There
shall be
Beautiful things made new, for the surprise
Of the sky-children.
KEATS.
Everywhere the blue sky belongs to them,
and is their appointed rest, and their native
country and their own natural homes, which they
enter unannounced, as lords that are certainly expected,
and yet these is a silent joy at their arrival.
COLERIDGE.
A BIRD-LOVER’S
APRIL.
It began on the 29th of March; in
the afternoon of which day, despite the authority
of the almanac and the banter of my acquaintances (March
was March to them, and it was nothing more), I shook
off the city’s dust from my feet, and went into
summer quarters. The roads were comparatively
dry; the snow was entirely gone, except a patch or
two in the shadow of thick pines under the northerly
side of a hill; and all tokens seemed to promise an
early spring. So much I learned before the hastening
twilight cut short my first brief turn out-of-doors.
In the morning would be time enough to discover what
birds had already reported themselves at my station.
Unknown to me, however, our national
weather bureau had announced a snow-storm, and in
the morning I drew aside the curtains to look out
upon a world all in white, with a cold, high wind blowing
and snow falling fast. “The worst Sunday
of the winter,” the natives said. The “summer
boarder” went to church, of course. To have
done otherwise might have been taken for a confession
of weakness; as if inclemency of this sort were more
than he had bargained for. The villagers, lacking
any such spur to right conduct, for the most part
stayed at home; feeling it not unpleasant, I dare
say, some of them, to have a natural inclination providentially
confirmed, even at the cost of an hour’s exercise
with the shovel. The bravest parishioner of all,
and the sweetest singer,-the song sparrow
by name,-was not in the meeting-house, but
by the roadside. What if the wind did blow, and
the mercury stand at fifteen or twenty degrees below
the freezing point? In cold as in heat “the
mind is its own place.”
Three days after this came a second
storm, one of the heaviest snow-falls of the year.
The robins were reduced to picking up seeds in the
asparagus bed. The bluebirds appeared to be trying
to glean something from the bark of trees, clinging
rather awkwardly to the trunk meanwhile. (They are
given to this, more or less, at all times, and it
possibly has some connection with their half-woodpeckerish
habit of nestling in holes.) Some of the snow-birds
were doing likewise; I noticed one traveling up a
trunk,-which inclined a good deal, to be
sure,-exploring the crannies right and left,
like any creeper. Half a dozen or more phoebes
were in the edge of a wood; and they too seemed to
have found out that, if worst came to worst, the tree-boles
would yield a pittance for their relief. They
often hovered against them, pecking hastily at the
bark, and one at least was struggling for a foothold
on the perpendicular surface. Most of the time,
however, they went skimming over the snow and the
brook, in the regular flycatcher style. The chickadees
were put to little or no inconvenience, since what
was a desperate makeshift to the others was to them
only an every-day affair. It would take a long
storm to bury their granary. After the titmice,
the fox-colored sparrows had perhaps the best of it.
Looking out places where the snow had collected least,
at the foot of a tree or on the edge of water, these
adepts at scratching speedily turned up earth enough
to checker the white with very considerable patches
of brown. While walking I continually disturbed
song sparrows, fox sparrows, tree sparrows, and snow-birds
feeding in the road; and when I sat in my room I was
advised of the approach of carriages by seeing these
“pensioners upon the traveler’s track”
scurry past the window in advance of them.
It is pleasant to observe how naturally
birds flock together in hard times,-precisely
as men do, and doubtless for similar reasons.
The edge of the wood, just mentioned, was populous
with them: robins, bluebirds, chickadees, fox
sparrows, snow-birds, song sparrows, tree sparrows,
phoebes, a golden-winged woodpecker, and a rusty blackbird.
The last, noticeable for his conspicuous light-colored
eye-ring, had somehow become separated from his fellows,
and remained for several days about this spot entirely
alone. I liked to watch his aquatic performances;
they might almost have been those of the American dipper
himself, I thought. He made nothing of putting
his head and neck clean under water, like a duck,
and sometimes waded the brook when the current was
so strong that he was compelled every now and then
to stop and brace himself against it, lest he should
be carried off his feet.
It is clear that birds, sharing the
frailty of some who are better than many sparrows,
are often wanting in patience. As spring draws
near they cannot wait for its coming. What it
has been the fashion to call their unerring instinct
is after all infallible only as a certain great public
functionary is,-in theory; and their mistaken
haste is too frequently nothing but a hurrying to
their death. But I saw no evidence that this
particular storm was attended with any fatal consequences.
