Let Euclid rest, and Archimedes
pause,
And what the Swede intends,
and what the French.
MILTON.
AN OWL’S
HEAD HOLIDAY.
My trip to Lake Memphremagog was by
the way, and was not expected to detain me for more
than twenty-four hours; but when I went ashore at the
Owl’s Head Mountain-House, and saw what a lodge
in the wilderness it was, I said to myself, Go to,
this is the place; Mount Mansfield will stand for
another year at least, and I will waste no more of
my precious fortnight amid dust and cinders.
Here were to be enjoyed many of the comforts of civilization,
with something of the wildness and freedom of a camp.
Out of one of the windows of my large, well-furnished
room I could throw a stone into the trackless forest,
where, any time I chose, I could make the most of
a laborious half-hour in traveling half a mile.
The other two opened upon a piazza; whence the lake
was to be seen stretching away northward for ten or
fifteen miles, with Mount Orford and his supporting
hills in the near background; while I had only to
walk the length of the piazza to look round the corner
of the house at Owl’s Head itself, at whose
base we were. The hotel had less than a dozen
guests and no piano, and there was neither carriage-road
nor railway within sight or hearing. Yes, this
was the place where I would spend the eight days which
yet remained to me of idle time.
Of the eight days five were what are
called unpleasant; but the unseasonable cold, which
drove the stayers in the house to huddle about the
fire, struck the mosquitoes with a torpor which made
strolling in the woods a double luxury; while the
rain was chiefly of the showery sort, such as a rubber
coat and old clothes render comparatively harmless.
Not that I failed to take a hand with my associates
in grumbling about the weather. Table-talk would
speedily come to an end in such circumstances if people
were forbidden to criticise the order of nature; and
it is not for me to boast any peculiar sanctity in
this respect. But when all was over, it had to
be acknowledged that I, for one, had been kept in-doors
very little. In fact, if the whole truth were
told, it would probably appear that my fellow boarders,
seeing my persistency in disregarding the inclemency
of the elements, soon came to look upon me as decidedly
odd, though perhaps not absolutely demented.
At any rate, I was rather glad than otherwise to think
so. In those long days there must often have
been a dearth of topics for profitable conversation,
no matter how outrageous the weather, and it was a
pleasure to believe that this little idiosyncracy of
mine might answer to fill here and there a gap.
For what generous person does not rejoice to feel
that even in his absence he may be doing something
for the comfort and well-being of his brothers and
sisters? As Seneca said, “Man is born for
mutual assistance.”
According to Osgood’s “New
England,” the summit of Owl’s Head is 2,743
feet above the level of the lake, and the path to it
is a mile and a half and thirty rods in length.
It may seem niggardly not to throw off the last petty
fraction; and indeed we might well enough let it pass
if it were at the beginning of the route,-if
the path, that is, were thirty rods and a mile and
a half long. But this, it will be observed, is
not the case; and it is a fact perfectly well attested,
though perhaps not yet scientifically accounted for
(many things are known to be true which for the present
cannot be mathematically demonstrated), that near
the top of a mountain thirty rods are equivalent to
a good deal more than four hundred and ninety-five
feet. Let the guide-book’s specification
stand, therefore, in all its surveyor-like exactness.
After making the climb four times in the course of
eight days, I am not disposed to abate so much as
a jot from the official figures. Rather than
do that I would pin my faith to an unprofessional-looking
sign-board in the rear of the hotel, on which the legend
runs, “Summit of Owl’s Head 2-1/4 miles.”
For aught I know, indeed (in such a world as this,
uncertainty is a principal mark of intelligence),-for
aught I know, both measurements may be correct; which
fact, if once it were established, would easily and
naturally explain how it came to pass that I myself
found the distance so much greater on some days than
on others; although, for that matter, which of the
two would be actually longer, a path which should
rise 2,743 feet in a mile and a half, or one that
should cover two miles and a quarter in reaching the
same elevation, is a question to which different pedestrians
would likely enough return contradictory answers.
