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SCRAPING
ACQUAINTANCE. As I was
crossing
Boston Common, some years ago, my attention was caught by the unusual
behavior
of a robin, who was standing on the lawn, absolutely motionless, and
every few
seconds making a faint hissing noise. So much engaged was he that, even
when a
dog ran near him, he only started slightly, and on the instant resumed
his
statue-like attitude. Wondering what this could mean, and not knowing
how else
to satisfy my curiosity, I bethought myself of a man whose letters
about birds
I had now and then noticed in the daily press. So, looking up his name
in the
City Directory, and finding that he lived at such a number, Beacon
Street, I
wrote him a note of inquiry. He must have been amused as he read it;
for I
remember giving him the title of “Esquire,” and speaking of his
communications
to the newspapers as the ground of my application to him. “Such is
fame!” he
likely enough said to himself. “Here is a man with eyes in his head, a
man,
moreover, who has probably been at school in his time, — for most of
his words
are spelled correctly, — and yet he knows my name only as he has seen
it signed
once in a while to a few lines in a newspaper.” Thoughts like these,
however,
did not prevent his replying to the note (my “valued favor”) with all
politeness, although he confessed himself unable to answer my question;
and by
the time I had occasion to trouble him again I had learned that he was
to be
addressed as Doctor, and, furthermore, was an ornithologist of
world-wide
reputation, being, in fact, one of the three joint-authors of the most
important work so far issued on the birds of North America. Certainly
I was and
am grateful to him (he is now dead) for his generous treatment of my
ignorance;
but even warmer is my feeling toward that city thrush, who, all
unconscious of
what he was doing, started me that day on a line of study which has
been ever
since a continual delight. Most gladly would I do him any kindness in
my power;
but I have little doubt that, long ere this, he, too, has gone the way
of all
the earth. As to what he was thinking about on that memorable May
morning, I am
as much in the dark as ever. But there is no law against a bird’s
behaving
mysteriously, I suppose. Most of us, I am sure, often do things which
are
inexplicable to ourselves, and once in a very great while, perhaps, it
would
puzzle even our next-door neighbors to render a complete account of our
motives. Whatever
the robin
meant, however, and no doubt there was some good reason for his
conduct, he had
given my curiosity the needed jog. Now, at last, I would do what I had
often
dreamed of doing, — learn something about the birds of my own region,
and be
able to recognize at least the more common ones when I saw them. The
interest of the
study proved to be the greater for my ignorance, which, to speak within
bounds,
was nothing short of wonderful; perhaps I might appropriately use a
more
fashionable word, and call it phenomenal. All my life long I had had a
kind of
passion for being out-of-doors; and, to tell the truth, I had been so
often
seen wandering by myself in out-of-the-way wood-paths, or sitting idly
about on
stone walls in lonesome pastures, that some of my Philistine townsmen
had most
likely come to look upon me as no better than a vagabond. Yet I was not
a
vagabond, for all that. I liked work, perhaps, as well as the
generality of
people. But I was unfortunate in this respect: while I enjoyed in-door
work, I
hated to be in the house; and, on the other hand, while I enjoyed being
out-of-doors, I hated all manner of out-door employment. I was not
lazy, but I
possessed — well, let us call it the true aboriginal temperament;
though I fear
that this distinction will be found too subtle, even for the
well-educated,
unless, along with their education, they have a certain sympathetic
bias,
which, after all, is the main thing to be depended on in such nice
psychological discriminations. With all
my rovings
in wood and field, however, I knew nothing of any open-air study. Study
was a
thing of books. At school we were never taught to look elsewhere for
knowledge.
Reading and spelling, geography and grammar, arithmetic and algebra,
geometry
and trigonometry,—these were studied, of course, as also were Latin and
Greek.
