The lesser lights, the dearer still
That they elude a vulgar eye.
BROWNING.
Listen too,
How every pause is filled with under-notes.
SHELLEY.
MINOR SONGSTERS.
Among those of us who are in the habit
of attending to bird-songs, there can hardly be anybody,
I think, who has not found himself specially and permanently
attracted by the music of certain birds who have little
or no general reputation. Our favoritism may
perhaps be the result of early associations:
we heard the singer first in some uncommonly romantic
spot, or when we were in a mood of unusual sensibility;
and, in greater or less degree, the charm of that
hour is always renewed for us with the repetition
of the song. Or if may be (who will assert the
contrary?) that there is some occult relation between
the bird’s mind and our own. Or, once more,
something may be due to the natural pleasure which
amiable people take (and all lovers of birds may be
supposed, a priori, to belong to that class)
in paying peculiar honor to merit which the world
at large, less discriminating than they, has thus far
failed to recognize, and in which, therefore, as by
“right of discovery,” they have a sort
of proprietary interest. This, at least, is evident:
our preference is not determined altogether by the
intrinsic worth of the song; the mind is active, not
passive, and gives to the music something from itself,-“the
consecration and the poet’s dream.”
Furthermore, it is to be said that
a singer-and a bird no less than a man-may
be wanting in that fullness and scope of voice and
that large measure of technical skill which are absolutely
essential to the great artist, properly so called,
and yet, within his own limitations, may be competent
to please even the most fastidious ear. It is
with birds as with other poets: the smaller gift
need not be the less genuine; and they whom the world
calls greatest, and whom we ourselves most admire,
may possibly not be the ones who touch us most intimately,
or to whom we return oftenest and with most delight.
This may be well illustrated by a
comparison of the chickadee with the brown thrush.
The thrush, or, as he is sometimes profanely styled,
the thrasher, is the most pretentious, perhaps I ought
to say the greatest, of New England songsters, if
we rule out the mocking-bird, who is so very rare
with us as scarcely to come into the competition; and
still, in my opinion, his singing seldom produces
the effect of really fine music. With all his
ability, which is nothing short of marvelous, his
taste is so deplorably uncertain, and his passion so
often becomes a downright frenzy, that the excited
listener, hardly knowing what to think, laughs and
shouts. Bravo! by turns. Something must be
amiss, certainly, when the deepest feelings of the
heart are poured forth in a manner to suggest the
performance of a buffo. The chickadee,
on the other hand, seldom gets mention as a singer.
Probably he never looked upon himself as such.
You will not find him posing at the top of a tree,
challenging the world to listen and admire. But,
as he hops from twig to twig in quest of insects’
eggs and other dainties, his merry spirits are all
the time bubbling over in little chirps and twitters,
with now and then a Chickadee, dee, or a Hear,
hear me, every least syllable of which is like
“the very sound of happy thoughts.”
For my part, I rate such trifles with the best of
all good music, and feel that we cannot be grateful
enough to the brave tit, who furnishes us with them
for the twelve months of every year.
So far as the chickadee is concerned,
I see nothing whatever to wish different; but am glad
to believe that, for my day and long after, he will
remain the same unassuming, careless-hearted creature
that he now is. If I may be allowed the paradox,
it would be too bad for him to change, even for the
better. But the bluebird, who like the titmouse
is hardly to be accounted a musician, does seem to
be somewhat blameworthy. Once in a while, it
is true, he takes a perch and sings; but for the most
part he is contented with a few simple notes, having
no semblance of a tune. Possibly he holds that
his pure contralto voice (I do not remember ever to
have heard from him any note of a soprano, or even
of a mezzo-soprano quality) ought by itself to be
a sufficient distinction; but I think it likelier
that his slight attempt at music is only one manifestation
of the habitual reserve which, more than anything else
perhaps, may be said to characterize him. How
differently he and the robin impress us in this particular!
