I am sitting upon the upland bank
of a narrow winding creek. Before me is a sea
of grass, brown and green of many shades. To the
north the marsh is bounded by live-oak woods,-a
line with numberless indentations,-beyond
which runs the Matanzas River, as I know by the passing
and repassing of sails behind the trees. Eastward
are sand-hills, dazzling white in the sun, with a
ragged green fringe along their tops. Then comes
a stretch of the open sea, and then, more to the south,
St. Anastasia Island, with its tall black-and-white
lighthouse and the cluster of lower buildings at its
base. Small sailboats, and now and then a tiny
steamer, pass up and down the river to and from St.
Augustine.
A delicious south wind is blowing
(it is the 15th of February), and I sit in the shade
of a cedar-tree and enjoy the air and the scene.
A contrast, this, to the frozen world I was living
in, less than a week ago.
As I approached the creek, a single
spotted sandpiper was teetering along the edge of
the water, and the next moment a big blue heron rose
just beyond him and went flapping away to the middle
of the marsh. Now, an hour afterward, he is still
standing there, towering above the tall grass.
Once when I turned that way I saw, as I thought, a
stake, and then something moved upon it,-a
bird of some kind. And what an enormous beak!
I raised my field-glass. It was the heron.
His body was the post, and his head was the bird.
Meanwhile, the sandpiper has stolen away, I know not
when or where. He must have omitted the tweet,
tweet, with which ordinarily he signalizes his
flight. He is the first of his kind that I have
seen during my brief stay in these parts.
Now a multitude of crows pass over;
fish crows, I think they must be, from their small
size and their strange, ridiculous voices. And
now a second great blue heron comes in sight, and
keeps on over the marsh and over the live-oak wood,
on his way to the San Sebastian marshes, or some point
still more remote. A fine show he makes, with
his wide expanse of wing, and his feet drawn up and
standing out behind him. Next a marsh hawk in
brown plumage comes skimming over the grass. This
way and that he swerves in ever graceful lines.
For one to whom ease and grace come by nature, even
the chase of meadow mice is an act of beauty, while
another goes awkwardly though in pursuit of a goddess.
Several times I have noticed a kingfisher
hovering above the grass (so it looks, but no doubt
he is over an arm of the creek), striking the air
with quick strokes, and keeping his head pointed downward,
after the manner of a tern. Then he disappeared
while I was looking at something else. Now I
remark him sitting motionless upon the top of a post
in the midst of the marsh.
A third blue heron appears, and he
too flies over without stopping. Number One still
keeps his place; through the glass I can see him dressing
his feathers with his clumsy beak. The lively
strain of a white-eyed vireo, pertest of songsters,
comes to me from somewhere on my right, and the soft
chipping of myrtle warblers is all but incessant.
I look up from my paper to see a turkey buzzard sailing
majestically northward. I watch him till he fades
in the distance. Not once does he flap his wings,
but sails and sails, going with the wind, yet turning
again and again to rise against it,-helping
himself thus to its adverse, uplifting pressure in
the place of wing-strokes, perhaps,-and
passing onward all the while in beautiful circles.
He, too, scavenger though he is, has a genius for
being graceful. One might almost be willing to
be a buzzard, to fly like that!
The kingfisher and the heron are still
at their posts. An exquisite yellow butterfly,
of a sort strange to my Yankee eyes, flits past, followed
by a red admiral. The marsh hawk is on the wing
again, and while looking at him I descry a second
hawk, too far away to be made out. Now the air
behind me is dark with crows,-a hundred
or two, at least, circling over the low cedars.
Some motive they have for all their clamor, but it
passes my owlish wisdom to guess what it can be.
A fourth blue heron appears, and drops into the grass
out of sight.
Between my feet is a single blossom
of the yellow oxalis, the only flower to be seen;
and very pretty it is, each petal with an orange spot
at the base.
Another buzzard, another marsh hawk,
another yellow butterfly, and then a smaller one,
darker, almost orange. It passes too quickly over
the creek and away. The marsh hawk comes nearer,
and I see the strong yellow tinge of his plumage,
especially underneath. He will grow handsomer
as he grows older. A pity the same could not
be true of men. Behind me are sharp cries of
titlarks. From the direction of the river come
frequent reports of guns. Somebody is doing his
best to be happy! All at once I prick up my ears.
From the grass just across the creek rises the brief,
hurried song of a long-billed marsh wren. So he
is in Florida, is he? Already I have heard confused
noises which I feel sure are the work of rails of
some kind. No doubt there is abundant life concealed
in those acres on acres of close grass.
The heron and the kingfisher are still
quiet. Their morning hunt was successful, and
for to-day Fate cannot harm them. A buzzard, with
nervous, rustling beats, goes directly above the low
cedar under which I am resting.
At last, after a siesta of two hours,
the heron has changed his place. I looked up
just in season to see him sweeping over the grass,
into which he dropped the next instant. The tide
is falling. The distant sand-hills are winking
in the heat, but the breeze is deliciously cool, the
very perfection of temperature, if a man is to sit
still in the shade. It is eleven o’clock.
I have a mile to go in the hot sun, and turn away.
But first I sweep the line once more with my glass.
Yonder to the south are two more blue herons standing
in the grass. Perhaps there are more still.
I sweep the line. Yes, far, far away I can see
four heads in a row. Heads and necks rise above
the grass. But so far away! Are they birds,
or only posts made alive by my imagination? I
look again. I believe I was deceived. They
are nothing but stakes. See how in a row they
stand. I smile at myself. Just then one of
them moves, and another is pulled down suddenly into
the grass. I smile again. “Ten great
blue herons,” I say to myself.
All this has detained me, and meantime
the kingfisher has taken wing and gone noisily up
the creek. The marsh hawk appears once more.
A killdeer’s sharp, rasping note-a
familiar sound in St. Augustine-comes from
I know not where. A procession of more than twenty
black vultures passes over my head. I can see
their feet drawn up under them. My own I must
use in plodding homeward.