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XI THE BLUE JAY
SOME years ago, as the story comes to me, two collectors of birds met by accident in South America, one of them from Europe, the other from the United States. “There is one bird that I would rather see than any other in the world,” said the European. “It is the handsomest of all the birds that fly, to my thinking, although I know it only in the cabinet. You have it in North America, but I suppose you do not often see it. I mean the blue jay.” What the
American
answered in words, I do not know; but I am pretty confident that he
smiled. The
European might almost as well have said that he supposed Boston people
did not
often see an English sparrow. Not that the blue jay swarms everywhere
as the
foreign spar row swarms in our American cities; but it is so common, so
noisy,
so conspicuous, and so unmistakable, that it is, or ought to be, almost
an
everyday sight to all country dwellers. Strange as
it
seems, however, I find many people who do not know the jay when they
see it. In
late winter, say toward the end of February, when I begin to be on the
lookout
for the first bluebird of the year, I am all but certain to have word
brought
to me by some one of the village school-teachers that bluebirds have al
ready
come. Johnny This or Jimmy That saw one near his house several weeks
ago! That
“several weeks ago” makes me suspicious, and on following up the matter
I
discover that John and James have seen a large blue bird, larger than a
robin,
with some black and white on him — all
white underneath — and wearing a tall
crest or topknot. Then I know that they have mistaken a blue bird for a bluebird. They have seen a blue
jay, a bird of a very different feather. He has
been with us all winter, as he always is, and has been in sight from my
windows
daily. So easy is it for boys and men to guess at things, and guess
wrong. The jay is
a relative
of the crow, and has much of the crow’s cleverness, with more than the
crow’s
beauty. Like the crow, if he has an errand near houses, he makes a
point of
doing it in the early morning before the folks who live in the houses
have
begun to stir about. In fact, he knows us, in some respects at least,
better
than we know him, and habitually takes advantage of what no doubt seems
to him
a custom of very late rising on the part of human beings. Among
small birds
of all sorts he bears a decidedly bad name. In nesting time you may
hear them
uttering a chorus of loud and bitter laments as often as he appears
among them.
Their eggs and young are in danger, and they join forces to worry him
and drive
him away. One bird sounds the alarm, another hears him and hastens to
see what
is going on, and in a few minutes the whole neighborhood is awake. And
it stays
awake till the jay moves off. After that piece of evidence, you do not
need to
see him doing mischief. The little birds’ behavior is sufficiently
convincing.
As Thoreau said, the presence of a trout in the milk is something like
proof. And jays,
in their
turn, club together against enemies larger than themselves. Last autumn
I was
walking through the woods with a friend, — a city schoolmaster eager
for knowledge,
as every schoolmaster ought to be, — when we heard a great screaming of
blue
jays from a swampy thicket on our right hand. “Now what
do you
suppose the birds mean by all that outcry?” said my friend. I answered
that
very likely there was a hawk or an owl there. “Let’s go
and see,”
said the master, and we turned in that direction. Sure enough, we soon
came
face to face with a large hen-hawk perched in one of the trees, while
the jays,
one after another, were dashing as near him as they dared, yelling at
him as
they passed. At our
nearer
approach the hawk took wing; then the jays disappeared, and silence
fell upon
the woods. And I dare say the schoolmaster gave me credit for being a
wondrously wise man! The jay
has many
notes, and once in a great while may even be heard indulging in
something like
a warble. One of his most musical calls sounds to my ears a little like
the
word “lily.” He seems
to be very
fond of acorns, and is frequently to be seen standing upon a limb,
holding an
acorn under his claw and hammering it to pieces with all the force of
his stout
bill. When angered, he scolds violently, bobbing up and down in a most
ridiculous manner. In fact, he is of a highly nervous temperament, and
as full
of gesticulations as a Frenchman. To me he
is
especially a bird of autumn. At that season the woods are loud with his
clarion, and as I listen to it I can often feel myself a boy again,
rambling in
the woods that knew me in my school-days. With all his faults — his ill
treatment of small birds, I mean — I should be sorry to have his
numbers
greatly diminished. |