Both take up their abode in our door-yards and orchards;
the bluebird goes so far, indeed, as to accept our
hospitality outright, building his nest in boxes put
up for his accommodation, and making the roofs of
our houses his favorite perching stations. But,
while the robin is noisily and jauntily familiar, the
bluebird maintains a dignified aloofness; coming and
going about the premises, but keeping his thoughts
to himself, and never becoming one of us save by the
mere accident of local proximity. The robin, again,
loves to travel in large flocks, when household duties
are over for the season; but although the same has
been reported of the bluebird, I have never myself
seen such a thing, and am satisfied that, as a rule,
this gentle spirit finds a family party of six or
seven company enough. His reticence, as we cheerfully
admit, is nothing to quarrel with; it is all well-bred,
and not in the least unkindly; in fact, we like it,
on the whole, rather better than the robin’s
pertness and garrulity; but, none the less, its natural
consequence is that the bird has small concern for
musical display. When he sings, it is not to gain
applause, but to express his affection; and while,
in one aspect of the case, there is nothing out of
the way in this,-since his affection need
not be the less deep and true because it is told in
few words and with unadorned phrase,-yet,
as I said to begin with, it is hard not to feel that
the world is being defrauded, when for any reason,
however amiable, the possessor of such a matchless
voice has no ambition to make the most of it.
It is always a double pleasure to
find a plodding, humdrum-seeming man with a poet’s
heart in his breast; and a little of the same delighted
surprise is felt by every one, I imagine, when he learns
for the first time that our little brown creeper is
a singer. What life could possibly be more prosaic
than his? Day after day, year in and out, he creeps
up one tree-trunk after another, pausing only to peer
right and left into the crevices of the bark, in search
of microscopic tidbits. A most irksome sameness,
surely! How the poor fellow must envy the swallows,
who live on the wing, and, as it were, have their home
in heaven! So it is easy for us to think; but
I doubt whether the creeper himself is troubled with
such suggestions. He seems, to say the least,
as well contented as the most of us; and, what is
more, I am inclined to doubt whether any except “free
moral agents,” like ourselves, are ever wicked
enough to find fault with the orderings of Divine Providence.
I fancy, too, that we may have exaggerated the monotony
of the creeper’s lot. It can scarcely be
that even his days are without their occasional pleasurable
excitements. After a good many trees which yield
little or nothing for his pains, he must now and then
light upon one which is like Canaan after the wilderness,-“a
land flowing with milk and honey.” Indeed,
the longer I think of it the more confident I feel
that every aged creeper must have had sundry experiences
of this sort, which he is never weary of recounting
for the edification of his nephews and nieces, who,
of course, are far too young to have anything like
the wide knowledge of the world which their venerable
three-years-old uncle possesses. Certhia works
all day for his daily bread; and yet even of him it
is true that “the life is more than meat.”
He has his inward joys, his affectionate delights,
which no outward infelicity can touch. A bird
who thinks nothing of staying by his nest and his mate
at the sacrifice of his life is not to be written
down a dullard or a drudge, merely because his dress
is plain and his occupation unromantic. He has
a right to sing, for he has something within him to
inspire the strain.
There are descriptions of the creeper’s
music which liken it to a wren’s. I am
sorry that I have myself heard it only on one occasion:
then, however, so far was it from being wren-like that
it might rather have been the work of one of the less
proficient warblers,-a somewhat long opening
note followed by a hurried series of shorter ones,
the whole given in a sharp, thin voice, and having
nothing to recommend it to notice, considered simply
as music. All the while the bird kept on industriously
with his journey up the tree; and it is not in the
least unlikely that he may have another and better
song, which he reserves for times of more leisure.
Our American wood-warblers are all
to be classed among the minor songsters; standing
in this respect in strong contrast with the true Old
World warblers, of whose musical capacity enough, perhaps,
is said when it is mentioned that the nightingale
is one of them. But, comparisons apart, our birds
are by no means to be despised, and not a few of their
songs have a good degree of merit. That of the
well-known summer yellow-bird may be taken as fairly
representative of the entire group, being neither
one of the best nor one of the poorest. He, I
have noticed, is given to singing late in the day.
Three of the New England species have at the same
time remarkably rough voices and black throats,-I
mean the black-throated blue, the black-throated green,
and the blue golden-wing,-and seeing that
the first two are of the genus Dendroeca, while
the last is a Helminthophaga, I have allowed
myself to query (half in earnest) whether they may
not, possibly, be more nearly related than the systematists
have yet discovered. Several of the warbler songs
are extremely odd. The blue yellow-back’s,
for example, is a brief, hoarse, upward run,-a
kind of scale exercise; and if the practice of such
things be really as beneficial as music teachers affirm,
it would seem that this little beauty must in time
become a vocalist of the first order. Nearly
the same might be said of the prairie warbler; but
his etude is a little longer and less hurried,
besides being in a higher key. I do not call to
mind any bird who sings a downward scale. Having
before spoken of the tendency of warblers to learn
two or even three set tunes, I was the more interested
when, last summer, I added another to my list of the
species which aspire to this kind of liberal education.
