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ON THE UPPER ST. JOHN’S. THE city
of Sanford is a beautiful and interesting place, I hope, to
those who live in it. To the Florida tourist it is important as lying
at the
head of steamboat navigation on the St. John’s River, which here
expands into a
lake — Lake Monroe — some five miles in width, with Sanford on one
side, and
Enterprise on, the other; or, as a waggish traveler once expressed it;
with
Enterprise on the north, and Sanford and- enterprise on the south. Walking
naturalists and lovers of things natural have their own point of
view, individual, unconventional, whimsical, if you please, — very
different,
at all events, from that of clearer-witted and more serious-minded men;
and the
inhabitants of Sanford will doubtless take it as a compliment, and be
amused
rather than annoyed, when I confess that I found their city a
discouragement,
a widespread desolation of houses and shops. If there is a pleasant
country
road leading out of it in any direction, I was unlucky enough to miss
it. My.
melancholy condition was hit off before my eyes in a parable, as it
were, by a
crowd of young fellows, black and white, whom I found one afternoon in
a
sand-lot just outside the city, engaged in what was intended for a game
of
baseball. They were doing their best, — certainly they made noise
enough; but
circumstances were against them. When the ball came to the ground,
from no
matter what height or with what impetus, it fell dead in the sand; if
it had
been made of solid rubber, it could not have rebounded. “Base-running”
was
little better than base-walking. Sliding “was safe, but, by the same
token,
impossible. Worse yet, at every foul strike” or “wild throw” the ball
was lost,
and the barefooted fielders had to pick their way painfully about in
the
outlying saw-palmetto scrub till they found it. I had never seen our
“national
game” played under conditions so untoward. None but true patriots would
have
the heart to try it, I thought, and I meditated writing to Washington,
where
the quadrennial purification of the civil service was just then in
progress, —
under a new broom, — to secure, if possible, a few bits of recognition
(“plums”
is the technical term, I believe) for men so deserving. The first
baseman
certainly, who had oftenest to wade into the scrub, should have
received a
consulate, at the very least. Yet they were a merry crew, those
national
gamesters. Their patriotism was of the noblest type, — the unconscious.
They
had no thought of being heroes, nor dreamed of bounties or pensions.
They
quarreled with the umpire, of course, but not with Fate; and I hope I
profited
by their example. My errand in Sanford was to see something of the
river in
its narrower and better part; and having done that, I did not regret
what
otherwise might have seemed a profitless week. First,
however, I walked about the city. Here, as already at St.
Augustine, and afterward at Tallahassee, I found the mockingbirds in
free
song. They are birds of the town. And the same is true of the
loggerhead
shrikes, a pair of which had built a nest in a small water-oak at the
edge of
the sidewalk, on a street corner, just beyond the reach of passers-by.
In the
roadside trees — all freshly planted, like the city — were myrtle
warblers,
prairie warblers, and blue yellowbacks, the two latter in song. Once,
after a
shower, I watched a myrtle bird bathing on a branch among the wet
leaves. The
street gutters were running with sulphur water, but he had waited for
rain. I
commended his taste, being myself one of those to whom water and
brimstone is
a combination as malodorous as it seems unscriptural. Noisy boat-tailed
grackles, or “jackdaws,” were plentiful about the lakeside,
monstrously long
in the tail, and almost as large as the fish crows, which were often
there with
them. Over the broad lake swept purple martins and white-breasted
swallows, and
nearer the shore fed peacefully a few pied-billed grebes, or
dabchicks, birds
that I had seen only two or three times before, and at which I looked
more than
once before I made out what they were. They had every appearance of
passing a
winter of content. At the tops of three or four stakes, which stood
above the
water at wide intervals, — and at long distances from the shore, — sat
commonly as many cormorants, here, as everywhere, with plenty of idle
time upon
their hands. On the other side of the city were orange groves, large,
well
kept, thrifty looking; the fruit still on the trees (March 20, or
thereabouts),
or lying in heaps underneath, ready for the boxes. One man’s house, I
remember,
was surrounded by a fence overrun with Cherokee rosebushes, a full
quarter of
a mile of white blossoms. My best
botanical stroll was along one of the railroads (Sanford is a
“railway centre,” so called), through a dreary sand waste. Here I
picked a
goodly number of novelties, including’ what looked like a beautiful
pink
chicory, only the plant itself was much prettier (Lygodesmia); a very curious
sensitive-leaved plant (Schrankia),
densely beset throughout with
curved prickles, and bearing globes of tiny pink-purple flowers; a
calopogon,
quite as pretty as our Northern pulchellus;
a clematis (Baldwinii),
which
looked more like a bluebell than a clematis till I commenced pulling it
to
pieces; and a great profusion of one of the smaller papaws, or
custard-apples,
a low shrub, just then full of large, odd-shaped, creamy-white,
heavy-scented
blossoms. I was carrying a sprig of it in my hand when I met a negro.