But none of our lessons took us out of the school-room, unless it was
astronomy, the study of which I had nearly forgotten; and that we
pursued in
the night-time, when birds and plants were as though they were not. I
cannot
recollect that any one of my teachers ever called my attention to a
natural
object. It seems incredible, but, so far as my memory serves, I was
never in
the habit of observing the return of the birds in the spring or their
departure
in the autumn; except, to be sure, that the semi-annual flight of the
ducks and
geese was always a pleasant excitement, more especially because there
were
several lakes (invariably spoken of as ponds) in our vicinity, on the
borders
of which the village “gunners” built pine-branch booths in the season. But now, as I have said, my ignorance was converted all at once into a kind of blessing; for no sooner had I begun to read bird books, and consult a cabinet of mounted specimens, than every turn out-of-doors became full of all manner of delightful surprises. Could it be that what I now beheld with so much wonder was only the same as had been going on year after year in these my own familiar lanes and woods? Truly the human eye is nothing more than a window, of no use unless the man looks out of it. Some of
the
experiences of that period seem ludicrous enough in the retrospect.
Only two or
three days after my eyes were first opened I was out with a friend in
search of
wild-flowers (I was piloting him to a favorite station for Viola pubescens), when I saw a
most
elegant little creature, mainly black and white, but with brilliant
orange
markings. He was darting hither and thither among the branches of some
low
trees, while I stared at him in amazement, calling on my comrade, who
was as
ignorant as myself, but less excited, to behold the prodigy. Half
trembling
lest the bird should prove to be some straggler from the tropics, the
like of
which would not be found in the cabinet before mentioned, I went
thither that
very evening. Alas, my silly fears! there stood the little beauty’s
exact
counterpart, labeled Setophaga
ruticilla,
the American redstart, — a bird which the manual assured me was very
common in
my neighborhood. But it was
not my
eyes only that were opened, my ears also were touched. It was as if all
the
birds had heretofore been silent, and now, under some sudden impulse,
had
broken out in universal concert. What a glorious chorus it was; and
every voice
a stranger! For a week or more I was puzzled by a song which I heard
without
fail whenever I went into the woods, but the author of which I could
never set
eyes on, — a song so exceptionally loud and shrill, and marked by such
a
vehement crescendo, that, even to my new-found ears, it stood out from
the
general medley a thing by itself. Many times I struck into the woods in
the
direction whence it came, but without getting so much as a flying
glimpse of
the musician. Very mysterious, surely! Finally, by accident I believe,
I caught
the fellow in the very act of singing, as he stood on a dead pine-limb;
and a
few minutes later he was on the ground, walking about (not hopping)
with the
primmest possible gait, — a small olive-brown bird, with an orange
crown and a
speckled breast. Then I knew him for the golden-crowned thrush’; but it
was not
for some time after this that I heard his famous evening song, and it
was
longer still before I found his curious roofed nest. “Happy
those early
days,” those days of childish innocence, — though I was a man grown, —
when
every bird seemed newly created, and even the redstart and the wood
wag. tail
were like rarities from the ends of the earth. Verily, my case was like
unto
Adam’s, when every fowl of the air was brought before him for a name. One
evening, on my
way back to the city after an afternoon ramble, I stopped just at dusk
in a
grove of hemlocks, and soon out of the tree-top overhead came a song, —
a brief
strain of about six notes, in a musical but rather rough voice, and in
exquisite accord with the quiet solemnity of the hour. Again and again
the
sounds fell on my ear, and as often I endeavored to obtain a view of
the
singer; but he was in the thick of the upper branches, and I looked for
him in
vain. How delicious the music was! a perfect lullaby, drowsy and
restful; like
the benediction of the wood on the spirit of a tired city-dweller. I
blessed
the unknown songster in return; and even now I have a feeling that the
peculiar
enjoyment which the song of the black-throated green warbler never
fails to afford
me may perhaps be due in some measure to its association with that
twilight
hour. To this same hemlock grove I was in the habit, in those days, of going now and then to listen to the evening hymn of the veery, or Wilson thrush. Here, if nowhere else, might be heard music fit to be called sacred. Nor did it seem a disadvantage, but rather the contrary, when, as sometimes happened, I was compelled to take my seat in the edge of the wood, and wait quietly, in the gathering darkness, for vespers to begin. The veery’s mood is not so lofty as the hermit’s, nor is his music to be compared for brilliancy and fullness with that of the wood thrush; but, more than any other bird-song known to me, the veery’s has, if I may say so, the accent of sanctity. Nothing is here of self-consciousness; nothing of earthly pride or passion. If we chance to overhear it and laud the singer, that is our affair. Simple-hearted worshiper that he is, he has never dreamed of winning praise for himself by the excellent manner in which he praises his Creator, — an absence of thrift, which is very becoming in thrushes, though, I suppose, it is hardly to be looked for in human choirs. And yet,
