Canst thou imagine where those
spirits live
Which make such delicate music
in the woods?
SHELLEY.
BIRD-SONGS.
Why do birds sing? Has their
music a meaning, or is it all a matter of blind impulse?
Some bright morning in March, as you go out-of-doors,
you are greeted by the notes of the first robin.
Perched in a leafless tree, there he sits, facing
the sun like a genuine fire-worshiper, and singing
as though he would pour out his very soul. What
is he thinking about? What spirit possesses him?
It is easy to ask questions until the simplest matter comes to seem, what at
bottom it really is, a thing altogether mysterious; but if our robin could
understand us, he would, likely enough, reply:-
“Why do you talk in this way,
as if it were something requiring explanation that
a bird should sing? You seem to have forgotten
that everybody sings, or almost everybody. Think
of the insects,-the bees and the crickets
and the locusts, to say nothing of your intimate friends,
the mosquitoes! Think, too, of the frogs and the
hylas! If these cold-blooded, low-lived creatures,
after sleeping all winter in the mud, are free
to make so much use of their voices, surely a bird
of the air may sing his unobtrusive song without being
cross-examined concerning the purpose of it.
Why do the mice sing, and the monkeys, and the woodchucks?
Indeed, sir,-if one may be so bold,-why
do you sing, yourself?”
This matter-of-fact Darwinism need
not frighten us. It will do us no harm to remember,
now and then, “the hole of the pit whence we
were digged;” and besides, as far as any relationship
between us and the birds is concerned, it is doubtful
whether we are the party to complain.
But avoiding “genealogies and
contentions,” and taking up the question with
which we began, we may safely say that birds sing,
sometimes to gratify an innate love for sweet sounds;
sometimes to win a mate, or to tell their love to
a mate already won; sometimes as practice, with a
view to self-improvement; and sometimes for no better
reason than the poet’s,-“I
do but sing because I must.” In general,
they sing for joy; and their joy, of course, has various
causes.
For one thing, they are very sensitive
to the weather. With them, as with us, sunlight
and a genial warmth go to produce serenity. A
bright summer-like day, late in October, or even in
November, will set the smaller birds to singing, and
the grouse to drumming. I heard a robin venturing
a little song on the 25th of last December; but that,
for aught I know, was a Christmas carol. No matter
what the season, you will not hear a great deal of
bird music during a high wind; and if you are caught
in the woods by a sudden shower in May or June, and
are not too much taken up with thoughts of your own
condition, you will hardly fail to notice the instant
silence which falls upon the woods with the rain.
Birds, however, are more or less inconsistent (that
is, a part of their likeness to us), and sometimes
sing most freely when the sky is overcast.
But their highest joys are by no means
dependent upon the moods of the weather. A comfortable
state of mind is not to be contemned, but beings who
are capable of deep and passionate affection recognize
a difference between comfort and ecstasy. And
the peculiar glory of birds is just here, in the all-consuming
fervor of their love. It would be commonplace
to call them models of conjugal and parental faithfulness.
With a few exceptions (and these, it is a pleasure
to add, not singers), the very least of them is literally
faithful unto death. Here and there, in the notes
of some collector, we are told of a difficulty he has
had in securing a coveted specimen: the tiny
creature, whose mate had been already “collected,”
would persist in hovering so closely about the invader’s
head that it was impossible to shoot him without spoiling
him for the cabinet by blowing him to pieces!
Need there be any mystery about the
singing of such a lover? Is it surprising if
at times he is so enraptured that he can no longer
sit tamely on the branch, but must dart into the air,
and go circling round and round, caroling as he flies?