Yet let me not be thought to magnify
so small a feat as the ascent of Owl’s Head,
a mountain which the ladies of the Appalachian Club
may be presumed to look upon as hardly better than
a hillock. The guide-book’s “thirty
rods” have betrayed me into saying more than
I intended. It would have been enough had I mentioned
that the way is in many places steep, while at the
time of my visit the constant rains kept it in a muddy,
treacherous condition. I remember still the undignified
and uncomfortable celerity with which, on one occasion,
I took my seat in what was little better than the
rocky bed of a brook, such a place as I should by
no means have selected for the purpose had I been granted
even a single moment for deliberation.
“Hills draw like heaven”
(as applied to some of us, it may be feared that this
is rather an under-statement), and it could not have
been more than fifteen minutes after I landed from
the Lady of the Lake-the “Old Lady,”
as one of the fishermen irreverently called her-before
I was on my way to the summit.
I was delighted then, as I was afterwards,
whenever I entered the woods, with the extraordinary
profusion and variety of the ferns. Among the
rest, and one of the most abundant, was the beautiful
Cystopteris bulbifera; its long, narrow, pale
green, delicately cut, Dicksonia-like fronds bending
toward the ground at the tip, as if about to take root
for a new start, in the walking-fern’s manner.
Some of these could not have been less than four feet
in length (including the stipe), and I picked one
which measured about two feet and a half, and bore
twenty-five bulblets underneath. Half a mile from
the start, or thereabouts, the path skirts what I
should call the fernery; a circular space, perhaps
one hundred and fifty feet in diameter, set in the
midst of the primeval forest, but itself containing
no tree or shrub of any sort,-nothing but
one dense mass of ferns. In the centre was a patch
of the sensitive fern (Onoclea sensibilis), while
around this, and filling nearly the entire circle,
was a magnificent thicket of the ostrich fern (Onoclea
struthiopteris), with sensibilis growing
hidden and scattered underneath. About the edge
were various other species, notably Aspidium Goldianum,
which I here found for the first time, and Aspidium
aculeatum, var. Braunii. All in
all, it was a curious and pretty sight,-this
tiny tarn filled with ferns instead of water,-one
worth going a good distance to see, and sure to attract
the notice of the least observant traveler.
Ferns are mostly of a gregarious habit.
Here at Owl’s Head, for instance, might be seen
in one place a rock thickly matted with the common
polypody; in another a patch of the maiden-hair; in
still another a plenty of the Christmas fern, or a
smaller group of one of the beech ferns (Phegopteris
polypodioides or Phegopteris Dryopteris).
Our grape-ferns or moonworts, on the other hand, covet
more elbow-room. The largest species (Botrychium
Virginianum), although never growing in anything
like a bed or tuft, was nevertheless common throughout
the woods; you could gather a handful almost anywhere;
but I found only one plant of Botrychium lanceolatum,
and only two of Botrychium matricariaefolium
(and these a long distance apart), even though, on
account of their rarity and because I had never before
seen the latter, I spent considerable time, first
and last, in hunting for them. What can these
diminutive hermits have ever done or suffered, that
they should choose thus to live and die, each by itself,
in the vast solitude of a mountain forest?
It was already the middle of July,
so that I was too late for the better part of the
wood flowers. The oxalis (Oxalis acetosella),
or wood-sorrel was in bloom, however, carpeting the
ground in many places. I plucked a blossom now
and then to admire the loveliness of the white cup,
with its fine purple lines and golden spots. If
each had been painted on purpose for a queen, they
could not have been more daintily touched. Yet
here they were, opening by the thousand, with no human
eye to look upon them. Quite as common (Wordsworth’s
expression, “Ground flowers in flocks,”
would have suited either) was the alpine enchanter’s
night-shade (Circaea alpina); a most frail and
delicate thing, though it has little other beauty.
Who would ever mistrust, to see it, that it would
prove to be connected in any way with the flaunting
willow-herb, or fire-weed? But such incongruities
are not confined to the “vegetable kingdom.”