The snow completely disappeared within a day or two;
and even while it lasted the song sparrows, fox sparrows,
and linnets could be heard singing with all cheerfulness.
On the coldest day, when the mercury settled to within
twelve degrees of zero, I observed that the song sparrows,
as they fed in the road, had a trick of crouching
till their feathers all but touched the ground, so
protecting their legs against the biting wind.
The first indications of mating were
noticed on the 5th, the parties being two pairs of
bluebirds. One of the females was rebuffing her
suitor rather petulantly, but when he flew away she
lost no time in following. Shall I be accused
of slander if I suggest that possibly her No
meant nothing worse than Ask me again? I trust
not; she was only a bluebird, remember. Three
days later I came upon two couples engaged in house-hunting.
In this business the female takes the lead, with a
silent, abstracted air, as if the matter were one of
absorbing interest; while her mate follows her about
somewhat impatiently, and with a good deal of talk,
which is plainly intended to hasten the decision.
“Come, come,” he says; “the season
is short, and we can’t waste the whole of it
in getting ready.” I never could discover
that his eloquence produced much effect, however.
Her ladyship will have her own way; as indeed she
ought to have, good soul, considering that she is to
have the discomfort and the hazard. In one case
I was puzzled by the fact that there seemed to be
two females to one of the opposite sex. It really
looked as if the fellow proposed to set up housekeeping
with whichever should first find a house to her mind.
But this is slander, and I hasten to take it
back. No doubt I misinterpreted his behavior;
for it is true-with sorrow I confess it-that
I am as yet but imperfectly at home in the Sialian
dialect.
For the first fortnight my note-book
is full of the fox-colored sparrows. It was worth
while to have come into the country ahead of time,
as city people reckon, to get my fill of this Northern
songster’s music. Morning and night, wherever
I walked, and even if I remained in-doors, I was certain
to hear the loud and beautiful strain; to which I
listened with the more attention because the birds,
I knew, would soon be off for their native fields,
beyond the boundaries of the United States.
It is astonishing how gloriously birds
may sing, and yet pass unregarded. We read of
nightingales and skylarks with a self-satisfied thrill
of second-hand enthusiasm, and meanwhile our native
songsters, even the best of them, are piping unheeded
at our very doors. There may have been half a
dozen of the town’s people who noticed the presence
of these fox sparrows, but I think it doubtful; and
yet the birds, the largest, handsomest, and most musical
of all our many sparrows, were, as I say, abundant
everywhere, and in full voice.
One afternoon I stood still while
a fox sparrow and a song sparrow sang alternately
on either side of me, both exceptionally good vocalists,
and each doing his best. The songs were of about
equal length, and as far as theme was concerned were
not a little alike; but the fox sparrow’s tone
was both louder and more mellow than the other’s,
while his notes were longer,-more sustained,-and
his voice was “carried” from one pitch
to another. On the whole, I had no hesitation
about giving him the palm; but I am bound to say that
his rival was a worthy competitor. In some respects,
indeed, the latter was the more interesting singer
of the two. His opening measure of three pips
was succeeded by a trill of quite peculiar brilliancy
and perfection; and when the other bird had ceased
he suddenly took a lower perch, and began to rehearse
an altogether different tune in a voice not more than
half as loud as what he had been using; after which,
as if to cap the climax, he several times followed
the tune with a detached phrase or two in a still fainter
voice. This last was pretty certainly an improvised
cadenza, such a thing as I do not remember ever to
have heard before from Melospiza melodia.
The song of the fox sparrow has at
times an almost thrush-like quality; and the bird
himself, as he flies up in front of you, might easily
be mistaken for some member of that noble family.
Once, indeed, when I saw him eating burning-bush berries
in a Boston garden, I was half ready to believe that
I had before my eyes a living example of the development
of one species out of another,-a finch
already well on his way to become a thrush. Most
often, however, his voice puts me in mind of the cardinal
grosbeak’s; his voice, and perhaps still more
his cadence, and especially his practice of the portamento.
The 11th of the month was sunny, and
the next morning I came back from my accustomed rounds
under a sense of bereavement: the fox sparrows
were gone. Where yesterday there had been hundreds
of them, now I could find only two silent stragglers.
