch farther down the sands.
+Light, smoky clouds drift over and a strange little shower of rain
+comes down, running along the beach, disturbing no one. Then
+the sun comes clear again, moving westward. Everything we collect,
+all that we can say about it, is only a start, a suggestion, although
+each sample leads to all others. We have left a great deal behind.
+If the north wind roars in again tomorrow, sweeping all warmth
+away, killing more of life’s visible evidence, or making it cower in
+the earth, and causing colds and crabbedness in human society, we
+will still be setting out.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Colors of the Season</i></h3>
+
+<p>There is yellow and peach pink on the leaves of the red
+maples, and some of the oaks begin to show signs of changing, but
+the most colorful plants are the mushrooms. The wet weather has
+been providential for them, and they have come up in some areas
+where I cannot remember having seen them before. They thrust
+mysteriously but stubbornly through the grass in a wide semicircle
+of white moons. They parade up the side of trees, and across the
+wood floor their cups or parasols stand comfortably grounded in
+dead leaves or decaying wood. (We see only the flower of the
+mushroom protruding above the ground, while underneath lies the
+complex mat of fine fibers from which they blossom, the mycelium.)</p>
+
+<p>For such pulpy, soft, almost immaterial-looking plants, mushrooms
+show a strange power to lift, which is caused, in reality, by
+hydraulic pressure within them, amounting to as much as six or
+eight pounds per square inch. They come up through an inch or
+two of concrete, or through the asphalt surface of a road. They
+move the heavy bark of old logs aside. One of them puts up a scaly
+dome under the edge of a pump house eave that almost touches
+the ground, as if it intended to lift the roof off.</p>
+
+<p>When we think of fungi, we have a justifiable association with
+rot and decay, mildew and mold. They lack chlorophyll, that famous
+green substance by which other plants are able to absorb
+the energy of the sunlight and through it convert carbon dioxide
+and water into food. The mushrooms, like other fungi, get their
+food directly from organic matter, rich soil, rotting wood, or leaf<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
+mold. They reproduce by billions of tiny spores, each of which,
+or rather, the comparatively few that catch, are started in such a
+matrix. In a sense they are procreative flowers of the darkness, annuals
+which the earth puts forth in its own teeming right, regardless
+of the gay slaves of the sunlight. But they are colorful. They
+wear the earth’s sulfurs, umbers, and ochers, its iron rusts, light
+greens, grays, and whites, as well as some startling rose-reds and
+vermilions.</p>
+
+<p>I find a small one in the wet leaves which is a lavender-blue,
+named, according to my reference book, the violet cortinarius, and
+good to eat—surprisingly enough. Color is no criterion of what is
+poisonous. The deadly amanita does not have the flickering blue-green
+color of something low and ominous, nor is it a dangerous
+red, a signal for all but the most reckless to keep off. Some of the
+reddest mushrooms, in point of fact, are the best to eat. But the
+deadly amanita is almost tempting in appearance. It is white and
+succulent-looking, and to eat enough of it means death.</p>
+
+<p>A strange thing, the mushroom, of short annual appearances
+(though the roots, or mycelium, are perennial), of quick growth
+and quick decay. Some of them are already turned into rotten
+dark brown, nearly liquid heaps. Others will gradually dry up and
+disappear, but now, on this tag end of a moist season, they are the
+local bounty. They have curled edges like cabbage or dead oak
+leaves. They take the form of single stems and fronds like seaweed.
+They are fringed, scalloped, round or flat, thin or fat. They bunch
+together at the base of an old stump, or they climb the side of a
+tree in shelves. Their heads take the form of lima beans, or floppy
+rabbit ears, fans, umbrellas, trumpets, shaggy hats, or cottage roofs.
+They are scaly, rough, smooth, or silky. They have thin stems and
+dainty heads like flowers; or both head and stem look like one
+great overgrown protuberance. Here and there, coming through
+the leaf litter, are yellow bunches of coral mushrooms, so called
+because they have the look of branched coral; and in the deep
+shade they seem almost luminous. In fact, whether or not any
+mushrooms do have a luminosity, like some fungi, they have a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
+glimmer of decay about them in our imagination. They are of
+the earth unearthly, in spite of the fact that many of them provide
+substantial beds for insect larvae, that they are good, if sometimes
+treacherous food, and that they can raise the top off a road.</p>
+
+<p>This year has also been rich in Indian pipes. This is that unreal,
+pure-white plant, which, in more mythical times, has been
+called the corpse plant, or ghost flower. It blooms by itself, though
+out of the moist woodland humus like the mushrooms, lacking
+chlorophyll as they do. There is some dispute apparently, consistent
+with the Indian pipe’s ghostly nature, about what it really is.
+Some books refer to it as a “saprophyte,” which means a plant
+that absorbs its nutrition from dead or decaying organic matter,
+but in others it is called a “parasite.” A parasite gets its nourishment
+from a living host. The Indian pipe has a very small mat of
+rootlets where the thick stems join together at the base of the plant.
+If you dig it out of the ground it looks as if it were resting on bare
+knuckles. These roots, according to the botanists, have an outer
+layer of funguslike tissue, which means that the fungus rather than
+the roots has actual contact with the soil. So it sounds as though
+the Indian pipe, being dependent for its food on the fungus and
+not the soil or humus, were a parasite. Another alternative, if the
+fungus gets any nourishment from the plant, is that they live in
+a state of mutual association, or symbiosis. Thus science, still trying
+for exactitude, and the Indian pipe, still unaccountable. It seems
+to be on the verge of several worlds rather than an integral part of
+one, a plant you might meet in a dream.</p>
+
+<p>Other old and once popular names for it are: Dutchman’s-pipe;
+fairy smoke; convulsion weed; eyebright; bird’s nest; and
+American ice plant. It was called ice plant, according to Alice O.
+Albertson in her <i>Nantucket Wild Flowers</i> (1921), because “it resembles
+frozen jelly and is juicy and tender and dissolves in the
+hands like ice.” One contemporary authority calls it “clammy,”
+which is accurate enough, and keeps it in the realm of ghosts and
+chills, but I think it was an exaggeration to say that it dissolves in
+the hands. I find it solid enough, not fragile or perishable to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
+touch. Its stems have a fibrous, tough core, which is sometimes
+hard to tear. It also has a pungent, woody smell, though this probably
+comes from the soil it grows in.</p>
+
+<p>All the same, it is an elusive, beautiful flower, a miraculous
+specialty. Coral pink shines almost translucently through the stems,
+which are covered with tiny white bracts, or scales, taking the
+place of leaves—scales of a tiny albino fish perhaps—and the bell-like
+flowers hang their stiff white heads straight down, with pink
+seed pods standing up between them, round, decoratively grooved
+little crowns. When the plant dies, it stands for months as a thin,
+brownish black string, having turned from beautiful ghost to lifeless
+reality.</p>
+
+<p>Over the mushrooms and Indian pipes, in subtle relationship
+to them, the leaves are losing their green chlorophyll and revealing
+the other, more stable pigments that last out long enough to make
+the familiar glory of the autumn. There is not so much a general
+“dying” in the fall, as an adjustment. Insect eggs are in the bark or
+ground, the mushroom spores are being carried through the air,
+the grasses are heavy with seed, acorns drop to the ground. One
+day last October I was hit with a shower of acorns from the white
+oaks. This year, since oaks fruit heavily on different years, I notice
+more acorns from the black oaks. How fast these acorns get to
+work! A little curling, probing, adventurous sprout comes from the
+nut, and in a short time has grown several inches. A few manage to
+take hold before the ground is frozen. A multitude of others provide
+food for squirrels, chipmunks, or blue jays. The measure of
+these arrangements is complex and elaborate. Between the leaf of
+a tree and a mushroom, worlds apart in function, there are connections
+of rainfall, temperature, or sunlight, in a context continually
+new, and though the ground colors fade, sunsets, seas, and inland
+waters will take over their active play.</p>
+
+<p>That great bonfire of a maple tree—one special to my boyhood—that
+I used to marvel at in the New Hampshire fall, is here
+replaced by second-or third-growth oaks. I now live in a stunted
+land; but as it is the sea which surrounds it, so, in its long low<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span>
+stretches, its glacial hollows and running hills, it rides ahead like
+open billows. The early splashes of color come from the red of the
+sumac and the purple-reds of the huckleberries and blueberries.
+Then color begins to spread through the oaks, that war with yellow-green
+pitch pines for living space. Yellow or red streaks show
+in the leaves of the white oak, orange in the waxy leaves of the
+post oak, brilliant red in the scarlet oak. Then deep reds, maroons,
+cowhide yellows and browns pervade them, and our woodland
+surroundings seem full of a beautiful propriety, a beauty in necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Occasional copses of beech trees are shining with golden
+bronze; and tupelo, or black gum, trees, with scraggy, undulant
+branches, have little leaves that are a blazing, livid red. Over bare
+hillsides the “hog cranberry,” or bearberry, a perennial ground
+cover with shiny leaves, is hung with cherry-red fruit. The cultivated
+cranberry bogs show broad stretches of purple-red, shaped,
+depending on the area, in squares, circles, or oblongs, all, if well
+cared for, neatly ditched. The tidal inlets and marshes run with
+flaxen and gold, spotted at their edges with light festival red from
+the berries of black alder, a form of holly.</p>
+
+<p>These flaming revelations signal the trees’ reaction to the decrease
+in light’s intensity, or the colder temperature of the soil.
+The leaf decomposes. The tree withdraws and makes ready for a
+leaner season; but it is too big a display for mere “adjustment.”
+You will not find the category of color in a historical dictionary
+or the encyclopedia of social sciences, but in this temperate zone
+at least, it is now an integral part of the history of change, and of
+natural society.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>There is a deep little hollow nearby called Berry’s Hole. Many
+years ago it contained a cranberry bog, and it is still wet bottom
+land with water around its edge, and a center choked with moisture-loving
+shrubs and reeds. Frogs take advantage of it, as well as
+water insects and their larvae. Wood peewees nest around it in
+the springtime. Now it is radiant with its special version of the fall.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
+In the middle of October, sheep laurel is still green on the surrounding
+slopes, through the purple huckleberry bushes. I walk
+down them into a raining screen of leaves. Berry’s Hole is circled
+by red, also called swamp, maples, and their red and yellow leaves,
+light and delicate compared to those of the oak trees on dry slopes
+above them, slip down constantly through the bright air, drift,
+eddy, and finally touch the ground, or fill the brown water with
+loose-lying, sinking rafts of color.</p>
+
+<p>A green frog leaps into the water with a squeak. I notice
+a box turtle on the bank, with its head determinedly locked in this
+time. Its markings, on an almost black shell, are dashes of yellow,
+and a rich reddish orange that reminds me of a Blackburnian
+warbler.</p>
+
+<p>Response to color is response to energy, the radiance and the
+reflection of light. I close my eyes after looking across the sun and
+see red, the color of warmth and desire. Around the eye of Berry’s
+Hole is the red of blood and the yellow of the sun.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Last Day in October</i></h3>
+
+<p>The night, after a deceptively bright and soothing day, seems
+suddenly withdrawn. The wind has a hard feel to it, as if a northern
+authority had come to stay. Heavy rolls of cumulus clouds hang in
+the sky when morning breaks, and the Cape begins to look like my
+winter image of it, dank and cold, with inert, slate-colored seas
+investing its shores. The oak leaves have turned a darker, more
+lifeless red, or they are light brown. I notice that the leaves of the
+white oaks are among the first to die, beginning to curl up like
+stiff, ancient hands, with an ashy pallor on them. The scarlet oaks
+are the last to lose their color.</p>
+
+<p>As a result of their definite adjustment, insisting on certain
+rules of change before many of the rest of us are quite ready, the
+oak woods seem to have a dark, plenipotentiary look. The trees
+stand in self-saved, stiff company, although the animals that
+visit them are lively enough. I watch a gray squirrel burying acorns
+in loose dirt at the edge of the road. He has that continually
+twitching, starting and stopping, restless being of his rodent relatives
+the red squirrels and the chipmunks. He runs back and forth
+over the sandy earth burying the acorns, and then, as if unsatisfied
+with the places he put them, bringing them out again.</p>
+
+<p>The squirrel’s gray, fur-clad body flows with suppleness. The
+big gray tail is sudden too in its motion, stretching out behind,
+or up, with curled tip when the animal stops to sit. He quits his
+activity, and with a long bound and dive he is up a tree. Along
+with its slapdash motion, but provident method, the gray squirrel
+may also have a touch of foolhardiness in its nature, though even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
+the most practiced make their slips. I have never seen it happen
+myself, but a friend tells me that he has seen gray squirrels miss
+their leap occasionally in high trees near his house and fall to
+their death.</p>
+
+<p>The leaf litter still fairly jumps with mice and shrews. A little
+blind shrew with dark gray pelt and pink nose slips out of a bank
+of leaves where I walk. It swerves with astonishing speed and
+squeaks angrily at me before it dives out of sight into the leaves.
+This, in contrast to other members of the mouse family, is a
+fighter.</p>
+
+<p>I go into a part of the oak wood which has been a little more
+protected ... a hollow fenced in and fringed by strands of bull
+briar. It is an open space where deer have come in to paw the
+ground and settle down at night. Skunks have left little holes
+where they clawed into the leaf mold on their hunt for grubs.
+Towhees have scratched the leaves apart. Cottontails have stopped
+here, hopped, nibbled, and jumped away.</p>
+
+<p>This land is mine. The deed is recorded in my name. But I
+cannot claim to have put it to better use than the animals to whom
+it is public property. It belongs to the deer, the skunk, the rabbit,
+and the towhee, who eat, pass through, or take shelter there. With
+my approach, of course, the whole question of tenure is rudely
+solved, except for the countless stay-at-home organisms in the
+ground beneath me. The deer turns once with a large gaze, then
+bounds away with its white, electric brush of a tail flung up.
+“Boom!” a partridge thunders up, cuffing leaves and twigs with its
+wings, and hurtles off through the trees. A crow gives a warning
+call as it flies overhead. I am allowed the land if I want it, though
+not much trust is involved. But why should I expect comfort or
+acceptance, in this open realm of risk? Neither man nor deer was
+mother to the skunk. It knew its own. Chance meetings will do,
+for the love I find in them.</p>
+
+<p>On the calendar this is the last day of October, and it has
+some justice to the title. The lunar months mirror the general
+character of the year’s transitions. In spite of the fact that all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pgs 79-80]</span>
+single days are lost in the passage of light and we are left behind, this
+one seems full of an end and a turn to something else. The local
+life is making its last forays, before a time of dormancy, hibernation,
+or struggle to survive. A mourning cloak butterfly beats
+lightly by, with no other companions to be seen. I find some mud
+dauber wasps, flies, and a cicada killer, all hibernating in a pile
+of rotten logs. The woods are full of the intermittent beauty of the
+last oak leaves, red, with a deep tone in the gray day, and the
+sumacs still show their shining raspberry color on the surrounding
+slopes.</p>
+
+<p>The late afternoon is cold and quiet. I regret the shorter day
+and the need to leave the great air so soon. But underneath lowering
+clouds is a growing gap of swirling orange toward the west.
+As the light recedes around us, the sunset begins to show the
+power and surge of pattern in the sky. Coils and whips of gold at
+first—bold, bright, far away. Then spun gold behind dark barriers—the
+ribs of whales, giant minnows, plumes tinted with salmon,
+the curving timbers of ships, and all things rare and imaginary
+plunging through an oceanic fire. Also I see golden October going,
+in fields of last excitement. But what this and many other sunsets
+say is “Come on!” However you use your days and nights, in
+speed or muddled preoccupations, come. It will be too late soon
+for the feast that is now, whose fires are always carrying over to the
+other side of the world.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pgs 81-82]</span></p>
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="November"><i>November</i></h2>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span></p>
+
+<h3><i>The Seed in the Season</i></h3>
+
+<p>The glory goes, and there comes the first sudden plucking out
+of dead leaves. They scud and sail. They lift and fall to the ground,
+where they sometimes scuttle unexpectedly like mice.</p>
+
+<p>November rolls into view with cool, solemn, formal consistency.
+When it rains they say: “I’m glad it’s not that white stuff,”
+although Cape Cod is not noted for its snow. There is no deep
+and heavy frost as yet, no northeast gales driving wet flakes at
+our eyes. A number of Cape Codders migrate to Florida for the
+winter. Daylight diminishes. As the leaves drop off we begin to see
+more distinctly between the trees. I find two spotted turtles moving
+very slowly through the waters of a ditch at one side of an
+abandoned cranberry bog. In one open field there are a few red-legged
+grasshoppers, much less active than a few weeks before.
+An occasional cricket, grasshopper, or spider is spotted and animated
+by the rays of the sun when it bursts through drifting
+clouds. Here and there a violet aster or late goldenrod stands in
+bloom between innumerable plants that are fuzzy with seed. The
+milkweed still sends crowds of little silk parachutes shining on the
+wind.</p>
+
+<p>We are now in a genuine country state of which the urban
+power talks with both scorn and ignorant nostalgia. The summer
+no longer pounds at our temples. The fall color is gone. There is
+nothing to look at, and very little to hear except the wind, or a
+plane in the distance, a car on the highway. To a city lover it is
+silent and deadly dull.</p>
+
+<p>As to the nostalgia, I doubt that there is much stress any more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
+on the virtue implicit in country living. Since all men now dwell
+in all places, they question virtue everywhere; but some still talk
+as though the country were a place for that intangible peace and
+moral order that they think is lacking in the world. The country,
+however, is in the grip of a power that has no moral values and is
+greater than morality. It is false and true. It is benign and it is
+terrible. It cures and it kills. And I do not suppose that whether
+or not the earth is made up of human cities can make much difference
+to it. I am waiting for a deeper tone than hope.</p>
+
+<p>There is no noise or compelling distraction in a field or stand
+of trees. Still, a forester suggested to me that if trees could make
+themselves heard, in their internal growth and adjustments, the
+roar would be deafening. The same thought has been applied to
+life in the ground, with its countless microorganisms, in a state of
+continual displacement and turmoil, growing and dying, consuming
+and being consumed. They too might roar. We have enough
+at hand and under our feet to make general tumult no surprise.</p>
+
+<p>The point about this countryside is not its isolation but its
+potentiality. It is in charge of origins. What is more dramatic than
+the production of seeds in plants and grasses over one small field?
+The seeds are in uncountable numbers, and each one is a miniature
+plant, an embryo, surrounded by food and a protective coating.
+It is an embodiment of force. It eats and breathes, and now
+goes into a period of dormancy like an animal, ready to germinate
+in the spring when conditions are favorable. Such facts are part of
+elementary biology, but they cover up the stir and momentum of
+the globe.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i084" style="max-width: 98.3125em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i084.jpg" alt="Tall Grass and Insect">
+</figure>
+
+<p>These seeds, on grass and weeds now growing thinner, drier,
+more colorless, are not only rich in generation, on their own account,
+but they provide beyond themselves. The juncos, or snow
+birds, that come down from the north will survive on a seed diet
+throughout the winter, with the sparrows, and that sustaining food
+the mice, preyed upon by fox, weasel, or hawk. The simplest “food
+chain” suggests the links in many others. In fact there is no fundamental
+separation anywhere in this common world of life, despite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
+the greatly various environments of water and land that we
+use to help us differentiate between the species. Winds blow
+through. Tides lap over. Each plant and animal is proof of general
+contact and association.</p>
+
+<p>The insignificant seed has energy and sustenance enough to
+perpetuate many worlds. It makes me look at mere grass with more
+interest than I did. I believe there are some fourteen hundred
+species of grasses in the United States, of which I know less than
+a dozen. There is one grass which grows in many areas of the
+Cape, through open slopes, pine woods, sandy, run-down fields,
+that I have heard called beard, or prairie grass. I have walked
+by it, on it, and through it for years without knowing its name,
+though its nameless, light-catching beauty often caught my attention.
+It turns out to be broom sedge (<i>Andropogon scoparius</i>),
+a plant that reaches from here and the Middle Atlantic States
+south to Texas and across the southeast to California. It is a poor
+soil, poor forage grass, appropriate to this nonagricultural region.
+Its stems rise from a bunch of curving, rustling leaf blades, and
+are covered with tiny florets that go to seed in the fall, little
+feathery tufts. As the autumn months progress it grows more colorful,
+deepening to tawny pink, with a touch of purple, before it
+takes on its straw-colored midwinter hue. The little silky feathery
+tufts shine in the sunlight like the slightest spits and sparkles on a
+pool, or tiny plumes of frost, intangibly gentle, sustaining their
+brightness as the winter comes on. The stems are two to three
+feet tall, and with their delicate adornments, they stand the year
+around, stirring, curving forward, nodding back, with the utmost
+refinement. So I praise what is for me a new discovery, though it
+has stood near me in its own praise for many years—a country
+eloquence.</p>
+
+<p>Almost all local preparations are done. The seed is sown and
+made ready. The time for persistence is coming, when those
+grasses we take so much for granted will hold our earth together.
+When the sun warms them, drying on slopes and through old
+fields, they smell sweet underfoot, a natural, uncut hay.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Clouds</i></h3>
+
+<p>The power of sending on is latent in the seed, but the weather
+itself is always openly manifest, and when the leaves fall, when
+the summer nests begin to show up in unexpected places, then it
+hits us even harder. The northeast winds are beginning to be
+something to hide from. The sky stares with a wider, colder eye.</p>
+
+<p>When it is cloudy I hear the dull drone of unseen planes far
+above me, and I think of a world at large that is teeming with
+meetings and negotiations, losing decisions, waiting on results.