The wood-nettle was growing everywhere; a juicy-looking
but coarse weed, resembling our common roadside nettles
only in its blossoms. The cattle had found out
what I never should have surmised,-having
had a taste of its sting,-that it is good
for food; there were great patches of it, as likewise
of the pale touch-me-not (Impatiens pallida),
which had been browsed over by them. It seemed
to me that some of the ferns, the hay-scented for
example, ought to have suited them better; but they
passed these all by, as far as I could detect.
About the edges of the woods, and in favorable positions
well up the mountain-side, the flowering raspberry
was flourishing; making no display of itself, but
offering to any who should choose to turn aside and
look at them a few blossoms such as, for beauty and
fragrance, are worthy to be, as they really are, cousin
to the rose. On one of my rambles I came upon
some plants of a strangely slim and prim aspect; nothing
but a straight, erect, military-looking, needle-like
stalk, bearing a spike of pods at the top, and clasped
at the middle by two small stemless leaves. By
some occult means (perhaps their growing with Tiarella
had something to do with the matter) I felt at once
that these must be the mitrewort (Mitella diphylla).
My prophetic soul was not always thus explicit and
infallible, however. Other novelties I saw, about
which I could make no such happy impromptu guess.
And here the manual afforded little assistance; for
it has not yet been found practicable to “analyze,”
and so to identify plants simply by the stem and foliage,-although
I remember to have been told, to be sure, of a young
lady who professed that at her college the instruction
in botany was so thorough that it was possible for
the student to name any plant in the world from seeing
only a single leaf! But her college was not Harvard,
and Professor Gray has probably never so much as heard
of such an admirable method.
On the whole, it is good to have the
curiosity piqued with here and there a vegetable stranger,-its
name and even its family relationship a mystery.
The leaf is nothing extraordinary, perhaps, yet who
knows but that the bloom may be of the rarest beauty?
Or the leaf is of a gracious shape and texture, but
how shall we tell whether the flower will correspond
with it? No; we must do with them as with chance
acquaintances of our own kind. The man looks every
inch a gentleman; his face alone seems a sufficient
guaranty of good-breeding and intelligence; but none
the less,-and not forgetting that charity
thinketh no evil,-we shall do well to wait
till we have heard him talk and seen how he will behave,
before we put a final label upon him. Wait for
the blossom and the fruit (the blossom is the
fruit in its first stage); for the old rule is still
the true one,-alike in botany and in morals,-“By
their fruits ye shall know them.”
What a world within a world the forest
is! Under the trees were the shrubs,-knee-high
rock-maples making the ground verdant for acres together,
or dwarf thickets of yew, now bearing green acorn-like
berries; while below these was a variegated carpet,
oxalis and the flower of Linnaeus, ferns and club-mosses
(the glossy Lycopodium lucidulum was especially
plentiful), to say nothing of the true mosses and
the lichens.
Of all these things I should have
seen more, no doubt, had not my head been so much
of the time in the tree-tops. For yonder were
the birds; and how could I be expected to notice what
lay at my feet, while I was watching intently for
a glimpse of the warbler that flitted from twig to
twig amid the foliage of some beech or maple, the very
lowest branch of which, likely enough, was fifty or
sixty feet above the ground. It was in this way
(so I choose to believe, at any rate) that I walked
four or five times directly over the acute-leaved
hepatica before I finally discovered it, notwithstanding
it was one of the plants for which I had all the while
been on the lookout.
I said that the birds were in the
tree-tops; but of course there were exceptions.
Here and there was a thrush, feeding on the ground;
or an oven-bird might be seen picking his devious
way through the underwoods, in paths of his own, and
with a gait of studied and “sanctimonious”
originality. In the list of the lowly must be
put the winter wrens also; one need never look skyward
for them. For a minute or two during my
first ascent of Owl’s Head I had lively hopes
of finding one of their nests. Two or three of
the birds were scolding earnestly right about my feet,
as it were, and their cries redoubled, or so I imagined,
when I approached a certain large, moss-grown stump.
