The finger of God hath left an inscription
upon all his works, not graphical or composed
of letters, but of their several forms, constitutions,
parts, and operations, which, aptly joined together,
do make one word that doth express their natures.
By these letters God calls the stars by their
names; and by this alphabet Adam assigned to every
creature a name peculiar to its nature.
SIR
THOMAS BROWNE.
CHARACTER
IN FEATHERS.
In this economically governed world
the same thing serves many uses. Who will take
upon himself to enumerate the offices of sunlight,
or water, or indeed of any object whatever? Because
we know it to be good for this or that, it by no means
follows that we have discovered what it was made for.
What we have found out is perhaps only something by
the way; as if a man should think the sun were created
for his own private convenience. In some moods
it seems doubtful whether we are yet acquainted with
the real value of anything. But, be that as it
may, we need not scruple to admire so much as our
ignorance permits us to see of the workings of this
divine frugality. The piece of woodland, for instance,
which skirts the village,-how various are
its ministries to the inhabitants, each of whom, without
forethought or question, takes the benefit proper to
himself! The poet saunters there as in a true
Holy Land, to have his heart cooled and stilled.
Mr. A. and Mr. B., who hold the deeds of the “property,”
walk through it to look at the timber, with an eye
to dollars and cents. The botanist has his errand
there, the zoologist his, and the child his.
Oftenest of all, perhaps (for barbarism dies hard,
and even yet the ministers of Christ find it a capital
sport to murder small fishes),-oftenest
of all comes the man, poor soul, who thinks of the
forest as of a place to which he may go when he wishes
to amuse himself by killing something. Meanwhile,
the rabbits and the squirrels, the hawks and the owls,
look upon all such persons as no better than intruders
(do not the woods belong to those who live in them?);
while nobody remembers the meteorologist, who nevertheless
smiles in his sleeve at all these one-sided notions,
and says to himself that he knows the truth of the
matter.
So is it with everything; and with
all the rest, so is it with the birds. The interest
they excite is of all grades, from that which looks
upon them as items of millinery, up to that of the
makers of ornithological systems, who ransack the
world for specimens, and who have no doubt that the
chief end of a bird is to be named and catalogued,-the
more synonyms the better. Somewhere between these
two extremes comes the person whose interest in birds
is friendly rather than scientific; who has little
taste for shooting, and an aversion from dissecting;
who delights in the living creatures themselves, and
counts a bird in the bush worth two in the hand.
Such a person, if he is intelligent, makes good use
of the best works on ornithology; he would not know
how to get along without them; but he studies most
the birds themselves, and after a while he begins
to associate them on a plan of his own. Not that
he distrusts the approximate correctness of the received
classification, or ceases to find it of daily service;
but though it were as accurate as the multiplication
table, it is based (and rightly, no doubt) on anatomical
structure alone; it rates birds as bodies, and nothing
else: while to the person of whom we are speaking
birds are, first of all, souls; his interest in them
is, as we say, personal; and we are none of us in
the habit of grouping our friends according to height,
or complexion, or any other physical peculiarity.
But it is not proposed in this paper
to attempt a new classification of any sort, even
the most unscientific and fanciful. All I am to
do is to set down at random a few studies in such
a method as I have indicated; in short, a few studies
in the temperaments of birds. Nor, in making
this attempt, am I unmindful how elusive of analysis
traits of character are, and how diverse is the impression
which the same personality produces upon different
observers. In matters of this kind every judgment
is largely a question of emphasis and proportion; and,
moreover, what we find in our friends depends in great
part on what we have in ourselves. This I do
not forget; and therefore I foresee that others will
discover in the birds of whom I write many things that
I miss, and perhaps will miss some things which I
have treated as patent or even conspicuous. It
remains only for each to testify what he has seen,
and at the end to confess that a soul, even the soul
of a bird, is after all a mystery.
Let our first example, then, be the
common black-capped titmouse, or chickadee. He
is, par excellence, the bird of the merry heart.
There is a notion current, to be sure, that all birds
are merry; but that is one of those second-hand opinions
which a man who begins to observe for himself soon
finds it necessary to give up. With many birds
life is a hard struggle. Enemies are numerous,
and the food supply is too often scanty. Of some
species it is probable that very few die in their beds.
But the chickadee seems to be exempt from all forebodings.