So far as song is the voice of emotion,
it will of necessity vary with the emotion; and every
one who has ears must have heard once in a while bird
music of quite unusual fervor. For example, I
have often seen the least flycatcher (a very unromantic-looking
body, surely) when he was almost beside himself; flying
in a circle, and repeating breathlessly his emphatic
chébec. And once I found a wood pewee in
a somewhat similar mood. He was more quiet than
the least flycatcher; but he too sang on the wing,
and I have never heard notes which seemed more expressive
of happiness. Many of them were entirely new and
strange, although the familiar pewee was introduced
among the rest. As I listened, I felt it to be
an occasion for thankfulness that the delighted creature
had never studied anatomy, and did not know that the
structure of his throat made it improper for him to
sing. In this connection, also, I recall a cardinal
grosbeak, whom I heard several years ago, on the bank
of the Potomac River. An old soldier had taken
me to visit the Great Falls, and as we were clambering
over the rocks this grosbeak began to sing; and soon,
without any hint from me, and without knowing who
the invisible musician was, my companion remarked upon
the uncommon beauty of the song. The cardinal
is always a great singer, having a voice which, as
European writers say, is almost equal to the nightingale’s;
but in this case the more stirring, martial quality
of the strain had given place to an exquisite mellowness,
as if it were, what I have no doubt it was, a song
of love.
Every kind of bird has notes of its
own, so that a thoroughly practiced ear would be able
to discriminate the different species with nearly as
much certainty as Professor Baird would feel after
an examination of the anatomy and plumage. Still
this strong specific resemblance is far from being
a dead uniformity. Aside from the fact, already
mentioned, that the characteristic strain is sometimes
given with extraordinary sweetness and emphasis, there
are often to be detected variations of a more formal
character. This is noticeably true of robins.
It may almost be said that no two of them sing alike;
while now and then their vagaries are conspicuous
enough to attract general attention. One who
was my neighbor last year interjected into his song
a series of four or five most exact imitations of
the peep of a chicken. When I first heard this
performance, I was in company with two friends, both
of whom noticed and laughed at it; and some days afterwards
I visited the spot again, and found the bird still
rehearsing the same ridiculous medley. I conjectured
that he had been brought up near a hen-coop, and, moreover,
had been so unfortunate as to lose his father before
his notes had become thoroughly fixed; and then, being
compelled to finish his musical education by himself,
had taken a fancy to practice these chicken calls.
This guess may not have been correct. All I can
affirm is that he sang exactly as he might have been
expected to do, on that supposition; but certainly
the resemblance seemed too close to be accidental.
The variations of the wood thrush
are fully as striking as those of the robin, and sometimes
it is impossible not to feel that the artist is making
a deliberate effort to do something out of the ordinary
course, something better than he has ever done before.
Now and then he prefaces his proper song with many
disconnected, extremely staccato notes, following
each other at very distant and unexpected intervals
of pitch. It is this, I conclude, which is meant
by some writer (who it is I cannot now remember) when
he criticises the wood thrush for spending too much
time in tuning his instrument. But the fault is
the critic’s, I think; to my ear these preliminaries
sound rather like the recitative which goes before
the grand aria.
Still another musician who delights
to take liberties with his score is the towhee bunting,
or chewink. Indeed, he carries the matter so far
that sometimes it seems almost as if he suspected the
proximity of some self-conceited ornithologist, and
were determined, if possible, to make a fool of him.
And for my part, being neither self conceited nor an
ornithologist, I am willing to confess that I have
once or twice been so badly deceived that now the
mere sight of this Pipilo is, so to speak,
a means of grace to me.
One more of these innovators (these
heretics, as they are most likely called by their
more conservative brethren) is the field sparrow,
better known as Spizella pusilla. His usual
song consists of a simple line of notes, beginning
leisurely, but growing shorter and more rapid to the
close. The voice is so smooth and sweet, and the
acceleration so well managed, that, although the whole
is commonly a strict monotone, the effect is not in
the least monotonous. This song I once heard
rendered in reverse order, with a result so strange
that I did not suspect the identity of the author
till I had crept up within sight of him. Another
of these sparrows, who has passed the last two seasons
in my neighborhood, habitually doubles the measure;
going through it in the usual way, and then, just
as you expect him to conclude, catching it up again,
Da capo.
But birds like these are quite outdone
by such species as the song sparrow, the white-eyed
vireo, and the Western meadow-lark,-species
of which we may say that each individual bird has
a whole repertory of songs at his command. The
song sparrow, who is the best known of the three,
will repeat one melody perhaps a dozen times, then
change it for a second, and in turn leave that for
a third; as if he were singing hymns of twelve or
fifteen stanzas each, and set each hymn to its appropriate
tune. It is something well worth listening to,
common though it is, and may easily suggest a number
of questions about the origin and meaning of bird
music.
