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diff --git a/8682-h/8682-h.htm b/8682-h/8682-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..25d5bf9 --- /dev/null +++ b/8682-h/8682-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,6806 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<meta name="generator" content="HTML Tidy, see www.w3.org"> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content= +"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<title>The Naturalist on the Thames</title> +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- +body {margin-left:5%; margin-right:10%;Font-Family: Arial, Helvetica, Sans-Serif;Color: #000000;Background-Color: #FFFFFF;} +H1{Font-Size: 160%;Font-Weight: bold;} +H2{Font-Size: 140%;Font-Weight: bold;} +HR{Width: 30%;} +A:link {color: #660000;Background-Color: #FFFFFF;} +A:visited {color: #660066;Background-Color: #FFFFFF;} +A:hover {color: #000000;Background-Color: #FFFFFF;} +A:active {color: #FF0000;Background-Color: #FFFFFF;} +P{Text-Align: justify;} +.fnsuper{Font-Size: 70%;Vertical-Align: top;} +.poetry{Margin-Left: 2em;} +.quoted{Margin-Left: 4em;} +.footnote{Font-Size: 90%;Margin-Left: 6em;} +.centered{Text-Align: center;Margin-Bottom: 2em;Margin-Top: 2em;} +.spaced{Text-Align: center;Margin-Top: 4em;} +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Naturalist on the Thames, by C. J. Cornish + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Naturalist on the Thames + +Author: C. J. Cornish + +Posting Date: April 5, 2014 [EBook #8682] +Release Date: August, 2005 +First Posted: July 31, 2003 +[Last updated: April 8, 2014] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE NATURALIST ON THE THAMES *** + + + + +Produced by Eric Eldred, Robert Connal and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team. + + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<p class="centered"><a name="foxflush"></a> <img class="centered" +src="images/fig01.png" width="597" height="947" alt= +"FOX FLUSHING PHEASANTS. +From a drawing by Lancelot Speed."></p> + +<h1 class="centered">THE NATURALIST ON THE THAMES</h1> + +<h2 class="centered">BY<br> +<br> +C.J. CORNISH, F.Z.S.</h2> + +<h2 class="spaced">PREFACE</h2> + +<p>Having spent the greater part of my outdoor life in the Thames +Valley, in the enjoyment of the varied interests of its natural +history and sport, I have for many years hoped to publish the +observations contained in the following chapters. They have been +written at different intervals of time, but always with a view to +publication in the form of a commentary on the natural history and +character of the valley as a whole, from the upper waters to the +mouth. For permission to use those which have been previously +printed I have to thank the editors and proprietors of the +<em>Spectator</em>, <em>Country Life</em>, and the <em>Badminton +Magazine</em>.</p> + +<p>C.J. CORNISH.</p> + +<p>ORFORD HOUSE,<br> +CHISWICK MALL.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced">CONTENTS</h2> + +<p><a href="#chapter1">THE THAMES AT SINODUN HILL</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter2">THE FILLING OF THE THAMES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter3">THE SHELLS OF THE THAMES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter4">THE ANTIQUITY OF RIVER PLANTS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter5">INSECTS OF THE THAMES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter6">"THE CHAVENDER OR CHUB"</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter7">THE WORLD'S FIRST BUTTERFLIES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter8">BUTTERFLY SLEEP</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter9">CRAYFISH AND TROUT</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter10">FOUNTAINS AND SPRINGS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter11">BIRD MIGRATION DOWN THE THAMES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter12">WITTENHAM WOOD</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter13">SPORT AT WITTENHAM</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter14">SPORT AT WITTENHAM +(<em>continued</em>)</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter15">A FEBRUARY FOX HUNT</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter16">EWELME--A HISTORICAL RELIC</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter17">EEL-TRAPS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter18">SHEEP, PLAIN AND COLOURED</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter19">SOME RESULTS OF WILD-BIRD +PROTECTION</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter20">OSIERS AND WATER-CRESS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter21">FOG AND DEW PONDS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter22">POISONOUS PLANTS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter23">ANCIENT THAMES MILLS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter24">THE BIRDS THAT STAY</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter25">ANCIENT HEDGES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter26">THE ENGLISH MOCKING BIRD</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter27">FLOWERS OF THE GRASS FIELDS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter28">RIVERSIDE GARDENING</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter29">COTTAGES AND CAMPING OUT</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter30">NETTING STAGS IN RICHMOND PARK</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter31">RICHMOND OLD DEER PARK</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter32">FISH IN THE LONDON RIVER</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter33">CHISWICK EYOT</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter34">CHISWICK FISHERMEN</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter35">BIRDS ON THAMES RESERVOIRS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter36">THE CARRION CROW</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter37">LONDON'S BURIED ELEPHANTS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter38">SWANS, BLACK AND WHITE</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter39">CANVEY ISLAND</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter40">THE LONDON THAMES AS A WATERWAY</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chapter41">THE THAMES AS A NATIONAL TRUST</a></p> + +<h2 class="spaced">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2> + +<p><a href="#foxflush">A FOX FLUSHING PHEASANTS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#wildduck">WILD DUCK</a></p> + +<p><a href="#wildduck">A FULL THAMES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#shells">SHELLS OF THE THAMES</a></p> + +<p><a href="#flowery">A FLOWERY BANK</a></p> + +<p><a href="#burrreed">BURR REED AND FLOWERING RUSH</a></p> + +<p><a href="#chub">A MONSTER CHUB</a></p> + +<p><a href="#butterfly">BUTTERFLIES AT REST</a></p> + +<p><a href="#trout">A TROUT</a></p> + +<p><a href="#otters">OTTERS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#otters">A WATERHEN ON HER NEST</a></p> + +<p><a href="#dabchick">A DABCHICK</a></p> + +<p><a href="#dabchick">A BADGER</a></p> + +<p><a href="#foxandcub">FOX AND CUB</a></p> + +<p><a href="#ewelme">EWELME POOL</a></p> + +<p><a href="#nightjar">A NIGHTJAR AND YOUNG ONE</a></p> + +<p><a href="#nightjar">A REED-BUNTING</a></p> + +<p><a href="#ossiers">PEELING OSIERS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#mill">BOTLEY MILL</a></p> + +<p><a href="#mill">EEL BUCKS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#orchis">ORCHIS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#violet">WATER VIOLET AND WILD IRIS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#stag">A NETTED STAG</a></p> + +<p><a href="#bream">BREAM AND ROACH</a></p> + +<p><a href="#grampus">A GRAMPUS AT CHISWICK</a></p> + +<p><a href="#smelts">SMELTS</a></p> + +<p><a href="#inn">THE LOBSTER SMACK INN, CANVEY ISLAND</a></p> + +<p><a href="#inn">THE STEPPING-STONES AT BENFLEET</a></p> + +<p><a href="#nets">HAULING THE NETS FOR WHITEBAIT</a></p> + +<p><a href="#boats">FISHING BOATS AT LEIGH</a></p> + +<h1 class="spaced">THE NATURALIST ON THE THAMES</h1> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter1">THE THAMES AT SINODUN +HILL</a></h2> + +<p>Fresh water is almost the oldest thing on earth. While the rocks +have been melted, the sea growing salter, and the birds and beasts +perfecting themselves or degenerating, the fresh water has been +always the same, without change or shadow of turning. So we find in +it creatures which are inconceivably old, still living, which, if +they did not belong to other worlds than ours, date from a time +when the world was other than it is now; and the fresh-water +plants, equally prehistoric, on which these creatures feed. +Protected by this constant element the geographical range of these +animals and plants is as remarkable as their high antiquity. There +are in lake Tanganyika or the rivers of Japan exactly the same +kinds of shells as in the Thames, and the sedges and reeds of the +Isis are found from Cricklade to Kamschatka and beyond Bering Sea +to the upper waters of the Mackenzie and the Mississippi. The +Thames, our longest fresh-water river, and its containing valley +form the largest natural feature in this country. They are an +organic whole, in which the river and its tributaries support a +vast and separate life of animals and plants, and modify that of +the hills and valleys by their course. Civil law has recognised the +Thames system as a separate area, and given to it a special +government, that of the Conservators, whose control now extends +from the Nore to the remotest springs in the hamlets in its +watershed; and natural law did so long before, when the valley +became one of the migration routes of certain southward-flying +birds. Its course is of such remote antiquity that there are those +who hold that its bed may twice have been sunk beneath the sea, and +twice risen again above the face of the waters. <a name="fnr1"></a> +<a href="#fn1" class="fnsuper">1</a> It has ever been a masterful +stream holding its own against the inner forces of the earth; for +where the chalk hills rose, silently, invisibly, in the long line +from the vale of White Horse to the Chilterns the river seems to +have worn them down as they rose at the crossing point at +Pangbourne, and kept them under, so that there was no barring of +the Thames, and no subsequent splitting of the barrier with gorges, +cliffs, and falls. Its clear waters pass from the oolite of the +Cotswolds, by the blue lias and its fossils, the sandstone rock at +Clifton Hampden, the gravels of Wittenham, the great chalk range of +the downs, the greensand, the Reading Beds, to the geological pie +of the London Basin, and the beds of drifts and brick earth in +which lie bedded the frames and fragments of its prehistoric +beasts. In and beside its valley are great woods, parks, downs, +springs, ancient mills and fortresses, palaces and villages, and +such homes of prehistoric man as Sinodun Hill and the hut remains +at Northfield. It has 151 miles of fresh water and 77 of tideway, +and is almost the only river in England in which there are islands, +the famous eyots, the lowest and largest of which at Chiswick +touches the London boundary.</p> + +<p>After leaving Oxford the writer has lived for many years +opposite this typical and almost unspoilt reach of the London +river, and for a considerable time shot over the estate on the +upper Thames of which Sinodun Hill is the hub and centre. This fine +outlier of the chalk, with its twin mount Harp Hill, dominates not +only the whole of the Thames valley at its feet, but the two cross +vales of the Thame and the Ock. On the bank opposite the Thame +joins the Isis, and from thence flows on the THAMES. Weeks and +months spent there at all seasons of the year gave even better +opportunities for becoming acquainted with the life of the Upper +Thames, than the London river did of learning what the tidal stream +really is and may become. Fish, fowl and foxes, rare Thames flowers +and shy Thames chub, butterflies, eel-traps, fountains and springs, +river shells and water insects, are all parts of the "natural +commodities" of the district. There is no better and more +representative part of the river than this. Close by is Nuneham, +one of the finest of Thames-side parks, and behind that the remains +of wild Oxfordshire show in Thame Lane and Clifton Heath. How many +centuries look down from the stronghold on Sinodun Hill, reckoning +centuries by human occupation, no one knows or will know. There +stands the fortress of some forgotten race, and below it the double +rampart of a Roman camp, running from Thame to Isis. Beyond is +Dorchester, the abbey of the oldest see in Wessex, and the Abbey +Mill. The feet of the hills are clothed by Wittenham Wood, and +above the wood stretches the weir, and round to the west, on +another great loop of the river, is Long Wittenham and its lovely +backwater. Even in winter, when the snow is falling like bags of +flour, and the river is chinking with ice, there is plenty to see +and learn, or in the floods, when the water roars through the +lifted hatches and the rush of the river throbs across the misty +flats, and the weeds and sedges smell rank as the stream stews them +in its mash-tub in the pool below the weir.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn1"></a> <a href="#fnr1">[1]</a> +Phillips, "Geology of Oxford and of the Valley of the Thames."</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter2">THE FILLING OF THE +THAMES</a></h2> + +<p>In the late autumn of 1893, one of the driest years ever known, +I went to the weir pool above the wood, and found the shepherd +fishing. The river was lower than had ever been known or seen, and +on the hills round the "dowsers" had been called in with their +divining rods to find the vanished waters.</p> + +<p>"Thee've got no water in 'ee, and if 'ee don't fill'ee avore New +Year, 'ee'll be no more good for a stree-um"! Thus briefly, to +Father Thames, the shepherd of Sinodun Hill. He had pitched his +float into the pool below the weir--the pool which lies in the +broad, flat fields, with scarce a house in sight but the lockman's +cottage--and for the first time on a Saturday's fishing he saw his +bait go clear to the bottom instead of being lost to view instantly +in the boiling water of the weir-pool. He could even see the broken +piles and masses of concrete which the river in its days of +strength had torn up and scattered on the bottom, and among them +the shoals of fat river fish eyeing his worm as critically as his +master would a sample of most inferior oats. Yet the pool was +beautiful to look upon. Where the water had sunk the rushes had +grown taller than ever, and covered the little sandbanks left by +the ebbing river with a forest of green and of red gold, where the +frost had laid its finger on them. In the back eddies and shallows +the dying lily leaves covered the surface with scales of red and +copper, and all along the banks teazles and frogbits, and brown and +green reeds, and sedges of bronze and russet, made a screen, +through which the black and white moorhens popped in and out, while +the water-rats, now almost losing the aquatic habit, and becoming +pedestrian, sat peeling rushes with their teeth, and eyeing the +shepherd on the weir. Even the birds seemed to have voted that the +river was never going to fill again, for a colony of sandpipers, +instead of continuing their migration to the coast, had taken up +their quarters on the little spits of mud and shingle now fringing +the weir-pool, and were flitting from point to point, and making +believe it was a bit of Pagham Harbour or Porchester Creek. On +every sunny morning monster spiders ran out from the holes and +angles of the weir-frame, and spun webs across and across the +straddling iron legs below the footbridge, right down to the +lowered surface of the water, which had so sunk that each spider +had at least four feet more of web than he could have reckoned upon +before and waxed fat on the produce of the added superficies of +enmeshed and immolated flies. So things went on almost till New +Year's Eve. The flats of the Upper Thames, where the floods get out +up the ditches and tributaries, and the wild duck gather on the +shallow "splashes" and are stalked with the stalking-horse as of +old, were as dry as Richmond Park, and sounded hollow to the foot, +instead of wheezing like a sponge. The herons could not find a meal +on a hundred acres of meadow, which even a frog found too dry for +him, and the little brooks and land-springs which came down through +them to the big river were as low as in June, as clear as a +Hampshire chalk stream, and as full of the submerged life of +plants. Instead of dying with the dying year at the inrush of cold +water brought by autumn rains, all the cresses, and tresses, and +stars, and tangles, and laced sprays of the miniature growth of the +springs and running brooks were as bright as malachite, though +embedded in a double line of dead white shivering sedge. And thus +the shortest day went by, and still the fields lay dry, and the +river shrank, and the fish were off the feed; and though murky +vapours hung over the river and the flats and shut out the sun, the +long-expected rains fell not until the last week's end of the year. +Then at last signs and tokens began by which the knowing ones +prophesied that there was something the matter with the weather. +The sheep fed as if they were not to have another bite for a week, +and bleated without ceasing, strange birds flew across the sky in +hurrying flocks, and in all the country houses and farmers' halls +the old-fashioned barometers, with their dials almost as big as our +eight-day clocks and pointers as long as a knitting-needle, began +to fall, or rather to go backwards, further than was ever recorded. +And whereas it is, and always has been, a fact well known to the +owners of these barometers that if they are tapped violently in the +centre of their mahogany stomachs the needle will jerk a little in +the direction of recovery, and is thereby believed to exercise a +controlling influence in the direction of better weather, the more +the barometers were tapped and thumped the more the needle edged +backwards, till in some cases it went down till it pointed to the +ivory star at the very bottom of the dial, and then struck work and +stuck there.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="wildduck"></a> <img src="images/fig02.png" +width="625" height="955" alt= +"WILD DUCK. +From a photograph by Charles Reid. +A FULL THAMES. +From a photograph by Taunt & Co."> +</p> + +<p>That night the storm began. To connoisseurs in weather in the +meteorological sense it was a joy and an ensample, for it was a +perfect cyclonic storm, exactly the right shape, with all its +little dotted lines of "isobars" running in ovals one inside +another. From another point of view it was the storm of an hour +spread over two days, so that there was plenty of time to see and +remember the normal ways of cyclones, which may be briefly +described as first a flush of heat whether in summer or winter, +then a furious wind, then hurrying clouds and much rain, with +changes of wind, then more clouds and more rain, then a "clearing +shower" with most rain, then a furling and brailing-up of the rain +clouds, splashes of blue in the sky, with nets of scud crossing +them, sudden gleams of sun, sudden cold, and perhaps a hail shower, +and then piercing cold and sunlight. All which things happened, but +took a long time about it. The storm began in the night, and howled +through the dark. The rain came with the morning; but it was the +"clearing shower," which lasted ten hours, which caused the filling +of the Thames. The wind still blew in furious gusts, but the rain +was almost too heavy to be moved. The sky was one dark, sombre +cloud, and from this the rain poured in slanting lines like pencils +of water. But across this blanket of cloud came darker, lower, and +wetter clouds, even more surcharged with water, from which the +deluge poured till the earth was white like glass with the spraying +drops. Out in the fields it was impossible to see through the rain; +but as the end of the column of cloud began to break and widen the +water could be seen in the act of passing from the land to the +river. On the fallows and under the fences all the surface earth +was beaten down or swept away. All seeds which had sunk naturally +below the surface were laid bare. Hundreds of sprouting horse +chestnuts, of sprouting acorns beneath the trees, thousands of +grains of fallen wheat and barley, of beans, and other seeds of the +farm were uncovered as if by a spade.</p> + +<p>Down every furrow, drain, watercourse, ditch, runnel, and +watercut, the turbid waters were hurrying, all with one common +flow, all with increasing speed, to the Thames. The sound of waters +filled the air, dropping, poppling, splashing, trickling, dripping +from leaves to earth, falling from bank to rills below, gurgling +under gate-paths, lapping against the tree-trunks and little ridge +piles in the brooks, and at last sweeping with a hushed content +into the bosom of Thames. And the river himself was good for +something more than a "stree-um." He was bank-full and sweeping on, +taking to himself on this side and on that the tributes of his +children, from which the waters poured so fast that they came in +almost clear, and the mingled waters in the river were scarcely +clouded in their flow. The lock-men rose by night and looked at the +climbing flood, and wakened their wives and children, and raised in +haste hatch after hatch of the weirs, and threw open locks and +gates. Windsor Weir broke, but the wires flashed the news on, and +the river's course was open, and after the greatest rain-storm and +the lowest barometer known for thirty years, the Thames was not in +flood, but only brimful; and once more a "river of waters."</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter3">THE SHELLS OF THE THAMES</a></h2> + +<p>Of the thousands who boat on the Thames during the summer few +know or notice the beauty of the river shells. They are among the +most delicate objects of natural ornament and design in this +country. Exquisite pattern, graceful shapes, and in some cases +lovely tints of colour adorn them. Nature has for once relaxed in +their favour her rigid rules, by which she turns out things of this +kind not only alike in shape, but with identical colour and +ornament. Among humming-birds, for instance, each bird is like the +other, literally to a feather. The lustre on each ruby throat or +amethyst wing shines in the same light with the same prismatic +divisions. But even in the London river, if you go and seek among +the pebbles above Hammersmith Bridge when the river is low, you may +find a score of <em>neretina</em> shells not one of which is +coloured like the rest or ornamented with exactly the same pattern, +yet each is fit to bejewel the coronet of some Titania of the +waters. A number of these tiny shells, gathered from below the +bridge, lie before the writer, set on black satin to display the +hues. They look at a little distance like a series of mixed +Venetian beads, but of more elegant form. From whichever side they +are seen, the curves are the perfection of flowing line. The +colouring and ornament of each is a marvel and delight. Some are +black, with white spots arranged in lines following the curves, and +with the top of the blunt spiral white. These "black-and-white +marble" patterns are followed by a whole series in which purple +takes the place of black, and the spots are modified into scales. +Then comes a row of rose-coloured shells, some with white +lance-heads, or scales, others with alternate bands of white scales +and white dots. Some are polished, others dull, some rosy pink, +others almost crimson. Some are marked with cream and purple like +the juice of black currants with cream in it. In some the scale +pattern changes to a chequer, some are white with purple zig-zags. +And lastly come a whole series in pale olive, and olive and cream, +in which the general colour is that of a blackcap's egg, and the +pattern made by alternate spots of olive and bands of cream. If +these little gems of beauty come out of the London river, what may +we not expect in the upper waters of the silver Thames? <a name= +"fnr2"></a> <a href="#fn2" class="fnsuper">1</a> A search in the +right places in its course will show. But these <em>neretinae</em> +are everywhere up to the source of the river, for they feed on all +kinds of decaying substances. If the pearl is the result of a +disease or injury, the beauty of the <em>neretina</em> is a product +or transformation from foul things to fair ones.</p> + +<p>As the Thames is itself the product and union of all its vassal +streams, an "incarnation" of all the rest, so in its bed it holds +all the shells collected from all its tributaries. Different tribes +of shells live in different waters. Some love the "full-fed river +winding slow," some the swift and crystal chalk-stream. Some only +flourish just over the spots where the springs come bubbling up +from the inner cisterns of earth, and breathe, as it were, the +freshness of these untainted waters; others love the rich, fat mud, +others the sides of wearings and piles, others the river-jungles +where the course is choked with weeds. But come what may, or +flourish where they please, the empty shells are in time rolled +down from trout-stream and chalk-stream, fountain and rill, +mill-pool and ditch, cress-bed and water-cut, from the springs of +the Cotswolds, the Chilterns, the downs, from the valleys of +Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Surrey, Gloucester, Oxford, and Essex, +into the Thames. Once there the river makes shell collections on +its own account, sorting them out from everything else except a bed +of fine sand and gravel, in which they lie like birds' eggs in bran +in a boy's cabinet, ready for who will to pick them up or sift them +out of it. These shell collections are made in the time of winter +floods, though how they are made or why the shells should all +remain together, while sticks, stones, and other rubbish are +carried away, it is impossible to say. They are laid on smooth +points of land round which the waters flow in shallow ripples. +Across the river it is always deep, swift, and dark, though the +sandbanks come in places near the surface, and in the shallows grow +water-crowfoot, with waving green hair under water, and white stems +above it. The clean and shining sand shelves down to the water's +edge, and continues below the surface. Here are living shells, or +shells with living fish in them. In the bright water lie hundreds +of the shells of the fresh-water mussels, the bearers of pearls +sometimes, and always lined with that of which pearls are made, the +lustrous nacre. The mealy masses of dry sand beyond the river's lip +are stuffed with these mussel shells. They lie all ways up, +endways, sideways, on their faces, on their backs. The pearl lining +shines through the sand, and the mussels gleam like silver spoons +under the water. They crack and crunch beneath your feet as you +step across to search the mass for the smaller and rarer shells. +Many of those in the water contain living mussels, yellow-looking +fat molluscs, greatly beloved of otters, who eat them as sauce with +the chub or bream they catch, and leave the broken shells of the +one by the half-picked bones of the other. There was a popular song +which had for chorus the question, "Did you ever see an oyster walk +upstairs?" These mussels <em>walk</em>, and are said to be +"tolerably active" by a great authority on their habits. They have +one foot, on which they travel in search of feeding ground, and +leave a visible track across the mud. There are three or four +kinds, two of which sometimes hold small pearls, while a third is +the pearl-bearer proper. <em>Unio pictorum</em> is the scientific +name of one, because the shells were once the cups in which the old +Dutch painters kept their colours, and are still used to hold +ground gold and silver for illuminating. The pearl-bearing mussel +is longer than the other kinds, flatter and darker, and the lining +of mother-of-pearl is equal to half the total thickness of the +shell. <a name="fnr3"></a> <a href="#fn3" class="fnsuper">2</a></p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="shells"></a> <img src="images/fig03.png" +width="908" height="652" alt= +"SHELLS OF THE THAMES. +From a photograph by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>Though not so striking from their size and pearly lustre, there +are many shells on the Thames sandbanks not less interesting and in +large numbers. Among these are multitudes of tiny fresh-water +cockle shells of all sizes, from that of a grain of mustard seed to +the size of a walnut, flat, curled shells like small ammonites, +fresh-water snail shells of all sizes, river limpets, +<em>neretinae</em>, and other and rounder bivalve shells allied to +the cockles. The so-called "snails" are really quite different from +each other, some, the <em>paludinas</em>, being large, +thick-striped shells, while the <em>limnaeas</em> are thin, more +delicately made, some with fine, pointed spiral tops, and others in +which the top seems to have been absorbed in the lower stories. +There are eight varieties of these <em>limnaeas</em> alone, and six +more elegant shells of much the same appearance, but of a different +race.</p> + +<p>The minute elegance of many of these shells is very striking. +Tiny <em>physas</em> and <em>succineas</em>, no larger than shot, +live among big <em>paludinas</em> as large as a garden snail, while +all sizes of the larger varieties are found, from microscopic atoms +to the perfect adult. Being water shells, and not such common +objects as land shells, these have no popular names. The river +limpets are called <em>ancylus fluviatilis</em>. Some are no larger +than a yew berry, and are shaped like a Phrygian cap; but they +"stick" with proper limpet-like tenacity. On the stems of +water-lilies, on piles, on weeds and roots in any shallow streams, +but always on the under side of the leaves, are the limpets of the +Thames. The small ammonite-like shells are called +<em>planorbis</em>, and like most of the others, belong also to the +upper tertiary fossils. They feed on the decaying leaves of the +iris and other water plants, and from the number of divisions on +the shell are believed to live for sometimes twenty years. Of the +many varieties, one, the largest, the horn-coloured +<em>planorbis</em>, emits a purple dye. Two centuries ago Lister +made several experiments in the hope that he might succeed in +fixing this dye, as the Tyrians did that of the murex, but in vain. +There are eleven varieties of this creature alone. It is easier to +find the shells than to discover the living creature in the river. +For many the deep, full river is not a suitable home; they only +come there as the water does, from the tributary streams. Far up in +some rill in the chalk, from the bed of which the water bubbles up +and keeps the stones and gravel bright, whole beds of little +pea-cockles may be found, lying in masses side by side, like seeds +sown in the water-garden of a nymph.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn2"></a> <a href="#fnr2">[1]</a> I +have a series of <em>neretina</em> shells from the Philippines, +much larger in size and brown in colour, in which many of the same +kinds of ornament occur.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn3"></a> <a href="#fnr3">[2]</a> A +fresh-water mussel shell from North America in my possession is +coloured green, and so marked and crimped as to resemble exactly a +patch of water-weed, such as grows on stones and piles.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter4">THE ANTIQUITY OF RIVER +PLANTS</a></h2> + +<p>In the still gossamer weather of late October, when the webs lie +sheeted on the flat green meadows and spools of the air-spiders' +silk float over the waters, the birds and fish and insects and +flowers of the best of England's rivers show themselves for the +last time in that golden autumn sun, and make their bow to the +audience before retiring for the year. All the living things become +for a few brief hours happy and careless, drinking to the full the +last drops of the mere joy of life before the advent of winter and +rough weather. The bank flowers still show blossom among the +seed-heads, and though the thick round rushes have turned to +russet, the forget-me-not is still in flower; and though the +water-lilies have all gone to the bottom again, and the swallows no +longer skim over the surface, the river seems as rich in life as +ever; and the birds and fish, unfrightened by the boat traffic, are +tamer and more visible.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="flowery"></a> <img src="images/fig04.png" +width="868" height="607" alt= "A FLOWERY BANK NEAR COOKHAM. +From a photograph by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>The things in the waters and growing out of the waters are very, +very old. The mountains have been burnt with fire; lava grown solid +has turned to earth again and grows vines; chalk was once +sea-shells; but the clouds and the rivers have altered not their +substance. Also, so far as this planet goes, many of the water +plants are world-encircling, growing just as they do here in the +rivers of Siberia, in China, in Canada, and almost up to the Arctic +Circle. The creatures which lived on these prehistoric plants live +on them now, and in exactly the same parts of the stream. The same +shells lie next the banks in the shallows as lie next the bank of +the prehistoric river of two million years ago whose bed is cut +through at Hordwell Cliffs on the Solent. The same shells lie next +them in the deeper water, and the sedges and rushes are as +"prehistoric" as any plant can well be. In the clay at Hordwell, +which was once the mud of the river, lie sedges, pressed and dried +as if in the leaves of a book, almost exactly similar in colour, +which is kept, and in shape, which is uninjured, to those which +fringe the banks of the Thames to-day. These fresh-water plants +show their hoary antiquity by the fashion of their generation. Most +of them are mono-cotyledonous--with a single seed-lobe, like those +of the early world. There is nothing quite as old among the Thames +fishes as the mud fishes, the lineal descendants of the earliest of +their race. But the same water creatures were feeding on the same +plants perhaps when the Thames first flowed as a river.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="burrreed"></a> <img src="images/fig05.png" +width="887" height="618" alt= +"BURR REED AND FLOWERING RUSH. +From photographs by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>The sedge fringe in the shallows, the "haunt of coot and tern" +elsewhere, and of hosts of moorhens and dabchicks on the now +protected river, is mainly composed of the giant rush, smooth and +round, which the water-rats cut down and peel to eat the pith. +These great rushes, sometimes ten feet high, <em>die</em> every +year like the sickliest flowers, and break and are washed away. Few +people have ever tried to reckon the number of kinds of sedges and +reeds by the river, and it would be difficult to do so. There are +forty-six kinds of sedge (<em>carex</em>), or if the +<em>Scirpus</em> tribe be added, sixty-one, found in our islands. +They are not all water plants, for the sand-sedge with its creeping +roots grows on the sandhills, and some of the rarest are found on +mountain-tops. But the river sedges and grasses, with long creeping +roots of the same kind, have played a great part in the making of +flat meadows and in the reclamation of marshes, stopping the +water-borne mud as the sand-sedge stops the blowing sand. They have +done much in this way on the Upper Thames, though not on the lower +reaches of the river. The "sweet sedge," so called--the smell is +rather sickly to most tastes--is now found on the Thames near +Dorchester, and between Kingston and Teddington among other places, +though it was once thought only to flourish on the Norfolk and Fen +rivers. It is not a sedge at all, but related to the common arum, +and its flower, like the top joints of the little finger, +represents the "lords and ladies" of the hedges. So the burr reed, +among the prettiest of all the upright plants growing out of the +water, is not a reed, but a reed mace. Its bright green stems and +leaves, and spiky balls, are found in every suitable river from +Berkshire to the Amur, and in North America almost to the Arctic +Circle. In the same way the yellow water villarsia, which though +formerly only common near Oxford, has greatly increased on the +Thames until its yellow stars are found as low as the Cardinal's +Well at Hampton Court, extends across the rivers of Europe and Asia +as far as China. The cosmopolitan ways of these water plants are +easily explained. They live almost outside competition. They have +not to take their chance with every new comer, for ninety-nine out +of a hundred stranger seeds are quietly drowned in the embosoming +stream. The water itself keeps its temperature steadily, and only +changes slowly and in no great degree, and then, when the plants +are in their winter sleep the stream may well say that "men may +come and men may go, but I go on for ever." The same is very +largely true of the things which live in the brook.</p> + +<p>Many of the flowers are not quite what their names imply. The +true lilies are among the oldest of plants. But "water-lilies" are +not lilies. They have been placed in order between the barberry and +the poppy, because the seed-head of a water-lily is like the poppy +fruit. The villarsia, which looks like a water-lily, is not related +at all, while the buck-bean is not a bean, but akin to the +gentians. Water-violet might be more properly called +water-primrose, for it is closely related to the primrose, though +its colour is certainly violet, and not pale yellow. By this time +all the bladderworts have disappeared under water. In June in a +pool near the inflow of the Thames at Day's Lock, opposite +Dorchester, the fine leafless yellow spikes of flower were standing +out of the water like orchids, while the bladders with their +trapdoors were employed in catching and devouring small tadpoles. +There is something quietly horrible about these carnivorous plants. +Their bladders are far too small to take one in whole, but catch +the unhappy infant tadpoles by their tails and hold them till they +die from exhaustion.</p> + +<p>The bank flora of the Thames is nearly all the same from Oxford +to Hampton Court, made up of some score of very fine and striking +flowers that grow from foot to crest on the wall of light marl that +forms the bank. Constantly refreshed by the adjacent water, they +flower and seed, seed and flower, and are haunted by bees and +butterflies till the November frosts. The most decorative of all +are the spikes of purple loose-strife. In autumn when most of the +flowers are dead the tip of the leaf at the heads of the spikes +turns as crimson as a flower. The other red flowers are the +valerian, in masses of squashed strawberry, and the fig-wort, tall, +square-stemmed, and set with small carmine knots of flower. In +autumn these become brown seed crockets, and are most decorative. +The fourth tall flower is the flea-bane, and the fifth the great +willow-herb. The lesser plants are the small willow-herbs, whose +late blossoms are almost carmine, the water-mints, with mauve-grey +flowers, and the comfrey, both purple and white. The dewberry, a +blue-coloured more luscious bramble fruit, and tiny wild roses, +grow on the marl-face also. At its foot are the two most beautiful +flowers, though not the most effective, the small yellow +snapdragon, or toad-flax, and the forget-me-not. This blue of the +forget-me-nots is as peculiar as it is beautiful. It is not a +common blue by any means, any more than the azure of the chalk-blue +butterflies is common among other insects. Colour is a very +constant feature in certain groups of flowers. One of these +includes the forget-me-nots, the borage, the alkanet, and the +viper's bugloss, which keep up this blue as a family heirloom. +Others of the tribe, like the comfrey, have it not, but those which +possess it keep it pure.</p> + +<p>The willows at this time are ready to shed their leaves at the +slightest touch of frost. Yet these leaves are covered with the +warts made by the saw-flies to deposit their eggs in. The male +saw-fly of this species and some others is scarcely ever seen, +though the female is so common. The creature <em>stings</em> the +leaf, dropping into the wound a portion of formic acid, and then +lays its egg. The stung leaf swells, and makes the protecting gall. +It is difficult to say when "fly," in the fisherman's use of the +term as the adult insect food of fish, may not appear on the water. +Moths are out on snowy nights, as every collector knows, and on any +mild winter day flies and gnats are seen by streams. In the warm, +sunny days of late September, numbers of some species of ephemerae +were seen on the sedges and willows, with black bodies and gauzy +wings, which the dace and bleak were swallowing eagerly, in quite +summer fashion. The water is now unusually clear, and as the fish +come to sun themselves in the shallows every shoal can be seen.</p> + +<p>Among the typical Thames-valley flowers, all of which would be +the better for protection, are the very rare soldier orchis +(<em>Orchis Militaris</em>) and the monkey orchis (<em>Orchis +Simia</em>), the water-snowflake, the <em>hottonia</em>, or +water-violet, the water-villarsia, more elegant even than the +water-lilies, the flowering rush, with a crown of bright rose-pink +flowers. The two orchids named are very interesting plants. Of the +monkey orchis Mr. Claridge Druce says in his "Flora of Oxfordshire" +that it has become exceedingly scarce, not so much from the +depredations of collectors, but from the fondness of rabbits for it +and the changes brought about by agriculture. The soldier orchis is +very rare indeed; both are only found in a few woods in the Thames +valley, and possibly in Kent. The bladderworts fade instantly, and +are not much interfered with, and though the fritillaries are +picked for market, the roots are not dug up because that would +injure the meadow turf in which they grow, and business objections +would be raised.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter5">INSECTS OF THE +THAMES</a></h2> + +<p>Except among the select few, generally either enthusiastic boys +or London mechanics of an inquiring mind, who keep fresh-water +aquariums and replenish them from ponds and brooks at "weekends," +few persons outside the fancy either see or know much of the water +insects, <a name="fnr4"></a> <a href="#fn4" class="fnsuper">1</a> +or are aware, when floating on a summer day under the willows in a +Thames backwater, of the near presence of thousands of aquatic +creatures, swift, carnivorous, and pursuing, or feeding greedily on +the plants in the water garden that floats below the boat, or +weaving nests, tending eggs, or undergoing the most astonishing +transitions of form and activity, on or below the surface. Many of +them are perhaps better equipped for encountering all the chances +of existence than any other creatures. They can swim, dive, and run +below water, live on dry land, or fly in the air, and many are so +hardy as to be almost proof against any degree of cold. The great +carnivorous water-beetle, the dytiscus, after catching and eating +other creatures all day, with two-minute intervals to come up, poke +the tips of its wings out of the water and jam some air against its +spiracles, before descending once more to its subaqueous +hunting-grounds, will rise by night from the surface of the Thames, +lift again those horny wing-cases, unfold a broad and beautiful +pair of gauzy wings, and whirl off on a visit of love and adventure +to some distant pond, on to which it descends like a bullet from +the air above. When people are sitting in a greenhouse at night +with no lamp lighted, talking or smoking, they sometimes hear a +smash as if a pebble had been dropped on the glass from above. It +is a dytiscus beetle, whose compound eyes have mistaken the shine +of the glass in the moonlight for the gleam of a pond. At night +some of the whirligig beetles, the shiny, bean-like creatures seen +whirling in incessant circles in corners by the bank, make a quite +audible and almost musical sound upon the water. The activity of +many of the water insects is astonishing. Besides keeping in almost +incessant motion, those which spend most of their time below water +have generally to come up constantly to breathe. Such are the +water-bugs, water-scorpions and stick insects, which, though +slender as rushes, and with limbs like hairs, can catch and kill +the fry of the smaller fishes. Most of these are like divers, who +have to provide themselves with air to breathe, and work at double +speed in addition.</p> + +<p>If a group of whirligig beetles is disturbed, the whole party +will dive like dabchicks, rising to the surface again when they +feel the need for breathing-air again. The diving-bell spiders, +which do not often frequent the main Thames stream, though they are +commonly found in the ditches near it, gather air to use just as a +soldier might draw water and dispose it about his person in +water-bottles. They do this in two ways, one of which is +characteristic of many of the creatures which live both in and out +of the water as the spider does. The tail of the spider is covered +with black, velvety hair. Putting its tail out of the water, it +collects much air in the interstices of the velvet. It then +descends, when all this air, drawn down beneath the surface, +collects into a single bubble, covering its tail and breathing +holes like a coat of quicksilver. This supply the spider uses up +when at work below, until it dwindles to a single speck, when it +once more ascends and collects a fresh store. The writer has seen +one of these spiders spin so many webs across the stems of water +plants in a limited space that not only the small water-shrimps and +larvae, but even a young fish were entangled. The other and more +artistic means of gathering air employed by the spider is to catch +a bubble on the surface and swim down below with it. The bubble is +then let go into a bell woven under some plant, into which many +other bubbles have been drawn. In this diving-bell the eggs are +laid and the young hatched, under the constant watch of the old +spider. Few people care to take the trouble to gaze for any time +into a shallow, still piece of water, in which the bottom is +plainly discernible, and a crop of water-weeds makes a wall on +either side of some central "well." If they do find some such pond +near the Thames banks or a shallow backwater, they may see after a +few minutes much that is new and suggestive of strange activities. +Everything will be quiet and motionless at first, for water beasts +are very suspicious of movement above them, and all sham dead, or +lie quite still, and are strangely invisible. On the other hand, +they have none of the power of remaining motionless for +half-an-hour like land animals. Soon what look like sticks, but are +caddis larva, begin to creep on the bottom. Then more brown +objects, larvae of dragon-flies and water-beetles, detach +themselves from the stems of the plants and cruise up and down +seeking what they may devour. Other creatures feeding and swimming +among or beneath the plants crawl out on to the upper surface, and +the water-beetles come up to breathe, or to play upon the surface. +One of the largest of these is a very fine <em>black</em> beetle, a +vegetable-feeding creature. It is most interesting to see two of +them--they generally live in pairs--browsing on one of the +fern-like plants of the Thames. This plant has leaves like fern +blades, each having in turn its own small spikelets. The big +beetles work along the leaf like a cow in a cabbage yard, biting +off, chewing, and swallowing each in succession, and leaving the +stem perfectly bare. Sometimes it looks as if the two beetles were +eating for a match, like the beef-eating contests held in country +public-houses, in which the winner once boasted that he won easily +"afore he came to vinegar."