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XIII EARLY MORNING STUDIES MY bedroom, when I woke
this morning, was full of bird-songs, which is the greatest pleasure in life,
says Robert Louis Stevenson in one of his letters, thus expressing in his own
felicitous way the sentiments of bird-lovers the world over. Few things in this
matter-of-fact existence are more delightful than to be called out of dreamland
by the sweet voices of birds, and to lie half awake, yet wholly conscious, to
enjoy them, before plunging into the storm and stress of our daily lives. The
morning-song is the most cherished pleasure of the bird-lover's day. These early concerts are
always interesting, and nearly all of them are charming, but it is not
generally recognized that there is great diversity among them. The study of our little
brothers is made peculiarly fascinating by the fact that they show character
and individuality in every act of life, not only in song and manners, but even
in their grouping. One shall scarcely twice find exactly the same species
living together hi the neighborhood. And since they sing about their homes, the
songs of the morning in any given locality are determined by the species
resident there. In a good many years of close observation I have never found
much resemblance between the morning chorus of any two places. The exceptional charm of
the song of the morning first came into my consciousness a good many years ago
in North Carolina where the bird of the South — the mocking-bird (who deserves
a better name) — took the lead, and indeed usually furnished the entire
programme of the morning performance, — "Trying to be ten birds in one"; — sometimes, too, after having entranced me by
a glorious midnight rhapsody.
Since that awakening, the
first bird-note, be it mocking-bird or English sparrow, arouses me, and I lie
and listen to the music that comes through my wide-open windows, so long as the
overture lasts. For it is curious and suggestive that this opening song, in
which all the birds of the neighborhood seem to take part, abruptly ceases
after a certain length of time, and the efforts of the remainder of the day are
scattering and sporadic, unlike in every way. A very different service of
song greeted me in the Rocky Mountains, at the foot of Cheyenne the Beautiful,
with its tender and sad memories. The journey thither had prepared me for
changes, for I went through Nebraska. When a traveler from the
Atlantic coast enters that state, he is impressed with its wonderful adaptation
to farming. Not a hill, not a rock, not a stump to be seen. He remembers dear
New England's stony heart, and Michigan's miles of stumps, and wonders that any
one wishing to till the ground can stay where are roots to be grubbed up, rocks
to be blasted, stones to be removed, and trees to be cut, and why all the world
does not rush to this fertile plain. But as the hours go by he begins to think
fondly about variety in scenery, and to yearn for a few trees, and to long for
a rock or two, and this feeling continues and grows till, from simple irritation,
he becomes fairly exasperated with the endless flatness: the whole state pressed
down and rolled out like a pie-crust. Through acres and acres of wheat, and
miles and miles of corn, as if it had rained seed-corn, he goes, and before his
train reaches the boundary he wonders that every soul in it does n't go raving
mad from pure monotony. When he reaches the
Mountain State — Colorado — he wants to open wide the windows to get Nebraska
out of his lungs, and to take in the mountains — pure air, blue sky, deserts,
prairie-dogs, owls, and all; to get Nebraska cinders out of his eyes and her sameness
out of his soul. Around my camp in Colorado
were Western meadow-larks, chewinks, and Western wood-pewees, but the songs of
the morning were almost exclusively the dismal wails of the latter bird. Our
own pewee has a sweet and plaintive little song, but his Western brother
exaggerates it into a dirge, pessimistic in the last degree, and depressing to the
spirits, while it is so loud one cannot ignore it. Somewhat later in the day
the chewink, or towhee bunting, would ring his silver bell-like peal, and when
at its best this is one of our most exquisite bird-songs. A chewink who came
about the camp daily, added to the usual strain — which is two staccato notes followed
by a tremolo considerably higher — two more tremolos on different and lower keys,
uttered so softly one could hardly hear them, but of a liquid, rapturous
quality which defies description. A little away from our
grove the meadowlark was glorious. Sometimes I was happy enough to hear his
bewitching whisper-song in a sweet, low, trilling undertone, interpolated
between the strains of the ordinary loud performance. That is another charm of the
morning, — the frequency with which the birds indulge in these peculiar
undertone efforts, — singing to themselves, as it were, and evidently not
intending the public to hear. The diversity of sentiment about the song of the
Western meadow-lark, which we often see expressed in print, is easily explained
by the simple fact that the birds differ in quality of voice and execution. A quiet retreat in New
Hampshire, in sight of Chocorua, made famous by our lamented Frank Bolles,
offered me a peculiar and more musical morning attraction, — nothing less than
the song of the barn-swallow. Not the low, sweet utterance we are familiar with
from our bird of the hayloft, but strangely loud and clear, and poured out with
all the freedom and abandon of a bobolink. It was such an exhibition of this bird's
musical ability as I have seldom heard. The reason seemed to be that in that
neighborhood he had to sustain almost the entire burden of song, the only other
bird common about the place being the cedar-waxwing, who rarely speaks above a
whisper. This being the case, the barn-swallow rose to the occasion and assumed
his role with spirit, not only showing himself social and lively about the
house, but blossoming out as a really brilliant singer, capable of furnishing a
morning song to enchant the most critical audience. Perching himself on the
peak of the roof over a dormer window, and standing up very straight on his
tiny black legs, — contrary to the family custom of sitting, — one would sing
his quaint and charming song for half an hour at a time without pause, in so
loud a tone that I hardly recognized it at first. One morning before I was
well awake, I heard a great chattering of swallows, so near it seemed they must
be in the room. Rousing myself I looked to the window, where appeared a little
black head against the screen, constantly turning from side to side, with
bright black eyes peering into the room. He was keeping sharp watch over me,
while some sort of a conference was in progress on the roof of the piazza
before the window. There was no singing, but excited conversational notes in