“What is
this?” I asked. “I dunno, sir.” “Isn’t it
papaw?” “No, sir, that ain’t papaw;”
and then, as if he had just remembered something, he added,
“That’s dog
banana.” Oftener
than anywhere else I resorted to the shore of the lake, — to the
one small part of it, that is to say, which was at the same time easily
reached
and comparatively unfrequented. There — going one day farther than
usual — I
found myself in the borderland of a cypress swamp. On one side was the
lake,
but between me and it were cypress-trees; and on the other side was the
swamp
itself, a dense wood growing in stagnant black water covered here and
there
with duckweed or some similar growth: a frightful place it seemed, the
very
abode of snakes and everything evil. Stories of slaves hiding in
cypress swamps
came into my mind. It must have been cruel treatment that drove them
to it!
Buzzards flew about my head, and looked at me. “He has come here to
die,” I
imagined them saying among themselves. “No one comes here for anything
else.
Wait a little, and we will pick his bones.” They perched near by, and,
not to
lose time, employed the interval in drying their wings, for the night
had been
showery. Once in a while one of them shifted his perch with an ominous
rustle.
They were waiting for me, and were becoming impatient. “He is long
about it,”
one said to another; and I did not wonder. The place seemed one from
which none
who entered it could ever go out; and there was no going farther in
without
plunging into that horrible mire. I stood still, and looked and
listened. Some
strange noise, “bird or devil,” came from the depths of the wood. A
flock of
grackles settled in a tall cypress, and for a time made the place loud.
How
still it was after they were gone! I could hardly withdraw my gaze from
the
green water full of slimy black roots and branches, any one of which
might
suddenly lift its head and open its deadly white mouth! Once a
fish-hawk fell
to screaming farther down the lake. I had seen him the day before,
standing on
the rim of his huge nest in the top of a tree, and uttering the same
cries. All
about me gigantic cypresses, every one swollen enormously at the base,
rose
straight and branchless into the air. Dead trees, one might have said,
—
light-colored, apparently with no bark to cover them; but if I glanced
up, I
saw that each bore at the top a scanty head of branches just now
putting forth
fresh green leaves, while long funereal streamers of dark Spanish moss
hung
thickly from every bough. I am not
sure how long I could have stayed in such a spot, if I had not
been able to look now and then through the branches of the under-woods
out upon
the sunny lake. Swallows innumerable were playing over the water, many
of them
soaring so high as to be all but invisible. Wise and happy birds,
lovers of
sunlight and air. They
would
never be found in a cypress swamp. Along the shore, in a weedy shallow,
the
peaceful dabchicks were feeding. Far off on a post toward the middle of
the
lake stood a cormorant. But I could not keep my eyes long at once in
that
direction. The dismal swamp had me under its spell, and meanwhile the
patient
buzzards looked at me. “It is almost time,” they said; “the fever will
do its
work,” — and I began to believe it. It was too bad to come away; the
stupid
town offered no attraction; but it seemed perilous to remain. Perhaps I
could
not come away. I would try it and see. It was amazing that I could; and