</p> + +<p>The number of carnivorous creatures found in the water seems out +of all proportion to the usual order of Nature. But this is perhaps +because the minute, almost invisible creatures, or entomostraca, of +which the rivers and ponds are full, and which are the main food of +the smaller water carnivora, live mainly on decaying vegetable +substance, which is practically converted and condensed into +microscopical animals before these become in turn the food of +others. It is as if all trees and grass on land were first eaten by +locusts or white ants, and the locusts and white ants were then +eaten by semi-carnivorous cows and sheep, which were in turn eaten +by true carnivora. The water-weeds, both when living and decaying, +are eaten by the entomostraca, the entomostraca are eaten by the +larvae of insects, the perfect insects are eaten by the fish, and +the fish are eaten by men, otters, and birds. Thus we eat the +products of the water plants at four removes in a fish; while we +eat that of the grass or turnips only in a secondary form in beef +or mutton.</p> + +<p>The water-shrimp is a very common crustacean in the small Thames +tributaries, and valuable as fish food. It has a very rare +subterranean cousin known as the <em>well shrimp</em>. A lady in +the Isle of Wight, who in a moment of energy went to the pump to +get some water to put flowers in, actually pumped up one of these +subterranean shrimps into a glass bowl. The well was eighty feet +deep. The shrimp was absolutely white, and probably blind.</p> + +<p>Flesh-eating insects are fairly common on land; wasps will +actually raid a butcher's shop, and carry off little red bits of +meat, besides killing and eating flies, spiders, and larvae. +Dragon-flies are the hawks of the insect world, and slay and devour +wholesale, when in the air as well as when they are larvae on the +water, though few persons actually witness their attacks on other +creatures, owing to the swiftness of their flight. Some centipedes +will attack other creatures with the ferocity of a bulldog. An +encounter between one of the smaller centipedes and a worm is like +a fight between a ferret and a snake, so frantic is the writhing of +the worm, so determined the hold which the hard and shiny centipede +maintains with its hooked jaws. But the ferocity and destroying +appetite of some of the water creatures would be appalling were it +not for their small size. The desire of killing and devouring +appears in the most unexpected quarters, among creatures which no +one would suspect of such intentions. Of two kinds of water snail +found in the Thames, and among the commonest molluscs, one is a +vegetable feeder. It is found living on water plants, the snails +being of all sizes, from that of a mustard seed to a walnut. The +other will feed not only on dead animal substances, but on living +creatures, and is equipped with sharp teeth, which work like a saw. +One of these kept in an aquarium fastened on to and slowly devoured +a small frog confined in the same vessel. The large dytiscus beetle +is the great enemy of small fish. If the salmon is ever restored to +the Thames these creatures will be among the worst enemies of the +fry, though in swift rivers they are not plentiful. Frank Buckland +states that in Hollymount Pond they killed two thousand young +salmon. One of these was put into a bowl with a dytiscus beetle, +which, "pouncing upon him like a hawk upon an unsuspecting lark, +drove its scythe-like horny jaws right into the back of the poor +little fish. The little salmon, a plucky fellow, fought hard for +his life, and swam round and round, up and down, hither and +thither, trying to escape from this terrible murderer; but it was +no use, he could not free himself from his grip; and while the poor +little wretch was giving the last few flutterings of his tail, the +water-beetle proceeded coolly to peck out his left eye, and to +devour it at once." The larva not only of the carnivorous dytiscus +but also of the vegetable-feeding water-beetle are ferocious and +carnivorous, and deadly enemies of young fish and ova.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn4"></a> <a href="#fnr4">[1]</a> In +mentioning some of the Thames <em>insecta</em> I have also noticed +some of the <em>mollusca</em> and <em>crustacea</em>. It is a pity +these have not some common names. One cannot write easily of +"pulmonate gasteropods."</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter6">"THE CHAVENDER OR +CHUB"</a></h2> + +<p class="poetry"> "Now when you've caught your +chavender,<br> + (Your chavender or chub)<br> + You hie you to your pavender,<br> + (Your pavender or pub),<br> + And there you lie in lavender,<br> + (Sweet lavender or lub)."<br> +</p> + +<p class="poetry"> <em>Mr. Punch.</em><br> +</p> + +<p>I went into the Plough Inn at Long Wittenham in mid-November to +arrange about sending some game to London. The landlord, after +inquiring about our shooting luck, went out and came back into the +parlour, saying, "Now, sir, will you look at my sport?" He carried +on a tray two large chub weighing about 2-1/2 lbs. each, which he +had caught in the river just behind the house. Their colour, olive +and silver, scarlet, and grey, was simply splendid. Laid on the +table with one or two hares and cock pheasants and a few brace of +partridges they made a fine sporting group in still life--a regular +Thames Valley yield of fish and fowl. The landlord is a quiet +enthusiast in this Thames fishing. It is a pleasure to watch him at +work, whether being rowed down on a hot summer day by one of his +men, and casting a long line under the willows for chub, or hauling +out big perch or barbel. All his tackle is exquisitely kept, as +well kept as the yeoman's arrows and bow in the Canterbury Tales. +His baits are arranged on the hook as neatly as a good cook sends +up a boned quail. He gets all his worms from Nottingham. I notice +that among anglers the man who gets his worms from Nottingham is as +much a connoisseur as the man who imported his own wine used to be +among dinner-givers.</p> + +<p>Drifting against a willow bush one day, the branches of which +came right down over the water like a crinoline, I saw inside, and +under the branches, a number of fair-sized chub of about 1 lb. or +1-1/2 lbs. It struck me that they felt themselves absolutely safe +there, and that if in any way I could get a bait over them they +might take it. The entry under which I find this chronicled is +August 24th. Next morning when the sun was hot I got a stiff rod +and caught a few grasshoppers. Overnight I had cut out a bough or +two at the back of the willow bush, and there was just a chance +that I might be able to poke my rod in and drop the grasshopper on +the water. After that I must trust to the strength of the gut, for +the fish would be unplayable. It was almost like fishing in a +faggot-stack. Peering through the willow leaves I could just see +down into the water where a patch of sunlight about a yard square +struck the surface. Under this skylight I saw the backs of several +chub pass as they cruised slowly up and down. I twisted the last +two feet of my line round the rod-top, poked this into the bush +with infinite bother and pluckings at my line between the rings, +and managed to drop the hopper on to the little bit of sunny water. +What a commotion there was. The chub thought they were all in a +sanctuary and that no one was looking. I could see six or seven of +them, evidently all cronies and old acquaintances, the sort of fish +that have known one another for years and would call each other by +their Christian names. They were as cocky and consequential as +possible, cruising up and down with an air, and staring at each +other and out through the screen of leaves between them and the +river, and every now and then taking something off a leaf and +spitting it out again in a very independent connoisseur-like way. +The moment the grasshopper fell there was a regular rush to the +place, very different from what their behaviour would have been +outside the bush. There was a hustle and jostle to look at it, and +then to get it. They almost fought one another to get a place. +Flop! Splash! Wallop! "My grasshopper, I think." "I saw it first." +"Where are you shoving to?" "O--oh--what is the matter with +William?" I called him William because he had a mark like a W on +his back. But he was hooked fast and flopping, and held quite tight +by a very strong hook and gut, like a bull with a ring and a pole +fastened to his nose. I got him out too--not a big fish, but about +1-1/2 lbs.</p> + +<p>This showed pretty clearly that where chub can be fished for +"silently, invisibly," they can still be caught, even though steam +launches or row-boats are passing every ten minutes. This was +mid-August; my next venture nearly realised the highest ambitions +of a chub-fisher. It also showed the sad limitations of mere +instinctive fishing aptitudes in the human being as contrasted with +the mental and bodily resources of a fish with a deplorably low +facial angle and a very poor <em>morale</em>. There was just one +place on the river where it seemed possible to remain unseen yet to +be able to drop a bait over a chub. A willow tree had fallen, and +smashed through a willow <em>bush</em>. Its head stuck out like a +feather brush in front and made a good screen. On either side were +the boughs of the bush, high, but not too high to get a rod over +them, if I walked along the horizontal stem of the tree. It was +only a small tree, and a most unpleasant platform. But I had caught +a most appetising young frog, rather larger than a domino, which I +fastened to the hook, and after much manoeuvring I dropped this +where I knew some large chub lay. As the tree had only been blown +down a day before, I was certain that they had never been fished +for at that spot.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="chub"></a> <img src="images/fig06.png" width= +"617" height="942" alt= "A MONSTER CHUB. +From a drawing by Lancelot Speed."></p> + +<p>I was right; hardly had the frog touched the water when I saw a +monster chub rise like a dark salamander out of the depths. Slowly +he rose and eyed the frog, moving his white lips as if the very +sight imparted a gusto to the natural excellence of young frogs. I +nearly dropped from the tree stem from sheer suspense, when he made +up his mind, put on steam, and took it! He was fast in a minute, +and kindly rushed out into the river, where I played him. Then I +wound in my line and hauled him up till his head and mouth were out +of the water. As there was an impenetrable screen of bushes between +him and me I laid the rod down, trusting to the tackle, and ran +round to where close by was a farm punt, made fast. It had been +used during harvest time, and was full of what in the classics they +call the "implements of Ceres." All of these that do not seem made +to cut your leg off are designed to run into and spike you. Besides +scythes and reap hooks, there were iron rakes (sharp end upwards), +wooden rakes, pitchforks, and garden forks, and the difficulty was +to move in the punt without getting cut or spiked. The last users +of the punt had also taken peculiar care to fasten it up. It was +anchored by a grapnel, and by an iron pin on a chain, the pin +eighteen inches long and driven hard into the bank. In a desperate +hurry I hauled up the grapnel, did a regular Sandow feat in pulling +up the iron peg, seized a punt pole apparently weighted with lead, +but made out of an ash sapling, and started the punt. It would not +move. I found there was another mooring, so picking my way among +the scythes, spikes, rakes, &c., I hauled this in. It was most +infernally heavy, and turned out to be a cast-iron wheel of a steam +plough or other farming implement. Then I was under weigh, and got +round to the fish. It was still there. I could see its +expressionless eye (about as big as a sixpence) out of the water +and its mouth wide open, when I remembered I had forgotten the +landing-net in my hurry. Then came the period of mental aberration +common to the amateur. The fish was certainly 4 lbs. in weight, yet +I tried to get him in with my hands. Of course he gave one big +flop, slipped out, and disappeared--the biggest chub I ever shall +not catch.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter7">THE WORLD'S FIRST +BUTTERFLIES</a></h2> + +<p>Thames plants must strike every one as belonging to an ancient +order of life. But the vast clouds of winged <em>ephemeridae</em> +that dance over its waters when there is a rise of "May-fly" in +early summer look to be not only the creatures of a day, but of our +day. In the astonishing wave and rush of life seen at such times, +when from every plant and pool winged creatures are ascending to +float in air, it is difficult to picture the silence and stillness +of a world where there were no birds, or hum of bees, and no signs +of the other insects which exceed the other population of the earth +by unnumbered myriads of millions; yet the insects, even the same +identical species which dance over the Thames to-day, are among the +very oldest of living things, just as its plants and its shells +are. Rocks and slate are not ideal butterfly cases; and if the +fragile limbs of the beetle and grasshopper of the successive +prehistoric worlds had perished beyond the power of identification, +no one could have felt surprise. But such has been the industry of +modern naturalists--to give the widest name to those who have +devoted their time to the search for, and description of, fossil +insects--that the remains of thousands of species have been +identified, and the time of their appearance upon the earth +approximately fixed. The latest contributor to this elegant branch +of the study of fossils is Mr. Herbert Goss. <a name="fnr5"></a> <a +href="#fn5" class="fnsuper">1</a> Perhaps the most interesting of +his conclusions is the antiquity, not only of the existing orders +of insects, but even of their particular families and genera, as +compared with vertebrate animals. It is astonishing to find not +only crickets and beetles existing at periods enormously earlier +than the appearance of birds or fish, but that they conformed in +type to the families in which they are classed to-day. Though they +become fewer and fewer as they are tracked back up the river of +time, there are not found in the earliest fossil-bearing rocks any +connecting links or earlier and simpler forms of insect life, or a +clue to the common ancestor of insects, spiders, and shrimps, which +naturalists would dearly like to discover. There is a baffling +completeness about these creatures. When in the lias period, for +instance, the vertebrates were huge saurian reptiles and flying +lizards, and scarcely any of our existing classes of fish had come +into existence, the beetles, cockroaches, crickets, and white ants +were there, with all the distinguishing characteristics of the +existing families as they were settled by Linnaeus.</p> + +<p>The first insect known to have existed, a creature of such vast +antiquity that it deserves all the respect which the parvenu man +can summon and offer to it, was--a cockroach. This, the father of +all black-beetles, probably walked the earth in solitary +magnificence when not only kitchens, but even kitchen-middens were +undreamt of, possibly millions of years before Neolithic man had +even a back cave to offer with the remains of last night's supper +for the cockroach of the period to enjoy. His discovery established +the fact that in the Silurian period there were insects, though, as +the only piece of his remains found was a wing, there has been room +for dispute as to the exact species. Mr. Goss in his preface to the +second edition of his book notes that what is probably a still +older insect has been found in the lower Silurian in Sweden. This +was not a cockroach, but apparently something worse. If the Latin +name, <em>Protocimex Silurius</em>, be literally translated, it +means the original Silurian bug. It was a fair conjecture that +insects appeared about the same time as land plants first grew on +the earth. As almost all the species either feed on some vegetable +substances in growth or decay, or else live upon other insects, +some such provision of food was necessary for them. Remains of such +plants were discovered in the Silurian rocks. In the Devonian +formations, which contain the next oldest set of fossil insects, +numbers of conifers and ferns are found. Yet even then the only +vertebrate animals seem to have been fish. The insects still had +the land all to themselves. Of one of these Devonian insects the +base of a wing was the only part preserved in the rock. From this +it was possible to tell the order to which the creature belonged. +It was one of the <em>Neuroptera</em> --insects with wings in which +the veins run straight down the wing, sometimes joined by cross +branches at right angles. Some of the modern kinds are very +beautiful four-winged flies, with bright colours on their wings +like butterflies. Others are ant-lions or caddis-flies. The curve +of the fragment of wing also suggested its probable size when +unbroken. It was perhaps two inches long. As there are little horny +rings round the wing base like those which crickets have, on which +they rub their legs and so "chirp," it is also quite likely that +this insect of hoary antiquity did the same, and enlivened the +silence of Devonian fern groves with a prehistoric hum. It is quite +in keeping with modern ideas that in that age of fishes one of the +most remarkable insects should have been a kind of May-fly, "a +large species of <em>Ephemerina</em>, which must have measured five +inches in expanse of wings." Thus our Thames May-flies had gigantic +prehistoric ancestors, which appeared on earth, possibly with their +present associates the caddis flies, at an enormously remote +age.</p> + +<p>So far no butterfly had yet appeared on earth, though the +<em>Ephemerinae</em> might dance over the still lagoons and swamps. +In the coal-forest period, and the age of trees and rank +vegetation, insects of many kinds seem to have multiplied, even +though the most beautiful of all were not yet launched in air. In +England the first beetle wandered on to the stage of life--the +oldest British insect fossil known. It was discovered in the +ironstone of Coalbrookdale, and was a kind of weevil. Another +creature found in the same ironstone was a cricket. It is quite in +keeping with the forest and tree surroundings of the time that +white ants should have abounded to eat up the decayed and dead +wood. Strictly speaking, black-beetles are not beetles at all. But +they are a very good imitation. As some hundreds of families of +<em>Paltaeoblattidae</em>, which may be translated as "old original +cockroaches," and <em>Blattidae</em>, or cockroaches <em>pur +sang</em>, pervaded these forests, and the doyen of all Swiss +fossil animals is one of these, the "state of the streets" in a +coal forest may be imagined when there were no bird police to keep +the insects in order. Thus the end of the Palaeozoic world--a very +poor world at best--was fairly well stocked with insects, though +the moths, bees, and butterflies had yet to come. Then came the +sunrise of a new time--mammals, any number of reptiles, possibly +some birds, and an insect life more teeming than any we now know. +The "insect limestone" attests these multitudes. Beetles, of which +the scarabs were a numerous family, increased vastly, and the +oldest known dragon-fly and supposed ancestor of those which hawk +over the Oxford river, left his skeleton, or what represents a +dragon-fly's skeleton, among some two thousand other specimens of +fossil insects, in the Swiss Alps. It was then that the first bird +and the first butterfly appeared. The bird was the famous +Archaeopteryx, found in the Solenhofen slate, and the first +butterfly, to use an Irishism, was a moth, a sphinx moth, +apparently about the size of the Convolvulus sphinx moth. This +stone-embedded relic of the moth that sucked the juices of the +plants of the Mesozoic world, incalculable ages before the time +even of the gigantic mammals, is preserved in the Teyler Museum at +Haarlem. When the new era of the Eocene period developed modern +forms of plants, their rapid growth was accompanied by a great +increase in the number of insects. Those which, like the moths, had +only made their first venture on earth, now appeared in greater +numbers. Near Aix, in Provence, five butterflies and two moths were +found in some beds of marl and gypsum long celebrated for their +fossils, and with the fossil butterflies were, in every case but +one, fossil remains of the plants which had served its larvae as +food. Thus the May-flies and beetles are perhaps older than the +Thames shells, and older than the prehistoric plants on which the +river molluscs feed.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn5"></a> <a href="#fnr5">[1]</a> +Secretary of the Entomological Society, and an accomplished +botanist. The work is entitled "The Geological Antiquity of +Insects," and published by Gurney and Jackson, London.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter8">BUTTERFLY SLEEP</a></h2> + +<p>Fond as the butterflies are of the light and sun, they dearly +love their beds. Like most fashionable people who do nothing, they +stay there very late. But their unwillingness to get up in the +morning is equalled by their equal desire to leave the world and +its pleasures early and be asleep in good time. They are the first +of all our creatures to seek repose. An August day has about +fifteen hours of light, and for that time the sun shines for twelve +hours at least; but the butterflies weary of sun and flowers, +colour and light, so early that by six o'clock, even on warm days, +many of them have retired for the night. I climbed Sinodun Hill, on +a cold, windy afternoon, and found that hundreds of butterflies +were all falling asleep at five o'clock. Their dormitory was in the +tall, colourless grass, with dead seed-heads, that fringes the +tracks over the hills, or the lanes that cross the hollows. Common +blues were there in numbers, and small heath butterflies almost as +many. The former, each and every one of them, arrange themselves to +look like part of the seed-spike that caps the grass-stem. Then the +use and purpose of the parti-coloured grey and yellow +under-colouring of their wings is seen. The butterfly invariably +goes to sleep head downwards, its eyes looking straight down the +stem of the grass. It folds and contracts its wings to the utmost, +partly, perhaps, to wrap its body from the cold. But the effect is +to reduce its size and shape to a narrow ridge, making an acute +angle with the grass-stem, hardly distinguishable in shape and +colour from the seed-heads on thousands of other stems around. <a +name="fnr6"></a> <a href="#fn6" class="fnsuper">1</a> The butterfly +also sleeps on the top of the stem, which increases its likeness to +the natural finial of the grass. In the morning, when the sunbeams +warm them, all these grey-pied sleepers on the grass-tops open +their wings, and the colourless bennets are starred with a thousand +living flowers of purest azure. Side by side with the "blues" sleep +the common "small heaths." They use the grass-stems for beds, but +less carefully, and with no such obvious solicitude to compose +their limbs in harmony with the lines of the plant. They also sleep +with their heads downwards, but the body is allowed to droop +sideways from the stem like a leaf. This, with their light +colouring, makes them far more conspicuous than the blues. +Moreover, as grass has no leaves shaped in any way like the +sleeping butterfly, the contrast of shape attracts notice. Can it +be that the blues, whose brilliant colouring by day makes them +conspicuous to every enemy, have learnt caution, while the brown +heaths, less exposed to risk, are less careful of concealment? Be +it noticed that moths and butterflies go to sleep in different +attitudes. Moths fold their wings back upon their bodies, covering +the lower wing, which is usually bright in colour, with the upper +wing. They fold their antennas back on the line of their wings. +Butterflies raise the wings above their bodies and lay them back to +back, putting their antennae between them if they move them at all. +On these same dry grasses of the hills, another of the most +brilliant insects of this country may often be seen sleeping in +swarms--the carmine and green burnet moth. But it is a sluggish +creature, which often seems scarcely awake in the day, and its +surrender to the dominion of sleep excites less surprise than the +deep slumber of the active and vivacious butterflies. The "heaths" +and "blues" should perhaps be regarded as the gipsies of the +butterfly world, because they sleep in the open. They are even +worse off than the nomads, because, like that regiment sleeping in +the open which the War Office lately refused to grant field +allowance to on the ground that they were "not under canvas," they +do not possess even a temporary roof. What we may call the "garden +butterflies," especially the red admirals, often do seek a roof, +going into barns, sheds, churches, verandahs, and even houses to +sleep. There, too, they sometimes wake up in winter from their long +hibernating sleep, and remind us of summer days gone by as they +flicker on the sun-warmed panes. Mrs. Brightwen established the +fact that they sometimes have fixed homes to which they return. Two +butterflies, one a brimstone, the other, so far as the writer +remembers, a red admiral, regularly came for admission to the +house. One was killed by a rain-storm when the window was shut; the +other hibernated in the house. Probably it was as a sleeping-place +and bedroom that the butterflies made it their home. There is a +parallel instance, mentioned by a Dutch naturalist quoted by Mr. +Kirby, when a butterfly came night after night to sleep on a +particular spot in the roof of a verandah in the Eastern +Archipelago. In the East the sun itself is so regular and so rapid +in rising and setting that the sleeping hours of insects and birds +are far more regular than in temperate lands, with their shifting +periods of light and darkness. Our twilight, that season that the +tropics know not, has produced a curious race of moths, or rather, +a curious habit confined to certain kinds. They are the creatures +neither of day nor of night, but of twilight. They awake as +twilight begins, go about their business and enjoy a brief and +crepuscular activity, and go to sleep as soon as darkness settles +on the world. At the first glimmer of the dawn they awaken again to +fly till sunrise, when they hurry off like the fairies, and sleep +till twilight falls again.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="butterfly"></a> <img src="images/fig07.png" +width="656" height="977" alt= "BUTTERFLIES AT REST. +From photographs by R.B. Lodge."></p> + +<p>At the time of writing a border of bright flowers runs in +straight perspective from the window opposite, with a rose arcade +by the border, and a yew hedge behind that. The shafts of the +morning sun fly straight down to the flowers, and every blossom of +hollyhock, sunflower, campanula, and convolvulus, and the scarlet +ranks of the geraniums, are standing at "attention" to welcome this +morning inspection by the ruler and commander-in-chief of all the +world of flowers. The inspecting officers, rather late as +inspecting officers are wont to be, are overhauling and examining +the flowers. These inspectors, also roused by the sun, are the +butterflies and bees. Splendid red admirals are flying up, and +alighting on the sunflowers, or hovering over the pink masses of +valerian. Peacock butterflies, "eyed" like Emperors' robes, open +and shut their wings upon the petals; large tortoiseshells are +flitting from flower to flower; mouse-coloured humming-bird moths +are poising before the red lips of the geraniums; and a stream of +common white butterflies is crossing the lawn to the flowers at the +rate of twenty a minute. They all come from the same direction, +across a cornfield and meadow, behind which lies a wood. The bees +came first, as they are fairly early risers; the butterflies later, +some of them very late, and evidently not really ready for parade, +for they are sitting on the flowers stretching, brushing +themselves, and cleaning their boots--or feet. The fact is that the +butterflies, late though it is, are only just out of bed. You might +look all the evening to find the place where these particular +butterflies sleep, and not discover it, unless some of them have +taken a fancy to the verandah or the inside of a dwelling-room in +the house. But each and every one of them has been asleep in a +place it has chosen, and it is probable that some, the red +admirals, for instance, will go back to that place to sleep at +evening.</p> + +<p>As there are hundreds of moths that fly by night and sleep by +day at seasons when there are perhaps only twenty species of +butterflies flying by day and sleeping by night, it is strange that +the sleeping moths are not more often found. Some kinds are often +disturbed, and are seen. But the great majority are sleeping on the +bark of trees, in hedges, in the crevices of pines, oaks and elms, +and other rough-skinned timber, and we see them not. Some prefer +damp nights with a drizzle of rain to fly in, not the weather which +we should choose as inviting us to leave repose. Few like moonlight +nights; darkness is their idea of a "fine day" in which to get up +and enjoy life, many, like the dreams in Virgil's Hades, being all +day high among the leaves of lofty trees, whence they descend at +the summons of night, the--</p> + +<p class="poetry"> + "Filmy +shapes<br> + That haunt the dusk, with ermine capes,<br> + And woolly breasts, and beaded eyes,"<br> +</p> + +<p>The connection between character and bedtime which grew up from +association when human life was less complex than now has some +counterpart in the world of butterflies and insects. The +industrious bees go to bed much earlier than the roving wasps. The +latter, which have been out stealing fruit and meat, and foraging +on their own individual account, "knock in" at all hours till dark, +and may sometimes be seen in a state of disgraceful intoxication, +hardly able to find the way in at their own front door. The bees +are all asleep by then in their communal dormitory.</p> + +<p>It would not be human if some belief had not arisen that the +insects that fly by night imitate human thieves and rob those which +toil by day. There has always been a tradition that the +death's-head moth, the largest of all our moths, does this, and +that it creeps into the hives and robs the bees, which are said to +be terrified by a squeaking noise made by the gigantic moth, which +to a bee must appear as the roc did to its victims. It is said that +the bees will close up the sides of the entrance to the hive with +wax, so as to make it too small for the moth to creep in. Probably +this is a fable, due to the pirate badge which the moth bears on +its head. But it is certainly fond of sweet things, and as it is +often caught in empty sugar-barrels, it is quite possible that it +does come to the hive-door at night and alarm the inmates in its +search for honey.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn6"></a> <a href="#fnr6">[1]</a> In +the illustration it was impossible to photograph butterflies +actually sleeping. They show their attitude, but not the degree to +which the wings are flattened into a very acute angle.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter9">CRAYFISH AND TROUT</a></h2> + +<p>About the middle of August, when walking by one of the locks on +a disused canal in the Ock Valley, I saw a man engaged in a very +artistic mode of catching crayfish. The lock was very old, and the +brickwork above water covered with pennywort and crane's-bill +growing where the mortar had rotted at the joints. In these same +joints below water the crayfish had made holes or homes of some +sort, and were sitting at the doors with their claws and feelers +just outside, waiting, like Mr. Micawber, for something to turn up. +To meet their views the crayfish catcher had cut a long willow +withe. From the tapering tip of this he had cut the wood, leaving +the bark, which had been carefully slit and the woody tip extracted +from it. This pendant of bark he had made into a running noose, and +leaning over the bank he worked it over the crayfish's claws and +then snared them. It was a neat adaptation of local means to an +end; for if you think of it, string would not have answered, +because it would not remain rigid, and wire would be too stiff for +the job.</p> + +<p>Crayfish catching, until lately one of the minor fisheries of +the Thames, is now a vanished industry. Ten years ago the banks of +the river from Staines to the upper waters at Cricklade were +honeycombed with crayfish holes, like sandmartins' nests in a +railway cutting. These holes were generally not more than eighteen +inches below the normal water line of the river. In winter when the +stream was full fresh holes were dug higher up the bank. In summer +when the water fell these were deserted. The result was that there +were many times more holes than crayfish, and that for hundreds of +miles along the Thames and its tributaries these burrows made a +perforated border of about three feet deep. The almost complete +destruction of the crayfish was due to a disease, which first +appeared near Staines, and worked its way up the Thames, with as +much method as enteric fever worked its way down the Nile in the +Egyptian Campaign after Omdurman. The epidemic is well known in +France, where a larger kind of crayfish is reared artificially in +ponds, and serves as the material for <em>bisque d'écrevisses</em>, +and as the most elegant scarlet garnish for cold and hot dishes of +fish in Paris restaurants; but it was new to recent experience of +the Thames. Perhaps that is why its effects were so disastrous. The +neat little fresh-water lobsters turned almost as red as if they +had been boiled, crawled out of their holes, and died. Under some +of the most closely perforated banks they lay like a red fringe +along the riverside under the water. Near Oxford, and up the +Cherwell, Windrush, and other streams they were, before the +pestilence, so numerous that making crayfish pots was as much a +local industry as making eel-pots, the smaller withes, not much +larger than a thick straw, being used for this purpose. Most +cottages near the river had one or two of these pots, which were +baited on summer nights and laid in the bottom of the stream near +the crayfish holes. It must be supposed that they only use them by +day, and come out by night, just as lobsters do, to roam about and +seek food on a larger scale than that which they seize as it floats +past their holes by day. That time of more or less enforced +idleness the crayfish used to spend in looking out of their holes +with their claws hanging just over the edge ready to seize and haul +in anything nice that floated by. Their appetite by night was such +that no form of animal food came amiss to them. The "pots" were +baited with most unpleasant dainties, but nasty as these were they +were not so unsavoury as the food which the crayfish found for +themselves and thoroughly enjoyed, such as dead water-rats and dead +fish, worms, snails, and larvae. They were always hungry, and one +of the simplest ways of catching them was to push into their holes +a gloved finger, which the creature always seized with its claw and +tried to drag further in. The crayfish, who, like the lobster, +looked on it as a point of honour never to let go, was then jerked +out into a basket. They rather liked the neighbourhood of towns and +villages because plenty of dirty refuse was thrown into the water. +In the canalised stream which runs into Oxford city itself there +were numbers, which not only burrowed in the bank, but made homes +in all the chinks of stone and brick river walls, and sides of +locks, and in the wood of the weiring, where they sat ensconced as +snugly as crickets round a brick farmhouse kitchen fireplace. They +were regularly caught by the families of the riverine population of +boatmen, bargees, and waterside labourers, and sold in the Oxford +market. A dish of crayfish, as scarlet as coral, was not +unfrequently seen at a College luncheon. Possibly the recovery from +the epidemic may be rapid, and the small boys of Medley and Mill +Street may earn their sixpence a dozen as delightfully as they used +to. Young crayfish, when hatched from the egg, are almost exactly +like their parents. The female nurses and protects them, carrying +them attached to its underside in clinging crowds. They grow very +fast, and this makes it necessary for the youthful crayfish to +"moult" or shed their shells eight times in their first twelvemonth +of life, as the shell is rigid and does not grow with the body. The +constant secretion of the lime necessary to make these shells is so +exhausting to the youthful crayfish that only a small number ever +grow up. In America, where a large freshwater crayfish nearly a +foot long is found, its burrowing habits are a serious nuisance, +especially in the dykes of the Mississippi. In those streams from +which these interesting little creatures have entirely disappeared +it might be worth while to introduce the large Continental +crayfish. As it is bred artificially, there would be no difficulty +in obtaining a supply, and it would be a useful substitute for the +small native kind.</p> + +<p>Sea crayfish, which grow to a very large size, are not much +esteemed in this country. They are not so well flavoured as their +cousin the lobster. But as river crayfish of a superior kind can be +cultivated, and are reared for the table abroad, it might be worth +while to pay some attention to what has been done in the United +States to replenish by artificial breeding the stock of lobsters +now somewhat depleted by the great "canning" industry. The method +of obtaining the young lobsters is different from that employed to +rear trout from ova. The female lobsters carry all their eggs +fastened to hair-fringed fans or "swimmerets" under their tails, +the eggs being glued to these hairs by a kind of gum which +instantly hardens when it touches the water. For some ten months +the female lobster carries the eggs in this way, aerating them all +the time with the movement of the swimmerets. When they are caught +in the lobster-pots in the months of June and July, the eggs are +taken to the hatchery, and the ova are detached. As they are +already fertilised, they are put into hatching jars, where in due +course they become young lobsters, or rather lobster larvae, for +the lobster does not start in life quite so much developed as does +the infant crayfish. It is about one-third of an inch long, has no +large claws, and swims naturally on the surface of the water, +instead of lurking at the bottom as it does when it has come to +lobster's estate. It seems to be compelled to rise to the surface, +for sunlight, or any bright illumination, always brings swarms of +lobsterlings to the top of the jars in which they are hatched. In +the sea this impulse towards the light stands them in good stead, +for in the surface-waters they find themselves surrounded by the +countless atoms of animal life, or potential life, the eggs and +young of smaller sea beasts. The young lobster is furiously hungry +and voracious, because, like the young crayfish, it has to change +not only its shell but the lining of its stomach five times in +eighteen days. Unfortunately, in the hatching jars there is no such +store of natural food as in the sea. The result is that the young +lobsters have to eat each other, which they do with a cheerful +mind, if they are not at once liberated. When they have reached +their fifth month they go to the bottom and "settle down" in the +literal sense to the serious life of lobsters.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="trout"></a> <img src="images/fig08.png" +width="898" height="615" alt= "A TROUT. +From a photograph by Charles Reid."></p> + +<p>I believe no one ever saw trout spawning in the Thames, though +there are plenty of shallows where they might do so. Consequently +the Thames trout must be regarded as a fish which was born in the +tributaries and descended into the big river, and as the mouths of +these trout-holding tributaries, such as the Kennet at Reading, the +Pang, the lower Colne, and others, become surrounded with houses +and the trout no longer haunt the <em>embouchure</em>, so the +tendency is for fewer trout to get into the Thames. Still, places +like the Windrush, the Evenlode, and the other upper tributaries +hold rather more trout than they did, as they are better looked +after; and the Fairford Colne is still a beautiful trout stream. +For some reason, however, the Thames trout do not seem fond of the +upper waters, where if found they seem to keep entirely in the +highly aerated parts by the weirs, but mainly haunt the lower ones +from Windsor downwards, and one was recently caught in the tidal +waters below the bridge. It is very difficult to see why there are +so few above Oxford, or from Abingdon to Reading. It is not because +they are caught, for very few are caught. A friend of mine who had +lived on the river near Clifton Hampden for some eight years, could +only remember eight trout being caught in that time. I thought I +was going to have one once. I was fishing for chub with a bumble +bee, and a great spotted trout rose to it in a way which made me +hope I was going to have a trophy to boast of for life. But he +"rose short," and I saw him no more. I believe <em>all</em> the +brooks which rise in the chalk hills of the Thames Valley have +trout in them. One runs under the railway line at Steventon. A +resident there had quite a number of tamed trout in the conduit +which took the stream under the line, and used to feed them with +worms as a show. At the head waters of the Lockinge brook, close to +the springs, I saw the trout spawning on New Year's Day. The big +fish had wriggled up into the very shallowest water, and were lying +with their back fins and tails out, I suppose from some instinct +either that this water is the most highly aerated, or because +floods do less harm on a shallow, or for both reasons combined. At +Long Wittenham, though I never saw a trout in the river (they are, +however, taken there), Admiral Clutterbuck recently had a fine old +stew pond in the picturesque old grounds of the Manor House cleaned +out, and stocked it with rainbow trout. They did well and grew +fast, and so far as I know, none died. The water was not suited for +their breeding, but the fish were very ornamental, and rose freely +to the fly.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter10">FOUNTAINS AND +SPRINGS</a></h2> + +<p>Is it true that our fountains and springs of sweet water are +about to perish? A writer in <em>Country Life</em> says "Yes," that +in parts of the Southern counties the hidden cisterns of the +springs are now sucked dry, and that the engineers employed to +bring the waters from these natural sources to the village or the +farm lament that where formerly streams gushed out unbidden, they +are now at pains to raise the needed water by all the resources of +modern machinery. When the old fountains fail new sources are +eagerly sought, and where science fails the diviner's art is called +in to aid. At the Agricultural Show the water-diviner sits +installed, surrounded by votive tablets picturing the springs +discovered by his magic art; and County Councils quarrel with the +auditors of local expenditure over sums paid for the successful +employment of his mysterious gift.</p> + +<p>It is not strange that the springs of England should still +suggest a faint echo of Nature-worship. If rivers have their gods, +fountains and springs have ever been held to be the home of +divinities, beings who were by right of birth gods, even though, +owing to circumstances, they did not move exactly in their circle. +<em>Procul a Jove, procul a fulgure</em> may have been the thought +ascribed by Greek fancy to the gracious beings who made their home +by the springs, for whether in ancient Greece or in our Western +island, they breathe the sense of peace, security, and quiet, and +to them all living things, animal and human, come by instinct to +enjoy the sense of refreshment and repose. A spring is always old +and always new. It is ever in movement, yet constant, seldom +greater and seldom less, in the case of most natural upspringing +waters, syphoned from the deep cisterns of earth. Absolutely +material, with no mystery in its origin, it impresses the fancy as +a thing unaccountable, like the source of life embodied, something +self-engendered. It has pulses, throbbing like the ebb and flow of +blood. Its dancing bubbles, rising and bursting, image emotion. It +is the only water always clear and sparkling. Streams gather mud, +springs dispel it. They come pure from the depths, and never suffer +the earth to gather where they leap from ground. They are the +brightest and the cleanest things in Nature. From all time the +polluter of a spring has been held accursed.</p> + +<p>One of the sources of the Thames was a real spring, rising from +the earth in a meadow, until the level of the subterranean water +was reduced.</p> + +<p>These suddenly uprising springs are not common in our country, +and need seeking. Our poets, who borrowed from the classics all +their epithets for natural <em>fountains</em>, wrongly applied them +to our modest springs welling gently from the bosom of the earth. +The springs of old Greece and Italy gushed spouting from the rocks +or flowed like the fountains of Tivoli in falling sheets over +dripping shoots of stone. Even a Greek of to-day never speaks of a +"spring," because he seldom sees one. "Fountain" is the word used +for all waters flowing from the earth, and the difference of words +corresponds to a difference of fact. The springs of his land +<em>are</em> fountains, waters gushing from the rock or flowing +from caverns and channels in the hills. The fountains of Greece +flow down from above, and do not bubble up from below. These are +the waters that tell their presence by sound, and have been the +natural models of all the drinking fountains ever built,--jets +that, spouting in a rainbow curve, hollow out basins below them, +cut in the marble floor, cool cisterns ever running over, at which +demi-gods watered their horses, and the white feet of the nymphs +were seen dancing at sundown.