+The immediate earth seems to shift, tack, and decide according to
+its clouds, that slant up the sky in fibrous strands, hang deep and
+low, or lift across the sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>The sun’s rays slant lower between the open aisles of the
+trees, and there is a keener, icier edge to the light. I walk out
+through a hollowed, dipping and waving landscape onto gray-green
+lichens, and dry, sweet-smelling grasses of an old field laced with
+briars, and the pale blue sky is on top of me with intoxicating
+height. The vapor trail of a jet plane cuts across the sky for miles,
+while slower clouds ease and change across the November blue,
+allowing lazy time for the imagination.</p>
+
+<p>But if to imagine is a dispensation from nature that allows
+us to take part in her intricate creativeness, then it is no idleness.
+Rationally, a cloud, whether cumulus, stratus, cirrus, nimbus, or a
+combination thereof, is what it is: a collection of drops of water,
+or ice particles, suspended in the air. Meteorology as a science
+must be one of the most intriguing, since its subjects never sit still.
+I would, if I could, make an analysis of the clouds that are typical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
+of a season, the changes in pace that make themselves known
+overhead; though the old maritime men of Cape Cod could do a
+better job. They knew what they depended on, in the way of
+calm or storm, and predicted what they felt. Subjective interpretation
+is suspect these days, but it implies a common familiarity for
+which objective analysis offers no substitute. The sensate imagination,
+with its head in the clouds, finds interconnections past their
+specialty and name.</p>
+
+<p>Clouds, collecting moisture from the ponds, lakes, or ocean
+waters, have many of the shapes and patterns of the land, or
+head, if you like, that they come from. We can find faces in
+them, as well as in the dregs of a teacup; but they are the images
+of an invention that is more fluid than our own. Their texture
+may cause them to look like scratched, glacial rocks, or they are
+wooly and fibrous at the same time. They might suggest cocoons
+or the nest of fall webworms. They hang in snowy shoals or in
+striated banks. They ripple like the sands at low tide. They look
+like whitecaps on the sea. They move as slowly and inexorably as
+fields of ice, or in quick bursts ahead of the wind. They roll in
+mountainous abundance, or fan out like a river’s long fingers
+stretching out across a delta.</p>
+
+<p>Clouds suggest seaweed, grasses, wings. Occasionally they
+remind me of ferns, and of the fernlike patterns that the frost
+makes on a window, or they resemble some basic structure of a
+living thing. As plants and animals are united in fundamental
+physical laws and in their chemical composition, so clouds, for
+all their evanescence, cannot be separated from the world of life.
+Clouds are announcements of progress and decline. They show the
+sky’s adventures. There is more to them than my fancy. The light,
+the wind, the altitude, temperature, time of day or year commit
+them to a definite size, shape, and existence. They are images of
+substance, in a motion which casts everything into its weather,
+including that human sign on the sky, the jet’s trail, imposing
+an abstract scar ten miles across.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Inconstant Land</i></h3>
+
+<p>When the clouds cover the sky like gun smoke and the air
+feels cold and restricting, I am reminded that the character of
+Cape Cod has nothing to offer an uncertain world except uncertainty.
+Its trees are not of a size to hang on to, and its dunes
+shift like the waves. It is a land that men have ravaged with fire,
+not excluding the Indians who preceded us, and abused without
+compunction. It is said there used to be great stands of trees
+on the Cape, hardwoods, hemlocks and pine. The remnants of
+submerged Atlantic white cedar forests have been found as far as
+three miles out in Cape Cod Bay, and bog borings have revealed
+the evidence of timber in some areas where trees now have only a
+bare subsistence. But during the nineteenth century, judging by
+photographs and local account, this peninsula was much poorer
+in trees than it is now, even though our local woods cannot be
+given credit for much height and dignity.</p>
+
+<p>A man from New Hampshire visited me briefly a few
+years ago and said: “What in the world are you living here for?
+There aren’t any trees!” I pointed out to him that we had the sea,
+but the place seemed poor and flat to him, and he headed back
+to the mountains and tall timber as fast as he could, though he
+first chose to have a lunch of seafood, on his way out.</p>
+
+<p>When I bought the land I live on, it had a desolate appearance
+aside from a long view of the water, but its high wildness appealed
+to me. It was covered with dead oaks, standing everywhere like
+stripped spars. They had been killed off by a severe infestation
+of gypsy moths, and were, in any case, weak, cutover growth to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
+begin with. The local landowners cut the woods down almost
+completely, then waited, twenty-five years in many cases, to cut
+them again. Others cut for firewood whenever they needed it.
+This area is covered like a rabbit warren with tracks made by
+wagons coming in to take out wood. I talked with a man recently
+who used to ride on the wagon seat with his grandfather when he
+was a boy. They liked to pull trees out when the frost was in
+the ground. Even then the wagon would be so heavily loaded
+that it sank in almost to the axles, with the horse pulling hard in
+the middle. The deep ruts are still to be seen. Besides taking out
+the wood for sale and for their own use, the owners would sell
+it “on the stump,” letting individuals go on their land and cut.</p>
+
+<p>Since this was a country whose inhabitants often made a sparse
+living out of livestock as well as fish, the land was also used for
+grazing. Cattle and sheep kept the brush and ground cover down.
+Many sandy hillsides were not only bare, but beginning to erode
+badly.</p>
+
+<p>In his <i>Cape Cod</i>, Thoreau speaks of the country between
+the towns of Barnstable and Orleans on the bay side as being
+“bare, or with only a little scrubby wood left on the hills.”
+“Generally,” he writes, “the ploughed fields of the Cape look white
+and yellow, like a mixture of salt and Indian meal. This is called
+soil. All an inlander’s notions of soil and fertility will be confounded
+by a visit to these parts, and he will not be able, for some
+time afterwards, to distinguish soil from sand.”</p>
+
+<p>Fire has tormented the Cape, ever since the Indians, who
+used it to clear areas for corn, or to increase the visibility when
+hunting game. When the humus on the woodland floor is thin,
+and the trees not healthy or high enough to provide protective
+shade, thus retaining moisture in the ground, a severe drought
+may make them ripe for burning. I have heard it said that fires
+used to be set deliberately in order to improve the blueberry crop.
+And a neighbor tells me that he has seen thirty or more fires set
+by the sparks from a train, chugging down the Cape, as he watched
+from a bare hillside half a century ago.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span></p>
+
+<p>Oddly enough, the pitch pine owes a great deal of its present
+prosperity to fire. It is one of the few trees whose roots stay
+alive and which comes back after an area has been burned over.
+Most of its competitors, except scrub oaks and black oaks, are
+killed off. It is a tough tree, and when it grows to good height
+with its rugged, wind-whisking look, a beautiful one; but it has
+its vulnerable points. It is very greedy for light, being what the
+tree experts call an “intolerant tree,” and it cannot stand competition.
+Pitch pines that come up under the shade of oaks or
+even of their own kind, soon die off. They demand their own
+ground. The oaks, especially the white oak, are much more tolerant
+of shade, and may in time push out the pitch pine, provided fires
+are held to a minimum in the future.</p>
+
+<p>The oaks are monumentally persistent. Cut them down fifty
+times and they will sprout back from the roots, which merely
+spread out a little further and send out more shoots. These “sprout
+hardwoods” have poor quality wood. They have fungus diseases,
+and are subject to attack by insect borers. The general attitude
+toward them is that they are worthless. Now that they are not
+much in demand for firewood, the bulldozer, rather than the ax, is
+their major enemy. But they deserve some admiration for holding
+their own. The first year or two after cutting, a sprout oak will
+grow very fast, but then it settles down for a long future, beginning
+to grow at a slow, insistent rate, taking what comes. This is
+a windy and salty land, where oaks may never grow to great
+girth and height, but they seem eloquent about their right to
+last out the next five thousand years on Cape Cod as well as we,
+even though thirty feet, or in some areas five, may be the maximum
+they reach. This is their chosen land.</p>
+
+<p>The late fall wind makes the brown oak leaves rustle and
+stir or sound like hail, and it soughs through the pitch pines.
+The whole year is full of the collaborative music of air and trees.
+They may be poor trees, low and rangy, subject to great abuse,
+but in their growth they make the land march between its
+surrounding waters. The gray oak trunks go in ranks and tiers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
+for mile after mile down the center of the Cape, interspersed by
+individual pitch pines, or backed up and sided by pines in
+independent woods that look rounded and bunched in the distance,
+pocked with dark green shadows. The oak branches thrust up their
+candelabras of branches and stiff twigs against the pale sky, ready
+for next spring’s sunlight. The pitch pines stand with scaly, dark
+brown trunks and thick needles rocking and switching around,
+authorities on wind, and sandy soil, on impermanence, on taking
+your chances when and where you can.</p>
+
+<p>Geologists say that this truly “narrow land,” no more than a
+mile wide in some sections, seven or eight in others, may vanish
+under the sea in five or six thousand years. Its border of sands
+is always in the process of roaming and shifting. The Cape has
+no bedrock. Its rocks are migrants, brought down from the north
+by moving ice. In spite of the evidence of some once fairly
+rich timberland and deep topsoil, the Cape does not convince
+you of any depth and permanence other than its alliance with
+salt water.</p>
+
+<p>The sea gives and the sea takes away, breaking through a
+barrier beach during winter storms and roaring into the marsh
+and sheltered inlet behind, cutting down cliffs a foot or two a
+year, or imperceptibly stealing inches from a low-lying shore; while
+it adds new beaches, packs new tons of sand around an outlying
+spit or shoal. Last year, when I accompanied a group of children
+on their geology class, we uncovered a burying pit for horses
+and cows in the sandbank at the head of one of the bay beaches.
+If there had been a farm in the vicinity, a hundred years or more
+ago, the sea may well have cut in over half a mile to reach these
+bones.</p>
+
+<p>The winds sweep overhead, or merely threaten, the beach
+waters lap gently, or bridle and roar, and the only stability I feel
+is that of the tides, a lasting balance between the give-and-take
+of water and land. The Cape’s ravaged past and stunted present
+seems transmuted into motion. What this spit of land has taught
+me is an altered sense of the context of time. I once saw a tree<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span>
+either as material for the woodpile, or something with a growth
+so slow as to pass notice. Now I have begun to see trees moving
+by the million in a million varied places. Natural change is
+made up of so many circumstances, the continuum of life in its
+vast order is so far from being held down by history, that everything
+requires us to move on into the distance. It may well be regretted,
+but Cape Cod is not so much a place for traditionalism as a
+victim of the beautiful and impatient earth.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Dead and the Living</i></h3>
+
+<p>A cautious solemnity is beginning to take hold, although
+the weather plays new tricks as it alternates between the influences
+of north and south, east and west. Rain pours over the land.
+Then, on a warm day, there is thunder and lightning at noon,
+succeeded by a furious northwest wind after dark, bringing in a
+deeper cold. The wind hums and roars during the night, and with
+the sky clear and the stars out, the Cape has a new swept and
+running feel to it.</p>
+
+<p>On a night of full moonlight, there are glassy shadows between
+the trees, with a dry surf of air; and if sight brings sound, almost
+tinkling beams of light from the low moon. New stations, new
+harmonies of cold are suggested by stiff trees on their low hills
+and hummocks, standing against persimmon and topaz sunsets,
+or by a crystal edge on the sunlight.</p>
+
+<p>We have had light frosts, but by the end of the month no
+consistent, freezing weather has been reached. Then on the
+thirtieth the temperature drops to 20 degrees. I notice a flower,
+Queen Anne’s lace, still blooming, all by itself in a field of
+matted grass. During the night the surface of the ground is
+frozen hard ... a cap of reality at last, with no more lingering.
+There is a genuine glittering clarity of cold, in cloud, and branch
+and stone. Out on the bay the low waves look as if they had a
+harder push and pull to make, imbued with new heaviness. A
+boy shows me the frozen body of a red-legged grasshopper, perfectly
+preserved for a little while by a power to which its only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
+adaptation is death. What still stands above ground now faces
+poverty, and primitive recalcitrance.</p>
+
+<p>There is a kind of ice sludge being nudged in by the tides
+along the shore and through rippling purple waters of tidal
+inlets. There are ice circlets around the marsh grass. Thin ice
+sheets form at the rim of fresh-water ponds.</p>
+
+<p>The inland world seems either subdued or facing survival’s
+icy stare, and even self-sufficient human society looks ready to
+draw in and hole up for the winter. But since Cape Cod is
+surrounded by the sea, it has another depth, another range, where
+other populations roam while the rest of us wait and shiver. Above
+water, the more visible migrants are those wintering sea birds—auks,
+scoters, black ducks, eiders, old squaws, brant and Canada
+geese—that feed along the shore, in sheltered inlets, or in waters
+farther out, depending on their habit.</p>
+
+<p>In my locality Canada geese and black ducks are swimming
+through peat-rooted grasses off Paine’s Creek where the terns
+were fishing two months ago. A line of white-winged scoters flies
+low over the heaving waters of the bay. I watch two black ducks in
+the sky, approaching from the north. They are coming over at high
+speed downwind with wings beating hard. Then more ducks fly up
+across inlet and marsh, taking off to windward. They swing back
+for a short stretch, then up again, as if to hold position, like
+travelers reconnoitering, then fly on and out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>Two miles or more from shore I see points of spray going
+up from the surface of the water, and above them many large
+white birds continually turning and diving, from a considerable
+height. These are the gannets, that appear off Cape waters in
+the autumn after they have nested on their island territories in
+the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The immature, first-year birds, which
+can also be seen diving for fish, are almost totally black. They
+are usually not with us for long, since they pass to winter feeding
+grounds, which may be as far south as the Caribbean.</p>
+
+<p>Anyone who has seen them crowding their nesting grounds
+on Bonaventure Island off the Gaspé Peninsula, will know, from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
+close observation, how spectacular these birds are. They allow
+tourists to come almost as close to them as chickens in a yard.
+Thousands of pairs nest at the top of high cliffs or along their
+ledges above the water, each with its established square foot or two
+of nesting territory. A loud, rattling cry goes up, out of a multitude
+of hoarse croaks and groans. I felt a great sense of pressure
+and establishment in this bird city, this singular society with its
+consistent behavior and ceremony. The pairs greet one another
+bowing, or with heads raised and the long thick bills fencing.
+Their stiff carved heads are always in motion, always in response
+to one another. It is a pressing, elaborate spectacle, ancient and
+authoritative.</p>
+
+<p>Gannets are awkward landers. They come in stiffly and do a
+kind of top-heavy tumble when they hit the ground; but as ocean
+flyers they have no superiors. When I see them again silently
+gliding over the waters off the Cape, I greet them for their
+earth-honored mastery. At a distance they might be mistaken for
+herring gulls, but they are much larger, and their long black-ended
+wings are typical. When you see points of spray going up
+far out on the water, and white birds diving, you have unmistakably
+seen the gannets.</p>
+
+<p>Earlier this month, during an easterly storm, with pouring,
+blinding, deafening wind and rain, a few gannets were flying
+close to the shore off Paine’s Creek where the water was a little
+calmer and the atmosphere less overcast than farther out in the
+bay. The birds flew low, since the fish they were hunting were
+in shallow water and presumably close to the surface. On this
+stormy morning they flew in an almost leisurely way over the
+surface, flapping their wings and gliding. They would turn casually
+and dive, their wings half spread. Then they rose and flew
+steadily on with power and ease, their wings feeling the stiff wind,
+using it like the ancient professionals they were.</p>
+
+<p>Now the north wind is blowing hard in the late afternoon.
+There are slate-gray cloud masses in the sky, with a steely light
+where the sun rays through, and the temperature has dropped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
+to about 40 degrees. Offshore over rocking, ponderous, gray waters,
+I can see the crowds of gannets following a shoal line in the
+distance. They catch the light from the sun when it strikes
+occasionally through the clouds, intensifying their whiteness and
+turning the water green. They seem to drift and turn continually,
+their arrowed bodies plummeting down, the splashes appearing
+against white bordered waves. As I walk inland the sun goes
+westward behind massive clouds and the gannets, far out, high
+and white, keep diving with exact abandon.</p>
+
+<p>The intermittent sunlight wheels in to brighten the yellow
+grasses and make the sand sparkle. To the north it is as if the
+sky were moving down from its Arctic limits and announcing
+new themes, with iceberg clouds, and high walls of cold against
+which the sun strikes new fire, while the wind rushes down to
+make the message felt. A flock of sharp-tailed sparrows lands on
+the sand, the marsh-side of a dune. They fly up into the stiff,
+cold air, and then drop down into a small hollow for protection.
+They stay there for a while under the great force of wind and
+blown sand, not closely knit so much as spread out in what looks
+like a perilous unanimity. If one sparrow should stray even a foot
+away from the rest, in their over-all, though loose, pattern, I feel
+as if it must be irretrievably lost, blown off, and separated. That
+which holds the sharp-beaked, yellow-headed little birds together
+is in their senses. They intercommunicate as one flock and form.
+It is a control—as lightly manifested as the sparrows themselves,
+but as powerful as the elements against which they stand.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pgs 97-98]</span></p>
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="December"><i>December</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
+<h3><i>An Old Place, an Old Man</i></h3>
+
+<p>When the feel of winter comes, in November or early
+December—though by astronomical calculation winter does not
+start until December twenty-second—when the first hard seal
+is set on the ground, and we are settled in with a new plainness,
+then it is not difficult to bring back yesterday and its country
+living. Winter’s role in the year’s wheel is an arresting, for the
+sake of renewal, a sleep, or half sleep, for later waking. It has
+its own suspense and violence, its roars and silences, like the
+other seasons, but in general its order is of a different quality,
+having an inwardness and resistance, a bare, gray need to keep
+things inside and hidden down. This is the time of year that
+shows a plain connection between human beings and their land.</p>
+
+<p>I see last leaves whipping around the hollows off an old
+Cape road, or walk through the now more oblique rays of the
+sun that yellow the sandy ground held by thin, waving grasses,
+gray beach plum or bayberry bushes, and I recognize what has
+been left behind.</p>
+
+<p>Here, surrounded by open slopes, is an abandoned house
+site, now a cellar hole, walled by square blocks of glacial granite.
+Orchard grass, timothy, and redtop still engage the old domesticity.
+Inside their circle you can see where children played, water was
+fetched and carried, chickens fed, and voices raised. There are
+yucca plants close to the foundations, and a rose or two. I
+transplanted such a rose a few years ago, and with added nourishment
+it turned from a slight, single-petaled flower to a great bunch
+of pinkish-purple fragrance.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span></p>
+
+<p>Unlike some abandoned farm sites in other parts of New
+England, there is nothing left here to show what the inhabitants
+did. There are no harrows, stone bolts, yokes, or farm implements,
+not even any pots and pans. The stones are left, and the faithful
+grasses, and beyond them the crunchy, gray deer moss, and
+beard grass of indigenous fields. It was a small place, of bare
+subsistence. Whatever the qualities of the people who lived there,
+they left simplicity behind them. Not too far away, a bulldozer
+is making a desert with giant scoops, high-tension wires are
+marching by, and a plane rips the air overhead. We are encroaching
+in our oblivious fashion, without delay. The new domesticities
+may occupy only a tenth of an acre each, but they engage all
+lands. The old domestic wildness cannot be replaced. It was a
+lodgment limited by need, gray outside and dark within, perhaps
+unbearably close and confined at times, but with a knowledge
+of its earth.</p>
+
+<p>It seems to me that as the world has grown outward in
+recent years, even I, a comparative newcomer to Cape Cod,
+have lost some local life to memory. When you live in a place
+for the first time you see behind it to its roots and grain, before
+the storms of circumstance blow you away from it. I remember
+a few old men who seemed so representative of the old Cape
+that it will never be the same now that they are gone. The loss
+is of a country speech, the flavor of a flesh and blood nurtured
+on locality. What has replaced them can be defined in terms
+of California as well as Cape Cod, which means no detriment
+to either, for what we are now obliged to consider is locality in
+a wider field. But those old men were born as we may not yet
+be born, sturdily, in custom and resignation.</p>
+
+<p>Nathan Black died in October 1957, at the age of ninety-two.
+He was born in 1865, the year Abraham Lincoln was assassinated.