His coat is thick, his heart is brave, and, whatever
may happen, something will be found to eat. “Take
no thought for the morrow” is his creed, which
he accepts, not “for substance of doctrine,”
but literally. No matter how bitter the wind
or how deep the snow, you will never find the chickadee,
as the saying is, under the weather. It is this
perennial good humor, I suppose, which makes other
birds so fond of his companionship; and their example
might well be heeded by persons who suffer from fits
of depression. Such unfortunates could hardly
do better than to court the society of the joyous
tit. His whistles and chirps, his graceful feats
of climbing and hanging, and withal his engaging familiarity
(for, of course, such good-nature as his could not
consist with suspiciousness) would most likely send
them home in a more Christian mood. The time will
come, we may hope, when doctors will prescribe bird-gazing
instead of blue-pill.
To illustrate the chickadee’s
trustfulness, I may mention that a friend of mine
captured one in a butterfly-net, and, carrying him
into the house, let him loose in the sitting-room.
The little stranger was at home immediately, and seeing
the window full of plants, proceeded to go over them
carefully, picking off the lice with which such window-gardens
are always more or less infested. A little later
he was taken into my friend’s lap, and soon
he climbed up to his shoulder; where, after hopping
about for a few minutes on his coat-collar, he selected
a comfortable roosting place, tucked his head under
his wing, and went to sleep, and slept on undisturbed
while carried from one room to another. Probably
the chickadee’s nature is not of the deepest.
I have never seen him when his joy rose to ecstasy.
Still his feelings are not shallow, and the faithfulness
of the pair to each other and to their offspring is
of the highest order. The female has sometimes
to be taken off the nest, and even to be held in the
hand, before the eggs can be examined.
Our American goldfinch is one of the
loveliest of birds. With his elegant plumage,
his rhythmical, undulatory flight, his beautiful song,
and his more beautiful soul, he ought to be one of
the best beloved, if not one of the most famous; but
he has never yet had half his deserts. He is
like the chickadee, and yet different. He is not
so extremely confiding, nor should I call him merry.
But he is always cheerful, in spite of his so-called
plaintive note, from which he gets one of his names,
and always amiable. So far as I know, he never
utters a harsh sound; even the young ones, asking
for food, use only smooth, musical tones. During
the pairing season his delight often becomes rapturous.
To see him then, hovering and singing,-or,
better still, to see the devoted pair hovering together,
billing and singing,-is enough to do even a cynic good. The happy lovers! They
have never read it in a book, but it is written on their hearts,-
“The gentle law, that
each should be
The other’s heaven and
harmony.”
The goldfinch has the advantage of
the titmouse in several respects, but he lacks that
sprightliness, that exceeding light-heartedness, which
is the chickadee’s most endearing characteristic.
For the sake of a strong contrast,
we may look next at the brown thrush, known to farmers
as the planting-bird and to ornithologists as Harporhynchus
rufus; a staid and solemn Puritan, whose creed
is the Preacher’s,-“Vanity
of vanities, all is vanity.” No frivolity
and merry-making for him! After his brief annual
period of intensely passionate song, he does penance
for the remainder of the year,-skulking
about, on the ground or near it, silent and gloomy.
He seems ever on the watch against an enemy, and,
unfortunately for his comfort, he has nothing of the
reckless, bandit spirit, such as the jay possesses,
which goes to make a moderate degree of danger almost
a pastime. Not that he is without courage; when
his nest is in question he will take great risks;
but in general his manner is dispirited, “sicklied
o’er with the pale cast of thought.”
Evidently he feels
“The heavy and the weary
weight
Of all this unintelligible
world;”
and it would not be surprising if
he sometimes raised the question, “Is life worth
living?” It is the worst feature of his case
that his melancholy is not of the sort which softens
and refines the nature. There is no suggestion
of saintliness about it. In fact, I am convinced
that this long-tailed thrush has a constitutional taint
of vulgarity. His stealthy, underhand manner
is one mark of this, and the same thing comes out
again in his music. Full of passion as his singing
is (and we have hardly anything to compare with it
in this regard), yet the listener cannot help smiling
now and then; the very finest passage is followed
so suddenly by some uncouth guttural note, or by some
whimsical drop from the top to the bottom of the scale.
In neighborly association with the
brown thrush is the towhee bunting, or chewink.
The two choose the same places for their summer homes,
and, unless I am deceived, they often migrate in company.