</p> + +<p>A tributary of the Severn, near Bisley, in the Cotswolds, bursts +from a real fountain pouring from a hollow face of stone. But +fountains in this sense are rare in England, though among the Welsh +hills and the Yorkshire dales they may be seen springing full grown +from the sides of the glens or "scarrs," and cutting basins and +steps in marble or slate. But in the South the gentle springs take +their place, silent, retiring, seldom found, except by chance, or +by the local tradition which always attaches to the more important +of our English natural wells. These it is the ambition of +misdirected zeal to enclose in walls of stone, and to furnish with +steps and conduits. If the old goddess Tan was once worshipped as +the deity of the spring, it has usually undergone conversion by the +early monks and changed its title to "St. Anne's Well," or been +assigned to St. Catherine or some other of the holy sisterhood of +saints. <a name="fnr7"></a> <a href="#fn7" class="fnsuper">1</a> +But there are hundreds of tiny springs in Britain still left as +Nature made them, and not yet settled in trust on any of the modern +successors to the water rights of classic nymphs and Celtic +goddesses. He who discovers for himself one of these springs will +visit it each time he passes near. Some are in the woods, known +only to the birds and beasts which live in them, and come daily to +drink the pure, untainted waters. Wood springs are among the most +beautiful of all, for they have a setting of tall timber, and their +margins are never trampled by cattle, or the natural play of their +waters disturbed to draw for the beasts of the farm. In the wood +below Sinodun Hill there rises an everlasting spring. There may be +seen how great an area of land it takes to make and keep one tiny +spring. All the waters which gather in the millions of tons of +chalk on Sinodun rise and flow out in the wood in the one pool, not +larger than the circle of a wheel. It is always full, with the +water throbbing up clear from the invisible vents below, and tiny +white water-shells floating and falling in the basin, set round +with liverwort and moss, and watering a bed of teazles in the wood +below. Children drink from it, and pluck wild strawberries by its +banks, and the pheasant and the fox come there to quench their +thirst. An unexpected but not uncommon site of such springs is +close to the margin of streams, which themselves are fed, not +mainly by springs, but from the surface waters. <a name="fnr8"></a> +<a href="#fn8" class="fnsuper">2</a> Wherever high ground slopes +down to a stream, and ends in a rising bank at some distance from +the river, there a true spring often rises, with an existence +wholly apart from that of the river close by, into which its +surplus of waters flows. Such springs have their special flora, +their own "phenomena," and their own little set of effects on their +liliput landscape. In the centre the waters well up, absolutely +pure, and only discoloured when a more impatient earth-throb drives +up a column of cloudy sand or earth. The spreading circles broaden +outwards, and make their little marsh, planted with water-grass and +forget-me-nots and blue bog-bean, and in the spring with +butterburs. Outside, on the firmer but still moist soil the +creeping jenny mats the ground; and the succulent grasses which +attract the cattle to tread the marsh into a muddy paste. At the +foot of the larger chalk downs the springs sometimes break out in +different fashion, a modest imitation of classical fountains. The +chalky soil breaks down, and from its sides the water often spouts +in jets, as may be seen in Betterton glen, above Lockinge House, +and in many other heads of the chalk brooks.</p> + +<p>Springs of this kind are the natural outflowing of the +water-bearing strata, where they lie upon others not pervious. But +the upflowing springs are often fed by the accumulations of a great +area of country, coming to the surface like water from the orifice +of a syphon, and flowing permanently neither in greater nor less +volume with constant force. If these cease to run the inference is +that the old conditions are seriously disturbed. This has happened +so frequently of late that local authorities would do well to +schedule lists of the larger springs and request the owners or +occupiers of the land to inform them from time to time whether +there is a decrease in the flow. Stored water is almost as valuable +as earth in a cycle of deficient rainfall, and the loss of any of +our fountains and springs is a local misfortune not easily +remedied.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn7"></a> <a href="#fnr7">[1]</a> +"Well deckings" are still common festivals in the North. Quite +lately a Scotch loch was dragged with nets to catch a kelpie, and +the bottom sowed with lime. The Church early forbade well +worship.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn8"></a> <a href="#fnr8">[2]</a> +There is one such just above Marston Ferry, near Oxford, on the +Cherwell, and two in a field below Ardington, near Lockinge.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter11">BIRD MIGRATION DOWN THE +THAMES</a></h2> + +<p>On September 16, 1896, after a period of very stormy wet +weather, I saw a great migration of swallows down the Thames. It +was a dark, dripping evening, and the thick osier bed on Chiswick +Eyot was covered with wet leaf. Between five and six o'clock +immense flights of swallows and martins suddenly appeared above the +eyot, arriving, not in hundreds, but in thousands and tens of +thousands. The air was thick with them, and their numbers increased +from minute to minute. Part drifted above, in clouds, twisting +round like soot in a smoke-wreath. Thousands kept sweeping just +over the tops of the willows, skimming so thickly that the sky-line +was almost blotted out for the height of from three to four feet. +The quarter from which these armies of swallows came was at first +undiscoverable. They might have been hatched, like gnats, from the +river.</p> + +<p>In time I discovered whence they came. They were literally +"dropping from the sky." The flocks were travelling at a height at +which they were quite invisible in the cloudy air, and from minute +to minute they kept dropping down into sight, and so +perpendicularly to the very surface of the river or of the eyot. +One of these flocks dropped from the invisible regions to the lawn +on the river bank on which I stood. Without exaggeration I may say +that I saw them fall from the sky, for I was looking upwards, and +saw them when first visible as descending specks. The plunge was +perpendicular till within ten yards of the ground. Soon the +high-flying crowds of birds drew down, and swept for a few minutes +low over the willows, from end to end of the eyot, with a sound +like the rush of water in a hydraulic pipe. Then by a common +impulse the whole mass settled down from end to end of the island, +upon the osiers. Those in the centre of the eyot were black with +swallows--like the black blight on beans.</p> + +<p>Next morning, at 6.30 a.m., every swallow was gone. In half an +hour's watching not a bird was seen. Whether they went on during +the night, or started at dawn, I know not. Probably the latter, for +Gilbert White once found a heath covered with such a flock of +migrating swallows, which did not leave till the sun dispelled the +mists.</p> + +<p>The migration routes of birds follow river valleys, when these +are conveniently in line with the course they wish to take. There +is far more food along a river than elsewhere, and this is a +consideration, for most birds, in spite of the wonderful stories of +thousand-mile flights, prefer to rest and feed when making long +migrations, and also those short shifts of locality which temporary +hard weather causes. A friend just back from Khartoum tells me that +he saw the storks descending from vast heights to rest at night on +the Nile sandbanks, and saw their departing flight early in the +morning, these birds being in flocks of hundreds and thousands.</p> + +<p>By watching the river carefully for many years I have noticed +that it is a regular migration route for several species besides +swallows. The first to begin the "trek" down the river are the +early broods of water-wagtails, both yellow and pied. They turn up +in small flocks so early in the summer that one might almost doubt +if they could fly well enough to take care of themselves. On June +26th last summer nearly forty were flying about in the evening, and +went across to roost on the eyot. Later numbers of blackbirds +arrive, also moving down the river. Sand-martins, when beginning +the migration, travel down the Thames in small flocks, and sleep +each night in different osier beds. How many stages they make when +"going easy" down the river no one knows. But I have seen the +flocks come along just before dusk, straight down stream, and then +dropping into an osier bed.</p> + +<p>In the second week of September there is usually an immense +migration of house-martins and swallows down the river. I have +already described what I once saw on a migration night on Chiswick +Eyot. Sometimes they go on past London, and find themselves near +Thames mouth with no osier beds or shelter of any kind. Then they +settle on ships. I was told that one morning the craft lying in +Hole Haven off Canvey Island were covered with swallows, all too +numb to move, but that when the sun came out the greater number +flew away towards the sea. The same thing happened on the windmill +at Cley, in Norfolk, a famous starting and alighting place for +birds. Moorhens evidently migrate up or down the river in spring +and autumn, and occasionally dabchicks; otherwise their sudden +appearance and disappearance on the eyot could not be accounted +for. Snipe follow the Thames up the valley. Formerly Chiswick Eyot +was their first alighting place when east winds were blowing, after +the fatigue of crossing London; and persons still living used to go +out and shoot them. A friend of mine, whose family has resided in +Chiswick for several generations, used to go down the outside of +the eyot and kill snipe, and also kill teal and duck in the stream +which runs from Chiswick House into the river. Another friend broke +a young pointer to partridges on the market garden between Barnes +Bridge and Chiswick.</p> + +<p>Probably a number of the warblers also use the river as a +migration road, though I only notice them in spring. But as I am +never here in early September possibly many pass without being +noticed. Also they are silent in autumn, whereas in spring they +sing, a little, but enough to show that they are there.</p> + +<p>Among the birds of this kind which pass up the river, but of +which only a few pairs stay to breed on the eyot, are whitethroats, +blackcaps, chiff-chaffs, and, I believe, nightingales. One +beautiful early morning in spring I could not believe my ears, but +I heard a nightingale in a bush by the side of the garden +overhanging the river. It sang for about an hour, "practising" as +nightingales do. Another person in a house near also heard it, and +was equally astonished. It probably passed on, for next day it was +inaudible.</p> + +<p>In hard weather a migration of a different kind takes place down +the river towards the sea. These birds are recruited from the ranks +of the birds that stay, with some foreign winter visitors also. +They pass down the river feeding on the mud and among the stones at +ebb tide. Among those I have seen are flocks of starlings and +scattered birds, mainly redwings, thrushes, blackbirds, and +occasionally robins. Sandpipers also migrate up the Thames in +spring, and down it in autumn.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter12">WITTENHAM WOOD</a></h2> + +<p>In Wittenham Wood, which in our time was not spoiled, from a +naturalist's point of view, by too much trapping or shooting the +enemies of game, though there was plenty of wild game in it, the +balance of nature was quite undisturbed. Of course we never shot a +hawk or an owl, and I think the most important item of vermin +killed was two cats, which were hung up as an awful instance of +what we could do if we liked.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="otters"></a> <img src="images/fig09.png" +width="553" height="956" alt="OTTERS. +From a photograph by J. S. Bond. +WATERHEN ON HER NEST. +From a photograph by R. B. Lodge."> +</p> + +<p>In such large isolated woods, the wild life of the ordinary +countryside exists under conditions somewhat differing from those +found even in estates where the natural cover of woodland is broken +up into copses and plantations. Birds and beasts, and even +vegetation, are found in an intermediate stage between the wholly +artificial life on cultivated land and the natural life in true +forest districts like the New Forest or Exmoor. Most of these woods +are cut bare, so far as the underwood extends, once in every seven +years. But the cutting is always limited to a seventh of the wood. +This leaves the ground covered with seven stages of growth, the +large trees remaining unfelled. With the exception of this annual +disturbance of a seventh of the area, and a few days' hunting and +shooting, limited by the difficulty of beating such extensive +tracts of cover, the wood remains undisturbed for the twelve +months, and all wild animals are naturally tempted to make it a +permanent home.</p> + +<p>As I have said, the wood stands on the banks of the Thames, +below the old fortress of Sinodun Hill, and opposite to the +junction of the River Thame. All the British land carnivora except +the martin cat and the wild cat are found in it. The writer +recently saw the skin of a cat which had reverted to the exact +size, colouring, and length of fur of the wild species, killed in +the well-known Bagley Wood, an area of similar character, but of +much greater extent, at a few miles distance in the direction of +Oxford. A polecat was domiciled in Wittenham Wood as lately as +August, 1898. Though this animal is reported to be very scarce in +many counties, there is little doubt that in such woods it is far +commoner than is generally believed. Being mainly a night-hunting +animal it escapes notice. But in the quiet of the wood it lays +aside its caution, and hunts boldly in the daytime. The cries of a +young pheasant in distress, running through some thick bramble +patches and clumps of hazel, suggested that some carnivorous animal +was near, and on stepping into the thicket a large polecat was seen +galloping through the brushwood. Its great size showed that it was +a male, and the colour of its fur was to all appearance not the +rich brown common to the polecat and the polecat cross in the +ferret, but a glossy black. This, according to Mr. W.E. de Winton, +perhaps the best authority on the British <em>mustelidae</em>, is +the normal tint of the male polecat's fur in summer. "By the 1st of +June," he writes, "the fur is entirely changed in both sexes. The +female, or 'Jill,' changes her entire coat directly she has young; +at the end of April or the beginning of May. The male, or 'Hob,' +changes his more leisurely throughout the month of May. He is then +known locally as the black ferret, and has a beautiful purplish +black coat. As in all <em>mustelidae</em> the male is half as big +again as the female." Stoats and weasels are of course attracted to +the woods, where, abandoning their habit of methodical hedgerow +hunting, they range at large, killing the rabbits in the open wood, +and hunting them through the different squares into which the +ground is divided with as much perseverance as a hound. They may be +seen engaged in this occupation, during which they show little or +no fear of man. They will stop when crossing a ride to pick up the +scent of the hunted rabbit, and after following it into the next +square, run back to have another look at the man they noticed as +they went by, with an impudence peculiar to their race. The foxes +have selected one of the prettiest tracts of the wood for their +breeding-earth. It is dug in a gentle hollow, and at a height of +some forty feet above the Thames. From it the cubs have beaten a +regular path to the riverside, where they amuse themselves by +catching frogs and young water-voles. The parent foxes do not, as a +rule, kill much game in the wood itself, except when the cubs are +young. They leave it early in the evening and prowl round the +outsides, over the hill, and round the Celtic camp above, and beat +the river-bank for a great distance up and down stream, catching +water-hens and rats. At sunrise they return to the wood, and, as a +rule, go to earth. The cubs, on the other hand, never leave it +until disturbed by the hounds cub-hunting in September. Otters, +which travel up and down the river, and occasionally lie in the +osier-bed which joins the wood, complete the list of predatory +quadrupeds which haunt it. With the exception of the first, the +wild cat, and the last, the otter, they constitute its normal +population, and as long as the stock of rabbits and hares is +maintained, they may remain there as long as the wood lasts.</p> + +<p>Numerically, the rabbits are more than equal to the total of +other species, whether bird or beast. <a name="fnr9"></a> <a href= +"#fn9" class="fnsuper">1</a> In dry seasons, they swarm in the +lighter tracts of the wood, and burrow in every part of it. These +wood-rabbits differ in their way of life from those in the open +warren outside. Their burrows are less intricate, and not massed +together in numbers as in the open. On the other hand, the whole +rabbit population of the one hundred acres seems to keep in touch, +and occasionally moves in large bodies from one part of the area to +another. During one spring and early summer the first broods of +young rabbits burrowed tunnels under the wire-netting which +encircled the boundary for many hundred yards, and went into a +large field of barley adjoining. This they half destroyed. By the +middle of August it was found that, instead of the barley being +full of rabbits, it was deserted. They had all returned to the +wood, and were in their turn bringing up young families. One colony +deserted the wood altogether, and formed a separate warren some +hundreds of yards away on a steep hillside. On the eastern boundary +the river is a complete check to their migration. Except in the +great frosts, when the Thames is frozen, no rabbit ever troubles to +cross it. Hares do so frequently when coursed, and occasionally +when under no pressure of danger. After harvest, when the last +barley-fields are cut, the wood is full of hares. They resort to it +from all quarters for shelter, and do not emerge in any number +until after the fall of the leaf. During the months of August, +September, and October these hares, which during the spring and +winter lie out in the most open parts of the hills above, lead the +life of woodland animals. In place of lying still in a form +throughout the day, they move and feed. At all hours they may be +heard fidgeting about in the underwood and "creeping" in the +regularly used paths in the thick cover. When disturbed they never +go at speed, but, confident in the shelter of the wood, hop and +canter in circles, without leaving cover. In the evening they come +out into the rides, and thence travel out into the clover layers, +returning, like the foxes, early in the morning. A badger was found +dead in the wood the first year I rented it. This I much regretted, +for though it had probably been shot coming out of a cornfield next +the wood, the badger is quite harmless, and most useful to the fox +hunter, for he <em>cleans out the earths</em>. Mr. E. Dunn, late +master of the Old Berkshire, tells me that they are of great +service in this way, as they <em>dig</em> and enlarge the earths, +and so prevent the taint of mange clinging to the sides if a mangy +fox has lain in them.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="dabchick"></a> <img src="images/fig10.png" +width="557" height="913" alt="DABCHICK. +From a photograph by R.B. Lodge. +BADGER. +From a photograph by J.S. Bond."> +</p> + +<p>Lying between the river and the hills, this wood holds nearly +every species of the larger woodland and riverine birds common to +southern England. The hobby breeds there yearly. The wild pheasant, +crow, sparrow-hawk, kestrel, magpie, jay, ringdove, brown owl, +water-hen (on the river-bounded side), in summer the cuckoo and +turtle-dove, are all found there, and, with the exception of the +pigeons and kestrels, which seek their food at a distance during +the day, they seldom leave the shelter of its trees. One other +species frequents the more open parts of the cover in yearly +greater numbers; this is the common grey partridge. The wood has an +increasing attraction for them. They nest in it, fly to it at once +for shelter when disturbed, lie in the thick copses during the heat +of the day, and roost there at night. Several covies may be seen on +the wing in a few minutes if the stubbles outside are disturbed in +the evening, flying to the wood. There they alight, and run like +pheasants, refusing to rise if followed. It is said that in the +most thickly planted parts of Hampshire the partridge is becoming a +woodland bird, like the ruffed grouse of North America. All that it +needs to learn is how to perch in a tree, an art which the +red-legged partridge possesses. The birds, unlike the foxes, hares, +and rabbits, avoid the centre of the wood. Only the owls and +wood-pigeons haunt the interior. All the other species live upon +the edge. They dislike the darkness, and draw towards the sun. The +jays keep mainly to one corner by the river. The sparrow-hawks have +also their favourite corner. The wild pheasants lead a life in +curious contrast to that of the tame birds in the preserves. Like +their ancestors in China and the Caucasus, they prefer the +osier-beds and reeds by the river to the higher and drier ground. +But in common with all the other birds of the wood, with the +exception of the brown owls, they move round the wood daily, +<em>following the sun</em>. In the early morning they are on the +eastern margin to meet the sunrise. At noon they move round to the +south, and in the evening are on the stubbles to the west. Where +the pheasants are there will the other birds be found, in an +unconscious search for light. It is the shelter and safety of the +big wood, and not the presence of crowded vegetation, that attracts +them. They seek the wood, not from choice, but because it is a city +of refuge.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn9"></a> <a href="#fnr9">[1]</a> +These observations were made some years ago. I believe it has been +found necessary to kill down the rabbits since.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter13">SPORT AT WITTENHAM</a></h2> + +<p>There is always some rivalry about shooting different woods on +adjacent properties, and the villages near always take a certain +interest in the results. Visiting our nearest riverside inn to +order luncheon for our own shoot that week, I found about a dozen +labourers in the front room, with a high settle before the fire to +keep the draught out, sitting in a fine mixed odour of burning +wood, beer, and pipes. Sport was the pervading topic, for a popular +resident had been shooting his wood, and many of the men had been +beating for him, and had their usual half-crown to spend. They were +all talking over the day at the top of their voices; it had been a +very good one. The wood is quite isolated and not more than forty +acres. All round it is the property of one of the Oxford Colleges, +which retains the sporting rights over about fifteen hundred acres. +This is exercised by one of their senior fellows under some +arrangement which works perfectly well so far as I can see. I asked +our keeper, who always calls him "The Doctor," whether he was a +medicine doctor or a doctor of divinity. He inclined to think he +was the latter, as he belonged to college shooting. This way of +putting it struck me as odd, but he was right. Any way, he looked a +very pleasant figure in his long shooting coat and old-fashioned +Bedford cords. There is also a college keeper, who is an +institution in the village. The day's sport in "the Captain's wood" +had been a success. Forty hares had been shot, or just one per +acre, as well as a number of rabbits and wild pheasants. The hares +were being sent round the village in very generous fashion, and a +dozen lay on a bench in a back room.</p> + +<p>Our own day was also a satisfactory one. Rabbits were unusually +numerous, and many squares had to be beaten twice. The gross total +of the two days was only something over three hundred head; but it +was all wild game, and shot in very pretty surroundings. With the +beaters were the keeper, who is also head woodman, and two +assistant woodmen. These three men cut the whole of the hundred +acres down in the course of seven years. Putting their lives at +something over three score and ten, they will, as they began before +they were twenty-one, have cut the wood down about eight times in +the course of their existence. The beaters are entirely recruited +from the staff of this very large and well-managed farm. They have +beaten the woods so often that they know exactly what to do, when +properly generalled. Our landlord was one of the guns, and his son, +who does not shoot, but knows the wood thoroughly, kindly took +command of the men, and kept things going at best pace through the +day. Anything prettier than the entrance to the wood would be hard +to find. A long meadow slopes steeply to the Thames, with an old +church and the remains of a manor house at one end and the wood at +the other. Below the house is a roaring weir, and opposite the +abbey of Dorchester across the flats. Our little campaign gave an +added interest to the scene. The bulk of the men were going round +behind the hills to drive these "kopjes" into the wood. The guns +and one or two ladies, and some small boys bearing burdens were +walking up the middle ride. Below was the silver Thames in best +autumn livery, for the leaf was not yet off the willows, though the +reed-beds were bright russet. The sky was blue, the sun bright, and +the sound of the weir came gaily up through the trees. All the +wood-paths were bright with moss, the air still, and an endless +shower of leaves from the oaks was falling over the whole hundred +acres. There were just enough wild pheasants in the wood to make a +variety in the rabbit-shooting. Hares were unexpectedly numerous, +and we lined up on the side of the wood furthest from the river for +a hare drive. The whole hillside is without a hedge. Watching the +long slope it is a pretty and exciting sport to see the coveys of +partridges, of which there are sometimes a number on the hill, +rise, fly down and pitch again, and then rise once more and come +fifty miles an hour over your head into the wood.</p> + +<p>The hares are generally very wild, getting up while the folds of +the ground are still between them and the beaters. As they seldom +come straight into the wood it is amusing to guess which particular +gun they will make for. Most of them slipped in at a safe distance, +only to be picked up in the wood later. A few birds were shot, and +the cover now held some forty partridges, though they are very wild +in the low slop, and seldom leave more than one or two stragglers +behind when the wood is beaten. The rabbit-shooting in the cover is +difficult unless firing at "creepers" from the cover in front is +indulged in. The rides are often very narrow, and the rabbits cross +like lightning. Shooting "creepers" is also highly dangerous if +there are many guns, or if the men are near. They do not seem to +mind; indeed, I have known them shout out exhortations for us to +fire, when only screened by a row of thistles. One thing I have +learnt by shooting this big wood. The hares, and late in the season +the rabbits, move at least one square ahead of the beaters. If a +single gun is kept well forward, choosing his own place and taking +turnabout with the others, the bag--if it is wished to kill down +the ground game--will be considerably increased. One object when +shooting this wood is to get the ground beaten quickly; if there +are twenty squares to be beaten, and five minutes are wasted at +each, it means a loss of one hour forty minutes. The guns +consequently go best pace to their places forward after each beat. +What with running at a jog-trot down the rides, shooting hard when +in place, and then getting on quickly to the next stand, often +along spongy or clayey rides on a nice, warm, moist November day, +this is by no means the armchair work which people are fond of +calling wood shooting. The variety of scenery in the wood added +much to the charm. Sometimes we were in the narrow rides covered +with short turf and almost arched over by the tall hazels; +sometimes we were in low slop or walking through last year's +cuttings, shooting at impossible rabbits. There we had an +occasional rise of those most difficult of all birds to kill, +partridge in cover, killing both French and English birds; or a +cock pheasant would rise and hustle forward, an agreement having +been made to leave these till properly beaten up later in the day. +Two very pretty corners were perhaps the most enjoyable parts of +the sport. By the river was a flat reed- and rush-covered corner, +with a ring of oaks round, the Thames at the bottom, and some tall +chestnut-trees on the outside. As the men advanced we had a regular +rise of wild pheasants, rocketing up from the reeds in every +direction high over the oaks and chestnuts. A fox helped the fun by +trotting up and down in the reeds uncertain which way to go, and +flushing the birds as he did so. Then the rushes were walked out +and the rabbits sent darting in every direction. After this we +hardly found a bird or rabbit in that corner during the season.</p> + +<p>That year the wood gave constant sport, far better than in the +later years. There were three times as many rabbits, as well as +hares and pheasants.</p> + +<p>One day in January we shot it during a fall of fine, dry snow. +As the day went on the ground grew white, and our coats whiter. At +luncheon the men were quite prepared for the emergency, or rather +had prepared for it the day before when the frost began. They had a +bonfire of brambles a dozen feet high, and faggots ready as seats, +one set for us on one side of the fire, another for themselves on +the other. The roaring blaze of the fire warmed us through and +through, and by the end of luncheon our coats, which had been +powdered with snow, were grey with wood ash descending. During this +day a fox hung round us during the whole shoot. I think he must +have been picking up and burying or hiding wounded rabbits, for +every now and then he would come out into the ride, carefully smell +the various places where rabbits had crossed, and then, selecting +one, would go off like a retriever into the cover.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter14">SPORT AT WITTENHAM +(<em>continued</em>)</a></h2> + +<p>A month later Mr. Harcourt was shooting his woods at Nuneham. +There are more than four hundred acres of woods round this most +beautiful park, all of them giving ideal English estate scenery. +The oaks of the park are like those at Richmond, but there is not +much fern except in the covers. Nuneham is the best natural +pheasant preserve in the Thames Valley, except Wytham, Lord +Abingdon's place, above Oxford. The woods lie roughly in a ring +round the park, in which the pheasants sun themselves. Outside +these woods are arable fields with quantities of feed, and all +along the front lies the river, which the pheasants do not often +cross. The most striking sport at Nuneham is the driving of the +island by the lock cottage. Every one who has been at Oxford has +rowed down to have tea under the lovely hanging woods by the old +lock. Few see it later in the year when the island opposite is +covered with masses of silver-white clematis and thousands of red +berries of the wild rose and thorn. In the late autumn mornings, +when the mists are floating among the tall trees on the hill and +the sunbeams just striking down through the vapours as they top the +wood from the east, it is one of the prettiest sights on the +Thames. In November or early December, when the woods are shot, +numbers of pheasants are always found on the island. It holds a +pool, in which and on the river are usually a number of wild ducks. +Shooting from the river itself is now forbidden, and these and the +half-wild duck have multiplied. The beaters, in white smocks, all +cross the old rustic bridge like a procession of white-robed monks, +and drive this island, and wild ducks and pheasants come out high +over the river, making for the top of the hill. The shooting is +fast and difficult, and the scene as the guns fire from the +stations all along the bank is most picturesque.</p> + +<p>Shooting with a neighbour on some land adjoining Nuneham, my +attention was drawn to the very elegant appearance of all the gates +and rails adjacent to the road. As the ground was always +beautifully farmed and in good order, the condition of the gates +did not surprise me. There was, however, a story attached to their +smartness. A seller of quack medicines had sent out advertisers +with most objectionable little bills, which he had posted on every +gate adjoining the roads. My entertainer, who was the occupier of +the land, had brought an action against the medicine man for +defacing his gates, which was only compromised by the delinquent +undertaking to paint every gate. He demurred at first to painting +the railings too, but in the end had to do this also.</p> + +<p>The stalking-horse is still part of the sporting equipment of +some old Thames-valley farmhouses, but not in this neighbourhood. +Only one wet season fell to my lot, and then, though I often saw +bodies of duck, I had no opportunity of getting near them. A +neighbour anchored a punt under a hedge on the line which he +believed the duck would take at dusk, and killed several. Hard +frosts send large bodies of duck to the river; they come as soon as +ever the large private lakes, like those at Blenheim, Wootton, and +Eynsham are frozen, and lie in small flocks all along the river. +Water-hens are so numerous on the river now, owing to their +preservation by the Conservancy, that any small covers of osier +near are full of them. They make extremely pretty old-fashioned +shooting when beaten up by a spaniel from the sedge and osier +cover. I once turned out a dozen water-hens, a brown owl, a +woodcock, and a water-rail from one little withe patch. When +shooting the wood we always had one or two water-hens in the bag, +and sometimes a chance at a duck flying overhead from the river. +Only once were there many woodcocks in the cover. There must have +been at least five, and all were missed. At last, as we were +finishing the beat, one of the guns, who was young and keen, went +off after the last-missed cock along the river bank. As we were +loading up the game at the wood gate we heard a single shot. Then +he appeared in the ride with the cock. Both he and his excellent +old spaniel received warm congratulations. For my own part I was +never tired of by-days in the wood in my first season. The best +sport was starting rabbits from under the rows of fresh-felled ash +and hazel poles, which the woodman called drills. They are about +five feet high and seven feet through. The rabbits get under them +in numbers, and sit there all day. We had an old retriever who was +an expert at finding them. The next process was for the gun to +clamber on to the top and stand knee-deep on the springing faggots, +while a woodman on each side poked the rabbit out with a pole. He +might bolt any way, and was under the next drill in a trice, so the +shooting was quick. I bagged twelve one afternoon in this cheerful +manner. Another great ambition of our lives was to get the better +of the hill partridges. There were plenty of them, but they always +dived into the wood, and were lost for the day. Only once did we +score off them. We drove about sixty from the hills into the wood. +There they were seen running along the rides like guinea fowls, but +by placing a gun at the corner of the wood, and beating towards +him, we killed nine brace.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter15">A FEBRUARY FOX HUNT</a></h2> + +<p>When the Yeomanry left the hunting field for South Africa, and +"registered" horses were commandeered by Government, fox hunting in +counties where it is not the main business of life might be +supposed to languish. As a matter of fact, it did not; and if the +fields were smaller than usual, and a good many familiar faces +missing, the master very properly felt that as he had his pack and +there were plenty of foxes, he might as well employ the one and +hunt the other, and keep up the spirits of the county by good, +sound sport and plenty of it. Masters who take this view, and there +are very few who do not, are public benefactors and shining +examples; for it is not only the men who hunt who benefit vastly by +the change and exhilaration which hunting brings in its train. The +whole countryside enjoys a wholesome tonic by the frequent visits +of the hounds, and the well-equipped company with them. Nothing +cheers up the village, or cures the influenza, or brings oblivion +of war news, or puts every one into conceit with themselves, so +quickly, or leaves such a glow of sound satisfaction behind it. It +would be odd if it did not, considering the amount of time, money, +and trouble spent before the pack trots up to the green before the +old grey church at eleven on a February morning. Wittenham Wood +lies on the very edge of the Old Berkshire country, and as the +river blocks all one side of it is naturally not one of the +favourite meets. But at the time of writing, early in February a +meet was duly advertised, and punctually to time the hounds were +there. Some people seem to think that modern fox-hunting is not so +thorough as it was in the past. We know better, and without +imitating Mr. Jack Spraggon, or reminding every one present of that +"two thousand five hundred--twenty-five 'undred--pounds a year" +which Lord Scamperdale did or did not spend on his pack, are very +well aware of what our master and the servants and the hounds had +done that morning. The meet is on the edge of his country, sixteen +miles from his house, and he has ridden over all the way, rising +before the sun has got through more than the outside layer of the +mists. There is no special honour and glory awaiting him in return. +The cover to be drawn is surrounded for miles by deep and holding +land now soaked with rain. A run of any distinction is most +improbable. On the other hand, there will be plenty of hunting of a +certain kind, and the chance of seeing it, for the wood is +overlooked by lofty hills. Therefore, though the meet is small, the +neighbourhood as a body expect to see plenty of the hounds, and +turn up expectant, the farmers on their cobs, the young ladies on +ponies and in dog-carts, and all the village who can be spared for +an hour on foot, while the small boys regard each other with +rapturous grins, and practise "holloaing" to improve their +lung-power when the fox breaks. When the hounds appear--they have +come nearly as far from the kennels as the master has from +home--they are covered with road mud from foot to head. The gritty +splashes have changed all the white and tan to grey, and made the +black badger-pied. While some roll on the grass and push themselves +along sideways to get clean, and others attempt the impossible task +of licking the mud off their legs and feet, the older hounds, who +are less self-conscious, poke their heads into the hands and +against the chests of their ready-made friends, the village +children, who rush in while the master and the field and lookers-on +are exchanging courtesies, and embrace all the pack whom they can +reach. Meantime the "assets" for the day's sport, the material +complement on which this present assembly must rely for its day's +hunting, lie in the cover and its contents. A hundred acres of +wood, in all stages of growth, from the high thickets which the +woodmen were felling yesterday, to the teazle and stump-studded +slope which they cut last year, with the deep river below and the +swelling hills above, is the cover.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="foxandcub"></a> <img src="images/fig11.png" +width="605" height="924" alt="FOX AND CUB. +From photographs by Charles Reid."></p> + +<p>What the master would like would be that it should hold but one +fox, that that fox should get away over the hills and on to the +downs beyond as quickly as possible, and that he should never come +back, but be killed three parishes away. But no one believes in +such luck; and the local lookers-on do not in the least desire it. +They want to see "a day's hunting" in the wood, and a fox to every +half-dozen hounds. As a fact there are five foxes, not one, in the +wood; and, passing from the general to the particular, we may +explain how they came there. The heavy rains of the end of January +filled all the drains, in which many foxes lie, so full of water +that they abandoned them in sheer disgust, and took to the warm +lying of the wood. Among these was a most attractive vixen, whose +society kept the rest from leaving when the weather improved; +consequently, the wood seemed full of foxes, none of which were +disposed to leave it. When the pack trotted up to the main ride, +and the huntsman's ringing voice sent them crashing into the +four-years' growth by the river, a brace were lying snug and dry in +the old ash-stumps. One slipped into the river at once and quietly +swam to the opposite bank, while the other crept all along the +outside hedge and curled up in the corner waiting on events. The +vixen slipped into a badger earth under an old oak and stayed +there, and a couple more dog-foxes moved on into four acres of low +slop, brambles, shoots, and blackthorns, where they were winded by +half the pack, while the other half were running the first fox up +the fence. The crash and music of the hounds re-echoed from the +trees and the enfolding hills above, the shrieking of the jays as +they flit protesting from tree to tree, the hearty ring of the +huntsman's voice cheering his hounds--surely all this should send +each fox flying out over the fields beyond! But a fox has no +nerves. He keeps his head with the coolness of a Red Indian, and a +"slimness" all his own. The first fox doubles back along his +tracks, crosses the big ride, twenty yards lower, just as that part +of the pack which is hunting him flings on up the fence, and waits +again till he hears them break out where he first stopped. From +outside, where the field are waiting on a knoll which gives a +downward view into the rolling acres of the wood, the rest of the +pack are seen forcing another fox upwards towards the hills. The +sight is as pretty as our woods can show. Down below the red coats +of the master and huntsman move up the rides, and the heads and +sterns of the broad line of hounds, now all clean and bright after +brushing through the wood, rise and fall, appear and vanish, as +they leap over or thrust through the low slop and brambles. In +front, where a goyle runs up to a hollow of the hill, the ground +has been cleared of wood, and the forest of tall teazle-tops is +full of goldfinches, flying from seed-head to seed-head, too tame +to mind the noise or care for anything but their breakfast. Yet +even they gather and fly before the approaching tumult. Hares come +hurrying out, and dash over the smooth hillside; magpies rise, +poise themselves, slue round, and dive backwards into the wood; and +then circumspect, lopping easily and lightly along, a fox crosses +through the teazles, and slips down to a drain in the hollow; and +see! another fox behind him, along the same path, and on the same +errand, for each trots up to a covered drain, looks at it, and +finding it stopped, pauses a second to think, and takes his +resolve. One slips back into the wood, the other canters to the +fence, rising the hill, looks out, whisks his brush and is +off--across the turf, over the fifty-acre field of growing wheat, +and away to the back of the hills. Half the pack are running the +first fox, who has slipped back to the river, but with the other +half every one gets clear off, and does his best over the awful +ground. The mud explodes like shells as the hoofs crush into it, +but somehow every one is across and away, and on to the green road +and a line of sainfoin much sooner than could be expected. The fox +can be seen crossing the back of the hill, looking big and red, and +full of running; but after twenty-five minutes over all sorts of +ground, from medium bad to "downright cruel," for the soaking rains +have made a very pudding even of the pasture, the fox is run into +and killed close to the Thames. No one need be sorry for him, for +he had lived by theft and violence for the past two years, and was +duly eaten himself by his natural enemies. Then back to the wood +again, where the rest of the pack had been whipped off their fox, +and were waiting dolefully to begin again, by which time the other +foxes, of which two elected to stay, had resolved that come what +might, they would stick to the wood, of which they knew every inch +by heart; and by keeping under the river bank, sneaking under +layers of felled brushwood, dodging along drains, and other +devices, postponed their fate for two hours, when one was "chopped" +and one broke away and was run till dark. This is not the kind of +thing that keeps hunting alive, but it is the kind of day which +occurs in most ordinary counties in February, and at which no one +greatly grumbles. But if a slow woodland day is unattractive, the +man who hunts in a modest way from London and wishes to be sure of +a run has no lack of choice. Try, for instance, a day on the South +Downs, five miles from the sea, on the vast uplands and among the +furze-covered bottoms behind Beachy Head, when the snow-clouds are +rolling in from the Channel and dusting the summits of the downs +with white. There is at least the certainty of foxes, and of a +gallop over the highest and soundest land in the South, and even +"February fill-dike" cannot make the going heavy.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter16">EWELME--A HISTORICAL +RELIC</a></h2> + +<p>At the head of one of the smaller Thames tributaries, a few +miles from the river, lies Ewelme, the ancient Aquelma, so called +from the springing waters which rise there. There are trout in the +brook and excellent water-cresses higher up, which are cultivated +scientifically. Also there was a political row in Gladstonian days +over an appointment to the living. But the real interest of this +exceptionally beautiful Thames-valley village is that it is a +survival, almost unchanged, of a "model village" made in the time +of the Plantagenets. As such it deserves a place in any history, +even a "natural" history, which deals with the river.</p> + +<p>The village lies at the foot of the Chiltern Hills, not far from +Dorchester. The persons who made it a model village just before the +Wars of the Roses were William de la Pole, the first Duke of +Suffolk, and his Duchess, Alice, the grandchild of Geoffrey +Chaucer. The Duke, as every one knows, was for years the leading +spirit in England during the early part of the reign of Henry VI., +whose marriage with Margaret of Anjou he arranged in the hope of +putting an end to the disastrous war with France. His murder in +mid-Channel--when his relentless enemies followed him out to sea, +took him from the ship in which he was going into exile, and +beheaded him on the thwarts of an open boat--was the forerunner of +the most ghastly chapters of blood and vengeance in civil feud ever +known in this country. But the grace and dignity of his home life +in his palace at Ewelme, with his Duchess to help him, are less +well known, though the evidences of it remain little altered at the +present day.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="ewelme"></a> <img src="images/fig12.png" +width="886" height="654" alt="EWELME POOL. +From a photograph by Taunt & Co."