for all
the unstudied ease and simplicity of the veery’s strain, he is .a great
master
of technique. In his
own artless
way he does what I have never heard any other bird attempt: he gives to
his
melody all the force of harmony. How this unique and curious effect,
this vocal
double-stopping, as a violinist might term it, is produced, is not
certainly known;
but it would seem that it must be by an arpeggio,
struck with such consummate quickness and precision that the ear is
unable to
follow it, and is conscious of nothing but the resultant chord. At any
rate,
the thing itself is indisputable, and has often been commented on. Moreover,
this is
only half the veery’s technical proficiency. Once in a while, at least,
he will
favor you with a delightful feat of ventriloquism; beginning to sing in
single
voice, as usual, and anon, without any noticeable increase in the
loudness of
the tones, diffusing the music throughout the wood, as if there were a
bird in
every tree, all singing together in the strictest time. I am not sure
that all
members of the species possess this power, and I have never seen the
performance
alluded to in print; but I have heard it when the illusion was
complete, and
the effect most beautiful. Music so devout and unostentatious as the veery’s does not appeal to the hurried or the preoccupied. If you would enjoy it you must bring an ear to hear. I have sometimes pleased myself with imagining a resemblance between it and the poetry of George Herbert, — both uncared for by the world, but both, on that very account, prized all the more dearly by the few in every generation whose spirits are in tune with theirs. This bird
is one of
a group of small thrushes called the Hylocichlæ,
of which group we have five representatives in the Atlantic States: the
wood
thrush; the Wilson, or tawny thrush; the hermit; the olive-backed, or
Swainson;
and the gray-cheeked, or Alice’s thrush. To the unpracticed eye the
five all
look alike. All of them, too, have the same glorious voice, so that the
young
student is pretty sure to find it a matter of some difficulty to tell
them
apart. Yet there are differences of coloration which may be trusted as
constant, and to which, after a while, the eye becomes habituated; and,
at the
same time, each species has a song and call-notes peculiar to itself.
One
cannot help wishing, indeed, that he might hear the five singing by
turns in
the same wood. Then he could fix the distinguishing peculiarities of
the
different songs in his mind so as never to confuse them again. But this
is more
than can be hoped for; the listener must be content with hearing two,
or at the
most three, of the species singing together, and trust his memory to
make the
necessary comparison. The song of the wood thrush is perhaps the most easily set apart from the rest, because of its greater compass of voice and bravery of execution. The Wilson’s song, as you hear it by itself, seems so perfectly characteristic that you fancy you can never mistake any other for it; and yet, if you are in northern New England only a week afterwards, you may possibly hear a Swainson (especially if he happens to be one of the best singers of his species, and, more especially still, if he happens to be at just the right distance away), who you will say, at first thought, is surely a Wilson. The difficulty of distinguishing the voices is naturally greatest in the spring, when they have not been heard for eight or nine months. Here, as elsewhere, the student must be willing to learn the same lesson over and over, letting patience have her perfect work. That the five songs are really distinguishable is well illustrated by the fact (which I have before mentioned), that the presence of the Alice thrush in New England during the breeding season was announced as probable by myself, simply on the strength of a song which I had heard in the White Mountains, and which, as I believed, must be his, notwithstanding I was entirely unacquainted with it, and though all our books affirmed that the Alice thrush was not a summer resident of any part of the United States. It is
worth
remarking, also, in this connection, that the Hylocichlæ
differ more decidedly in their notes of alarm than in their songs. The
wood
thrush’s call is extremely sharp and brusque, and is usually fired off
in a
little volley; that of the Wilson is a sort of whine, or snarl, in
distressing
contrast with his song; the hermit’s is a quick, sotto voce, sometimes almost
inaudible chuck; the
Swainson’s is a mellow whistle;
while that of the Alice is something between the Swainson’s and the
Wilson’s, —
not so gentle and refined as the former, nor so outrageously vulgar as
the
latter. In what is
here
said about discriminating species it must be understood that I am not
speaking
of such identification as will answer a strictly scientific purpose.