This I looked over carefully on all sides, putting
my fingers into every possible hole and crevice, till
it became evident that nothing was to be gained by
further search. (What a long chapter we could write,
any of us who are ornithologists, about the nests
we did not find!) It dawned upon me a little later
that I had been fooled; that it was not the nest which
had been in question at all. That, wherever it
was, had been forsaken some days before; and the birds
were parents and young, the former distracting my
attention by their outcries, while at the same moment
they were ordering the youngsters to make off as quickly
as possible, lest yonder hungry fiend should catch
and devour them. If wrens ever laugh, this pair
must have done so that evening, as they recalled to
each other my eager fumbling of that innocent old stump.
This opinion as to the meaning of their conduct was
confirmed in the course of a few days, when I came
upon another similar group. These were at first
quite unaware of my presence; and a very pretty family
picture they made, in their snuggery of overthrown
trees, the father breaking out into a song once in
a while, or helping his mate to feed the young, who
were already able to pick up a good part of their
own living. Before long, however, one of the
pair caught sight of the intruder, and then all at
once the scene changed. The old birds chattered
and scolded, bobbing up and down in their own ridiculous
manner (although, considered by itself, this gesture
is perhaps no more laughable than some which other
orators are applauded for making), and soon the place
was silent and to all appearance deserted.
Notwithstanding Owl’s Head is
in Canada, the birds, as I soon found, were not such
as characterize the “Canadian Fauna.”
Olive-backed thrushes, black-poll warblers, crossbills,
pine linnets, and Canada jays, all of which I had
myself seen in the White Mountains, were none of them
here; but instead, to my surprise, were wood thrushes,
scarlet tanagers, and wood pewees,-the
two latter species in comparative abundance.
My first wood thrush was seen for a moment only, and
although he had given me a plain sight of his back,
I concluded that my eyes must once more have played
me false. But within a day or two, when half-way
down the mountain path, I heard the well-known strain
ringing through the woods. It was unquestionably
that, and nothing else, for I sat down upon a convenient
log and listened for ten minutes or more, while the
singer ran through all those inimitable variations
which infallibly distinguish the wood thrush’s
song from every other. And afterward, to make
assurance doubly sure, I again saw the bird in the
best possible position, and at short range. On
looking into the subject, indeed, I learned that his
being here was nothing wonderful; since, while it is
true, as far as the sea-coast is concerned, that he
seldom ventures north of Massachusetts, it is none
the less down in the books that he does pass the summer
in Lower Canada, reaching it, probably, by way of
the valley of the St. Lawrence.
A few robins were about the hotel,
and I saw a single veery in the woods, but the only
members of the thrush family that were present in
large numbers were the hermits. These sang everywhere
and at all hours. On the summit, even at mid-day,
I was invariably serenaded by them. In fact they
seemed more abundant there than anywhere else; but
they were often to be heard by the lake-side, and
in our apple orchard, and once at least one of them
sang at some length from a birch-tree within a few
feet of the piazza, between it and the bowling alley.
As far as I have ever been able to discover, the hermit,
for all his name and consequent reputation, is less
timorous and more approachable than any other New
England representative of his “sub-genus.”
On this trip I settled once more a
question which I had already settled several times,-the
question, namely, whether the wood thrush or the hermit
is the better singer. This time my decision was
in favor of the former. How the case would have
turned had the conditions been reversed, had there
been a hundred of the wood thrushes for one of the
hermits, of course I cannot tell. So true is
a certain old Latin proverb, that in matters of this
sort it is impossible for a man to agree even with
himself for any long time together.
The conspicuous birds, noticed by
everybody, were a family of hawks. The visitor
might have no appreciation of music; he might go up
the mountain and down again without minding the thrushes
or the wrens,-for there is nothing about
the human ear more wonderful than its ability not to
hear; but these hawks passed a good part of every
day in screaming, and were bound to be attended to
by all but the stone-deaf. A native of the region
pointed out a ledge, on which, according to his account,
they had made their nest for more than thirty years.