But though they are so much together, and in certain
of their ways very much alike, their habits of mind
are widely dissimilar. The towhee is of a peculiarly
even disposition. I have seldom heard him scold,
or use any note less good-natured and musical than
his pleasant cherawink. I have never detected
him in a quarrel such as nearly all birds are once
in a while guilty of, ungracious as it may seem to
mention the fact; nor have I ever seen him hopping
nervously about and twitching his tail, as is the
manner of most species, when, for instance, their nests
are approached. Nothing seems to annoy him.
At the same time, he is not full of continual merriment
like the chickadee, nor occasionally in a rapture
like the goldfinch. Life with him is pitched in
a low key; comfortable rather than cheerful, and never
jubilant. And yet, for all the towhee’s
careless demeanor, you soon begin to suspect him of
being deep. He appears not to mind you; he keeps
on scratching among the dry leaves as if he had no
thought of being driven away by your presence; but
in a minute or two you look that way again, and he
is not there. If you pass near his nest, he makes
not a tenth part of the ado which a brown thrush would
make in the same circumstances, but (partly for this
reason) you will find half a dozen nests of the thrush
sooner than one of his. With all his simplicity
and frankness, which puts him in happy contrast with
the thrush, he knows as well as anybody how to keep
his own counsel. I have seen him with his mate
for two or three days together about the flower-beds
in the Boston Public Garden, and so far as appeared
they were feeding as unconcernedly as though they
had been on their own native heath, amid the scrub-oaks
and huckleberry bushes; but after their departure
it was remembered that they had not once been heard
to utter a sound. If self-possession be four
fifths of good manners, our red-eyed Pipilo may
certainly pass for a gentleman.
We have now named four birds, the
chickadee, the goldfinch, the brown thrush, and the
towhee,-birds so diverse in plumage that
no eye could fail to discriminate them at a glance.
But the four differ no more truly in bodily shape
and dress than they do in that inscrutable something
which we call temperament, disposition. If the
soul of each were separated from the body and made
to stand out in sight, those of us who have really
known the birds in the flesh would have no difficulty
in saying, This is the titmouse, and this the towhee.
It would be with them as we hope it will be with our
friends in the next world, whom we shall recognize
there because we knew them here; that is, we knew them,
and not merely the bodies they lived in. This
kind of familiarity with birds has no necessary connection
with ornithology. Personal intimacy and a knowledge
of anatomy are still two different things. As
we have all heard, ours is an age of science; but,
thank fortune, matters have not yet gone so far that
a man must take a course in anthropology before he
can love his neighbor.
It is a truth only too patent that
taste and conscience are sometimes at odds. One
man wears his faults so gracefully that we can hardly
help falling in love with them, while another, alas,
makes even virtue itself repulsive. I am moved
to this commonplace reflection by thinking of the
blue jay, a bird of doubtful character, but one for
whom, nevertheless, it is impossible not to feel a
sort of affection and even of respect. He is
quite as suspicious as the brown thrush, and his instinct
for an invisible perch is perhaps as unerring as the
cuckoo’s; and yet, even when he takes to hiding,
his manner is not without a dash of boldness.
He has a most irascible temper, also, but, unlike the
thrasher, he does not allow his ill-humor to degenerate
into chronic sulkiness. Instead, he flies into
a furious passion, and is done with it. Some say
that on such occasions he swears, and I have myself
seen him when it was plain that nothing except a natural
impossibility kept him from tearing his hair.
His larynx would make him a singer, and his mental
capacity is far above the average; but he has perverted
his gifts, till his music is nothing but noise and
his talent nothing but smartness. A like process
of depravation the world has before now witnessed in
political life, when a man of brilliant natural endowments
has yielded to low ambitions and stooped to unworthy
means, till what was meant to be a statesman turns
put to be a demagogue. But perhaps we wrong our
handsome friend, fallen angel though he be, to speak
thus of him. Most likely he would resent the
comparison, and I do not press it. We must admit
that juvenile sportsmen have persecuted him unduly;
and when a creature cannot show himself without being
shot at, he may be pardoned for a little misanthropy.
Christians as we are, how many of us could stand such
a test? In these circumstances, it is a point
in the jay’s favor that he still has, what is
rare with birds, a sense of humor, albeit it is humor
of a rather grim sort,-the sort which expends
itself in practical jokes and uncivil epithets.