It was on the side of Mount Clinton that I heard two
Blackburnians, both in full sight and within a few
rods of each other, who were singing two entirely
distinct songs. One of these-it is
the common one, I think-ended quaintly with
three or four short notes, like zip, zip,
zip; while the other was not unlike a fraction
of the winter wren’s melody. Those who are
familiar with the latter bird will perhaps recognize
the phrase referred to if I call it the willie,
willie, winkie,-with a triple accent
on the first syllable of the last word. Most
of the songs of this family are rather slight, but
the extremest case known to me is that of the black-poll
(Dendroeca striata), whose zee, zee, zee
is almost ridiculously faint. You may hear it
continually in the higher spruce forests of the White
Mountains; but you will look a good many times before
you discover its author, and not improbably will begin
by taking it for the call of the kinglet. The
music of the bay-breasted warbler is similar to the
black-poll’s, but hardly so weak and formless.
It seems reasonable to believe not only that these
two species are descended from a common ancestry,
but that the divergence is of a comparatively recent
date: even now the young of the year can be distinguished
only with great difficulty, although the birds in
full feather are clearly enough marked.
Warblers’ songs are often made
up of two distinct portions: one given deliberately,
the other hurriedly and with a concluding flourish.
Indeed, the same may be said of bird-songs generally,-those
of the song sparrow, the bay-winged bunting, and the
wood thrush being familiar examples. Yet there
are many singers who attempt no climax of this sort,
but make their music to consist of two, or three, or
more parts, all alike. The Maryland yellow-throat,
for instance, cries out over and over, “What
a pity, what a pity, what a pity!” So, at least,
he seems to say; though, I confess, it is more than
likely I mistake the words, since the fellow never
appears to be feeling badly, but, on the contrary,
delivers his message with an air of cordial satisfaction.
The song of the pine-creeping warbler is after still
another fashion,-one simple short trill.
It is musical and sweet; the more so for coming almost
always out of a pine-tree.
The vireos, or greenlets, are akin
to the warblers in appearance and habits, and like
them are peculiar to the western continent. We
have no birds that are more unsparing of their music
(prodigality is one of the American virtues, we are
told): they sing from morning till night, and-some
of them, at least-continue thus till the
very end of the season. It is worth mentioning,
however, that the red-eye makes a short day; becoming
silent just at the time when the generality of birds
grow most noisy. Probably the same is true of
the rest of the family, but on that point I am not
prepared to speak with positiveness. Of the five
New England species (I omit the brotherly-love greenlet,
never having been fortunate enough to know him) the
white-eye is decidedly the most ambitious, the warbling
and the solitary are the most pleasing, while the
red-eye and the yellow-throat are very much alike,
and both of them rather too monotonous and persistent.
It is hard, sometimes, not to get out of patience
with the red-eye’s ceaseless and noisy iteration
of his trite theme; especially if you are doing your
utmost to catch the notes of some rarer and more refined
songster. In my note-book I find an entry describing
my vain attempts to enjoy the music of a rose-breasted
grosbeak,-who at that time had never been
a common bird with me,-while “a pesky
Wagnerian red-eye kept up an incessant racket.”
The warbling vireo is admirably named;
there is no one of our birds that can more properly
be said to warble. He keeps further from the ground
than the others, and shows a strong preference for
the elms of village streets, out of which his delicious
music drops upon the ears of all passers underneath.
How many of them hear it and thank the singer is unhappily
another question.
The solitary vireo may once in a while
be heard in a roadside tree, chanting as familiarly
as any red-eye; but he is much less abundant than
the latter, and, as a rule, more retiring. His
ordinary song is like the red-eye’s and the
yellow-throat’s, except that it is pitched somewhat
higher and has a peculiar inflection or cadence, which
on sufficient acquaintance becomes quite unmistakable.
This, however, is only the smallest part of his musical
gift. One morning in May, while strolling through
a piece of thick woods, I came upon a bird of this
species, who, all alone like myself, was hopping from
one low branch to another, and every now and then
breaking out into a kind of soliloquizing song,-a
musical chatter, shifting suddenly to an intricate,
low-voiced warble. Later in the same day I found
another in a chestnut grove. This last was in
a state of quite unwonted fervor, and sang almost continuously;
now in the usual disconnected vireo manner, and now
with a chatter and warble like what I had heard in
the morning, but louder and longer. His best
efforts ended abruptly with the ordinary vireo call,
and the instantaneous change of voice gave to the
whole a very strange effect. The chatter and
warble appeared to be related to each other precisely
as are those of the ruby-crowned kinglet; while the
warble had a certain tender, affectionate, some would
say plaintive quality, which at once put me in mind
of the goldfinch.