many voices. As long as I made no movement the talk went on, but on my first
involuntary stirring the watchman on the sill uttered a cry, and the meeting adjourned
without ceremony. What kill-joys we have made ourselves to the birds. May mornings on the shore
of Lake Michigan were opened by the songs of a wren, — a house-wren, in wooing
time, and, — His cheerful call came to the ear, While light was slowly growing." The way through which I reached the scene of
this interesting window-study was far from charming. There were miles and miles
of stumps; whole townships of dead trees, some barked and ghastly white in the
sunshine, some blackened by fire, and acres of them lying in piled-up
confusion, as the burning of their roots had made them fall. Everywhere was
smoke and smouldering fire; everywhere among the stumps were glaring piles of
raw new lumber into which the vanished trees had been transformed; everywhere
were carloads of logs, saw-mills, and little new-board towns, looking as if put
up overnight. It was pitiful. Beyond the smoke and
depression of these scenes I found a quiet nook near the shore of the lake, and
a room with windows looking into a retired yard with trees and shrubs. The first morning in the
new quarters I was awakened by the cheerful song of the wren, and greeted my
charming neighbor with enthusiasm, for no bird shows more character and
individuality than the dull-clad midget we call a wren. He may always be depended
upon for originality, for unexpectedness, and idiosyncrasies of many sorts. He never
fails to make an interesting study. Never did a personage of
his inches pour out such floods of rapture. It was luxury to lie and listen to
the gushing, liquid melody that floated into the window at my head. I knew it was
courtship-time, and wren love-making is not of the common hackneyed sort. It is
the unique custom of that family to select and furnish a home, and then win a
bride by song, calling her out of the universe by his charm of voice. Surely no
more winsome strains could be demanded by the most exacting of little brown
wren-maidens. Knowing this custom, I was
always on hand with his first note, sharing his watch, and eager to welcome the
unknown — unknown to me — who was to respond to his eloquent appeals. Sometimes I slipped quietly
out of the sleep-bound house to enjoy the mystic charm of those hours when all
the world is in dreamland. It is a strange, almost a weird feeling to have the
whole green world to oneself, with only birds for neighbors. But by experience
only can one understand the rapture of those hours when one can say with
Whittier, —
I found that my little
lover had taken a house in the top of a gate-post a few feet from my window,
and was extremely busy putting in the furnishings for the expected bride. Never
was eager bridegroom so blithe and so busy, and never, I’m sure, was one so bewitching.
Hours every day I watched
him. In the intervals of his labors at nest-making, he sang from the top of the
post, — the roof of his house, — often with mouth loaded with building
material, so full of rapture it fairly bubbled over. Then, his strain finished,
he whisked over the edge with his load. For three days he never
tired, singing an hour or more at a time, ever looking eagerly about overhead,
turning this way and that, as if fearing she might pass and he not see her. After
that he began to seem exhausted, and his voice not quite so clear and ringing
as at first, while he stood with tail drooped to the post, and looking somewhat
anxious. I feared the sweet little drama would end in disappointment and
tragedy, and I became as anxious as he for a settlement of his matrimonial
affairs. At last! at last! My bonny
bridegroom appeared one morning, fluttering and frisking and singing to split
his throat, while conducting a stranger to the gate-post domicile. At first she alighted on
the fence not far off, and he proceeded to coax her, uttering a low "chur-r-r-r,"
with a soft, coaxing note now and then, keeping his eye on her, apparently
begging her to try the home he had provided. In a moment she flew, and he
followed, singing almost incessantly. Plainly matters were not settled — she
did not quite know her own mind. The coy damsel flitted
about, on a tree, on the fence, on the ground, and he never intermitted his
attentions nor his song. Twice he coaxed her almost to the door, but at the
last moment she would not. Evidently entering the offered quarters constitutes
acceptance in Bird-land. Many times that day these
scenes were enacted, and I became as absorbed in his courtship as I ever do in
the varying fortunes of similar character in human life, or in a novel. Nor is
the difference so great as one might imagine — birds are wonderfully human in
their ways. It was noon of the next day
before the bride was won and concluded to enter the apartment offered her. Then
my little hero went wild with joy, singing like mad, fluttering his wings,
flying up in the air. He seemed hardly able to contain himself. Then, too, he
instantly began vigorously dressing his plumage, for birds are careful or
indifferent , to their personal appearance according to their emotions, exactly
as are their human brothers. After this came a
difference in the wren's behavior. He was now the sedate head of a family. He
still sang, but not so loud or so urgently as before, — his audience was near
at hand; wooing was ended and home-life had begun. And now I made the
acquaintance of the bride, who soon began to appear on the gatepost in the role
of mistress. Though their dress was the same, I had no difficulty in
distinguishing the pair. She was all airs and flirty ways, posturing, flitting
about with tail held up at an angle (though never, as usually pictured,
pointing, to ward the head). The bridegroom appeared
somewhat subdued, and I began to fear that life was not all roses to the poor
little fellow. She was, it must be admitted, a little coquettish, and made my
gentleman keep his distance, greeting him with a sharp note if he came too
near, and sometimes pretending to fly at him, upon which he quietly retired a
few inches, still evidently regarding her with admiration and devotion. Once I saw her bathe. There
had been a quiet rain without wind, and every leaf was loaded with water. She
flew from her nest to a fruit-tree, rubbed against a bunch of leaves, and then
fluttered and shook herself violently. This she repeated until wet as she desired,
when she gave herself up to an elaborate dressing and arranging of her
draperies. I could not stay to see
this charming pair through their honeymoon, — nor what was more important — to
protect the little home so dangerously exposed to every one that passed, but I
confided them to a sympathetic household, and left them with the fervent hope that
all went well, and that wren-song will make joyous many more mornings beside
the blue waters. |