Not much to find, not much to see;
But the air was fresh, the path was free.
W.
ALLINGHAM.
WINTER BIRDS
ABOUT BOSTON.
A weed has been defined as a plant
the use of which is not yet discovered. If the
definition be correct there are few weeds. For
the researches of others beside human investigators
must be taken into the account. What we complacently
call the world below us is full of intelligence.
Every animal has a lore of its own; not one of them
but is-what the human scholar is more and
more coming to be-a specialist. In
these days the most eminent botanists are not ashamed
to compare notes with the insects, since it turns
out that these bits of animate wisdom long ago anticipated
some of the latest improvements of our modern systematists.
We may see the red squirrel eating, with real epicurean
zest, mushrooms, the white and tender flesh of which
we have ourselves looked at longingly, but have never
dared to taste. How amused he would be (I fear
he would even be rude enough to snicker) were you to
caution him against poison! As if Sciurus Hudsonius
didn’t know what he were about! Why should
men be so provincial as to pronounce anything worthless
merely because they can do nothing with it?
The clover is not without value, although the robin
and the oriole may agree to think so. We know
better; and so do the rabbits and the humblebees.
The wise respect their own quality wherever they see
it, and are thankful for a good hint from no matter
what quarter. Here is a worthy neighbor of mine
whom I hear every summer complaining of the chicory
plants which disfigure the roadside in front of her
windows. She wishes they were exterminated, every
one of them. And they are homely, there is no
denying it, for all the beauty of their individual
sky-blue flowers. No wonder a neat housewife
finds them an eyesore. But I never pass the spot
in August (I do not pass it at all after that) without
seeing that hers is only one side of the story.
My approach is sure to startle a few goldfinches (and
they too are most estimable neighbors), to whom these
scraggy herbs are quite as useful as my excellent lady’s
apple-trees and pear-trees are to her. I watch
them as they circle about in musical undulations,
and then drop down again to finish their repast; and
I perceive that, in spite of its unsightliness, the
chicory is not a weed,-its use has been
discovered.
In truth, the lover of birds soon
ceases to feel the uncomeliness of plants of this
sort; he even begins to have a peculiar and kindly
interest in them. A piece of “waste ground,”
as it is called, an untidy garden, a wayside thicket
of golden-rods and asters, pig-weed and evening primrose,-these
come to be almost as attractive a sight to him as
a thrifty field of wheat is to an agriculturalist.
Taking his cue from the finches, he separates plants
into two grand divisions,-those that shed
their seeds in the fall, and those that hold them through
the winter. The latter, especially if they are
of a height to overtop a heavy snow-fall, are friends
in need to his clients; and he is certain to have
marked a few places within the range of his every-day
walks where, thanks to somebody’s shiftlessness,
perhaps, they have been allowed to flourish.
It is not many years since there were
several such winter gardens of the birds in Commonwealth
Avenue,-vacant house-lots overgrown with
tall weeds. Hither cause flocks of goldfinches,
red-poll linnets, and snow buntings; and thither I
went to watch them. It happened, I remember,
that the last two species, which are not to be met
with in this region every season, were unusually abundant
during the first or second year of my ornithological
enthusiasm. Great was the delight with which I
added them to the small but rapidly increasing list
of my feathered acquaintances.
The red-polls and the goldfinches
often travel together, or at least are often to be
found feeding in company; and as they resemble each
other a good deal in size, general appearance, and
ways, the casual observer is very likely not to discriminate
between them. Only the summer before the time
of which I speak I had spent a vacation at Mount Wachusett;
and a resident of Princeton, noticing my attention
to the birds (a taste so peculiar is not easily concealed),
had one day sought an interview with me to inquire
whether the “yellow-bird” did not remain
in Massachusetts through the winter. I explained
that we had two birds which commonly went by that
name and asked whether he meant the one with a black
forehead and black wings and tail. Yes, he said,
that was the one. I assured him, of course, that
this bird, the goldfinch, did stay with us all the
year round, and that whoever had informed him to the
contrary must have understood him to be speaking about
the golden warbler. He expressed his gratification,
but declared that he had really entertained no doubt
of the fact himself; he had often seen the birds on
the mountain when he had been cutting wood there in
midwinter. At such times, he added, they were
very tame, and would come about his feet to pick up
crumbs while he was eating his dinner. Then he
went on to tell me that at that season of the year
their plumage took on more or less of a reddish tinge:
he had seen in the same flock some with no trace of
red, others that were slightly touched with it, and
others still of a really bright color. At this
I had nothing to say, save that his red birds, whatever
else they were, could not have been goldfinches.