They had been well scattered over the township,-here
a flock and there a flock; but in some way-I
should be glad to have anybody tell me how-the
word had passed from company to company that after
sundown Friday night all hands would set out once
more on their northward journey. There was one
man, at least, who missed them, and in the comparative
silence which followed their departure appreciated
anew how much they had contributed to fill the wet
and chilly April mornings with melody and good cheer.
The snow-birds tarried longer, but
from this date became less and less abundant.
For the first third of the month they had been as numerous,
I calculated, as all other species put together.
On one occasion I saw a large company of them chasing
an albino, the latter dashing wildly round a pine-tree,
with the whole flock in furious pursuit. They
drove him off, across an impassable morass, before
I could get close enough really to see him, but I
presumed him to be of their own kind. As far as
I could make out he was entirely white. For the
moment it lasted, it was an exciting scene; and I
was especially gratified to notice with what extreme
heartiness and unanimity the birds discountenanced
their wayward brother’s heterodoxy. I agreed
with them that one who cannot be content to dress
like other people ought not to be allowed to live with
them. The world is large,-let him
go to Rhode Island!
On the evening of the 6th, just at
dusk, I had started up the road for a lazy after-dinner
saunter, when I was brought to a sudden halt by what
on the instant I took for the cry of a night-hawk.
But no night-hawk could be here thus early in the
season, and listening further, I perceived that the
bird, if bird it was, was on the ground, or, at any
rate, not far from it. Then it flashed upon me
that this was the note of the woodcock, which I had
that very day startled upon this same hillside.
Now, then, for another sight of his famous aerial courtship
act! So, scrambling down the embankment, and clambering
over the stone-wall, I pushed up the hill through
bushes and briers, till, having come as near the bird
as I dared, I crouched, and awaited further developments.
I had not long to wait, for after a few yaks,
at intervals of perhaps fifteen or twenty seconds,
the fellow took to wing, and went soaring in a circle
above me; calling hurriedly click, click, click,
with a break now and then, as if for breath-taking.
All this he repeated several times; but unfortunately
it was too dark for me to see him, except as he crossed
a narrow illuminated strip of sky just above the horizon
line. I judged that he mounted to a very considerable
height, and dropped invariably into the exact spot
from which he had started. For a week or two
I listened every night for a repetition of the yak;
but I heard nothing more of it for a month. Then
it came to my ears again, this time from a field between
the road and a swamp. Watching my opportunity,
while the bird was in the air, I hastened across the
field, and stationed myself against a small cedar.
He was still clicking high overhead, but soon
alighted silently within twenty yards of where I was
standing, and commenced to “bleat,” prefacing
each yak with a fainter syllable which I had
never before been near enough to detect. Presently
he started once more on his skyward journey. Up
he went, in a large spiral, “higher still and
higher” till the cedar cut off my view for an
instant, after which I could not again get my eye
upon him. Whether he saw me or not I cannot tell,
but he dropped to the ground some rods away, and did
not make another ascension, although he continued
to call irregularly, and appeared to be walking about
the field. Perhaps by this time the fair one
for whose benefit all this parade was intended had
come out of the swamp to meet and reward her admirer.
Hoping for a repetition of the same
programme on the following night, I invited a friend
from the city to witness it with me; one who, less
fortunate than the “forest seer,” had never
“heard the woodcock’s evening hymn,”
notwithstanding his knowledge of birds is a thousand-fold
more than mine, as all students of American ornithology
would unhesitatingly avouch were I to mention his
name. We waited till dark; but though Philohela
was there, and sounded his yak two or three
times,-just enough to excite our hopes,-yet
for some reason he kept to terra firma.
Perhaps he was aware of our presence, and disdained
to exhibit himself in the rôle of a wooer under
our profane and curious gaze; or possibly, as my more
scientific (and less sentimental) companion suggested,
the light breeze may have been counted unfavorable
for such high-flying exploits.
After all, our matter-of-fact world
is surprisingly full of romance. Who would have
expected to find this heavy-bodied, long-billed, gross-looking,
bull-headed bird singing at heaven’s gate? He
a “scorner of the ground”? Verily,
love worketh wonders! And perhaps it is really
true that the outward semblance is sometimes deceptive.
To be candid, however, I must end with confessing
that, after listening to the woodcock’s “hymn”
a good many times, first and last, I cannot help thinking
that it takes an imaginative ear to discover anything
properly to be called a song in its monotonous click,
click, even at its fastest and loudest.