></p> + +<p>Of course there was a village there long before the Duke of +Suffolk became possessed of it. It was such a perfect site that if +any place in the country round were inhabited, Ewelme would have +been first choice. The flow of water is one of the most striking +natural features and amenities of the place. It is a natural +spring, coming out from the chalk of the Chilterns, and forming +immediately a lovely natural pool, under high, tree-grown banks. +This is still exactly as it was in the ancient days. No water +company has robbed it, and besides "The King's Pool," which is the +old name of the water, there are overflowing streams in every +direction, now used in careful irrigation for the growth of +watercress, one of the prettiest of all forms of minor farming. +Fertile land, shelter from gales by the overhanging hill, great +trees, and abundance of ever-flowing water, are the natural +commodities of the place. It was of some importance very early, for +it gave its name to a Hundred. This hundred contains among other +places Chalgrove, where Hampden received his death-wound. Ewelme +belonged to the Chaucer family. The last male heir was Thomas, son +of Geoffrey Chaucer the poet, who left an only daughter Alice, +destined to become the greatest lady of her time. She married first +the celebrated Earl of Salisbury, who was killed by a cannon-shot +while inspecting the defences of Orleans during the siege which +Joan of Arc raised. William de la Pole, then Earl of Suffolk, was +appointed commander of the English forces in the Earl of +Salisbury's place, and not only succeeded to his office, but also +married his Countess, who now became Countess of Suffolk. It was +long before either the Earl or his Countess could revisit Ewelme, +where the Earl must have had some property before his marriage, for +his elder brother, Earl Michael, was buried at the public expense +in the church of Ewelme after his death at Agincourt. For seventeen +years the Earl never left the war in France; but when Henry VI. was +grown up he arranged the marriage with Margaret of Anjou, and did +his best to promote peace. At this time Suffolk was the most +powerful subject in the kingdom. He was made a Marquis, and finally +a Duke, and his Duchess was granted the livery of the Garter. In +1424 they built a palace at Ewelme, and in due course rebuilt the +church, founded a "hospital for thirteen poor men and two priests," +and added to this a school. Palace, church, hospital, and school +were all of the same period of architecture, and that the very best +of its kind. Thus in the fifteenth century Ewelme was eminently a +"one man" place, like most of the model villages of to-day. The +palace was moated, and used as a prison as late as the Civil War. +Margaret of Anjou was kept there in a kind of honourable +confinement for a short time, for long after the Duke's murder the +Duchess was in favour once more, in the triumph of the Yorkists, +and Margaret, who had been her Queen and patroness, was given to +her keeping as a prisoner both in her palace and later at +Wallingford Castle. Henry VIII. spent his third honeymoon there, +with Jane Seymour, and Prince Rupert lived in it during the Civil +War. Later, only the banqueting hall remained, which was converted +into a manor house.</p> + +<p>But if the palace is gone, the church remains as evidence of the +magnificence of the Duke's ideas on the subject of a village place +of worship. He seems to have shared the apprehension felt by the +Duke in Disraeli's novel "Tancred," that he might be accused of +"under-building his position." In design it is very like another +large church at Wingfield in Suffolk, where his hereditary +possessions lay, and where he was buried after his murder, his body +having been given to his widow. The same architect possibly +supervised both, but of the two Ewelme Church is the finer. The +interior is especially splendid, for in it are the tombs of the +Chaucers, and the magnificent sepulchre of the Duchess herself, on +which her emaciated figure lies wrapped in her shroud. This tomb of +the Duchess Alice is one of the finest monuments of the kind in +England. The other relic of the prosperity of Ewelme under the De +la Poles is the hospital and school they founded. "God's House" is +the name now given to it, and it is kept in good repair and used as +an almshouse. The inner court is surrounded by cloisters, and the +whole is in exactly the same condition as when it was built. The +higher parts, constructed of brick, were the quarters of the priest +and schoolmaster. The ruin and subsequent murder of the Duke, who +adorned and beautified this model village in the early fifteenth +century, took place in 1450. Nearly all France was lost, and in the +hopes of conciliating the enemy, Maine and Anjou were given up by +Suffolk's advice. He was accused of "selling" the provinces, and a +number of vague but damaging charges were drawn up against him on +evidence which would not be listened to now in any court or +Parliament, except perhaps in a French State trial. Suffolk drew up +a petition to the king, which shows among other things the drain +which the French wars made on the lives and fortunes of the English +nobles. After referring to the "odious and horrible language that +runneth through the land almost in every common mouth, sounding to +my highest charge and most heaviest slander," he reminded the King +that his father had died in the siege of Harfleur, and his eldest +brother at Agincourt; that two other brothers were killed at the +battle of Jargeau, where he himself had been taken prisoner and had +to pay Ł20,000 ransom; that while his fourth brother was hostage +for him he died in the enemy's hands; and that he had borne arms +for the King's father and himself "thirty-four winters," and had +"abided in the war in France seventeen years without ever seeing +this land." The King's favour secured that he should be banished +instead of losing his head, for a State trial was never anything +better than a judicial murder. The following is the letter written +by an eye-witness to Sir John Paston, describing what then +happened: "In the sight of all his men he was drawn out of the +great ship into the boat, and there was an axe and a stock. And one +of the lewdest men of the ship bade him lay down his head and he +should be fairly ferd (dealt) with, and die on a sword. And he took +a rusty sword and smote off his head with half-a-dozen strokes, and +took away his gown of russet and his doublet of velvet mailed, and +laid his body on the sands of Dover; and some say his head was set +on a pole by it, and his men sit on the land by great circumstance +and pray." The writer says, "I have so washed this bill with +sorrowful tears that uneths ye shall not read it." The Countess +survived his fall and lived to be great and powerful once more. Her +son became the brother-in-law of sovereigns, and her grandchildren +were princes and princesses.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter17">EEL-TRAPS</a></h2> + +<p>Fish and flour go together as bye-products of nearly all our +large rivers. The combination comes about thus: Wherever there is a +water-mill, a mill cut is made to take the water to it. The larger +the river, the bigger and deeper the mill cut and dam, unless the +mill is built across an arm of the stream itself. This mill-dam, as +every trout-fisher knows, holds the biggest fish, and where there +are no trout, or few trout, it will be full of big fish, while in +the pool below there are perhaps as many more. Of all the food +fishes of our rivers the eel is really far the most important. He +flourishes everywhere, in the smallest pools and brooks as well as +in the largest rivers, and grows up to a weight of 9 lb. or 10 lb., +and sometimes, though rarely, more. His price indicates his worth, +and never falls below 10d. per lb. Consequently he is valuable as +well as plentiful, and the millers know this well. On nearly all +rivers the millers have eel-traps, some of the ancient sort being +"bucks," made of withes, and worked by expensive, old-fashioned +machinery like the mill gear. Another and most paying dodge of the +machine-made order is worked in the mill itself, and makes an +annexe to the mill-wheel.</p> + +<p>I once spent an agreeable hour watching the making of barley +meal and the catching of eels, literally side by side. It was +sufficiently good fun to make me put my gun away for the afternoon, +and give up a couple of hours' walk, with the chance of a duck, to +watch the mill and eel-traps working.</p> + +<p>They were both in a perfect old-world bye-end of the Thames +Valley, in the meads at the back of the forgotten but perfect abbey +of the third order at Dorchester, under the tall east window of +which the River Thame was running bank full, fringed with giant +poplars, from which the rooks were flying to look at their last +year's nests in the abbey trees.</p> + +<p>The mill was, as might be supposed, the Abbey Mill; but on +driving up the lane I was surprised to see how good and large was +the miller's house, a fine dwelling of red and grey brick; and what +a length of frontage the old mill showed, built of wood, as most of +them are, but with two sets of stones, and space for two wheels. +Only one was at work, and that was grinding barley-meal--meal from +nasty, foreign barley full of dirt; but the miller had English +barley-meal too, soft as velvet and sweet as a new-baked loaf. +Stalactites of finest meal dust hung from every nail, peg, cobweb, +and rope end on the walls, fine meal strewed the floor, coarse meal +poured from the polished shoots, to which the sacks hung by bright +steel hooks, and on both floors ancient grindstones stood like +monuments of past work and energy, while below and beside all this +dust and floury dryness roared the flooded waters of the dam and +the beating floats of the wheel. "Have you any eels?" I asked. +"Come and see," said the miller.</p> + +<p>He stopped his wheel, unbolted the door, and we looked up the +mill dam, two hundred yards long, straight as a line, embanked by +double rows of ancient yews, the banks made and the trees planted +by the monks five hundred years ago. Then we stepped into the +wheel-house, where the water, all yellow and foaming, was pouring +into two compartments set with iron gratings below, on which it +rose and foamed. Seizing a long pole with prongs like walrus teeth, +the miller felt below the water on the bars. "Here's one, anyway," +he said, and by a dexterous haul scooped up a monster eel on to the +floor. In a box which he hauled from the dam he had more, some of +5-lb. weight, which had come down with the flood--an easy and +profitable fishery, for the eels can lie in the trap till he hauls +them out, and sell well summer and winter. It pays as well as a +poultry yard. Once he took a 9-lb. fish; 2-1/2 lb. to 4 lb. are +common.</p> + +<p>The eel-trap on the old Thames mill stream is imitated in other +places where there is no mill. Thus at Mottisfont Abbey on the Test +an old mill stream is used to work an hydraulic ram, and also to +supply eels for the house; the water is diverted into the eel-trap, +and the fish taken at any time. Another dodge for taking eels, +which is not in the nature of what is called a "fixed engine," is +the movable eel-trap or "grig wheel." It is like a crayfish basket, +and is in fact the same thing, only rather larger. They can be +obtained from that old river hand, Mr. Bambridge, at Eton, +weighted, stoppered, and ready for use, for 7s. 6d. each, and +unweighted for 5s. They are neat wicker-work tunnels, with the +usual contrivance at the mouth to make the entrance of the eels +agreeable and their exit impossible. The "sporting" side of these +traps is that a good deal of judgment is needed to set them in the +right places in a river. Many people think that eels like carrion +and favour mud. Mr. Bambridge says his experience is different, and +his "advice to those about to fish" with this kind of eel-trap is +suggestive of new ideas about eels. He says that "for bait nothing +can beat about a dozen and a-half of small or medium live gudgeon, +failing these large minnows, small dace, roach, loach, &c., +though in some streams about a dozen good bright large lob worms, +threaded on a copper wire and suspended inside, are very effective, +and should always be given a trial. Offal I have tried but found +useless, eels being a cleaner feeding fish than many are aware of; +and feeding principally in gravelly, weedy parts, the basket should +be well tucked up under a long flowing weed, as it is to these +places they go for food, such as the ground fish, loach, miller's +thumb, crayfish, shrimps, mussels, &c. When I worked a fishery +near here, I made it a rule after setting the basket to well +scratch the soil in front of the entrance with the boathook I used +for lowering them, and firmly believe their curiosity was excited +by the disturbed gravel. Choose water from four feet to six feet +deep, and see basket lays flat. Every morning when picked up, lay +them on the bank, pick out all weed and rubbish, and brush them +over with a bass broom, keeping them out of water till setting +again at dusk."</p> + +<p>Eel-bucks, of which few perfect sets now remain, are the fixed +engines so often seen on the Thames, and are a costly and rather +striking contrivance, adding greatly to the picturesqueness of +parts of the river. They are very ancient, and date from days when +the "eel-run" was one of the annual events of river life. The eels +went down in millions to the sea, and the elvers came up in such +tens of millions that they made a black margin to the river on +either side by the bank, where they swam because the current was +there weakest. The large eels were taken, and are still taken, on +their downward journey in autumn. It is then that the Thames fills, +and at the first big rush of water the eels begin to descend to +reach the mud and sands at the Thames mouth, where they spawn. They +always travel by night, and it is then that the heavy eel-bucks are +lowered. Often hundredweights are taken in a night, all of good +size, one of the largest of which there is any record being one of +15 lb., taken in the Kennet near Newbury. In the "grig-wheels" they +are taken as small as 3 oz. or 4 oz.; but in the bucks they rarely +weigh less than 1 lb. The darkest nights are the most favourable. +Moonlight stops them, and they do not like still weather. The +upward migration of eels goes on from February till May on the +Thames, but the regular "eel-fare" of the young grigs do not assume +any great size till May, when as many as 1,800, about three inches +long, were seen to pass a given point in one minute. So say the +records. But who could have counted them so fast?</p> + +<p>A few recent developments of the eel trade elsewhere show how +valuable this may be. Quite lately the Danes discovered that the +Lim-fiord and some other shallow Broads on the West Danish Coast +were a huge preserve of eels. They began trawling there steadily, +and have established a large and lucrative trade in them. On the +Bann, in Ireland, eel catching is still done in a large way, and +the fish shipped to London. But the most ancient and yet most +modern of eel fisheries is on the Adriatic, at Comacchio, where +lagoons 140 miles in circumference are stocked with eels, and eel +breeding and exporting are carried out on a large scale. Even as +early as the sixteenth century the Popes used to derive an income +of Ł12,000 from this source.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter18">SHEEP, PLAIN AND +COLOURED</a></h2> + +<p>In the Thames Valley there are two very distinguished breeds of +sheep--the Cotswolds at the head of the watershed, and the Oxford +Downs, near Wallingford. Wallingford lamb is supposed to be the +best in the market. There are also the Berkshire Downs sheep, but +these are, I think, more obviously cross-bred, or else of the +Hampshire breed. The Cotswold sheep are probably a very old breed. +They are evidently the original of the woolly "baa-lamb" of the +nursery, with long, fleecy wool. The Oxford Downs are a +short-woolled sheep. One of the flocks of this breed has been +improved by selection, mainly in regard to fecundity, to such an +extent that I believe twins are the normal proportion among the +lambs. The shepherds, as elsewhere on the large down farms, form a +race apart. They are not always on the best of terms with the +ordinary farm labourers, I notice. "The shepherd be a working +against I," is a complaint I sometimes hear. The real reason is +that the shepherd thinks, above all things, of his flock, and of +finding them <em>food</em>. The feud between the keeper of sheep +and the raiser of crops dates from the days of Cain and Abel.</p> + +<p>I heard lately from a gentleman who very frequently occupies the +honourable position of judge or steward at the leading agricultural +shows, that it is proposed that in future no sheep sent to shows +are to be allowed to have their coats rouged, and the judges are in +future to make their decisions uninfluenced by the beauties of +cosmetics. This decision comes as a great blow to the skilled hands +in the business of the "improver," who, by long experience and a +nice knowledge of the weaknesses of judges, had brought the art of +"making up" pedigree sheep of any particular breed to something +very nearly approaching the ideal of perfection. Their wool was +clipped so artistically as to resemble a bed of moss, and this +being elegantly tinted with rouge or saffron, the sheep assumed the +hue of the pink or primrose, according to taste and fancy. The +reason for the demand which now requires that the champions of the +flock shall be shown "plain" and not coloured is not too technical +to appeal to the general public. Those who know the acute anxiety +with which the exhibitors of prize animals, from fancy mice to +shorthorns, watch them "coming on" as the hour for the show +approaches, will treat tenderly, even if they cannot condone, the +little weaknesses into which the uses of rouge and saffron led +them. When a Southdown which ought to have a contour smooth and +rounded as a pear still showed aggravating little pits and hollows +where there ought to be none, nothing was easier than to postpone +clipping those undesirable hollows till the moment before the show, +or if there were bumps where there should be no bumps, to shave the +wool down close over them. Left to Nature, the newly-clipped wool +would show a different tint from the rest of the fleece; but the +rouge or saffron then applied made all things even, to the eye, and +the judges to find out whether the animals were "level" or not had +to feel them all over. Feeling every six inches of some two hundred +sheep's backs is very tiring work; so the judges have struck +against rouge, and there is an end of it.</p> + +<p>One night, some years ago, an extraordinary thing happened on +both lines of downs by the Thames, near Reading, and also along the +Chilterns. Most of the flocks over a very large area took a panic +and burst from their folds, and next morning thousands of sheep +were wandering all over the hills. I feel certain that there must +have been an earthquake shock that night. Nothing else could have +accounted for such a wide and general stampede. The last +authenticated earthquake shock in the South Midlands took place +hereabouts in 1775, and was noted at Lord Macclesfield's Castle of +Shirbourne, where the water in the moat was seen to rise against +the wall of one of the towers. <a name="fnr10"></a> <a href="#fn10" +class="fnsuper">1</a></p> + +<p>Are our domestic sheep, except for their highly artificial +development of wool, really very different from their wild +ancestors, the active and flat-coated animals which still feed on +the stony mountain-tops? The ways of sheep, not only in this +country but abroad, show that a part at least of their wild nature +is still strong in them; and if type photographs of all the +representative domestic animals of our time, had been possible a +few centuries ago, it may be that even in this country the shape of +the animal would be found to have been far nearer to the sheep of +St. Kilda and of the wild breeds than it is to-day.</p> + +<p>In one of the old Cloth Halls of Norfolk are two fine reliefs in +plaster, one showing the <em>Argo</em>, bringing the golden fleece, +the other a flock of sheep of the day, with a saint in Bishop's +mitre and robes preaching to them. The shepherd, in a smock, is +spinning wool with a distaff; and the sheep feeding around him, +though carefully modelled, are quite unlike any of the modern +breeds. Many of the domestic sheep of hot countries are more +slender and less woolly than the wild sheep of the mountains. The +black-and-white Somali sheep, for instance, are as smooth as a +pointer dog.</p> + +<p>But it is in temperament and habits that the close connection +between the wild and tame breeds is most clearly shown. The +<em>excessive</em> domestication of the flocks of Southern England +has killed all interest in them even among those who live in the +country, and are keen and sympathetic observers of the ways of +every other creature in the fields. The beauty of the lambs +attracts attention, and the prettiness of the scene when they and +their mothers are placed in some sheltered orchard among the wild +daffodils and primroses, or in an early meadow by the brook, makes +people wonder why they are so stupid when grown up. But the fact is +that when not penned up by hurdles and moved from square to square +over a whole farm, so that each inch of food may be devoured, each +member of the flock can think for itself, and would, in less +artificial surroundings, make for itself a creditable name for +independence and intelligence. All sheep have retained this +distinguishing habit of their ancestors, that they are by nature +migratory, and share with nearly all migrant animals a capacity for +thought and organisation, and a knowledge of localities. Wild sheep +are migratory because they live by preference on the rocky and +stony parts of hills just below the snow-line. This is why the tame +sheep do so well on the moors of Scotland and mountains of +Switzerland. But as the snow-line descends each winter far below +their summer feeding haunts, wild sheep either migrate to the lower +slopes of the mountains, or, like the deer of the Rockies, move off +altogether to great distances. Every winter, for instance, the +lower valleys of Yellowstone Park are filled with deer and antelope +from the distant mountains. So the tame flocks of Greece, Thrace, +Spain, and even Scotland are migratory. In Scotland their transport +is modernised, and they travel regularly by steamer from the +islands to winter in the Lowlands, and by train from the Highlands. +Two years ago a flock of migratory sheep from Ayrshire came for +early spring feeding to Hyde Park, and were there shorn, with their +Highland collies looking on. In the "old countries" and the +non-progressive East of Europe the migration of the flocks is on a +vaster and far more romantic scale. In Spain there are some ten +millions of migratory sheep, which every year travel as much as two +hundred miles from the plains to the "delectable mountains," where +the shepherds feed them till the snows descend. These sheep are +known as <em>transhumanies</em> and their march, resting places, +and behaviour are regulated by ancient and special laws and +tribunals dating from the fourteenth century. At certain times no +one is allowed to travel on the same route as the sheep, which have +a right to graze on all open and common land on the way, and for +which a road ninety yards wide must be left on all enclosed and +private property. The shepherds lead the flocks, the sheep follow, +and the flock is accompanied by mules carrying provisions, and +large dogs which act as guards against the wolves. The Merino sheep +travel four hundred miles to the mountains, and the total time +spent on the migration there and back is fourteen weeks. In Thrace +the migration of the flocks is to the northern ranges of Mount +Rhodope. The sheep are said to be no less alert than the Pomak +shepherds, obeying a signal to assemble at any moment given by the +shepherd's horn. The dogs are ferocious in the extreme, as the +enemies of sheep in these parts are more commonly men than wild +beasts, and the gentle shepherd, who has, since the Russo-Turkish +War, exchanged his long gun for a Winchester rifle, shoots at sight +and asks no questions.</p> + +<p>The more nearly domestic sheep can approach the life of the +primitive stock, the more intelligent their way of life becomes. +The cleverest sheep live on the hills, and the stupidest on the +plains. In Wales, for instance, if a new tenant takes over the +flock of an outgoing tenant, the latter is by law allowed a higher +price if the flock is one which knows the boundaries and paths on +the hills. On the plains of Argentina, as Mr. Hudson tells us, the +lambs are born so stupid that they will run after a puff-ball +rolling before the wind, mistaking it for their mother.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn10"></a> <a href="#fnr10">[1]</a> +This was a tremor of the great earthquake at Lisbon.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter19">SOME RESULTS OF WILD-BIRD +PROTECTION</a></h2> + +<p>Among the happiest results of the modern feeling about birds is +the conversion of the whole of the Thames above the tideway into a +"protected area." This was not done by an order of the Secretary of +State, who, by existing law, would have had to make orders for each +bit of the river in different counties, and often, where it divides +counties, would have been obliged to deal separately with each +bank. The Thames Conservancy used their powers, and summarily put a +stop to shooting on the river throughout their whole jurisdiction. +The effect of this was not seen all at once; but little by little +the waterfowl began to return, the kingfishers to increase, and all +the birds along the banks grew tamer. Then the County Councils of +Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, and Berkshire forbade the killing of +owls and kingfishers, and this practically made the river and its +banks a sanctuary.</p> + +<p>The water-hen are so numerous that at Nuneham Lock they run into +the cottages, and at other locks the men complain they eat all +their winter cabbages. As many as forty at a time have been counted +on the meadows. Mr. Harcourt has also established a wild-duck +colony on and about the island at Nuneham. The island has a pond in +the centre, with sedges and ancient willows and tall trees round. +There the really wild ducks join the home-bred ones in winter. +Lower down, the scene on late summer days is almost like a +poultry-yard, with waterfowl and wild pigeons substituted for ducks +and chickens. Young water-hens of all sizes pipe and flutter in the +reeds, and feed on the bank within a few feet of those rowing or +fishing, and their only enemies are the cats, which, attracted by +their numbers, leave the cottages for the river and stalk them, +while the old water-hens in vain try to get their too tame young +safe on to the water again.</p> + +<p>Though kingfishers have increased fast they are less in +evidence, being naturally shy after years of persecution. In summer +they keep mainly at the back of the willows, away from the river, +so long as the latter is crowded with boats.</p> + +<p>It was not till November, 1899, that I saw the kingfishers at +play, as I had long hoped to do, in such numbers as to make a real +feature on the river. It was a brilliant, warm, sunny morning, such +as sometimes comes in early winter, and I went down before +breakfast to Clifton Bridge. There the shrill cry of the +kingfishers was heard on all sides, and I counted seven, chasing +each other over the water, darting in swift flight round and round +the pool, and perching on the cam-shedding in a row to rest. +Presently two flew up and hovered together, like kestrels, over the +stream. One suddenly plunged, came up with a fish, and flying to +the other, which was still hovering, put the fish into its beak. +After this pretty gift and acceptance both flew to the willows, +where, let us hope, they shared their breakfast.</p> + +<p>In a row down the river extending over ten miles I saw more than +twenty kingfishers, most of them flying out, as is their custom, on +the side of the willows and osiers averse from the river, but some +being quite content to remain on their perches from which they +fish, while the boat slipped down in midstream. As they sit +absolutely motionless, and the reddish breast, and not the +brilliant back, is turned to the water, it needs quick eyes to see +these watchers by the stream.</p> + +<p>The total prohibition of shooting on the water or banks is also +producing the usual effect on the other birds and beasts. They are +rapidly becoming tame, and the oarsman has the singular pleasure of +floating down among all kinds of birds which do not regard him as +an enemy. Young swallows sit fearlessly on the dead willow boughs +to be fed by their parents; the reed-buntings and sedge-warblers +scarcely move when the oar dips near the sedge on which they sit; +wood-pigeons sit on the margin and drink where the pebble-banks or +cattle-ways touch the water; and the water-rats will scarcely stop +their business of peeling rushes to eat the pith, even if a +boatload of children passes by.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="nightjar"></a> <img src="images/fig13.png" +width="558" height="844" alt="NIGHTJAR AND YOUNG ONE. +From a photograph by R.B. Lodge. +REED BUNTING. +From a photograph by R.B. Lodge."> +</p> + +<p>The return of the birds, and especially of wild fowl, to the +London river is the result partly of the same causes which have +restored the fish to its waters; partly, also, of measures +affecting a wider area, but carried out with far less physical +difficulty. Their presence is evidence that the tidal Thames now +yields them a stock of food so abundant as to tempt birds like the +heron, the water-hen, and the kingfisher back to their old haunts. +It shows, secondly, that the by-laws for the protection of birds +passed by the counties of London, Surrey, and Middlesex, and by the +Thames Conservancy (which was the pioneer in this direction by +forbidding shooting on the river), are so far effective that the +stock is rapidly increasing; and, lastly, that the birds are +preserved and left in peace to a great extent on the London river +itself. The following are the most marked instances of this return +of river fowl which have come under the writer's notice; but in +every case there have been preliminary advances on the part of the +birds, which show that what is now recorded is only one step +further in the general tendency to resume their old habits, or even +to go beyond their former limits of place and time in resorting to +the river. The herons from Richmond Park have extended their usual +nightly fishing ground, which formerly ended at Kew Bridge, four +miles further down the river, almost to Hammersmith Bridge, and in +place of coming late at night, under cover of darkness, have made a +practice of flying down at dusk, and pitching on the edge of +Chiswick Eyot. <a name="fnr11"></a> <a href="#fn11" class= +"fnsuper">1</a> Their regular appearance led to various inquiries +as to the nature of the "big birds like geese" which flew down the +river and made a noise in the evening, questions which were +answered, in one case, by the appearance of one of the birds as it +swung round in the air opposite a terrace of houses, and dropped in +the stream to fish, not twenty yards from the road. As the heron is +naturally among the shyest of all waterside birds, and seeks +solitude above all things, these visits show that the quantity of +fish in the lower river must be great, and also that the London +herons, now never shot at, are losing their inbred dislike of +houses and humanity. Their footprints have been found on the mud +opposite a creek in Hammersmith, round which is one of the most +crowded quarters of the poorer folk of West London. The birds had +been fishing within ten yards of the houses, which at this point +are largely inhabited by organ-grinders and vendors of ice-creams, +callings which do not promote quiet and solitude in the immediate +neighbourhood. In the evening and early morning a few wild ducks +accompany the herons as low as the reach above Hammersmith Bridge, +and single ducks have been seen even at midday flying overhead. At +sunrise one Midsummer Day I saw a sheldrake (probably an escaped +bird) flying down the river, looking very splendid in its black, +white, and red plumage, in the bright light of the morning. It +haunted the reach for some days, and was not shot. Among other +visitors to this part of the river and its island during spring +were a curlew, which fed for some time on the eyot during the early +morning, and a pair of pheasants, one of which, an old-fashioned +English cock bird, was subsequently captured unhurt. A flock of +sandpipers remained there for some weeks, and during the summer +numbers of sedge-warblers have nested on and around the eyot; the +cuckoo has been a regular visitor to the osier-bed in the early +morning, probably with a view to laying its eggs in the +sedge-warblers' nests. As a set-off to these early visits of the +cuckoo, a nightjar has hunted round the islet for moths, both at +dusk and during the night, when its note may often be heard. This +is a fairly long list of interesting birds revisiting a portion of +the river which the London boundary crosses. At a distance of less +than half a mile, on some ornamental water near the river, an even +more unexpected increase of the bird population has been noted. A +pair of kingfishers nested and reared their brood in an old +gravel-pit, while several nests of young dabchicks hatched by the +pool. <a name="fnr12"></a> <a href="#fn12" class="fnsuper">2</a> +There also during the spring a pair of tufted ducks appeared, and +remained for some days before going on their journey to their +breeding haunts. One lamentable event in the bird life of the +Thames deserves mention. A pair of swans ventured to nest within a +few hundred feet of the London boundary. The hen, a very shy young +bird, laid three eggs on Chiswick Eyot, and the pair, being +supplied with material, diligently built up their nest day by day +until it was above the tide level. They sat for five weeks, the +cock bird keeping anxious guard day and night, while the hen would +probably have died of starvation unless fed by kindly neighbours, +for the river affords very little food for a swan, and this +required far longer time to find than the bird was willing to spare +from her nest. This was then robbed in the night, and the cock bird +maltreated in defending it. The return of fish and fowl to the +London Thames shows by the best of tests that the efforts of the +Thames Conservancy to preserve the amenities of the river, of the +Sewage Committee of the County Council to maintain its purity, or +rather to render it less impure at its mouth, and of the adjacent +County Authorities to protect bird life, are all yielding good +results, and justify the courage with which such an apparently +hopeless task was undertaken. To the Conservancy I would offer one +or two suggestions, which County Councillors might also consider. +The river is the only large <em>natural</em> feature still left in +the area of London and Greater London. Now that it contains water +in place of sewage, there is a guarantee that its main element as a +natural amenity in a great city will be maintained, and as it +becomes purer, so will the facilities which it offers for boating, +fishing, and bathing increase. But it should not be +<em>embanked</em> beyond the present limit at Putney. Stone walls +are not a thing of beauty, and a natural river-bank is. At present, +from Putney to Richmond the greater part of the Thames flows +between natural boundaries. If these can be maintained, the growth +of willows, sedge, hemlock, reeds, water ranunculus, and many other +fine and luxuriant plants affords insect food for the fish and +shelter for the birds, besides giving to the river its natural +floral border. If this is replaced by stone banks the birds and the +fish will move elsewhere.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn11"></a> <a href="#fnr11">[1]</a> +Mr. J.E. Vincent tells me that in 1902 the herons were heard as far +down the river as Chelsea.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn12"></a> <a href="#fnr12">[2]</a> In +the beautiful grounds of Chiswick House, where the present +occupier, Dr. T. Tuke, carefully preserves all wild birds.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter20">OSIERS AND +WATER-CRESS</a></h2> + +<p>Osiers, the shoots of which are cut yearly for making baskets, +crates, lobster-pots, and eel-traps are a form of crop of which not +nearly as much is made in the Thames Valley as their profitable +return warrants. Properly managed they nearly always pay well, and, +in addition, they are very ornamental, and for the whole of the +summer, autumn, and winter are one of the very best forms of covert +for game. They are commonly seen near rivers, especially in parts +where the ground is flooded in winter. But osiers may be grown +anywhere on good ground, and are a rapid and paying crop, giving +very little trouble, though they need some attention even on the +banks of tidal rivers. It is estimated that in the whole of Great +Britain there are only between 7,000 and 8,000 acres of osier beds, +but these average three tons of rods per acre, and the value of the +crop when harvested is often at least Ł15 per acre gross return. As +fruit cultivation is immensely increasing in England, there is a +corresponding increase in the demand for baskets to put the fruit +in. This is the main reason why osiers, unlike most farm crops, +keep up their price. Immense quantities are now imported from +Belgium, France, and Germany because our own crop is not nearly +sufficient. <a name="fnr13"></a> <a href="#fn13" class= +"fnsuper">1</a> They do not require a wet soil or to be near water: +all that the willow roots need is that the land shall be good and +not too dry or sandy. Stagnant, boggy ground does not suit them at +all, though they will grow well in light loam. Many species of +osier are of most brilliant colouring in winter and early spring. +In some the rods are golden yellow; in others the bark is almost +scarlet with a bright polish, and the osier bed forms a brilliant +object from December to February, just before the rods are cut. The +kind of willow grown varies from the slender, tough withes used in +making small baskets and eel-traps, to the large, fast-growing rods +suited for making crates for heavy goods. The planter must find out +for which kind there is the readiest market in the neighbourhood, +and then get his land ready. It needs thorough clearing and +trenching to the depth of from twenty to thirty inches. The young +osiers should then be put in. These should be taken from a nursery +in which they have been "schooled" for one year, as in that case +they will produce a crop fit to cut one year earlier than if the +cuttings have been put at once in the new osier-bed. The cuttings +when transferred to the bed should be put in twelve inches apart in +the rows, and these rows made at two feet distance from each other. +They will need hoeing to keep the ground clear, which will cost Łl +to Ł2 per acre for the first two years, and this should be done +before the middle of June. When the osiers are well started they +grow so densely that they kill out the weeds themselves. The rate +of growth even on ordinary field-land is astonishing; they will add +eighteen inches in a week. February and March are the months for +planting, and March also sees the osier harvest when the time comes +to cut them. In the fens the harvesting of the rods begins earlier, +but this depends usually on the season, the object being to cut +them before the sap begins to rise. Osiers particularly invite the +attention of those who are desirous of planting coverts for game. +They are a paying crop, and a quick crop, giving cover sooner and +of better quality than almost any other form of underwood, and are +also very ornamental. It is true that they are cut yearly, but this +is not till the shooting season is over. Meantime there is no +covert which pheasants like so much as osier-beds, especially if +they are near water.</p> + +<p>On Chiswick Eyot, which is entirely planted with osiers, there +are standing at the time of writing six stacks of bundles set +upright. Each stack contains about fifty bundles of the finest +rods, nine feet high. Thus the eyot yields at least three hundred +bundles. This osier-bed is cut quite early in the year, usually in +January, and by February all the fresh rods are planted. Before +being peeled the osiers are stood upright in water for a month, and +some begin to bud again. This is to make the sap run up, I presume, +by which means the bark comes off more readily. I believe that the +Chiswick osiers, being of the largest size, are used for making +crates, and that they are cut early because there is no need to +peel them.</p> + +<p>Water-cress growing is an increasing business in the Thames +Valley, where the head of every little brook or river in the chalk +is used for this purpose. This is good both for business in general +and for the fish, for water-cress causes the accumulation of a vast +quantity of fish food in various forms.</p> + +<p>The artificial culture of water-cress is comparatively modern, +and a remarkably pretty side-industry of the country.</p> + +<p>Formerly, the cress gatherer was usually a gipsy, or "vagrom +man," who wandered up to the springs and by the head waters of +brooks at dawn, and took his cresses as the mushroom-gatherer takes +mushrooms--by dint of early rising and trespass.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="ossiers"></a> <img src="images/fig14.png" +width="902" height="664" alt="PEELING OSIERS. +From a photograph by Taunt & Co."></p> + +<p>The places where water-cress grows naturally are usually +singularly attractive. The plant grows best where springs actually +bubble from the ground, either where the waters break out on the +lower sides of the chalk downs, or in some limestone-begotten +stream where springs rise, sometimes for a distance of one or two +miles, bubbling and swelling in the very bed of the brook. There, +among dead reeds and flags, the pale green cresses appear very +early in the spring, for the water is always warmer which rises +from the bosom of the earth. Trout and wild duck haunt the same +spots, and one often sees, stuck on a board in the stream, a notice +warning off the poor water-cress gatherer, who was supposed to +poach the fish.</p> + +<p>The happy-go-lucky cress gathering is now a thing of the past, +and there are few rural industries more skilfully and profitably +conducted. I knew a farmer who, having lost all his capital on a +large farm on the downs, took as a last resource to growing the +humble "creases" by the springs below. He has now made money once +more, and been able to take and cultivate another farm nearly as +large as that he worked before, while the area of his water-cress +beds still grows.</p> + +<p>Wherever a chalk stream, however small, breaks out of the hills, +it is usual to let it to a water-cress grower. He widens the +channels, and year by year every square foot of the upper waters is +planted with cress. Each year, too, new and larger beds are added +below, and the cresses creep down the stream. When they encroach on +good spawning ground this is very bad for trout; but the beds are +pretty enough, forming successive flats, on different levels, of +vivid green.</p> + +<p>The scene on the Water-cress Farm shows the complete +metamorphosis undergone by what was once a swift running brook when +once the new culture is taken in hand. When left to Nature, the +little chalk stream might truly have said, in the words of the +poem--</p> + +<p class="poetry"> "I murmur under moon and stars<br> + In brambly wildernesses,<br> + I linger by my shingly bars,<br> + I loiter round my cresses."<br> +</p> + +<p>Now all the brambles and shingle are gone, and the stream is +condemned to "loiter round its cresses," and to do nothing else. +The water must not be more than six inches deep, and it must not +flow too fast. To secure these conditions little dams, some made of +earth and some of boards, are built from side to side of the brook. +The water thus appears to descend in a series of steps, each +communicating with the next by earthen pipes, through which the +water spouts. When a fresh bed of cresses is to be planted, which +is done usually towards the end of summer, a sluice is opened, and +only an inch or so of water left. On this cuttings from the cress +are strewn, which soon take root, and make a bed fit for gathering +by next spring.</p> + +<p>From February to April the cresses are at their best. Their +flavour is good, their leaves crisp, and they come at a time when +no outdoor salad can be grown. As the beds are set close to the +fresh springs, they are seldom frozen. Hence, in very hard weather +all the birds flock to the cress-beds, where they find running +water and a certain quantity of food. If the beds do freeze, the +cress is destroyed, and the loss is very serious.</p> + +<p>Gathering cresses is a very pleasant job in summer, but in early +spring one of the most cheerless occupations conceivable short of +gathering Iceland moss. The men wear waterproof boots, reaching up +the thighs, and thick stockings inside these. But the water is icy +cold. The cress plants are then not tall, as they are later, but +short and bushy. They need careful picking, too, in order not to +injure the second crop. Then the cold and dripping cresses have to +be trimmed, tied into bundles, and packed. When "dressed" they are +laid in strong, flat hampers, called "flats," the lids of which are +squeezed down tight on to them. The edges are then cut neatly with +a sharp knife, and the baskets placed in running water, until the +carts are ready to drive them to the station. Not London only but +the great towns of the North consume the cress grown in the South +of England. A great part of that grown in the springs which break +out under the Berkshire Downs goes to Manchester.</p> + +<p>One basket holds about two hundred large bunches. From each of +these a dozen of the small bunches retailed at a penny each can be +made; and every square rod of the cress-bed yields two baskets at a +cutting.</p> + +<p>In one of the East London suburbs, near to the reservoirs of a +water company, it has been found worth while to create an +artificial spring, by making an arrangement with the waterworks for +a constant supply. This flows from a stand-pipe and irrigates the +cress-beds, which produce good cresses, though not of such fine +flavour as those grown in natural spring water and upon a chalk +soil.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn13"></a> <a href="#fnr13">[1]</a> +Fishermen in the Isle of Wight send all the way to the Midlands to +get the little scarlet withes required for making lobster-pots.