But next winter, when I saw the “yellow-birds”
and the red-poll linnets feeding together in Commonwealth
Avenue, I thought at once of my Wachusett friend.
Here was the very scene he had so faithfully described,-some
of the flock with no red at all, some with red crowns,
and a few with bright carmine crowns and breasts.
They remained all winter, and no doubt thought the
farmers of Boston a very good and wise set, to cultivate
the evening primrose so extensively. This plant,
like the succory, is of an ungraceful aspect; yet
it has sweet and beautiful blossoms, and as an herb
bearing seed is in the front rank. I doubt whether
we have any that surpass it, the birds being judges.
Many stories are told of the red-polls’
fearlessness and ready reconciliation to captivity,
as well as of their constancy to each other.
I have myself stood still in the midst of a flock,
until they were feeding round my feet so closely that
it looked easy enough to catch one or two of them
with a butterfly net. Strange that creatures so
gentle and seemingly so delicately organized should
choose to live in the regions about the North Pole!
Why should they prefer Labrador and Greenland, Iceland
and Spitzbergen, to more southern countries? Why?
Well, possibly for no worse a reason than this, that
these are the lands of their fathers. Other birds,
it may be, have grown discouraged, and one after another
ceased to come back to their native shores as the
rigors of the climate have increased; but these little
patriots are still faithful. Spitzbergen is home,
and every spring they make the long and dangerous
passage to it. All praise to them!
If any be ready to call this an over-refinement,
deeming it incredible that beings so small and lowly
should come so near to human sentiment and virtue,
let such not be too hasty with their dissent.
Surely they may in reason wait till they can point
to at least one country where the men are as universally
faithful to their wives and children as the birds
are to theirs.
The red-poll linnets, as I have said,
are irregular visitors in this region; several years
may pass, and not one be seen; but the goldfinch we
have with us always. Easily recognized as he is,
there are many well-educated New-Englanders, I fear,
who do not know him, even by sight; yet when that
distinguished ornithologist, the Duke of Argyll, comes
to publish his impressions of this country, he avers
that he has been hardly more interested in the “glories
of Niagara” than in this same little yellow-bird,
which he saw for the first time while looking from
his hotel window at the great cataract. “A
golden finch, indeed!” he exclaims. Such
a tribute as this from the pen of a British nobleman
ought to give Astragalinus tristis immediate
entrance into the very best of American society.
It is common to say that the goldfinches
wander about the country during the winter. Undoubtedly
this is true in a measure; but I have seen things
which lead me to suspect that the statement is sometimes
made too sweeping. Last winter, for example,
a flock took up their quarters in a certain neglected
piece of ground on the side of Beacon Street, close
upon the boundary between Boston and Brookline, and
remained there nearly or quite the whole season.
Week after week I saw them in the same place, accompanied
always by half a dozen tree sparrows. They had
found a spot to their mind, with plenty of succory
and evening primrose, and were wise enough not to
forsake it for any uncertainty.
The goldfinch loses his bright feathers
and canary-like song as the cold season approaches,
but not even a New England winter can rob him of his
sweet call and his cheerful spirits; and for one, I
think him never more winsome than when he bangs in
graceful attitudes above a snow-bank, on a bleak January
morning.
Glad as we are of the society of the
goldfinches and the red-polls at this time of the
year, we cannot easily rid ourselves of a degree of
solicitude for their comfort; especially if we chance
to come upon them after sunset on some bitterly cold
day, and mark with what a nervous haste they snatch
here and there a seed, making the utmost of the few
remaining minutes of twilight. They will go to
bed hungry and cold, we think, and were surely better
off in a milder clime. But, if I am to judge
from my own experience, the snow buntings awaken no
such emotions. Arctic explorers by instinct,
they come to us only with real arctic weather, and
almost seem to be themselves a part of the snow-storm
with which they arrive. No matter what they are
doing: running along the street before an approaching
sleigh; standing on a wayside fence; jumping up from
the ground to snatch the stem of a weed, and then
setting at work hurriedly to gather the seeds they
have shaken down; or, best of all, skimming over the
snow in close order, their white breasts catching
the sun as they veer this way or that,-whatever
they may be doing, they are the most picturesque of
all our cold-weather birds. In point of suspiciousness
their behavior is very different at different times,
as, for that matter, is true of birds generally.
