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VIII THE FIELD SPARROW
AND THE CHIPPER ALL
beginners in
bird study find the sparrow family a hard one. There are so many kinds
of
sparrows, and the different kinds look so confusingly alike. How shall
I ever
be able to tell them apart? the novice says to himself. Well, there is no royal road to such learning, it may as well be confessed. But there is a road, for all that, and a pretty good one, — the road of patience; and there is much pleasure to be had in following it. If you know one sparrow, be it only the so-called “English,” you have made a beginning. If you know the
English sparrow, I say; for, strange as it may seem, I find numbers of
people
who do not. Take the average inhabitant of any of our large cities into
the
country, and let him come upon an English sparrow in a way side hedge,
and
there are three chances to one that he will not know with certainty
what to
call it. Quite as likely as not he has never noticed that there are two
kinds
of English sparrows, very differently feathered — the male and the
female. In a short
chapter
like this I am not going to attempt a miracle. If you read it to the
end, never
so carefully, you will not be prepared to name all the sparrows at
sight. As I
said be fore, they are a hard set. My wish now is to speak of two of
the
smallest and commonest. One of
these is
called sometimes the chipping sparrow, sometimes the chipper, and
sometimes —
much less often — the doorstep sparrow. Personally, I like the last
name best,
— perhaps be cause I invented it. Scientific men, who prefer for
excellent
reasons to have their own names for things, call him Spizella socialis — that
is to say, the familiar or social little spiza, or sparrow. The idea of
littleness, some young readers may not know, is contained in the
termination ella, which is
what grammarians call a diminutive. Umbrella, for instance, is
literally a small umbra, or
shade. With most
readers
of this book the chipping sparrow is a bird of spring, summer, and
autumn. For
the winter he retires to our extreme Southern States and to Mexico. If
you live
in Massachusetts, you may begin to be on the watch for him by the 5th
of April.
If your home is farther south, you should see him somewhat earlier. Perhaps
you will
know him by this brief description: a very small, slender sparrow, with
a dark
chestnut-red crown, a black forehead, a black bill, and plain —
unstreaked and
unspotted — under parts. His
ordinary note,
or call, is a chip (whence
his name), and his song is a very dry, tuneless,
monotonous, long-drawn chippy-chippy-chippy,
uttered so fast as to sound almost
like a trill. You may like the bird never so well, but if you have any
idea of
music, you will never call him a fine singer. What he and his mate
think about
the matter there is, of course, no telling. He seems to be very much in
earnest, at all events. He is a
social
bird, I say. You will not have to go far afield or into the woods in
search of
him. If you live in any sort of country place, with a bit of garden and
a few
shrubs and fruit trees, a pair of chippers will be likely to find you
out.
Their nest will be built in a tree or bush, a small structure neatly
lined with
hair, and in due time it will contain four or five eggs, blue or
greenish blue,
with brown spots. Our other
bird is
of the chipper’s size, and, like him, has unstreaked and unspotted
lower parts.
His bill is of a light color, “reddish brown,” one book says, “pale
reddish,”
says an other. This is one of the principal marks for the beginner to
notice.
Another is a wash of buff, or yellowish brown, on the sides of the
breast. The
upper parts, too, are in general much lighter than the chipper’s. You will
not be
likely often to find this bird in your garden or about the lawn. He is
called
the field sparrow, but he lives mostly in dry old pastures, partly
overgrown
with bushes and trees. His nest is placed on the ground, or in a low
bush, and
is often lined wholly or in part with hair. He and the chipper belong
to what
is called the same genus. That is to say, the two are so nearly related
that
they have the same surname. The chipper is Spizella
socialis, the field sparrow is Spizella
pusilla; just as two brothers will have one name in common,
say,
Jones, William, and Jones, Andrew. The
chipper is a
favorite on account of his familiar, friendly ways. The field sparrow
de serves
to be known and loved for his music. Few birds sing better, in my
opinion,
though many make more display and are more talked about. The beauty of
the song
is in its sweet ness, simplicity, and perfect taste. It begins with
three or
four longer notes, which run at once into quicker and shorter ones,
either on
the same pitch or a little higher. Really the strain is almost too
simple to
make a description of: a simple line of pure melody, one may say. You
must hear
it for yourself. Sometimes the bird gives it out double, so to speak,
catching
it up again just as he seems ready to finish. The tone is the clearest
of
whistles, and the whole effect is most delightful and soothing. It is
worth any
body’s while to spend a season or two in bird study, if only to learn
this and
half a dozen more pieces of our common wild-bird music. The field
sparrow’s
times of arrival and departure are practically the same as the
chipper’s.
Neither bird is hard to see, or very hard to distinguish; a bit of
patience and
an opera-glass will do the business; though you may have to puzzle
awhile over
either of them before making quite sure of your knowledge. In bird
study, as in
any other, we learn by correcting our own mistakes. |