While I was enjoying the farewell
matinee of the fox-colored sparrows on the
11th, suddenly there ran into the chorus the fine silver
thread of the winter wren’s tune. Here
was pleasure unexpected. It is down in all the
books, I believe, that this bird does not sing while
on his travels; and certainly I had myself never known
him to do anything of the sort before. But there
is always something new under the sun.
“Who ever heard of th’
Indian Peru?
Or who in venturous vessell
measured
The Amazon’s huge river,
now found trew?
Or fruitfullest Virginia who
did ever vew?”
I was all ear, of course, standing
motionless while the delicious music came again and
again out of a tangle of underbrush behind a dilapidated
stone-wall,-a spot for all the world congenial
to this tiny recluse, whose whole life, we may say,
is one long game of hide-and-seek. Altogether
the song was repeated twenty times at least, and to
my thinking I had never heard it given with greater
brilliancy and fervor. The darling little minstrel!
he will never know how grateful I felt. I even
forgave him when he sang thrice from a living bush,
albeit in so doing he spoiled a sentence which I had
already committed to “the permanency of print.”
Birds of all kinds will play such tricks upon us;
but whether the fault be chargeable to fickleness or
a mischievous spirit on their part, rather than to
undue haste on the part of us their reporters, is
a matter about which I am perhaps not sufficiently
disinterested to judge. In this instance, however,
it was reasonably certain that the singer did not
show himself intentionally; for unless the whole tenor
of his life belies him, the winter wren’s motto
is, Little birds should be heard, and not seen.
Two days afterward I was favored again
in like manner. But not by the same bird, I think;
unless my hearing was at fault (the singer was further
off than before), this one’s tune was in places
somewhat broken and hesitating,-as if he
were practicing a lesson not yet fully learned.
I felt under a double obligation to
these two specimens of Anorthura troglodytes hiemalis:
first for their music itself; and then for the support
which it gave to a pet theory of mine, that all our
singing birds will yet be found to sing more or less
regularly in the course of the vernal migration.
Within another forty-eight hours this
same theory received additional confirmation.
I was standing under an apple-tree, watching a pair
of titmice who were hollowing out a stub for a nest,
when my ear caught a novel song not far away.
Of course I made towards it; but the bird flew off,
across the road and into the woods. My hour was
up, and I reluctantly started homeward, but had gone
only a few rods before the song was repeated.
This was more than human nature could bear, and, turning
back upon the run, I got into the woods just in time
to see two birds chasing each other round a tree,
both uttering the very notes which had so roused my
curiosity. Then away they went; but as I was
again bewailing my evil luck, one of them returned,
and flew into the oak, directly over my head, and
as he did so fell to calling anew, Sue, suky, suky.
A single glance upward revealed that this was another
of the silent migrants,-a brown creeper!
Only once before had I heard from him anything beside
his customary lisping zee, zee; and even
on that occasion (in June and in New Hampshire) the
song bore no resemblance to his present effort.
I have written it down as it sounded at the moment,
Sue, suky, suky, five notes, the
first longer than the others, and all of them brusque,
loud, and musical, though with something of a warbler
quality.
It surprised me to find how the migratory
movement lagged for the first half of the month.
A pair of white-breasted swallows flew over my head
while I was attending to the winter wren on the 11th,
and on the 14th appeared the first pine-creeping warblers,-welcome
for their own sakes, and doubly so as the forerunners
of a numerous and splendid company; but aside from
these two, I saw no evidence that a single new species
arrived at my station for the entire fortnight.
Robins sang sparingly from the beginning,
and became perceptibly more musical on the 8th, with
signs of mating and jealousy; but the real robin carnival
did not open till the morning of the 14th. Then
the change was wonderful. Some of the birds were
flying this way and that, high in air, two or three
together; others chased each other about nearer the
ground; some were screaming, some hissing, and more
singing. So sudden was the outbreak and so great
the commotion that I was persuaded there must have
been an arrival of females in the night.
I have heard it objected against these
thrushes, whose extreme commonness renders them less
highly esteemed than they would otherwise be, that
they find their voices too early in the morning.
But I am not myself prepared to second the criticism.
They are not often at their matins, I think, until
the eastern sky begins to flush, and it is not quite
certain to my mind that they are wrong in assuming
that daylight makes daytime. I have questioned
before now whether our own custom of sitting up for
five or six hours after sunset, and then lying abed
two or three hours after sunrise, may not have come
down to us from times when there were still people
in the world who loved darkness rather than light,
because their deeds were evil; and whether, after all,
in this as in some other respects, we might not wisely
take pattern of the fowls of the air.