I have seldom been more charmed with
the song of any bird than I was on the 7th of last
October with that of this same Vireo solitarius.
The morning was bright and warm, but the birds had
nearly all taken their departure, and the few that
remained were silent. Suddenly the stillness
was broken by a vireo note, and I said to myself with
surprise, A red-eye? Listening again, however,
I detected the solitary’s inflection; and after
a few moments the bird, in the most obliging manner,
came directly towards me, and began to warble in the
fashion already described. He sang and sang,-as
if his song could have no ending,-and meanwhile
was flitting from tree to tree, intent upon his breakfast.
As far as I could discover, he was without company;
and his music, too, seemed to be nothing more than
an unpremeditated, half-unconscious talking to himself.
Wonderfully sweet it was, and full of the happiest
content. “I listened till I had my fill,”
and returned the favor, as best I could, by hoping
that the little wayfarer’s lightsome mood would
not fail him, all the way to Guatemala and back again.
Exactly a month before this, and not
far from the same spot, I had stood for some minutes
to enjoy the “recital” of the solitary’s
saucy cousin, the white-eye. Even at that time,
although the woods were swarming with birds,-many
of them travelers from the North,-this white-eye
was nearly the only one still in song. He, however,
was fairly brimming over with music; changing his
tune again and again, and introducing (for the first
time in Weymouth, as concert programmes say) a notably
fine shake. Like the solitary, he was all the
while busily feeding (birds in general, and vireos
in particular, hold with Mrs. Browning that we may
“prove our work the better for the sweetness
of our song"), and one while was exploring a poison-dogwood
bush, plainly without the slightest fear of any ill-result.
It occurred to me that possibly it is our fault, and
not that of Rhus venenata, when we suffer from
the touch of that graceful shrub.
The white-eyed greenlet is a vocalist
of such extraordinary versatility and power that one
feels almost guilty in speaking of him under the title
which stands at the head of this paper. How he
would scold, out-carlyling Carlyle, if he knew what
were going on! Nevertheless I cannot rank him
with the great singers, exceptionally clever and original
as, beyond all dispute, he is; and for that matter,
I look upon the solitary as very much his superior,
in spite of-or, shall I say, because of?-the
latter’s greater simplicity and reserve.
But if we hesitate thus about these
two inconspicuous vireos, whom half of those who do
them the honor to read what is here said about them
will have never seen, how are we to deal with the
scarlet tanager? Our handsomest bird, and with
musical aspirations as well, shall we put him into
the second class? It must be so, I fear:
yet such justice is a trial to the flesh; for what
critic could ever quite leave out of account the beauty
of a prima donna in passing judgment on her
work? Does not her angelic face sing to his eye,
as Emerson says?
Formerly I gave the tanager credit
for only one song,-the one which suggests
a robin laboring under an attack of hoarseness; but
I have discovered that he himself regards his chip-cherr
as of equal value. At least, I have found him
perched at the tip of a tall pine, and repeating this
inconsiderable and not very melodious trochee with
all earnestness and perseverance. Sometimes he
rehearses it thus at nightfall; but even so I cannot
call it highly artistic. I am glad to believe,
however, that he does not care in the least for my
opinion. Why should he? He is too true a
gallant to mind what anybody else thinks, so long
as one is pleased; and she, no doubt, tells
him every day that he is the best singer in the grove.
Beside his divine chip-cherr the rhapsody of
the wood thrush is a mere nothing, if she is to be
the judge. Strange, indeed, that so shabbily
dressed a creature as this thrush should have the
presumption to attempt to sing at all! “But
then,” she charitably adds, “perhaps he
is not to blame; such things come by nature; and there
are some birds, you know, who cannot tell the difference
between noise and music.”
We trust that the tanager will improve
as time goes on; but in any case we are largely in
his debt. How we should miss him if he were gone,
or even were become as rare as the summer red-bird
and the cardinal are in our latitude! As it is,
he lights up our Northern woods with a truly tropical
splendor, the like of which no other of our birds can
furnish. Let us hold him in hearty esteem, and
pray that he may never be exterminated; no, not even
to beautify the head-gear of our ladies, who, if they
only knew it, are already sufficiently bewitching.