Seeing the flock alight in a low roadside lot, you
steal silently to the edge of the sidewalk to look
over upon them. There they are, sure enough,
walking and running about, only a few rods distant.
What lovely creatures, and how prettily they walk!
But just as you are wishing, perhaps, that they were
a little nearer, they begin to fly from right under
your feet. You search the ground eagerly, right
and left, but not a bird can you discover; and still
they continue to start up, now here, now there, till
you are ready to question whether, indeed, “eyes
were made for seeing.” The “snow-flakes”
wear protective colors, and, like most other animals,
are of opinion that, for such as lack the receipt of
fern-seed, there is often nothing safer than to sit
still. The worse the weather, the less timorous
they are, for with them, as with wiser heads, one
thought drives out another; and it is nothing uncommon,
when times are hard, to see them stay quietly upon
the fence while a sleigh goes past, or suffer a foot
passenger to come again and again within a few yards.
It gives a lively touch to the imagination
to overtake these beautiful strangers in the middle
of Beacon Street; particularly if one has lately been
reading about them in some narrative of Siberian travel.
Coming from so far, associating in flocks, with costumes
so becoming and yet so unusual, they might be expected
to attract universal notice, and possibly to get into
the newspapers. But there is a fashion even about
seeing; and of a thousand persons who may take a Sunday
promenade over the Mill-dam, while these tourists
from the North Pole are there, it is doubtful whether
a dozen are aware of their presence. Birds feeding
in the street? Yes, yes; English sparrows, of
course; we haven’t any other birds in Boston
nowadays, you know.
With the pine grosbeaks the case is
different. When a man sees a company of rather
large birds about the evergreens in his door-yard,
most of them of a neutral ashy-gray tint, but one
or two in suits of rose-color, he is pretty certain
to feel at least a momentary curiosity about them.
Their slight advantage in size counts for something;
for, without controversy, the bigger the bird the
more worthy he is of notice. And then the bright
color! The very best men are as yet but imperfectly
civilized, and there must be comparatively few, even
of Bostonians, in whom there is not some lingering
susceptibility to the fascination of red feathers.
Add to these things the fact that the grosbeaks are
extremely confiding, and much more likely than the
buntings to be seen from the windows of the house,
and you have, perhaps, a sufficient explanation of
the more general interest they excite. Like the
snow buntings and the red-polls, they roam over the
higher latitudes of Europe, Asia, and America, and
make only irregular visits to our corner of the world.
I cannot boast of any intimate acquaintance
with them. I have never caught them in a net,
or knocked them over with a club, as other persons
have done, although I have seen them when their tameness
promised success to any such loving experiment.
Indeed, it was several years before my lookout for
them was rewarded. Then, one day, I saw a flock
of about ten fly across Beacon Street,-on
the edge of Brookline,-and alight in an
apple-tree; at which I forthwith clambered over the
picket-fence after them, heedless alike of the deep
snow and the surprise of any steady-going citizen
who might chance to witness my high-handed proceeding.
Some of the birds were feeding upon the rotten apples;
picking them off the tree, and taking them to one of
the large main branches or to the ground, and there
tearing them to pieces,-for the sake of
the seeds, I suppose. The rest sat still, doing
nothing. I was most impressed with the exceeding
mildness and placidity of their demeanor; as if they
had time enough, plenty to eat, and nothing to fear.
Their only notes were in quality much like the goldfinch’s,
and hardly louder, but without his characteristic
inflection. I left the whole company seated idly
in a maple-tree, where, to all appearance, they proposed
to observe the remainder of the day as a Sabbath.
Last winter the grosbeaks were uncommonly
abundant. I found a number of them within a few
rods of the place just mentioned; this time in evergreen
trees, and so near the road that I had no call to commit
trespass. Evergreens are their usual resort,-so,
at least, I gather from books,-but I have
seen them picking up provender from a bare-looking
last year’s garden. Natives of the inhospitable
North, they have learned by long experience how to
adapt themselves to circumstances. If one resource
fails, there is always another to be tried. Let
us hope that they even know how to show fight upon,
occasion.