“We call them mountain hawks,” he said,
in answer to an inquiry. The keepers of the hotel,
naturally enough, called them eagles; while a young
Canadian, who one day overtook me as I neared the
summit, and spent an hour there in my company, pronounced
them fish-hawks. I asked him, carelessly, how
he could be sure of that, and he replied, after a
little hesitation, “Why, they are all the time
over the lake; and besides, they sometimes dive into
the water and come up with a fish.” The
last item would have been good evidence, no doubt.
My difficulty was that I had never seen them near
the lake, and what was more conclusive, their heads
were dark-colored, if not really black. A few
minutes after this conversation I happened to have
my glass upon one of them as he approached the mountain
at some distance below us, when my comrade asked, “Looking
at that bird?” “Yes,” I answered;
on which he continued, in a matter-of-fact tone, “That’s
a crow;” plainly thinking that, as I appeared
to be slightly inquisitive about such matters, it would
be a kindness to tell me a thing or two. I made
bold to intimate that the bird had a barred tail,
and must, I thought, be one of the hawks. He did
not dispute the point; and, in truth, he was a modest
and well-mannered young gentleman. I liked him
in that he knew both how to converse and how to be
silent; without which latter qualification, indeed,
not even an angel would be a desirable mountain-top
companion. He gave me information about the surrounding
country such as I was very glad to get; and in the
case of the hawks my advantage over him, if any, was
mainly in this,-that my lack of knowledge
partook somewhat more fully than his of the nature
of Lord Bacon’s “learned ignorance, that
knows itself.”
Whatever the birds may have been,
“mountain hawks,” “fish-hawks,”
or duck-hawks, their aerial evolutions, as seen from
the summit, were beautiful beyond description.
One day in particular three of them were performing
together. For a time they chased each other this
way and that at lightning speed, screaming wildly,
though whether in sport or anger I could not determine.
Then they floated majestically, high above us, while
now and then one would set his wings and shoot down,
down, till the precipitous side of the mountain hid
him from view; only to reappear a minute afterward,
soaring again, with no apparent effort, to his former
height.
One of these noisy fellows served
me an excellent turn. It was the last day of
my visit, and I had just taken my farewell look at
the enchanting prospect from the summit, when I heard
the lisp of a brown creeper. This was the first
of his kind that I had seen here, and I stopped immediately
to watch him, in hopes he would sing. Creeper-like
he tried one tree after another in quick succession,
till at last, while he was exploring a dead spruce
which had toppled half-way to the ground, a hawk screamed
loudly overhead. Instantly the little creature
flattened himself against the trunk, spreading his
wings to their very utmost and ducking his head until,
though I had been all the while eying his motions
through a glass at the distance of only a few rods,
it was almost impossible to believe that yonder tiny
brown fleck upon the bark was really a bird and not
a lichen. He remained in this posture for perhaps
a minute, only putting up his head two or three times
to peer cautiously round. Unless I misjudged
him, he did not discriminate between the screech of
the hawk and the ank, ank of a nuthatch, which
followed it; and this, with an indefinable something
in his manner, made me suspect him of being a young
bird. Young or old, however, he had learned one
lesson well, at all events, one which I hoped would
keep him out of the talons of his enemies for long
days to come.
It was pleasant to see how cheerfully
he resumed work as soon as the alarm was over. This
danger was escaped, at any rate; and why should he
make himself miserable with worrying about the next?
He had the true philosophy. We who pity the birds
for their numberless perils are ourselves in no better
case. Consumption, fevers, accidents, enemies
of every name are continually lying in wait for our
destruction. We walk surrounded with them; seeing
them not, to be sure, but knowing, all the same, that
they are there; yet feeling, too, like the birds, that
in some way or other we shall elude them a while longer,
and holding at second hand the truth which these humble
creatures practice upon instinctively,-“Sufficient
unto the day is the evil thereof.”