no
sooner was I out in the sunshine than I wished I had stayed where I
was; for
having once left the place, I was never likely to find it again. The
way was
plain enough, to be sure, and my feet would no doubt serve me. But the
feet
cannot do the mind’s part, and it is a sad fact, one of the saddest in
life,
that sensations cannot be repeated. With the
fascination of the swamp still upon me, I heard somewhere in
the distance a musical voice, and soon came in sight of a garden where
a
middle-aged negro was hoeing, —hoeing and singing: a wild, minor,
endless kind
of tune; a hymn, as seemed likely from a word caught here and there; a
true
piece of natural melody, as artless as any bird’s. I walked slowly to
get more
of it, and the happy-sad singer minded me not, but kept on with his hoe
and his
song. Potatoes or corn, whatever his crop may have been, — I did not
notice,
or, if I did, I have forgotten, — it should have prospered under his
hand. Farther
along, in the highway,— a sandy track, with wastes of scrub on
either side, — a boy of eight or nine, armed with a double-barreled
gun, was
lingering about a patch of dwarf oaks and palmettos. “Haven’t got that
rabbit
yet, eh? ” said I. (I had passed him there on my way out, and he had
told me
what he was after.) “No, sir,”
he answered. “I don’t
believe there’s any rabbit there.” “Yes,
there is, sir; I saw one a little while ago, but he got away
before I could get pretty near.” “Good! “I
thought. “Here is a grammarian. Not one boy in ten in this
country but would have said ‘I seen.’” A scholar like this was worth
talking
with. “Are there many rabbits here?” I asked. “Yes, sir,
there’s a good deal.” And so, by
easy mental stages, I was clear of the swamp and back in the
town, — saved from the horrible, and delivered to the commonplace and
the
dreary. My best
days in Sanford were two that I spent on the river above the
lake. A youthful boatman, expert alike with the oar and the gun,
served me
faithfully and well, impossible as it was for him to enter fully into
the
spirit of a man who wanted to look at birds, but not to kill them. I
think he
had never before seen a customer of that breed. First he rowed me up
the
“creek,” under promise to show me alligators, moccasins, and no lack
of birds,
including the especially desired purple gallinule. The snakes were
somehow
missing (a loss not irreparable), and so were the purple gallinules;
for them,
the boy thought, it was still rather early in the season, although he
had
killed one a few days before, and for proof had brought me a wing. But
as we
were skirting along the shore I suddenly called “Hist!”
An alligator lay on the bank just before us.
The boy turned his head, and instantly was all excitement. It was a big
fellow,
he said, — one of three big ones that inhabited the creek. He would get
him
this time. “Are you sure?” I asked. “Oh yes, I’ll blow the top of his
head
off.” He was loaded for gallinules, and I, being no sportsman, and
never having
seen an alligator before, was some shades less confident. But it was
his game,
and I left him to his way. He pulled the boat noiselessly against the
bank in
the shelter of tall reeds, put down the oars, with which he could
almost have
touched the alligator, and took up his gun. At that moment the creature
got
wind of us, and slipped incontinently into the water, not a little to
my
relief. One live alligator is worth a dozen dead ones, to my thinking.