The purple finch-a small
copy of the pine grosbeak, as the indigo bird is of
the blue grosbeak-is a summer rather than
a winter bird with us; yet he sometimes passes the
cold season in Eastern Massachusetts, and even in
Northern New Hampshire. I have never heard him
sing more gloriously than once when the ground was
deep under the snow; a wonderfully sweet and protracted
warble, poured out while the singer circled about
in the air with a kind of half-hovering flight.
As I was walking briskly along a West
End street, one cold morning in March, I heard a bird’s
note close at hand, and, looking down, discovered
a pair of these finches in a front yard. The male,
in bright plumage, was flitting about his mate, calling
anxiously, while she, poor thing, sat motionless upon
the snow, too sick or too badly exhausted to fly.
I stroked her feathers gently while she perched on
my finger, and then resumed my walk; first putting
her into a little more sheltered position on the sill
of a cellar window, and promising to call on my way
back, when, if she were no better, I would take her
home with me, and give her a warm room and good nursing.
When I returned, however, she was nowhere to be found.
Her mate, I regret to say, both on his own account
and for the sake of the story, had taken wing and disappeared
the moment I entered the yard. Possibly he came
back and encouraged her to fly off with him; or perhaps
some cat made a Sunday breakfast of her. The truth
will never be known; our vigilant city police take
no cognizance of tragedies so humble.
For several years a few song sparrows-a
pair or two, at least-have wintered in
a piece of ground just beyond the junction of Beacon
street and Brookline Avenue. I have grown accustomed
to listen for their tseep as I go by the spot,
and occasionally I catch sight of one of them perched
upon a weed, or diving under the plank sidewalk.
It would be a pleasure to know the history of the
colony: how it started; whether the birds are
the same year after year, as I suppose to be the case;
and why this particular site was selected. The
lot is small, with no woods or bushy thicket near,
while it has buildings in one corner, and is bounded
on its three sides by the streets and the railway;
but it is full of a rank growth of weeds, especially
a sturdy species of aster and the evergreen golden-rod,
and I suspect that the plank walk, which on one side
is raised some distance from the ground, is found serviceable
for shelter in severe weather, as it is certainly made
to take the place of shrubbery for purposes of concealment.
Fortunately, birds, even those of
the same species, are not all exactly alike in their
tastes and manner of life. So, while by far the
greater part of our song sparrows leave us in the
fall, there are always some who prefer to stay.
They have strong local attachments, perhaps; or they
dread the fatigue and peril of the journey; or they
were once incapacitated for flight when their companions
went away, and, having found a Northern winter not
so unendurable as they had expected, have since done
from choice what at first they did of necessity.
Whatever their reasons,-and we cannot be
presumed to have guessed half of them,-at
all events a goodly number of song sparrows do winter
in Massachusetts, where they open the musical season
before the first of the migrants make their appearance.
I doubt, however, whether many of them choose camping
grounds so exposed and public as this in the rear
of the “Half-way House.”
Our only cold-weather thrushes are
the robins. They may be found any time in favorable
situations; and even in so bleak a place as Boston
Common I have seen them in every month of the year
except February. This exception, moreover, is
more apparent than real,-at the most a matter
of but twenty-four hours, since I once saw four birds
in a tree near the Frog Pond on the last day of January.
The house sparrows were as much surprised as I was
at the sight, and, with characteristic urbanity, gathered
from far and near to sit in the same tree with the
visitors, and stare at them.
We cannot help being grateful to the robins and the song sparrows, who give
us their society at so great a cost; but their presence can scarcely be thought
to enliven the season. At its best their bearing is only that of patient
submission to the inevitable. They remind us of the summer gone and the summer
coming, rather than brighten the winter that is now upon us; like friends who
commiserate us in some affliction, but are not able to comfort us. How different
the chickadee! In the worst weather his greeting is never of condolence, but of
good cheer. He has no theory upon the subject, probably; he is no Shepherd of
Salisbury Plain; but he knows better than to waste the exhilarating air of this
wild and frosty day in reminiscences of summer time. It is a pretty-sounding
couplet,-
“Thou hast no morrow
in thy song,
No winter in thy year,-
but rather incongruous, he would think.
