And now ’twas like all instruments,
Now like a lonely flute;
And now it is an angel’s song,
That makes the heavens be mute.
COLERIDGE.
A MONTH’S
MUSIC.
The morning of May-day was bright
and spring-like, and should have been signalized,
it seemed to me, by the advent of a goodly number of
birds; but the only new-comer to be found was a single
black-and-white creeper. Glad as I was to see
this lowly acquaintance back again after his seven
months’ absence, and natural as he looked on
the edge of Warbler Swamp, bobbing along the branches
in his own unique, end-for-end fashion, there was
no resisting a sensation of disappointment. Why
could not the wood thrush have been punctual? He
would have made the woods ring with an ode worthy
of the festival. Possibly the hermits-who
had been with us for several days in silence-divined
my thoughts. At all events, one of them presently
broke into a song-the first Hylocichla
note of the year. Never was voice more beautiful.
Like the poet’s dream, it “left my after-morn
content.”
It is too much to be expected that
the wood thrush should hold himself bound to appear
at a given point on a fixed date. How can we know
the multitude of reasons, any one of which may detain
him for twenty-four hours, or even for a week?
It is enough for us to be assured, in general, that
the first ten days of the month will bring this master
of the choir. The present season he arrived on
the 6th-the veery with him; last year he
was absent until the 8th; while on the two years preceding
he assisted at the observance of May-day.
All in all, I must esteem this thrush
our greatest singer; although the hermit might dispute
the palm, perhaps, but that he is merely a semi-annual
visitor in most parts of Massachusetts. If perfection
be held to consist in the absence of flaw, the hermit’s
is unquestionably the more nearly perfect song of
the two. Whatever he attempts is done beyond
criticism; but his range and variety are far less than
his rival’s, and, for my part, I can forgive
the latter if now and then he reaches after a note
lying a little beyond his best voice, and withal is
too commonly wanting in that absolute simplicity and
ease which lend such an ineffable charm to the performance
of the hermit and the veery. Shakespeare is not
a faultless poet, but in the existing state of public
opinion it will hardly do to set Gray above him.
In the course of the month about which
I am now writing (May, 1884) I was favored with thrush
music to a quite unwonted degree. With the exception
of the varied thrush (a New-Englander by accident only)
and the mocking-bird, there was not one of our Massachusetts
representatives of the family who did not put me in
his debt. The robin, the brown thrush, the cat-bird,
the wood thrush, the veery, and even the hermit (what
a magnificent sextette!)-so many I counted
upon hearing, as a matter of course; but when to these
were added the Arctic thrushes-the olive-backed
and the gray-cheeked-I gladly confessed
surprise. I had never heard either species before,
south of the White Mountains; nor, as far as I then
knew, had anybody else been more fortunate than myself.
Yet the birds themselves were seemingly unaware of
doing anything new or noteworthy. This was especially
the case with the olive-backs; and after listening
to them for three days in succession I began to suspect
that they were doing nothing new,-that
they had sung every spring in the same manner, only,
in the midst of the grand May medley, my ears had
somehow failed to take account of their contribution.
Their fourth (and farewell) appearance was on the
23d, when they sang both morning and evening.
At that time they were in a bit of swamp, among some
tall birches, and as I caught the familiar and characteristic
notes-a brief ascending spiral-I
was almost ready to believe myself in some primeval
New Hampshire forest; an illusion not a little aided
by the frequent lisping of black-poll warblers, who
chanced just then to be remarkably abundant.
It was on the same day, and within
a short distance of the same spot, that the Alice
thrushes, or gray-cheeks, were in song. Their
music was repeated a good many times, but unhappily
it ceased whenever I tried to get near the birds.
Then, as always, it put me in mind of the veery’s
effort, notwithstanding a certain part of the strain
was quite out of the veery’s manner, and the
whole was pitched in decidedly too high a key.
It seemed, also, as if what I heard could not be the
complete song; but I had been troubled with the same
feeling on previous occasions, and a friend whose
opportunities have been better than mine reports a
similiar experience; so that it is perhaps not uncharitable
to conclude that the song, even at its best, is more
or less broken and amorphous.
In their Northern homes these gray-cheeks
are excessively wild and unapproachable; but while
traveling they are little if at all worse than their
congeners in this respect,-taking short
flights when disturbed, and often doing nothing more
than to hop upon some low perch to reconnoitre the
intruder.
At the risk of being thought to reflect
upon the acuteness of more competent observers, I
am free to express my hope of hearing the music of
both these noble visitors again another season.