He
showed his back above the surface of the stream for a moment shortly
afterward,
and then disappeared for good. Ornithologically,
the creek was a disappointment. We pushed into one
bay after another, among the dense “bonnets,” — huge leaves of the
common
yellow pond lily, — but found nothing that I had not seen before. Here
and
there a Florida gallinule put up its head among the leaves, or took
flight as
we pressed too closely upon it; but I saw them to no advantage, and
with a
single exception they were dumb. One bird, as it dashed into the
rushes,
uttered two or three cries that sounded familiar. The Florida gallinule
is in
general pretty silent, I think; but he has a noisy season; then he is
indeed
noisy enough. A swamp containing a single pair might be supposed to be
populous with barn-yard fowls, the fellow keeps up such a clatter: now
loud and
terror-stricken, “like a hen whose head is just going to be cut off,”
as a
friend once expressed it; then soft and full of content, as if the
aforesaid
hen had laid an egg ten minutes before, and were still felicitating
herself
upon the achievement. It was vexatious that here, in the very home of
Florida
gallinules, I should see and hear less of them than I had more than
once done
in Massachusetts, where they are esteemed a pretty choice rarity, and
where, in
spite of what I suppose must be called exceptional good luck, my
acquaintance
with them had been limited to perhaps half a dozen birds. But in
affairs of
this kind a direct chase is seldom the best rewarded. At one point the
boatman
pulled up to a thicket of small willows, bidding me be prepared to see
birds in
enormous numbers; but we found only a small company of night herons
—evidently
breeding there — and a green heron. The latter my boy shot before I
knew what
he was doing. He took my reproof in good part, protesting that he had
had only
a glimpse of the bird, and had taken it for a possible gallinule. In
the course
of the trip we saw, besides the species already named, great blue and
little
blue herons, pied-billed grebes, coots, cormorants, a flock of small
sandpipers
(on the wing), buzzards, vultures, fish-hawks, and innumerable
red-winged
blackbirds. Three days
afterward we went up the river. At the upper end of the lake
were many white-billed coots (Fulica americana); so many that
we did our best
to count them as they rose, flock after flock, dragging their feet over
the
water behind them with a multitudinous splashing noise. There were a
thousand,
at least. They had an air of being not so very shy, but they were
nobody’s
fools. “See there!” my boy would exclaim, as a hundred or two of them
dashed
past the boat “see how they keep just out of range!” We were
hardly on the river itself before he fell into a state of
something like frenzy at the sight of an otter swimming before us,
showing its
head, and then diving. He made after it in hot haste, and fired I know
not how
many times, but all for nothing. He had killed several before now, he
said, but
had never been obliged to chase one in this fashion. Perhaps there was
a Jonah
in the ship; for though I sympathized with the boy, I sympathized also,
and
still more warmly, with the otter. It acted as if life were dear to it,
and for
aught I knew it had as good a right to live as either the boy or I. No such
qualms disturbed me a few minutes later, when, as the boat was
grazing the reeds, I espied just ahead a snake lying in wait among
them. I gave
the alarm, and the boy looked round. “Yes,” he said, “a big one, a
moccasin, —
a cotton-mouth; but I’ll fix him.” He pulled a stroke or two nearer,
then
lifted his oar and brought it down splash; but the reeds broke the
blow, and
the moccasin slipped into the water, apparently unharmed. That was a
case for
powder and shot. Florida people have a poor opinion of a man who meets
a venomous
snake, no matter where, without doing his best to kill it. How strong
the
feeling is my boatman gave me proof within ten minutes after his
failure with
the cotton-mouth. He had pulled out into the middle of the river, when
I
noticed a beautiful snake, short and rather stout, lying coiled on the
water. Whether it
was an optical illusion I cannot say, but it seemed to me
that the creature lay entirely above the surface, —as if it had been an
inflated skin rather than a live snake. We passed close by it, but it
made no
offer to move, only darting out its tongue as the boat slipped past. I
spoke to
the boy, who at once ceased rowing. “I think I
must go back and kill that fellow,” he said. “Why so?”
I asked, with surprise, for I had looked upon it simply as a
curiosity. “Oh, I
don’t like to see it live. It’s the poisonousest snake there is.” As he
spoke he turned the boat: but the snake saved him further trouble,
for just then it uncoiled and swam directly toward us, as if it meant
to come
aboard. “Oh, you’re coming this way, are you?” said the boy
sarcastically.
“Well, come on!” The snake came on, and when it got well within range
he took
up his fishing-rod (with hooks at the end for drawing game out of the
reeds and
bonnets), and the next moment the snake lay dead upon the water. He
slipped the
end of the pole under it and slung it ashore. “There! how do you like
that?”