Chickadee, dee, he calls,-chickadee,
dee; and though the words have no exact equivalent
in English, their meaning is felt by all such as are
worthy to hear them.
Are the smallest birds really the
most courageous, or does an unconscious sympathy on
our part inevitably give them odds in the comparison?
Probably the latter supposition comes nearest the truth.
When a sparrow chases a butcher-bird we cheer the sparrow,
and then when a humming-bird puts to flight a sparrow,
we cheer the humming-bird; we side with the kingbird
against the crow, and with the vireo, against the
kingbird. It is a noble trait of human nature-though
we are somewhat too ready to boast of it-that
we like, as we say, to see the little fellow at the
top. These remarks are made, not with any reference
to the chickadee,-I admit no possibility
of exaggeration in his case,-but as leading to a mention of the golden-crested
kinglet. He is the least of all our winter birds, and one of the most engaging.
Emersons atom in full breath and scrap of valor would apply to him even
better than to the titmouse. He says little,-zee, zee, zee is
nearly the limit of his vocabulary; but his lively
demeanor and the grace and agility of his movements
are in themselves an excellent language, speaking infallibly
a contented mind. (It is a fact, on which I forbear
to moralize, that birds seldom look unhappy except
when they are idle.) His diminutive size attracts
attention even from those who rarely notice such things.
About the first of December, a year ago, I was told
of a man who had shot a humming-bird only a few days
before in the vicinity of Boston. Of course I
expressed a polite surprise, and assured my informant
that such a remarkable capture ought by all means
to be put on record in “The Auk,” as every
ornithologist in the land would be interested in it.
On this he called upon the lucky sportsman’s
brother, who happened to be standing by, to corroborate
the story. Yes, the latter said, the fact was
as had been stated. “But then,” he
continued, “the bird didn’t have a long
bill, like a humming-bird;” and when I suggested
that perhaps its crown was yellow, bordered with black,
he said, “Yes, yes; that’s the bird, exactly.”
So easy are startling discoveries to an observer who
has just the requisite amount of knowledge,-enough,
and (especially) not too much!
The brown creeper is quite as industrious
and good-humored as the kinglet, but he is less taking
in his personal appearance and less romantic in his
mode of life. The same may be said of our two
black-and-white woodpeckers, the downy and the hairy;
while their more showy but less hardy relative, the
flicker, evidently feels the weather a burden.
The creeper and these three woodpeckers are with us
in limited numbers every winter; and in the season
of 1881-82 we had an altogether unexpected visit from
the red-headed woodpecker,-such a thing
as had not been known for a long time, if ever.
Where the birds came from, and what was the occasion
of their journey, nobody could tell. They arrived
early in the autumn, and went away, with the exception
of a few stragglers, in the spring; and as far as
I know have never been seen since. It is a great
pity they did not like us well enough to come again;
for they are wide-awake, entertaining creatures, and
gorgeously attired. I used to watch them in the
oak groves of some Longwood estates, but it was not
till our second or third interview that I discovered
them to be the authors of a mystery over which I had
been exercising my wits in vain, a tree-frog’s
note in winter! One of their amusements was to
drum on the tin girdles of the shade trees; and meanwhile
they themselves afforded a pastime to the gray squirrels,
who were often to be seen creeping stealthily after
them, as if they imagined that Melanerpes erythrocephalus
might possibly be caught, if only he were hunted long
enough. I laughed at them; but, after all, their
amusing hallucination was nothing but the sportsman’s
instinct; and life would soon lose its charm for most
of us, sportsmen or not, if we could no longer pursue
the unattainable.
Probably my experience is not singular,
but there are certain birds, well known to be more
or less abundant in this neighborhood, which for some
reason or other I have seldom, if ever, met. For
example, of the multitude of pine finches which now
and then overrun Eastern Massachusetts in winter I
have never seen one, while on the other hand I was
once lucky enough to come upon a few of the very much
smaller number which pass the summer in Northern New
Hampshire. This was in the White Mountain Notch,
first on Mount Willard and then near the Crawford House,
at which latter place they were feeding on the lawn
and along the railway track as familiarly as the goldfinches.