What shall we say now about the lesser
lights of that most musical family, the finches?
Of course the cardinal and rose-breasted grosbeaks
are not to be included in any such category. Nor
will I put there the goldfinch, the linnet,
the fox-colored sparrow, and the song sparrow.
These, if no more, shall stand among the immortals;
so far, at any rate, as my suffrage counts. But
who ever dreamed of calling the chipping sparrow a
fine singer? And yet, who that knows it does not
love his earnest, long-drawn trill, dry and tuneless
as it is? I can speak for one, at all events;
and he always has an ear open for it by the middle
of April. It is the voice of a friend,-a
friend so true and gentle and confiding that we do
not care to ask whether his voice be smooth and his
speech eloquent.
The chipper’s congener, the
field sparrow, is less neighborly than he, but a much
better musician. His song is simplicity itself;
yet, even at its lowest estate, it never fails of
being truly melodious, while by one means and another
its wise little author contrives to impart to it a
very considerable variety, albeit within pretty narrow
limits. Last spring the field sparrows were singing
constantly from the middle of April till about the
10th of May, when they became entirely dumb. Then,
after a week in which I heard not a note, they again
grew musical. I pondered not a little over their
silence, but concluded that they were just then very
much occupied with preparations for housekeeping.
The bird who is called indiscriminately
the grass finch, the bay-winged bunting, the bay-winged
sparrow, the vesper sparrow, and I know not what else
(the ornithologists have nicknamed him Pooecetes
gramineus), is a singer of good parts, but is
especially to be commended for his refinement.
In form his music is strikingly like the song sparrow’s;
but the voice is not so loud and ringing, and the
two or three opening notes are less sharply emphasized.
In general the difference between the two songs may
perhaps be well expressed by saying that the one is
more declamatory, the other more cantabile;
a difference exactly such as we might have expected,
considering the nervous, impetuous disposition of
the song sparrow and the placidity of the bay-wing.
As one of his titles indicates, the
bay-wing is famous for singing in the evening, when,
of course, his efforts are doubly acceptable; and I
can readily believe that Mr. Minot is correct in his
“impression” that he has once or twice
heard the song in the night. For while spending
a few days at a New Hampshire hotel, which was surrounded
with fine lawns such as the grass finch delights in,
I happened to be awake in the morning, long before
sunrise,-when, in fact, it seemed like the
dead of night,-and one or two of these
sparrows were piping freely. The sweet and gentle
strain had the whole mountain valley to itself.
How beautiful it was, set in such a broad “margin
of silence,” I must leave to be imagined.
I noticed, moreover, that the birds sang almost incessantly
the whole day through. Much of the time there
were two singing antiphonally. Manifestly, the
lines had fallen to them in pleasant places:
at home for the summer in those luxuriant Sugar-Hill
fields, in continual sight of yonder magnificent mountain
panorama, with Lafayette himself looming grandly in
the foreground; while they, innocent souls, had never
so much as heard of hotel-keepers and their bills.
“Happy commoners,” indeed! Their
“songs in the night” seemed nowise surprising.
I fancied that I could be happy myself in such a case.
Our familiar and ever-welcome snow-bird,
known in some quarters as the black chipping-bird,
and often called the black snow-bird, has a long trill,
not altogether unlike the common chipper’s, but
in a much higher key. It is a modest lay, yet
doubtless full of meaning; for the singer takes to
the very tip of a tree, and throws his head back in
the most approved style. He does his best, at
any rate, and so far ranks with the angels; while,
if my testimony can be of any service to him, I am
glad to say (’t is too bad the praise is so
equivocal) that I have heard many human singers who
gave me less pleasure; and further, that he took an
indispensable though subordinate part in what was one
of the most memorable concerts at which I was ever
happy enough to be a listener. This was given
some years ago in an old apple-orchard by a flock of
fox-colored sparrows, who, perhaps for that occasion
only, had the “valuable assistance” of
a large choir of snow-birds. The latter were
twittering in every tree, while to this goodly accompaniment
the sparrows were singing their loud, clear, thrush-like
song. The combination was felicitous in the extreme.
I would go a long way to hear the like again.
If distinction cannot be attained
by one means, who knows but that it may be by another?