Not far from this spot, on a previous
occasion, I had very unexpectedly come face to face
with another of the creeper’s blood-thirsty
persecutors. It happened that a warbler was singing
in a lofty birch, and being in doubt about the song
(which was a little like the Nashville’s, but
longer in each of its two parts and ending with a less
confused flourish), I was of course very desirous to
see the singer. But to catch sight of a small
bird amid thick foliage, fifty feet or more above
you, is not an easy matter, as I believe I have already
once remarked. So when I grew weary of the attempt,
I bethought myself to try the efficacy of an old device,
well known to all collectors, and proceeded to imitate,
as well as I could, the cries of some bird in distress.
My warbler was imperturbable. He had no nest or
young to be anxious about, and kept on singing.
But pretty soon I was apprised of something in the
air, coming toward me, and looking up, beheld a large
owl who appeared to be dropping straight upon my head.
He saw me in time to avoid such a catastrophe, however,
and, describing a graceful curve, alighted on a low
branch near by, and stared at me as only an owl can.
Then away he went, while at the same instant a jay
dashed into the thicket and out again, shouting derisively,
“I saw you! I saw you!” Evidently
the trick was a good one, and moderately well played;
in further confirmation of which the owl hooted twice
in response to some peculiarly happy efforts on my
part, and then actually came back again for another
look. This proved sufficient, and he quickly disappeared;
retiring to his leafy covert or hollow tree, to meditate,
no doubt, on the strange creature whose unseasonable
noises had disturbed his afternoon slumbers.
Likely enough he could not readily fall asleep again
for wondering how I could possibly find my way through
the woods in the darkness of daylight. So difficult
is it, we may suppose, for even an owl to put himself
in another’s place and see with another’s
eyes.
This little episode over, I turned
again to the birch-tree, and fortunately the warbler’s
throat was of too fiery a color to remain long concealed;
though it was at once a pleasure and an annoyance to
find myself still unacquainted with at least one song
out of the Blackburnian’s repertory. In
times past I had carefully attended to his music,
and within only a few days, in the White Mountain Notch,
I had taken note of two of its variations; but here
was still another, which neither began with zillup,
zillup, nor ended with zip, zip,-notes
which I had come to look upon as the Blackburnian’s
sign-vocal. Yet it must have been my fault, not
his, that I failed to recognize him; for every bird’s
voice has something characteristic about it, just as
every human voice has tones and inflections which
those who are sufficiently familiar with its owner
will infallibly detect. The ear feels them, although
words cannot describe them. Articulate speech
is but a modern invention, as it were, in comparison
with the five senses; and since practice makes perfect,
it is natural enough that every one of the five should
easily, and as a matter of course, perceive shades
of difference so slight that language, in its present
rudimentary state, cannot begin to take account of
them.
The other warblers at Owl’s
Head, as far as they came under my notice, were the
black-and-white creeper, the blue yellow-backed warbler,
the Nashville, the black-throated green, the black-throated
blue, the yellow-rumped, the chestnut-sided, the oven-bird
(already spoken of), the small-billed water thrush,
the Maryland yellow-throat, the Canadian flycatcher,
and the redstart.
The water thrush (I saw only one individual)
was by the lake-side, and within a rod or two of the
bowling alley. What a strange, composite creature
he is! thrush, warbler, and sandpiper all in one; with
such a bare-footed, bare-legged appearance, too, as
if he must always be ready to wade; and such a Saint
Vitus’s dance! His must be a curious history.
In particular, I should like to know the origin of
his teetering habit, which seems to put him among
the beach birds. Can it be that such frequenters
of shallow water are rendered less conspicuous by this
wave-like, up-and-down motion, and have actually adopted
it as a means of defense, just as they and many more
have taken on a color harmonizing with that of their
ordinary surroundings?
The black-throated blue warblers were
common, and like most of their tribe were waiting
upon offspring just out of the nest. I watched
one as he offered his charge a rather large insect.
The awkward fledgeling let it fall three times; and
still the parent picked it up again, only chirping
mildly, as if to say, “Come, come, my beauty,
don’t be quite so bungling.” But
even in the midst of their family cares, they still
found leisure for music; and as they and the black-throated
greens were often singing together, I had excellent
opportunities to compare the songs of the two species.