The shore larks, too, are no doubt
common near Boston for a part of every year; yet I
found half a dozen five or six years ago in the marsh
beside a Back Bay street, and have seen none since.
One of these stood upon a pile of earth, singing to
himself in an undertone, while the rest were feeding
in the grass. Whether the singer was playing sentinel,
and sounded an alarm, I was not sure, but all at once
the flock started off, as if on a single pair of wings.
Birds which elude the observer in
this manner year after year only render themselves
all the more interesting. They are like other
species with which we deem ourselves well acquainted,
but which suddenly appear in some quite unlooked-for
time or place. The long-expected and the unexpected
have both an especial charm. I have elsewhere
avowed my favoritism for the white-throated sparrow;
but I was never more delighted to see him than on
one Christmas afternoon. I was walking in a back
road, not far from the city, when I descried a sparrow
ahead of me, feeding in the path, and, coming nearer,
recognized my friend the white-throat. He held
his ground till the last moment (time was precious
to him that short day), and then flew into a bush to
let me pass, which I had no sooner done than he was
back again; and on my return the same thing was repeated.
Far and near the ground was white, but just at this
place the snow-plough had scraped bare a few square
feet of earth, and by great good fortune this solitary
and hungry straggler had hit upon it. I wondered
what he would do when the resources of this garden
patch were exhausted, but consoled myself with thinking
that by this time he must be well used to living by
his wits, and would probably find a way to do so even
in his present untoward circumstances.
The snow-birds (not to be confounded
with the snow buntings) should have at least a mention
in such a paper as this. They are among the most
familiar and constant of our winter guests, although
very much less numerous at that time than in spring
and autumn, when the fields and lanes are fairly alive
with them.
A kind word must be said for the shrike,
also, who during the three coldest months is to be
seen on the Common oftener than any other of our native
birds. There, at all events, he is doing a good
work. May he live to finish it!
The blue jay stands by us, of course.
You will not go far without hearing his scream, and
catching at least a distant view of his splendid coat,
which he is too consistent a dandy to put off for one
of a duller shade, let the season shift as it will.
He is not always good-natured; but none the less he
is generally in good spirits (he seems to enjoy his
bad temper), and, all in all, is not to be lightly
esteemed in a time when bright feathers are scarce.
As for the jay’s sable relatives,
they are the most conspicuous birds in the winter
landscape. You may possibly walk to Brookline
and back without hearing a chickadee, or a blue jay,
or even a goldfinch; but you will never miss sight
and sound of the crows. Black against white is
a contrast hard to be concealed. Sometimes they
are feeding in the street, sometimes stalking about
the marshes; but oftenest they are on the ice in the
river, near the water’s edge. For they know
the use of friends, although they have never heard
of Lord Bacon’s “last fruit of friendship,”
and would hardly understand what that provident philosopher
meant by saying that “the best way to represent
to life the manifold use of friendship is to cast
and see how many things there are which a man cannot
do himself.” How aptly their case illustrates
the not unusual coexistence of formal ignorance with
real knowledge! Having their Southern brother’s
fondness for fish without his skill in catching it,
they adopt a plan worthy of the great essayist himself,-they
court the society of the gulls; and with a temper
eminently philosophical, not to say Baconian, they
cheerfully sit at their patrons’ second table.
From the Common you may see them almost any day (in
some seasons, at least) flying back and forth between
the river and the harbor. One morning in early
March I witnessed quite a procession, one small company
after another, the largest numbering eleven birds,
though it was nothing to compare with what seems to
be a daily occurrence at some places further south.
At another time, in the middle of January, I saw what
appeared to be a flock of herring gulls sailing over
the city, making progress in their own wonderfully
beautiful manner, circle after circle. But I
noticed that about a dozen of them were black!
What were these? If they could have held their
peace I might have gone home puzzled; but the crow
is in one respect a very polite bird: he will
seldom fly over your head without letting fall the
compliments of the morning, and a vigorous caw,
caw soon proclaimed my black gulls to be simply
erratic specimens of Corvus Americanus.
Why were they conducting thus strangely? Had
they become so attached to their friends as to have
taken to imitating them unconsciously? Or were
they practicing upon the vanity of these useful allies
of theirs, these master fishermen? Who can answer?
The ways of shrewd people are hard to understand;
and in all New England there is no shrewder Yankee
than the crow.