For it is noticeable how common such things tend to
become when once they are discovered. An enthusiastic
botanical collector told me that for years he searched
far and near for the adder’s-tongue fern, till
one day he stumbled upon it in a place over which
he had long been in the habit of passing. Marking
the peculiarities of the spot he straightway wrote
to a kindred spirit, whom he knew to have been engaged
in the same hunt, suggesting that he would probably
find the coveted plants in a particular section of
the meadow back of his own house (in Concord); and
sure enough, the next day’s mail brought an
envelope from his friend, inclosing specimens of Ophioglossum
vulgatum, with the laconic but sufficient message,
Eureka! There are few naturalists, I suspect,
who could not narrate adventures of a like sort.
One such befell me during this same
month, in connection with the wood wagtail, or golden-crowned
thrush. Not many birds are more abundant than
he in my neighborhood, and I fancied myself pretty
well acquainted with his habits and manners.
Above all, I had paid attention to his celebrated
love-song, listening to it almost daily for several
summers. Thus far it had invariably been given
out in the afternoon, and on the wing. To my
mind, indeed, this was by far its most interesting
feature (for in itself the song is by no means of
surpassing beauty), and I had even been careful to
record the earliest hour at which I had heard it-three
o’clock P. M. But on the 6th of May aforesaid
I detected a bird practicing this very tune in the
morning, and from a perch! I set the fact down
without hesitation as a wonder,-a purely
exceptional occurrence, the repetition of which was
not to be looked for. Anything might happen once.
Only four days afterwards, however, at half-past six
in the morning, I had stooped to gather some peculiarly
bright-colored anémones (I can see the patch
of rosy blossoms at this moment, although I am writing
by a blazing fire while the snow is falling without),
when my ear caught the same song again; and keeping
my position, I soon descried the fellow stepping through
the grass within ten yards of me, caroling as he walked.
The hurried warble, with the common Weechee,
weechee, weechee interjected in the midst,
was reiterated perhaps a dozen times,-the
full evening strain, but in a rather subdued tone.
He was under no excitement, and appeared to be entirely
by himself; in fact, when he had made about half the
circuit round me he flew into a low bush and proceeded
to dress his feathers listlessly. Probably what
I had overheard was nothing more than a rehearsal.
Within a week or two he would need to do his very
best in winning the fair one of his choice, and for
that supreme moment he had already put himself in training.
The wise-hearted and obliging little beau! I
must have been the veriest churl not to wish him his
pick of all the feminine wagtails in the wood.
As for the pink anémones, they had done me a double
kindness, in requital for which I could only carry
them to the city, where, in their modesty, they would
have blushed to a downright crimson had they been
conscious of one-half the admiration which their loveliness
called forth.
Before the end of the month (it was
on the morning of the 18th) I once more heard the
wagtail’s song from the ground. This time
the affair was anything but a rehearsal. There
were two birds,-a lover and his lass,-and
the wooing waxed fast and furious. For that matter,
it looked not so much like love-making as like an
aggravated case of assault and battery. But,
as I say, the male was warbling, and not improbably
(so strange are the ways of the world), if he had
been a whit less pugnacious in his addresses, his
lady-love, who was plainly well able to take care
of herself, would have thought him deficient in earnestness.
At any rate, the wood wagtail is not the only bird
whose courtship has the appearance of a scrimmage;
and I believe there are still tribes of men among
whom similar practices prevail, although the greater
part of our race have learned, by this time, to take
somewhat less literally the old proverb, “None
but the brave deserve the fair.” Love,
it is true, is still recognized as one of the passions
(in theory at least) even among the most highly civilized
peoples; but the tendency is more and more to count
it a tender passion.
While I am on the subject of marriage
I may as well mention the white-eyed vireo. It
had come to be the 16th of the month, and as yet I
had neither seen nor heard anything of this obstreperous
genius; so I made a special pilgrimage to a certain
favorite haunt of his-Woodcock Swamp-to
ascertain if he had arrived. After fifteen minutes
or more of waiting I was beginning to believe him
still absent, when he burst out suddenly with his
loud and unmistakable Chip-a-wee-o. “Who
are you, now?” the saucy fellow seemed
to say, “Who are you, now?” Pretty
soon a pair of the birds appeared near me, the male
protesting his affection at a frantic rate, and the
female repelling his advances with a snappish determination
which might have driven a timid suitor desperate.
He posed before her, puffing out his feathers, spreading
his tail, and crying hysterically, Yip, yip, yaah,-the
last note a downright whine or snarl, worthy of the
cat-bird. Poor soul! he was well-nigh beside
himself, and could not take no for an answer,
even when the word was emphasized with an ugly dab
of his beloved’s beak. The pair shortly
disappeared in the swamp, and I was not privileged
to witness the upshot of the battle; but I consoled
myself with believing that Phyllis knew how far she
could prudently carry her resistance, and would have
the discretion to yield before her adorer’s
heart was irremediably broken.