For that
the bird must be shot. To the maiden
“whose light blue eyes
Are tender over drowning flies,” this decree will no doubt sound cruel. Men who pass laws of that sort may call themselves ornithologists, if they will; for her part she calls them butchers. We might turn on our fair accuser, it is true, with some inquiry about the two or three bird-skins which adorn her bonnet. But that would be only giving one more proof of our heartlessness; and, besides, unless a man is downright angry he can scarcely feel that he has really cleared himself when he has done nothing more than to point the finger and say, You’re another. However, I am not set for the defence of ornithologists. They are abundantly able to take care of themselves without the help of any outsider. I only declare that, even to my unprofessional eye, this rule of theirs seems wise and necessary. They know, if their critics do not, how easy it is to be deceived; how many times things have been seen and minutely described, which, as was afterwards established, could not by any possibility have been visible. Moreover, regret it as we may, it is clear that in this world nobody can escape giving and taking more or less pain. We of the sterner sex are accustomed to think that even our blue-eyed censors are not entirely innocent in this regard; albeit, for myself, I am bound to believe that generally they are not to blame for the tortures they inflict upon us. Granting
the
righteousness of the scientist’s caution, however, we may still find a
less
rigorous code sufficient for our own non-scientific, though I hope not
unscientific,
purpose. For it is certain that no great enjoyment of bird study is
possible
for some of us, if we are never to be allowed to call our gentle
friends by
name until in every case we have gone through the formality of a post-mortem examination.
Practically, and
for every-day ends, we may know a robin, or a redstart, or even a
hermit
thrush, when we see him, without first turning the bird into a
specimen. Probably
there are
none of our birds which afford more surprise and pleasure to a novice
than the
family of warblers. A well-known ornithologist has related how one day
he
wandered into the forest in an idle mood, and accidentally catching a
gleam of
bright color overhead, raised his gun and brought the bird to his feet;
and how
excited and charmed he was with the wondrous beauty of his little
trophy. Were
there other birds in the woods as lovely as this? He would see for
himself. And
that was the beginning of what bids fair to prove a life-long
enthusiasm. Thirty-eight
warblers are credited to New England; but it would be safe to say that
not more
than three of them are known to the average New-Englander. How should
he know
them, indeed? They do not come about the flower-garden like the
humming-bird,
nor about the lawn like the robin; neither can they be hunted with a
dog like
the grouse and the woodcock. Hence, for all their gorgeous apparel,
they are
mainly left to students and collectors. Of our common species the most
beautiful are, perhaps, the blue yellow-back, the blue golden-wing, the
Blackburnian, the black-and-yellow, the Canada flycatcher, and the
redstart;
with the yellow-rump, the black-throated green, the prairie warbler,
the summer
yellow-bird, and the Maryland yellow-throat coming not far behind. But
all of
them are beautiful, and they possess, besides, the charm of great
diversity of
plumage and habits; while some of them have the further merit, by no
means
inconsiderable, of being rare. It was a
bright day
for me when the blue golden-winged warbler settled in my neighborhood.
On my
morning walk I detected a new song, and, following it up, found a new
bird, — a
result which is far from being a thing of course. The spring migration
was at
its height, and at first I expected to have the pleasure of my new
friend’s
society for only a day or two; so I made the most of it. But it turned
out that
he and his companion had come to spend the summer, and before very long
I
discovered their nest. This was still unfinished when I came upon it;
but I
knew pretty well whose it was, having several times noticed the birds
about the
spot, and a few days afterwards the female bravely sat still, while I
bent over
her, admiring her courage and her handsome dress. I paid my respects to
the
little mother almost daily, but jealously guarded her secret, sharing
it only
with a kind-hearted woman, whom I took with me on one of my visits.
But, alas!