Individually, the phoebes were almost
as noisy as the robins, but of course their numbers
were far less. They are models of perseverance.
Were their voice equal to the nightingale’s they
could hardly be more assiduous and enthusiastic in
its use. As a general thing they are content
to repeat the simple Phoebe, Phoebe (there are
moods in the experience of all of us, I hope, when
the repetition of a name is by itself music sufficient),
but it is not uncommon for this to be heightened to
Phoebe, O Phoebe; and now and then you will
hear some fellow calling excitedly, Phoebe, Phoebe-be-be-be-be,-a
comical sort of stuttering, in which the difficulty
is not in getting hold of the first syllable, but
in letting go the last one. On the 15th I witnessed
a certain other performance of theirs,-one
that I had seen two or three times the season previous,
and for which I had been on the lookout from the first
day of the month. I heard a series of chips,
which might have been the cries of a chicken, but which,
it appeared, did proceed from a phoebe, who, as I
looked up, was just in the act of quitting his perch
on the ridge-pole of a barn. He rose for perhaps
thirty feet, not spirally, but in a zigzag course,-like
a horse climbing a hill with a heavy load,-all
the time calling, chip, chip, chip. Then
he went round and round in a small circle, with a kind
of hovering action of the wings, vociferating hurriedly,
Phoebe, Phoebe, Phoebe; after which he shot
down into the top of a tree, and with a lively flirt
of his tail took up again the same eloquent theme.
During the next few weeks I several times found birds
of this species similarly engaged. And it is
worthy of remark that, of the four flycatchers which
regularly pass the summer with us, three may be said
to be, in the habit of singing in the air, while
the fourth (the wood pewee) does the same thing, only
with less frequency. It is curious, also, on
the other hand, that not one of our eight common New
England thrushes, as far as I have ever seen or heard,
shows the least tendency toward any such state of
lyrical exaltation. Yet the thrushes are song
birds par excellence, while the phoebe, the
least flycatcher, and the kingbird are not supposed
to be able to sing at all. The latter have the
soul of music in them, at any rate; and why should
it not be true of birds, as it is of human poets and
would-be poets, that sensibility and faculty are not
always found together? Perhaps those who have
nothing but the sensibility have, after all, the better
half of the blessing.
The golden-winged woodpeckers shouted
comparatively little before the middle of the month,
and I heard nothing of their tender wick-a-wick
until the 22d. After that they were noisy enough.
With all their power of lungs, however, they not only
are not singers; they do not aspire to be. They
belong to the tribe of Jubal. Hearing somebody
drumming on tin, I peeped over the wall, and saw one
of these pigeon woodpeckers hammering an old tin pan
lying in the middle of the pasture. Rather small
sport, I thought, for so large a bird. But that
was a matter of opinion, merely, and evidently the
performer himself had no such scruples. He may
even have considered that his ability to play on this
instrument of the tinsmith’s went far to put
him on an equality with some who boast themselves
the only tool-using animals. True, the pan was
battered and rusty; but it was resonant, for all that,
and day after day he pleased himself with beating
reveille upon it. One morning I found
him sitting in a tree, screaming lustily in response
to another bird in an adjacent field. After a
while, waxing ardent, he dropped to the ground, and,
stationing himself before his drum, proceeded to answer
each cry of his rival with a vigorous rubadub, varying
the programme with an occasional halloo. How
long this would have lasted there is no telling, but
he caught sight of me, skulking behind a tree-trunk,
and flew back to his lofty perch, where he was still
shouting when I came away. It was observable
that, even in his greatest excitement, he paused once
in a while to dress his feathers. At first I was
inclined to take this as betraying a want of earnestness;
but further reflection led me to a different conclusion.
For I imagine that the human lover, no matter how
consuming his passion, is seldom carried so far beyond
himself as not to be able to spare now and then a
thought to the parting of his hair and the tie of
his cravat.
Seeing the great delight which this
woodpecker took in his precious tin pan, it seemed
to me not at all improbable that he had selected his
summer residence with a view to being near it, just
as I had chosen mine for its convenience of access
to the woods on the one hand, and to the city on the
other. I shall watch with interest to see whether
he returns to the same pasture another year.