The white-eyed vireo is a singer of
astonishing spirit, and his sudden changes from one
theme to another are sometimes almost startling.
He is a skillful ventriloquist, also, and I remember
one in particular who outwitted me completely.
He was rehearsing a well-known strain, but at the
end there came up from the bushes underneath a querulous
call. At first I took it for granted that some
other bird was in the underbrush; but the note was
repeated too many times, and came in too exactly on
the beat.
I have no personal acquaintance with
the Western meadow-lark, but no less than twenty-six
of his songs have been printed in musical notation,
and these are said to be by no means all.
Others of our birds have similar gifts,
though no others, so far as I know, are quite so versatile
as these three. Several of the warblers, for
example, have attained to more than one set song, notwithstanding
the deservedly small reputation of this misnamed family.
I have myself heard the golden-crowned thrush, the
black-throated green warbler, the black-throated blue,
the yellow-rumped, and the chestnut-sided, sing two
melodies each, while the blue golden-winged has at
least three; and this, of course, without making anything
of slight variations such as all birds are more or
less accustomed to indulge in. The best of the
three songs of the blue golden-wing I have never heard
except on one occasion, but then it was repeated for
half an hour under my very eyes. It bore no resemblance
to the common dsee, dsee, dsee,
of the species, and would appear to be seldom used;
for not only have I never heard it since, but none
of the writers seem ever to have heard it at all.
However, I still keep a careful description of it,
which I took down on the spot, and which I expect
some future golden-wing to verify.
But the most celebrated of the warblers
in this regard is the golden-crowned thrush, otherwise
called the oven-bird and the wood wagtail. His
ordinary effort is one of the noisiest, least melodious,
and most incessant sounds to be heard in our woods.
His song is another matter. For that he
takes to the air (usually starting from a tree-top,
although I have seen him rise from the ground), whence,
after a preliminary chip, chip, he lets
fall a hurried flood of notes, in the midst of which
can usually be distinguished his familiar weechee,
weechee, weechee. It is nothing
wonderful that he should sing on the wing,-many
other birds do the same, and very much better than
he; but he is singular in that he strictly reserves
his aerial music for late in the afternoon. I
have heard it as early as three o’clock, but
never before that, and it is most common about sunset.
Writers speak of it as limited to the season of courtship;
but I have heard it almost daily till near the end
of July, and once, for my special benefit, perhaps,
it was given in full-and repeated-on
the first day of September. But who taught the
little creature to do this,-to sing one
song in the forenoon, perched upon a twig, and to keep
another for afternoon, singing that invariably on
the wing? and what difference is there between the
two in the mind of the singer?
It is an indiscretion ever to say
of a bird that he has only such and such notes.
You may have been his friend for years, but the next
time you go into the woods he will likely enough put
you to shame by singing something not so much as hinted
at in your description. I thought I knew the
song of the yellow-rumped warbler, having listened
to it many times,-a slight and rather characterless
thing, nowise remarkable. But coming down Mount
Willard one day in June, I heard a warbler’s
song which brought me to a sudden halt. It was
new and beautiful,-more beautiful, it seemed
at the moment, than any warbler’s song I had
ever heard. What could it be? A little patient
waiting (while the black-flies and mosquitoes “came
upon me to eat up my flesh"), and the wonderful stranger
appeared in full view,-my old acquaintance,
the yellow-rumped warbler.
With all this strong tendency on the
part of birds to vary their music, how is it that
there is still such a degree of uniformity, so that,
as we have said, every species may be recognized by
its notes? Why does every red-eyed vireo sing
in one way, and every white-eyed vireo in another?
Who teaches the young chipper to trill, and the young
linnet to warble? In short, how do birds come
by their music? Is it all a matter of instinct,
inherited habit, or do they learn it? The answer
appears to be that birds sing as children talk, by
simple imitation. Nobody imagines that the infant
is born with a language printed upon his brain.