In this instance there was no misconceiving
the meaning of the action; but whoever watches birds
in the pairing season is often at his wit’s
end to know what to make of their demonstrations.
One morning a linnet chased another past me down the
road, flying at the very top of his speed, and singing
as he flew; not, to be sure, the full and copious
warble such as is heard when the bird hovers, but still
a lively tune. I looked on in astonishment.
It seemed incredible that any creature could sing
while putting forth such tremendous muscular exertions;
and yet, as if to show that this was a mere nothing
to him, the finch had no sooner struck a perch than
he broke forth again in his loudest and most spirited
manner, and continued without a pause for two or three
times the length of his longest ordinary efforts.
“What lungs he must have!” I said to myself;
and at once fell to wondering what could have stirred
him up to such a pitch of excitement, and whether the
bird he had been pursuing was male or female. He
would have said, perhaps, if he had said anything,
that that was none of my business.
What I have been remarking with regard
to the proneness of newly discovered things to become
all at once common was well illustrated for me about
this time by these same linnets, or purple finches.
One rainy morning, while making my accustomed rounds,
enveloped in rubber, I stopped to notice a blue-headed
vireo, who, as I soon perceived, was sitting lazily
in the top of a locust-tree, looking rather disconsolate,
and ejaculating with not more than half his customary
voice and emphasis, Mary Ware!-Mary
Ware! His indolence struck me as very surprising
for a vireo; still I had no question about his identity
(he sat between me and the sun) till I changed my
position, when behold! the vireo was a linnet.
A strange performance, indeed! What could have
set this fluent vocalist to practicing exercises of
such an inferior, disconnected, piecemeal sort?
Within the next week or two, however, the same game
was played upon me several times, and in different
places. No doubt the trick is an old one, familiar
to many observers, but to me it had all the charm
of novelty.
There are no birds so conservative
but that they will now and then indulge in some unexpected
stroke of originality. Few are more artless and
regular in their musical efforts than the pine warblers;
yet I have seen one of these sitting at the tip of
a tree, and repeating a trill which toward the close
invariably declined by an interval of perhaps three
tones. Even the chipping sparrow, whose lay is
yet more monotonous and formal than the pine warbler’s,
is not absolutely confined to his score. I once
heard him when his trill was divided into two portions,
the concluding half being much higher than the other-unless
my ear was at fault, exactly an octave higher.
This singular refrain was given out six or eight times
without the slightest alteration. Such freaks
as these, however, are different from the linnet’s
Mary Ware, inasmuch as they are certainly the
idiosyncrasies of single birds, not a part of the
artistic proficiency of the species as a whole.
During this month I was lucky enough
to close a little question which I had been holding
open for a number of years concerning our very common
and familiar black-throated green warbler. This
species, as is well known, has two perfectly well-defined
tunes of about equal length, entirely distinct from
each other. My uncertainty had been as to whether
the two are ever used by the same individual.
I had listened a good many times, first and last,
in hopes to settle the point, but hitherto without
success. Now, however, a bird, while under my
eye, delivered both songs, and then went on to give
further proof of his versatility by repeating one
of them minus the final note. This abbreviation,
by the way, is not very infrequent with Dendroeca
virens; and he has still another variation, which
I hear once in a while every season, consisting of
a grace note introduced in the middle of the measure,
in such a connection as to form what in musical language
is denominated a turn. At my first hearing of
this I looked upon it as the private property of the
bird to whom I was listening,-an improvement
which he had accidentally hit upon. But it is
clearly more than that; for besides hearing it in
different seasons, I have noticed it in places a good
distance apart. Perhaps, after the lapse of ten
thousand years, more or less, the whole tribe of black-throated
greens will have adopted it; and then, when some ornithologist
chances to fall in with an old-fashioned specimen who
still clings to the plain song as we now commonly hear
it, he will fancy that to be the very latest
modern improvement, and proceed forthwith to enlighten
the scientific world with a description of the novelty.
Hardly any incident of the month interested
me more than a discovery (I must call it such, although
I am almost ashamed to allude to it at all) which
I made about the black-capped titmouse. For several
mornings in succession I was greeted on waking by
the trisyllabic minor whistle of a chickadee, who
piped again and again not far from my window.
