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XII THE KINGBIRD As a very
small boy
I spent much time in a certain piece of rather low ground partly grown
up to
bushes. Here in early spring I picked bunches of pretty pink and white
flowers,
which I now know to have been anemones. In the same place, a month or
two
later, I gathered splendid red lilies, and admired, without gather ing
it, a
tiny blue flower with a yellow centre. This would not bear taking home,
but was
al ways an attraction to me. I should have liked it better still, I am
sure, if
some one had been kind enough to tell me its pretty name — blue-eyed
grass. Here, also, I picked the first strawberries of the season and the first blueberries. They were luxuries indeed. A “gill-cup” full of either of them was good pay for an hour’s search. In one
corner of
the place there were half a dozen or so of apple-trees, and on the
topmost
branches of these there used to perch continually two or three birds of
a kind
which some older boy told me were kingbirds. At these my brother and I
— both
of us small enough to be excusable for such mischief — were in the
habit of
throwing green apples; partly to see how near we could come to hitting
them,
partly for the fun of watching them rise into the air, circle about
with sharp
cries, and then settle back upon the perches they had left. Sometimes
we stuck
the half-grown apple on the end of a stick, swung the stick round our
heads,
and sent the apple flying to a tremendous distance. Stick or no stick,
however,
we were in no danger of killing anything, as I am glad now to remember.
What
amazed us was
that the birds did not go away. No matter how long we “appled” them,
they were
certain to be on hand the next day in the same place. We must have been
very
young and very green, — greener even than the apples, — for it never
occurred
to us that the birds had nests in the trees, and for that reason were
not to be
driven away by our petty persecutions. Even then I noticed the peculiar flight of the birds — the short, quick strokes of their wings, and their habit of hovering. These are among the signs by which the kingbird can be recognized a long way off. He is dark-colored above, — almost black, — pure white underneath, and his tail, when outspread, shows a broad white border at the tip. On his crown is an orange-red patch, but you will probably never see it unless you have the bird in your hand and brush apart the feathers in search of it. The
kingbird’s
Latin name has much the same meaning as his common English one. Tyrannus
tyrannus he is called by scientific people. He belongs to a
family
known as flycatchers, birds that catch insects on the wing. That is the
reason
why the kingbird likes a perch at the tip of something, so that he can
dart out
after a passing insect, catch it, and return to his perch to wait for
another. I should call him
the “apple-tree flycatcher,” if the matter were referred to
me. He is not
large, —
little bigger than an English sparrow, — but he has plenty of courage
and a
strong disposition to “rule the roost,” as the saying goes. Every
country boy
has laughed to see the kingbird chasing a crow. And a very lively and
pleasing
sight it is: the crow making for the nearest wood as fast as his wings
will
carry him, and one or two kingbirds in hot pur suit. Their great aim is
to get
above him and swoop down upon his back. Sometimes you will see one
actually
alight on a crow’s back and, as boys say, “give it to him” in great
style. Another
taking
action of the kingbird is his trick of flying straight up in the air,
almost
perpendicularly, as if he were trying to see how near he could come to
performing that impossible feat, and then tumbling about madly, with
noisy out
cries. Often it looks as if he actually turned somersaults. He cannot
sing, and
so has to let his high spirits bubble over in these half-crazy
gymnastics. All
in all, he is a very lively and entertaining customer. His nest
is built
in a tree, often in an orchard, and is comparatively easy to find. The
birds
arrive in New England in the first week of May, having passed the
winter in
Central or South America, and remain till the end of August. Like most
birds,
they are very punctual in their coming and going. No doubt they have an
almanac
of their own. You will do well to find one of them in Massachusetts
after the
first two or three days of September. Toward the
end of
their stay, flycatchers though they are, they feed largely upon
berries. I have
seen a dozen in one small dogwood bush, all eating greedily. |