The father and mother may never have known a word of
any tongue except the English, but if the child is
brought up to hear only Chinese, he will infallibly
speak that, and nothing else. And careful experiments
have shown the same to be true of birds. Taken from
the nest just after they leave the shell, they invariably
sing, not their own so-called natural song, but the
song of their foster-parents; provided, of course,
that this is not anything beyond their physical capacity.
The notorious house sparrow (our “English”
sparrow), in his wild or semi-domesticated state,
never makes a musical sound; but if he is taken in
hand early enough, he may be taught to sing, so it
is said, nearly as well as the canary. Bechstein
relates that a Paris clergyman had two of these sparrows
whom he had trained to speak, and, among other things,
to recite several of the shorter commandments; and
the narrative goes on to say that it was sometimes
very comical, when the pair were disputing over their
food, to hear one gravely admonish the other, “Thou
shalt not steal!” It would be interesting to
know why creatures thus gifted do not sing of their
own motion. With their amiability and sweet peaceableness
they ought to be caroling the whole year round.
This question of the transmission
of songs from one generation to another is, of course,
a part of the general subject of animal intelligence,
a subject much discussed in these days on account of
its bearing upon the modern doctrine concerning the
relation of man to the inferior orders.
We have nothing to do with such a
theme, but it may not be out of place to suggest to
preachers and moralists that here is a striking and
unhackneyed illustration of the force of early training.
Birds sing by imitation, it is true, but as a rule
they imitate only the notes which they hear during
the first few weeks after they are hatched. One
of Mr. Barrington’s linnets, for example, after
being educated under a titlark, was put into a room
with two birds of his own species, where he heard
them sing freely every day for three months. He
made no attempt to learn anything from them, however,
but kept on practicing what the titlark had taught
him, quite unconscious of anything singular or unpatriotic
in such a course. This law, that impressions
received during the immaturity of the powers become
the unalterable habit of the after life, is perhaps
the most momentous of all the laws in whose power we
find ourselves. Sometimes we are tempted to call
it cruel. But if it were annulled, this would
be a strange world. What a hurly-hurly we should
have among the birds! There would be no more
telling them by their notes. Thrushes and jays,
wrens and chickadees, finches and warblers, all would
be singing one grand medley.
Between these two opposing tendencies,
one urging to variation, the other to permanence (for
Nature herself is half radical, half conservative),
the language of birds has grown from rude beginnings
to its present beautiful diversity; and whoever lives
a century of millenniums hence will listen to music
such as we in this day can only dream of. Inappreciably
but ceaselessly the work goes on. Here and there
is born a master-singer, a feathered genius, and every
generation makes its own addition to the glorious
inheritance.
It may be doubted whether there is
any real connection between moral character and the
possession of wings. Nevertheless there has long
been a popular feeling that some such congruity does
exist; and certainly it seems unreasonable to suppose
that creatures who are able to soar at will into the
heavens should be without other equally angelic attributes.
But, be that as it may, our friends, the birds, do
undeniably set us a good example in several respects.
To mention only one, how becoming is their observance
of morning and evening song! In spite of their
industrious spirit (and few of us labor more hours
daily), neither their first nor their last thoughts
are given to the question, What shall we eat, and
what shall we drink? Possibly their habit of
saluting the rising and setting sun may be thought
to favor the theory that the worship of the god of
day was the original religion. I know nothing
about that. But it would be a sad change if the
birds, declining from their present beautiful custom,
were to sleep and work, work and sleep, with no holy
hour between, as is too much the case with the being
who, according to his own pharisaic notion, is the
only religious animal.
In the season, however, the woods
are by no means silent, even at noonday. Many
species (such as the vireos and warblers, who get their
living amid the foliage of trees) sing as they work;
while the thrushes and others, who keep business and
pleasure more distinct, are often too happy to go
many hours together without a hymn. I have even
seen robins singing without quitting the turf; but
that is rather unusual, for somehow birds have come
to feel that they must get away from the ground when
the lyrical mood is upon them. This may be a thing
of sentiment (for is not language full of uncomplimentary
allusions to earth and earthliness?), but more likely
it is prudential. The gift of song is no doubt
a dangerous blessing to creatures who have so many
enemies, and we can readily believe that they have
found it safer to be up where they can look about
them while thus publishing their whereabouts.
