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BIRDS AT THE WINDOW THE winter
has
continued birdless, not only in eastern Massachusetts, but, as far as I
can
learn, throughout New England. Letters from eastern Maine, the White
Mountain
region, and western Massachusetts all bring the same story: no birds
except the
commonest — chickadees and the like. Cross-bills, redpolls, and pine
grosbeaks
have left us out in the cold. The only
break in
the season's monotony with me has been a flock of six purple finches,
seen on
the 29th of January. I was nearing home, in a side street, thinking of
nothing
in particular, when I heard faint conversational notes close at hand,
and
stopping to look, saw first one and then another of the bright carmine
birds;
for five of the six were handsome adult males. All were eating savin
berries,
and conversing in their characteristic soft staccato. It was by all
odds the
brightest patch of feathers of the new century. The birds must be
wintering not
far away, I suppose; but though I have been up and down that road a
dozen times
since February came in, I have seen nothing more of them. Within a
month they
will be singing, taking the winds of March with music. No more staccato
then,
but the smoothest of fluency. Much the
birdiest
spot known to me just now is under our own windows — under them and
against
them, as shall presently be explained. Indeed, we may be said to be
running a
birds' boarding-house, and we are certainly doing an excellent
business.
“Meals at all hours,” our signboard reads. We “set a good table,” as
the trade
expression is, and our guests, who, being experienced travelers, know a
good
thing when they see it, have spread the news. There is no advertisement
so
effective as a satisfied customer. The
earliest
corners are the blue jays. They anticipate the first call for
breakfast,
appearing before sunrise. Jays are a shrewd set. They can put two and
two
together with the sharpest of us. Man, they have discovered, is a
laggard in
the morning. Then is their time. In very bad weather, indeed, they come
at all
hours; but they are always wary. If I raise the window an inch or two
and set
it down with a slam, away they go; though, likely as not, I look out
again five
minutes later to find them still there. In times of dearth one may
reasonably
risk something for a good piece of suet. The jays
take what
they can, somewhat against our will. The table is spread for smaller
people:
for downy woodpeckers, white-breasted nuthatches, and chickadees, with
whom
appears now and then, always welcome, a brown creeper. The table is set
for
them, I say; and they seem to know it. They come not as thieves, but as
invited
guests, or, better still, as members of the family. No opening and
shutting of
windows puts them to flight. Why should it? There are at least a dozen
baiting-places about the house, and they know every one of them. Though
the
fare is everywhere the same, they seem to find a spice of variety in
taking a bite
at one table after another. My own
principal
enjoyment of the business, at present, is connected with a new toy, if
I may
call it so: a small, loosely knit, or crocheted, bag — made of
knitting-cotton,
I think I was told — sent to me by a correspondent in Vermont. Into
this,
following the donor's instructions, I have put nutmeats and hung it out
of a
window of my working room, throwing a cord over the top of the upper
sash, and
allowing the bag to dangle against the pane. At first I
broke
the nuts into small pieces, but I soon learned better than that. Now I
divide
the filbert once, and for the most part the birds (chickadees only,
thus far)
have to stay on the bag and eat, instead of pulling out the pieces
whole and
making off with them. The sight is a pretty one — as good as a play. I
am
careful not to fill the bag, and the feeder is compelled to hang bottom
side up
under it, and strike upward. The position is graceful and not in the
least inconvenient,
and possesses, moreover, a great economical advantage: the crumbs, some
of
which are of necessity spilled, drop on the eater's breast, instead of
to the
ground. I see him stop continually to pick them off. “Gather up the
fragments,”
he says, “that nothing be lost.” When one
of the
pieces in the bag is so far nibbled away that a corner of it can be
pulled
through one of the interstices, matters become exciting. Then comes the
tug of
war. The eater, who knows that his time is limited, grows almost
frantic. He
braces himself and pulls, twitching upward and downward and sidewise
(“Come
out, there, will you?”), while the wind blows him to and fro across the
pane,
and one or two of his mates sit upon the nearest branch of the elm,
eyeing him
reproachfully. “You greedy thing!” they say. “Are you going to stay
there
forever?” Often their patience gives out (I do not wonder), and one
after
another they swoop down past the window, not to strike the offender,
but to
offer him a hint in the way of moral suasion. Sometimes one alights,
with more
or less difficulty, on the narrow middle sash just below, and talks to
him; or
one hovers near the bag, or even perches sidewise on the string, just
above, as
much as to say, “Look out!” Then I hear a burst of little, hurried,
sweet-sounding, angry notes — always the same, or so nearly the same
that my
ear is unable to detect the difference. Generally
these
manœuvres are successful; but now and then the feeder is so
persistently
greedy that I am tempted to assert a landlord's prerogative and tell
him to begone.
Only once have I ever seen two birds clinging to the bag together,
although so
far as I can make out, there is nothing to hinder their doing so; and
even then
they were not eating, but waiting to see which should give place to the
other. All in
all, it is a
very pleasing show. It is good to see the innocent creatures so happy.
Nobody
could look at them, their black eyes shining, their black bills
striking into
the meats, all their motions so expressive of eager enjoyment, without
feeling
glad on their account. And with all the rest, it may be said that an
ease-loving man, with a meddlesome New England conscience, is not
always sorry
to have a decent, or better than decent, excuse for dropping work once
in a
while to look out of the window. Who says we are idle while we are
taking a
lesson in natural history? I do not know how many times I have broken
off
(seeing a bird's shadow in the room, or hearing a tap on the pane)
while
writing these few paragraphs. Once,
indeed, I saw
something like actual belligerency. Two birds reached the bag at the
same
instant, and neither was inclined to withdraw. They came together, bill
to
bill, each with a volley of those fine, spitfire notes of which I spoke
just
now, and in the course of the set-to, which was over almost before it
began,
one of them struck beak-first against the window, as if he were coming
through.
Then both flew to the elm branches, fifteen feet away, and in a moment
more one
of them came back and took a turn at feeding. I am not going to take in
the bag
for fear of the immoral effects of excessive competition. Competition —
among
customers — is the life of trade. I am glad to see my table so popular.
The
nuthatches, of
which we have at least two, male and female, as I know by the
different color
of their crowns, have not yet discovered the nuts, but come regularly
to the
suet in the trees, and pretty often to a piece that is nailed upon one
of my
window-sills. I hear the fellow's pleasant, contented, guttural,
grunting
notes, and rise to look at him, liking especially to watch the tidbits
as they
travel one after another between his long mandibles. Even if he does
not call
out, I know that it is he, and not a chickadee, by the louder noise he
makes in
driving his bill into the fat. I have
fancied, all
winter, that the birds — these two nuthatches, I mean — were mated,
seeing them
so often together; and perhaps they are; but the other day I witnessed
a
little performance that seemed to put another complexion upon the case.
I was
leaving the yard when I heard bird notes, repeated again and again,
which I did
not recognize. To the best of my recollection they were quite new. I
looked up
into a tree, and there were the two nuthatches, one chasing the other
from
branch to branch, with that peculiarly dainty, fluttering, mincing
action of
the wings, a sort of will-you-be-mine motion, which birds are given to
using
in the excitement of courtship. There could be no doubt of it, though
it was
only the 10th of February: Corydon was already “paying attentions” to
Phyllis.
Success to him! I notice, also, that chickadees are beginning to
whistle
“Phoebe” with considerable frequency, though there is nothing in the
weather
to encourage them. Birds have an almanac of their own. Spring is
coming. |