He has discovered the school-boy’s secret:
that for the expression of unadulterated derision there
is nothing like the short sound of a, prolonged
into a drawl. Yah, yah, he cries; and
sometimes, as you enter the woods, you may hear him
shouting so as to be heard for half a mile, “Here
comes a fool with a gun; look out for him!”
It is natural to think of the shrike
in connection with the jay, but the two have points
of unlikeness no less than of resemblance. The
shrike is a taciturn bird. If he were a politician,
he would rely chiefly on what is known as the “still
hunt,” although he too can scream loudly enough
on occasion. His most salient trait is his impudence,
but even that is of a negative type. “Who
are you,” he says, “that I should be at
the trouble to insult you?” He has made a study
of the value of silence as an indication of contempt,
and is almost human in his ability to stare straight
by a person whose presence it suits him to ignore.
His imperturbability is wonderful. Watch him
as closely as you please, you will never discover
what he is thinking about. Undertake, for instance,
now that the fellow is singing from the top of a small
tree only a few rods from where you are standing,-undertake
to settle the long dispute whether his notes are designed
to decoy small birds within his reach. Those
whistles and twitters,-hear them! So
miscellaneous! so different from anything which would
be expected from a bird of his size and general disposition!
so very like the notes of sparrows! They must
be imitative. You begin to feel quite sure of
it. But just at this point the sounds cease,
and you look up to discover that Collurio has fallen
to preening his feathers in the most listless manner
imaginable. “Look at me,” he says;
“do I act like one on the watch for his prey?
Indeed, sir, I wish the innocent sparrows no harm;
and besides, if you must know it, I ate an excellent
game-breakfast two hours ago, while laggards like
you were still abed.” In the winter, which
is the only season when I have been able to observe
him, the shrike is to the last degree unsocial, and
I have known him to stay for a month in one spot all
by himself, spending a good part of every day perched
upon a telegraph wire. He ought not to be very
happy, with such a disposition, one would think; but
he seems to be well contented, and sometimes his spirits
are fairly exuberant. Perhaps, as the phrase
is, he enjoys himself; in which case he certainly
has the advantage of most of us,-unless,
indeed, we are easily pleased. At any rate, he
is philosopher enough to appreciate the value of having
few wants; and I am not sure but that he anticipated
the vaunted discovery of Teufelsdrockh, that the fraction
of life may be increased by lessening the denominator.
But even the stoical shrike is not without his epicurean
weakness. When he has killed a sparrow, he eats
the brains first; after that, if he is still hungry,
he devours the coarser and less savory parts.
In this, however, he only shares the well-nigh universal
inconsistency. There are never many thorough-going
stoics in the world. Epictetus declared with an
oath that he should be glad to see one.
To take everything as equally good, to know no difference
between bitter and sweet, penury and plenty, slander
and praise,-this is a great attainment,
a Nirvana to which few can hope to arrive. Some
wise man has said (and the remark has more meaning
than may at once appear) that dying is usually one
of the last things which men do in this world.
Against the foil of the butcher-bird’s
stolidity we may set the inquisitive, garrulous temperament
of the white-eyed vireo and the yellow-breasted chat.
The vireo is hardly larger than the goldfinch, but
let him be in one of his conversational moods, and
he will fill a smilax thicket with noise enough
for two or three cat-birds. Meanwhile he keeps
his eye upon you, and seems to be inviting your attention
to his loquacious abilities. The chat is perhaps
even more voluble. Staccato whistles and snarls
follow each other at most extraordinary intervals of
pitch, and the attempt at showing off is sometimes
unmistakable. Occasionally he takes to the air,
and flies from one tree to another; teetering his
body and jerking his tail, in an indescribable fashion,
and chattering all the while. His “inner
consciousness” at such a moment would be worth
perusing. Possibly he has some feeling for the
grotesque. But I suspect not; probably what we
laugh at as the antics of a clown is all sober earnest
to him.
At best, it is very little we can
know about what is passing in a bird’s mind.
We label him with two or three sesquipedalia verba,
give his territorial range, describe his notes and
his habits of nidification, and fancy we have rendered
an account of the bird. But how should we like
to be inventoried in such a style? “His
name was John Smith; he lived in Boston, in a three-story
brick house; he had a baritone voice, but was not
a good singer.” All true enough; but do
you call that a man’s biography?