The voices, while both very peculiar, are at the same
time so nearly alike that it was impossible for me
on hearing the first note of either strain to tell
whose it was. With the voice the similarity ends,
however; for the organ does not make the singer, and
while the blue seldom attempts more than a harsh, monotonous
kree, kree, kree, the green possesses the true
lyrical gift, so that few of our birds have a more
engaging song than his simple Trees, trees, murmuring
trees, or if you choose to understand it so, Sleep,
sleep, pretty one, sleep.
I saw little of the blue yellow-backed
warbler, but whenever I took the mountain path I was
certain to hear his whimsical upward-running song,
broken off at the end with a smart snap. He seemed
to have chosen the neighborhood of the fernery for
his peculiar haunt, a piece of good taste quite in
accord with his general character. Nothing could
well be more beautiful than this bird’s plumage;
and his nest, which is “globular, with an entrance
on one side,” is described as a wonder of elegance;
while in grace of movement not even the titmouse can
surpass him. Strange that such an exquisite should
have so fantastic a song.
I have spoken of the rainy weather.
There were times when the piazza was as far out-of-doors
as it was expedient to venture. But even then
I was not without excellent feathered society.
Red-eyed vireos (one pair had their nest within twenty
feet of the hotel), chippers, song sparrows, snow-birds,
robins, waxwings, and phoebes were to be seen almost
any moment, while the hermit thrushes, as I have before
mentioned, paid us occasional visits. The most
familiar of our door-yard friends, however, to my
surprise, were the yellow-rumped warblers. Till
now I had never found them at home except in the forests
of the White Mountains; but here they were, playing
the rôle which in Massachusetts we are accustomed
to see taken by the summer yellow-birds, and by no
others of the family. At first, knowing that
this species was said to build in low evergreens,
I looked suspiciously at some small spruces which lined
the walk to the pier; but after a while I happened
to see one of the birds flying into a rock-maple with
something in his bill, and following him with my eye,
beheld him alight on the edge of his nest. “About
four feet from the ground,” the book said (the
latest book, too); but this lawless pair had chosen
a position which could hardly be less than ten times
that height,-considerably higher, at all
events, than the eaves of the three-story house.
It was out of reach in the small topmost branches,
but I watched its owners at my leisure, as the maple
was not more than two rods from my window. At
this time the nestlings were nearly ready to fly,
and in the course of a day or two I saw one of them
sitting in a tree in the midst of a drenching rain.
On my offering to lay hold of him he dropped into
the grass, and when I picked him up both parents began
to fly about me excitedly, with loud outcries.
The male, especially, went nearly frantic, entering
the bowling alley where I happened to be, and alighting
on the floor; then, taking to the bole of a tree, he
fluttered helplessly upon it, spreading his wings and
tail, seeming to say as plainly as words could have
done, “Look, you monster! here’s another
young bird that can’t fly; why don’t you
come and catch him?” The acting was admirable,-all
save the spreading of the tail; that was a false note,
for the youngster in my hand had no tail feathers at
all. I put the fellow upon a tree, whence he
quickly flew to the ground (he could fly down but
not up), and soon both parents were again supplying
him with food. The poor thing had not eaten a
morsel for possibly ten minutes, a very long fast
for a bird of his age. I hoped he would fall
into the hands of no worse enemy than myself, but the
chances seemed against him. The first few days
after quitting the nest must be full of perils for
such helpless innocents.
For the credit of my own sex I was
pleased to notice that it was the father-bird who
manifested the deepest concern and the readiest wit,
not to say the greatest courage; but I am obliged
in candor to acknowledge that this feature of the
case surprised me not a little.
In what language shall I speak of
the song of these familiar myrtle warblers, so that
my praise may correspond in some degree with the gracious
and beautiful simplicity of the strain itself?