said he, and he headed the boat upstream again. It was a
“copper-bellied
moccasin,” he declared, whatever that may be, and was worse than a
rattlesnake. On the
river, as in the creek, we were continually exploring bays and
inlets, each with its promising patch of bonnets. Nearly every such
place
contained at least one Florida gallinule; but where were the
“purples,” about
which we kept talking, — the “royal purples,” concerning whose beauty
my boy
was so eloquent? “They are
not common yet,” he would say. “By and by they will be as
thick as Florida are now.” “But don’t
they stay here all winter?” “No, sir;
not the purples.” “Are you
certain about that?” “Oh yes,
sir. I have hunted this river too much. They couldn’t be here
in the winter without my knowing it.” I wondered
whether he could be right, or partly right, notwithstanding
the book statements to the contrary. I notice that Mr. Chapman,
writing of his
experiences with this bird at Gainesville, says, “None were seen until
May 25,
when, in a part of the lake before unvisited, — a mass of floating
islands and
‘bonnets,’ — I found them not uncommon.” The boy’s assertions may be
worth
recording, at any rate. In one
place he fired suddenly, and as he put down the gun he exclaimed,
“There! I’ll bet I’ve shot a bird you never saw before. It had a bill
as long
as that,” with one finger laid crosswise upon another. He hauled the
prize into
the boat, and sure enough, it was a novelty, — a king rail, new to both
of us.
We had gone a little farther, and were passing a prairie, on which were
pools
of water where the boy said he had often seen large flocks of white
ibises
feeding (there were none there now, alas, though we crept up with all
cautiousness to peep over the bank), when all at once I descried some
sharp-winged, strange-looking bird over our heads. It showed sidewise
at the
moment, but an instant later it turned, and I saw its long forked tail,
and
almost in the same breath its white head. A fork-tailed kite! and
purple
gallinules were for the time forgotten. It was performing the most
graceful
evolutions, swooping half-way to the earth from a great height, and
then
sweeping upward again. Another minute, and I saw a second bird, farther
away. I
watched the nearer one till it faded from sight, soaring and swooping
by
turns, — its long, scissors-shaped tail all the while fully spread, —
but
never coming down, as its habit is said to be, to skim over the surface
of the
water. There is nothing more beautiful on wings, I believe: a large
hawk, with
a swallow’s grace of form, color, and motion. I saw it once more (four
birds)
over the St. Mark’s River, and counted the sight one of the chief
rewards of my
Southern winter. At noon we
rested and ate our luncheon in the shade of three or four
tall palmetto-trees standing by themselves on a broad prairie, a place
brightened by beds of blue iris and stretches of golden senecio, —
homelike as
well as pretty, both of them. Then we set out again. The day was
intensely hot
(March 24), and my oarsman was more than half sick with a sudden cold.
I begged
him to take things easily, but he soon experienced an almost
miraculous
renewal of his forces. In one of the first of our after-dinner bonnet
patches,
he seized his gun, fired, and began to shout, “A purple! a purple!” He
drew the
bird in, as proud as a prince. “There, sir!” he said; “didn’t I tell
you it was
handsome? It has every color there is.”
And indeed it was handsome, worthy to be called the “Sultana; with the
most
exquisite iridescent bluish-purple plumage, the legs yellow, or
greenish-yellow
(a point by which it may be distinguished from the Florida gallinule,
as the
bird flies from you), the bill red tipped with pale green, and the
shield (on
the forehead, like a continuation of the upper mandible) light blue, of
a
peculiar shade, “just as if it had been painted.” From that moment the
boy was
a new creature. Again and again he spoke of his altered feelings. He
could pull
the boat now anywhere I wanted to go. He was perfectly fresh, he
declared, although
I thought he had already done a pretty good day’s work under that
scorching
sun. I had not imagined how deeply his heart was set upon showing me
the bird I
was after. It made me twice as glad to see it, dead though it was. Within an
hour, on our way homeward, we came upon another. It sprang out
of the lily pads, and sped toward the tall grass of the shore. “Look!