+He was a near neighbor. His land abutted mine, and since he was
+the proprietor of the Black Hills Barber Shop, I could walk down
+through the woods to get my hair cut, for the price, in a trillion-dollar
+world, of fifty cents. He was a heavy man, with bright<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
+brown eyes, and a head of curly white hair. He fitted the open
+Cape Cod weather, or the weather fitted him. I am not sure
+of the distinction. Nearly ninety years of change, of natural
+cataclysm, of both peace and abysmal war in the human world,
+had left him in the same place, with the same measure, outwardly
+at least, of stability.</p>
+
+<p>When he left his place, or the customary orbit of work and
+old friends that constituted his life, perhaps to drive out on a
+new highway or to the chain store, he may never have stopped
+being surprised. I remember his looking at me with a kind of
+amused questioning—but no alarm—and saying something about
+no one belonging here any more. The new population didn’t
+quite make sense to him.</p>
+
+<p>In the way of old countrymen who knew their boundaries,
+he was tough and unforgiving in his role of landowner. He had
+his rights, “By gawly!” and he would know when someone did
+him wrong. He held on hard, and I suspect there were neighbors
+who felt the possessiveness too strongly, but this being none of
+my business, I will go in and get my hair cut.</p>
+
+<p>The shop, with a tool shed under the same roof, where
+“Nate” used to grind knives and axes, stood, and still stands,
+across the yard from the house where he was born. There are
+some other gray-shingled, outlying buildings on both sides of a
+dirt road that runs through scrubby woods and hollows, dry hills
+sloping down to marshy bottom land ... wood-lot country. One
+December day I rapped at the door, and he put his jacket on
+and walked across the yard with me, where two white ducks
+were parading and some red chickens giving the frozen ground a
+going over. The old man bent down a little and spoke to his dog
+Bonnie, a cream-colored spaniel, which had just wagged up to him:
+“Did you get it?”</p>
+
+<p>Then, to me: “I lost an egg. Picked up five eggs, out of
+the hen yard this mornin’, and came back with four. Maybe
+there was a hole in these old pants of mine.”</p>
+
+<p>The barber shop was small, long and narrow, but he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
+a stove in there that kept it warm. There were some old magazines
+on a bench against the wall, with a black Homburg hat hanging
+on a peg. It had been given him by an old customer, a wealthy
+man who had lived on the Cape during the summer and had
+come in to have his hair cut for many years before he died. There
+was a photograph on the wall of the two of them with an
+inscription underneath that read: “Established 1884. A satisfied
+customer is our best advertisement.” They were standing out in
+front of the shop, smiling in the sun.</p>
+
+<p>“Feller came here yesterday and I had to clip him in the
+kitchen. Shop was too cold,” Nate said.</p>
+
+<p>The calm of the place was comforting. It came, I suppose,
+from an acceptance that emanated from him, and brought in
+many old friends, who would sit down to say: “Nate, just
+thought I’d come over and pass the time of day.”</p>
+
+<p>Whatever he had to say about other people never left them
+without the honor of human circumstances. “Pretty close, he is,”
+he would say with a little laugh, or “I guess he had a shade on”
+(a Cape Cod expression for being drunk). “Guess you can’t
+hold on to nothin’,” he said about some local theft, in a way that
+insisted on not being roused beyond necessity.</p>
+
+<p>His origins were out of a kind of history of which there was
+very little left intact except himself. He once showed me a tintype
+of his mother, a handsome girl named Bridget Malady, who had
+emigrated from Ireland in 1862. His father, Timothy Black,
+was born in Yarmouth, on the Cape. At the age of ten he signed
+on as a cook aboard the packet which sailed between East
+Dennis and Boston, and seems to have spent a good deal of
+his life on intermittent voyages at sea. He was also in the butchering
+and slaughtering business with his two sons. In the autumn
+they used to butcher eighty-five hogs or more, at the rate of three
+a day. And in some rough but related way, Timothy Black started
+his son in the barbering business. Nate remembered how his
+father used to cut his hair in the kitchen, long before the Black
+Hills emporium was established: “I used to sit there while he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
+sort of pummeling at me on the back of the neck. By gol! I sure
+did cringe when he was chopping me with those women’s scissors.”</p>
+
+<p>While I, seventy or eighty years later, was sitting in the
+barber’s chair, getting more expert and calmer work done on me,
+I assembled a little of the past. In the nineteenth and early
+twentieth centuries an expedition to the post office or the store
+took up a large part of the day. That was the time when you
+could hitch the horse up to a post and stop for a long chat,
+“having the capacity to waste time” as I heard a Texan phrase
+it about some of his countrymen in the western part of the state.
+People walked between their houses—there are foot paths still
+showing—on barren hills. They had small herds of cows that
+foraged on the sloping fields. Families used to picnic together
+by the ponds, and there were barn dances on Saturday nights,
+which were sometimes the occasion for a rip-roaring fight. I
+have heard it said that Nate Black was the strongest fighter in the
+region, when outraged beyond his normal patience, but he would
+reveal none of this prowess to me.</p>
+
+<p>The Black family also held dances in their kitchen. The
+father of the house played the violin. On such occasions they
+would have plum porridge suppers, or they served crackers, milk,
+and raisins, and sometimes hulled corn.</p>
+
+<p>He was of a piece with his surroundings. I think of many
+things he talked about while I was having my hair cut and they
+all meant the gray, sea-girded land, and a human closeness to it.
+I think of the deer that ate his beans, of his duck that was
+carried off by a fox, of foxes being reduced in population by the
+mange, of a watering place for horses by Cedar Pond in East
+Dennis (a beautiful pond with ranks of dark cedars backing
+it up, and now being encroached upon by house lots); and he
+talked about the big eels waiting to eat young herrin’ (or alewives)
+at the mouth of a pond, and of sounding the depths of Round
+Pond here in West Brewster.</p>
+
+<p>And then there was his dog which had to be chained up
+because it got so wildly excited chasing rabbits through the woods<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
+that it was constantly lost, having once been picked up nearly
+ten miles away; and the coon that climbed a tree after a hen;
+and his little granddaughter wanting to shine a flashlight through
+the window one night and take a picture of a coon she saw
+outdoors, because it was “such a pretty-looking animal.”</p>
+
+<p>There also come to mind the fishing boats all-over white
+with screaming gulls, that he once spoke about with real
+excitement, and, of course, the yearly work on his cranberry
+bogs ... he and his tart and lively wife used to pick them
+together; and the shifting price of cranberries, and his wood lots,
+and who was after him to buy some of his land.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes yes” he would say, in the Cape Cod fashion, and always,
+when a customer was leaving the shop: “Come again.”</p>
+
+<p>His wife Emily died two years before him. Some time before
+that I stopped to talk with him when he was scything the family
+plot in Red Top Cemetery, which lies at the junction of two
+country roads, on a little hill or high knoll up in the sky and the
+ocean winds. He told me two women had come up one day while
+he was there and said: “What a nice place!” He and his wife are
+buried there, in a place which has no more permanence than any
+other, but for them and by them had the simple power of
+acquaintance.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i104" style="max-width: 102.5625em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i104.jpg" alt="Cemetery">
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Night in the Afternoon</i></h3>
+
+<p>If I have left Nathan Black in the nineteenth century (although
+when I last saw him he was deeply involved with a
+television set) or at least in a tradition which no longer appears
+to sustain us, it is not to emphasize that all continuity is lost.
+He has left us transients to make what we can of the Cape Cod
+weather, without assistance, but the examples it still offers are
+both patient and surprising. Storms and stars never fail us.</p>
+
+<p>The theme this month is a growing cold, but whether we
+are to have rain or snow, hard frosts, or comparative mildness
+is not known. If you listen to what people say about the weather
+you go from apprehension to apprehension. It is as though we
+were already working to keep our lives open until spring. I suspect
+that by March we get tired of comment. In any case it represents
+a communication with the forces around us, and I am not one
+to disparage such banalities.</p>
+
+<p>“Good morning.” “What’s good about it?” Dead oak leaves
+hang like wet rags in the cold rain. After the rain stops there
+is a cold moisture suspended in the air with its own whiteness.
+There is a silence everywhere, except for a chickadee’s harsh split
+trills nearby, the low tone of offshore waters, and the indiscriminate
+sound of engines on roads or in the sky. The woodchuck,
+the box turtle, and the chipmunk are asleep. There are no insects
+above ground to catch the eye. The day shortens, and we who are
+always calling for more sunshine, pleased at the idea of some
+perpetual, impossible comfort, are obliged to confront night in
+the afternoon. Life is quiet, stripped of redundancy. There is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
+new restraint about our depopulated local world, and at the
+same time new openings afforded. At least the season seems
+to offer another quality for interpretation. Perhaps, for example,
+because the trees are bare and the ground devitalized, we are
+to look up and find the sky.</p>
+
+<p>I come home one night under vast black reaches full of
+stars, almost as thick as wet snowflakes. It is very still around me,
+a cold stillness through the ground, but overhead the infinite
+dome almost resounds. It is blazing, bounding, soaring with the
+means and light of existence. I am not troubled at all that I look
+out from an unimportant planet dependent on a common star,
+and am only able to see a few light-years away, each light-year
+being a distance of six million million miles. There is sight
+past sight. The strongest telescope is still an extension of the
+human eye. Our measurements themselves are a form of participation
+in that fantastic distance, which may not make us any less
+lonely, but we have a mind in space; and since men calculate,
+by observation of the heavens and of their earth, that the laws
+of life are the same as far and farther than they can see, then
+they have hearts and blood there too. I stand here on the cold
+ground, and take sensual note of the universe.</p>
+
+<p>Then I move back into my domestic hole to do a little
+hibernating of my own. A winter withdrawal sets in, when outer
+resources escape me. I am drawn inward to human want and its
+frustrations, to common egotism or inertia. The December days
+progress almost remotely. Who cares about the secrets of that
+cold and darkening earth outside? Our problems are sufficient unto
+themselves.</p>
+
+<p>But there is a natural complex of greed, a provision for
+appetite, that brings men and earth to mutuality. Manifested by
+the weather, it sometimes puts us out of doors to understand real
+fortitude. Instead of easing on toward January, December begins
+to tug and roar. It snows all day and there are north winds of
+from thirty to forty miles an hour driving the snow against
+our houses, suggesting an extra struggle we might not be quite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
+ready for. Then it warms up to 2 or 4 degrees above freezing, and
+the following morning begins with a cold rain and sleet falling
+down with hissing, disheartening force. The temperature drops.
+The sleet turns to snow, driving in violently from the north,
+hitting the trees like bullets. The sky closes in. There is no
+horizon. The wind swirls. Trees rock and bend. This is a storm
+with a great rush of savagery, setting wild, grim traps for the
+unprotected. “Now,” it says, “I have you. Try some adventures
+in this.”</p>
+
+<p>There is ice or cemented snow along the tree trunks in the
+direction of the storm, so that by sight and feel I know the wind
+is from the northeast quarter, without need of instruments. My
+hand tells me where the present power is coming from.</p>
+
+<p>When the snow and wind let up a little, I head for the
+shore and find signs down, gutters yanked out, and telegraph
+wires dangling across the road. Salt water ahead of me is
+churning, tossing white spume against the open shore, while
+the wind seethes, whines, and howls with growing intensity. The
+feeling of conflict is everywhere around me—a hurling and letting
+go, a bend and give, a clash, a holding against insufferable strain.
+The sand on the upper beach is whipped into stinging strength.
+The sea is almost boiling, its racing, conflicting edges spray-lined.
+On top of an exceptionally high tide, great waves run in over a
+sheltered inlet, sending their combers farther toward the land. All
+points of contact and withdrawal, rise and fall, seem to be
+concentrated in this monumental turbulence, a force that is
+almost uncontained. Is it a replica in violence of the normally
+unseen stresses and strains lying under a peaceful season, or a
+life? Our bodies are made of air and salt water, in their components
+of hydrogen and oxygen, carbon and nitrogen. A storm should be
+our organic companion. But this cold screaming fury makes me
+take refuge behind a wall. Man may have overcome the elements,
+but not his elemental frailty.</p>
+
+<p>Out over the gray and white waters, hovering against the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
+wind in an almost idle way, are several herring gulls. And, at the
+mouth of the inlet, riding calmly on the roaring, running tide,
+facing up against a thirty-five-mile-an-hour wind, is a loon—close-reefed,
+well fitted in all respects to weather the worst.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Two Encounters</i></h3>
+
+<p>After the storm a hard cold sets in for many days. As a rule
+our Decembers are comparatively mild, with the days alternating
+between light rain and cool sunshine. Now the very great plunges
+of the cold, driving the frost deep into the ground, freezing the
+pond waters, starting a rim of pack ice around Cape Cod
+Bay, comes as a surprise, something not known before. The
+weather bureau, explaining the cold as being the result of a
+vast Canadian high-pressure system, speaks of its unusual “fetch
+and intensity.” Ten degrees above zero is not severe as compared
+with conditions in other parts of the world, but this unseasonal
+extreme is a local reminder of the earth’s potential, and just
+how much we depend on the normal rhythms of the year. We
+gasp with cold, turn up the heat, and think that cataclysm is a
+small thing to the universe.</p>
+
+<p>The cold around us creates a different earth. It demands
+a readjustment of the senses, as though it were ready with amazing
+new suggestions. One sharply cold morning when snow lies
+fresh on the ground I stop by the cemetery where the Blacks
+are buried, on my way to town. There is something about this
+day that asks attention. It sings. Pure crystalline masses creak
+underfoot. The tune of the cold finds an edge on my bones.
+Pines, stiff cedars, locust trees, hard ground and stone, all share
+in resonance, being forged and tempered by the cold. The little
+graveyard hill is a tympanum, or sounding board, very highly
+pitched, so powerfully taut, being plucked very lightly by the air
+with sharp whispers and twanging sounds being sent across the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
+snow, that it might be ready to send one chord, incomparably
+new, into the whole sky.</p>
+
+<p>I start to go away, but a tiny, almost casual trill separates
+itself from the vibrations of the cold. I keep listening and in
+a few seconds see a bird rounding the branch of a cedar tree,
+not twenty feet away. Working in and out of the branches,
+coming in to view and then disappearing again, is a flock of
+purple finches, eating cedar berries. The males are washed with a
+raspberry color that keeps appearing through the dark green masses
+of the tree like intermittent lights, hints of fruitfulness in the
+winter’s containment.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, surprisingly, a light brown, speckled veery appears
+on the open branch of a locust. This summer bird, out in the
+glittering cold, seems to have a startled, wildly timid look in its
+eyes. Its slim body hesitates, with the problem of aloneness
+perhaps, or direction, or food in this white earth that has cut
+so cruelly into its subsistence. Then it flies off into a wood of
+pitch pines, and I hear a low sound, the mere snatch of a thrush’s
+warbling.</p>
+
+<p>Just by stopping for ten minutes instead of hurrying on, I
+have been put into a new relation with the morning, and have
+seen a singularity and sacredness to all its parts. It could happen
+in Moscow or New York.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two later I am in the city, just before Christmas,
+when the stores are rushed and jammed with shoppers. It is late
+afternoon and yellow lights flood out of great glass windows
+and crowded doors. There is a tinkling of bells, cups, and tambourines,
+a tooting of horns through the general confused roaring
+of the streets. Just as I pass a huge department store, I hear an
+odd, disassociated center of pipings and cries. I can connect it
+with none of the turmoil around me.</p>
+
+<p>I stand and listen. There, across the street, like a theatrical
+backdrop, is an abandoned brownstone building, four or five
+stories high, with a grimy, ponderous façade. It is covered with
+ledges and its dark, empty windows reflect the pond-dark evening
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pgs 111-112]</span>
+skies ... every now and then a white cloud moves across them
+with disembodied calm. On the ledges are hundreds of starlings,
+pushing, crowding, hopping, flying up against the windows,
+perched all along the heavy front of the building—dingy birds,
+with their lost Christmas cries. There they are, adapted almost
+domestically to man’s world, tough in a way that a purple finch
+or a veery cannot be, but still a race apart.</p>
+
+<p>Then I am back down the street again with my own tribe
+that teems with general might and inner purposes of its own, going
+and returning—out continually—representatives of a force of mind
+that can gauge the mechanics of the universe, and in animal
+power overrunning the earth. I see in these shoppers an evolutionary
+line of vision never satisfied, a history of cities, ledges of light
+running to unknown futures. The world is in the hands of these
+omnipresent and familiar beings, the young and the old, black-haired,
+brown, yellow, or gray, in the indefinite shapes and interchanges
+of their lives—the human race hurrying through its own
+lighted ways. And if I shouted: “Stop! Look away from yourselves.
+Consider the starlings!” with what sort of mild madness would
+I be credited?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pgs 113-114]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="January"><i>January</i></h2>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
+
+<h3><i>Exposure</i></h3>
+
+<p>It is said that winter, being the season when the sun shines
+on us obliquely, is a period of death, or, as the dictionary puts
+it, of “dreariness, old age and decay.” We are being deprived of a
+portion of original energy, and recognize occasionally that if
+we were out far enough, in as extreme and bare a relationship
+to the cold as the birds, but without their equivalent in insulation,
+we would have a hard time surviving (though birds are also
+perishable and have their share of disease and death from starvation).
+But we take care of ourselves, in such an elaborate and
+consuming way, that the grand extremes of weather may only
+succeed in being a nuisance. The freezing weather deepens this
+month, after a few days of moderate warmth at the start, and I
+am free to complain about the heat bills. The car skids and
+turns a half circle on the highway, which is covered with glare
+ice one morning, and I am afraid, not for myself so much as for
+my new car. How could I manage that ten miles back without
+it? Self-protection may be all that winter means to us, though
+it is a term that can only be comparative in an age of manufactured
+violence.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there is a tremendous thud above us that jars and
+rocks the house. It seems to tug at the vitals of the earth and
+would cause us more than mere shock if we were not aware
+that it is a plane breaking the sound barrier, thousands of feet
+in the air. A minute or two later I hear a familiar gabbling, a
+mixed bugling, overhead, and run out to see twenty Canada
+geese, hurrying fast down the north wind in four separate flocks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
+aligned in flight. With their long necks stretched out and strong
+wings beating they are fleeing for their lives, frightened up from
+winter feeding grounds along the shores of Cape Cod Bay. The
+earth, for the time being at least, is committed to mankind. The
+geese cannot so frighten <i>us</i>. They are innocent of ways to “control
+their environment.”</p>
+
+<p>Then there is almost complete silence again, and I understand
+what is meant by the “dead of winter.” Under the cold
+blue stare of the sky nothing seems to be happening. Each sound—a
+crow cawing, a car on the road, the rustle and clink of a
+clump of dead oak leaves—is by itself, occupying wide, unpopulated
+plains. Without the wind, the air too presses on me, with a cold
+weight. I walk through its depths, feeling it against my face, and
+suddenly realize that limited sea of oxygen in which we live,
+this side of outer space and its violet darkness.</p>
+
+<p>This silence may be just as alarming to some people as a
+“sonic boom.” Nothing seems to be going on. There is an intensity
+of rest. The demand for something new is unsatisfied. There
+are men who stray into nature from a city’s booming, reassuring
+hive, and are frightened by being caught in necessity—one of the
+year’s cold, unspeaking tides. Perhaps they also recognize how
+much the sun provides us with other than pleasant company. There
+is a winter in us from which we will not soon escape into warmth
+and joy.</p>
+
+<p>Still, this frozen land contributes to a global art. It is cold
+and silent here because it is hot and loud in India. And how can
+we spread our wings without a knowledge of deprivation? While
+I am closed in I know there are redstarts wintering in Mexico
+and arctic terns in the Antarctic, and when I greet them on
+their return it will not be only because they have come home
+(a bird’s nest is not a house but a platform from which to start),
+but because home comprises so large an area. Some birds, if they
+survive their first year, will reappear in the vicinity of the place
+where they were reared. So will salmon, shad, and alewives, returning
+to their parent stream after years of absence. We are conscious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span>
+of the great amount of space their journeying requires. Species
+of fish or birds show great variation in the extent of their
+migrations, and the whole pattern is wider than a continent.
+Their movements are not only consistent with periodic motions
+of climate, weather, the tides, but may be visible evidence of
+earth changes that go back for incredible lengths of time. They
+require an unrestricted measure for their lives and deaths. Men
+alter, restrict, or use up, to suit their needs and fancy. Then they
+move elsewhere. I see that one of the young men who has been
+designated for training in space flight, an “Astronaut,” says he
+accepted the challenge of being sent aloft in a capsule because
+we were “running out of interesting things to do down here.”
+The destruction and denial of earth’s resources must have gone
+farther than we realize. But the life journeys continue, from
+one sunny round to another, over the earth and its wide-ranging
+waters. How much we must be missing, even in the wintertime!</p>
+
+<p>Before dawn, after the windless day, the temperature drops
+to 10 degrees. A walloping, tugging, brutal wind sets in. The
+frost so rigidifies the needles of the pines, burning into their
+cells, that they look dark and scorched. I feel as if the rigid and
+dizzy earth were being kicked around, rocked like a topheavy
+boat—the trees its masts. The wind cries: “Remember poverty!”
+and I go gasping for breath through the fierce air, feeling as
+perishable as a moth. We may be having the mere taste of an
+extreme, but this penury weather is huge and mighty all the same.
+It is the result of a Labrador storm one thousand to two thousand
+miles in extent. Its balanced fury tests all it meets.</p>
+
+<p>On this kind of day I am an inland lover. To be wind-cut
+and sandblasted serves no good human end. As if in general
+proof of that, I meet no more than a car or two on the highway,
+and see no one on the streets of the town. The shore is desolate,
+hissing with driven sand. On the surface the bay waters in the
+distance are being stiff-armed and flung away. New ice, morose
+and slow, is nudged by an outgoing tide in the inlet at Paine’s
+Creek. Gulls drift slowly upwind like clouds. And on the wide<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
+tidal flats—the searing, biting, turbulent grounds—groups of
+Canada geese are stalking through shallow purple waters that
+reach, wind-scudded, over shoals of peat. Then a new group wheels
+in low and settles down with the rest. I can hear their honking
+under the sound of wind and sand. Beyond them, in steely waters
+speckled green, is a small flock of black ducks.</p>
+
+<p>This is no inanimate landscape. Under the given power,
+the abandon of the wind, the restrictiveness of the cold, is still
+an all-containing balance. I listen to those famous travelers the
+geese as they communicate and am taken a little further out on
+violent and unreceptive grounds, past my own shivering.</p>
+
+<p>Inland again, listening, taking shelter in the lee of the wind,
+just as a rabbit jumps away from me and runs under a tangle of
+bull briar, I am conscious of all the unseen hiding and endurance
+around me. What else moves here, beside the wind that suddenly
+rushes in and roars so loud that it makes the trees groan and the
+large round clouds hurry on? The trees, swaying and creaking, are
+the most obvious, the most exposed. They are half dead, rigid,
+hard, inert. The sap coagulates in the extreme cold. I cut a twig
+with my knife and the pitch is dark and frozen. The trees in their
+containment, adapted to less water and light, getting scarcely any
+nutriment, are able to make their stand in the open while other
+lives must hide.</p>
+
+<p>In the late afternoon the ground stirs harshly. Leaves run in
+dead abandon. The wind seems to sound a burst of doom, and
+then seethes in lively rage. A dead limb cracks. I am on the trigger
+edge of ultimate need. Blue-gray clouds hang over the shaking fingers
+of the trees. There is a collective power that flays us all, without
+discrimination.</p>
+
+<p>The shadows have left the earth. Light stays in the sky, and
+then begins to go. There are rims of pale electric light in the
+west. Long cloud shoals, now white and pearly gray, stand against
+wide bands of blue and mauve and pink, like the baked desert cliffs
+of the Southwest. Finally, and I feel all finality, as the ringing
+air sheds down enormous heavy cold, received numbly by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
+earth, the sky turns a startling gemlike blue. We are turned into
+night. The sky’s mineral beauty shifts to pure blackness lighted
+by the stars. There is an almost shrilling intensity in the air
+above the earth-binding wind, and I am conscious of nothing
+but height, height beyond reach.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Ice on the Ponds</i></h3>
+
+<p>The air is crystalline and the sunlight through the pitch pine
+needles gives them a glassy sheen. This is one of those rare times
+when almost all of Cape Cod’s innumerable ponds are iced over
+and the children can go skating after school. It has been consistently
+cold for weeks, with comparatively little snow, and the pond
+surfaces tempt all skaters to soar.</p>
+
+<p>But we have had a day and a half of thawing weather. When
+my young daughter and I go to a pond to skate, we hear its fine
+whomping sound as it expands under the sun’s warmth. What
+looks like jagged broken bits of crystal, catching light on the surface,
+turn out to be part of the ice structure, thawing ice refrozen.