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter21">FOG AND DEW PONDS</a></h2> + +<p>The cycle of dry seasons seems to be indefinitely prolonged. +During the period, now lasting since 1893, in which we have had +practically no wet summers, and many very hot ones, a very curious +phenomenon has been remarked upon the high and dry chalk downs. The +dew ponds, so called because they are believed to be fed by dew and +vapours, and not by rain, have kept their water, while the deeper +ponds in the valleys have often failed. The shepherds on the downs +are careful observers of these ponds, because if they run dry they +have to take their sheep to a distance or draw water for them from +very deep wells. They maintain that there are on the downs some dew +ponds which have never been known to run dry. Others which do run +dry do so because the bottom is injured by driving sheep into them +and so perforating the bed when the water is shallow, and not from +the failure of the invisible means of supply. There seem to be two +sources whence these ponds draw water, the dew and the fogs. Summer +fogs are very common at night on the high downs, though people who +go to bed and get up at normal hours do not know of them. These +fogs are so wet that a man riding up on to the hills at 4 a.m. may +find his clothes wringing wet, and every tree dripping water, just +as during the first week of last November in London many trees +distilled pools of water from the fog, as if it had been pouring +with rain. Such was the case on July 4th, 1901. The fogs will draw +up the hollows towards the ponds, and hang densely round them. Fog +and dew may or may not come together; but generally there is a +heavy dew deposit on the grass when a fog lies on the hills. After +such fogs, though rain may not have fallen for a month, and there +is no water channel or spring near the dew pond, the water in it +rises prodigiously. Every shepherd knows this, but the actual +measurements of this contribution of the vapour-laden air have not +often been taken. Yet the subject is an interesting one, and of +real importance to all dwellers on high hills, especially those +which, like the South Downs, are near the sea, and attract great +masses of fog and vapour-laden cloud, but contain few springs on +the high rolls of the hills.</p> + +<p>The following are some notes of the rise in a dew pond caused by +winter fogs on the Berkshire Downs. They were recorded by the Rev. +J.G. Cornish at Lockinge, in Berkshire, and taken at his suggestion +by a shepherd <a name="fnr14"></a> <a href="#fn14" class= +"fnsuper">1</a> in a simple and ingenious way. Whenever he thought +that a heavy dew or fog was to be expected (and the shepherds are +rarely wrong as weather prophets) he notched a stick, and drove it +into the pond overnight, so that the notch was level with the +surface. Next morning he pulled it up, marked how high the water +had risen above the notch, and nicked it again for measurement. On +January 18th, after a night of fog, the water rose 1-1/2 in.; on +the next day, after another fog, 2 in.; and on January 24th, 1 in. +Five nights of winter fog gave a total rise of 8 ins.--a vast +weight of water even in a pond of moderate area. Five days of heavy +spring dew in April and May, with no fog, gave a total rise in the +same pond of 3-1/2 ins., the dews, though one was very heavy, +giving less water than the fogs, one of which even in May caused +the water to rise 1-1/2 ins. <a name="fnr15"></a> <a href="#fn15" +class="fnsuper">2</a> The shepherds say that it is always well to +have one or two trees hanging over the pond, for that these distil +the water from the fog. This is certainly the case. The drops may +be heard raining on to the surface in heavy mists. During the first +October mists of 1891 the pavement under certain trees was as wet +as if it had been raining, while elsewhere the dust lay like +powder. The water was still dripping from these trees at 7 a.m. +Under the plane-trees the fallen leaves were as wet from distilled +moisture as if they had been dipped in water; yet the ground beyond +the spread of the tree was dry. The writer tried a simple +experiment in this distilling power of trees. At sundown, two +vessels were placed, one under a small cherry-tree in full leaf, +the other on some stone flags. Heavy dew was falling and condensing +on all vegetation, and on some other objects, with the curious +capriciousness which the dewfall seems to show. The leaves of some +trees were already wet. In the morning the vessel under the tree, +and that in the open, both held a considerable quantity of water, +that on the stone caught from dew and condensation, that under the +tree mainly from what had dripped from the leaves, which clearly +intercepted the direct fall of dew. But the vessel under the tree +held just twice as much water as that in the open, the surplus +being almost entirely derived from drops precipitated from the +leaves. Mr. Sanderson, the manager of the elephant-catching +establishment of the Indian Government, noted that in heavy dews in +the jungle the water condensed by the leaves could be heard falling +like a heavy shower of rain.</p> + +<p>Gilbert White, who noticed everything, and lived near a chalk +hill, makes some shrewd conjectures, both about the dew ponds and +the part which trees play in distilling water from fog, though he +does not form the practical conclusion, which we think is a safe +one, that the most fog-distilling trees should be discovered and +planted to help to supply the water in these air-tapping +reservoirs. "To a thinking mind," he writes, "few phenomena are +more strange than the state of little ponds on the summits of the +chalk hills, many of which are never dry in the most trying +droughts of summer. On <em>chalk</em> hills, I say, because in many +rocky and gravelly soils springs usually break out pretty high on +the sides of elevated grounds and mountains; but no persons +acquainted with chalky districts will allow that they ever saw +springs in such a soil but in valleys and bottoms, since the waters +of so pervious a stratum as chalk all lie on one dead level, as +well-diggers have assured me again and again. Now we have many such +little round ponds in this district, and one in particular on our +sheep-down, three hundred feet above my house, and containing +perhaps not more than two or three hundred hogsheads of water; yet +it is never known to fail, though it affords drink for three or +four hundred sheep, and for at least twenty head of large cattle +beside. This pond, it is true, is overhung with two moderate +beeches, that doubtless at times afford it much supply. But then we +have others as small, which, without the aid of trees, and in spite +of evaporation from sun and wind and perpetual consumption by +cattle, yet constantly contain a moderate share of water, without +overflowing in the winter, as they would do if supplied by springs. +By my Journal of May, 1775, it appears that 'the small and even the +considerable ponds in the vales are now dried up, but the small +ponds on the very tops of the hills are but little affected.' Can +this difference be accounted for by evaporation alone, which is +certainly more prevalent in the bottoms? Or, rather, have not these +elevated pools <em>some unnoticed recruits, which in the night time +counterbalance the waste of the day?</em>" These unnoticed +recruits, though it is now certain that they come in the form of +those swimming vapours from which little moisture seems to fall, +are enlisted by means still not certainly known. The common +explanation was that the cool surface of the water condensed the +dew, just as the surface of a glass of iced water condenses +moisture. The ponds are always made artificially in the first +instance, and puddled with clay and chalk.</p> + +<p>In the notes to a recent edition of "White's Selborne," edited +by Professor L.C. Miall, F.R.S., and Mr. W. Warde Fowler, a +considerable amount of information on dew ponds is appended to the +passage quoted above, but the source of supply still remains +obscure. The best dew ponds seem to be on the Sussex Downs, where +far more fog and cooling cloud accumulates than on the more inland +chalk ranges, because of the nearness of the sea. Near Inkpen +Beacon, in Hampshire, there is a dew pond at a height of nine +hundred feet, which is never dry, though it waters a large flock of +sheep. <a name="fnr16"></a> <a href="#fn16" class="fnsuper">3</a> +Dew ponds are often found where there are no other sources of +supply, such as the wash coming from a road. Probably if the site +for one had to be selected, it should be where the mists gather +most thickly and the heaviest dews are shed, local knowledge only +possessed by a few shepherds. I have driven up <em>through</em> +rain on to the top of the downs, and found there that no rain was +falling, but mists lying in the hollows like smoke. Mr. Clement +Reid, F.R.S., has added to the "Selborne" notes his own experiences +of the best sites for dew ponds. They should, he thinks, be +sheltered on the south-west by an overhanging tree. In those he is +acquainted with the tree is often only a stunted, ivy-covered thorn +or oak, or a bush of holly, or else the southern bank is high +enough to give shadow. "When one of these ponds is examined in the +middle of a hot summer's day," he adds, "it would appear that the +few inches of water in it could only last a week. But in early +morning, or towards evening, or whenever a sea-mist drifts in, +there is a continuous drip from the smooth leaves of the +overhanging tree. There appears also to be a considerable amount of +condensation on the surface of the water itself, though the roads +may be quite dry and dusty. In fact, whenever there is dew on the +grass the pond is receiving moisture."</p> + +<p>Though this is evidently the case, no one has explained how it +comes about that the pond surface receives so very much more +moisture than the grass. The heaviest dew or fog would not deposit +an inch, or even two inches, of water over an area of grass equal +to that of the pond. None of the current theories of dew deposits +quite explain this very interesting question. Two lines of inquiry +seem to be suggested, which might be pursued side by side. These +are the quantities distilled or condensed on the ponds, and the +means by which it is done; and secondly, the kind of tree which, in +Gilbert White's phrase, forms the best "alembic" for distilling +water from fog at all times of the year. It seems certain that the +tree is an important piece of machinery in aid of such ponds, +though many remain well supplied without one.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn14"></a> <a href="#fnr14">[1]</a> +Thomas Elliot, who for some twenty years was shepherd and general +manager for one of my father's tenants at Childrey.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn15"></a> <a href="#fnr15">[2]</a> +Full details of the cost and method of making dew ponds, as well as +other information about them, are contained in the prize essay of +the late Rev. J. Clutterbuck, Rector of Long Wittenham, in the +Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society. Vol. I., §S. Part 2.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn16"></a> <a href="#fnr16">[3]</a> In +the Isle of Wight, on Brightstone Downs, about 400 feet above the +sea, is a dew pond with a <em>concrete</em> bottom, which has never +run dry for thirty years.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter22">POISONOUS PLANTS</a></h2> + +<p>A friend informs me that he has found a quantity of woad growing +on the Chilterns above the Thame, enough to stain blue a whole +tribe of ancient Britons, and also that on a wall by the roadside +between Reading and Pangbourne he discovered several plants of the +deadly nightshade, or "dwale." This word is said to be derived from +Old French <em>deuil</em>, mourning; but its present form looks +very English. The only cases of plant poisoning now common among +grown-up people are those caused by mistaking fungi for mushrooms, +or by making rash experiments in cooking the former, of which +Gerard quaintly says: "Beware of licking honey among the thorns, +lest the sweetness of the one do not countervail the sharpness and +pricking of the other." But with such a list of toxic plants as our +flora can show there is always danger from certain species whose +properties are quite unknown to ordinary mortals. Are they equally +unknown to the herbalists and that mysterious trade-union of +country-women and collectors of herbs by the roadside who deal with +them? Probably the trade in poisons not used for serious purposes, +but for what used in some parts of England to be called "giving a +dose," a punishment for unfaithful, unkind, or drunken husbands, +still exists as it did some forty years ago. The collectors of +medicinal plants cut from the roadside and rubbish heaps, plants +whose "operations" for good are quite well known, and have been +handed down by tradition for centuries, cannot be absolutely +ignorant of the other side of the picture, the toxic properties +which other plants, or sometimes even the same plants, contain. +Foxglove, for instance, from which <em>digitalis</em> used as a +medicine is extracted, is a good example of these kill-or-cure +plants. Every portion of the plant is poisonous, leaves, flowers, +stalks, and berries. It affects the heart, and though useful in +cases in which the pulsations are abnormal, its symptoms when taken +by persons in ordinary health are those of heart failure. Thus +foxglove is not only a dangerous but a "subtle" poison.</p> + +<p>Among other plants which may cause serious mischief, but are +seldom suspected, are such harmless-looking flowers as the +meadowsweet, herb-paris, the common fool's-parsley, found growing +in quantities in the gardens of unlet houses and neglected ground +which has been in cultivation, mezereon, columbine, and laburnum. +Meadowsweet has the following set against its name: "A few years +since two young men went from London to one of the Southern +counties on a holiday excursion, on the last day of which they +gathered two very large sheafs of meadowsweet to bring home with +them. These they placed in their bedroom at the village inn where +they had to put up. In the course of the night they were taken +violently ill, and the doctor who was called in stated that they +were suffering from the poisonous prussic-acid fumes of the +meadowsweet flowers, which he said almost overpowered him when he +came into the room. The flowers were at once removed, and the young +men, treated with suitable restoratives, were by next morning +sufficiently recovered to undertake the journey home." <a name= +"fnr17"></a> <a href="#fn17" class="fnsuper">1</a> Without knowing +what the young men had had for supper, it seems perhaps rather +hasty to blame the meadowsweet. But the other flowers mentioned +above have a bad record. To take them in order. Herb-paris, which +grows in woods and shady places, with four even-sized leaves in a +star at the top of the stem, all growing out opposite each other, +bears a large, green solitary flower, and a bluish-black berry +later. All parts of the plant are poisonous, the berries +especially. Fool's-parsley, an unpleasantly smelling, very common +plant, which leaves its odour on the hand if the seeds are squeezed +or drawn through it, is said to cause numbers of deaths by being +mistaken for common parsley and cooked. In the case of poisoning by +this plant, it is recommended that milk should be given, the body +sponged with vinegar, and mustard poultices put on the sufferer's +legs. It is reckoned that one plant produced six thousand and +eighty seeds--an unpleasant degree of fecundity for a poisonous +weed. Columbine, which is a wild plant with blue or white flowers, +as well as a domesticated one, has a toxic principle like that of +the monkshood, more especially in the seeds; and the pretty red +berries of the mezereon are responsible for the deaths or illness +of children nearly every autumn. They are like cherries, and easily +picked from the low bushes on which they grow. A dozen are said to +be enough to cause death, though this must probably depend on the +state of the eater's health. The laburnum, with its golden rain, is +potentially a kind of upas tree. The writer has only known of two +deaths of children caused by eating the beans in the green pods, +but it is said to be a frequent cause of death every year on the +Continent, where, possibly, children are less naturally careful +about poisonous plants than those in England, to whom risks of this +kind are usually and properly made part of the "black list" of the +nursery-book of "Don'ts." The seeds will even poison poultry, if +they pick them up after they have dropped from the pod. Laburnum is +of comparatively recent introduction into Britain, or it would +probably earlier have been accorded a place among the severely +poisonous plants, dreaded by all.</p> + +<p>Of these the deadly nightshade and hemlock are the best known in +story, while the yew is most dangerous because far more common. In +one case the Rector of a Berkshire village was made very ill by +eating honey which had been partly gathered from yew flowers. Green +hellebore and monkshood are also classed in the list of the ranker +poisons. Deadly nightshade is rather a rare plant, yet it may be +seen often enough on the sides of woods where there are old walls. +It is poisonous throughout. The flowers are large, single, purple +bells, and the berries black and shiny like a black cherry. It is +said of this dangerous plant that the roots are computed to be five +times more poisonous than the berries, that human beings have been +found more susceptible to it than animals, and carnivorous animals +more so than others. Children suffer more in proportion to the +quantity of poison taken than do adults. But cases of nightshade +poisoning are very rare, though two were reported some three years +ago. Possibly the berries often fail to ripen, and so are less +attractive in appearance. The poisonous hemlocks are two, one of +which, the common hemlock, is said to have been the plant from +which the Athenians prepared their poison for executing citizens +condemned to death; and the other, the water-hemlock, or cowbane, +is particularly deadly when eaten by cattle, to which it is fatal +in a very few hours. Another plant, used for preparing poison in +India, which produces a drug used by some tribes of Thugs for +procuring the death of their victims, datura or stramonium, has now +found a place amongst our wild flowers. It has an English name, +thorn-apple, and is said to have been naturalised by the gipsies, +who used the seeds as a medicine and narcotic, and carried them +about with them in their wanderings. Like henbane, it is often seen +on rubbish-heaps and in old brickfields. The leaf is very handsome, +and the flower white and trumpet-shaped. Both this plant and the +henbane retain their poisonous properties even when dried in hay, +and stalled cows have been known to be poisoned by fodder +containing a mixture of the latter plant.</p> + +<p>Cattle have a delicate sense of smell which warns them of the +danger of most poisonous English herbs, though apparently this +warning odour is absent from the plants which kill so many horses +when the grass grows on the South African veld, and also from our +English yew. Yew was anciently employed as a poison in Europe, much +as is the curari to-day in Central America. Dr. W.T. Fernie, the +author of "Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Use," says that its +juice is a rapidly fatal poison, that it was used for poisoning +arrows, and that the symptoms correspond in a very remarkable way +with those which follow the bites of venomous snakes. It is +believed that in India there is a poison which produces the same +effect. An Indian Rajah once desired that a notice should be put in +a well-known paper that he did not intend to raise his rents on his +accession to the estates. The proprietor of the paper asked him his +reasons for wishing for such an advertisement. The Rajah said that +his grandfather had raised the rents, and had died of snake-bite; +that his father had done the same, and had also died of snake-bite; +and that he concluded that there was some connection of cause and +effect. The notice was inserted, and this Rajah did not die of +snake-bite, or rather of the poison which simulates it.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn17"></a> <a href="#fnr17">[1]</a> +"Farm and Home" Year Book for 1902.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter23">ANCIENT THAMES +MILLS</a></h2> + +<p>Almost the greatest loss to country scenery is the decay of the +ancient windmills and water-mills. The first has robbed the +hilltops of a most picturesque feature, while in the valleys and +little glens the roaring, creaking, dripping wheel sounds no +longer, except in favoured spots where it still pays to grind the +corn in the old way. The old town and city mills often survived +longer than the country ones, and those on the Thames longer than +those on smaller rivers. The corn and barley which was taken to +market in the town was easily transferred to the town mill, and +thence by water to the place of consumption. Every Wykehamist +remembers the ancient and picturesque mills of Winchester, with the +mill-stream bridged by the main street. At Oxford some of the most +ancient mills remain to this day, while others have only recently +been destroyed, or have undergone a curious conversion into +dwelling-houses, beneath which the mill-stream still rushes. One of +these houses stands near Folly Bridge; another old mill has just +undergone the same process, that close to Holywell Church. Some of +these mills are the most ancient surviving institutions in Oxford, +far older than the colleges--older even than any of the churches +except perhaps one. Some of these--the Castle Mill, for +instance--have ground corn for centuries since the abbeys, for +whose use they were founded, utterly disappeared. Others were +standing long before abbeys or colleges were founded, and were part +of their endowments. They are the oldest link between town life and +country life left in Oxford, or indeed in England. For a thousand +years the corn grown on the hills beyond the Thames meadows has +been drawn to their doors. Saxon churls dragged wheat there on +sledges, Danes rowed up the river to Oseney and stole the flour +when they sacked the abbey, Norman bishops stole the mills +themselves. That iniquitous Roger of Salisbury was "in" this, as we +might guess. Roger, who knew that attention to detail is the soul +of business, commandeered this particular mill with others in these +parts, and, when forced to let it go, with a fine sense of humour +made it over to the Godstone nunnery as a pious donor.</p> + +<p>The Knights Templars had another mill at Cowley, and the king +himself one on the Cherwell, which was given to the Hospital of St. +John, who "swapped" it with Merton. Later on these mills helped +King Charles's army vastly, for all the flour needed for the Oxford +garrison was ground inside or close to the walls.</p> + +<p>At present the Thames is mainly visited as a source of rest and +refreshment to tens of thousands of men "in cities pent," and of +pleasure rather than profit. In a secondary degree it is useful as +a commercial highway, the barge traffic being really useful to the +people on its banks, where coal, stone for road-mending, wood, +flour, and other heavy and necessary goods are delivered on the +staithes almost at their doors. But when the old mills were first +founded, and for eight centuries onwards, it was as a source of +power, a substitute for steam, that the river was valued. The times +will probably alter, and the Thames currents turn mill wheels again +to generate electric light for the towns and villages on its banks. +The chance of this coming about is enough to make any one who owns +a mill right on the water keep it, even though not useful at +present. First the old roads with auto-cars, then the old mills +with hydraulic lighting and low-power dynamos will come to the +front again. Whereof take the old story of the Oxford river as full +and sufficient witness, and Antony Wood for storyteller. "Oxford," +he says, "owed its prosperity to its rivers," of which there were +apparently as many branches and streams then as now.</p> + +<p>The rivers were "beneficial to the inhabitants, as anon shall be +showed," though the Cherwell was "more like a tide" than a common +river sometimes, and once nearly overflowed all the physic garden. +That garden stands there still. So does the Cherwell still behave +"more like a tide than a river," and the scene at the torpid races +a few years ago is evidence that the rivers have not diminished in +volume. What, then, was the "great commodity" given by them to the +city? First and least, a water which was good for dyeing cloth and +for tanning leather; secondly, and by far the greatest benefit, it +turned the wheels of at least a dozen important mills. As mills +were always a monopoly, as much opposition was raised to the making +of a new one as would now be evoked by the proposal to construct a +new railway.</p> + +<p>It was meddling with vested interests of a powerful kind, but +there were so many rivers at Oxford that each turned one or two +mills without injuring any one's water rights.</p> + +<p>Of all these mills, the greatest advantage to the city came from +the Castle Mill. Notwithstanding its name, this was <em>not</em> +the property of the Castle of Oxford, though it stood within +arrow-shot of its towers, and was thus protected from pillage in +time of war. It stands under the remaining tower, the water tower, +of the castle still, and on exactly the same site, and on the +branch of the Thames which from the most ancient days has been the +waterway by which barges and merchandise came from the country to +the city, bringing goods from Abingdon or corn and fuel from the +upper river. And it is still called by its old name of the Weir +Stream. "There is one river called Weyre, where hath bin an Hythe, +at which place boatmen unload their vessels, which also maketh that +antient mill under the castle seldom or never to faile from going, +to the great convenience of the inhabitants." So says Antony Wood, +adding that it stood before the Norman conquest. After that it was +forfeited to the Norman kings, and then held in half shares by the +burgesses of the town and the abbots of Oseney, that once wealthy +and now vanished abbey, which stood close by where the railway +station now is. They shared the fishery also, and apparently this +partnership prevented friction between the town and the monks, as +each could undersell the other, and prices for flour and fish were +kept down at a reasonable figure.</p> + +<p>Henry VIII. gave the abbey's share to the new bishopric of +Oxford, but the funds of the bishopric were embezzled by some +means, and the town ultimately bought the mill for Ł566.</p> + +<p>St. George's Tower, the only remaining fragment of the castle, +is built of stones and mortar, so compact that though the walls +have stood since Robert d'Oily reared it, late in the reign of the +Conqueror, the stones and mortar had to be cut out as if from a +mass of rock when a water-pipe was recently taken through the +walls. It is now the water tower which holds the supply for Oxford +prison.</p> + +<p>Old Holywell Mill was on a branch of the Cherwell, and stood +just behind Magdalen Walks, whence a charming view was had of its +wheel and lasher. It belonged to the Abbey of Oseney, who gave it +to Merton College in exchange for value. Now it is a handsome +dwelling-house, below which the mill stream rushes.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="mill"></a> <img src="images/fig15.png" width= +"611" height="967" alt="BOTLEY MILL. +From a photograph by Taunt & Co. +EEL BUCKS. +From a photograph by Taunt & Co."> +</p> + +<p>Merton College seems to have had a fancy for owning mills, for +it also acquired by exchange the King's Mill. Only the house and +lasher are left to show where this old mill stood. It had a narrow +but very strong mill stream, which in winter used to come down in a +sheet of solid water like green jade, a beautiful object among the +walks and willows of Mesopotamia. It was an outpost of the King's +forces when Oxford was held for the Royalists.</p> + +<p>Botley Mill, though on the westernmost of the many streams into +which the Thames divides at Oxford, was outside the walls. It dates +from before the Conquest. This belonged to the Abbey of Abingdon, +in the chronicles of which are some records of an injury done to +the "aqueduct, which is vulgarly called the lake." This name is +still the local term for all side streams and artificial cuts from +the Upper Thames. The men of a now vanished village of Seckworth +broke the banks of the "lake" when Odo, Bishop of Bayeux, was being +besieged in Rochester Castle. The lord of the manor was +subsequently sued for this by the abbot of Abingdon, and had to pay +ten shillings damages. Doubtless the men of Seckworth had to +contribute to pay for their indulgence in this mischief, but it +looks as if the abbot's miller had been cheating them.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter24">THE BIRDS THAT STAY</a></h2> + +<p>In the Vision of the Lots and Lives, when the souls chose their +careers on a fresh register before taking another chance in the +world above, Ulysses chose that of a stay-at-home proprietor, with +a resolve, born of experience, never again to roam. If Plato had +made a Myth of the Birds, he might have alleged some such reason to +explain how it is that while most of them are incessant wanderers, +ever flitting uncertain between momentary points of rest, so few +remain fixed and constant, as if they had sworn at some distant +date never more to make trial of the wine-dark sea. In the still, +November woods, when the vapours curl like smoke among the dripping +boughs, leaving a diamond on each sprouting bud where next year's +leaf is hid; by the moorland river, on bright December mornings, +when the grayling are lying on the shallows below the ripple where +the rock breaks the surface; by the frozen shore where the +land-springs lie fast, drawn into icicles or smeared in slippery +slabs on the cliff faces, and hoar frost powders the black +sea-wrack; on the lawns of gardens, where the winter roses linger +and open dew-drenched and rain-washed in the watery sunbeams--there +we see, hear, and welcome the birds that stay. Then and there we +note their fewness, their lameness, and feel that they are really +fellow-countrymen, native to the soil. The list of these +home-loving birds is short; and those commonly seen are only a few +of the total. In a winter stroll by the upper Thames, the absence +of the birds which flocked along the banks in summer and spring, +when the May was in blossom and the willow covered with cotton +fleck, is among the first seasonal changes noticed. The +chiff-chaffs, turtledoves, sedge-warblers, whitethroats, coots, +sandpipers, and all the little river birds are gone. So are the +greater number of the blackbirds, thrushes and missel-thrushes. All +the fisherman sees, his daily companions by the deserted river, are +the wren creeping in the flood-drift, the tits working over the +alder bushes to see if any seeds are left in the cones, and the +kingfishers. The grayling fisherman on the Northern streams has the +water ousels for his constant and charming companions, true to the +mountain river as in the days of Merlin and Vivien, busy as big +black-and-white bees as they flit up-stream and down-stream, flying +boldly into the waterfalls, dropping silently from mossy stones +into the clear brown eddies, singing when the sunbeams shine and +warm the crag-tops, and even floating and singing on the water, +like aquatic robins. The ousels must have been the sacred birds of +Tana, the Water Goddess, the ever attached votaries of her dripping +and rustic shrines.</p> + +<p>By the winter shore, untrodden by any but the fisher going down +at the ebb to seek king-crab for bait, or by his children, +gathering driftwood on the stones, one little bird stays ever +faithful to the same short range of shore. This is the +rock-pipit--the "sea-lark" of Browning's verse. But that is a +summer song. It is not only when the cliff--</p> + +<p class="poetry"> "Sets his +bones,<br> + To bask i' the sun,"<br> +</p> + +<p>but in the short winter days, that the sea-lark keeps constant +to the fringe of ocean. It is the most narrowly local and +stay-at-home of all birds, never leaving the very fringe and +margin, not of sea, but of land, haunting only the last edge and +precipice of the coast, nesting on those upright walls of granite +or chalk, and creeping, flying, and twittering among the crumbling +stones, the water-worn boulders, and the tufts of sea-pink and +samphire. When the winter storms slam the roaring billows against +the cliff faces and the spray flies up a hundred feet from the +exploding mass, the little sea-larks only mount to higher levels of +the cliff, never coming inland or forsaking its salt-spattered +resting-place. Compared with these home-loving birds, all the gulls +are wanderers, even though they do not desert our shores and come +fifty miles up the Thames. Of the rock-fowl, the puffins fly +straight away to the Mediterranean, and the guillemots and +razorbills go out to sea and leave their nesting crags. Only the +cormorants stay at home, flying in to roost on the same lofty crag +every autumn and winter night, from the fishing grounds which the +sea-crows have frequented for longer years even than the +"many-wintered crow" of inland rookeries has his fat and smiling +fields.</p> + +<p>The discovery that rooks, with their reputation for staunch +attachment to locality, are regular and irrepressible migrants, +crossing from Denmark and Holland to England, and from England to +Ireland, has been followed by other curious revelations about the +mobility of what were believed to be stationary birds. Our own +beloved garden robin, whom we feed till he becomes a sturdy beggar, +though he pays us with a song, stays with us, as we know, because +he applies regularly for his rations. But he sends all his children +away to seek their fortunes elsewhere, and on our coasts flights of +migrant robins, whom either their parents, or the bad weather, have +sent from Norway over the foam, arrive all through the autumn. Even +the jenny-wrens migrate to some extent.</p> + +<p>Because we see birds of certain kinds near our farms, gardens, +and hedges it does not follow that these are those which were there +in summer and spring. Such common finches as the greenfinches and +chaffinches migrate in immense flocks, and over vast distances, +considering their short wings and small size. In the gardens and +shrubberies round the houses the parent robins stay. So do some of +the blackbirds, the thrushes (except in very hard weather), the +hedge-sparrow, the nuthatch (more in evidence in winter than at any +other time, and a firm believer in eleemosynary nuts), all the +tits, except the long-tailed tit, a little gipsy bird wandering in +family hordes, and the crested and marsh tits (dwellers in the pine +forest and sedge-beds), and the wood pigeon. Occasionally that shy +bird, the hawfinch, is seen on a wet, quiet day picking up +white-beam kernels and seeds. Except this, every one of the garden +birds comes to be fed, and is well known and appreciated. It is in +the woods and the hedges of the rain-soaked meadows that the +general absence of bird life in winter is most marked, and the +presence of the few which stay most appreciated. Those who, on +sport intent, go round the hedges in November and December, or wait +in rides while the woods are driven, or lie up quietly in the big +covers for a shot at wood pigeons in the evening, are almost +startled by the tameness and indifference of the birds, eagerly +feeding so as to make the most of the short, dark days. When the +hedges are beaten for rabbits the bullfinches appear in families, +their beautiful grey backs and exquisite rosy breasts looking their +very best against the dark-brown, purply twigs. Another +home-staying bird of the hedgerows, or rather of the hedgerow +timber, is the tree-creeper. It has no local habitation, being a +bird which migrates in a drifting way from tree to tree, and so +bound by no ties to mother-earth. But it is in the woods that the +stay-at-home birds are most in evidence in winter. There they find +abundant food, and there they make their home. The woodpeckers, the +magpie, and the jay, the brown owl, the sparrow-hawk, the kestrel, +the pheasant, the long-tailed tit, and all the rest of the tribe; +and in the clearings where the teazle grows, the goldfinches feed. +The barn owl and brown owl both stay with us. So does the +long-eared owl. But the short-eared owl is a regular migrant, +coming over in flights like woodcock. No one has satisfactorily +answered the question why there are sedentary species and migratory +species so closely allied in habits and food that the quest for a +living must be ruled as outside the motive for migration.</p> + +<p>If the long-eared owl can remain and find a living all the year +round in the copses on the downs, why should not the short-eared +owl make a practice of what is its occasional custom, and nest in +the fens and marshes? If the kingfisher can find a living and +abundant fish in our rivers and brooks, why does the dabchick +migrate? The migration is only a partial one, for many remain on +the Thames all the year round, especially near the eyots by +Tilehurst; but it vanishes from most of the Northern pools and +returns almost on the same date. Perhaps a conclusion might be +hazarded from the behaviour of wild migratory birds which have +become semi-domesticated. In Canada, the largest and best known of +the wild geese is the black-necked Canadian goose. It is a regular +migrant. The Indians believe it brings little birds on its back +when it comes. At Holkham, where a large flock of these is +acclimatised, but lives under perfectly wild conditions, the +Canadian geese never attempt to migrate, though they often fly out +on to the sands at ebb-tide. They show less disposition to leave +the estate than the herons in the park. Yet during the winter they +feed every day with flocks of wild geese in the marshes. These +geese fly every spring away to the Lapland mountains or the +tundras, and could show the Canada geese the way northwards if they +wished to follow. The conclusion is that the Canada geese have no +desire for change; and the reason that other birds do not migrate +is probably the same.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter25">ANCIENT HEDGES</a></h2> + +<p>In the upper Thames valley, both in May and autumn, one of the +prettiest sights is the great hedges which divide the meadows. In +spring, those above Oxford look as though covered with snow, and in +early October they are loaded with hips and haws, just turned red, +with blackberries, elderberries (though the starlings have eaten +most of these), with crab apples, with hazel nuts, scarlet wild +guelder-rose berries, dog-wood berries, and sloes. Except the +fields themselves, our hedges are almost the oldest feature with +which Englishmen adorned rural England. They have gone on making +them until the last parish "enclosures," some of which were made as +late as thirty years ago, and when made they have always been +regarded as property of a valuable kind. When Christ's Hospital was +founded in Ipswich in Tudor days, partly as a reformatory for bad +characters, "hedge-breakers" were more particularly specified as +eligible for temporary domicile and discipline. "Hedges even +pleached" were always a symbol of prosperity, care, and order. "Her +fruit trees all unpruned, her hedges ruined," a token that +something was amiss in our country economy.</p> + +<p>One untidy habit, which the writer remembers as very common, has +been discontinued in this connection. Twenty years ago the linen +drying on the hedge, which Shakespeare evidently regarded as a +"common object of the country," was constantly seen. It was always +laid on well-trimmed hedges, or otherwise it would have been torn. +Now it is always hung on lines, possibly because the hedges are not +so well trimmed and kept. Bad times in farming have greatly helped +the beauty of hedges. They are mostly overgrown, hung with masses +of dog-rose, trailed over by clematis, grown up at bottom with +flowers, ferns, and fox-gloves, festooned with belladonna, padded +with bracken. The Surrey hedges are mostly on banks, a sign that +the soil is light, and that a bank is needed because the hedge will +not thicken into a barrier. But these, like most others, are set +with the charming hedgerow timber that makes half England look like +a forest at a distance of a mile or so. It is difficult to +reconstruct our landscape as it was before the hedges were made. +But any one curious as to the comparative antiquity of the fields +can perhaps detect the nucleus or centre where enclosure started. +Those having the ditch on the outer side are always the earlier, +the ditch being the defence against the cattle that strayed on the +unenclosed common or grazings outside.</p> + +<p>The finest garden hedges in England are at Hall Barn, in +Buckinghamshire. They must be thirty feet high, are immensely +thick, and are clipped so as to present the smooth, velvety +appearance peculiar to the finest yew and box hedges. The colour +and texture of these walls of ancient vegetation, contrasting with +the vivid green lawns at their feet, are astonishingly beautiful. +One of the peculiar charms of such hedges is that where yew of a +different kind or age, or a bush of box, forms part of the mass, it +shows like an inlay of a different material, and the same effect is +given merely by the trick that some yews have of growing their +leaves or shoots at a different angle from that favoured by others. +These surfaces give the variety of tint which is shown in such +fabrics as "shot" or "watered" silk. Here there is a splash of blue +from the box, or of invisible dull green, or of golden sheen, from +different classes of yew. Box hedges of great size are less common +than those of yew, and less durable, for the box is easily rent +from the stem when old. But these two, the yew and the box, are the +"precious" hedges, the silver and gold, of the garden-maker. Next, +representing the copper and brass, are the hedges of beech and +holly. Both are commonly planted and carefully tended as borders +and shelters to the less important parts of gardens; as screens +also to block out the humdrum but necessary portions of the +curtilage, such as the forcing-pits for early plants, minor +offices, timber yards, and the like; and to shelter vegetable +gardens (for which the Dutch use screens of dried reeds). Holly +makes the best and most impenetrable of all hedges when clipped, +but it is not beautiful for that reason. Clipped holly grows no +berries; it accumulates dust and dirt, and has a dull, lifeless +look. Beech, on the other hand, should be in greater esteem than it +is. If clipped when the sap is rising it puts on leaves which last +all the winter. From top to bottom the wall of russet shines warm +and bright. Its leaves are harmless in decay, for they contain an +antiseptic oil, and no leaves of spring are more tenderly green or +in more ceaseless motion at the lightest breeze. Privet makes the +last and least esteemed of these "one-tree" hedges. Yet it is the +most tractable of all hedge material, and was almost invariably +used to form the intricate "mazes," once a favourite toy of the +layers-out of stately gardens.</p> + +<p>Keeping these hedges in good repair and properly clipped and +trimmed is one of the minor difficulties of the country. In large +gardens there are always one or two professional gardeners who +understand the topiary art. But it often happens that a quite +modest garden possesses a splendid hedge of yew or box, the pride +of the place, which needs attention once or twice every year. These +hedges have frequently been clipped by the same man, some old +resident in the village, for thirty or forty years. Clipping that +hedge is part of his regular extra earnings to which he looks +forward, and a source of credit and renown to him in his circle. He +knows every weak place, what parts need humouring, what stems are +crowding others between the furry screen of leaves, and where the +wind got in and did mischief in the last January gale. When in the +course of Nature the old hedge-trimmer dies, there is no one to +take his place. The men do not learn these outside accomplishments +as they once did, and the art is likely to be lost, just as +ornamental thatching and the making of the more decorative kinds of +oak paling are in danger of disappearing.</p> + +<p>Mending, or still worse remaking, field-hedges is a difficult, +expensive, and withal a very highly skilled form of labour. The +workers have for generations been very humble men, who have +scarcely been honoured for their excellent handiwork as they +deserved. They appear in art only in John Leech's pictures of +hunting in Leicestershire, in his endless jokes on "mending the +gaps" towards the close of the hunting season. In February and +March the scenes shown in Leech's pictures are reproduced on most +of the Thames valley farms in Berkshire and Oxfordshire. The men +wear in front an apron of sacking, torn and plucked by thorns. The +hands are gloved in leather mits with no fingers; in them the +hedger holds his light, sharp billhook, shaped much like the knife +of the forest tribes of Southern India. When a whole fence has to +be relaid the art of "hedge carpentry" is exhibited in its +perfection. Few people not brought up to the business, which is +only one minor branch of the many-sided handiness of a good field +labourer, the kind of man whom every one now wants and whom few can +find, would have the courage to attempt it. A ditch full of +brambles, often with water at the bottom, has to be cleared. Then +the man descends into the ditch, and strips the bank of brambles +and briars. That is only the preliminary. When he has piled all the +brambles in heaps at regular intervals along the brow of the ditch, +he walks thoughtfully from end to end of the fence, and considers +the main problem, or lets the idea sink into his mind, for he never +talks, and probably never frames for himself any form of words or +conscious plan. In front, with the bases of the stems bare where +the bank is trimmed and slashed, stands the overgrown hedge which +he is to cut, bend over, relay, and transform, to make another ten +or twelve years of growth till it reaches the unmanageable size of +that which stands before him. Most of it is great bushes of +blackthorn, hard as oak, with thorns like two-inch nails, and +sharper. These bushes, grow up in thick rods and stocks, spiny and +intractable, from the bank to a height of perhaps twelve feet. The +rest of the fence-stuff is whitethorn, nearly as ill to deal with +as the blackthorn, and perhaps a few clumps of ash and wild rose. +Slashing, hewing, tearing down, and bending in, he works steadily +down the hedge day by day. All the time he is using his judgment at +every stroke. Some he hews out at the base and flings behind him on +the field. Much he cuts off at what will be the level of the hedge. +But all the most vigorous stems of blackthorn and whitethorn he +half cuts through and then bends over, twisting the heads to the +next stocks or uprights, or, where there are no stocks, driving in +stout stakes cut from the discarded blackthorns. When finished the +newly mended hedge consists of uprights, mostly rooted in their +native bank, and fascine-like bundles--the heads of these uprights, +which are bent and bound horizontally to the other uprights or +stakes. This is the universal "stake and bond" hedge of the shires, +impenetrable to cattle, unbreakable, and imperishable, because the +half-cut bonds, the stakes, and the small stuff all shoot again, +and in a few years make the famous "bullfinch" with stake and bond +below, and a tall mass of interlacing thorns and small stuff +above.