look! a
purple!” the boy cried. “See his yellow legs!” Instinctively he raised
his gun,
but I said No. It would be inexcusable to shoot a second one; and
besides, we
were at that moment approaching a bird about which I felt a stronger
curiosity,
— a snake-bird, or water-turkey, sitting in a willow shrub at the
further end
of the bay. “Pull me as near it as it will let us come,” I said. “I
want to see
as much of it as possible.” At every rod or two I stopped the boat and
put up
my glasses, till we were within perhaps sixty feet of the bird. Then it
took
wing, but instead of flying away went sweeping about us. On getting
round to
the willows again it made as if it would alight, uttering at the same
time some
faint ejaculations, like “ah! ah! ah!” but it kept on for a second
sweep of the
circle. Then it perched in its old place, but faced us a little less
directly,
so that I could see the beautiful silver tracery of its wings, like the
finest
of embroidery, as I thought. After we had eyed it for some minutes we
suddenly
perceived a second bird, ten feet or so from it, in full sight. Where
it came
from, or how too, shaped like a narrow wedge, was unconscionably long;
and as
the bird showed against the sky, I could think of nothing but an
animated sign
of addition. A better man —the Emperor Constantine, shall we say? — might have seen in it a nobler symbol. While we
were loitering down the river, later in the afternoon, an eagle
made its appearance far overhead, the first one of the day. The boy,
for some
reason, refused to believe that it was an eagle. Nothing but a sight of
its
white head and tail through the glass could convince him. (The
perfectly square
set of the wings as the bird sails is a pretty strong mark, at no
matter what
distance.) Presently an osprey, not far from us, with a fish in his
claws, set
up a violent screaming. “It is because he has caught a fish,” said the
boy; “he
is calling his mate.” “No,” said
I, “it is because the eagle is after him. Wait a bit.” In
fact, the eagle was already in pursuit, and the hawk, as he always
does, had
begun struggling upward with all his might. That is the fish-hawk’s way
of
appealing to Heaven against his oppressor. He was safe for that time.
Three
negroes, shad-fishers, were just beyond us (we had seen them there in
the
morning, wading about the river setting their nets), and at the sight
of them
and of us, I have no doubt, the eagle turned away. The boy was not
peculiar in
his notion about the osprey’s scream. Some one else had told me that
the bird
always screamed after catching a fish. But I knew better, having seen
him
catch a hundred, more or less, without uttering a sound. The safe rule,
in such
cases, is to listen to all you hear, and believe it — after you have
verified
it for yourself. It was
while we were discussing this question, I think, that the boy
opened his heart to me about my methods of study. He had looked through
the
glass now and then, and of course had been astonished at its power.
“Why,” he
said finally, “I never had any idea it could be so much fun just to
look at
birds in the way you do!” I liked the turn of his phrase. It seemed to
say, “Yes,
I begin to see through it. We are in the same boat. This that you call
study
is only another kind of sport.” I could have shaken hands with him but
that he
had the oars. Who does not love to be flattered by an ingenuous boy? All in
all, the day had been one to be remembered. In addition to the
birds already named — three of them new to me — we had seen great blue
herons,
little blue herons, Louisiana herons, night herons, cormorants,
pied-billed
grebes, kingfishers, red-winged blackbirds, boat-tailed grackles,
redpoll and
myrtle warblers, savanna sparrows, tree swallows, purple martins, a few
meadow
larks, and the ubiquitous turkey buzzard. The boat-tails abounded along
the
river banks, and, with their tameness and their ridiculous outcries,
kept us
amused whenever there was nothing else to absorb our attention. The
prairie
lands through which the river meanders proved to be surprisingly dry
and
passable (the water being unusually low, the boy said), with many
cattle
pastured upon them. Here we found the savanna sparrows; here, too, the
meadow
larks were singing. It was a
hard pull across the rough lake against the wind (a dangerous
sheet of water for flat-bottomed rowboats, I was told afterward), but
the boy
was equal to it, protesting that he didn’t feel tired a bit, now we had
got the
purples; and if he did not catch the fever from drinking some quarts of
river
water (a big bottle of coffee having proved to be only a drop in the
bucket),
against my urgent remonstrances and his own judgment, I am sure he
looks back
upon the labor as on the whole well spent. He was going North in the
spring, he
told me. May joy be with him wherever he is! The next
morning I took the steamer down the river to Blue Spring, a
distance of some thirty miles, on my way back to New Smyrna, to a place
where
there were accessible woods, a beach, and, not least, a daily sea
breeze. The
river in that part of its course is comfortably narrow, — a great
advantage, —
winding through cypress swamps, hammock woods, stretches of prairie,
and in
one place a pine barren; an interesting and in many ways beautiful
country, but
so unwholesome looking as to lose much of its attractiveness. Three or
four
large alligators lay sunning themselves in the most obliging manner
upon the
banks, here one and there one, to the vociferous delight of the
passengers, who
ran from one side of the deck to the other, as the captain shouted and
pointed.