+We find hundreds of water spiders frozen in around the edge where
+yesterday they had been brought out into the water by rain and
+comparative warmth, and on the way we found a dead worm on
+top of frozen ground. So some animals are flung around with the
+season and respond fatally to chance. They belong to an allowance
+left over from December. Then it ends, and the day hardens like
+the ice. It is as though the helpless were not to be allowed their
+helplessness for some time to come.</p>
+
+<p>To skate on a long stretch of unmarked ice, over green reflected
+clouds, with the sound of clear air swishing past your face,
+is to voyage, full sail. It is a shining freedom, and our only competition
+is in play, to skid and turn and rush like water birds in the
+springtime—the only hardship a bruising fall. Under black holes
+we can see down to the bottom of the pond, where there are little
+forests of green moss and water plants, very still and soft.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
+Suddenly a diving beetle swims quickly and erratically across and then
+a slow tadpole moves into sight. There is enough sun-induced
+warmth in the shallow water at the pond’s edge to allow life more
+play, though in that respect a pond is easier on its inhabitants
+than the land. With its cover of ice it is now in a state of “winter
+stagnation.” There are frogs buried in the mud and fish moving
+sluggishly in cold, stabilized waters. But this is an environment
+which always allows activity in at least some of its inhabitants
+throughout the year. Its extremes and revolutions of temperature
+bear little comparison with those of the land. Our hazards are of
+a sterner kind.</p>
+
+<p>When we kneel on the ice, where the mobile sky is reflected,
+and look down in, the water world seems half awake and half
+asleep, half tropical and half glacial. The waters are almost motionless
+over intermittent green carpets and through their black depths.
+The whole being of the pond seems to move independently of our
+surface storms. It has a heart of its own.</p>
+
+<p>The winter land is a harder environment, though we sometimes
+make more of its rigidity than we need to. At the pond’s
+edge I brush past a bayberry bush, and its dried, dark gray berries
+smell as pungently and herbaceously as they did when ripe—waxen
+and pewter colored—in the fall. There are checkerberry or partridgeberry
+plants rimming the pond. In fact they grow well
+through the acid earth of these woodlands, and their shiny leaves
+stay green throughout the winter. They are also called wintergreen,
+or mountain tea, and their leaves taste spicy and aromatic.
+Are we still common enough to make new names instead of numbers,
+implying that familiarity, touch, and association have not
+been left behind?</p>
+
+<p>You know the checkerberry, hugging the ground with shiny,
+flavored leaves, tiny bell-like flowers pure white in the late spring,
+bright red berries in the autumn. Something to say hello to, and
+not merely to recognize as <i>Gaultheria procumbens</i> and pass by.
+To name means to know, love—perhaps even to laugh at. The fact
+that the checkerberry has so many other common names is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
+human distinction. Consider: grouseberry, spiceberry, oneberry,
+chicken-berry, deerberry, groundberry, hillberry, ivyberry, boxberry,
+teaberry, greenberry, ivy-plum, chinks, drunkards, red pollen, rapper-dandies,
+wax cluster, redberry tea, Canadian tea. They dance
+in friendship. I have been told that the name “Drunkards” comes
+from the use of checkerberry tea as a remedy for a hangover, but
+am unable to corroborate it.</p>
+
+<p>While I am pulling off my skates and chewing on a spicy
+leaf, a trim, round little chickadee comes within four feet of me
+and twitters and scolds. Then two warier golden-crowned kinglets
+show up suddenly in a nearby shrub, crying: “Tseet! Tseet!”
+and flit away. We climb up the steep sides of the pond and face
+the slopes toward the north. Bold gusts of wind strike us. Stiff
+briars and branches whip us as we walk along a narrow path, and
+the play of winter sunlight through the clouds goes lively across
+the grasses and through the gray trees.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Contrast and Response</i></h3>
+
+<p>January seems grim and contained. This is not the time to
+expect life to declare itself. Even local human circumstances are
+such as to prove a kind of gray waiting. While the rest of the
+world retires in Florida, counts change in New York, or struggles
+with vast new shifts and divided aims, Cape Cod stays down, and
+holds on. The population is five times less than that of the summer.
+It is the barren, exposed peninsula it used to be, with the
+exception of the new woodlands and all the cottages. We are
+linked by highway and modern communicatory apparatus with the
+rest of the continent, but in this season there is a feeling of diminished
+wants. The human pulse begins to rise in April or May,
+when people paint and refurbish their motels and cottages in preparation
+for the great migration of vacationists. Now the economy
+subsists more on expectation than fulfillment. The human squirrels
+have stored away their acorns. The forage is thin in January for
+all inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>The weather roams still, with our surrounding waters. Why
+live here but for the reason that there is always an element of
+sufficient grandeur? Although the sea might not be visible for the
+motels and trailers before your eyes, a few miles, or a few yards,
+brings its untouched enormity into view. The sky is wide, and the
+ocean waters are still breathing loud or low with fruitful magnitude.
+They are at the end of every road. And when the foghorn
+bawls from Chatham like a lost cow, we know that there are still
+headlands and ships, the uncalculated and the unknown.</p>
+
+<p>On the Cape’s south side, facing the heavy Atlantic swells and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
+breakers, the high cliffs are often covered with miniature scrub
+oak forests, or thickets—they are scarcely more than two feet high,
+as well as stunted pitch pine with a mustard tinge to their needles.
+Dark clumps of hudsonia, a heath, resembling heather, cover the
+hollows and slopes, the billowing mounds on cliff tops above the
+beach. The vegetation lies low against wind and salt spray. It looks
+rusty and tormented. On the steep slopes to the beach there are
+milky films of snow, and then patches of white foam at the bottom.
+The surf roars in, sidling with great licks and washes along the
+sands.</p>
+
+<p>The sea beyond is full of long waves that take the low sunlight
+of late afternoon and swoop and fall with it. They come in
+from the distance and then rise as they approach the shore, showing
+their marbled, curved surfaces, to pause at the crest and plunge
+down. A stiff north wind holds them back a little. Manes of spray
+whip back at their cresting and when they fall the spray rises up
+almost vertically. Just inshore, where the breakers fling in their
+prows along the sloping beach, the waters foam with constant
+movement, in and out, all bubbling and shifting with a turbulent
+milk, whose surface looks opalescent—colors of blue, green, and
+pink bordered by heavy pearl. And what a sound! A thundering,
+a loud fermentation, with an occasional great soft clash of waves
+like cymbals, the long surf roaming and lunging in the evening
+light for miles and miles. From where I stand on the cliff top I
+can see a little group of men and children jumping and throwing
+sticks and stones into the surf. They run back and forth with its
+rhythm, playing touch and go with it, running to keep warm in
+the wind, playing as if they had to, dancing for the surf’s thunder.
+They laugh, shout, hurl driftwood into it. They jump and wave
+their arms as the water reflects their images, just on the fringe of
+an immense, terrible beauty, responding with an antic kind of
+love.</p>
+
+<p>The sea provides a cold, unfathomed latitude in the tightness
+of January. On land too there is a kind of under-rhythm of things
+allowed, or rather a special winter pace and timing, each life with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
+its relation to the cold. The thin light and air seem to define the
+leeway. Thick snow showers slant in. Sky, hills, and shore are
+blotted out. There is nothing to be seen but the naked trees, the
+oak leaves like tattered old flags holding against the wind that
+kicks the flakes ahead. The storm abates into gusts, and occasional
+sweeps of snow with blue patches blown clear in the sky.
+At each advent of this blue clarity, with sharp spun strands of light
+coming in from the sun, the birds respond. Snow swirls. Wind
+seethes. There is nothing to be seen but a tree sparrow or a chickadee
+at the bird feeder. Then the blue patches show again and the
+earth clears to vision. A flock of juncos fly in, or a blue jay glides
+through; a red-tailed hawk screams in the sky. It is as if they were
+all puppets dancing for their master light.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i124" style="max-width: 102.75em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i124.jpg" alt="Snow in Bare trees">
+</figure>
+
+<p>Special response is as much a part of winter as extreme reaction
+or withdrawal. I see this in the birds. I hear it in the yawing
+creaks of a pine, in dead leaf stir, wind speech, in their collaboration.
+I feel it in the quality of the season, its rigid shocks, its holding
+hard and letting go, its suspense and trigger edges, the obedience
+it calls for, the inertness and tight compliance.</p>
+
+<p>Within the temperature range permitted it, life now shows
+many hairbreadth balances. Some marine animals “deactivate” during
+the winter—the equivalent of that coma and lowered metabolism
+which is called hibernation in the woodchuck or the chipmunk.
+If no ice blocks are in the way, and I can walk out over the
+offshore flats, I find periwinkles still holding on to rocks or driftwood,
+but obviously slowed down almost to a stop. On the other
+hand, common rock barnacles breed during the winter months
+as far north as Delaware and New Jersey, sending out eggs which
+will hatch in cold sea water into free-swimming larvae. And there
+is a red crab in Boston Harbor which stays active throughout the
+winter.</p>
+
+<p>When it gets abnormally cold, shellfish “supercool.” They have
+a freezing nucleus and will survive if not suddenly jarred.</p>
+
+<p>Adaptation to ranges in temperature varies enormously.
+Some plants and animals die when the temperature drops beyond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
+a certain point, and others when they are released too quickly
+from freezing temperatures. Some animals avoid the cold by migrating,
+or they are able by specialized habits to eat and survive
+as permanent residents.</p>
+
+<p>The conditions of life in its natural environment, whether
+land or water, vary from place to place, although the sea, for example,
+is less extreme and difficult than is the land. Such conditions
+may show dramatic contrasts in areas that are fairly close together.
+Because of the influence of the Labrador Current, the
+waters to the north of Cape Cod are colder than those to the
+south, where they are influenced by the Gulf Stream. As a result,
+there are some species of marine invertebrates which exist on one
+side of the Cape but not the other.</p>
+
+<p>The frog, a cold-blooded animal whose tissues approximate
+the temperature around it, lies in the cold mud, sometimes in
+blocks of ice, an intrinsic part of winter. The blue jay, on the
+other hand, is less helpless, and is able to forage above the ice and
+snow. Like man, it has an internal temperature of its own, regardless
+of the weather; although man is without the insulation of
+feathers or fur. A thing apart, I run to my house, my city, the
+tunnels of my society, in order to escape the cold. I wonder,
+though, whether this mental animal, a great experiment in complexity,
+is not as perilously balanced as any simple organism, a
+mussel or a clam, in the extremes of temperature and environment.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pgs 127-128]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="February"><i>February</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
+<h3><i>Secrets in the Open</i></h3>
+
+<p>Rain comes, heavy, cold, inert. Dirt roads begin to turn to
+mud. Then the vice tightens again. Below freezing temperatures
+take hold, putting a new strain on plants and trees lately thawed.
+It is not steady, continuous cold that now threatens life, but the
+shifts between freezing and thawing—alternates in the caprices of
+energy. We are not allowed to open our pores and eyes too much,
+lest we be taken unawares, stopped as we try to start again.</p>
+
+<p>I am hungry for release from winter’s power. I imagine, hopefully,
+that the buds on the oak trees are a little fatter and the pine
+needles greener. If everything is ready to bloom when permitted,
+I am ready to say the word. But in fact the earth turns, and there
+has been a gradual increase in daylight for two months. The skunk
+cabbage has already reacted. The conical tips of its buds are pushing
+through frozen ground, showing that all life is not confined
+to pumping hearts. The ferment goes on in many ways, although
+the imperturbable action of a skunk cabbage, following the global
+year’s own pace, is not something to give me as much cheer as a
+blue bird’s song.</p>
+
+<p>Zero and subzero weather is unfamiliar on the Cape and when
+it comes it feels incalculably cold. It is face-burning, dry, and
+piercing. Icy, crackling abysses hang in the air. There is a fire in
+a neighboring town. A small clothing store has caught fire in the
+early morning when the proprietor was away. Leaden gray smoke
+lifts above it through heavy walls and winds of cold into the sky.
+A small crowd gathers on the other side of the street. They stamp
+hard, hold on to their ears, and watch the fire truck hurling tons of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
+water into the black interior of the store, a little yellow frame building
+with nothing left to it but its name—the letters still showing
+on a dirty sign above the door.</p>
+
+<p>A stove caused it, they say. They wonder whether the man
+had any insurance. Was this all he had? They watch in sympathy.
+They walk away saying: “Who cares!” They laugh, and as the fires
+show signs of going out, they cry for more. What is there in us
+that cries out for disaster and responds so readily to accidents?</p>
+
+<p>I hear brutality and kindness, all in the same crowd, cold
+laughter and silent sympathy. Here are our meetings, all in the one
+extreme of a winter day, showing the allowances and shifts in human
+weather ... hidden fires almost seen.</p>
+
+<p>In a day’s time the great cold is gone. Frost still lies deep in
+the ground. The twigs of shrubs and trees shiver wildly and delicately.
+The sun strikes us more directly. It sheathes the tree tops
+and a running slate-blue sea, and the day seems more open, receptive
+to that release I look for; but there might be a magic there
+that will pass before I find it. I spend as much time stumbling as
+in discovery, stumbling over debris, cans, and broken glass, like
+this stretch of drab ground just off the highway, bordering a salt
+marsh. It has the grim look of scalped ground, having been robbed
+of its topsoil. The only life is a starling, perched on a bare sumac.
+At the edge of the marsh I clamber over colorless litter, logs,
+branches, piles of thatch shoved in and rocked by the tides. Things
+seem tediously dead.</p>
+
+<p>Something says stand and wait, look out and over; and when
+I do life stirs, assembles, and flies. The yellow marsh grasses sway
+beyond me. Ice shines white in the drainage ditches. A flicker,
+sun loaded, flies over to the far side. Tall dry reeds rattle together.</p>
+
+<p>In silence, a female purple finch lands on a tree facing the
+wind, its breast shining in the light. I hear the dry “tik” of a myrtle
+warbler. Then a chickadee swings and loops out of a wind-washed
+pitch pine above me.</p>
+
+<p>Through the thickets of alder, shad, blueberry, and sumac on
+the surrounding banks, I become aware of a sweet spring voice,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
+then of small singings here and there, and when I follow them up
+I realize they come from the shrubs themselves. Twigs rustle and
+touch. Gray branches out of frozen ground sing in contact. Even
+the marsh reeds make occasional sharp, squeaking twangs. There
+is no melody among the birds. A robin, although it is as red as it
+will ever be in spring, and fatter, with feathers puffed out on the
+cold, flies to an alder bush, where a few dried berries are still hanging,
+to perch without a sound.</p>
+
+<p>The music is there, though it may become louder and richer
+in a later context. Musical capacity is not confined to a few animals,
+or to spring and summer. Cold air and frost rehearse with
+plants as well, under the changing sun. The song of light is played
+in many ways.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Sea in the Ground</i></h3>
+
+<p>It is on just such a day, when hope, interest, renewal seem to
+be afforded, though held in check, that I find other local residents—other
+people, other customs—that are not only in readiness, but
+blooming with color as though it were summertime. The temperature
+is barely at the freezing point. The air is bright and clear,
+and the top of the ground is played over by sunny warmth. In
+flowing fields that skirt the oaks, the reindeer moss, with many
+branches, perhaps suggestive of antlers (though it gets its name
+because it provides food for reindeer and musk oxen in the frozen
+tundras of the Arctic), is gray like dawn dew, or an almost luminous
+gray-green. Light nests of snow with sparkling hexagonal
+flakes rest between its curly fronds.</p>
+
+<p>The reindeer moss is one of the lichens. A lichen, each separate
+plant, multitudes of which compose the visible growth, is a
+composite of a fungus and an alga, seen only through a microscope.
+The alga contains the coloring matter, or chlorophyll, and can
+therefore carry out the process of photosynthesis, manufacturing
+food with water and sunlight. The fungus, which has no such
+ability, wraps its threads around the alga, protects it from the sun,
+and stores the moisture for their partnership; and, if they are of
+the rock-growing variety, anchors them both securely.</p>
+
+<p>The lichens are tough. They can endure extreme contrasts in
+temperature, and hang on in barren areas where other plants
+could not get a foothold. In fact, they are pioneers of millions of
+years’ service. They prepared the way for all the changing elaboration
+of plants with leaves and stems that followed them, after they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
+had broken down bare rock with their acids, dissolved it, cracked
+it, and combined their own dead materials with the rock particles
+to form soil.</p>
+
+<p>In these round-edged plates of lichen that cover rocks or tree
+trunks in the bare February woods, I see a life that is almost independent
+of the season. It goes beyond or behind our immediate
+knowledge of it into a kind of primal security, settling in where
+little else is possible.</p>
+
+<p>The color of lichens is the color of the green algae of the
+sea and of fresh-water ponds. If their blue-grays, gray-greens, or
+yellows, bring up the cast-steel color of ocean barrens to my
+imagination, or green water lolling at the sand’s edge, or underwater
+depths running with fish and shafts of light, there is knowledge
+to back me up. The progenitors of the lichens and their relatives
+the mosses—this richly green hair-capped moss that soaks up
+melting snow in the sunlight—were unicellular organisms that
+formed in the sea. The line is direct. The algae in lichens need
+water. Without it they would not be able to make food or reproduce.</p>
+
+<p>(The blue-green algae, which as a species is abundant in both
+marine and fresh waters, as well as in the soil, has the ability of
+lichens to endure very difficult environments. It can exist in icy
+pools or hot springs. The latter extreme was brought home very
+forcibly to me not long ago in Nevada, when I saw this plant
+growing at the edge of a fissure from which hydrogen sulphide gas
+was puffing out. The algae was growing where steam condensed
+near the surface and must have been thriving in temperatures of
+nearly 200 degrees Fahrenheit.)</p>
+
+<p>The color of our inland lichens and mosses changes with the
+rate of moisture. Reindeer moss withdraws in dry months as a
+method of coping with a disadvantageous season, instead of trying
+to carry on an uncertain battle for existence. It shrinks, in
+other words, turning dry and crunchy underfoot, but in wet weather
+it absorbs, almost drinks up, water, and then turns spongelike and
+its color gleams more richly.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
+
+<p>In the absence of leaves filtering the sunlight, the trunks of
+the larger oaks are dappled and spotted with these colors of watery
+origin. I say the larger oaks because the lichens once started may
+take a long time to spread. The golden lichen is a very slow-growing
+species, although there are many stone walls in this region
+that are covered with it. I have watched one spot of golden lichen
+for two years or more. No bigger than a fifty-cent piece, it grows
+on a stone step outside the house, and has hardly expanded at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>So it is an enduring kind of fertility that shines here, as the
+gray sea waters rock in the distance. And when I turn over a log,
+or take up a handful of spongy oak leaf humus, half thawed in
+the sunlight, there is visible evidence of the life now arrested in
+the frozen soil. I find a millipede, curled up like the shell of a
+chambered nautilus. I hold it in my hand and keep breathing on
+it, until it comes to life and starts moving around, stretching out,
+its myriad legs moving with fantastic synchronization, ready to be
+busy again, traveling seriously with the given purpose of eating
+bits of leaves, breaking down organic matter in the earth. It is suggested
+that the millipede may have been one of the earliest animals
+to leave the ocean, where all life presumably began, and take to the
+land—one of those statements, of course, that leaves millions of
+years in the balance of human guesses, but gives me another approach
+to ageless tenacity in this ocean-bordered wood.</p>
+
+<p>There is another ancient animal, the pill bug, damp bug, or
+armadillo, which I find in semihibernation in the middle of a rotten
+log. Pill bug because it can roll up into a perfect little ball;
+damp bug for its choice of environment; wood louse for its habitat
+and general appearance, although it is no louse but a crustacean,
+not an insect but related to brine shrimp, water fleas, lobsters
+and crabs. It is one of the few members of this family that have
+become adapted to life on land, but it retains a set of gills, or at
+least respiratory tubes with some functional equivalence to gills.
+It also retains an organic affinity for wetness, needing constant
+moisture in order to breathe, and will invariably direct itself to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
+dampest environment it can find. One dry summer day I uncovered
+a bunch of wood lice way out in the middle of a dusty patch
+of ground that looked like a miniature desert. They had taken advantage
+of the only shelter available, an old fragment of a board
+that held some shade and moisture under it.</p>
+
+<p>In terms of millions of years the development of millipede,
+or pill bug, becomes extremely complex and partly unknown.