It is denied us to be great? Very well, we can
at least try the effect of a little originality.
Something like this seems to be the philosophy of
the indigo-bird; and he carries it out both in dress
and in song. As we have said already, it is usual
for birds to reserve the loudest and most taking parts
of their music for the close, though it may be doubted
whether they have any intelligent purpose in so doing.
Indeed, the apprehension of a great general truth such
as lies at the basis of this well-nigh universal habit,-the
truth, namely, that everything depends upon the impression
finally left on the hearer’s mind; that to end
with some grand burst, or with some surprisingly lofty
note, is the only, or to speak cautiously, the principal,
requisite to a really great musical performance,-the
intelligent grasp of such a truth as this, I say,
seems to me to lie beyond the measure of a bird’s
capacity in the present stage of his development.
Be this as it may, however, it is noteworthy that
the indigo-bird exactly reverses the common plan.
He begins at his loudest and sprightliest, and then
runs off into a diminuendo, which fades into
silence almost imperceptibly. The strain will
never be renowned for its beauty; but it is unique,
and, further, is continued well into August.
Moreover,-and this adds grace to the most
ordinary song,-it is often let fall while
the bird is on the wing.
This eccentric genius has taken possession
of a certain hillside pasture, which, in another way,
belongs to me also. Year after year he comes
back and settles down upon it about the middle of May;
and I have often been amused to see his mate-who
is not permitted to wear a single blue feather-drop
out of her nest in a barberry bush and go fluttering
off, both wings dragging helplessly through the grass.
I should pity her profoundly but that I am in no doubt
her injuries will rapidly heal when once I am out
of sight. Besides, I like to imagine her beatitude,
as, five minutes afterward, she sits again upon the
nest, with her heart’s treasures all safe underneath
her. Many a time was a boy of my acquaintance
comforted in some ache or pain with the words, “Never
mind! ’t will feel better when it gets well;”
and so, sure enough, it always did. But what
a wicked world this is, where nature teaches even a
bird to play the deceiver!
On the same hillside is always to
be found the chewink,-a creature whose
dress and song are so unlike those of the rest of his
tribe that the irreverent amateur is tempted to believe
that, for once, the men of science have made a mistake.
What has any finch to do with a call like cherawink,
or with such a three-colored harlequin suit? But
it is unsafe to judge according to the outward appearance,
in ornithology as in other matters; and I have heard
that it is only those who are foolish as well as ignorant
who indulge in off-hand criticisms of wiser men’s
conclusions. So let us call the towhee a finch,
and say no more about it.
But whatever his lineage, it is plain
that the chewink is not a bird to be governed very
strictly by the traditions of the fathers. His
usual song is characteristic and pretty, yet he is
so far from being satisfied with it that he varies
it continually and in many ways, some of them sadly
puzzling to the student who is set upon telling all
the birds by their voices. I remember well enough
the morning I was inveigled through the wet grass
of two pastures-and that just as I was shod
for the city-by a wonderfully foreign note,
which filled me with lively anticipations of a new
bird, but which turned out to be the work of a most
innocent-looking towhee. It was perhaps this same
bird, or his brother, whom I one day heard throwing
in between his customary cherawinks a profusion
of staccato notes of widely varying pitch,
together with little volleys of tinkling sounds such
as his every-day song concludes with. This medley
was not laughable, like the chat’s, which it
suggested, but it had the same abrupt, fragmentary,
and promiscuous character. All in all, it was
what I never should have expected from this paragon
of self-possession.
For self-control, as I have elsewhere
said, is Pipilo’s strong point. One afternoon
last summer a young friend and I found ourselves, as
we suspected, near a chewink’s nest, and at
once set out to see which of us should have the honor
of the discovery. We searched diligently, but
without avail, while the father-bird sat quietly in
a tree, calling with all sweetness and with never
a trace of anger or trepidation, cherawink, cherawink.
Finally we gave over the hunt, and I began to console
my companion and myself for our disappointment by shaking
in the face of the bird a small tree which very conveniently
leaned toward the one in which he was perched.