</p> + +<p>During the last era of prosperous farming there was a mania for +destroying hedges and cutting down the timber. If ever prosperity +returns it will smile on a better-informed class of occupier and +owner. It is now seen that the hedges were of the greatest value to +shelter cattle, sheep, and horses, and benefited to some extent +even the sown crops, especially at the blossoming time. As cattle +are now the farmer's main reliance, it will be long before he grubs +up or destroys the welcome shelter given by the hedges from sun, +rain, and storm.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter26">THE ENGLISH MOCKING +BIRD</a></h2> + +<p>One winter an unusual number of peewits visited the flats near +Wittenham and Burcote, and remained there for several months. One +or two starlings which haunted the house in which we stayed, and +slept in their old holes in the thatch, picked up all the various +peewits' calls and notes, and used to amuse themselves by repeating +these in the apple-trees on sunny mornings. The note was so exact a +reproduction that I often looked up to see where the plover was +before I made out that it was only the starling's mimicry.</p> + +<p>A correspondent of the <em>Newcastle Journal</em>, writing from +Yeare, near Wooler, in Northumberland, recently described the +performances of a wild starling which has settled near his house. +It is such an excellent mimic of other birds' notes that no one can +help noticing its performances. A record has been kept of the +variety entertainments provided by the bird. Besides its own calls, +whistles, and song, it reproduces the song of the blackbird and +thrush absolutely correctly, and mimics with equal nicety the calls +of the curlew, the corncrake, and the jackdaw.</p> + +<p>It is appropriate that this eulogy of the starling should appear +in a Newcastle paper, for Bewick when residing there always +regretted the absence of these birds from the town, and hoped that +they might in time become numerous, as in the South and West. +Starlings are such intelligent, interesting, and really remarkable +birds that if they were rare they would be among the most prized of +pets. Their open-air vocal performances are quite as remarkable as +their latest admirer says. They are the British mocking-birds, +able, when and if they choose, to reproduce almost any form of +song. They do this partly, no doubt, because their throats are +adaptable, but more from temperament and a kind of objective mind +not very common in birds. Like parrots, starlings are given to +spending a good deal of every fine morning in contemplating other +people, including other birds, and then in thinking them over, or +talking them over to themselves. Any one who is sitting or working +quietly near a room where a parrot is in its cage alone can fairly +follow the train of thought in the parrot's mind. It is evidently +recalling episodes or things which form part of its daily mental +experiences. It begins by barking like the dog, then remembers the +dog's mistress, and tells it to be quiet, as she does. Then it +hears the housemaid, and imitates a window-sash being let down, or +some phrase it has picked up in the servants' quarters. If it has +been lately struck with some new animal noise or unusual sound, it +will be heard practising that. Starlings do exactly the same thing. +When the sun begins to be hot on any fine day, summer or winter, +the cock bird goes up usually alone, to a sunny branch, gable, or +chimney, and there indulges in a pleasant reverie, talking aloud +all the time. Its own modes of utterance are three. One is a +melodious whistle, rather low and soft; another is a curious +chattering, into which it introduces as many "clicks" as a Zulu +talking his native language; and the third is a short snatch of +song, either its own, or one which has become a national anthem or +morning hymn common to all starlings, though it may originally have +been a "selection" from other birds' notes. Then, or amongst the +rest of the ordinary notes, the starling inserts or practises its +accomplishments. Not all starlings do this, and only a few attain +great eminence in that line. Obviously it is only personal feeling +that induces them to do it, and they get no encouragement from +other starlings, though when kept in cages, as they very seldom are +now, and rewarded and taught, they might develop the most striking +talents. It should be added that, like all good bird-mimics, they +are ventriloquists. They can reproduce perfectly the sound of +another bird's note, not as that bird utters it, but as it is +heard, faint and low, softened by distance. They can also sing over +bars of bird-songs in a low tone perfectly correctly, and repeat +them in a high one.</p> + +<p>To give a rather striking example. Last spring the writer was in +the Valley of the Eden, opposite Eden-hall. The vale is a wide one, +and on the north-east side are high fells, Cross Fell among others. +On these the curlews breed, and occasionally fly right over the +valley at a great height to the hills above Edenhall, uttering +their long, musical call. When heard, this call is generally +uttered several hundred feet above the valley. A curlew was heard +flying above, and repeating its cry, but was not discernible. Again +the call was heard, but no curlew seen, though such a large bird +must have been visible. In the line of sound was a starling sitting +on a chimney-pot. Again the curlew called, the long-drawn notes +sounding from exactly the same place in the sky. It was the +starling, reproducing with perfect accuracy the call, as it was +used to hear it from the high-flying curlews crossing the valley. +Apparently the tradition that they were good talkers has died out +in rural England. It was always one of the firm beliefs of East +Anglia that if a starling's tongue were slit with a thin sixpence +it would learn to talk at once, but that otherwise it would only +mimic other birds. The operation, like most other traditional +brutalities, was absolutely unnecessary. Talking starlings were +common enough, and must have been for many years previous to the +time when they were no longer valued as cage-birds. Has not Sterne +in his "Sentimental Journey" immortalised the poor bird whose one +and leading sentiment, had he been able to find words for it, was +"I can't get out! I can't get out!"?</p> + +<hr> +<p>From early spring until after midsummer the starlings have young +broods in more varied places and positions than probably any other +birds in England. They like the homes of men, and build with equal +pleasure in thatched roofs, under tiles, in the eaves and under the +leads of churches (though a recent edict by the Bench of Bishops +has forbidden them the towers by causing wire netting to be placed +over the louvre boards), and also in places the most remote from +mankind. In the most solitary groves on Beaulieu Heath, under the +ledges of stark Cornish precipices, and in ruins on islets in +mountain lochs in Scotland, they tend their hungry nestlings with +the same assiduous care. The good done by the starlings throughout +the spring, summer, and autumn is incalculable. The young are fed +entirely on insect food, and as the birds always seek this as close +to home as possible, they act as police to our gardens and meadows. +They do a little mischief when nesting and in the fruit season, +partly because they have ideas. It was alleged recently that they +picked off the cherry blossoms and carried them off to decorate +their nests with. Later they are among the most inveterate robbers +of cherry orchards and peckers of figs, which they always attack on +the ripest side. But they have never developed a taste for +devouring corn, like the rice-birds and starlings of the United +States. They have a good deal in common with those bright, clever, +and famous mimics, the Indian mynahs, which they much resemble +physically. This was the bird which Bontius considered "went one +better" than Ovid's famous parrot:--</p> + +<p class="poetry"> "Psittacus, Eois quamvis tibi missus +ab oris<br> + Jussa loquar; vincit me sturnus garrulus Indis."<br> +</p> + +<p>The mynahs have also the starling's habit of building in houses, +and especially in temples. There is a finish about the mynah's and +the starling's mimicry which certainly beats that of the +parrots.</p> + +<p>In their attendance on sheep and cattle the starlings have +another creditable affinity. They are very like the famous +rhinoceros-birds of Africa, to which also they are related. The +rhinoceros-birds always keep in small flocks, every member of which +sits on the back of the animal, whether antelope, buffalo, or +rhinoceros, on which it is catching insects. The starlings do not +keep so closely to the animal's body, though they frequently alight +on the back of a sheep or cow and run all over it. But when seeking +insect food among cattle the little groups of starlings generally +keep in a pack and attend to a single animal. Mr. J.G. Millais, +watching deer in a park with his glasses, saw a starling remove a +fly from the corner of a deer's eye. When they have run round it, +and over it, and caught all the flies they can there, they rise +with a little unanimous exclamation, and fly on to the next beast. +Their winter movements are also interesting. By day they associate +with other birds, mainly with rooks. Gilbert White thought they did +this because the rooks had extra nerves in their beaks, and were +able to act as guides to the smaller birds searching for invisible +food. Probably it is only due to the sociable instinct. Towards +night they nearly always repair in innumerable flocks to some +favourite roosting-place, either a reed-bed or a wood of +evergreens, where they assemble in thousands. One of these communal +sleeping-places is the duck island in St. James's Park. In hard +weather they feed on the saltings and round the shore, especially +where rotten seaweed abounds, with great quantities of insect life +in it. At such times they roost in the crevices of the great sea +cliffs. Under Culver Cliff, for instance, they may be seen flying +along the shore and coming in to bed in the frost fog with the +cormorants and other fishers of the deep.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter27">FLOWERS OF THE GRASS +FIELDS</a></h2> + +<p>Just before hay-time, the crowning glory of the Thames-side +flats is given by the flowers growing in the grass. Their setting, +among the uncounted millions of green grass stems, appeals not only +by the contrast of colour, but by the sense of coolness and content +which these sheltered and softly bedded blossoms suggest. The +meadows which they adorn are best-loved of all the fields of +England; but they would never be as dear to Englishmen as they are +were it not for the flowers which deck them. The blossoms and +plants found in the tall grasses differ from those on lawns and +grazing pastures. They are taller, more delicate, and of a more +graceful growth. The daisy, so dear to pastoral poets, is not a +flower of the hayfield. The myriads of springing stems choke the +daisy flowers, which love to lie low, on their flat and +shallow-rooted stars of leaves. The daisy is a lawn plant that +loves low turf, and only in early spring on the pasture-fields does +it whiten the unmown grasses. The turf glades of the New Forest, +grazed short by cattle for eight hundred years, are very properly +called "lawns"; and on these the daisies grow in thousands, showing +that they are true lawns, and not grassfields mown yearly by the +scythe. What makes a flower of the grasses it is difficult to say. +Bulbs flourish among them, and clovers, trefoils, and vetch. White +ox-eye daisies love the grass, and many orchids, and in shady +places white cow-parsley, and blue wild geraniums, and all the +buttercups. Others, like the yellow snapdragon and the scarlet +poppy, will have none of it, but love a dry and dusty fallow or a +cornfield that has run to waste, shimmering with heat and drought. +Up the valley of the Pang, you may see acres of poppies on a fallow +as scarlet as a field-marshal's coat, and not one in the meadows by +the stream. Even before the sheltering grass stems shoot upward and +around them, drawing all the flower-life skywards as trees draw +other trees upright towards the light, there are plants which are +found only growing in the meadows, springing from the turf carpet, +and happy in no other setting. Chief of these are the wild +daffodils or Lent-lilies, the ornaments of old orchards and of the +green meadows of Devon and the Isle of Wight. Why they, like the +snowdrops, and in other parts of Europe the narcissi, should choose +the turf in which to flower, instead of the woods, where grass does +not grow, is one of the secrets of the flower-world. So, too, the +wild hyacinths grow not in the meadows, though the fritillaries, +the chequered red or pale "snake flowers," are grass-lovers, and +grow only in the alluvial meadows by the streams and brooks of the +valleys. Early though the fritillaries are, they are a real "grass +flower," flourishing best where there is some early succulent +growth around them, for they like the shelter so given. This they +enjoy even early in the year, because their favourite home is in +meadows over which flood-waters run in winter, and there the grass +grows fast. With the cowslip comes the early common orchis, with +its red-purple flower, and later the masses of buttercups, and the +ox-eye daisies. Both these flowers are increasing in our meadows, +the former to the detriment of the grass itself, and to the loss of +the butter-makers, for the cows will not eat the buttercups' bitter +stems. Like the ox-eye daisy, the buttercup is a typical meadow +flower, tall, so that it tops the grasses and catches the sun in +its petals, thin-foliaged, for no real grass-growing flower has +broad or remarkable leaves, and with a habit of deep, underground +growth far below the upper surface of the matted grass roots. You +cannot easily pull up a buttercup root, or that of any flower of +the meadows. The stems break first, for they draw their sustenance +from a deep stratum of earth. Most of the meadow flowers and +blossoms in the mowing grass belong to the beautiful, rather than +to the useful, order of plants. They are fitted to weave a garland +from rather than to distil into simples and potions. As Gerard says +of the butterfly orchis, "there is no great use of these in +physicke, but they are chiefly regarded for the pleasant and +beautiful flowers wherewith Nature hath seemed to play and disport +herselfe." Herein they differ from the roadside plants and the +blossoms of waste-lands and woods, for these, especially the +former, swell the list of the medicinal plants, the garden not of +Flora, but of Aesculapius. It is these which have been gathered for +centuries by the wise men and wise women of the villages from the +Apennines to Exmoor, while, if we may infer from the story of +agriculture, the flowers of the grassfields are in a sense modern +and artificial. They owe their numbers to the discovery of the art +of haymaking. Before men learnt to cut, dry, and stack hay, which, +after fermenting partly in the stacks under pressure, becomes a +manufactured food, it may be concluded that there were no such +flower-spangled fields, in this country at least, as now form such +a striking feature of rural England. Cattle and sheep wandered all +over the common pastures, and ate the grass down, or trampled it +under foot. Consequently, it never grew long, or formed the +protecting bed in which the flowers now lie, and many of the meadow +plants could seldom have flowered at all. The hungry cattle would +graze down all the soft, juicy young buds and leaves, wandering at +will over the valleys, under charge only of the herdsman. When +haymaking became general the cattle were confined in spring and +early summer, and the fields of "mowing grass" appeared, and +nourished year by year the plants peculiar to this form of +cultivation. The proof that this is so may be seen in the New +Forest. There the private fields, carefully protected during the +spring, from the tread or bite of cattle, and mown yearly in the +summer, have all the wealth of flowers peculiar to our hay-meadows. +Outside, in the forest itself, these flowers hardly exist, except +by some pool-side, or on the meadow-like border of a bog. They are +only natural in the second sense, because our mowing grass is a +natural product of enclosed ground, when cattle are excluded. Some +flowers just invade the meadows, venturing out a few yards from the +hedges or woods, but never spreading broadcast over the sun-warmed +central acres. Such are the blue bird's-eye, which just colours the +mowing grass in shady spots and patches near the fence, and +occasionally the bee-orchis and the butterfly-orchis. The latter +does not grow tall in the meadows as it does in the woods, but +affects a humbler growth. Blue wild geraniums also flourish in +patches in the meadows, and sometimes cranesbill and campion. But +campions do not seed well among the thick grasses and seldom hold +their own, as they do where a copse has been cut down, or on a +hedgeside. And, though it is not a flower, there is the "quaking +grass" beloved of children, though useless as cattle food, and a +sign of bad pasturage, but the only grass which cottage people +gather to keep, as a memento of the hayfields.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="#orchis"></a> <img src="images/fig16.png" +width="908" height="643" alt="ORCHIS. +From photographs by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>Flowering plants form a large part of the actual herbage from +which the hay is made. The bottom of a good crop of mowing grass +springs from a tangle of clover and leguminous plants, all owning +blossoms, and many of them of brilliant hues and exquisite perfume. +Chief among these is the red meadow-clover, the pride of the +hayfields. Few plants can match its perfume, or the cool freshness +of its leaves. With this is mixed the little hop-clover, and the +sucklings, and other tiny gold-dust blossoms. Meadow vetchling, and +the tall meadow crowfoot, with rich yellow blooms and dainty +leaves, are set off by the pinks of the clover and the crimson of +stray sainfoin clusters. All these blossoms with the various +flowers of the grasses, tend to ripen and come to perfection +together, the heats of June bringing the whole multitude on +together as in a natural forcing-pit. It is then that the mowing +grass is said to be "ripe," when all the blossoms are shedding +their pollen, and giving hay-fever to those who enter the fields. +It must be cut then, wet or fine, or the quality and aroma of the +hay passes away beyond recovery. Perhaps it is an accident that +most of our meadow flowers are white or yellow. The two most +striking exceptions are from foreign soil, the purple-blue lucerne +and the crimson sainfoin. But yellow is not the universally +predominant hue of the flowers of grasses, for in Switzerland and +the Italian Alps the hayfields are as blue with campanulas as they +are here yellow with buttercups. The turf on our chalk downs shows +flowers more nearly approaching in tint the flora of the Alps. The +hair-bells with their pale blue, and the dark-purple campanulas, +give the complement of blue absent in the lower meadows, while the +tiny milkwort is as deep an ultramarine as the Alpine gentians +themselves. But the turf of the chalk downs, never rising to any +height, and without the forcing power of the valley grasses, yields +no such wealth of colour or perfume as the meadow flowers lavish on +our senses in the early weeks of June.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter28">RIVERSIDE GARDENING</a></h2> + +<p class="quoted">"And a river went out of Eden to water the +garden."</p> + +<p>A Recent addition to the country house is the "water garden," in +which a running brook is the centre and <em>motif</em> of the +subsidiary ornaments of flowers, ferns, trees, shrubs, and mosses. +Nature is in league with art in the brook garden, for nowhere is +wild vegetation so luxuriant, and the two forces of warmth and +moisture so generally combined, as by the banks of running streams. +The brook is its own landscape gardener, and curves and slopes its +own banks and terraces, sheltered from rough winds and prone to the +sun.</p> + +<p>Many houses near the Thames, especially those under the chalk +hills which fringe much of the valley, have near them some rill or +brook running to the main river. On the sides of the chalk hills, +though not on their summits, these streams cut narrow gullies and +glens. Wherever, in fact, there is hilly, broken ground, the little +rills form these broken ravines and gullies, often only a few yards +in width from side to side. Usually these brooklet valleys are +choked with brambles or fern, and filled with rank undergrowth. +Often the stream is overhung and invisible, or dammed and left in +soak, breeding frogs, gnats, and flies. The trees are always tall +and beautifully grown, whatever their age, for the moisture and +warmth force vertical growth; the smaller bushes--hawthorn, briar, +and wild guelder-rose--also assume graceful forms unhidden, for +they always bow their heads towards the sun-reflecting stream. Part +of the charm of the transformation of these brookside jungles into +the brookside garden lies in the gradual and experimental method of +their conversion. Every one knows that running water is the most +delightful thing to play with provided in this world; and the +management of the water is the first amusement in forming the brook +garden. When the banks have been cleared of brambles to such a +distance up the sides of the hollow as the ground suggests, and all +poor or ill-grown trees have been cut away to let in the only two +"fertilisers" needed--air and sun--the dimensions of the first pool +or "reach" in the brook garden are decided upon. This must depend +partly on the size and flow of the stream. If it is a chalk spring, +from six feet to six yards wide, its flow will probably be constant +throughout the year, for it is fed from the reservoirs in the heart +of the hills. Then it needs little care except to clear its course, +and the planting of its banks with flowers and stocking of its +waters with lilies, arums, irises, and trout is begun at once. But +most streams are full in winter and low in summer. On these the +brook gardener must take a lesson from the beavers, and make a +succession of delightful little dams, cascades, and pools, to keep +his water at the right level throughout the year. Where there is a +considerable brook these dams may be carried away in winter and +ruin the garden. Stone or concrete outfalls are costly, and often +give way, undermined by the floods. But there is a form of overflow +which gives an added sparkle even to the waterfall, and costs +little. Each little dam is roofed with thin split oak, overlapping +like the laths of a Venetian blind when closed. This forms the +bottom of the "shoot," and carries the water clear of the dam into +the stream below. As the water runs over the overlapping laths it +forms a ripple above each ridge, and from the everlasting throb of +these pleats of running water the sunlight flashes as if from a +moving river of diamonds. Beside these cascades, and only two +inches higher than their level, are cut "flood-overflows" paved +with turf, to let off the swollen waters in autumn rains. With the +cutting out of undergrowth and the admission of light the rank +vegetation of the banks changes to sweet grass, clovers, woodruffe, +and daisies, and the flowers natural to the soil can be planted or +will often spring up by themselves. In spring the banks should be +set thick with violets, primroses, and the lovely bronze, crimson, +and purple polyanthuses. Periwinkle, daffodils, crocuses, and +scarlet or yellow tulips will all flourish and blossom before the +grass grows too high or hides their flowers. For later in the year +taller plants, which can rise, as all summer wood-plants do, above +the level of the grasses, must be set on the banks. Clumps of +everlasting peas, masses of phloxes, hollyhocks, and, far later in +the year, scarlet tritomas (red-hot pokers) look splendid among the +deep greens of the summer grass and beneath the canopy of trees. +For it must be remembered that the brookside garden is in nearly +every case a shaded garden, beneath the tall trees natural to such +places. All beautiful flowering shrubs and trees, such as the +guelder-rose, the pink may, the hardy azaleas, and certain of the +more beautiful rhododendrons will aid the background of the brook +garden, and flourish naturally in its sheltered hollow. There is +one "new" rhododendron, which the writer saw recently in such a +situation, but of which he does not recollect the name, which has +masses of wax-like, pale sulphur flowers, which are mirrored in a +miniature pool set almost at its foot. This half-wild flower garden +pertains mainly to the banks of the brook gully, and not to the +banks of the brook itself. It is in the latter, by the waterside, +that the special charm of these gardens should be found. It is the +nature of such places to have a strip of level ground opposite to +each of the curves of the stream. All the narcissi, or +chalice-flowers, naturally love the banks of brooks--</p> + +<p class="poetry"> + "Those +springs<br> + On chaliced flowers that lies."<br> +</p> + +<p>These will grow in great tufts and ever-increasing masses, +multiplying their bulbs till they touch the water's edge. Not only +the old pheasant's-eye narcissus, but all the modern and splendid +varieties in gold, cream, white, and orange, grow best by the +brookside. By these, but on the lower ground almost level with the +water, big forget-me-nots, butterburs, and wild snake's-head lilies +should be set, and all the crimson and white varieties of garden +daisy. Lily-of-the-valley, despite its name, likes more sun than +our brook garden admits except in certain places; but certain of +the lilies which flourish in the garden beds grow with an added and +more languid grace on the green bank of our flower-bordered brook, +and the American swamp-lily finds its natural place. Then special +pools will be formed for the growth of those plants, foreign and +English, which love to have their roots in water-soaked mud or the +beds of running streams, while leaves and flowers rise far above +into the light. Other pools should become "beds" for the +water-flowers that float upon the surface. In the slang of the rock +garden the plants living and flourishing on upright rocks are +called "verticals." If we must have a slang for the flora of the +brook garden we will term them "horizontals"-- the plants that lie +flat on the water surface, and only use their stems as cables to +anchor them to the bottom of the stream. Of these we may plant, in +addition to the white water-lily and the yellow, the crimson +scented water-lily and the wild water-villarsia. White +water-crowfoot, water-soldier, and arrowheads will form the fringe +of the pool. But the crowning floral honour of the brook garden is +in the irises set in and beside its waters, chief among which are +the glorious irises of Japan-- purple, blue, rose-colour, and +crimson--the pink English flowering rush, big white mocassin +flowers, New Zealand flax, and pink buckbean, and bog arum. The +great white arum of the greenhouse is quite hardy out of doors if +it is planted eighteen inches below water, and blossoms in the +brook.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="violet"></a> <img src="images/fig17.png" +width="932" height="640" alt="WATER VIOLET AND WILD IRIS. +From photographs by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>The brook garden is like a colony. It is always extending its +range, following the course of the stream. Each year adds a little +more to the completeness of the lower pools, and each year some +yards of the upper waters and their banks are brought into partial +harmony with the lower reaches. In one perfect example of this kind +of garden, under the Berkshire downs, the succession of +trout-pools, water gardening, half-wild banks, and turf-walk +stretches for nearly a mile among the fields in a narrow glen, +unseen from either side, except for its narrow riband of tree-tops +among the fields; but within its narrow limits it is glorious with +flowers, cascades, pools full of trout, set with water-plants in +blossom, and the haunt of innumerable birds. Even the wild ducks +ascend to the topmost pools, and are constantly in flight down the +narrow winding vistas of grass, water, and trees, which they, like +the kingfishers and water-hens, seem to think are set out for their +especial pleasure.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter29">COTTAGES AND CAMPING +OUT</a></h2> + +<p>This is supposed to be a "business" country, but one wonders why +new wants which accompany any change of daily habit are so slowly +realised. Take, for instance, the annual migration to the Thames +Valley, which has assumed proportions never reached before. Beyond +the enlargement of the riverside inns, little has been done to meet +this new taste of English families for rustic life in place of the +seaside; and though the thousands of visitors to the "happy valley" +of our largest river do contrive to enjoy a maximum of fresh air +and outdoor life, this is often accompanied by a needless sacrifice +of comfort. If any improvements in the conditions of life by the +river can be suggested and put into practice, these will certainly +benefit other districts. The profits accruing to intelligent +provision for such a demand should also be considerable. But the +first condition is that the wants and wishes of those who take +their pleasure in this way should be properly understood.</p> + +<p>The boating part of the river life is quite well organised; +indeed, it would be difficult to improve upon it. Its convenience +and elasticity is remarkable. The way in which the leading +boatbuilders provide craft of all descriptions, which may be left +by their hirers at any point on the river, to be brought back to +Oxford or Reading by train, is beyond all praise. It is a triumph +of good sense and management. But boating is only part of the +amusement of the holiday, just as bathing is at the seaside. The +real object with which an ever-growing number of visitors have +adopted the river life is in order to spend the utmost length of +time out of doors and in beautiful scenery. To this end they need +accommodation of a special kind. The large hotel, with its +inducements to spend much time over meals and indoors, is wholly +out of place for such a purpose. What is needed is a cottage which +can be rented either wholly or in part, or actual camp life under +tents. The latter is now not confined to boating-men travelling up +or down the river. It is enjoyed partly as an annexe to up-river +houseboats; more often as "camping out" for its own sake, the tents +being pitched near the river, but in complete detachment from any +other habitation, fixed or floating. In these tents whole families +of the well-to-do classes now elect to live, sometimes for weeks; +rising early, bathing in the river, sometimes cooking their own +food, or more often employing a servant or local man-of-all-work to +do this, taking their meals in the open, and using the tents only +to sleep in, or as a shelter from rain. Even little children now +share the delights of this <em>al fresco</em> life, which realises +their wildest dreams of adventure, and is by general consent as +wholesome as it is entrancing. Whether their elders derive as much +pleasure as they might from the same environment is doubtful. The +business is not properly organised, and only half understood by the +greater number of those who are nevertheless so well pleased by the +experiment that they are anxious to repeat it. Sporadic camping out +involves too much fetching and carrying. Tradesmen do not "call" at +isolated tents in a riverside meadow, and all commodities have to +be fetched by the campers. On the other hand, sociable camping out, +when several groups set up their tents in proximity, needs proper +arrangement. Philosophers may see in it the evolution of the social +life from its primitive elements, with the growth of division of +labour and reciprocal good offices. English families would usually +prefer the sporadic tent, if it were not for the hard work +involved. But if camping out is to be a real success, such +understandings and arrangements must be made. Where this is not +done the result is a failure, obvious to the passer-by. Separate +and unsightly fires for cooking, and untidiness, because there are +no "hours" for performing the light but necessary domestic work, +are common objects of individualism on the camping ground. Yachts, +which are self-maintaining, never have clothes hanging in the +rigging after 8 a.m. when in harbour, and the self-respecting camp +must not fall behind this example.</p> + +<p>The camp in the country should have its communal kitchen in a +wooden movable house, in which meals can be cooked, and from which +it should be possible to purchase food as required. Here is an +opening for commercial enterprise. The tourist agencies might rent +camping grounds and supply tents on hire, with kitchens and all +proper necessaries for living under canvas. They do this with great +success for travellers in the East, and at a moderate cost. In +England tents, if not so luxurious as those provided from Egypt for +life in Palestine, are very cheap, and need no transport animals. +But such a firm could easily make them removable by arranging for +them to be called for and taken up river a few stages, as the boats +are. The hire could be fixed at so much per tent, and a camp +servant could also be provided. Commissionaires and ex-soldiers +with good characters could be found employment in the early autumn, +when they now find it difficult to earn a wage. They thoroughly +understand not only the management of tents, but the duties of a +camp. Rain-proof tents with movable board floors would be provided +from London in uncertain weather on the receipt of a wire, for life +under canvas is quite pleasant even if the hours are not all +serene, if the interior is kept dry.</p> + +<p>Though a new departure in this country camping out is part of +the ordinary and well-understood amusements of the eastern cities +of the United States. The whole State of Maine is practically a +State reserve for this, the most popular form of holiday-making in +America. Its forests, rivers, and lakes are one vast playground and +public sporting domain, which is enjoyed almost entirely by means +of camping out and boating. The rivers teem with State-reared +trout, of which as many are allowed to be caught as can possibly be +consumed by the party. The woods are free to shoot in, with a limit +for deer and caribou; State-provided guides are employed at a fixed +wage. At regular intervals along the rivers are the camping +grounds, each under the control of a camp agent, who arranges for +the comfort and convenience of the travelling host of +tent-dwellers. Each "base" is properly organised and supplied, and +visitors can purchase necessaries, in addition to the fish and +birds which fall to rod and gun. Ladies and children are among +those who enjoy the pastime most keenly, amusing themselves by the +river and among the woods while the husbands hunt or fish.</p> + +<p>The "residential cottage" is perhaps the safer basis for the +complete outdoor life, though it tends to reduce the number of +hours spent in the open. Habit is too strong when once we are under +a roof. It is evidence of the habitable nature of many of our +much-abused cottages that in the Thames-side villages a great +proportion are now occupied for several months in the year by +people who, though willing to pay for simple accommodation, will +not tolerate dirt, squalor, or want of sanitation. To their +surprise they have found hundreds of cottages, homely, but not +uncomfortable, kept with scrupulous neatness, and furnished by no +means badly. Nearly all have ample kitchen accommodation, fair +beds, and an equipment of glass, china, and crockery, which shows +how cheap and good are the necessaries of life in England. The +well-to-do agricultural labourer and his wife, whose children are +out in the world, the village artisans, small tradesfolk, and +"retired" couples are the owners or occupiers, and now let their +rooms at from Ł1 to Ł1 10s. per week, from June till the middle of +September. The results are good in every way. Visitors are pleased +at what seems a cheap holiday, and the letters of the rooms save +money for the winter, and realise in a pleasant way that their +later years have fallen on good times. It is also an encouragement +to landowners to build good and picturesque cottages. For the first +time they see their way to charging a fair rent on their outlay. +The town comes to help the country, and the country sees in the +movement a hopeful future.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter30">NETTING STAGS IN RICHMOND +PARK</a></h2> + +<p>About the opening of the year I went to see the big stags netted +in Richmond Park for transfer to Windsor. Last season this unique +and ancient hunting had to be put off till February. There was too +much "bone" in the ground to make riding safe. When the frost gave, +the stags were more than usually cunning, and were helped by more +than their usual share of luck. One fine stag charged the toils at +best pace, and, happening to hit a rotten net, burst through, and +went off shaking his antlers as proudly as if he had upset a rival +in a charge. Another took to the lake, and after playing Robinson +Crusoe on the island for some time, swam across to the wood, took a +standing leap out of the shallow water on the brink over the +paling, and laid up in Penn Wood.</p> + +<p>It was on a lovely mellow January morning, after just a touch of +frost, with haze and mist veiling the distant woods, a winter sun +struggling to make itself seen, and all the birds, from the +mallards on the lakes to the jackdaws in the old oaks, beginning to +talk, but with their minds not quite made up as to whether they +should take a morning flight or stop where they were, when the +business of setting up the toils began.</p> + +<p>This, which is probably managed in exactly the same way as when +Queen Dido arranged to give a day's sport to good Aeneas, is +carried out according to the ancient and unvarying tradition of +this royal and ancient park. Nor were we allowed to forget that in +this case, too, the stags were being taken by the servants of a +queen. Everything was ready for the transport of the stags to +Windsor, and in the foreground was a good strong wooden cart, +painted red and blue, and inscribed in the largest capitals with +the words, "Her Majesty's cart."</p> + +<p>The art and practice of taking the stags in the toils is carried +out in this wise. A body of mounted men, under the orders of the +superintendent of the park, ride out to find the herds of red deer. +They then ride in and "cut" out the finest stags, and, spreading +out in a broad line, chase them at the utmost speed of horse +towards that quarter of the park where the nets are spread. Some +two hundred yards in front of the nets two deerhounds are held, and +slipped as the stag gallops past--not to injure or distress him, +but to hurry him up and distract his attention from the long lines +of nets in front.</p> + +<p>The stags were known to be full of running, and resourceful; +consequently the number of riders who had been asked to help was +rather larger than usual. Even so they had to make a wide sweep of +the Southern Park before they found their deer, and had a racing +burst of more than a mile and a half before they brought them +round. Meantime, while they are away on their quest, let us inspect +the ancient contrivance of the toils. They are heavy nets of rope, +thick as a finger, and with meshes not more than ten inches +square--very strong, and to our eyes almost too solid and visible. +Partly to render them less conspicuous, the line--at least one +hundred yards long--is set in a long, narrow depression or shallow +drain, running from a wood on the Richmond side of Penn Pond down +to a small pool. Just in the centre of this line is a most ancient +pollard oak, the crown of which will hold eight men easily, ready +to spring down to earth and seize the deer as the nets fall on him. +In this most appropriate watch-tower the keeper in command at the +toils, and several of his helpers, ensconced themselves. The +Richmond stags, though so constantly in the sight of the crowds of +visitors to the park, are among the boldest and gamest of all park +stags. One, who was more especially the object of the day's chase, +jumped a paling 6 ft. 3 in. high the day before, merely for +amusement. Those sometimes transferred to the paddocks at Ascot for +hunting with the Royal Buckhounds were noted for their courage and +straight running. Perhaps the most famous was old Volunteer, whose +latest exploit was to give a run of nearly thirty miles, at the end +of which he was not taken. Having had his day out, and not being +taken up in the cart as usual, he made his way home by night, +jumped into his paddock, and was found there next morning!</p> + +<p>Holloaing, long and loud, was now heard from the east. Keen was +the keeper's glance as he looked, not to the sound, but along his +line of nets, the top at least eight feet from the ground, lightly +hitched on thick saplings, while an ample fold of some four feet +more lay upon the ground. Before and behind, the dead and tangled +bracken broke the line; the props were of natural wood, and the +tawny nets themselves made no break in the general colour of the +hillside. Then the shouting came louder down the wind. Where were +they? Not coming "up the straight" certainly, for no stags were +visible and the hounds were not slipped. Suddenly from above us +three big red stags came galloping obliquely down the hill, not as +they are represented in pictures with muzzles up and horns back, +but at high speed for all that; and though they carried their horns +erect, their sides were heaving and the smoke coming out of their +nostrils. They saw the nets, but determined to push through them. +One charged them gallantly head first, and as the thick meshes fell +tumultuously over his head and back, the second jumped the falling +toils twenty yards to his left, taking them most gracefully, as if +he were doing a circus trick. Down from the tree sprang the keeper +and his men, and seized the helpless stag, while the second, which +had jumped and won, stood panting and looking over his shoulder to +see what curious game this was. The third broke back and +disappeared.</p> + +<p>Perhaps the most strange thing was the calm self-possession of +the netted stag. The astonishing catching power of a net held him +enmeshed at all points. His muzzle was held by one mesh, his horns +by three or four; all four feet were caught also. In addition, +about eight men kindly caught hold of his horns, legs, and back, to +prevent him hurting himself. This he was far too clever to do. He +just lay quiet, calmly regarding the fun with his upper eye, and +wondering when the deuce they were going to take him "out of that." +In a very few minutes his feet were buckled together by soft +straps, and a saw trimmed off his antler tops, for which we felt +sorry, but there was not room for them in the "compartment" he was +to travel in. It is only when a stag lies close before you on the +ground that you realise that he is not a "slab-sided," flat-ribbed +animal, but a bulky, well-rounded beast. It took six men to lift +him on to the bed of fern in "Her Majesty's cart," and when there +he quickly twisted round, and lay couched, bound but not subdued, +calmly regarding the scene over the side of his cart. A nice lot of +chopped mangold root had been put in his box, and we hope he +enjoyed his lunch in the train on his way to Windsor.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="stag"></a> <img src="images/fig18.png" width= +"597" height="901" alt="A NETTED STAG. +From a drawing by Lancelot Speed."></p> + +<p>The next drive was far more rapid, and its results more +exciting. The stags were again brought round from above Penn Pond, +then through the oak grove below White Lodge, and came galloping up +the long side of the slope, straight for the nets. Then the brace +of deerhounds, which, like the keeper, seemed to know the game +thoroughly, were slipped, and most beautiful they looked, one +laying out, lithe and low, just parallel with the haunch of one +stag, the other driving the brace below. The single stag charged +the nets and was enveloped as before, but the other brace broke +back and escaped.</p> + +<p>Four in all were taken during the day, without accident or +mishap. One of the keepers did have an accident of a rather curious +kind, when assisting to catch stags at Buckhurst Park in Kent. He +was galloping as hard as he could, driving a stag, when his horse +cannoned up against another deer which was lying crouched in the +fern, as deer sometimes do. The horse went a complete somersault, +and its rider was badly bruised and hurt, though no bones were +broken.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter31">RICHMOND OLD DEER +PARK</a></h2> + +<p>If Henry VII.'s palace at Richmond still stood by the riverside, +we should have a second Hampton Court at half the distance from +London. It was almost the first of the fine Tudor palaces in this +country, built very stately, with a prodigious number of towers, +turrets, cupolas, and gilded vanes, on a site as fine as that of +Wolsey's competing pile higher up the river. But though the palace +has gone, the park is left. It is the precinct now called the Old +Deer Park, in which not one in ten thousand of those who visit and +enjoy the park on the hill which we call Richmond Park has ever set +foot, except in the corner furthest from the river to see a +horse-show or a cricket-match. Old it certainly is. The park on the +hill, venerable as it looks now, is only a thing of yesterday in +comparison with it. Charles I. made the latter, and the Penn Ponds +were dug by the Princess Amelia. The Old Deer Park was a Royal +demesne when the Saxon Kings had their palace at Sheen, before it +was given its new name of Richmond by the first Tudor, after the +Castle in Yorkshire from which he took his title when a subject. In +the middle of this ancient and forgotten park, forgotten because it +is neither reserved for the pleasure of the Sovereign nor thrown +open for the enjoyment of his subjects, it was lately proposed to +build a scientific laboratory, to supplement the work of the +observatory, which is mainly employed in magnetic observations and +in testing thermometers and chronometers. The proposal is an +instance of the mischief which may be done by precedent, and of the +way in which Royal favour may be misused quite unconsciously by +persons who forget that the circumstances which lent grace and +propriety to a concession at one time may be so altered later that +to presume on it is an error of judgment. George III. instructed +Chambers, the architect, who had been doing work for him at Kew, to +erect an observatory in the Old Park. It was a thoughtful act, at a +time when there were no public funds for the encouragement of +science, and when the study of astronomy was still regarded partly +as something peculiarly under Royal patronage because its practical +use was to keep and make records to ensure the safe navigation of +his Majesty's ships.</p> + +<p>The application to erect new buildings was refused, for a place +like the Old Deer Park, if kept open and wild, and not built upon, +has a present and future value to the health and happiness of +millions of people beyond any calculation or power of words.