+When did the pill bug leave the sea? How did its special breathing
+apparatus evolve? How, in other words, did it gradually adapt itself
+to life as a land animal? The problems of science are manifold.
+For an observer the very sense of a link between primal sea
+and primal earth embodied in this half-bug, half-marine crustacean,
+gives it great stature. There is thunder and depth in the pill bug.</p>
+
+<p>I suddenly feel lost in a wood which does not speak of calendar
+days or the month of February, but endless projection and development.</p>
+
+<p>Not lost too long—because the cold deepens and bites in the
+late afternoon and gray clouds begin to spread and darken, as a
+raw wind rises and shoves at the trees. I am caught again in the
+immediate. It feels like snow.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Need</i></h3>
+
+<p>Early next morning the snow begins to fall, thin and glassy,
+bringing in a new kind of quiet, unpredictable intent, spotting
+the thawed surface of the earth. After a few hours the flakes are
+heavier, and their momentum increases. They run down dizzily,
+with a ticking sound, shrouding the distance, pelting dead leaves,
+collecting in clumps between the needles of the pitch pines, coming
+down steadily and fast. The temperature drops quite suddenly,
+and the snow flakes grow lighter again. The wind sharpens, sending
+them ahead of it, lancing toward the south.</p>
+
+<p>Hour after hour the snow collects with mesmerizing totality,
+and in the colder evening the wind drives in with great fury and
+drifts pile up. Dry snow whirls in and races around the windows,
+scouring them like a dust storm. The wind molds a long drift on
+the north side of the house, like flesh over bone, hip edge out and
+curving in, a woman’s shape, an inanimate body molded by violence
+into classic beauty, hollowed, not for love unless the wind
+is love, carved, marked down and conquered by everything that is
+latent and unconquered in the storm.</p>
+
+<p>For many days afterward the arctic air reigns over us, and
+the snow is crusted, blindingly white in the sun, a mortal danger
+to animals whose food supply it covers. A long sickle, a new moon,
+of ice begins to appear along the rim of Cape Cod Bay. There is
+crackling, grinding cold, in a day when we rise a little past the sun
+instead of ahead of it. The freezing nights, for some of the animals
+that have endured the winter so far, must be interminable, except
+for the rabbit, caught suddenly in the open by a great-horned owl.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
+I found what was left of it in the woods—a burst of little bits of
+fur in the snow; the owl’s tracks; a mold left by the rabbit’s body.</p>
+
+<p>A hermit thrush dies of starvation, all its remnant food at
+winter’s end cut off by the snow. It is pathetically light, held in
+the hand, and when it is dissected only the tiniest patches of red
+meat show on either side of the breast bone.</p>
+
+<p>I find a dead eider duck on the shore. It may have been
+blown against a tree in the storm. One wing is broken, and the
+feathers buffed and thin from beating. After its feeding grounds
+are frozen over in an inlet farther down the Cape, a great blue
+heron dies on the snow-covered shores, wounding its neck in the
+last throes.</p>
+
+<p>The bird feeder is crowded with intermittent flocks of chickadees,
+juncos, and sparrows, all the ever present winter birds, pecking
+at seed, flying off, hopping on the snow, each with intense,
+nervous, active habits, keeping their wild, interrelated ways, entering
+in, displacing each other, disappearing and returning. A bolt
+of a bird suddenly tears in from nowhere and all the little ones
+are gone in a burst. A sharp-shinned hawk, a small hawk with
+an appetite for songbirds, has attacked in hunger and desperation,
+but it swerves when it reaches the feeder—its aim disturbed by
+fear as it approaches the house—and crashes into the window.
+It sits on the snow, terribly stunned, its head drooping. The body
+is the light umber of an immature bird, the breast streaked red.
+After a few minutes it stirs a little, wing shoulders twitching, head
+up, and yellow eyes glaring with the pure wild look of a hawk. Finally
+it lifts up quickly and beats away toward a line of trees in the
+distance.</p>
+
+<p>The chickadees are soon back, jumping down to the feeder
+from an overhanging pitch pine and bouncing back up like
+small puffs of snow, having left danger behind with their usual
+vibrant but sturdy acceptance. They are businesslike, determined
+little birds. If I could only get inside that head behind the tiny
+black eyes, and follow. I could swear it has the quickest perception
+of things. In any case it acts as if there were no time for leisure.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>
+Its whole body is tripped constantly at a staccato rate. The head
+moves up, down, sideways, in the needs of sight and utility. It
+poises to hammer a seed held between its tiny black toes and
+claws. It rounds the branch of a pine, ready for the next find, wonderfully
+resourceful in the game of survival; with a serious intent,
+gay in action, employing every second with such thoroughness as
+to be completely careless of the outcome of life, and so perhaps to
+surpass it.</p>
+
+<p>The mourning doves, whose low coos I mistook for an owl’s
+when I first heard them, are another of our permanent residents,
+not often at the bird feeder, but fairly ready visitors when they
+overcome their initial fear. One flies in, wings whistling wildly,
+hesitates, turns back, makes another foray, then waits in a shad
+tree thirty feet away, head bobbing, eyes blinking against the
+sharp sunlight. When a mourning dove flies up it shows a blue in
+its generally buff-colored feathers like a blue evening mist after
+winter rain. It walks with pigeonlike head bobbing back and forth,
+its thin tail standing out behind a tear-shaped body like the shaft
+of a cart, then spreading round and wide at the tip when the bird
+flies off.</p>
+
+<p>While the sturdy chickadees carry on business as usual, the
+dove, in gentle alarm, waits for an hour or two before hunger
+drives it back to stay and feed; and not long after that another
+dove flies in to join it.</p>
+
+<p>On the south side of the Cape where the open Atlantic surf
+keeps the shore waters fairly free of ice, there are sea ducks, eiders,
+baldpates, mergansers, blacks, or scoters, flying over the sea, or settling
+down on its shifting surfaces. Tiny white buffleheads, which
+make ducking dives into the water, show brilliantly against gray
+ice on the banks of an inlet at Monomoy. A tornado-shaped formation
+of red-backed sandpipers stands over the gun-metal sea. Patterns
+of wings and water run together, while the land is still not
+broken out of its frozen gravity.</p>
+
+<p>For life on land the power of the moment lies in a suspense
+which can kill. Another week of cold, with snow on the ground,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
+and many more birds will die. Because this Temperate Zone, influenced
+by oceanic weather, attracts more land birds than otherwise
+might stay, there is a greater margin of arbitrary risk. The
+weaker individuals will die first, by a natural law, but all are subject
+to unusual violence. The comparatively mild coastal climate
+does not normally have a winter as bad as this one, although extreme
+conditions are no surprise in North America, and the risks
+vary for the lives exposed to them. One winter with exceptionally
+deep frost in the ground, hard winds, and little snow cover, is as
+dangerous to plants as a month of snow would be to the birds.
+And a mild winter may result in death or damage from belated
+storms and cold.</p>
+
+<p>We talk of storms and the hazards of temperature as though
+nature were merely arbitrary, and inconvenience the essence of
+her plans. Being less self-sheltered, life subject to wild nature knows
+the extremes as standards of action. Living things are continually
+balanced between a bold summer and a demanding winter, where
+storms are the rule and risk is constant. They are unable to accept
+less. This terror has its pride.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Death, Man Made</i></h3>
+
+<p>Perhaps winter and death are complimentary, but the other
+seasons kill too, in their degrees of need and fulfillment. General
+association with death is so constant in nature that we could almost
+deny the validity of the word. Death, if it is essential to the
+consumption of energy, is at the least fuel for the fire of life and
+more likely an inseparable part of the fire itself. In the natural
+year it is all-pervasive and yet discreet and nearly invisible to us.
+We hardly pause on its behalf unless its presence becomes spectacular.
+To see a dead animal on the highway, whether or not it
+was killed by human agency, is not something most human beings
+care about, one way or another. This is not necessarily due to wanton
+disregard of life, or inhumane feelings, but because we retain
+an unconscious acceptance of death, as well as a natural ferocity—it
+is what is left of the animal predator in us that beats the
+stranded fish with a stick, or shoots at a bird simply because it is
+new to us. And yet, that death, which is so constant a part of the
+natural rhythm that we disregard it when we pass its evidence,
+may also become an obtrusive, isolated, and even obscene element
+when caused by human agency. Our technology does not
+represent such a mastery over nature that it is able to replace or
+assume nature’s ascendant ordering of things. We employ the
+methods of disaster with a heavier hand. Grace and accuracy of
+invention, abundance of means, are accompanied by an inordinate
+amount of plunder and pollution. In our power we are weak.</p>
+
+<p>I think of the hundreds of water birds that I have seen this
+winter dying, starving, poisoned, or freezing to death, as a result<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
+of having their plumage soaked by waste oil from ships. Tankers,
+merchant vessels of all kinds, cause drifting oil slicks on the surface
+of the ocean waters when their bilges are dumped at sea, or when
+their tanks are washed out when approaching port. Oil wastes
+seem to have made serious inroads on some forms of marine life
+in some areas, not to mention their soiling of beaches and shore
+waters. The sea birds drift into oil slicks at night when sleeping,
+or may even seek them out, mistaking them for plankton slicks.
+Eiders, old squaws, scoters, loons, brant, auks, all birds of our
+winter waters, come by immemorial habit to these feeding grounds
+for fish, plankton, or water plants. And because of the enormous
+and growing human traffic in ships and machines they have become
+endangered by something for which nothing in evolution has ever
+prepared them. Their feathers are tarred by an enormous brush,
+wielded at random.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i140" style="max-width: 101.9375em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i140.jpg" alt="Tanker Ship and Oiled Duck">
+</figure>
+
+<p>Almost any day that I visit the shore I find a victim. Out on
+the sand flats at low tide is a female eider duck, crouched down in
+such a way as to make me mistake her at first for a dark brown
+chunk of driftwood. When I walk up she stays there without moving,
+but her eyes are alive, out of an unknown depth of helplessness
+and misery. The bird is dying. Her feathers, which in the
+female eider, are a handsome reddish brown, are not naturally
+glossy any more, but they shine, sickeningly, with a heavy coating
+of oil.</p>
+
+<p>Some black and white males, whose necks are beautifully
+tinted, or washed with green, as though they had taken it from
+some of the northern sunsets from which they came, are swimming
+out over the water. I see others, both male and female, scattered
+along the shore. They have come on land, pathetically
+enough, to get warmer, in the sunny but freezing winter air. Birds
+affected by oil pollution have their feathers so matted together
+that they no longer serve as insulation, and the cold strikes directly
+to their skins. Even a spot of oil no bigger than a fifty-cent piece
+may expose them and cause pneumonia. So the doomed sea birds
+huddle up against a sandbank, out of the wind, or they waddle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
+into the water when I approach, or stand on rocks just offshore,
+vainly trying to preen dark smudges out of their feathers. Another
+effect of oil on plumage is to make the birds lose their buoyancy
+in the water, so that they swim half submerged, and when alarmed
+they are unable to take off but beat their wings and splash ahead
+with no result but further exhaustion. If the oil invades their digestive
+system, as they feed or preen, they are poisoned by it.</p>
+
+<p>This winter the dying birds have been so conspicuous that
+many local residents have become aware of a situation which
+might otherwise escape their notice, although when it becomes
+really acute we may only recognize it by deduction, because some
+species of birds will be gone. It is reported that oil pollution has
+killed some 250,000 birds off Newfoundland this winter. The razor-billed
+auk is now thought to be virtually wiped out as a breeding
+bird in that area.</p>
+
+<p>Some families in this area have tried to rescue a duck or an
+auk, having good feelings and a sense of responsibility. Success is
+none too frequent, since it depends on experience and great care
+in handling. It may take weeks to bring a bird back to normal vigor
+after it has been oiled. But the fact that a few individuals care
+enough to try is worth a thousand ships.</p>
+
+<p>“Whoever deals you this death,” I think, looking at some
+shivering eider on the sands or finding its soiled remains, “cannot
+get by with saying: ‘This is just a bird.’” The bird retains that
+wild distance which always seems just beyond our grasp, and it is
+intrinsically wise. Nothing we do to it can alter its original kinship
+with nature. It is in harmonious balance with a complexity of
+which we are greatly in envy and to which our carelessness only
+makes us strangers.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pgs 143-144]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="March"><i>March</i></h2>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span></p>
+
+<h3><i>Restless Days</i></h3>
+
+<p>Dormant vegetation is supposed to start awakening when the
+average mean temperature rises to 43 degrees, normally occurring
+in the northeast between April 1 and 15. Under unusually mild
+conditions, with the average minimum temperature lingering for
+some length of time above 32 degrees, growth begins sooner. This
+is of course a generality, a law of likelihood, which may be applied
+to an indefinite number of conditions. Spring may be spring, and
+winter winter, but March is a part of both February and April.
+During the warm days in February, the buds of the Mayflower
+or trailing arbutus begin to swell, while the skunk cabbage is
+steadily pushing up through frozen, marshy ground. Life does not
+recur after death so much as show its readiness; but in March the
+first obvious bursts of change begin to show, like those mountainous
+clouds coming up out of the west, with a fresh warm wind.</p>
+
+<p>The huge clouds roll loose and fan upwards in the gold afternoon.
+Then the wind changes. A blowing, whispering snow comes
+out of the southeast, cruel to promise, blotting out the swelling
+buds, the feeling of release in the air, as if to say promise is nothing
+without what is not promised. Nothing is realized without
+the possibility of disaster.</p>
+
+<p>“Ahh!” the indrawn breath of a storm, a swirling and seething
+to make life hide. The snow hisses incessantly into every corner
+and crevice. High-rolling, roaring tides push in. The storm rises to
+a mountainous capacity. The sea is fulsomely moaning, running
+under a white darkness. Comber after comber curls over, spills
+and plunges down, pounding the sands.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
+
+<p>The wind seems to pause. It races violently as if to have another
+try at climactical energy. Then hail clicks down, spattering
+tree trunks and ground. The snow is turning to cold rain. We are
+getting “dirty weather.” I feel a load of anger and disgust in me
+that rivals the storm.</p>
+
+<p>I am, to some degree, a subject of these changing days. I
+come out of a kind of hibernation of my own that might not be
+connected with the actual state of the weather, but it has its
+parallels. It is so with my own temper. I hold it for fear of being
+overwild, and then some outer wildness, a change of air, an adjustment
+to open sunlight, brings me to a free delight, a sense of opportunity
+that I thought was gone.</p>
+
+<p>March may seem cold, raw, and gloomy for most of its duration,
+but it begins consistently to offer evidence of new things. A
+white moth flies up in the headlights of my car one night. A robin
+jumps down to the wet, matted grass of the lawn. I seem to catch
+a new note of triumph in a crow. The chickadees are playing,
+chasing, constantly flitting from tree to tree. They call and answer
+one another like so many bells. They have a call that is sometimes
+mistaken for a phoebe’s, but with three notes: “Fee-a-bee.” And
+their song has a single phrase: “Here pretty” with an occasional
+syncopated pause followed by: “Pretty, pretty.” Sometimes two of
+them sing at the same time, one on an upper and the other on a
+lower key.</p>
+
+<p>A male blue bird, rare these days, perches on a wire, singing
+in sweet querulous tones, and I hear the continuous, talkative trill
+of a purple finch, a lovely casual song that comes from its throat
+like fast-dripping water.</p>
+
+<p>Snow falls, or sleet, and the songs stop. The weather clears
+and the birds begin again, like chronometers of an underlying
+spring music. The sunlight glitters and I hear them again, just as
+I notice that the waters in the distance have changed from the hard
+blue of the winter and are streaked with green, as if filled with
+new veins of life. Color and music spring and change along with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span>
+new numbers and demands, part of nature’s structure of love, a
+slowly increasing force, spreading out like a fan.</p>
+
+<p>There is a reddening in knotty oak twigs. I notice the leaves
+on a dwarf clover plant, tentatively but surely uncurling. Small
+eels are dashing back and forth in an aquarium with a new excitement,
+nipping at their fellow inmates, a sunfish and a minnow.</p>
+
+<p>This is the time of year that many animals start moving out
+of winter quarters, changing their range. On the highway I see
+dead muskrats that have been hit by cars, as well as some male
+gray squirrels. The squirrels sometimes dash back and forth across
+the road in a frantic kind of dance.</p>
+
+<p>Frost still lies deep in the ground. As they have done throughout
+the winter, quail pipe high, across the swishing, roaring wind.
+But there is a new restlessness abroad. The air itself seems to
+change now and then to an easier, looser abandon. Cold days,
+arrestations, come, but in counterbalance to surges of allowance
+and release. Life is beginning to seek its opportunities.</p>
+
+<p>I am impatient for spring, as raw, unseasonably cold weather
+continues, and then I see a dark little caterpillar on the road, or
+a mourning cloak butterfly, sprung out of hibernation. I hear a
+pair of mourning doves, cooing with slow measure and deliberation,
+long silences between. They seem to say something to me
+about attention. “What will come may not be, as yet. But we
+know when. And you might if you listened.”</p>
+
+<p>If I listened, and if I watched, found each insect as it came
+out of hibernation, comprehended a tree as a living thing, beginning
+to stir and seek, followed the development of buds and roots,
+the unseen life that stirs in egg or chrysalis through every inch of
+ground.</p>
+
+<p>There is, in common with the rest of the year’s revolutions,
+nothing neat or simple about the process of reawakening. It has
+started already. Raccoons in this area begin to breed in February
+and start foraging for their young in March. The great horned
+owl nests in January and February. During the dead of winter a
+few animals such as skates and barnacles start breeding in offshore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
+waters. Variable reaction in this time of change is as complex
+as the order which controls it.</p>
+
+<p>Hibernation itself, that mysterious state which is somewhere
+between death and sleep, differs in various species. Some mammals
+hibernate not because of outside conditions but because of internal
+changes in their blood stream, as if timed not to the weather but
+the year. Each life is cyclical, corresponding accurately to the circling
+of the globe, but in mode and terms it differs vastly. When
+the frogs begin to stir around a local pond, birds, independent of
+hibernation, move back from other climates. Late in March a few
+alewives swim into fresh water from the sea. Late in April large
+numbers begin to show up, at a time which only varies by a few
+days, year after year. Yet their arrival, like their growth and responses,
+is conditioned by any number of circumstances that are
+not only physically distant from us but may be remote as yet from
+scientific scrutiny. To realize that the slightest changes in temperature
+can affect whole worlds of life, and that this factor is only
+one of many, can make a man feel hopelessly inept.</p>
+
+<p>So spring is not to come now, nor tomorrow, suddenly complete
+with shy warmth and flowers according to our expectations,
+but will take its periodic time, within a wide range and with enormous
+resources. By the same token, no spring comes pleasantly,
+without a certain amount of doom in its wake. A flock of male
+blue birds flies north too soon. They die during a severe snow
+storm or a week of extreme cold. Thawing takes place too suddenly
+for one form of life, and too quick a drop in temperature
+will kill another.</p>
+
+<p>March is complex and March is in a rage, though I begin to
+feel a universal response, a gradual turn, in the ground, through
+the trees, down by the shore as the wind changes from tearing
+things loose to a peaceful low breathing. I smell salt things on the
+edge of motion, balanced on a tip of allowance. I hear what I am
+unable to see, stirring, tuning up across the land. The response
+may be hesitant or bold, delayed or premature, but it is coming.
+There is knowledge around me, even purpose, whether or not it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span>
+is working in mindless ways. When I see sunlight playing on a
+blade of grass, I see the component parts of wisdom. Then the
+grass joins the squirrel in its dance. Eels join men in restlessness
+and speculation.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>An Extravagance</i></h3>
+
+<p>We built a small concrete pool on our place, which is locally
+known as Dry Hill, and so brought the life of water a little closer
+to us. In the summertime the pool nurtures a migrant population
+of green frogs. I have put nothing in it except some sunfish that
+subsequently died, so that the occasional signs of new life it shows,
+like a water strider, or some nymph or larva of an insect that
+flew by and deposited its eggs, always strikes me as a dispensation
+from the sky. It is a proof of life’s pressing, inescapable need to
+drive into every opening.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking of draining the pool and cleaning it out for the approach
+of spring, I find a life so surprising and sudden as to take
+all human propriety out of my system. There, on the brown, algae-fringed
+edge of the pool, something moves, telling me that this
+well of water is more than ornamental. Light olive-colored insects,
+scum-covered, goggle-eyed, stalk on the edge, or skate very slowly
+through the water—the strangest kind of revelation. What could
+I clean up now without a sense of shame?</p>
+
+<p>The dragonfly larva, or nymph, which turns into an adult
+after a series of molts, is a fantastic-looking creature. I take one
+out of the pool and put it in a jar for observation. What I observe
+has no familiar meaning for me. It stays motionless, except when
+the jar is moved. I wonder again, as I did with a robber fly in the
+summer, what an insect is. Is it only a stereotyped pattern on the
+changing screen of nature? This one exhibits itself as a sort of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
+embodied suspension, careless of death or time, like the process of
+evolution itself. There is no hurry.</p>
+
+<p>The nymph lives for more than a week without food. Through
+a magnifying glass, I look at the flat-bottomed, skiff-shaped body
+made shaggy by algae-covered hair, the jointed legs, the upended
+tail. It is striped, and there are brown markings over and across its
+goggle eyes, and brown on its strange mouth part, which sits in
+front of its face like a catchers mask. This part, or device, is called
+the labrum. It is hinged, equipped with hooks, and can be shot
+forward rapidly to grab and hold the animal’s prey. In the nymph’s
+case, as with so many other things in nature, seemingly endless
+waiting and suspense precedes occasional spurts of lightning rapidity.</p>
+
+<p>As I peer at it, greatly enlarged behind my magnifying glass,
+its jointed legs suddenly flail up in front of me, and I actually feel
+a tremor of alarm—which might be humorous, except for my
+sense that this small dragon is timeless in some awesome way.</p>
+
+<p>As March is proving a seasonal release, at least in starting, so
+it also reveals an extravagance in the form of a dragonfly nymph,
+and what will come from that little insect shows that extravagance
+may have no end. After a series of molts, the number and duration
+of which depends on the species, a nymph will climb up on some
+green stalk spiking out of the water, the skin on its back will
+crack, and it will emerge from a sheath which it leaves behind, a
+dry, empty counterpart, and turn into a big, gauzy-winged dragonfly.