One, he told us, was thirteen feet long, the largest in the river. Each
appeared to have its own well-worn sunning-spot, and all, I believe,
kept their
places, as if the passing of the big steamer — almost too big for the
river at
some of the sharper turns — had come to seem a commonplace event.
Herons in the
usual variety were present, with ospreys, an eagle, kingfishers, ground
doves,
Carolina doves, blackbirds (red-wings and boat-tails), tree swallows,
purple
martins, and a single wild turkey, the first one I had ever seen. It
was near
the bank of the river, on a bushy prairie, fully exposed, and crouched
as the
steamer passed. For a Massachusetts ornithologist the mere sight of
such a bird
was enough to make a pretty good Thanksgiving Day. Blue yellow-backed
warblers
were singing here and there, and I retain a particular remembrance of
one
bluebird that warbled to us from the pine-woods. The captain told me,
somewhat
to my surprise, that he had seen two flocks of paroquets during the
winter
(they had been very abundant along the river within his time, he said),
but for
me there was no such fortune. One bird, soaring in company with a
buzzard at a
most extraordinary height straight over the river, greatly excited my
curiosity. The captain declared that it must be a great blue heron; but
he had
never seen one thus engaged, nor, so far as I can learn, has any one
else ever
done so. Its upper parts seemed to be mostly white, and I can only
surmise that
it may have been a sandhill crane, a bird which is said to have such a
habit. As I left
the boat I had a little experience of the seamy side of
Southern travel; nothing to be angry about, perhaps, but annoying,
nevertheless, on a hot day. I surrendered my check to the purser of the
boat,
and the deck hands put my trunk upon the landing at Blue Spring. But
there was
no one there to receive it, and the station was locked. We had missed
the noon
train, with which we were advertised to connect, by so many hours that
I had
ceased to think about it. Finally, a negro, one of several who were
fishing
thereabouts, advised me to go “up to the house,” which he pointed out
behind
some woods, and see the agent. This I did, and the agent, in turn,
advised me
to walk up the track to the “Junction,” and be sure to tell the
conductor, when
the evening train arrived, as it probably would do some hours later,
that I
had a trunk at the landing. Otherwise the train would not run down to
the
river, and my baggage would lie there till Monday. He would go down
presently
and put it under cover. Happily, he fulfilled his promise, for it was
already
beginning to thunder, and soon it rained in torrents, with a cold wind
that
made the hot weather all at once a thing of the past. It was a
long wait in the dreary little station; or rather it would have
been, had not the tedium of it been relieved by the presence of a newly
married
couple, whose honeymoon was just then at the full. Their delight in
each other
was exuberant, effervescent, beatific, — what shall I say? — quite beyond veiling or restraint. At
first I bestowed upon them sidewise and cornerwise glances only, hiding
bashfully behind my spectacles, as it were, and pretending to see
nothing; but
I soon perceived that I was to them of no more consequence than a fly
on the
wall. If they saw me, which sometimes seemed doubtful, — for love is
blind, —
they evidently thought me too sensible, or too old, to mind a little
billing
and cooing. And they were right in their opinion. What was I in Florida
for, if
not for the study of natural history? And
truly, I have seldom seen, even among birds, a pair
less sophisticated,
less cabined and confined by that disastrous knowledge of good and
evil which
is commonly understood to have resulted from the eating of forbidden
fruit, and
which among prudish people goes by the name of modesty. It was
refreshing.
Charles Lamb himself would have enjoyed it, and, I should hope, would
have
added some qualifying footnotes to a certain unamiable essay of his
concerning
the behavior of married people. |