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Part Three:
The Later Spring Birds
The Migration of Birds
The night comes on apace. The rain, * * * * *
The songsters bold that fly by day, A.E.B. |
The Tree Swallow
First of the swallow host they speed A.E.B. |
TREE SWALLOW
Little birds sit on the telegraph-wires, And chitter, and flitter, and fold their wings; Maybe they think that for them and their sires Stretched always, on purpose, those wonderful strings: And perhaps the Thought that the world inspires Did plan for the birds, among other things.
Little birds sit on the slender lines, Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney |
The Barn Swallow
And after April, when May follows, Browning
We come from the land of the South so gay,
With a flutter of joy, for the journey long
Our steel-blue backs like the waters shine,
The garlanded trees in the orchard fair, A.E.B. |
BARN SWALLOW
How the Swallow's Tail Became Forked
"Great Spirit" summoned to a grove
Fleet-winged birds and insects came:
Next sped the squirrel, rabbit, fox,
Each told how others preyed on him,
Man said, "Great Spirit, only birds
Bee buzzed, Owl hooted, Serpent hissed,
"Man, you are right; you are attacked
How they can best make friends with Man."
Then Swallow, darting swiftly down,
The treacherous serpent glided forth
Old Snake's curved, venomed mouth tore part A.E.B. |
The Purple Martin
Bird beloved by keen-eyed Indians,
Martins seek the sheltering houses, A.E.B. |
PURPLE MARTIN
This guest of summer, The temple-haunting martlet, does approve By his loved mansionery that the heaven's breath Smells wooingly here: no jutty, frieze, Buttress, nor coign of vantage, but this bird Hath made his pendant bed. Shakespeare: "Macbeth" |
The Chimney Swift
Some soft spring day, athwart the sky,
Such flapping and whirling and wheeling about,
Their nests are pockets against the wall, A.E.B. |
CHIMNEY SWIFT
The Nighthawk
In the far-off land of China,
There are birds that fly at twilight,
Gracefully they fly o'er housetops; A.E.B. |
NIGHTHAWK
The Whip-poor-will
When wingèd creatures for the night
He opens wide his monstrous mouth, A.E.B. |
WHIP-POOR-WILL
The House Wren
When apple-blooms are hanging
If you waken in the morning
Burst the wren's sweet notes of rapture; * * * * *
You may find him in the orchard,
When the honeymoon is over,
Flower-pot, can or hanging milk-pail,
Tiny, hungry, clamoring babies
But her irritable temper
She may drive away intruders,
For her skill, and her devotion A.E.B. |
HOUSE WREN
*The Oven-Bird or Gold-Crowned Thrush
Where the Veery breathes through organ-pipes
He, gold-crowned thrush, eludes our gaze; A.E.B. |
OVEN-BIRD
The Oven-Bird
In the hollows of the mountains,
Underneath them lie the leaf beds
In the days of spring migrations,
Daintily the leaves he tiptoes;
Hour by hour his voice he raises,
Strange, ventriloquous his music,
Teach us! Teach us! in his asking,
When the whip-poor-will is clucking,
Noontide never sees this soaring, Frank Bolles
--------- (Used by permission of D. Appleton & Co. Copyright, 1903.) |
The Wood Thrush
We heed thy call, O bird of the wood,
Thou art worthy to dwell in such sacred spot,
Is thy hymn of praise to the God of the Spring? A.E.B. |
WOOD THRUSH
At even Like liquid pearls fresh showered from heaven, The high notes of the lone wood-thrush Fall on the forest's holy hush. John Townsend Trowbridge
At the bent
spray's edge, Browning
This is a spray the Bird clung to, Browning: From "Misconceptions" |
The Brown Thrasher
He sings each song twice over, Browning
Darting about in the thickets,
"Listen, O listen!" he's saying; A.E.B. |
BROWN THRASHER
The Throstle
(The song of the English throstle or thrush resembles
"Summer is coming, summer is coming.
Sing the new year in under the blue.
"Love again, song again, nest again, young again,"
"Here again, here, here, here, happy year!" Tennyson
And hark! how blithe the throstle sings! Wordsworth |
The Catbird
Gay and restless are the catbirds,
Now they crouch like Maltese kittens--
Loving, tender, anxious Mother
He defends the nests of others,
Intelligent, a clever mimic, A.E.B. |
CATBIRD
The Catbird
He sits on a branch of yon blossoming brush
Dear merry mocker, your mimic art Edith M. Thomas |
The Mockingbird
A singer, one hour, with yearning heart,
The poets sing oft of his exquisite lays, A.E.B. |
MOCKINGBIRD
The Yellow-Billed Cuckoo
You slender, shy and dovelike bird, A.E.B. |
YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO
To The Cuckoo
O blithe New-comer! I have heard, * * * * *
Thrice welcome, darling of the Spring! * * * * *
To seek thee did I often rove Wordsworth |
The Legend of the First Humming-Bird
Once on a time, two Indians sped
Against the sky they saw it glow
Smoke floated away from its flaming top,
"How angry he must be with our tribe!"