+It is given two worlds, water and air. Its embodied transformation
+from one into another is as rare a thing as the transformation
+of a caterpillar into a butterfly; and is evidence of a daring like the
+flight of Icarus toward the sun, but more successful.</p>
+
+<p>Nature takes the nymph out of itself. It is no goggle-eyed
+inhabitant of some other planet, no knight doomed to expire by
+weight of armor. I see the fantastic in it and also a miraculous
+reality, which will not rest with own products. This water predator
+will turn into a brightly colored, great-eyed hunter, skimming
+everywhere over land and water, darting across the roaring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
+traffic of a city, flying over the surface of the ocean miles from
+land. Time seems suspended in the nymph; and this may be appropriate
+enough. It is the result of ages; but its metamorphosis
+is fresh and new, a successful act of endless creativity.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Interpretation</i></h3>
+
+<p>It is in the nature of things to surprise, after temporary imprisonments.
+Surprise is what men look for. It is a need. And this
+puts us somewhat in the position of a dragonfly larva, suspended,
+until sprung out. Since we are not as rigidly and instinctively stuck
+as the insects, relief from our often unblessed condition may come
+simply because we get a chance to look around. Freshness of act,
+unfailing originality, is here, but it takes time to see. After an age
+of inattention it comes like a red squirrel, which I meet unexpectedly
+one raw March morning. Its whole body twitches and
+shakes. It jumps with an extraordinary series of halts and starts;
+then, like a boy playing Indian, it leaps behind a rock as I walk by.</p>
+
+<p>If there is any spare time in a harried world, perhaps it should
+be used in cultivating habits of attention, learning how to keep
+open for possibility, instead of inventing distractions that provide
+for nothing. What is loosely called “nature study” requires discipline
+like any other area of knowledge, and acquaintance with its
+subjects, their names, their habits, their place and performance,
+may encourage extremes of refinement; but it is one good way
+to begin. It takes you out. It shows you what else can be done.
+By example it may spring you into a new mood of action. It provides
+new acquaintances, showing you life, the surprise, where there
+used to be a wall.</p>
+
+<p>I, as well as my children, am still learning to read. I am still
+making a collection of terms, in order to attempt a rudimentary
+analysis of what I find. First in importance, though, comes an admission
+that what I am considering is not so strangled by human<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
+terminology that it does not have an identity, a sacredness even, of
+its own. Discovery gets its worth from what it pursues.</p>
+
+<p>I see a pitch pine with different eyes, not because I have
+learned that its clusters have three needles, but because I recognize
+its independent existence. I know that it has needs, and a
+history, that it is not divorced from an infinity of circumstances
+just because I can identify it. We do not need to be vain about
+our name grubbing, our scientific nomenclature; it is only the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>When I go to the edge of a pond I have a pleasurable sense
+of excitement, not only because I have been there before, finding
+the good old tadpoles and water striders, but because I know that
+I will find something unexplained, the same life perhaps, but in
+new relationships.</p>
+
+<p>There is a swarm of thin little flies dancing in the warm sunlight
+on a March afternoon. They not only tell me something
+about the lengthening days, but the light seems to sit differently
+on their wings. They are a revelation, materializing out of a distance,
+hovering near.</p>
+
+<p>In the game of identification we have to admit that nature
+is not an exclusively human province. Then we can be led by it,
+like this class of children, boys and girls on file through the woods,
+exploring new land, in expectation.</p>
+
+<p>There has been a light fall of snow, and a cold wind blows
+off the tidal marshes on the north side of the woods, but a warm
+wind is out and it is only half-winter. There is a cover of unmelted
+snow in shaded slopes and hollows. The buds are glassy and on
+twigs and branches small ice capsules reflect the light. Snow blankets
+the tangles of briar where rabbits have their runs. Tiny
+upmounded tunnels show where mice scuttle through the snow’s
+protection. Pheasant tracks are found on the way, and then the
+odd, creaky, fowl-like call of a pheasant sounds in the near distance.
+Several myrtle warblers are seen in a clearing on the south side
+of the woods, a sheltered area bordering on a tidal creek. In a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
+marsh beyond the creek, which is running backwards because of
+the tide, cattails stand with a half cap of snow on their brown
+shako heads, on the side facing away from the sun. There is an icy
+glaze on the buds of a pussy willow. We are between north and
+south, winter and spring, snow and melted snow, arrested in clear
+parallels of beauty, turned toward the willingness of spring. Something
+calls to a slow and gentle attention that has been waiting in
+us. I wonder whether it is the identification of a pheasant’s tracks,
+or of a myrtle warbler, that they will remember in the future, or
+the special character of this day.</p>
+
+<p>It is hard to know what children perceive or retain. Suddenness,
+spontaneity, silence covers an untold number of impressions.
+Weeks, months, years later, they come out with something
+learned that a teacher could not have suspected. Occasionally they
+reveal an exactness which is innately theirs, quite apart from a
+classroom. I remember a little redheaded girl trying to tell us
+about a big white bird she had seen on the Chatham shore of the
+Cape. All description failed until she wagged her head back and
+forth in a special way, and we realized she had seen a snowy owl.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a boy who characterized the blue jay as being
+“the loudest bird in the East,” which may have brought the jay
+out of the realm of science but not accuracy.</p>
+
+<p>But we lead in to nature through names as well as our senses,
+and then by familiarity with habits, size, shape, color, the order of
+change, the ways of dying out and returning with plants and animals.
+Knowledge is our medium, and we are obliged to question.</p>
+
+<p>What is that tree, strangely bent over along the snowy ground?
+A wild cherry? What happened to it? What is the evidence? Did
+another tree fall on it when it was a sapling, bend it down and
+force it to grow out horizontally? Its thick trunk stretches for six
+feet parallel to the ground, only a few inches above it, then turns
+and starts up into a sky-opening between the thickets beside it,
+sending up a wild array of branches. What else can we say about
+it?</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span></p>
+
+<p>Then one boy, putting things together, hearing how the tree
+compensated for its difficulties, needed light, and thrusted after
+it, cries out: “Why that sounds as if the tree was alive!” That is
+what we have been looking for. He is well started.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Response</i></h3>
+
+<p>March progresses toward its end, gradually adding to the population.
+Dark-headed, deep-colored male robins tug at worms on
+the lawn. Red-winged blackbirds sail low over marshes, or take
+stations by the edge of a pond, with reedy cries. The purple finches
+sing, along with the shrill braying of the blue jays. White-throated
+sparrows, quail, jays, and partridges that have been here all winter
+are more in evidence, especially on sunny days, and begin to be
+accompanied by newcomers, like the grackles. Myrtle warblers
+flutter up into the air and down again, catching insects. But the
+wind blows. It backs and fills. The rain is cold. The turn toward
+spring is very gradual, hardly perceptible at times.</p>
+
+<p>Then a few alewives, a dozen or so, come in out of salt water
+and show up in Stony Brook, familiar strangers, large, pale fish
+weaving slowly up through the narrow stream. It has begun to be
+a time of declaration. New patterns, new arrangements are taking
+place, however much the season seems to lag.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the twenty-sixth I hear a high, shrill sound,
+whirring and spinning, suggesting proud activity, presence set free.
+The spring peepers are making it known that a time has arrived,
+and I take joy in the news, having failed to make any definite
+assurance of it myself. Their sound embraces all this changing
+land, rising above the whispered roars of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Now the perpetrator of this chorus is a tiny tan frog with a
+smudged cross or X on its back, named <i>Hyla Crucifer</i>. The male
+of the species has been speaking up on behalf of spring openings
+for millions of years. In that capacity it is authoritative enough.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
+Its voice, almost incredibly loud and shrill for an animal that is
+not much over an inch long, is amplified by means of a large bubblelike
+pouch which acts as a resonator. This mechanism is put to
+use after the animal comes out of winter torpor, after warm rain,
+and as the season itself breathes and sounds more freely. The
+peeper moves around with the earth itself and makes a declaration
+which, it seems to me, does not deserve the term automatic any
+more than the fiddling of grasshoppers in August. Both are part
+of the deep and various play of the year. In any case this specialty
+of voice is something of a marvel in itself. It is not like the eyes of
+an owl that are so made as to make maximum use of dim light,
+or the wings of a herring gull that can ride turbulent air currents
+above the water, or like the fins of a fish, the sensitive nose of a
+dog. The peeper’s vocal parts are not specialized for environmental
+use to that degree. Their primary, specific function is to attract the
+female. Mating and voice are synonymous. But perhaps we could
+also say that this mating cry, this sometimes bell-like sound, is fitted
+to the whole environment, that it belongs unerringly to a new
+earth and a new season. It seems to bring life and place, function
+and expression together. It is unequivocal. It is perfect. It speaks
+up reliably on behalf of everything now springing or about to
+spring.</p>
+
+<p>For all their vast population in the bogs, ponds, edges, swamps,
+and other wet areas of the Cape, individual spring peepers are very
+hard to find. During a cool evening, as the stars begin to declare
+themselves, I hear the peepers’ collective voice rising up around me,
+passing into the sky. On the banks of Berry’s Hole, that deep,
+swampy hollow nearby, there is a pulsing, piercing, deafening
+chorus. The wind suddenly blows over in a loud torrent, but the
+peepers keep on. I walk farther down and they stop; then they begin
+again, after I sit still for a minute or two. The banks are wet,
+after a light afternoon rain, and they must be covered by frogs,
+judging by the sound; but I search every bit of ground with a flashlight
+and am unable to find a single one.</p>
+
+<p>A wild, moist spring wind flings around the rim of the hollow,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pgs 159-160]</span>
+which is gray, dusted with fog, and in the clear opening overhead
+the stars fling out and away. Water stands dark and still where the
+banks end. Grass hummocks and shrubs choke the wet areas beyond.
+I sit for many minutes concentrating on one area with my
+flashlight. The peepers’ cry is deafening. Then at last, I see one.
+It jumps onto my shoes. And then another, on a low lying branch,
+moving along in the light—it displaces a third, which is toppled
+down into the leaves. They seem limp in action. A peeper is minute,
+almost weightless in my hand.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i158" style="max-width: 100.5em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i158.jpg" alt="Peeper on Shoe">
+</figure>
+
+<p>Nearby footsteps will silence them. They react spontaneously
+like tadpoles and minnows that dart off into deep water from a
+pond’s edge when you approach. Yet they are not bothered by
+the beam of a flashlight.</p>
+
+<p>Such a tiny thing, this animal, this cool, moist, anonymous
+amphibian, for so proud a message! I can see that a peeper’s
+whole body pumps as it calls. It is like a bellows, and the vocal sac
+blows out like a blister, bluish-green in the light. “Peep-peep-peep,”
+and the whole night is filled with an insistent, stirring cry. No human
+statement can rival this simple, triumphant mode of revelation.
+The earth begins again.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pgs 161-162]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="April"><i>April</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span></p>
+<h3><i>Deeper News</i></h3>
+
+<p>I read in the papers that spring is beginning to show its vast
+capacity in the nation behind us, with tornadoes in the west, and
+floods to the south. The way is being cleared with a violence.</p>
+
+<p>And here, heavy fogs invest the Cape during the early morning
+and at night. On the night of the second we are lashed by a
+savage gale, carrying wet snow and rain, and feel a searching, bitter
+dampness. The next morning the sun comes out with promise
+and radiance. There is a faint new fragrance in the air. It would
+have been nothing but that—a sense of mild relief after the pressure
+of a storm, but for another piece of news. At 1 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> the Coast
+Guard had received an “incoherent” distress signal, though without
+exact location, from a vessel somewhere on a twenty-five-mile
+stretch of shore between Cape Cod light in Truro and Nauset
+light in Orleans. It was found before dawn, an eighty-three-foot
+trawler, which had run aground off South Wellfleet. Out of a crew
+of seven, the reports say, two are drowned, four survived, and one
+is missing.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i164" style="max-width: 102.75em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i164.jpg" alt="Large Ocean Waves">
+</figure>
+
+<p>They were returning to Boston with 38,000 pounds of fish,
+after fishing west of Georges Banks. During the night, through a
+thick fog, a thirty- to forty-mile-an-hour wind, high waves, and
+heavy rain, the radar stopped working and the crewmen were unable
+to see. The “Back Shore” bar, on which the trawler ran
+aground, is an old graveyard for ships. Modern equipment has cut
+down greatly on losses, along with some of the old safeguards
+against them. Many lighthouses are no longer manned by lighthouse
+keepers and their families. Great beams of light swing out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
+over the dark sea and back again with inanimate, unmanned
+precision. Members of Coast Guard rescue crews may no longer be
+men born and bred here who know every inch of their beaches.
+In fact, they are more likely to come from a different state, and
+to be stationed temporarily on the Cape, so that a man hunting
+for a wreck may not have too exact an idea of his location.</p>
+
+<p>During the afternoon, after I hear the news and drive to
+see the wreck, a southwest wind blows over the cliffs that stand
+above the Wellfleet beach, and clouds swirl up across the blue
+emptiness. Cars line both sides of the road. A thin trickle of
+people walk along the heights, sands held by yellow grass and
+purple patches of bearberry, and there are others far down the
+long beach where the trawler lies, heaved over to starboard.</p>
+
+<p>From morning news accounts and a scatter of talk the story
+of the doomed ship and the rescue comes to me a little, from
+under its nighttime shroud of fog and heaving waves. After the
+radar quit and the vessel ran aground on the sand bar, the crew
+made a futile effort to get her off. Then the radio failed. The
+ship was being knocked around in the thrashing darkness. All
+attempts failed to put dories overboard. And the seven men went
+into the pilothouse, where they stayed for some five hours. When
+day broke, the tide was changing and the seas seemed bigger than
+ever. The men were battered and exhausted. The trawler’s decks
+were awash, and they thought she was beginning to break up.
+The captain then ordered the crew over the sides, at which
+time the ship was some 600 to 700 yards offshore.</p>
+
+<p>A local family, a man, his wife, and twelve-year-old daughter,
+proprietors of summer cottages above the beach, were wakened
+at four forty-five in the morning by two coastguardmen who had
+seen the wreck and stopped in to use the phone. While one of
+the men drove along the heights and trained the spotlights of his
+jeep on the wreck, the other, accompanied by the family, walked
+down to the shore. The fog had lifted a little and they could see
+white spars rocking above the water, and what looked at first like
+debris, being washed back and forth against the shore. Forming<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
+a hand-to-hand chain, the four rescuers then managed by just
+standing out far enough in the icy water to pull three men in.
+More Coast Guard personnel came later and rescued the fourth.
+The survivors were terribly numbed by the cold. One of them had
+to be forced into walking so as to save his life. “How much
+further?” he kept mumbling, as he stumbled around in the sands,
+held up by the mother and daughter. Later, the flesh of these
+survivors was found to be black and blue from the pounding
+they had taken on board the ship and in the surf, flung against
+the sands.</p>
+
+<p>Two other crewmen were found dead on the beach. Another
+local resident saw one of them where he lay at the bottom of a
+ladder that reached down the cliff: “A big man, between thirty
+and forty. He had coveralls on, but no shirt.”</p>
+
+<p>His wife says: “I’ll never complain about the price of fish
+again!”</p>
+
+<p>There are plenty of fish in evidence, all for free, although
+not a single one is taken away. The boat’s catch must have been
+broken into and scattered by the surf. Every ten yards or so
+along the wide, shelving beach are dead fish, lined up as if they
+had been placed there—a market display, for no taste but dissolution.
+Gray haddock cleaned by the fishermen’s knives. Rose
+fish, pinkish, orange-red, a sunset color, with fringed fins, and
+enormous jellied eyes rimmed with white, like goggles.</p>
+
+<p>A hatch cover floats loose in the water, and a pair of yellow,
+oiled fisherman’s overalls lies on the sand.</p>
+
+<p>The boat, which was shoved and lifted by the seas until it
+now lies a few yards off the beach, is just ahead. We curious
+onlookers walk toward it in growing silence. The surf waters
+are breaking on the beach beside the strong, humble craft, inactive,
+done, pounded down. I can make out her name, <i>Paulmino</i>, along
+the bow. She is banked over hard, and the waves, still fairly high,
+back and fill around the stern. They well up, then ease away again.
+Where water sloshes amidships there are tattered nets and bobbing
+cork floats. The steel masts stand with ropes and stays unbroken,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
+and the high, white pilothouse is intact, where they spent their
+terrible night.</p>
+
+<p>I walk away from that scene with a question. Surely they
+could have stayed on board and survived? But time is not waiting
+for could-have-beens. The sea rolls by. The stars burn and roar
+in their distances. Immortal death, an ending, but the source
+of all questions and the answer to them, roars on too without
+reply. Men in their death, or fish, or birds, are the same. They
+share in universal soundings that no mortal fear escapes.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>April Light</i></h3>
+
+<p>One evening, about nine o’clock, I walk out to listen to the
+peepers again. Their chorus comes up to the hill from all the
+watery lows around it, and through a fog-muffled distance I hear
+the scrambled yelping of herring gulls. It means a run of alewives
+swimming in to Paine’s Creek from the bay, on an incoming
+tide, two hours before the turn. The gulls can get at this feast
+more easily when the fish are crowded and not too far from the
+surface before complete darkness sets in. When I reach the
+shore, curls and wisps of fog show up in the headlights of my
+car. Gulls cry in alarm and fly back over the water. There is hardly
+any wind. The low, bull-like tones of a foghorn sound in the
+distance. But the stars shine out overhead.</p>
+
+<p>Long semicircular wavelets lap over the wide mouth of the
+creek where it enters the bay, and where the channel curves inland
+I can hear the fish slapping in the water as they swim in, making
+an occasional splash as they rush to the surface. Out in the middle
+of the stream, some twenty feet wide, I can dimly make out the
+head of an animal—probably a harbor seal that has been making
+a foray after fish in the channel—swimming steadily in the direction
+of the bay. I greet it with a yell as its head slips by and out of
+sight.</p>
+
+<p>A black-crowned night heron starts up with a low harsh
+“Quok!” where I startle it from its fishing stance along the water’s
+edge. The stars are brilliant, the sky above the low fog and bold
+emptiness of the shore is a vast cavern throbbing with light. Cold
+sea water, high spring night—life around me takes its antediluvian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
+chances. The fish come on with a proud mission, deliberate in
+its age, secure in its origins.</p>
+
+<p>Then I notice that there are stars underfoot as well. My feet
+strike stars in the damp sand. Everywhere I walk I am shod with
+light. Now it comes to me that these may be some light-emitting
+marine animals that I have read about, a family of protozoa called
+noctiluca. They are microorganisms, and although the sand gleams
+in my hand, they are not to be found or seen with the naked eye.
+What kind of “phenomenon” is this? At once a chemical reaction
+and a living thing? This illumination from mindless lives seems to
+me to have an incredible vitality. When I stamp brutally on the
+ground the prickly squares of light dim a little, but nothing I do
+can put them out or alter their abundance. The sea’s riches
+touch the shore and leave their fire. I may be in the presence of
+something that is nearly indecipherable, neither matter nor antimatter,
+neither the animate nor the inanimate, but a true
+representative of the sun, and more than the moon, a life in
+light.</p>
+
+<p>There are these night lights; and the lights of day, like the
+newly arrived tree swallows that shuttle across a stream dipping
+and diving in the air after insects. They have lovely white bellies,
+backs of a beetle’s iridescent green.</p>
+
+<p>Because there is still a tight residue of winter left in the
+air, the warm days when they come seem to promise everything.
+They come to us like a story to a child: “What happens next?” As
+I look through the novel glassy stillness outside the house I can
+hear the click of a bird’s bill as it chases a fly to the ground. It
+almost seems possible to see the grass growing.</p>
+
+<p>There is a rich salt smell coming from tidal marshes, a bolder
+light on their hummocks and stretches of oaten thatch. The
+sea breeze sounds, making the distance stretch with music in the
+light’s new allowance.</p>
+
+<p>In these opening stages, spring feels to me like a bird settling
+on the water, like a herring gull that drops down to the surface,
+spins a graceful half circle when it lands, adjusts its wings,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
+and settles down to rest. Life begins to show easier, freer ways
+of action which it had almost forgotten in the cold and dark.
+It displays itself, like the soft red flowers that hang from the maple
+trees, or the mourning cloak butterfly, come out of hibernation,
+stretching its wings in the yellow sunlight of a path where I am
+walking.</p>
+
+<p>These are the signs of spring, the illuminations I have been
+waiting for. And its fresh, cool wind, striking my face, seems to
+carry new senses with it. It is beginning to be fragrant and full.
+It calls up in me a new alertness along with a new contentment.