</p> + +<p>It does not need much imagination to make this forecast. But as +few people have ever made what, in the old words of forest law, was +called a "perambulation" of the park, some description of its +present condition and appearance may help to form an opinion. It is +the largest and finest riverside park in England. It covers nearly +four hundred acres, but this great area, as large as Hyde Park, is +shaped and placed so as to gain the maximum of beauty and +convenience from its surroundings. On the London side it has for +neighbour the whole depth of Kew Gardens, from the road at the back +to the river at the front--two hundred and eighty acres of garden +and wood. But whoever first acquired the land for the park, whether +Norman or Saxon, very rightly thought that the feature to be +desired was to make the most of the river-front, where the Thames, +pushing into Middlesex, cuts "a huge half-moon, a monstrous cantle, +out." Whether by accident or design, the park is like a half-open +fan, narrowest at the back, which is the ugly or plain side, near +the road, and with its widest part unbosoming on the Thames. From +back to front it is some half-mile deep; but the Thames front +extends for a mile along one of the most beautiful river scenes in +England.</p> + +<p>On the Kew Gardens border it lies against what was, until a few +years ago, the wild and private part of Kew. To this it served as +an open park, where all the birds drew out to sun themselves and +feed. So they do still. Along the margin are scattered old beech +trees, and a wilderness of long grass and flowers, where +wood-pigeons, thrushes, pheasants, crows, jays, and all the smaller +birds of the gardens may be seen sunning themselves. The narrow end +or "stick" of the "fan," near the road, is leased to a cricket +club, and cut off from the greater area by a belt of young +plantation. In this a brood of partridges hatches nearly every +year, though what becomes of the birds later is only conjectured. +Beyond this cross-belt the whole area of the park stretches out, +ever widening, and with an imperceptible fall, to the Thames. It is +studded here and there with very large and very ancient trees, and +is one of the largest and least broken areas of ancient pasture, +whether for deer or cattle, in England. Until lately the old +observatory was the only building upon it, and the turf was +unbroken. But recent years have added two disfigurements. One is a +large red building with skylights, connected with the games and +athletic sports, which have found a more or less permanent home in +the upper part of the park, where the annual horse-shows are held, +uses for which that part of the ground is well suited. The other is +a permanent and very deplorable blemish, made purposely, in the +interests of the popular game of the hour. The greater part of this +fine park has been leased to a private golf club. Golf, as every +one knows, originally flourished on sand dunes, which are about as +completely the natural opposite of an old flat park of ancient +pasture as can be found in this country. The golf club have been +allowed to do what they can to remedy this defect of Nature by +converting the Old Park into a sand dune, and this they have done +by digging holes and throwing up dozens, or scores, of bunkers. But +the margins of the park are quite unspoilt, and the river-front is +the wildest and the freest piece of Nature left near London. It is +completely bounded by an ancient moat, beyond which lies the +towing-path, and beyond that the river and the ancient and +picturesque front of Isleworth. The path between the moat and the +river is set with ancient trees, mostly horse-chestnuts and beech, +in continuous line. Under their branches and between their stems +the visitor in the park sees a series of pictures, framed by trees +and branches, of the Queen Anne houses and rose-gardens of +Isleworth, the old church with its tower and huge sun-dial, the +ferry and the old inn of the "London Apprentice," the poplars and +willows of the Isleworth eyots, the granaries and mills where the +little Hounslow stream falls in, and further Twickenham way the +gardens of the fine villas there, while towards London the +pavilions and park of Syon House begin. At the present moment the +margin of the Old Deer Park and its moat give a mile of beauty and +refreshment. No one has troubled to mow the grass or cut the weeds, +or clear the moat, or meddle with the hedge beyond it. So the moat, +which is filled from the river when necessary, and is not stagnant, +is full of water-flowers, and quite clear, and fringed with a deep +bed of reeds and sedges. In it are shoals of dace, and minnow, and +gudgeon, and sticklebacks, and plenty of small pike basking in the +sun. The largest and bluest forget-me-nots, and water-mints, and +big water-docks and burdocks flourish in the water, and the hedge +beyond is full of sweet elder in flower, and covered with wild +hops. Huge elms, partly decaying, and a dark grove of tall beeches +line the park near the moat, and besides water and flowers there is +shade and the motion of leaves. If the proposal to build on such a +site leads to a better knowledge of what this ancient park really +is, and its value to the amenities of the capital, it will have +done good, not harm. The late Queen recently presented the cottage +in the reserved part of Kew Gardens and its precincts for the use +of the public. It would seem that a similar sacrifice has been made +by Royalty in the case of the Old Deer Park, but that the public +are excluded by the Office of Woods and Forests, which has charge +of it, and the park neglected and disfigured. If it were put on the +same footing as Richmond Park upon the hill, and communication were +open between the park and Kew Gardens at proper hours, an +unequalled domain, still the property of the Crown, but enjoyed +within reasonable limitations by every subject, would be open from +Kew Green practically to Kingston. The line from the boundary of +the Old Deer Park is taken on by Richmond Green, and the +towing-path to the Terrace Gardens, formerly the property of the +Duke of Buccleuch, and now of the Richmond Corporation, thence by +the terrace and the open slope under it to Richmond Park, through +Sudbrook Park to Ham Common, a series of varied scenery unrivalled +even in the valley of the Thames.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter32">FISH IN THE LONDON +RIVER</a></h2> + +<p>The capture of a 4-lb. grilse in the Thames estuary in December, +1901, raised some hopes that we might in course of time see salmon +at London Bridge. Mr. R. Marston, a great authority, in an article +on "The Thames a Salmon River," in the <em>Nineteenth Century</em>, +has given many reasons why he fears that this will not be realised. +The question is not so much whether the salmon can come up, as +whether the smolts, or young salmon, could get down through the +polluted water. But the experiments made are interesting and +deserve every encouragement, and it may be hoped that money will be +forthcoming to make more.</p> + +<p>As regards other fish than salmon, their return has been going +on steadily since 1890; and their advance has covered a distance of +some twenty miles--from Gravesend to Teddington. The first evidence +was the reappearance of whitebait, small crabs, and jelly-fish at +Gravesend in 1892. In 1893 the whitebait fishermen and shrimp-boats +were busy ten miles higher than they had been seen at work for many +years. The condenser tubes of torpedo-boats running their trials +down the river were found to be choked with "bait," and buckets of +the fish were shown at the offices of the London County Council in +Spring Gardens. It was claimed that this evidence of the increased +purity of the water was mainly due to the efforts of the Main +Drainage Committee of the London County Council. There is abundant +evidence that this claim was correct, for instead of allowing the +whole of the London sewage to fall into the Thames at Barking and +Crossness, the County Council used a process to separate all the +solid matter, and carried it out to sea. The results of the first +year's efforts were that over two million tons were shipped beyond +the Nore, ten thousand tons of floating refuse were cleared away, +and the liquid effluent was largely purified. It was predicted at +the time that if this process was continued on the same scale it +would not be long before the commoner estuary fishes appeared above +London Bridge, even if the migratory salmon and sea-trout still +held aloof. Unfortunately there has been some deviation from the +methods of dealing with the sewage, a change from which we believe +that some of the officials concerned with the early improvements +very strongly dissented, that has to some extent retarded the +advance of the fish. But in 1895 a sudden "spurt" took place in +their return. Whitebait became so plentiful that during the whole +of the winter and spring the results were obvious, not only to +naturalists, but on the London market. Whitebait shoals swarmed in +the Lower Thames and the Medway, and became a cheap luxury even in +February and March. They were even so suicidally reckless as to +appear off Greenwich. Supplies of fresh fish came into the market +twice daily, and were sold retail at sixpence per quart. The Thames +flounders once more reappeared off their old haunt at the head of +the Bishop of London's fishery near Chiswick Eyot. Only one good +catch was made, and none have been taken since; but this had not +been done for twelve years, and there is a prospect of their +increase, for, in the words of old Robert Binnell, Water Bailiff of +the City of London in 1757, we may "venture to affirm that there is +no river in all Europe that is a better nourisher of its fish, and +a more speedy breeder, particularly of the flounder, than is the +Thames." Eels were also taken in considerable numbers between +Hammersmith and Kew; but the main supply of London eels came from +Holland even in the days of London salmon. In a very old print of +the City, with traitors' heads by the dozen on London Bridge, "Eale +Schippes," exactly like the Dutch boats lying at this moment off +Billingsgate, are shown anchored in the river. Besides the estuary +fish which naturally come <em>up</em> river, dace and roach began +to come <em>down</em> into the tideway, and during the whole summer +the lively little bleak swarmed round Chiswick Eyot. Later in the +year the roach and dace were seen off Westminster, and several were +caught below London Bridge, and in 1900 roach were seen and caught +at Woolwich, but were soon poisoned and died. In August the +delicate smelts suddenly reappeared at Putney, where they had not +been seen in any number for many years. Later, in September, +another migration of smelts passed right up the river. Many were +caught at Isleworth and Kew, and finally they penetrated to the +limit of the tideway at Teddington, and good baskets were made at +Teddington Lock.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="bream"></a> <img src="images/fig19.png" +width="898" height="648" alt="BREAM AND ROACH. +From a photograph by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>This additional evidence of the satisfaction of the fish with +the County Council does not quite satisfy us that the London river +is yet clean enough to give passage to the migratory salmon. It is +encouraging to the County Council, who deserve all the credit they +can get; but there is little doubt that the best evidence that the +river is fit for the salmon would be the spontaneous appearance of +the salmon themselves.</p> + +<p>Since the middle of June, 1890, large shoals of dace, bleak, +roach, and small fry have appeared in all the reaches, from Putney +upwards. A few years ago hardly any fish were to be seen below Kew +during the summer, and these were sickly and diseased. Last year +they were in fine condition, and dace eagerly took the fly even on +the lower reaches. Every flood-tide hundreds of "rises" of dace, +bleak, and roach were seen as the tide began to flow, or rather as +the sea-water below pushed the land-water before it up the river. +At high water little creeks, draw-docks, and boat-landings were +crowded with healthy, hungry fish, and old riverside anglers, whose +rods had been put away for years, caught them by dozens with the +fly. Sixty dozen dace were taken, mainly with the fly, in a single +creek, which for some years has produced little in the way of +living creatures but waterside rats. I counted twenty-two "rises" +in a minute in a length of twenty yards inside the eyot at +Chiswick. During one high tide in July a sight commonly seen in a +summer flood on the Isis or Cherwell was witnessed not sixty yards +from the boundary stone of the county of London. The tide rose so +far as to fringe several lawns by the river with a yard or two of +shallow water, and the fish at once left the river and crowded into +this shallow overflow, their backs occasionally showing above it, +to escape the muddy clouds in the tidal water. There were hundreds +of fish in the shoals, of all kinds and sizes, from dace nine +inches long, with a few roach, to sticklebacks. These fish are +probably the descendants of spawn laid in the <em>tidal</em> parts +of the river, on the gravel-beds and weeds. Doubtless the quantity +of fresh water from the spring rains contributed something to the +result, but the spawn must have hatched far more successfully than +usual.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="grampus"></a> <img src="images/fig20.png" +width="671" height="985" alt="A GRAMPUS AT CHISWICK. +From a drawing by Lancelot Speed."></p> + +<p>Rivermen on the tidal Thames always distinguish between eels and +"fish." The former are also increasing greatly. The sole survivor +of the "Peter boats" left on the river is saved from disappearing +like the rest of the race by eel-fishing. Formerly these boats, +whose owners lived and slept on board them for six months in the +year, were quite successful in catching eels and flounders. In the +Chiswick parish registers a number of those married or buried are +entered as being "fishermen," which clearly means that that was +their business in life. The number of professed eel catchers' boats +gradually dwindled to one, and the owner of this catches a fair +quantity of most excellent eels, those taken off Mortlake, opposite +the finish of the University boat-race, being especially fine in +flavour. Another eel-like fish, formerly taken in great numbers, +and of the finest quality, but now almost forgotten, is also +returning. This is the lampern. Lamperns, unlike eels, come into +the rivers to spawn, and go back to the sea later or to the +brackish waters. Men employed in scooping gravel out of the river +at Hammersmith, lately noticed numbers of lamperns coming up on to +the gravel-beds at low-water, and moving the gravel into little +hollows, previously to dropping their spawn. Twelve years ago the +great body of the migrating lamperns were all poisoned by the +river, and lay in tens of thousands in the mud at Blackwall Point. +As they have now succeeded in getting up to spawn, the shoals may +be seen next year in something like their old numbers. The +flounders have not yet reappeared to stay. Porpoises come up above +London nearly every year. The first I saw were two above +Hammersmith Bridge early on that momentous May morning in 1886, +when Mr. Gladstone's first Home Rule Bill was thrown out. I had +been up with a friend to hear the result of the division, and had +seen the wild joy which followed its announcement in the lobby, and +then walked home at dawn, and so met the early porpoises. A few +years later a fine grampus was found one night lying half dead by +the bows of one of the torpedo-boat destroyers at Chiswick. Its +"lines" struck the expert minds there as so good that it was +carefully measured, and the results were found to correspond almost +exactly with a mathematical curve--I think called a curve of sines. +The hollow over the blow-hole was filled up with mud and measured +over, and here there was a little discrepancy. The mud was removed, +and the measurement taken over the surface of the hollow, and the +figures found to be what were expected.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter33">CHISWICK EYOT</a></h2> + +<p>It has been said that Thames eyots always seem to have been put +in place by a landscape gardener. Chiswick Eyot is no exception to +the rule. It covers nearly four acres of ground, and lies like a +long ship, parallel with the ancient terrace of Chiswick Mall, from +which it is separated by a deep, narrow stream, haunted by +river-birds, and once a famous fishery.</p> + +<p>A salmon, perhaps the last, was caught between the eyot and +Putney in 1812, though the rent of the fishery used to be paid in +salmon, when it was worked by the good Cavalier merchant, Sir +Nicholas Crispe. The close-time for the fishery was observed +regularly at the beginning of the century, the fishing commencing +on January 1st, and ending on September 4th. There are those who +believe that with the increased purification of the Thames, the +next generation may perhaps throw a salmon-fly from Chiswick Eyot. +In the early summer of 1895 a fine porpoise appeared above the +island. At half-past eight it followed the ebb down the river, +having "proved" the stream for forty miles from its mouth, and +being apparently well pleased with its condition. At Putney it +lingered, as might be expected of a Thames porpoise, opposite a +public-house. Two sportsmen went out in a boat to shoot it; +instead, they hit some spectators on the bank. Flowers abound on +the eyot. The irises have all been taken, but what was the lowest +clump, opposite Syon House, has lost its pride of place, for now +there are some by the Grove Park Estate below Kew Bridge. The +centre of the eyot is yellow with patches of marsh-marigold in the +hot spring days. Besides the marsh-marigolds there are masses of +yellow camomile, comfrey, ragged robin, and tall yellow ranunculus, +growing on the muddy banks and on the sides of the little creeks +among the willows, and a vast number of composite flowers of which +I do not know the names. Common reeds are also increasing there, +with big water-docks, and on the edge of the cam-shedding of the +lawn which fronts my house some of the tallest giant hemlocks which +I have ever seen, have suddenly appeared. I notice that in +Papworth's views of London, published in 1816, arrowhead is seen +growing at the foot of the Duke of Buckingham's water-gate, which +is now embedded at the back of the embankment gardens at Charing +Cross. There is still plenty of it opposite Hammersmith Mall, half +a mile below Chiswick Eyot. The reach opposite and including the +eyot is the sole piece of the natural London river which remains +interesting, and largely unspoilt. I trust that if urban improvers +ever want to embank the "Mall" or the eyot, public opinion will see +its way to keeping this unique bit of the London river as it is. +Already there have been proposals for a tram-line running all the +length of the Mall, either at the front or behind it. The island +belongs to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. There is a certain +sense of the country about the eyot, because it is rated as +agricultural land, though its lower end is inside the London +boundary. The agriculture pursued on it is the growing of osiers. +These, frequently inundated by high tides, and left dry when the +ebb begins, are some of the finest on the Thames. At the present +moment (January 5, 1902) they are being cut and stacked in bundles. +In the spring the grass grows almost as fast between the stumps as +do the willow shoots. This is cut by men who make it part of the +year's business to sell to the owners of the small dealers' carts +and to costers. Formerly, when cows were kept in London, it was cut +for their use. During the year of the Great Exhibition milk was +very scarce, and this grass, which was excellent for the stable-fed +cows, fetched great prices. In the summer the willows, full of +leaf, and exactly appropriate to the flat lacustrine outline of the +eyot and the reach, are full of birds, though the reed-warbler does +not always return. He was absent last year. He is locally supposed +to begin his song with the words "Chiswick Eyot! Chiswick Eyot!" +which indeed he does pretty exactly. Early on summer mornings I +always see cuckoos hunting for a place to drop an egg. In the +summer of 1900 a young cuckoo was hatched from a sedge-warbler's +nest, and spent the rest of the summer in the gardens opposite this +and the next houses. All day long it wheezed and grumbled, and the +little birds fed it. In the evenings it used to practise flying, +and at last flew off for good.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter34">CHISWICK FISHERMEN</a></h2> + +<p>"Please, sir, a man wants to know if he can see you, and he has +brought a very large fish," was the message given me one very hot +evening at the end of July, at the hour which the poet describes as +being "about the flitting of the bats," plenty of which were just +visible hawking over the willows on the eyot. Thinking that it was +an odd time for a visit from a fishmonger, I was just wondering +what could be the reason for such a request when I remembered a +talk I had had at the ferry a week or two before on the subject of +the continued increase of fish in the London Thames. It turned out +to be as I expected; my visitor was one of the last local +fishermen, and brought with him a splendid silver eel, weighing +nearly 4 lb., taken in his nets that evening just opposite Chiswick +Eyot. It was the largest eel taken so low down for some years, and +when held up at arm's length, was a good imitation of one of Madame +Paula's pythons in the advertisement. He was anxious that I should +come out for an evening's netting and see for myself how clear the +water now is, and how good the fish. The previous summer, about the +same date, I had asked him to see what he could catch in an evening +as specimens; he had returned with over ninety fish, dace, roach, +eels, barbel, and smelts, many of which were exhibited alive the +next day before a good many people interested in the purification +of the Thames. As a further proof I forwarded the big eel to the +previous chairman of the London County Council, under whose sceptre +the marked improvement in the river began first to be felt, and +begged his acceptance of it as a tribute from the river. Then I +arranged to be at the old ferry next day at 6.30 p.m.</p> + +<p>It was the end of a blazing hot London day when I went down the +hard to the water's edge, among the small, pink-legged boys, +paddling, and the usual group of contemplative workmen, who smoke +their pipes by the landing place. The river was half empty, and +emptying itself still more as the ebb ran down. The haze of heat +and twilight blurred shapes and colours, but the fine old houses of +the historic "Mall," the tower of the church, and the tall elms and +taller chimneys of the breweries, which divide with torpedo boats +the credit of being the staple industries of Chiswick, stood out +all black against the evening sky; the clashing of the rivetters +had ceased in the shipyard, but the river was cheerfully noisy; +many eights were practising between the island and the Surrey bank, +coaches were shouting at them, a tug was taking a couple of +deal-loaded barges to a woodwharf with much puffing and whistling, +and bathers, sheltered by the eyot willows, were keeping up loud +and breathless conversations. "Not exactly the kind of surroundings +the fishermen seeks," you will say; but, apparently, London fish +get used to noise. Our boat was what I, speaking unprofessionally, +should call a small sea-boat, but I believe she was built years ago +at Strand-on-the-Green, the pretty old village with maltings and +poplar trees that fringes the river below Kew Bridge. She was +painted black and red, and furnished with a shelf, rimmed with an +inch-high moulding inboard and drained by holes, to catch the drip +from the net as it was hauled in. We were at work in two minutes. +The net was fastened at one end to two buoys; these dropped down +with the ebb, and formed a fixed, yet floating, point--if that is +not a bull--from which the boat was rowed in a circle while one of +the brothers who own the boat payed out the net. Thus we kept +rowing in circles, alternately dropping and hauling in the net, as +we slipped down what was once the Bishop of London's Fishery +towards Fulham. There are still no flounders on the famous Bishop's +Muds, but other fish were in evidence at once. Though the heat had +made them go to the bottom, we had one or two at every haul. The +two fishermen were fine specimens of strong, well-built Englishmen. +The pace at which they hauled in the net, or rowed the boat round, +was great; the rower could complete the circle--a wide one--in a +minute, and the net was hauled in in less time, if the hauler chose +to. Dace were our main catch--bright silvery fish, about three to +the pound, for they do not run large in the tideway; but they were +in perfect condition, and quite as good to eat, when cooked, as +fresh herring. For some reason the Jews of London prefer these +fresh-water fish; they eat them, not as the old Catholics did, on +fasts, but for feasts. They will fetch 2d. each at the times of the +Jews' holidays, so our fisherman told me, and find a ready sale at +all times, though at low prices. Formerly the singularly bright +scales were saved to make mother-of-pearl, or rather, to coat +objects which were wished to resemble mother-of-pearl. After each +haul the fish were dropped into a well in the middle of the boat. A +few roach were taken, and an eel; but the most interesting part of +the catch was the smelts. These sea-fish now ascend the Thames as +they did before the river was polluted. We took about a dozen, some +of very large size; they smelt exactly like freshly-sliced +cucumber. I stayed for an hour, till the twilight was turning to +dark, and the tugs' lights began to show. We had by then caught +seventy fish, or rather more than one per minute; a hundred is a +fair catch on a summer evening. In winter very large hauls are +made; then the fish congregate in holes and corners. In summer they +are all over the river. When the net happens to enclose one of +these shelter holes, hundreds may be taken. Consequently the two +fishermen work regularly all through the winter. Sometimes their +net is like iron wire, frozen into stiff squares. In a recent hard +winter the ice floated up and down the London Thames in lumps and +floes; yet they managed to fish, and made a record catch of two +thousand in one tide. I believe that if the Conservancy and the +County Council go on as they are doing, we shall see the flounder +back in the river above bridges, and that possibly sea-trout may +adventure there too; though unless the latter can get up to spawn, +there can be no regular run of sea-trout. But they probably also +act like grey mullet, and run up the estuaries merely for a cruise. +<a name="fnr18"></a> <a href="#fn18" class="fnsuper">1</a></p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="smelts"></a> <img src="images/fig21.png" +width="829" height="613" alt="SMELTS. +From a photograph by E. Seeley."></p> + +<p>The last of the "Peter-boat" men mentioned in a previous +chapter, has other claims to notice than that of being the only +survivor of an ancient outdoor industry. He has given evidence +before more than one committee of the House of Commons on the state +of the river and the condition of its waters, and is the oldest +salesman in that curious survival of antiquity, the free eel market +held at Blackfriars Stairs on Sunday mornings; and, in addition, he +has added to his original industry another branch of "fishing" of a +different kind, of which he is acknowledged to be the greatest +living exponent. He is an expert at grappling and "creeping" for +objects lying on the bed of the river, work for which his life-long +acquaintance with the contours of the bottom and the tides and +currents makes him particularly well fitted. Consequently he is now +regularly employed by many firms and shipping companies to fish up +anything dropped overboard, whether gear or cargo, which is heavy +enough to sink. The oddest thing about this double business is that +all the summer, while he lies and sleeps in his "Peter-boat" at +Chiswick, he is in receipt of telegrams whenever an accident of +this kind chances to happen, summoning him down river, to the Docks +or the Pool, and these telegrams are delivered to him (I think by +the ferryman) on his "Peter-boat." But the regular time for this +other Thames "fishery" is in winter. Then the eels "bed," +<em>i.e.</em>, bury themselves in the mud, and the eel man goes +either "gravelling," that is, scooping up gravel from the bottom to +deepen any part of the channel desired by the Conservancy, or doing +these odd salvage jobs. Getting up sunken barges is one side of the +business. These are raised by fastening two empty barges to them at +low tide, when the flood raises all three together, owing to the +increased buoyancy. But of "fishing" proper he has had plenty. He +hooked and raised the steamship <em>Osprey's</em> propeller, which +weighed six tons. This was done by getting first small chains and +then large ones round it, and fastening them to a lighter. Half-ton +anchors, casks of zinc, pigs of lead, copper tubes, ironwork, +ship-building apparatus, and the like, are common "game" in this +fishery. Other commodities are casks of pitch, cases of pickles, +boxes of champagne, casks of sardines in tins, bales of wool, and +even cases of machinery.</p> + +<p>This form of Thames fishery increases rather than diminishes. +Years ago he picked up under London Bridge a case of watches valued +at Ł1,500. He was only paid for the "job," as the loss was known +and it was not a chance find. Another and more sportsmanlike +incident was an "angling competition," among himself and others in +that line, for some cases of rings which a Jew, who became suddenly +insane, threw into the river off a steamer. He caught one case, and +another man grappled the other. Sometimes in fishing for one thing +he catches another which has been in the water for months, as, for +instance, a whole sack of tobacco, turned rotten. I do not know who +"that young woman who kept company with a fishmonger" was, though +he assumes that I do. But he certainly rescued her, and a gentleman +who jumped off London Bridge, and several upset excursionists on +various parts of the river. Also, as will be guessed, he has caught +or picked up a good many corpses. I hear, though not from him, that +on the Surrey side five shillings is paid for a body rescued, and +on the Middlesex side only half-a-crown; so Surrey gets the credit +of the greater number of the Thames dead. His life-saving services +have been very considerable, though he does not make much account +of them. He was instrumental in saving two women and six men on one +occasion, and on another "three men and a soldier." The distinction +is an odd one, but it holds good in the riverine mind.</p> + +<p class="footnote"><a name="fn18"></a> <a href="#fnr18">[1]</a> At +the close of the season 1901-1902 in March, one of the men tells me +that it has been the best year he has known. He caught sixteen eels +one night with the net only. Very fine bream have also appeared as +low as Hammersmith.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter35">BIRDS ON THAMES +RESERVOIRS</a></h2> + +<p>Now that every large town and many small ones are adding new +reservoirs, often of great size, to hold their water supply, these +artificial lakes play an important and increasing part in the wild +life, not only of the country, but of cities, and even of London +itself. Immense reservoirs have been made near Staines, and others +are being added close to the London river. These quiet sheets of +water, carefully protected from intrusion for fear of any pollution +of the water, form artificial sanctuaries which not only fill with +fish, which the water companies encourage, to eat the weeds and +insects bred in the weeds, but attract wild-fowl of very many kinds +in ever-increasing numbers. In Hertfordshire the artificial lakes +near Tring made to supply the Grand Junction Canal are carefully +preserved, and have a large and resident population of wild-fowl +(we believe a bittern bred there recently, and the great crested +grebe is common), and some of the new London reservoirs are rapidly +attracting a stock of wild-fowl. Thus civilisation is in some +measure restoring the balance of wild life, and offers to the most +persecuted of our birds a quiet and secure retreat. I was able at +the close of February, 1902, to witness a striking example of the +results of wild-bird protection in increasing some species of +wild-fowl which for half a century had steadily dwindled and +disappeared, and were practically unknown anywhere in the +neighbourhood of London. The scene was on the very large new +reservoirs which lie between the grounds of the Ranelagh Club and +the Thames, on what was some seven years ago a tract of market +gardens and meadows. The construction of these lakes was so ably +planned and carried out that in two years from the turning of the +first sod four wide pools, covering in all one hundred acres of +ground, were ready to be filled, and at the end of 1898 the ground +was metamorphosed into the largest area of water in the London +district, with the exception of the Serpentine.</p> + +<p>It is so rare for changes of this magnitude to take place in any +other way than by covering what was open ground with bricks and +mortar, that the advent of a kind of reservoir flora and fauna so +close to the greatest city of the world was looked for with some +curiosity. All the waste ground not covered by the water or +filtering-beds produced quantities of brilliant flowers, as waste +ground enclosed and left to itself generally does. The banks and +broad walks between the lakes were sown with good grass, which was +regularly made into hay. The reservoirs themselves soon filled with +fish, which came down the mains from Hampton, where the water is +taken in from the river. What these reservoir fish found to live +upon at first is not clear. No weeds are allowed to grow either in +the water or on the banks, which are concreted. But the bottom +becomes covered with the suspended matter deposited from the +unfiltered water, and probably a considerable number of the minute +<em>entomostraca</em> beloved of all fish breed in this. The Barnes +reservoirs do contain a growth of weed, which is carefully removed +every year. Whatever their sustenance may be, these reservoirs are +very full of fish, both the old ones at Barnes and the new lakes +near Ranelagh. The supply of fish, and the open and strictly +private extent of water, then attracted a number of wild duck or +water birds of some kind, which the writer was invited to see and +identify, as it did not seem probable that they could be the +ordinary wild duck, which are vegetable feeders, and would need an +artificial supply of grain, which is provided on the Serpentine, +but is not given to any of these reservoir ducks. They have +appeared entirely uninvited. The scene over the lakes was as +sub-arctic and lacustrine as on any Finland pool, for the frost-fog +hung over river and reservoirs, only just disclosing the long, flat +lines of embankment, water, and ice; the barges floating down with +the tide were powdered with frost and snow-flakes, and the only +colour was the long, red smear across the ice of the western +reservoir, beyond which the winter sun was setting into a bank of +snow clouds. It was four o'clock, and nothing apparently was +moving, either on the ice or the water, not even a gull. In the +centre of the north-eastern reservoir was what was apparently an +acre of heaped-up snow. On approaching nearer this acre of snow +changed into a solid mass of gulls, all preparing to go to sleep. +If there was one there were seven hundred, all packed together for +warmth on the ice. It is on or about these reservoirs that the +London gulls now sleep. Sometimes they are there in thousands; but +the sealing of so much of the water with ice had sent a great +proportion of them down the river to the more open water of the +Essex marshes. Beyond the gulls, which rose and circled high above +in the fog with infinite clamour, were a number of black objects, +which soon resolved themselves into the forms of duck and other +fowl. Rather more than seventy were counted, swimming on the water +near the bank or sitting on the ice. These were the self-invited +wild duck, so tame that with very little trouble they were +approached near enough for their colour and form to be distinctly +visible. The result of a look through the glasses was something of +a surprise. They were not mallard, teal, or widgeon; but +three-quarters of the number were tufted ducks, a diving-duck +species, which haunts both estuaries and fresh water, but +preferably the latter. It is a very handsome little black-and-white +duck, seen in great numbers on certain large lakes in +Nottinghamshire, and has greatly increased of late years in the +county of Norfolk. But so far it has not appeared in any numbers +either on the Surrey ponds or in Middlesex, and its assembling on +this London reservoir is a remarkable proof of the tendency of +wild-fowl to increase in this country.</p> + +<p>The cock birds were in brilliant winter plumage, with large +crests, white breasts, and white "clocks" on their wings. Some were +sleeping, some diving, and others swimming quietly. When +approached, the whole flock rose at once, and flew with arrow-like +speed round the lakes and twice or thrice back over the heads of +their visitors, of whom they were not at all shy, being used to the +sight of the man who keeps the reservoirs' banks in order. They +swept now overhead, now just above the ice, like a flock of +sea-magpies or ice-duck playing before some North Atlantic gale. As +several birds had not risen, we ventured still nearer, and saw that +most of these were coots, some ten or eleven, which did not fly, +but ran out on to the ice. Two large birds remaining, which had +dived, then rose to the surface, and to our surprise and pleasure +proved to be great crested grebes. These birds, which a few years +ago were so scarce even in Norfolk that Mr. Stevenson despaired of +the survival of the species as a native bird, have bred for three +seasons in Richmond Park. But their presence so close to London +shows that we need not despair of seeing wild-crested grebes appear +on the Serpentine. These birds are so wedded to the water that they +rarely fly. But this pair rose and flew, not away from, but towards +us, passing within fifteen yards. With their long necks stretched +out, feet level with the tail, and plumage apparently painted in +broad, longitudinal stripes, they presented a very singular +appearance.</p> + +<p>The East of London owns a crowded wild-fowl sanctuary at +Wanstead Park, which quite a different class of ducks frequent. It +is now the property of the public, and very carefully administered +by trustees. The lake there is very narrow and winding, which +causes it to freeze easily. On the other hand, it is full of long, +densely wooded islands, some almost enclosing pools of water. These +islands shelter the birds, and when the lake is covered with ice +the islands are crowded with wild duck and widgeon. Wanstead is a +curious example of the faith of wild-fowl in a sanctuary, for the +lake is so narrow that you could toss a stone among the fowl from +the bank. Suburban houses are close by on all sides but the meadows +by the little river Roding. Yet the fowl come to the lake as +confidently as they do to great sanctuaries like Holkham. As there +is a large heronry and rookery on the trees on the islands, the +variety of life there is very great. The writer saw in weather like +that in the second week of February, 1902, about a hundred and +fifty wild duck, thirty or forty widgeon, a few teal, a pochard, +and a great number of water-hens. Mallard, teal, dabchicks, and +moorhens breed there regularly, and in hard weather a number of +rarer birds drop in. Snipe are often seen by one of the shallower +ponds, and occasionally such divers as goosanders appear and give +an exhibition of fish-catching. These, like the tufted ducks and +grebes, are entirely self-supporting. The wild duck are pensioners, +being fed artificially, though they are wild birds, or descended +from birds which were wild, just as are the London +wood-pigeons.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter36">THE CARRION CROW</a></h2> + +<p>Those familiar with the valley of the Thames and with the wild +population both of the riverside and of the adjacent hills, will +set down the carrion crow as the typical resident bird of the whole +district. On the London Thames as high as Teddington it keeps +mainly to the line of the river itself, on the banks of which and +on the market gardens and meadows it finds abundant food, while the +elms of large suburban residences give it both shelter and a safe +nesting place. The bird is also commonly mistaken for a rook, and +so shares the privileges of those popular birds. Higher up the +river it swarms all along the Oxfordshire and Berkshire banks where +not killed down by keepers, and a perfect army of them has for +years invaded and been settled in the elm-bordered meadows of the +Vale of White Horse. Thence it has spread on to the downs, where +since the gradual abandonment of cultivation on the highest ground, +and the removal of the scattered population of carters and keepers +from a very large area, it now has matters all its own way. But it +always haunted these heights, as the name "Crow Down," recurring +more than once on the Ordnance maps, shows. The "Crow Down" with +which the writer is less acquainted is on the very high, wild land +north of Lambourn. There they have grown so confident that a nest +was found in a thorn bush not ten feet high, at a place called Worm +Hill, a good old Saxon name denoting that snakes abound there. +There is no doubt that the crows kill and eat the young snakes, one +having been seen carrying a snake in its beak recently.</p> + +<p>The habits of the carrion crow are so independent and peculiar, +and its resourcefulness so great, that it is not to be wondered at +that it holds its own well within and around London, while the rook +is gradually being edged out. It is generally regarded as a +criminal bird, which it is to some extent in the spring. From that +point of view the following facts may be cited against the crow. He +is keenly on the look-out for all kinds of eggs about the time that +his own nest is building. Consequently he is a real enemy to +pheasants, wild ducks, plovers, moorhens, and other birds which lay +in open places before there is cover. Nothing is more exasperating +than these exploits to people who know where birds are nesting on +their property, and wish to see them hatch safely. A wild duck's +nest in a large copse was found by some persons picking primroses. +In that copse was a crow's nest. The crows found out that the +primrose-pickers had discovered something interesting, and a few +hours later the "Quirk! quirk!" of the crows announced that they +were enjoying life to an unusual degree. It was found that they had +removed all seven eggs from the duck's nest. In an adjacent +reclaimed harbour they took the eggs of ducks, plovers, redshanks, +and even larks. In the Vale of White Horse they seem to take most +of the early wild pheasant's eggs, besides stealing hen's eggs from +round the farms. They are particularly fond of hunting down the +sides of streams and canals in the early morning, where they find +three dainties to which they are particularly partial,-- moorhen's +eggs, frogs, and fresh-water mussels. They swallow the frogs <em>in +situ</em>, and carry the moorhen's eggs and mussels off to some +adjacent post to eat them comfortably. The shells of both eggs and +mussels litter the ground under these dinner-tables. In Holland +they are so mischievous that little "duck-houses" are made by the +side of all the ornamental canals in private grounds for the ducks +to nest in, a convenience of which they, being sensible birds, +avail themselves. These duck-houses, or laying bowers, are still +regularly made by the half-moon canal at Hampton Court, a survival +probably of the days of William of Orange's Dutch gardeners.</p> + +<p>During the day they are very quiet birds, keeping much to the +trees; but towards evening in March and April, their disagreeable +croaking caw may be heard from all quarters where they are +numerous. Just at dusk they become less wary than in the day. The +writer for many years used to organise a few evening "drives" of +the crows to try to thin them down before their ravenous families +were hatched. Several guns used to hide in different parts of the +valley near nests, and on to this "blockhouse line" the crows were +driven. A few were generally shot before they discovered the plot. +Solicitude for the nest seldom leads them into danger, but one pair +met their fate in this way. The first bird came flying to the nest, +in which there were eggs, as soon as a shot was heard in the +distance. It was killed, and hardly had the spark of the flash +disappeared when the other bird dropped down out of the gloom +straight on to the eggs, and met the same fate. Forty young +chickens were taken by a pair of crows from a farm in one spring. +It was objected by some young ladies who were "interested" in the +farm that the crows were "such sneaks." They used to come at +luncheon-time up a line of trees extending from the wood to the +farm. They were not in the least afraid of any one with a cart, +apparently knowing that the horse could not be left, but would go +straight for the chicken yard. A pair of sparrow-hawks near would +seize a chicken now and then, but in a bold way as if they had a +right to them. A few crows contrive to nest in Kensington Gardens. +In the early mornings they always hunt the west banks of the Long +Water, and are credited with taking a good many ducks' eggs, as +well as ducklings.</p> + +<p>Crows make one of the best nests constructed by the larger +English birds. Usually it is placed, not out on the small branches, +where rooks prefer to build them, but on the fork made by a large +bough starting from the main trunk. This aids in concealment, and +is a protection against shot, though probably the birds do not +reckon on this contingency. The bottom of the nest is made of +large, dead sticks. Upon and between these smaller twigs, often +torn off green from willow-and elm-trees, or stolen from faggots of +recent cutting, are laid and woven. Then a fine deep basin is made, +woven of roots, grass, and some wiry stalk like esparto, the secret +of where to find which seems a special possession of crows, and on +this often a lining of bits of sheep's wool and cow's hair. There +are sometimes as many as six eggs, and rarely less than four. They +are quite beautiful objects, of a bright blue-green marked +variously, but in a very decorative way, with blotches and smears +of olive and blackish-brown. Two or three clutches of these eggs, +with some of the splendid purple-red kestrels' eggs, and +sparrow-hawks of bluish white, blotched with rich chestnut, make a +very handsome show after a day's bird-nesting on the hills. The +first eggs are laid very early, sometimes by the second week in +April. A nest recently analysed consisted mainly of green ash taken +from faggots and cuttings in the wood. One piece was a yard long, +and as thick at the base as the little finger. The nest was +<em>felted</em> with cow's hair, and quite impenetrable to shot. +These nests last for years, and often have a series of tenants, +kestrels, squirrels, brown owls, or hobbies. If the first nest is +destroyed, the crow makes another. In his conjugal relations the +carrion crow is a model bird. He pairs for life, and is inseparable +from his mate. If one croaks, the other answers instantly, but +usually they keep within sight of one another all day. In the +evening the pair, seldom more than a few yards apart, may be seen +hunting diligently in the meadows for slugs, which, so long as the +weather is not too dry, form the regular supper of the birds.