Its glow had faded in broad daylight,
They hastened down to tell the tribe
For many a month the Indians dwelt
One night when the people were all asleep,
They flung great rocks up toward the sky,
They leaped on trees, devoured the leaves,
They poured down melted rock, red-hot,
At last Great Spirit's voice rang out;
Fire Spirit begged her Master great
Great Spirit heeded her not, but struck
One beautiful little flame was left.
Great Spirit gave it a gentle touch,
A red flame burned at its tiny throat-- A.E.B. |
RUBY-THROATED HUMMING BIRD
The Humming-Bird
Dancer of air,
Jewelled coryphée,
The phlox, milk-white,
Swift weaves thy maze
The grave thrush sings
Yet doth love's glow
Of brooding thrush! Ednah Proctor Clarke |
The Indigo-Bird or Indigo Bunting
His plumage is bright as the sapphire blue A.E.B. |
INDIGO-BIRD
The Baltimore Oriole
W W
A flash of flame from a swaying bough
This restless, eager, burning bird A.E.B. |
BALTIMORE ORIOLE
The Oriole
Hush I 'tis he! Lowell
To An Oriole
How falls it, Oriole, thou hast come to fly
At some glad moment was it Nature's choice
Or did an orange tulip, flaked with black,
Yearning toward Heaven until its wish was heard, Edgar Fawcett |
*The Orchard Oriole
More modest in dress is this chestnut bird,
His beauty he hides amidst blossoming boughs, A.E.B.
-------- |
ORCHARD ORIOLE
The Scarlet Tanager
Why seems the world so fair to-day?
And lo! within a dim, green bower
To his olive mate he called "Chip-chur!" A.E.B. |
SCARLET TANAGER
The Rose-Breasted Grosbeak
I'm a dusky bird with the breast of a rose,
I've a joyous song like the robin's note,
I am one of the songsters that sing at night, A.E.B. |
ROSE-BREASTED GROSBEAK
The Bobolink
No poet can sing as he would of you! A.E.B. |
BOBOLINK
*Robert of Lincoln
Merrily swinging on brier and weed,
Robert of Lincoln is gayly drest,
Robert of Lincoln's Quaker wife,
Modest and shy as a nun is she;
Six white eggs on a bed of hay,
Soon as the little ones chip the shell,
Robert of Lincoln at length is made
Summer wanes; the children are grown; William Cullen Bryant
*NOTE.--Reprinted by permission of |
The Goldfinch
This child of Apollo has wings of night,
His musical voice is heard at his play,
He worships the Muse, Terpsichore;
A.E.B.
*NOTE.--Call given thus in Mr. Frank Chapman's |
GOLDFINCH
The Goldfinch
Sometimes goldfinches one by one will drop Keats |
The Yellow Warbler
"O, che-che-che-che-che-a-wee?" A.E.B. |
YELLOW WARBLER
O joy of life, O joy of love! When cloudless skies are blue above, In starry spring! When happy warblers on the wing Do mating build their nests and sing. O joy of life! Stuart Sterne |
The Maryland Yellow-Throat
A host of warblers northward come in May,
We glimpse your dainty coat of olive green,
O'er sparkling streamlets, rimmed with many a reed,
Your brooding mate rocks gently to and fro, A.E.B. |
MARYLAND YELLOW-THROAT
*The Maryland Yellow-Throat
While May bedecks the naked trees
An incantation so serene, Henry van Dyke
*NOTE.--Reprinted by permission of |
*The Red-Eyed Vireo
Do you hear me? Don't you know
I've a gray head, eyebrows light,
Do you hear it? Will you heed it? A.E.B. |
RED-EYED VIREO
*NOTE.--Wilson Flagg's description of the Red-eye exactly reflects
the character of the bird and its song: "The Preacher is more generally known
by his note, because he is incessant in his song.... His style of preaching
is not declamation. Though constantly talking, he takes the part of a
deliberative orator, with a pause between each sentence. 'You see it--you
know it--do you hear me?--do you believe it?' All these strains are delivered
with a rising inflection at the close, and with a pause, as if waiting for
an answer."
From Chapman's "Birds of Eastern North America." (Used by permission of D. Appleton & Co. Copyright, 1903. ) |
The Wood Pewee
In old deserted orchards,
Such pathos in his long-drawn note, A.E.B. |
WOOD PEWEE
The Pewee
I ...sat me down John Townsend Trowbridge |
The Kingbird
I'm a king, though my gold crown hides in black,
I've the valiant heart of a mighty king
My little feathered friends I shield
I'll whisper a secret! Keep it safe! A.E.B. |
KINGBIRD
The Sandpiper
By a tiny pool or a silvery stream; A.E.B |
SANDPIPER
The Sandpiper
Across the narrow beach we flit,
Above our heads the sullen clouds
I watch him as he skims along,
Comrade, where wilt thou be to-night Celia Thaxter |