+But underneath all these pleasant surfaces and scattered events,
+I feel the power of their origins. For all I can find and associate
+with spring, the romantic, welcome season, there are vastly more
+uncounted changes, unrealized ways of reaching up and out, responding
+to a new range of light and darkness. The protozoa tell
+me I have seen nothing yet as to fire. The migrant herring
+coming in at night say this April is ageless and dark. Everywhere
+around me, things deeply silent and unseen begin to share a
+proximity. They move in the waters, while they shoulder the dirt
+below ground. In the structure of their alliances, developed in
+measure and with appropriateness, is the co-ordination of the great
+globe as it spins in space. They respond to a power which not
+only defines the “spring” but will transform it and send it on its
+way.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3>“<i>Frightened Away</i>”</h3>
+
+<p>The swallows freely dip and fall and sail in high wild air,
+and as a southern surprise two adult turkey vultures soar low over
+the land, their wings like great flags, frayed at the tips. The
+cattail seeds begin to fly. Part of April’s cool progression, the
+tough-leaved Mayflowers blossom out of banks and brown leaf
+litter, with tiny pink and white flowers, deep cupped, strong
+and sweet of scent.</p>
+
+<p>On the twenty-fifth there is a big run of alewives in the brook.
+It is an event that attracts attention. Cars stop by. Small crowds
+gather and walk down to see the fish. This is not as great a day
+as it used to be, when salt herring counted heavily in the economic
+livelihood of Cape Cod, but it brings up remnant feelings. And
+the fish, after all, provide an open ceremony, even though the
+details of their natural or economic history may not be known to
+everyone. It is a spectacle worth leaving a car for, and might
+even tempt someone to leave his car for good, suggesting new
+roads and means of locomotion not yet considered.</p>
+
+<p>They mass in the shallow water of the brook, with flinty
+gleams showing on their backs and dorsal fins. Eyes staring,
+mouths gaping, turning and wheeling, the foot-long alewives move
+up through the fishways, obeying their great drive for fulfillment.
+Herring gulls gather above the water course by which the fish
+ascend through marshes and then fresh water to their spawning
+areas in the ponds. They circle overhead in the blinding sky, like
+a prodigal crown.</p>
+
+<p>The alewife multitude always draws a “why” from some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
+visitor. Their force is so obvious and yet not quite to be explained
+by referring to them as “poor fish.” Huge numbers are caught
+in nets where they die in a shining, gasping, shivering mass,
+and then are hauled away in barrels for the purposes of bait
+or cat food. Others attempt impossible rocky barriers and die of
+wounds or exhaustion, and a certain percentage have fallen prey
+to gulls before they arrive. They encounter enormous hazards,
+and the alewives, unlike men, or as men think of themselves, are
+unable to turn back. The plan that put them here seems wasteful
+and even too bold for those who see life in terms of human
+ascendancy, where all problems are subordinate to our conscious
+attempt to use the earth and save ourselves. But there they are,
+back again so committedly as to make the most self-enclosed
+glimpse something of the primal energy that makes all life insist on
+renewal and advance. Even the children who jump down to the
+water’s edge and try to flip the fish out with their hands, treating
+them sometimes with extraordinary cruelty, must feel some attachment
+to this force, or perhaps they feel it more than the rest of us.</p>
+
+<p>After trying to explain the habits of alewives to a group of
+children one day, I asked them why, if all the fish were taken out
+of the brook every day in the week, there would be hardly any
+fish returning in a few years’ time.</p>
+
+<p>I don’t excuse my lack of clarity. In any case, one boy
+answered: “Because they would get so frightened they would all
+go away and not come back.”</p>
+
+<p>Wrong, of course. Someone might even be tempted to cry:
+“Ridiculous!” The answer to the question is that most of the
+alewives return to the stream in whose headwaters they were
+hatched and where they grew up for a few weeks or months of
+their lives before returning to salt water. They then continue to
+grow in the sea, returning at sexual maturity in three or four
+years’ time. So if all the spawning fish are taken out of the brook
+every day in the week there would be no eggs to hatch out in the
+ponds above the stream, and the population would be decimated.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
+
+<p>“No,” you say to the child, “you don’t understand. Let me
+explain this again.”</p>
+
+<p>That the fish are “frightened” does not come into the
+picture at all, aside from the facts, and it is blatant anthropomorphism
+to try and read human response or attributes into a fish.
+Does a fish take fright? Perhaps, although it might be more accurate
+to call it an alarm, or flight reaction, an automatic nerve response
+inherent in the whole race.</p>
+
+<p>Trying to talk like an adult, I describe the alewives’ running
+in to spawn as “slavery to the reproductive urge.” What happens
+to them on the way is immaterial to this unconscious necessity.
+Fish that commit suicide do not do so out of choice.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, when these fish swing away from me, as my shadow
+comes over them, when they try time after time, sometimes
+frantically, to climb a mound of rocks or a head of water, I
+wonder about being “frightened,” or the noun “fear.” Is this
+spring stream of life without it? A bird trips off a branch in
+sudden alarm, cries out, and then forgets, to start in on a singing
+joy all over again. Birds are more emotional than cold-blooded
+fish, but if fear is a protective, lifesaving reaction inherent in a
+great many animals, then the fish may not be devoid of it. They
+are one of the foods of the universe, and in balance with that
+function, it is not just that their glands stimulate them to momentary
+activity, or that they flinch before disaster, but that they
+express in their bodies the wild need for freedom to act, to find,
+to run, to be, that manifests itself in highly developed animals,
+and to some degree in the lesser ones. They are in a sense
+compensating for the uses to which they are put as a prey, or
+element, of universal appetite.</p>
+
+<p>The alewives will not be frightened away, but they will come
+back with fear. It is not wise to be too impatient with a child.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pgs 173-174]</span></p>
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="May"><i>May</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
+<h3><i>Declarations</i></h3>
+
+<p>The colder, and still relatively silent world of April is past.
+Warm sunlight runs across trees, sharp shadows, water and sand,
+with a penetrating radiance. The alewives now come up the
+inland stream day after day. Pale, sun laden, they move against
+the fast-rushing current, arousing great excitement in the gulls.
+The big white and gray birds hover over, then dive down in a
+flock where the fish crowd in shallow water on their way up.
+The valley is full of marauding and assemblies and crying out
+as the fish keep on, rushing and weaving with the stream flowing
+over their backs.</p>
+
+<p>And now the shad blow blooms. Thousands and thousands
+of these little trees are laden, but lightly, with lacy white flowers,
+looking like standing clouds in open woods and valleys throughout
+the Cape. Pink and yellow and silvery-green colors begin to appear
+on the oaks. Anthers are hanging conspicuously from the pitch
+pines.</p>
+
+<p>Fish, insects, plants, birds are all, if I can personify them so,
+in close and obedient relationship to nature. They count on
+strength and protection when they sing or flower out above the
+ground. They are in confident relationship to the general
+being. And so they act with confidence. They have come. They
+will be. They declare themselves. The birds make the dawns sound
+with a silvery rain of music. On the morning when a thrush wakes
+me up, its rippling and melodious peals lifting and diving through
+the air, I have an incalculable urge to migrate outward and
+claim new territory. Spring tells me I have not had enough.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span></p>
+
+<p>The shore birds appear in new flocks all the time, skimming
+and crying along a once empty shore. Colorful little warblers
+populate the woods, each with so mature and particular a color
+and set of ways. Now, I think, they are all back from Mexico
+or Florida or Patagonia, to help us not only in our geography
+but to extend our senses.</p>
+
+<p>Motion and change of place are a bird’s necessity. Wings
+insist on flight. Yet their recognition of that part of the land or
+length of shore they come to in spring seems as positive as that
+of any home builder on a numbered lot. When they arrive, a
+large majority claim a place with all the resources at their command.
+In the science of ornithology this is called “territorialism.”
+Male birds, which often arrive some days or weeks before the
+females, select an area of land as a nesting site, which they defend
+against all intruders. Most of the songs of spring are advertisements
+by male birds of the fact of land possession.</p>
+
+<p>The towhees are more insistent and vociferous in their
+claiming than most. I hear two males, both perched on low trees,
+perhaps a hundred yards apart, that keep at their singing as if
+they had a rivalry that would never end. Each declares. Each
+holds its own, as if song is an anchor to the earth. They stop me
+in my tracks. A human being is a clumsy, noisy, obstreperous
+animal. When I walk down a slope or through the level fields,
+I find myself so involved with my own racket as to lose all sense
+of what it was I set out to look for. Where is peace if you yourself
+destroy it? These birds help me to command it. I stop and
+listen to them, squaring off the limits they declare.</p>
+
+<p>“Air<i>tree</i>!” the towhees call, and “Tip-your-<i>tree</i>!” continually,
+inexhaustibly. There is probably little point in using words like
+pride, challenge, or anticipation in terms of these singers. Who
+in the nonhuman world knows but they? Our music is not theirs,
+however much we have borrowed from them. Still, what I catch
+at, and what starts in me, is feeling. Their songs are an expression
+of it. The towhees are here to establish themselves. Their future
+is in direct relation to the place they have chosen for it, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
+may also be the general area where they were born. Their voices
+measure place, a real and powerful thing to them. Song insists.
+Song makes known. Song is a self-assurance. Since this singing is
+done in collaboration with the arousing, fecund world of spring, it
+may in its own way be true awareness.</p>
+
+<p>In the newly unfolding regions of delicate leaves a prairie
+warbler sings “Tsee-tsee-tsee-tsee-tsee-tsee” very rapidly, on an
+upward crescendo. A slim little bird, with a yellow breast streaked
+with black, its sharp trim beak opens wide as the notes swell
+out of its throat, and it seems to send song as far as it can.
+I think of constant effort, constant quick hearts. It picks up a
+light green caterpillar from the oak leaves and sings as it holds
+it in its beak. Then the warbler beats at the insect a little,
+pecks and shakes it, then swallows it down; and goes on singing.</p>
+
+<p>An oven bird perches on the oaks and sings, with breast
+uplifted, tail shaking, making a glorious effort. How could I
+dare say that this bird or another down the road, which accompanies
+it, is only singing something that sounds to our ears like
+“Teacher-teacher-teacher”? No bird song is alike, even in members
+of the same species. Each individual has its variation and seems
+to derive strength and pleasure from it. And it seems to me that
+they not only declare their rights and titles but are expressing
+something on behalf of spring. It is as if they sang: “It is not I.
+It is not I” but rather, all flowering, crossing, taking or accumulating,
+all growth. The song is a part of earth.</p>
+
+<p>Then there is that bird, a member of the family of mimics,
+the brown thrasher, which seems to make a mockery of the whole
+business. It is a cinnamon-winged, speckled-breasted, long-tailed
+bird, with a long bill and sharp, quick yellow eyes. The male
+thrasher is certainly as intense and serious about the duty of
+staking out his territory as any other species, but what issues
+loudly from his open bill seems like the most comical sort of
+parody. He may not be as good a mimic as the mocking bird—which
+has been known to imitate a flock of blue jays—but he
+manages a wonderful take-off on the whole race of birds. He is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
+master of a grab bag of trills, chatters, pips and cries, of rasps and
+sweetnesses, of sudden blurts, and obvious pauses as if for effect.</p>
+
+<p>Translated into a rapid tempo of words, his song might sound
+like this: “Jeremy! Jeremy! Ready here. Right here. Wide awake.
+Wide awake. Chipper! Chipper! Shake a leg. Up! Up! Here’s
+a joker. This way. This way.” ... an interpretation which
+probably makes me as ridiculous as he intended, if he is a serious
+humorist. In the middle of this exhortation I hear a comic little
+“Cucaracha!” or quite a good imitation of a whippoorwill, as
+if he saved his more exact skills for a casual moment.</p>
+
+<p>The thrasher may be just as conditioned in his joy and
+utterances as any other bird. His variations on the general bird
+theme may come out abstractly, without any attempt at parody,
+a limited kind of talent, and yet when I listen to it, it seems
+to me that the bounds of song are being just a bit extended. As
+compared with other birds, the blackpoll warbler for example,
+with only a thin, high note, reminiscent of insect sounds in the
+summer, the thrasher has range and repertoire. He is vocal and
+conversational, even to the extent of tempting at least one human
+animal into reading words and intentions into his performance;
+and this, from a bird’s point of view, might mean that I was
+extending my limits too.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Facets of Expression</i></h3>
+
+<p>I make a foolish game out of attaching words to a bird’s
+song. Perhaps it is a way of trying to bring the two of us together
+in familiarity, but to give nature its true respect, every song, color,
+and action is its own master. Understanding, the best human
+means of communicating with other lives, might be most effectively
+attained by keeping a certain distance.</p>
+
+<p>That is the way I feel when I see the alert, tough little
+chickadees coming up to the house and picking up tufts of hair,
+rope, or wool, to use as nesting material. They set to work carding
+it so busily and self-sufficiently that I am restrained from an
+impulse to join in and look things over. I walk off to my own
+business.</p>
+
+<p>A pair of tree swallows is trying out a birdhouse, and when I
+stay too long in the vicinity, they are given an extra reason for
+a negative decision as to its merits and fly into the distance. This
+is a time not to meddle, tease, interfere, or try to imitate what
+cannot be imitated.</p>
+
+<p>From that point of view the life of May, free of human
+embrace, seems full of wonderful languages, still to be learned,
+and they are not confined to the uses of sound. Isn’t a flower
+or wing or new leaf articulate? I watch a mourning cloak
+butterfly that flits and floats overhead and then lands on a bare
+patch of ground in the sunlight. The broad wings fold and show
+their dark, woody, shadow side, with little white circles on them,
+their pattern and texture a blend of weather-beaten, drab forest
+floors, suggestive of niches and corners of leaf-decaying darkness.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
+Then the wings spread out again. They are a light mahogany-red
+with shades of brown, bordered by black lines, and on their
+bottom edge they are rimmed with little round dashes of purplish
+blue, like small windows into the sky, and the body is green.
+The butterfly’s antennae have white tips. It has fine hairs on its
+back. Then, with a papery, fluttering sound, it is up with startling
+quickness from the ground; just out of reach, in the frequent
+manner of butterflies, as many a boy with a net has learned
+from hard experience.</p>
+
+<p>What can we say about the American robin that has not already
+been said? All the same, I know him not. He still appears on
+the spring grass like a stranger. He lands there, then pauses, holding
+up his head for a long time. No worms? Then he runs off on his
+robin procedure, abandoning one area for another, where he pauses
+rigidly again, then cocks his head. The worm is found. This is
+assessable behavior. By this stiff pausing and then tripping ahead,
+a robin is apparently able to detect the slightest motion on the
+ground. We don’t need to look for the emotion or consciousness
+of a robin beyond the actions to which it is stimulated by the
+immediate need for food. Utility is all. Or so I have been told.
+But the robin, like other birds, expresses its relation to the earth
+in terms of a set of responses which come from a head I know
+nothing about. It is an organism with much higher bodily temperatures
+than ours, with a much faster heart beat, burning up energy
+at a faster rate. Its experiences are entirely different. Down there,
+on that bird level, what is happening? What kind of awareness does
+it have, what kind of close, felt proximity to the stirring ground,
+the shadows, the lightly running wind?</p>
+
+<p>Even the flowers, as if they were special custodians of those
+fires of light that run through May, seem to express more than
+the value we have given them. Trim little violets, white, pale blue,
+or lilac in color, or pink lady’s-slippers blossom out and mark their
+separate places in the sun with beautiful emphasis. Each is significant.
+Each is inviolate. And, in a sense, are they not full of motion?
+In their growth, their seeding, their provision for continuity and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
+change of place, are they not free to run away? They fly in the
+winds. They grow and they fight for life.</p>
+
+<p>Tiny white chickweed flowers begin to mantle some of our barren
+areas, and the plants are so quick and strong in growth, establishing
+themselves as if they had too little time, that they seem to
+be partners with fish that school and spawn in the sea, or nesting
+birds.</p>
+
+<p>All the new tumult and excitement combines in what we call
+spring. Each facet of it, each life in its own right contributes
+originality, and there are communications between them which
+surprise us—distant, true, and unerring. I bear witness to them,
+without quite understanding. One late evening on the shore, the
+tide pools stand out like mirrors along dark sands. The air is cool.
+Light sparkles over the receding tide. The distances there, as always,
+seem sparse and immeasurable. I hear a sharp, wild cry, and then
+another, perhaps a quarter of a mile farther on. Two yellowlegs, I
+should judge. Theirs are the only sounds, besides the continuous
+breathing of the sea. Did one respond to the other? Whether it did
+or not, they are linked. The curved coast line is their orientation,
+and the wide evening a plane for their cries, and in the play of
+spring’s advance it is a recognition, vibrant and unique.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps we come to some such realization of the greatness of
+nature’s expression in spite of ourselves. We measure natural
+phenomenon with marvelous accuracy. We are always busy at it,
+cropping or adding names, readjusting interpretations, adding, subtracting,
+multiplying, and dividing. The miracle is still untouched.
+Why is the mindless flower less than ourselves and our assessments,
+or the bird’s reaction less remarkable? That which is without mind
+is not necessarily heedless. Perhaps spring is a manifestation of
+mind; and its lives, all those facets of motion and beauty, behave in
+its context as familiars. Each responds in terms of an alliance intrinsically
+known, as with the birds along their shore.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Travel</i></h3>
+
+<p>For all my wonder at it, spring brings me into direct and
+close enjoyment. Down the distance to blue water, the young oak
+leaves in delicate silvery greens and pinks, swing in the full south
+wind. There is a wave of baltimore orioles. They seem to have
+arrived all at once. They dive through the tree tops and chase
+each other, living jubilations in orange and black, shouting out
+what sounds to me like: “This is the birthday of the Lord, Oh
+Joy!” Then a scarlet tanager appears, silently perching on a
+pink-leaved oak. It has so blinding and brilliant a color as to make
+no sense in terms of camouflage, or environmental adaptation,
+unless like the oriole, it is a treetop, sun-high bird, fitted to the
+colors of the sun, half tropical. Now it seems like a gift of extravagance.</p>
+
+<p>Crane flies and gnats are swarming. Moths crowd the windows
+at night. The ground stirs with beetles and spiders. I watch a
+bumblebee digging a tunnel. Every minute or so a tiny yellow pile
+of sand appears at the surface and then tumbles down, pushed
+back by the bee, which half emerges, giving a little whining buzz,
+like a grunt of exertion, and then disappears down its hole again.</p>
+
+<p>Toward evening I see a red-wing blackbird on the far side of
+a cranberry bog, epaulets ablaze against the low sun. It is attacking
+two impervious crows sitting on a tree, who must have just made a
+meal of red-wing eggs. It flies over and around them, back and
+forth, vainly, hopelessly.</p>
+
+<p>A few terns, newly arrived, are courting on the sand flats
+beyond the shore. With light, airy grace, a male flies above a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
+female waiting on the sand, offering her a silvery fish. Then they
+both fly up and glide together across the blue and white reaches
+below them. Inland, two iridescent tree swallows go through similar
+formalities. A female perches on an oak post and the male
+constantly dips down and flutters above her, barely touching, performing
+a kind of aerial caress. Then he flies up and around her,
+with a chittering, trilling, clicking kind of sound. She flies down
+and pecks at the ground. Then both of them, in the growing darkness
+limber with new green and shimmering silver, wheel low
+together, in wide circles against the dying sun.</p>
+
+<p>What I see, what becomes easy to see for any eyes, in the gentle
+month of May, is an approach to prodigality. We are not yet bitten,
+dulled, and pounded down by population, of insects or men. Blistering
+droughts have not come yet, nor excessive rain; but all the
+component parts of nature run ahead. Through the alternately
+warm and cool sweeps of weather, there is a steady pattern of
+growth. This is the season of progression, of fanning out, and as
+with the trees that have formed next year’s buds, of provision for
+the future. The oak leaves which are limp and tiny to begin with,
+develop gradually. They toughen and mature toward their summer
+function of receiving and storing. They stretch, darken, and
+shine, turning from tenderness to ability. So it is with the fish
+hatched from the egg, or nesting birds, or the grass in the ground.
+To have had a son born this month, as we did, is much in keeping.</p>
+
+<p>Birth is now the rule. I smell a sweet salt air. White petals
+drop gently to the ground. Birds, trees, and plants, life in the
+ground below them, are sprung by a constructive light. To follow
+spring is to make use of yourself. Join and be. Here is as much
+expanding energy as the human spirit could desire. Aspiration
+meets its counterparts, on all sides. If, as man says, he represents
+a climax of sensitivity in the evolutionary sense, then let him
+now employ his consciousness for all it is worth, and not delay.</p>
+
+<p>Spring is loud and rich in its coming, but it is exact too, with
+a sustained propriety. Each life is in its place, its shade or full
+light. Each, held in the general change and roaming, to its necessity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
+Fragile star flowers and wind flowers bloom in the shade of
+a wood of beech trees, while out on the open slopes and fields
+the beach plum bushes are heavy with fat white blossoms, inviting
+the sun’s full strength.</p>
+
+<p>In that valley where the alewives run, a narrow cut between
+low hills once made by melt waters from a glacier, and joining
+fresh-water ponds to Cape Cod Bay, there is now such a variety
+of life in such a variety of places as to challenge travel in all the
+senses. It reaches from the fresh-water ponds with their muddy
+shallows where pickerel weed begins to put up its stalks, painted
+turtles sun themselves on rocks out of the water, and sunfish make
+their nests along the sandy edges—from the pond waters gently
+lapping and smooth surfaces skidded by the wind—all the way
+through tidal marshes to the sea whose massive motion stands
+beyond us. Each area, first the ponds, then the brook, as it cascades
+down rocky slopes, turning as it winds through valley reaches into a
+creek, and then a tidal estuary, meeting the sand flats on the bay
+shore, each definite part of land or shore, has its newly active,
+co-ordinated riches. In the upper end of the valley, just below the
+pond outlet where fish ladders are crowded with migrating alewives,
+there is a wild and loud screaming of gulls. They wheel
+constantly over the stream, and crowds of them settle down on
+the water, quarreling over feasts of fish. Below them, black-crowned
+night herons bob and stand tall in a grove of pitch pines. When
+startled, they cluck and squawk like so many women over a
+scandal. When one of them flies too close to the herring gulls, it
+is chased away.</p>
+
+<p>Two upland plovers skim in fast, crying high. A black duck
+whirs up, showing the white under its wings. The land at the
+edge of the marsh is full of yellowthroats, warblers with a quick,
+slurred call: “Weewiticha, weewiticha, weewiticha,” as it sounds to
+me, and sometimes a softer “Chichibee, chichibee, chichibee.” I
+watch one of these trim birds. It has a yellow breast and yellow
+head masked distinctively with black. It lands in the leaves, whips
+around, flits, quick and alert. Its colors fit with shade and sunlight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
+as though it had been conceived with them—a definite dash of
+light. In the stream, as it winds down toward salt water, subject to
+the rise and fall of the tide, small groups of alewives run quickly
+and persistently through the weaving currents, heading up toward
+gulls and then the nets and fishways beyond. I feel energy and
+motion demanding me. Seen or unseen, a flying, starting, striding,
+swimming, and inviting, makes of the present and its short lives
+an endlessness.</p>
+
+<p>It is low tide where the channel meets the shore. Warm, hazy
+air rises over the bare landscape into an empty, chalky-blue sky.