A few field sparrows and chippers
showed themselves punctually on the 15th; but they
were only scouts, and the great body of their followers
were more than a week behind them. I saw no bay-winged
buntings until the 22d, although it is likely enough
they had been here for some days before that.
By a lucky chance, my very first bird was a peculiarly
accomplished musician: he altered his tune at
nearly every repetition of it, sang it sometimes loudly
and then softly, and once in a while added cadenza-like
phrases. It lost nothing by being heard on a bright,
frosty morning, when the edges of the pools were filmed
with ice.
Only three species of warblers appeared
during the month: the pine-creeping warblers,
already spoken of, who were trilling on the 14th;
the yellow-rumped, who came on the 23d; and the yellow
red-polls, who followed the next morning. The
black-throated greens were mysteriously tardy, and
the black-and-white creepers waited for May-day.
A single brown thrush was leading
the chorus on the 29th. “A great singer,”
my note-book says: “not so altogether faultless
as some, but with a large voice and style, adapted
to a great part;” and then is added, “I
thought this morning of Titiens, as I listened to him!”-a
bit of impromptu musical criticism, which, under cover
of the saving quotation marks may stand for what it
is worth.
Not long after leaving him I ran upon
two hermit thrushes (one had been seen on the 25th),
flitting about the woods like ghosts. I whistled
softly to the first, and he condescended to answer
with a low chuck, after which I could get nothing
more out of him. This demure taciturnity is very
curious and characteristic, and to me very engaging.
The fellow will neither skulk nor run, but hops upon
some low branch, and looks at you,-behaving
not a little as if you were the specimen and he the
student! And in such a case, as far as I can see,
the bird equally with the man has a right to his own
point of view.
The hermits were not yet in tune;
and without forgetting the fox-colored sparrows and
the linnets, the song sparrows and the bay-wings, the
winter wrens and the brown thrush, I am almost ready
to declare that the best music of the month came from
the smallest of all the month’s birds, the ruby-crowned
kinglets. Their spring season is always short
with us, and unhappily it was this year shorter even
than usual, my dates being April 23d and May 5th.
But we must be thankful for a little, when the little
is of such a quality. Once I descried two of them
in the topmost branches of a clump of tall maples.
For a long time they fed in silence; then they began
to chase each other about through the trees, in graceful
evolutions (I can imagine nothing more graceful), and
soon one, and then the other, broke out into song.
“’Infinite riches in a little room,’”
my note-book says, again; and truly the song is marvelous,-a
prolonged and varied warble, introduced and often broken
into, with delightful effect, by a wrennish chatter.
For fluency, smoothness, and ease, and especially
for purity and sweetness of tone, I have never heard
any bird-song that seemed to me more nearly perfect.
If the dainty creature would bear confinement,-on
which point I know nothing,-he would make
an ideal parlor songster; for his voice, while round
and full,-in contrast with the goldfinch’s,
for example,-is yet, even at its loudest,
of a wonderful softness and delicacy. Nevertheless,
I trust that nobody will ever cage him. Better
far go out-of-doors, and drink in the exquisite sounds
as they drop from the thick of some tall pine, while
you catch now and then a glimpse of the tiny author,
flitting busily from branch to branch, warbling at
his work; or, as you may oftener do, look and listen
to your heart’s content, while he explores some
low cedar or a cluster of roadside birches, too innocent
and happy to heed your presence. So you will
carry home not the song only, but “the river
and sky.”
But if the kinglets were individually
the best singers, I must still confess that the goldfinches
gave the best concert. It was on a sunny afternoon,-the
27th,-and in a small grove of tall pitch-pines.
How many birds there were I could form little estimate,
but when fifteen flew away for a minute or two the
chorus was not perceptibly diminished. All were
singing, twittering, and calling together; some of
them directly over my head, the rest scattered throughout
the wood. No one voice predominated in the least;
all sang softly, and with an indescribable tenderness
and beauty. Any who do not know how sweet the
goldfinch’s note is may get some conception of
the effect of such a concert if they will imagine
fifty canaries thus engaged out-of-doors. I declared
then that I had never heard anything so enchanting,
and I am not certain even now that I was over-enthusiastic.
A pine-creeping warbler, I remember,
broke in upon the choir two or three times with his
loud, precise trill. Foolish bird! His is
a pretty song by itself, but set in contrast with
music so full of imagination and poetry, it sounded
painfully abrupt and prosaic.