By rather vigorous efforts I could make this pass
back and forth within a few inches of his bill; but
he utterly disdained to notice it, and kept on calling
as before. While we were laughing at his impudence
(his impudence!) the mother suddenly appeared,
with an insect in her beak, and joined her voice to
her husband’s. I was just declaring how
cruel as well as useless it was for us to stay, when
she ungratefully gave a ludicrous turn to what was
intended for a very sage and considerate remark, by
dropping almost at my feet, stepping upon the edge
of her nest, and offering the morsel to one of her
young. We watched the little tableau admiringly
(I had never seen a prettier show of nonchalance),
and thanked our stars that we had been saved from
an involuntary slaughter of the innocents while trampling
all about the spot. The nest, which we had tried
so hard to find, was in plain sight, concealed only
by the perfect agreement of its color with that of
the dead pine-branches in the midst of which it was
placed. The shrewd birds had somehow learned-by
experience, perhaps, like ourselves-that
those who would escape disagreeable and perilous conspicuity
must conform as closely as possible to the world around
them.
According to my observation, the towhee
is not much given to singing after July; but he keeps
up his call, which is little less musical than his
song, till his departure in late September. At
that time of the year the birds collect together in
their favorite haunts; and I remember my dog’s
running into the edge of a roadside pasture among some
cedar-trees, when there broke out such a chorus of
cherawinks that I was instantly reminded of
a swamp full of frogs in April.
After the tanager the Baltimore oriole
(named for Lord Baltimore, whose colors he wears)
is probably the most gorgeous, as he is certainly one
of the best known, of New England birds. He has
discovered that men, bad as they are, are less to
be dreaded than hawks and weasels, and so, after making
sure that his wife is not subject to sea-sickness,
he swings his nest boldly from a swaying shade-tree
branch, in full view of whoever may choose to look
at it. Some morning in May-not far
from the 10th-you will wake to hear him
fifing in the elm before your window. He has
come in the night, and is already making himself at
home. Once I saw a pair who on the very first
morning had begun to get together materials for a
nest. His whistle is one of the clearest and loudest,
but he makes little pretensions to music. I have
been pleased and interested, however, to see how tuneful
he becomes in August, after most other birds have
ceased to sing, and after a long interval of silence
on his own part. Early and late he pipes and
chatters, as if he imagined that the spring were really
coming back again forthwith. What the explanation
of this lyrical revival may be I have never been able
to gather; but the fact itself is very noticeable,
so that it would not be amiss to call the “golden
robin” the bird of August.
The oriole’s dusky relatives
have the organs of song well developed; and although
most of the species have altogether lost the art of
music, there are none of them, even now, that do not
betray more or less of the musical impulse. The
red-winged blackbird, indeed, has some really praiseworthy
notes; and to me-for personal reasons quite
aside from any question about its lyrical value-his
rough cucurree is one of the very pleasantest
of sounds. For that matter, however, there is
no one of our birds-be he, in technical
language, “oscine” or “non-oscine”-whose
voice is not, in its own way, agreeable. Except
a few uncommonly superstitious people, who does not
enjoy the whip-poor-will’s trisyllabic exhortation,
and the yak of the night-hawk? Bob White’s
weather predictions, also, have a wild charm all their
own, albeit his persistent No more wet is often
sadly out of accord with the farmer’s hopes.
We have no more untuneful bird, surely, than the cow
bunting; yet even the serenades of this shameless
polygamist have one merit,-they are at
least amusing. With what infinite labor he brings
forth his forlorn, broken-winded whistle, while his
tail twitches convulsively, as if tail and larynx
were worked by the same spring!
The judging, comparing spirit, the
conscientious dread of being ignorantly happy when
a broader culture would enable us to be intelligently
miserable,-this has its place, unquestionably,
in concert halls; but if we are to make the best use
of out-door minstrelsy, we must learn to take things
as we find them, throwing criticism to the winds.
Having said which, I am bound to go further still,
and to acknowledge that on looking back over the first
part of this paper I feel more than half ashamed of
the strictures therein passed upon the bluebird and
the brown thrush. When I heard the former’s
salutation from a Boston Common elm on the morning,
of the 22d of February last, I said to myself that
no music, not even the nightingale’s, could ever
be sweeter. Let him keep on, by all means, in
his own artless way, paying no heed to what I have
foolishly written about his shortcomings. As for
the thrasher’s smile-provoking gutturals, I recall
that even in the symphonies of the greatest of masters
there are here and there quaint bassoon phrases, which
have, and doubtless were intended to have, a somewhat
whimsical effect; and remembering this, I am ready
to own that I was less wise than I thought myself
when I found so much fault with the thrush’s
performance. I have sins enough to answer for:
may this never be added to them, that I set up my
taste against that of Beethoven and Harporhynchus
rufus.