</p> + +<p>A remarkable instance of the crow's courage in defence of its +mate occurred some years ago on Salisbury Plain when a party were +out rook-hawking. A falcon was flown at one of a pair of crows on +favourable, open ground. The two birds mounted in the usual spiral +until the falcon stooped, bound to the crow, and the pair came to +the ground together. Just as the horseman rode in to take up the +hawk the other crow descended straight upon the falcon, knocked her +off its prostrate mate, and the two flew off together to cover +before the falcon had realised whence the onset came. This crow not +only showed great courage in facing both the falcon and the +sportsman, but timed its interference with the greatest judgment +and precision.</p> + +<p>Probably a tame crow would make an amusing pet. Its intelligence +must be very considerable, though the shape of its head does not so +clearly indicate brain as does that of a raven. Among the crows +which haunt the banks of the London river there are some highly +educated pairs. One has maintained itself on the reach opposite Ham +House for thirteen years, if the evidence used to identify them is +reliable. These birds were noticed at that distance of time ago to +have learnt to pick up food floating on the water. To see a big +black crow hovering like a gull, and picking up bread from the +bosom of the Thames, is so unusual that it always excites remark, +and the writer was informed only last summer that these Ham House +crows were seen doing this constantly. Not many years ago a crow +nested in a plane-tree in St. Paul's Churchyard, and a pair also +reside on the island in Battersea Park. But the great headquarters +of London crows are the grounds of Ranelagh, and the reservoirs and +market gardens of Barnes and Chiswick. They flock to the manure +heaps in the latter, where the gulls now join them, and several +pairs spend all day nearly all the year round on the reservoir +banks at Barnes, and on Chiswick Eyot. The Eyot crows seems to find +a good living there, and never leave it till their young, which are +annually hatched in a tree at some distance on the Middlesex side, +can fly. But the crows haunting the great Barnes reservoirs, where +the tufted ducks now assemble in winter, are a bad lot. Last winter +they were seen to single out and attack any gull separated from the +flock which usually came there to roost. A sick or wounded gull was +soon caught, killed, and eaten, the small black-headed gulls being +no match for the crows. It was characteristic of their cunning that +by the river itself they did not molest the gulls.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter37">LONDON'S BURIED +ELEPHANTS</a></h2> + +<p>The amount of river gravel left in the part of the Thames Valley +on which West London is built is extraordinary. It is all round, +and mostly red, and as there are no rocks like the stone which +makes up most of this gravel anywhere in the modern valley, it is +puzzling to know where it came from. I went to see the digging of +the foundations of the new South Kensington Museum, and the great +excavation, which was like the ditch of a fortress, and the stuff +thrown out, which was like the rampart, was all dug in, or made of, +river gravel. In this the men had found, lying higgledy-piggledy, +with no two bones "belonging," quantities of bones of the beasts +which used to graze on what I suppose was the Kensington "veldt," +or perhaps flats by the riverside, during the time when the river's +drift and brick earth was being deposited. The Clerk of the Works +was much interested in these discoveries, and had caused them to be +carefully collected. These were bones of the great stags then +common, of the elephant, and of the primaeval horse, creatures +which lived here before the Channel was cut between England and +France, though not, perhaps, before man had appeared in what is now +the Thames Valley, for flint implements are often found with the +bones. Dr. Woodward, to whom some of the remains were taken, said +that they reminded him of the great discovery of similar remains in +the brick earth at Ilford, in Essex, thirty-seven years ago, when +he personally saw, dug from the brickfields of that almost suburban +parish, the head and tusks of one of the largest mammoth elephants +in the world. These river-gravel and brick-earth buried bones are +rather earlier than those found in the peat and marl. The latter +belonged to creatures which, though they no longer exist in +England, are still found in temperate Europe--beavers, bears, +bison, and wolves. But the Thames gravel and the London clay are in +places full of the bones of another, and earlier, though by no +means primaeval, generation of mammals, some of which are extinct, +while others are found at great distances from this country, in +remote parts of the earth. Judging from the places where they are +found and from the position of the bones, large animals must have +swarmed all over what is now London, just as they do on the Athi +plains and near the rivers and forests through which the Uganda +Railway runs.</p> + +<p>There was the same astonishing mixture of species, a mixture +which puzzles inquirers rather more than it need. Hippopotamus +bones are found in great numbers, and with the hippopotamus remains +those of creatures like the reindeer and the musk ox, now found +only on the Arctic fringe and frozen rim of the North, which lived +on the same area and with them the Arctic fox. Judging from the +great range of climate which most northern animals can endure, +there is no reason to think this juxtaposition of a creature only +found in warm rivers and of what are now Arctic animals is very +strange. The London "hippo" was just the same, to judge from his +bones, as that of the Nile or Congo. But the reindeer of North +America, under the name of the woodland cariboo, comes down far +south, and in the Arctic summer that of Europe endures a very high +temperature. The Arctic fox does the same. If there were Arctic +animals in Kensington and Westminster, that is no evidence that +they lived in an Arctic climate. Looking over the list of bones, +skulls, teeth, and tusks found, it is interesting to try to +reconstruct mentally the fauna of greater London just previous to +the coming of man. There were, to begin with, some African animals, +either the same as are found on the Central African plains, and +were found on the veldt of South Africa, or of the same families. +The present condition of the country between Mount Kilimanjaro and +the Victoria Nyanza shows quite as great a mixture of species. +There, for instance, are all the big antelopes, rhinoceroses, +zebras, lions, elephants, hyaenas, and wild dogs, and though there +are glaciers on Kilimanjaro and the great mountains near the +central valleys, the river running out of the Great Rift Valley is +full of crocodiles and hippopotami. There is heather and, higher +up, also ice and snow on the mountains, from whose tops the waters +come that feed these crocodile-haunted streams. So on the London +"veldt" there were lions, wild horses (perhaps striped like +zebras), three kinds of rhinoceroses--two of which were just like +the common black rhinoceros of Africa, though one had a woolly +coat--elephants, hyaenas, hippopotami, and that most typical +African animal the Cape wild dog! All these, except the elephants +and hippos, can stand some degree of cold; and there is not the +slightest reason why the two last may not have flourished in some +deep river valley, very many degrees hotter than the hills above. +To take an instance still remaining nearer to Europe than the Great +Rift Valley. The Jordan Valley is very deep and very hot. Many +species of birds are there found which are resident in India, and +not anywhere nearer. It is a kind of hot slice of India embedded in +the Palestine hills. The very large deer and immense bison and wild +oxen probably fed on the same low veldt as the African animals. The +bison were the same as those found in Lithuania, but far larger. +Numbers of the skulls, of quite gigantic size, have been found in +the brick earth. In the British Museum there is a tooth of the +mammoth found in 1731, at a depth of 28 feet below the surface, in +digging a sewer in Pall Mall. This Pall Mall mammoth might well +figure in Mr. E. T. Reed's prehistoric series in <em>Punch</em>. +Another tooth was found in Gray's Inn Lane. The mammoth was +evidently not confined to the present region of clubland.</p> + +<p>Besides these European and African groups of animals, a third +class ranged the London plains, probably at a greater height and in +a still colder temperature than the large grass-eating mammals +mentioned. These creatures, whose bones are found plentifully in +the drift, are now living in a country even more specialised than +the African veldt. They are the creatures of the Tartar steppes and +the cold plains of Central Asia. Their names are the suslik (a +Central Asian prairie dog), the pika, a little steppe hare, and an +extremely odd antelope, now found in Thibet. This is a singularly +ugly beast with a high Roman nose, and wool almost as thick as that +of a sheep when the winter coat is on. It must have been quite +common in those parts, for I have had the cores of two of their +horns brought to me during the last few years.</p> + +<p>These dry bones are not made so astonishingly interesting by +their setting in the gravel as are some far more ancient remains in +England. The gravel is a mere rubbish-bed, like a sea-beach, in +which all things have lost their connection. I was recently shown a +set of fossils far more ancient, possibly not less than 2,000,000 +years old, which were all found and may be seen exactly as they lay +and lived when they were on the bottom of a prehistoric river which +flowed through Hampshire, across what is now the Channel, over +South France, and then fell into the Mediterranean. This river +crosses the Channel at Hordwell cliffs on the Solent. There is the +whole section, of a great stream two miles wide, with the gravel at +its edges, the sediment and sand a little lower down the sides, and +the mud at the bottom. On each lie its appropriate shells. Some are +like those in the Thames to-day, but many more like those of a +river in Borneo. They are so thick that out of a single ounce of +the mud 150 little shells were obtained. In this, too, were found +the tooth of a crocodile and the bones of a spiny pike, and in +other masses of clay the very reeds and bits of the trees that grew +there. These sedges of the primitive ages were quite charming. Even +some of their colour was preserved, and all their delicate fluting +and fibre, in the fine clay. One of the branches of a tree, now +turned to lignite, had possessed a thick pith. This pith had +decayed, and water had trickled down the hollow like a pipe. The +water was full of iron pyrites, and had first lined the tube with +iron crystals and then filled up the whole hollow with a frosted +network of the same. There is a striking contrast between the +presence and realism of these once living things still preserving +the outer forms of life and the vast and inconceivable distances of +"geological time."</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter38">SWANS, BLACK AND +WHITE</a></h2> + +<p>A few pairs of black swans have been placed upon the river. Some +of these rear broods of young ones, and appear to be quite +acclimatised. The black swan was known to the traders of our own +East India Company nearly a century before Captain Cook and Sir +Joseph Banks discovered Botany Bay. The first notice of it appears +in a letter, written about the year 1698, by a Mr. Watson to Dr. M. +Lister, in which he says, "Here is returned a ship which by our +East India Company was sent to the South Land, called Hollandia +Nova," and adds that black swans, parrots, and many sea-cows were +found there. In 1726, two were brought alive to Batavia, which were +caught on the West Coast of Australia, near Hartop Bay, but no good +account of their habits was ever written till Gould put together +the facts he had seen and learnt on the spot.</p> + +<p>The habits in their native land of birds which we only see +acclimatised and domesticated, sometimes give a clue to what can be +done to domesticate other breeds. This swan is only found in +Australia, and only locally there, in the south and west. There it +takes the place occupied by the Brent goose in our northern +latitude, both as a water bird and as a source of food to the +natives. "Wherever there are rivers, estuaries of the sea, lagoons, +and pools of water of any extent the bird is generally +distributed," says Gould. "Sometimes it occurs in such numbers that +flocks of many hundreds can be seen together, particularly on those +arms of the sea which, after passing the beachline of the coast, +expand into great sheets of shallow water, on which the birds are +seldom disturbed either by the force of boisterous winds or the +intrusion of the natives. In the white man, however, the black swan +finds an enemy so deadly, that in many parts where it was formerly +quite numerous it has been almost, if not entirely, extirpated.</p> + +<p>"This has been particularly the case on some of the larger +rivers of Tasmania, but on the salt lagoons and inlets of +D'Entrecasteaux's channel, the little-frequented bays of the +southern and western shores of that island and the entrance to +Melbourne Harbour at Port Phillip, it is still numerous." This was +written in 1865, when to voyagers to the new continent the black +swans of Melbourne Harbour were sometimes a first and striking +reminder that they had reached a new world. One of the most deadly +means of killing off the black swans was to chase them in boats, +and either to net or club them, when they had shed all their flight +feathers. This is what Mr. Trevor Battye saw the Samoyeds doing to +the Brent geese on Kolguev Island. Thousands were driven into a +kind of kraal, and killed for winter food. Next to the pelagic +sealer, the whalers and ordinary seal-hunters are the worst +scourges of the animal world. They killed off, for instance, every +single one of the Antarctic right whales, and nearly all the Cape +and Antarctic fur seals. But it is not generally known that they +succeeded in almost killing off the black swans in some districts. +They caught and killed them in boatloads, not for the flesh, but to +take the swans' down. Black swans have white wings, though as they +are nearly always pinioned here, a stupid habit which our people +have learnt from the ancient and time-honoured brutality of "swan +upping," we never see them flying. They are then very beautiful +objects, with their plumage of ebon and ivory.</p> + +<p>In Australia they begin to lay in October, and the young are +hatched and growing in January. They are very prolific birds, +laying from five to eight light-green eggs with brownish buff +markings. Some years ago a splendid brood of six jolly little +nigger cygnets were hatched out by the black swans at Kew. But the +most successful breeder of black swans in this country was Mr. +Samuel Gurney, who began his stock with a pair on the river Wandle, +at Carshalton. He bought them in Leadenhall Market, in 1851. They +did not breed till three years later, and laid their first egg on +January 1st.</p> + +<p>This is very interesting, because it shows that so far these +birds were not acclimatised, but kept more or less to the seasons +of reproduction proper to their native land. They were laying in +what is the Australian summer and our mid-winter. It was a most +severe winter, and the young ones were hatched out in a severe +frost, which had lasted all the time that the birds were sitting in +the open. The cygnets lived--it is not stated how many there +were--and later on, the parents continued to breed, till in 1862, +eight years after, they had hatched ninety-three young ones, and +reared about half the number. The most extraordinary thing about +the original pair was that they seem to have taken on both our +seasons and their own, laying both in our spring and in the +Australian spring, and so hatching two broods a year. They bred +sixteen times in seven years--or probably seven and a half--and in +that time laid one hundred and eleven eggs. The interest of this +story is very considerable, because it shows the imperfect and +exhausting efforts which Nature causes animals to make to adapt +their breeding time to a new climate. Black swans which are +descended from young birds bred in this country conform to the +ordinary nesting-time of our hemisphere.</p> + +<p>I notice that among the white swans on the Thames the cock-bird +will fight to preserve his lady from intrusion, but he never thinks +of taking her any breakfast, or of bringing her food of any kind, +even though he may be fed most liberally himself. His only idea of +helping her actively is by minding house while she goes off to feed +and also while she is making her toilet. Not long ago, a swan who +had a nest by the Thames so far forgot his mate as to fall in love +with a young lady, whom he constantly tried to persuade to come and +join him on the river. She was in the habit of feeding both swans +every day, but as the lady swan was on the nest for the greater +part of the time, the cock swan came in for most of the attention. +In time he became tame enough to feed from her hand, and would come +out on to the bank; but he preferred to sit on the water and to be +fed from a boat-raft. After being fed he wanted to see more of his +friend, but could not understand why she preferred stopping on such +an uncomfortable place as the land when all she need do to enjoy +his society, and to be happier herself, was to step down into the +water. He would swim away slowly, looking over his shoulder to see +if she was coming. As she usually wore a white dress, there is very +little doubt that the swan thought she only wanted a few feathers +to be quite a presentable swan, and suited for life on the river. +When he found that she did not follow, he would return, and +stretching out his neck would take hold of her dress and pull her +towards the water, not in anger, but with a kind and pressing +insistence, as showing her what was best. This he did usually when +he had finished the food she brought, and when she left the bank +would swim up and down, waiting to see if she were coming back.</p> + +<p>The time-honoured brutality of swan-upping is now mitigated by +law, its cruelty being obvious. It would be far better to leave +them the use of their wings, which would enable them to seek food +at a distance in winter, and to escape the ice, which sometimes +breaks their legs. Several of these flightless swans were starved +to death in 1902.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter39">CANVEY ISLAND</a></h2> + +<p>Down near Thames mouth is the curious reclamation from the river +mud known as Canvey Island. It is separated from the land by a +"fleet," in which the Danes are recorded to have laid up their +ships in the early period of their invasions, and the village +opposite on the mainland is called Benfleet. Though on the river, +it is a half-marine place, with the typical sea-plants growing on +the saltings by the shore. In summer I noticed that the graves +below the grey sea-eaten, storm-furrowed walls of the church have +wreaths of sea-lavender laid upon them. But there is not the same +rich carpet of sea-flowers as at Wells or Blakeney. Nor is the +deposit so rich, so soft, so ready to be covered with smiling +meadows as those of North Norfolk, built up from the mud-clouds of +the Fen. Canvey Island itself is a heavy, indurated soil in parts, +now well established, and producing fine crops. But is it the kind +of ground which would pay a fair return on the cost of "inning it" +to-day? The wheat is good, the straw long, and the ears full. The +oats are less good, perhaps because the soil is too heavy. The +beans are strong and healthy; clover, which does not mind a salty +soil, thrives there; and there are strong crops of mangold. But it +is not like the Fenland; it cracks under the sun, "pans" upon the +surface, and is not adapted for inexpensive or for intensive +cultivation. Such was the writer's impression from a careful view +of the farms in the middle of harvest. But as a fact in the history +of English agriculture, and in its relation to the past story of +the Thames mouth, and its possibilities as a future health resort, +this work of the enterprising Dutchmen in the beginning of the +seventeenth century is full of interest. In 1622 Sir Henry +Appleton, the owner of the marsh, agreed to give one-third of it to +Joas Croppenburg, a Dutchman skilled in the making of dikes, if he +"inned" the marsh. This the Dutchman did off hand, and enclosed six +thousand acres by a wall twenty miles round. Like many parts of the +Fens, the island was peopled for a time by Dutchmen engaged on the +works, and Croppenburg is said to have built there a church. Two +small Dutch cottages remain, built in 1621. The general aspect of +the island is like that part of Holland near the mouth of the "old" +Rhine, but less closely cultivated and cared for.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="inn"></a> <img src="images/fig2225.png" width="602" height="837" +alt="THE LOBSTER SMACK INN, CANVEY ISLAND. +From a photograph by R. B. Lodge. +THE STEPPING STONES AT BENFLEET. +From a photograph by R. B. Lodge."> +</p> + +<p>It has always been a separate region. Never yet has it entered +the heads of its proprietors to join it permanently to the +mainland. For three centuries its visitors and people have driven +or walked over a tide-washed causeway at low water, or ferried over +at high tide. You do so still, in a scrubbed and salty boat, while +an ancient road-mender is occupied in the oddest of all forms of +road maintenance. He stirs and swirls the mud as the tide goes +down, to wash it out of the hollow way, otherwise it would be +turned into warp-land every day, and become impassable. The +Dutchmen's roads are sound and straight enough on the island. +Outside the wall the samphire and orach beds are wholly marine. +Inside the dikes and ditches are filled with a purely sweet-water +vegetation. Further seawards, or rather riverwards, at a place +called "Sluis," they are fringed with wild rose and wild plum, and +the ditches are deep in rushes, in willow herb, in purple +nightshade, water-mint, and reeds.</p> + +<p>Camden gives a curious account of the island in his day. It was +constantly almost submerged. The people lived by keeping sheep on +it. There were four thousand of a very excellent flavour. Evidently +this was the origin of <em>pré-salé</em> mutton in England. Camden +saw them milking their sheep, from which they made ewe-milk +cheeses. When the floods rose the sheep used to be driven on to low +mounds which studded the central parts of the marsh, and these +mounds are there still. Some are covered with wild-plum bushes. +One, in the centre of the island, is the site of the village of +Canvey; and on one, at the time of the writer's last visit, two +fine old Essex rams were sleeping in the sun. There was no flood; +the island had not known even a partial one for some years. But +true to the instincts of their race, they had occupied the highest +ground, though it was only a few feet above the levels. There are +few land-birds on Canvey Island, because there are few trees. Some +greenfinches, a whinchat or two, almost no pipits or larks, and +very few sparrows. The shore-birds are numerous and increasing, for +the Essex County Council strictly protect all the eggs and birds +during the breeding season. Enormous areas of breeding ground are +now protected in the wide fringe of private fresh-water marshes of +this river-intersected shore. Plovers, redshanks, terns, ducks, +especially the wild mallards, are increasing. So are the +black-headed gulls; even the oyster-catchers are returning. After +nesting the birds lead their young to the southern point of Canvey +Island. It is too near the growing and popular Southend for the +birds to be other than shy. But as they are not allowed to be shot +till the middle of August, they are able to take care of +themselves. At the flow of the tide, before the shooting begins, +the visitor who makes his way to this distant and unpeopled +promontory sees the birds in thousands. Out at sea the ducks were +this year as numerous as in the old days before breechloaders and +railways. Stints and ringed plover, golden plover and redshanks +were flitting everywhere from island to island on the mud and ooze; +curlews were floating and flapping over the "fleets"; and all were +in security. As the tide flowed, they crowded on to the highest and +last-covered islets, whence, as the inexorable tide again rose, +they took wing and flew swiftly to the Essex shore. The Sluis, +looking across to the Kentish shore, is the home of the seagulls. +Many quaint ships lie anchored there--Dutch eel-boats, which call +for refreshment after selling the cargo; barges; hoys from the +Medway bound to Harwich; and fishing-smacks and timber-brigs. Round +these the seagulls float, as tame almost as London pigeons. They +prefer company, at least the lesser gulls do; the big herring gulls +and black-backed gulls keep aloof.</p> + +<p class="centered"><img src="images/fig2326.png" width="604" height="929" +alt="HAULING THE NETS FOR WHITEBAIT. +From photographs by R. B. Lodge."></p> + +<p>The hope of reclaiming land from the waves exercises a peculiar +fascination over most minds. It presents itself in more than one +form as a most desirable activity. It is something like creation--a +form of making earth from sea. The clothing of the fringe of +ocean's bed with herbage, the reaping of a harvest where rolled the +tide, the barring out of the dominant sea, the vision, not +altogether illusive, of planting industrious and deserving men on +the ground so won, all these are alluring ideas. The undertaker, to +use the word in vogue in the Stuart days when such enterprises were +in high favour, always leaves a name among posterity, generally an +honoured name, and in nearly every case one associated with +courage, perseverance, and in some measure with benevolence. The +picturesque and sentimental side will always remain to the credit +of the reclaimers of the waste of Neptune's manor. But if the +balance of profitable expenditure, or of good done to others, is +weighed between winning land from the sea and expenditure in +improving the cultivation of land already accessible, the award +should probably be given to the latter. Intensive cultivation and +the improvement of the millions of acres which we now possess is a +more thankworthy task, demands more brains, and should give greater +results than the gaining of a few thousands of acres now covered by +water. This conclusion is not the one which any lover of enterprise +or of picturesque endeavour would prefer. It is a pity that it is +so. Perhaps in days to come when wheat is once more precious the +sea wastes may once more be worth recovery. But even so they are +not desirable spots on which to plant a population. They are by +natural causes on the way to nowhere, and out of communication with +the towns and villages. Brading Harbour, in the Isle of Wight, is +an exception, for it ran up inland. Lord Leicester's marshes at +Holkham are narrow though long, and, while splendidly fertile, are +all well within reach of the farms and villages. But to scatter +farms and labourers' cottages on the dreary flats of a place like +Canvey Island is not likely to appeal to the wishes of modern +agriculturists, who feel the dulness of rural life acutely already. +The growth of the Jewish colonies not far off on the mainland, +where poor Hebrews continually reinforce a community devoted to +field and garden labour and content to begin by earning the barest +living, seems to indicate that a population from the poorest urban +class might be found for reclaimed land. But the industrious town +artisans of English blood have not yet found life so intolerable as +to be ready to try the experiment.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter40">THE LONDON THAMES AS A +WATERWAY</a></h2> + +<p>Mary Boyle, in "Her Book," speaking of the time when her father +had an appointment at the Navy Board and a residence in Somerset +House, says, "It was our great delight to go by water on Sunday +afternoon to Westminster Abbey, and there is no doubt we +occasionally cut a grand figure on the river; for when my father +went out he had a splendid barge, rowed by boatmen clad entirely in +scarlet, with black jockey caps, such as in those picturesque old +days formed part of that beautiful river procession in honour of +the Lord Mayor, on the 9th of November, over the disappearance of +which pageant I have often mourned."</p> + +<p>It was not until the early days of the present reign that +neglect and dirt spoiled our river as an almost Royal waterway; and +we believe that as late as the days of Archbishop Tait the +Primate's State barge used to convey him from Lambeth Palace to the +House of Lords opposite. State barges and river processions were +the standing examples of State pageantry, thoroughly popular and +remembered by the intensely conservative people of London; and it +is a tribute to the feeling that the use of the river was a +necessary part of London life, that the Lord Mayor and his suite on +the 9th of November used to take boat at Blackfriars Bridge, and +went thence by water to Westminster Hall, returning in their State +barges to the bridge, where their coaches were waiting for them. We +may credit the founders of the earliest illustrated paper with a +knowledge of the popular sentiment of the day. When the +<em>Illustrated London News</em> was established the title-page of +that paper showed the Thames, with the procession of State barges +in the foreground, and the then new and popular river steamers +passing by them.</p> + +<p>In addition to cleanliness something in the form of a +restoration of old conditions of water-level and other improvements +by modern engineering will also be required if the river is to +become a popular waterway. Among the main drawbacks to its present +use is the great difference in level between high and low water. +The old London Bridge, with its multiplied arches and pillars, +acted as a lock. It admitted the flood tide more easily than it +released the ebb. The consequence was that when the tide began to +fall the waters above were pent in by the bridge, and the river was +kept at a level of three feet higher than it was below the +obstruction. Even now at flood tide it is a splendid and imposing +river. But the very improvements which add to its dignity when the +tide is flowing, have caused it to remain almost waterless for a +longer period during each day. The dredging and deepening of the +channel forces the waterway to contract its flow, while the +embanking of its sides enables the tide to slip down at great +speed. For four hours in each tide the Thames is not so much a +river as a half-empty conduit. It is not in the least probable that +this will be allowed to continue. The success of the half-tide lock +at Richmond has been beyond all expectation. It has secured a +perpetual river, whether on the ebb or flow, with a mean level +suited for boating and traffic at all hours. A scheme for another +lock of the same kind at Wandsworth is now accepted in principle +and nearly completed in detail. When this is built the long stretch +of river from Wandsworth, past Putney, Ranelagh, Hammersmith, +Barnes, and Kew, will retain a permanent and constant supply, +augmented at the flood tide, but never falling below a certain +level at the ebb. Then must follow the final and complete measure +for making the London river the greatest natural amenity in the +Metropolis, a half-tide lock at London Bridge, to hold up the water +opposite the historic and magnificent frontage of St. Paul's, the +Temple, Westminster and Lambeth, and upwards to above the +embankments at Chelsea. The result would be an immense fresh-water +lake, with an ebb and flow to keep it sweet and pure, but remaining +for the greater part of the twenty-four hours at a fixed level, and +during this period of rest only moved by a very gentle downward +stream, or else practically still when the water sank level with +the sills of the lock. This would make it not only easy for boats +propelled by steam, sail, or oars to move on it at all hours, +without hindrance from the present strong up or down currents, but +also absolutely safe. Any craft, from the outrigger and Canada +canoe, to the improved river steamers which would at once be +launched upon its waters, could float with ease and safety on the +London Thames.</p> + +<p>The scene in the near future can be imagined from the analogy of +Henley, though the larger scale of the London river makes the +forecast more difficult to bring into proportion. The intentionally +decorative side, given on the upper river by the houseboats, will +doubtless be supplied by a new service of public or municipal +passenger steamers, able to ply continuously at all hours, +independently of the tide, as fast as safety permits, and +absolutely punctual because the stream will be under control. These +should be as brilliantly carved, gilded, coloured, and furnished as +possible, surplus profits only going to the municipal coffers after +the boats have been repaired yearly and thoroughly redecorated. The +scheme is not in the least visionary. The Chairman of one of the +tramway companies obtained recently complete estimates for a fast, +luxurious, and beautiful service of Thames passenger boats, which +he was convinced would pay even now; and though he did not succeed +in inducing the shareholders to accept the idea of this alternative +investment, there is no doubt that on the improved river the +improved steamers would pay. A simultaneous and necessary addition +would be the building of numerous broad, accessible, and beautiful +stairs and landing places. Instead of the narrow gangway through +which files of passengers slowly creep there must be long +platforms, on to which the crowds on board the vessels step, as +from a train, all along the length of the ships, so that the touch +and departure may be rapid. The decline of traffic on the river is +largely due to the narrowness and fewness of these points of +access, which were gradually closed as the river was deserted for +the road, while their blocking or neglect discouraged efforts to +improve or multiply boats and steamers.</p> + +<p>In 1543 there were twelve large and handsome flights of stairs +down to the river between Blackfriars and Westminster. In 1600, +besides these there were public and private gateways of large size, +covered docks for State and private barges, and every convenience +for access to the water. There were stairs and stages at Essex +House, Arundel House, Somerset House, York House (the water-gate of +which still remains, with a frontage of embankment and garden +between it and the river of to-day), Bedford House, Durham House, +Whitehall, and Westminster. The latter were "the King's Stairs." +There are few constructions which lend themselves better to +architectural treatment than water-gates and stairways. They would +become one of the features of the Embankment. On the river itself +the City Companies would once more launch their State barges, and +the Houses of Parliament would have a flotilla of decorative steam +or electric launches. Permanent moorings, now difficult to maintain +near the bank on account of the runaway tide, would hold boats, +launches, and single-handed sailing yachts. No one will grudge the +County Council a State barge; while the new municipalities which +border on the river--Westminster, Southwark, Fulham, Kensington, +and the rest--will endeavour to interest their members in the great +waterway by following the example of the Thames Conservancy and +sending their representatives for official voyages to survey its +banks and note suggestions for improvements in their actual setting +and surroundings. No doubt in winter all the minor pleasure traffic +would cease. But there is no reason whatever why a service of +ornamental and well-equipped screw steamers plying at very short +intervals, and with absolute punctuality, should not continue all +the winter through. They would be entirely unlike the "penny boat." +Double-storied deckhouses, glazed and warmed, would afford the +passengers more room, purer air, and a more rapid means of +transport than the omnibus, and a far more agreeable mode of +crossing from one side of the river to the other than by railway +bridges, tunnels, or the architecturally beautiful, but crowded, +stone bridges used for ordinary traffic.</p> + +<h2 class="spaced"><a name="chapter41">THE THAMES AS A NATIONAL +TRUST</a></h2> + +<p>A movement is on foot among various societies interested in the +preservation of outdoor England to take measures jointly for the +protection of the beauties of the Thames. The subject is one which +attracts more interest yearly, and the time has now come when the +nation should make up its mind on the subject of such splendid +properties as it possesses in "real estate" like the Thames and the +New Forest, with especial regard to their value for beauty and +enjoyment. It would be unfair to expect too much from the Thames +Conservancy in this direction. That body exists to maintain the +navigation of the river, and to see that no impediments are put in +the way of its use as a waterway. Its duties are, in the first +instance, those of a Highway Board, which deals with a river +instead of a road. It has to buoy wrecks, and see that they are +raised. It controls the speed of steamers and launches, not, in the +first place, because they are a nuisance to pleasure boats, but +because the "wash" destroys the banks, and this costs money to +repair. It arranges for the dredging of shallows in the fairway, +for the embankment of the shores, and for the repair and +maintenance of the locks. Its business is to do this as cheaply as +is consistent with efficiency, and to lay no unavoidable burden on +the trade of the river. The preservation of its amenities is not, +strictly speaking, the object for which the Conservancy exists. Yet +it has done much in this direction, by obtaining from time to time +powers not originally in its jurisdiction. It may be said to be on +its way to become a guardian of the amenities of the river, though +these, which are fast becoming far more important than its use as a +means of traffic, were at first only accidentally objects of +solicitude to the Conservators, and such attention as is by them +devoted to this end is mainly confined to the Upper Thames, and not +to the London river. Legislation to preserve natural beauty, or +prevent disfigurement, has practically only been possible in recent +years, and the wish to do so, though shared by most classes, is not +yet so pronounced as it ought to be. What the Conservancy has been +able to do, under these circumstances, has been done, partly on +grounds of health, which are recognised in Legislation, and partly +to preserve the fishery. It has endeavoured to keep the river from +the most disgusting forms of pollution, and lately from being made +the receptacle for minor but objectionable refuse. It has certainly +prevented the Upper Thames being made into a sewer, and also +stopped pollution by paper mills and factories. London's need of +pure drinking water has given immense assistance to the forces +which were working to keep our rivers clean. All the tributaries of +the Thames are now under surveillance, and no village or little +country town may use them to pour sewage into. Country villagers +may grumble at being forced to keep water clean for Londoners to +drink. But this Act has done more to preserve the amenities of the +countryside than any other of this generation. It is so +far-reaching, and so frankly expresses the principle of placing +public rights in the "natural commodity" of pure water in our +rivers before private convenience in saving expense, that it is a +hopeful sign of the times. While the existence of this extensive +control is a guarantee for the increasing pureness of the Upper +Thames, it is also a precedent for regulating and increasing the +supervision of this national property in the most beautiful, the +largest, and the most pleasant highway in our country, whose very +pavement is a means of delight to the eye, of pleasure to the +touch, and of refreshment to all the senses. The minor regulations +for its maintenance are still more encouraging, for some of these +aim directly at preserving beauty, or objects of natural interest, +for their own sake. The oldest are those which protect the fishery. +There is one close-time for the coarse fish, another for the trout, +and a limit of size to the meshes of the nets which may be used. +Such minor disfigurements as the throwing of ashes from +steam-launches into the water or of kitchen <em>débris</em> from +houseboats are forbidden. Recently the Conservators have taken +powers more frankly directed to the preservation of natural beauty, +though even in these cases what may be called direct "taste +legislation" has not been exercised. They have not asked for leave +to say definitely: "This or that object is hideous or disfiguring, +and cannot be allowed by the side of our national highway." But +they have said, "This or that object which grows on or lives by the +side of our river-road is beautiful, and gives pleasure to the +public, and therefore it shall not be destroyed." The result has +been that the birds on the river and its banks may no longer be +shot, and certain flowers are not permitted to be plucked. The +Conservancy is also able indirectly to exercise some control over +riverside building operations, and very recently compelled an +alteration of design in the use of a building site on a reach of +the Upper Thames.</p> + +<p class="centered"><a name="boats"></a> <img src="images/fig2427.png" +width="605" height="988" alt="FISHING BOATS AT LEIGH. +From photographs by R. B. Lodge."></p> + +<p>It may be asked why, if so much has already been done, we should +not rest contented with the present control of the river, trusting +that a gradual increase of powers will be granted to the +Conservancy, so that little by little they may be able to meet all +requirements for the preservation of the Thames as our national +river, just as the New Forest is preserved on the grounds that it +was "of unique beauty and historic interest."</p> + +<p>The answer is that, in the first place, this is not the proper +business of the Conservancy, but only an incidental duty; and, in +the next, that with the best of goodwill, as is shown by what they +have done, the Conservators have only been able to mitigate, not to +control, a vast amount of disfigurement and abuse of the river in +the past. They were not created <em>ad hoc</em>, and the body has +not the position which would enable them to take a strong line, or +powers for expenditure on purely non-remunerative business, such as +might be necessary if a millowner had to be bought out if about to +sell his property for conversion into a gasworks, like the factory +of the Brentford Gas Company just opposite the palace at Kew, or +the foul soapworks which for years disfigured the banks and +polluted the air at Barnes. They have not the funds to maintain a +proper police to stop the minor pollution of the river, or to +scavenge it properly, and anywhere below Kew Bridge they are +entirely unable to cope with bankside disfigurements. Else we +cannot believe that for years the bank opposite the terrace at +Barnes and the villas above it would have been given up to the +shooting of dustbin refuse for hundreds of yards, or that Chiswick +and Richmond would have been permitted to pour "sewage effluent" +into what are still two of the finest reaches on the London river, +or that we should see advertisements of "A Site on the River-- +Suitable for a Nuisance Trade," advertised, as was recently done, +in a daily paper. If the London public, for instance, will only +make up its mind in time that the Thames is something really +necessary to its enjoyment of life; that it is the most beautiful +natural area which they can easily reach; that on it may be had the +freshest air, the best exercise, good sport (if the fishery were +replenished and the water kept clean), and constant rest and +refreshment for mind and body--it would no doubt succeed in +inducing Parliament to put the river under a strong Commission with +an adequate endowment. But the preservation of the Thames is more +than a local, or even a London, question. It is a national property +and of national importance, and should be managed from this point +of view. Mr. Richardson Evans has made out a good case for national +<em>property</em> in scenery generally. But here the case is +stronger, because the river <em>is</em> a national property +already, and anything which decreases its amenities for private +ends damages the property. Like very much other real estate, its +value depends now not on its return to the nation as a highway +(above London, that is), but purely as a "pleasure estate." +Supposing any private owner to be in possession of a beautiful +stretch of river, is it conceivable that, if he could, he would not +get a law passed to prevent gasworks, or hideous advertisements, or +rowdy steamers, or stinking dust-heaps, or sewage works from +spoiling any part of it? Would he let people throw in dead cats and +dogs, or set up cocoa-nut shies on the banks?--all of which things +have been done, and are done, between Syon House and Putney Bridge, +on the way by river from London itself to London's fairest suburbs, +Richmond and Twickenham. Or would he allow himself to be shut off +from access to his own river, or forbidden to walk along the path +by its side, supposing that one existed? Yet the public, whose +rights of way on the Thames are as good as those of any private +owner on his own waters, either suffer these things to go by +default, or at most permit and only faintly encourage a body which +was not created to care for this purpose, to undertake it because +there is no other authority to do so. It is no use to leave these +things to the local authority, however competent. There is always +the danger that local authorities--even those representing +interests normally opposed to each other--may agree to press local +interests at the expense of the public. What is needed is that both +the New Forest and the Thames shall be created national Trusts. +Both are as valuable, as unique, and as important as the British +Museum, and should be controlled by trustees of such standing and +position that their decision on matters of taste and expediency in +managing and maintaining the natural amenities of the national +forest and the national stream would be beyond question. The +decisions of the trustees of the British Museum are scarcely ever +questioned by public opinion. Could not the national river be +placed under similar guardianship?</p> + +<p> </p> + +<p class="footnote"><strong>Transcriber's Note</strong>: Some +illustrations are used twice in the original. The repeated +illustrations are retained in this version.</p> + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Naturalist on the Thames, by C. J. 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