The four birds last spoken of are
all wanting in refinement. The jay and the shrike
are wild and rough, not to say barbarous, while the
white-eyed vireo and the chat have the character which
commonly goes by the name of oddity. All four
are interesting for their strong individuality and
their picturesqueness, but it is a pleasure to turn
from them to creatures like our four common New England
Hylocichlae, or small thrushes. These
are the real patricians. With their modest but
rich dress, and their dignified, quiet demeanor, they
stand for the true aristocratic spirit. Like
all genuine aristocrats, they carry an air of distinction,
of which no one who approaches them can long remain
unconscious. When you go into their haunts they
do not appear so much frightened as offended.
“Why do you intrude?” they seem to say;
“these are our woods;” and they bow you
out with all ceremony. Their songs are in keeping
with this character; leisurely, unambitious, and brief,
but in beauty of voice and in high musical quality
excelling all other music of the woods. However,
I would not exaggerate, and I have not found even
these thrushes perfect. The hermit, who is my
favorite of the four, has a habit of slowly raising
and depressing his tail when his mind is disturbed-a
trick of which it is likely he is unconscious, but
which, to say the least, is not a mark of good breeding;
and the Wilson, while every note of his song breathes
of spirituality, has nevertheless a most vulgar alarm
call, a petulant, nasal, one-syllabled yeork.
I do not know anything so grave against the wood thrush
or the Swainson; although when I have fooled the former
with decoy whistles, I have found him more inquisitive
than seemed altogether becoming to a bird of his quality.
But character without flaw is hardly to be insisted
on by sons of Adam, and, after all deductions are
made, the claim of the Hylocichlae to noble
blood can never be seriously disputed. I have
spoken of the four together, but each is clearly distinguished
from all the others; and this I believe to be as true
of mental traits as it is of details of plumage and
song. No doubt, in general, they are much alike;
we may say that they have the same qualities; but
a close acquaintance will reveal that the qualities
have been mixed in different proportions, so that the
total result in each case is a personality strictly
unique.
And what is true of the Hylocichlae
is true of every bird that flies. Anatomy and
dress and even voice aside, who does not feel the
dissimilarity between the cat-bird and the robin, and
still more the difference, amounting to contrast,
between the cat-bird and the bluebird? Distinctions
of color and form are what first strike the eye, but
on better acquaintance these are felt to be superficial
and comparatively unimportant; the difference
is not one of outside appearance. It is his gentle,
high-bred manner and not his azure coat, which makes
the bluebird; and the cat-bird would be a cat-bird
in no matter what garb, so long as he retained his
obtrusive self-consciousness and his prying, busy-body
spirit; all of which, being interpreted, comes, it
may be, to no more than this, “Fine feathers
don’t make fine birds.”
Even in families containing many closely
allied species, I believe that every species has its
own proper character, which sufficient intercourse
would enable us to make a due report of. Nobody
ever saw a song-sparrow manifesting the spirit of
a chipper, and I trust it will not be in my day that
any of our American sparrows are found emulating the
virtues of their obstreperous immigrant cousin.
Of course it is true of birds, as of men, that some
have much more individuality than others. But
know any bird or any man well enough, and he will
prove to be himself, and nobody else. To know
the ten thousand birds of the world well enough to
see how, in bodily structure, habit of life, and mental
characteristics, every one is different from every
other is the long and delightful task which is set
before the ornithologist.
But this is not all. The ornithology
of the future must be ready to give an answer to the
further question how these divergences of anatomy and
temperament originated. How came the chickadee
by his endless fund of happy spirits? Whence
did the towhee derive his equanimity, and the brown
thrush his saturnine temper? The waxwing and the
vireo have the same vocal organs; why should the first
do nothing but whisper, while the second is so loud
and voluble? Why is one bird belligerent and
another peaceable; one barbarous and another civilized;
one grave and another gay? Who can tell?
We can make here and there a plausible conjecture.
We know that the behavior of the blue jay varies greatly
in different parts of the country, in consequence
of the different treatment which he receives.
We judge that the chickadee, from the peculiarity
of his feeding habits, is more certain than most birds
are of finding a meal whenever he is hungry; and that,
we are assured from experience, goes a long way toward
making a body contented. We think it likely that
the brown thrush is at some special disadvantage in
this respect, or has some peculiar enemies warring
upon him; in which case it is no more than we might
expect that he should be a pessimist. And, with
all our ignorance, we are yet sure that everything
has a cause, and we would fain hold by the brave word
of Emerson, “Undoubtedly we have no questions
to ask which are unanswerable.”