I discovered the first signs of nest-building
on the 13th, while investigating the question of a
bird’s ambi-dexterity. It happened that
I had just been watching a chickadee, as he picked
chip after chip from a dead branch, and held them
fast with one claw, while he broke them in pieces
with his beak; and walking away, it occurred to me
to ask whether or not he could probably use both feet
equally well for such a purpose. Accordingly,
seeing another go into an apple-tree, I drew near to
take his testimony on that point. But when I
came to look for him he was nowhere in sight, and
pretty soon it appeared that he was at work in the
end of an upright stub, which he had evidently but
just begun to hollow out, as the tip of his tail still
protruded over the edge. A bird-lover’s
curiosity can always adapt itself to circumstances,
and in this case it was no hardship to postpone the
settlement of my newly raised inquiry, while I observed
the pretty labors of my little architect. These
proved to be by no means inconsiderable, lasting nearly
or quite three weeks. The birds were still bringing
away chips on the 30th, when their cavity was about
eleven inches deep; but it is to be said that, as
far as I could find out, they never worked in the
afternoon or on rainy days.
Their demeanor toward each other all
this time was beautiful to see; no effusive display
of affection, but every appearance of a perfect mutual
understanding and contentment. And their treatment
of me was no less appropriate and delightful,-a
happy combination of freedom and dignified reserve.
I took it for an extremely neat compliment to myself,
as well as incontestable evidence of unusual powers
of discrimination on their part.
On my second visit the female sounded
a call as I approached the tree, and I looked to see
her mate take some notice of it; but he kept straight
on with what he was doing. Not long after she
spoke again, however; and now it was amusing to see
the fellow all at once stand still on the top of the
stub, looking up and around, as much as to say, “What
is it, my dear? I see nothing.” Apparently
it was nothing, and he went head first into
the hole again. Pretty soon, while he was inside,
I stepped up against the trunk. His mate continued
silent, and after what seemed a long time he came
out, flew to an adjacent twig, dropped his load, and
returned. This he did over and over (the end of
the stub was perhaps ten feet above my head), and once
he let fall a beakful of chips plump in my face.
They were light, and I did not resent the liberty.
Two mornings later I found him at
his task again, toiling in good earnest. In and
out he went, taking care to bring away the shavings
at every trip, as before, and generally sounding a
note or two (keeping the tally, perhaps) before he
dropped them. For the fifteen minutes or so that
I remained, his mate was perched in another branch
of the same tree, not once shifting her position,
and doing nothing whatever except to preen her feathers
a little. She paid no attention to her husband,
nor did he to her. It was a revelation to me that
a chickadee could possibly sit still so long.
Eight days after this they were both
at work, spelling each other, and then going off in
company for a brief turn at feeding.
So far they had never manifested the
least annoyance at my espionage; but the next morning,
as I stood against the tree, one of them seemed slightly
disturbed, and flew from twig to twig about my head,
looking at me from all directions with his shining
black eyes. The reconnoissance was satisfactory,
however; everything went on as before, and several
times the chips rattled down upon my stiff Derby hat.
The hole was getting deep, it was plain; I could hear
the little carpenter hammering at the bottom, and
then scrambling up the walls on his way out. One
of the pair brought a black tidbit from a pine near
by, and offered it to the other as he emerged into
daylight. He took it from her bill, said chit,-chickadese
for thank you,-and hastened back
into the mine.
Finally, on the 27th, after watching
their operations a while from the ground, I swung
myself into the tree, and took a seat with them.
To my delight, the work proceeded without interruption.
Neither bird made any outcry, although one of them
hopped round me, just out of reach, with evident curiosity.
He must have thought me a queer specimen. When
I drew my overcoat up after me and put it on, they
flew away; but within a minute or two they were both
back again, working as merrily as ever, and taking
no pains not to litter me with their rubbish.
Once the female (I took it to be she from her smaller
size, not from this piece of shiftlessness) dropped
her load without quitting the stub, a thing I had
not seen either of them do before. Twice one brought
the other something to eat. At last the male
took another turn at investigating my character, and
it began to look as if he would end with alighting
on my hat. This time, too, I am proud to say,
the verdict was favorable.
Their confidence was not misplaced,
and unless all signs failed they reared a full brood
of tits. May their tribe increase! Of birds
so innocent and unobtrusive, so graceful, so merry-hearted,
and so musical, the world can never have too many.