one day I called, only to find the nest empty. Whether the villain who
pillaged
it traveled on two legs, or on four, I never knew. Possibly he dropped
out of
the air. But I wished him no good, whoever he was. Next year the birds
appeared
again, and more than one pair of them; but no nest could I find, though
I often
looked for it, and, as children say in their games, was sometimes very
warm. Is there
any lover
of birds in whose mind certain birds and certain places are not
indissolubly
joined? Most of us, I am sure, could go over the list and name the
exact spots
where we first saw this one, where we first heard that one sing, and
where we
found our first nest of the other. There is a piece of swampy woodland
in
Jefferson, New Hampshire, midway between the hotels and the railway
station,
which, for me, will always be associated with the song of the winter
wren. I
had been making an attempt to explore the wood, with a view to its
botanical
treasures but the mosquitoes had rallied with such spirit that I was
glad to
beat a retreat to the road. Just then an unseen bird broke out into a
song, and
by the time he had finished I was saying to myself, A winter wren! Now,
if I
could only see him in the act, and so be sure of the correctness of my
guess! I
worked to that end as cautiously as possible, but all to no purpose;
and
finally I started abruptly toward the spot whence the sound had come,
expecting
to see the bird fly. But apparently there was no bird there, and I
stood still,
in a little perplexity. Then, all at once, the wren appeared, hopping
about
among the dead branches, within a few yards of my feet, and peering at
the
intruder with evident curiosity; and the next moment he was joined by a
hermit
thrush, equally inquisitive. Both were silent as dead men, but plainly
had no
doubt whatever that they were in their own domain, and that it belonged
to the
other party to move away. I presumed that the thrush, at least, had a
nest not
far off, but after a little search (the mosquitoes were still active) I
concluded not to intrude further on his domestic privacy. I had heard
the
wren’s famous song, and it had not been overpraised. But then came the
inevitable second thought: had I really heard it? True, the music
possessed the
wren characteristics, and a winter wren was in the brush; but what
proof had I
that the bird and the song belonged together? No; I must see him in the
act of
singing. But this, I found, was more easily said than done. In
Jefferson, in
Gorham, in the Franconia Notch, in short, wherever I went, there was no
difficulty about hearing the music, and little about seeing the wren;
but it
was provoking that eye and ear could never be brought to bear witness
to the
same bird. However, this difficulty was not insuperable, and after it
was once
overcome I was in the habit of witnessing the whole performance almost
as often
as I wished. Of similar
interest
to me is a turn in an old Massachusetts road, over which, boy and man,
I have
traveled hundreds of times; one of those delightful back-roads, half
road and
half lane, where the grass grows between the horse-track and the
wheel-track,
while bushes usurp what ought to be the sidewalk. Here, one morning in
the time
when every day was disclosing two or three new species for my delight,
I
stopped to listen to some bird of quite unsuspected identity, who was
calling
and singing and scolding in the Indian brier thicket, making, in truth,
a
prodigious racket. I twisted and turned, and was not a little
astonished when
at last I detected the author of all this outcry. From a study of the
manual I
set him down as probably the white-eyed vireo, — a conjecture which
further
investigation confirmed. This vireo is the very prince of
stump-speakers, —
fluent, loud, and sarcastic, — and is well called the politician,
though it is
a disappointment to learn that the title was given him, not for his
eloquence,
but on account of his habit of putting pieces of newspaper into his
nest. While
I stood peering into the thicket, a man whom I knew came along the
road, and
caught me thus disreputably employed. Without doubt he thought me a
lazy
good-for-nothing; or possibly (being more charitable) he said to
himself, “Poor
fellow! he’s losing his mind.” Take a gun
on your
shoulder, and go wandering about the woods all day long, and you will
be looked
upon with respect, no matter though you kill nothing bigger than a
chipmunk; or
stand by the hour at the end of a fishing-pole, catching nothing but
mosquito-bites, and your neighbors will think no ill of you. But to be
seen
staring at a bird for five minutes together, or picking road-side
weeds! —
well, it is fortunate there are asylums for the crazy. Not unlikely the
malady
will grow upon him; and who knows how soon he may become dangerous?
Something
must be wrong about that to which we are unaccustomed. Blowing out the
brains
of rabbits and squirrels is an innocent and delightful pastime, as
everybody
knows; and the delectable excitement of pulling half-grown fishes out
of the
pond to perish miserably on the bank, that, too, is a recreation easily
enough
appreciated. But what shall be said of enjoying birds without killing
them, or
of taking pleasure in plants, which, so far as we know, cannot suffer
even if
we do kill them? Of my many
pleasant
associations of birds with places, one of the pleasantest is connected
with the
red-headed woodpecker. This showy bird has for a good many years been
very rare
in Massachusetts; and therefore, when, during the freshness of my
ornithological researches, I went to Washington for a month’s visit, it
was one
of the things which I had especially in mind, to make his acquaintance.