+But the wide-ribbed sands are run over lightly by gold braided
+waters, light catchers full of motion, flexing and rippling. Crustaceans
+dart through them. Periwinkle tracks straggle across the
+sands, and the empty shells of razor clams litter the surface, along
+with the worm cases stuck with shells, seaweed and grains of sand,
+protruding above it; and there are black horseshoe crabs partly
+dug in, waiting for the tide to turn. The three-toed tracks of shore
+birds are everywhere, and farther out, through a light wind, a
+rushing sea sound, I can hear gulls calling low, muttering among
+themselves, and the unmistakable harsh cry of a tern.</p>
+
+<p>Sanderlings, black-bellied plovers, ruddy turnstones, are dipping
+up and down, scuttling, or tripping ahead as they feed. In
+the distance the turnstones, mottled black and brown, with short
+red legs, look a little like quail.</p>
+
+<p>Two herring gulls are pulling hard at a sand shark, stranded
+by a tide, or perhaps killed by some fishing boat when it was
+brought up in the nets. They work at it furiously, tugging and
+tearing from both sides, since the sand shark’s hide is like sandpaper
+and many times as thick and tough. When I come up, I can
+see that they have not managed to do much more than tear out
+some of the flesh from its head and neck. Judging by the tracks
+on the sand, they must have been hauling it around for some time.</p>
+
+<p>Far far out, I thought I saw a man digging for clams on the
+flats, but after walking for half a mile in that direction, I am
+astonished to see a yearling deer starting in a leisurely way toward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>
+the land. It had probably browsed its way out, nibbling at bits of
+tender seaweed, licking salt, encountering no danger in the expansive
+room that borders land and sea. Now, with the motion of
+its long legs showing in all detail as I have never seen them in
+fields or woods, the deer starts to run slowly, with an almost loose
+loping. It stops, looks around uneasily, and then the legs unlimber
+again, but hesitantly. It looks suddenly in my direction; and
+bounds and bucks away, its legs now working with tense speed.
+Through my field glasses I find a man and a boy on the beach.
+Seeing them, the animal changes course, gathers more speed, and
+when it reaches the shore, dashes up the sloping beach and disappears
+into a green line of shrubs and low trees.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i184" style="max-width: 102.25em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i184.jpg" alt="Deer">
+</figure>
+
+<p>The separations on these sand flats are vast. Where the narrow
+inland water course issues out, nothing is so well defined as space.
+For the variety of action here and in thousands of miles of deep
+water beyond, range is the rule, and the brook leads to the sea as
+all things lead to each other. Our meetings have scarcely begun.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pgs 187-188]</span></p>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="June"><i>June</i></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span></p>
+<h3><i>The Garden</i></h3>
+
+<p>“June, June, I beg your pardon, for walking in your garden”
+is a phrase from an old song, which expresses the delicacy you
+might feel on some moonlit night about treading a path through
+fragile shadows and flowers, or intruding by day on their young
+beauty. The song expresses it succinctly; but the fact of the matter
+is that the June garden is suddenly so rich and widespread that
+there are no paths to walk on. It is unavoidable. I find myself
+wondering how it happened—how it happened that I now take it
+for granted. My small daughter asked me the other day whether or
+not the trees wore leaves in the wintertime. She was not quite
+sure. We have come back to fruition unawares.</p>
+
+<p>The effort has been made, the strength achieved. In the past
+three months we have gone from death to birth, to unfettered
+growth, and have already forgotten what a great and elaborate
+process it was. I can remember—or I have it in writing (the aid to
+memory)—that on the twenty-fifth of March there was a light
+snow in the morning, and that the temperature was well below
+freezing, with strong north winds all day. The significance of the
+twenty-fifth comes from its often being used as an average date
+for the first sound of the spring peepers. That day the whole idea
+seemed impossible. And yet they sang, two evenings later. Of
+course the whole year is the scene of birth and growth. Spring is
+not the sole custodian of arrival. There are flowers that bloom in
+the autumn. But that was our last beginning, in immediate terms.
+We have lived through what followed with only the scantiest kind
+of recognition, to arrive now with a great new crowd of shapes and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
+sounds filling the distance, in the muscular swing of light. Flowery
+grasses, wild flowers like vetch, daisies, coreopsis, buttercups, and
+hundreds of others, head up, shoot forth, dance in the sun and
+compete with one another for living space—part of the rush and
+race of life we take for granted. The fact that we do take it for
+granted may be the best proof of our deep connection with it,
+as with all the natural rounds of the year. We breathe and give
+birth and die in terms of the same force as these surroundings. It is
+less articulate with us than realized. The new measures have a
+steady underlying order which pulses in us like the tides. So I suddenly
+look around me and find the whole earth peopled with motion
+and quantity, searching and adjustments, and I find it familiar.</p>
+
+<p>In the warm air the land seems bound together by a whir
+ticked off in the grass by field crickets, lighted at night by the slow-dancing
+fireflies, intensified on the millions of new leaf surfaces,
+petals, and stems, where insects alight, crawl, and eat, many races
+pursuing their separate ways, aligned with thousands of life communities
+in function and in act.</p>
+
+<p>June has gone green, with a staggering assumption of authority.
+The dry land ferns stretch stiff and wide like fans. The huckleberry
+bushes are springing with light green. The oaks heave and
+rise with their bounty of fresh leaves. Meadows along the shore
+are green with samphire; and marsh grasses, still low, looking close-cropped
+above the dark peat or through rushing waves at high tide.</p>
+
+<p>On the lee side of a stone jetty thrusting out from the shore
+the water is full of plankton. Tiny marine animals, like barnacle
+larvae, copepods, baby jellyfish, are being gently carried and
+lifted by the surf. They are whirled and drifted in the water as it
+swells and ebbs. There is a beautiful symmetry in these fragile,
+transparent animals. I notice tiny beads of air along the sides of
+some of the jellyfish.</p>
+
+<p>In some inland waters joined by inlets to the sea, there are
+massive numbers of adult jellyfish at this time of year, pulsing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
+slowly through green waters, like transparent animal flowers. The
+riches of the water, fresh or salt, are immeasurable.</p>
+
+<p>More and more adult alewives are returning to the sea after
+spawning in ponds and lakes, running back through marsh lands
+filled with cattails, wild iris, rushes, and arrowheads. Behind them
+they leave their progeny, which have in fact been hatching out for
+the past two months, and are gradually becoming so numerous as
+to interfere with the sport of fishing. These “bait fish” feed bass,
+pickerel, and perch, which now refuse to react to a mere fly or
+worm, having more than enough to eat.</p>
+
+<p>There are no waters, no wood or square yard of ground not
+sounding and moving with new life. A wild readiness, a fluency is
+here. Within its terrestrial order and confinement everything seems
+incalculably bold. Now is the time to run ahead. Now, even for
+our special race, is the time to take the necessary risk of new connections,
+new affinities. This is a world of alliances.</p>
+
+<p>I walk through a wood of trees—which might be in Cape
+Cod, Japan, or Siberia—their gray trunks spotted with dancing
+shadows, a naked wealth in motion, thinking that a man might
+find himself for the first time in this company, not because of
+would-be similarities—sap and blood, branches and arms—but because
+of a context which they share. I am an organism that can
+make a choice. The tree is not; nor can it suffer. To simplify the
+matter too much, I am an animal. The tree is a plant. But in the
+whole environment, with its intertwining events, its varying energies,
+each form of life joins and takes part. In this wood, while the
+wind blows across us and yellow light dances through, I think that
+even a man and trees, with their vastly different responses, may be
+together, players in a sunlight game.</p>
+
+<figure class="figcenter illowp45" id="i190" style="max-width: 105.0625em;">
+ <img class="w100" src="images/i190.jpg" alt="">
+</figure>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>Room to Spare</i></h3>
+
+<p>June is a fullness. There is no part of land and shore not
+imbued with warmth and covered with manifestations of strength
+and capacity, but the season moves on. It changes to new measures
+continually, beautiful in substance but hard to grasp, like a flock
+of sanderlings swinging and spinning in unison along the bright
+sands, or a school of fish. How do they keep together? What is
+their communication? Even a forest of apparently rigid trees has
+a coherence and order of its own, perhaps a sensibility, since it
+goes through all periods of existence. Everywhere I look there is
+spacing, and at the same time mutual attraction, in rhythmic
+display, as though the laws of space were inherent in every action
+and bound in every organism. The play of the universe is what I
+sense in its living instruments, and my own, often borrowed, interpretations
+stop far short of its magnitude.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the whole possible range of communication (and it
+seems to me to go beyond possibility) each species embodies a
+special response. Its senses react in a unique and selective way toward
+its surroundings. It is true of the frog. What does it hear
+that we cannot? It is true of the fish. How does it orient itself in
+the water? What does it feel? What explains the sensitivity of some
+plants to touch? Each have motions, and in a sense languages, of
+their own.</p>
+
+<p>How can I understand the hundreds of moths that crowd the
+screen door at night? They have all manner of shapes. When I
+shine my flashlight on them their eyes glow with an amber fire.
+They flutter against the screen, and when I turn the inside light<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
+off, fly away immediately. This is a sensitivity to light and darkness
+that has its parallels in the butterflies attracted to flowers of a
+particular color. They are selective in their behavior and perhaps
+restricted at the same time. And yet, huddled, crawling, landing,
+and flying off, concentrated in numbers as they are, they suggest a
+dark realm of action and context to me. In spite of their reactions
+their terms are unknown. It is these untouched areas which must
+attract any man who begins to be aware of them—as though we
+ourselves had something in us not yet understood. Where the
+mystery is, may be the reality.</p>
+
+<p>What we see, even from the outside looking in, is rhythmic
+performance, not a series of static events. Balance and rhythm are
+the rules of action, understood in depth by moth or fish. Each
+race, unknown to the other, plays its own game, follows its own
+senses, and yet is in balance with the rest of life. The rules of
+natural abundance are the rules of space—not almost constant
+destruction and collision between living things but obedience to
+their given orbits.</p>
+
+<p>Many people have the idea, perhaps because of a human fascination
+with violent events, that nature is compounded of just such
+rigidities—dog eat dog, or tiger eat horse—or obversely, that nothing
+happens at all. Nature is either a menace or a great bore. Could
+I expect, going to some pond or water hole concentrated with life
+to find all kinds of mutual slaughter going on? At the edge of any
+small pond I see action enough this time of year. Many tadpoles
+hurry off in all directions at my footfall. I hear a bullfrog’s noble
+plucked bass sounding among the pickerel weed, while dark gray
+catbirds cry in thickets along the shore. A great antediluvian animal,
+a snapping turtle, with a fat black shell, a thick, fat head and
+neck, and large lidded eyes like a dog, climbs out of the water to
+lay its eggs on a sandy bank above. Its movements are slow and
+massive, each leg lifted as it goes. Only a sudden, lunging, upward
+snap as I tease it with a stick, shows what quick ferocity it is capable
+of. In the still pond waters there are schools of tiny, newly hatched
+fish, big-eyed, big-headed, with minute pin-sized bodies, running<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
+and twitching in rhythmic solidarity. A yellow perch runs by, and
+then a horned pout roves through the fry with apparent disregard.
+It passes near a sunfish nest, a little round, cleared depression on
+the bottom. The sunfish sallies after it in a short dash and then
+returns to hover over its nest, its fringed tail waving gently. In
+spite of our expectations, any aggression here is latent rather than
+actual, and need, it is clear, has room and time to spare.</p>
+
+<p>Co-ordination is intrinsic to the life of an environment, acted
+upon by every predator. There will be no fight between the sunfish
+and the horned pout, but the sunfish has affirmed its ancient rights
+to the territory that comprises its nest. It is bold in defense of its
+home, up to the point, presumably, that it goes beyond a boundary
+which its feelings establish for it. I am reminded of those birds,
+like the herring gulls and their “threat postures” (described by
+N. K. Tinbergen in <i>The Herring Gull’s World</i>, 1954) assumed
+when two birds defend their respective positions on either side of
+a boundary invisible to us but strongly felt by them. In these cases
+a fight may never result, because the two alternate drives of defense
+and aggression cancel each other out. What the trained observer
+sees as an indication of what is going on are “behavior patterns,”
+types of physical action that show him what this gull communication
+might mean. In any case, up and down the scale of life is
+force and counterforce, action and reaction, in a balance that is
+understood in as many ways as there are species.</p>
+
+<p>The lusty month of June is made up of all its encounters,
+many of them savage in isolation; but we may look for Roman
+circuses in vain. Wait all day and no life seems to devour another.
+Wait all year and you may never see the fight you are looking for.
+Now and then to be sure, as with an abundance of fish and
+their marauding predators, you can see savagery and greed confined,
+but even so the lesson is the same. It is not killing, eating,
+and aggression which seem paramount but an over-all rhythm and
+balance in which they are only elements. Later on, between July
+and December, the young alewives hatched out this spring in
+pond waters will start returning to the sea. I have often seen them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
+as they go down the fish ladders by which their spawning parents
+came up. Perhaps through some attraction to the water’s force
+where it spills down hard over the concrete rims of each pool in the
+ladder, the fingerlings mass and circle before dropping back downstream.
+It is here that a number of eels, some of them of large size,
+coil and slither through the water, and eat large quantities of fish.
+Eels are largely nocturnal in habit, but they do go through periods
+of feeding by day. Sometimes they act like eating machines, methodically
+grabbing one little fish after another; but the alewives
+continually swim over them, unregarding. Where the fish idle
+in the stream below, in less turbulent, clearer water, perfectly
+capable of seeing any eels lying in wait for them, they are in no
+way affected, so far as I can see. The eels themselves, lying on
+the stream bottom for long periods after eating, pay no attention
+while the little alewives swim over them. Here is a strange relation
+between enemies.</p>
+
+<p>It is perfectly true that a young alewife may not know an eel
+from a stick unless it is directly attacked, being in some respects
+oblivious to much of anything except the need to migrate to salt
+water. And yet the point is not that they are “stupid,” but that
+their crowd lives demand a cohesive rhythm, sensitive enough in
+action, which is paramount to all risks they encounter. It is in fact
+their main protection. They school and eat. They school and escape.
+They school and perpetuate themselves. The solitary alewife
+is lost. These fish move and intercommunicate in a frame of continuity
+to which they are forever held. But can we call it a restriction?
+Its terms may be quite invisible to us.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span></p>
+
+
+<h3><i>The Binding Rain</i></h3>
+
+<p>So this is, or was, Cape Cod, as June booms with fruition. The
+nights throb; and on a clear one how the long frames of the stars
+line up overhead! There is no end of internment, no end of use
+and opening out.</p>
+
+<p>It is not the place I came to, out of the city, though its shape,
+like a giant curved arm, or fish hook lying out in the Atlantic, is
+the same. Its oak trees have grown, even in the comparatively
+few years I have lived here. The old, gray-shingled houses are still
+in evidence, but there are many more new ones, seemingly temporary
+as this age goes. The shores are crowded, beginning toward
+the end of June. We are scrambling to take advantage of our
+summer economy while it lasts, although the buzz saw sounds the
+year through, as well as the chickadees, building motels, summer
+cottages, gas stations, houses for the retired. Cape Cod still has a
+certain itinerant quality, which may ally it to its more seagoing
+past.</p>
+
+<p>In my own terms the Cape is not the same. I have outlived
+my dependence on its past. I go by the seventeenth- and eighteenth-century
+gravestones with less interest. The “old characters”
+are not around to talk to any more. I am not quite so fascinated by
+grown-over wagon tracks as I used to be. Something pleasant is
+lost—even a blessed continuity. Still, I have learned to look for
+another, which has no particular choice as to place, joining them
+all.</p>
+
+<p>This is not just “natural history” I have found, unless you are
+also willing to call it “natural mystery.” This is life, or death-in-life,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span>
+as well as “nature.” In any case it is bountiful, or niggardly,
+relentless, terrible, but always at hand. Only walk out and see.
+Cape Cod is rife with unknown lives (and what I know about
+its ocean waters is not worth mentioning). Where do we begin?
+With a first question perhaps. To make it is to recover from being
+afraid of getting or giving the wrong answer, a step toward knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>I have not learned much about cell structure, or the delicate
+co-ordination of organisms in their environment, or some of those
+remarkable mechanisms that trigger action in certain plants or animals
+of land and sea; but I have made that first step.</p>
+
+<p>I stand by some pond, wondering how deep it is. Everything
+around me says, in comparative silence: “As deep as you make it,”
+and I have no need to think my questions will delay the source
+that leads them on.</p>
+
+<p>The rolling energies of nature remind us of our own potentialities.
+In a small country field is all existence and its hazards.
+Ponderous storms, killing balances of cold and heat, great rains or
+droughts, hang over the needs of its competitive inhabitants. A
+natural, unimpeachable violence wipes out untold numbers, or
+holds them to its order. And yet the plants and animals themselves
+that endure, survive, and die prove an essential vigor in the
+process. It is not only a matter of “food gathering” and “competition”
+for them. They fight the winds, in rhythmic unity. They
+are made to face the universe, with the universe inside them.
+Their motions, their changing adaptation to circumstance, are also
+their great self-expenditure. Live and be finished off, but above all
+live!</p>
+
+<p>This Cape Cod, this special piece of America, has its unexampled
+strength and a “progress” which will not take second
+place to our own. Sun and rain, the capacities of earth, the mindless
+ways of the flower, the strange and short sensitivities of the
+insects in their other world, the brooding sea in its ominous tidal
+balance held by moon and turning globe, all this matrix of energy
+has its standards and its abiding needs.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
+
+<p>It rains steadily as the tourists begin to drive down the Cape
+in ever increasing numbers, thus abashing their spirits. Rain is a
+nuisance. It keeps us in and deprives us of perpetual warmth and
+light. If there were no rain? Drought is only on the surface. Water
+comes from pipes, the way milk comes from refrigerator cars.</p>
+
+<p>But the rain will not be stopped. Clean, cool, straight falling,
+pattering on multitudinous leaves, it insists on its own power and
+propriety. There is no wind. The calm gray sky is gently, loosely
+moving, but held dead center with its riches of rain. The fall is
+steady and fast above the treetops, with single drops ticking off
+from each waxen leaf, sliding down the pine needles to end at their
+tips in brilliant crystal eyes. With a thin long seething it spits and
+spats and trickles on, pausing occasionally, then putting forth
+again. The water lands on the dead leaf floor under the trees, or
+thick beds of needles, sliding and soaking through, making gradual
+displacements between litter and soil, stirring gently, providing
+the life of earth its refreshment and guaranteeing its sustenance.</p>
+
+<p>Between pond lilies and reeds the rain spatters the fresh water.
+It changes the lakes and ponds as it changes the earth. The
+water level moves up and down from year to year depending on
+the rainfall. In a pond it will move up the rim and cover the roots
+of overhanging shrubs—blueberries, alders, or swamp azaleas—then,
+after a year or two, it will recede again, revealing a narrow beach.
+During the years there will be continual, subtle alterations in the
+nature of plants around the pond, and in the habits of the animals
+dependent on them.</p>
+
+<p>The rain falls through woodland bogs, and open swamps. It
+trickles down bare slopes and thicket-studded valleys. It runs over
+incessantly moving brooks and streams that bear it toward the sea.
+Its drops bounce with silvery emphasis across the waters of the
+slow, gray tidal inlets. They sound like a breath along the sands,
+and while arrowlike terns are excitedly diving for fish, they pock
+the silver-streaked levels of the bay, and then are lost to sight,
+pattering out over massive waters.</p>
+
+<p>Even and sweet the descent, calm and clean its provision. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
+rain thrusts in and guarantees immediate growth. It binds the
+birds to the insects to the plants, to sun and air, breaking down
+elements in the soil, loosening it for billions of its travelers, making
+sure of sustenance in that release. Rain sound in June, which at
+other seasons may cut like a knife, is one of beatitude. I listen. I
+accept. It carries me on. Out of the hollow mind of the universe
+what conceptions may come in the millions and millions of years
+ahead? How many, in the next spit of timelessness, will fall prey
+to disaster? Both calm and calamity are in the cards. This is
+acceptable enough to life in nature. And who am I to claim some
+vain detachment?</p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="transnote">
+<p class="center"><b>Transcriber’s Notes</b></p>
+<p>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+<p>Perceived typographical errors have been silently corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrations have been moved nearer to the text to which they refer.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76613 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #76613
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76613)