A very interesting exception to this
rule is the savanna sparrow, who sings habitually
from the ground. But even he shares the common
feeling, and stretches himself to his full height
with an earnestness which is almost laughable, in
view of the result; for his notes are hardly louder
than a cricket’s chirp. Probably he has
fallen into this lowly habit from living in meadows
and salt marshes, where bushes and trees are not readily
to be come at; and it is worth noticing that, in the
case of the skylark and the white-winged blackbird,
the same conditions have led to a result precisely
opposite. The sparrow, we may presume, was originally
of a humble disposition, and when nothing better offered
itself for a singing-perch easily grew accustomed
to standing upon a stone or a little lump of earth;
and this practice, long persisted in, naturally had
the effect to lessen the loudness of his voice.
The skylark, on the other hand, when he did not readily
find a tree-top, said to himself, “Never mind!
I have a pair of wings.” And so the lark
is famous, while the sparrow remains unheard-of, and
is even mistaken for a grasshopper.
How true it is that the very things
which dishearten one nature and break it down, only
help another to find out what it was made for!
If you would foretell the development, either of a
bird or of a man, it is not enough to know his environment,
you must know also what there is in him.
We have possibly made too much of
the savanna sparrow’s innocent eccentricity.
He fills his place, and fills it well; and who knows
but that he may yet outshine the skylark? There
is a promise, I believe, for those who humble themselves.
But what shall be said of species which do not even
try to sing, and that, notwithstanding they have all
the structural peculiarities of singing birds, and
must, almost certainly, have come from ancestors who
were singers? We have already mentioned the house
sparrow, whose defect is the more mysterious on account
of his belonging to so highly musical a family.
But he was never accused of not being noisy
enough, while we have one bird who, though he is classed
with the oscines, passes his life in almost unbroken
silence. Of course I refer to the waxwing, or
cedar-bird, whose faint, sibilant whisper can scarcely
be thought to contradict the foregoing description.
By what strange freak he has lapsed into this ghostly
habit, nobody knows. I make no account of the
insinuation that he gave up music because it hindered
his success in cherry-stealing. He likes cherries,
it is true; and who can blame him? But he would
need to work hard to steal more than does that indefatigable
songster, the robin. I feel sure he has some
better reason than this for his Quakerish conduct.
But, however he came by his stillness, it is likely
that by this time he plumes himself upon it.
Silence is golden, he thinks, the supreme result of
the highest aesthetic culture. Those loud creatures,
the thrushes and finches! What a vulgar set they
are, to be sure, the more’s the pity! Certainly
if he does not reason in some such way, bird nature
is not so human as we have given it credit for being.
Besides, the waxwing has an uncommon appreciation
of the decorous; at least, we must think so if we are
able to credit a story of Nuttall’s. He
declares that a Boston gentleman, whose name he gives,
saw one of a company of these birds capture an insect,
and offer it to his neighbor; he, however, delicately
declined the dainty bit, and it was offered to the
next, who, in turn, was equally polite; and the morsel
actually passed back and forth along the line, till,
finally, one of the flock was persuaded to eat it.
I have never seen anything equal to this; but one
day, happening to stop under a low cedar, I discovered
right over my head a waxwing’s nest with the
mother-bird sitting upon it, while her mate was perched
beside her on the branch. He was barely out of
my reach, but he did not move a muscle; and although
he uttered no sound, his behavior said as plainly as
possible, “What do you expect to do here?
Don’t you see I am standing guard over
this nest?” I should be ashamed not to be able
to add that I respected his dignity and courage, and
left him and his castle unmolested.
Observations so discursive as these
can hardly be finished; they must break off abruptly,
or else go on forever. Let us make an end, therefore,
with expressing our hope that the cedar-bird, already
so handsome and chivalrous, will yet take to himself
a song; one sweet and original, worthy to go with
his soft satin coat, his ornaments of sealing-wax,
and his magnificent top-knot. Let him do that,
and he shall always be made welcome; yes, even though
he come in force and in cherry-time.