For music to be heard constantly, right under one’s
window, it could scarcely be improved; sweet, brief,
and remarkably unobtrusive, without sharpness or emphasis;
a trill not altogether unlike the pine-creeping warbler’s,
but less matter-of-fact and business-like. I
used to listen to it before I rose in the morning,
and it was to be heard at intervals all day long.
Occasionally it was given in an absent-minded, meditative
way, in a kind of half-voice, as if the happy creature
had no thought of what he was doing. Then it
was at its best, but one needed to be near the singer.
In a clearing back of the hotel, but
surrounded by the forest, were always a goodly company
of birds, among the rest a family of yellow-bellied
woodpeckers; and in a second similar place were white-throated
sparrows, Maryland yellow-throats, and chestnut-sided
warblers, the last two feeding their young. Immature
warblers are a puzzling set. The birds themselves
have no difficulty, I suppose; but seeing young and
old together, and noting how unlike they are, I have
before now been reminded of Launcelot Gobbo’s
saying, “It is a wise father that knows his
own child.”
While traversing the woods between
these two clearings I saw, as I thought, a chimney
swift fly out of the top of a tree which had been
broken off at a height of twenty-five or thirty feet.
I stopped, and pretty soon the thing was repeated;
but even then I was not quick enough to be certain
whether the bird really came from the stump or only
out of the forest behind it. Accordingly, after
sounding the trunk to make sure it was hollow, I sat
down in a clump of raspberry bushes, where I should
be sufficiently concealed, and awaited further developments.
I waited and waited, while the mosquitoes, seeing
how sheltered I was from the breeze, gathered about
my head in swarms. A winter wren at my elbow
struck up to sing, going over and over with his exquisite
tune; and a scarlet tanager, also, not far off, did
what he could-which was somewhat less than
the wren’s-to relieve the tedium of
my situation. Finally, when my patience was well-nigh
exhausted,-for the afternoon was wearing
away and I had some distance to walk,-a
swift flew past me from behind, and, with none of
that poising over the entrance such as is commonly
seen when a swift goes down a chimney, went straight
into the trunk. In half a minute or less he reappeared
without a sound, and was out of sight in a second.
Then I picked up my rubber coat, and with a blessing
on the wren and the tanager, and a malediction on the
mosquitoes (so unjust does self-interest make us),
started homeward.
Conservatives and radicals! Even
the swifts, it seems, are divided into these two classes.
“Hollow trees were good enough for our fathers;
who are we that we should assume to know more than
all the generations before us? To change is not
of necessity to make progress. Let those who
will, take up with smoky chimneys; for our part we
prefer the old way.”
Thus far the conservatives; but now
comes the party of modern ideas. “All that
is very well,” say they. “Our ancestors
were worthy folk enough; they did the best they could
in their time. But the world moves, and wise
birds will move with it. Why should we make a
fetish out of some dead forefather’s example?
We are alive now. To refuse to take advantage
of increased light and improved conditions may look
like filial piety in the eyes of some: to us
such conduct appears nothing better than a distrust
of the Divine Providence, a subtle form of atheism.
What are chimneys for, pray? And as for soot and
smoke, we were made to live in them. Otherwise,
let some of our opponents be kind enough to explain
why we were created with black feathers.”
So, in brief, the discussion runs;
with the usual result, no doubt, that each side convinces
itself.
We may assume, however, that these
old-school and new-school swifts do not carry their
disagreement so far as actually to refuse to hold
fellowship with one another. Conscience is but
imperfectly developed in birds, as yet, and they can
hardly feel each other’s sins and errors of
belief (if indeed these things be two, and not one)
quite so keenly as men are accustomed to do.
After all, it is something to be grateful
for, this diversity of habit. We could not spare
the swifts from our villages, and it would be too bad
to lose them out of the Northern forests. May
they live and thrive, both parties of them.
I am glad, also, for the obscurity
which attends their annual coming and going.
Whether they hibernate or migrate, the secret is their
own; and for my part, I wish them the wit to keep
it. In this age, when the world is in such danger
of becoming omniscient before the time, it is good
to have here and there a mystery in reserve.
Though it be only a little one, we may well cherish
it as a treasure.