But I
looked for him without success, till, at the end of a fortnight, I made
a
pilgrimage to Mount Vernon. Here, after visiting the grave, and going
over the
house, as every visitor does, I sauntered about the grounds, thinking
of the
great man who used to do the same so many years before, but all the
while
keeping my eyes open for the present feathered inhabitants of the
sacred spot.
Soon a bird dashed by me, and struck against the trunk of an adjacent
tree, and
glancing up quickly, I beheld my much sought red-headed woodpecker. How
appropriately patriotic he looked, at the home of Washington, wearing
the
national colors, — red, white, and blue! After this he became abundant
about
the capital, so that I saw him often, and took much pleasure in his
frolicsome
ways; and, some years later, he suddenly appeared in force in the
vicinity of
Boston, where he remained through the winter months. To my thought,
none the
less, he will always suggest Mount Vernon. Indeed, although be is
certainly
rather jovial, and even giddy, he is to me the bird of Washington much
more
truly than is the solemn, stupid-seeming eagle, who commonly bears that
name. To go away
from
home, even if the journey be no longer than from Massachusetts to the
District
of Columbia, is sure to prove an event of no small interest to a young
naturalist; and this visit of mine to the national capital was no
exception. On
the afternoon of my arrival, walking up Seventh Street, I heard a
series of
loud, clear, monotonous whistles, which I had then no leisure to
investigate,
but the author of which I promised myself the satisfaction of meeting
at
another time. In fact, I think it was at least a fortnight before I
learned
that these whistles came from the tufted titmouse. I had been seeing
him almost
daily, but till then he had never chanced to use that particular note
while
under my eye. There was
a certain
tract of country, woodland and pasture, over which I roamed a good many
times,
and which is still clearly mapped out in my memory. Here I found my
first
Carolina or mocking wren, who ran in at one side of a woodpile and came
out at
the other as I drew near, and who, a day or two afterwards, sang so
loudly from
an oak tree that I ransacked it with my eye in search of some large
bird, and
was confounded when finally I discovered who the musician really was.
Here,
every day, were to be heard the glorious song of the cardinal grosbeak,
the
insect-like effort of the blue-gray gnat-catcher, and the rigmarole of
the
yellow-breasted chat. On a wooded hillside, where grew a profusion of
trailing
arbutus, pink azalea, and bird-foot violets, the rowdyish,
great-crested
flycatchers were screaming in the tree-tops. In this same grove I twice
saw the
rare red-bellied woodpecker, who, on both occasions, after rapping
smartly with
his beak, turned his head and laid his ear against the trunk, evidently
listening to see whether his alarm had set any grub a-stirring. Near
by, in an
undergrowth, I fell in with a few worm-eating warblers. They seemed of
a
peculiarly unsuspicious turn of mind, and certainly wore the quaintest
of head-dresses.
I must mention also a scarlet tanager, who, all afire as he was, one
day
alighted in a bush of flowering dogwood, which was completely covered
with its
large white blossoms. Probably he had no idea how well his perch became
him. Perhaps I
ought to
be ashamed to confess it, but, though I went several times into the
galleries
of our honorable Senate and House of Representatives, and heard
speeches by
some celebrated men, including at least half a dozen candidates for the
presidency, yet, after all, the congressmen in feathers interested me
most. I
thought, indeed, that the chat might well enough have been elected to
the lower
house. His volubility and waggish manners would have made him quite at
home in
that assembly, while his orange-colored waistcoat would have given him
an
agreeable conspicuity. But, to be sure, he would have needed to learn
the use
of tobacco. Well, all
this was
only a few years ago; but the men whose eloquence then drew the crowd
to the
capitol are, many of them, heard there no longer. Some are dead; some
have
retired to private life. But the birds never die. Every spring they
come
trooping back for their all-summer session. The turkey-buzzard still
floats
majestically over the city; the chat still practices his lofty tumbling
in the
suburban pastures, snarling and scolding at all comers; the flowing
Potomac
still yields “a blameless sport” to the fish-crow and the kingfisher;
the
orchard oriole continues to whistle in front of the Agricultural
Department,
and the crow blackbird to parade back and forth over the Smithsonian
lawns.
Presidents and senators may come and go, be praised and vilified, and
then in
turn forgotten; but the birds are subject to no such mutations. It is a
foolish
thought, but sometimes their happy carelessness seems the better part. |