There could be little doubt about its being the bird
that I knew to be excavating a building site in one
of our apple-trees; but I was usually not out-of-doors
until about five o’clock, by which time the music
always came to an end. So one day I rose half
an hour earlier than common on purpose to have a look
at my little matutinal serenader. My conjecture
proved correct. There sat the tit, within a few
feet of his apple-branch door, throwing back his head
in the truest lyrical fashion, and calling Hear,
hear me, with only a breathing space between the
repetitions of the phrase. He was as plainly
singing, and as completely absorbed in his
work, as any thrasher or hermit thrush could have been.
Heretofore I had not realized that these whistled
notes were so strictly a song, and as such set apart
from all the rest of the chickadee’s repertory
of sweet sounds; and I was delighted to find my tiny
pet recognizing thus unmistakably the difference between
prose and poetry.
But we linger unduly with these lesser
lights of song. After the music of the Alice
and the Swainson thrushes, the chief distinction of
May, 1884, as far as my Melrose woods were concerned,
was the entirely unexpected advent of a colony of
rose-breasted grosbeaks. For five seasons I had
called these hunting-grounds my own, and during that
time had seen perhaps about the same number of specimens
of this royal species, always in the course of the
vernal migration. The present year the first
comer was observed on the 15th-solitary
and, except for an occasional monosyllable, silent.
Only one more straggler, I assumed. But on the
following morning I saw four others, all of them males
in full plumage, and two of them in song. To
one of these I attended for some time. According
to my notes “he sang beautifully, although not
with any excitement, nor as if he were doing his best.
The tone was purer and smoother than the robin’s,
more mellow and sympathetic, and the strain was especially
characterized by a dropping to a fine contralto note
at the end.” The next day I saw nothing
of my new friends till toward night. Then, after
tea, I strolled into the chestnut grove, and walking
along the path, noticed a robin singing freely, remarking
the fact because this noisy bird had been rather quiet
of late. Just as I passed under him, however,
it flashed upon me that the voice and song were not
exactly the robin’s. They must be the rose-breast’s
then; and stepping back to look up, I beheld him in
gorgeous attire, perched in the top of an oak.
He sang and sang, while I stood quietly listening.
Pretty soon he repeated the strain once or twice in
a softer voice, and I glanced up instinctively to
see if a female were with him; but instead, there were
two males sitting within a yard of each other.
They flew off after a little, and I resumed my saunter.
A party of chimney swifts were shooting hither and
thither over the trees, a single wood thrush was chanting
not far away, and in another direction a tanager was
rehearsing his chip-cherr with characteristic
assiduity. Presently I began to be puzzled by
a note which came now from this side, now from that,
and sounded like the squeak of a pair of rusty shears.
My first conjecture about the origin of this hic
it would hardly serve my reputation to make public;
but I was not long in finding out that it was the
grosbeaks’ own, and that, instead of three, there
were at least twice that number of these brilliant
strangers in the grove. Altogether, the half
hour was one of very enjoyable excitement; and when,
later in the evening, I sat down to my note-book,
I started off abruptly in a hortatory vein,-“Always
take another walk!”
In the morning, naturally enough,
I again turned my steps toward the chestnut grove.
The rose-breasts were still there, and one of them
earned my thanks by singing on the wing, flying slowly-half-hovering,
as it were-and singing the ordinary song,
but more continuously than usual. That afternoon
one of them was in tune at the same time with a robin,
affording me the desired opportunity for a direct comparison.
“It is really wonderful,” my record says,
“how nearly alike the two songs are; but the
robin’s tone is plainly inferior,-less
mellow and full. In general, too, his strain
is pitched higher; and, what perhaps is the most striking
point of difference, it frequently ends with an attempt
at a note which is a little out of reach, so that
the voice breaks.” (This last defect, by the
bye, the robin shares with his cousin the wood thrush,
as already remarked.) A few days afterwards, to confirm
my own impression about the likeness of the two songs,
I called the attention of a friend with whom I was
walking, to a grosbeak’s notes, and asked him
what bird’s they were. He, having a good
ear for matters of this kind, looked somewhat dazed
at such an inquiry, but answered promptly, “Why,
a robin’s, of course.” As one day
after another passed, however, and I listened to both
species in full voice on every hand, I came to feel
that I had overestimated the resemblance. With
increasing familiarity I discerned more and more clearly
the respects in which the songs differed, and each
came to have to my ear an individuality strictly its
own. They were alike, doubtless,-as
the red-eyed vireo’s and the blue-head’s
are,-and yet they were not alike. Of
one thing I grew, better and better assured:
the grosbeak is out of all comparison the finer musician
of the two. To judge from my last-year’s
friends, however, his concert season is very short-the
more’s the pity.
I begin to perceive (indeed it has been dawning upon me for some time) that
our essay is not to fulfill the promise of its caption. Instead of the glorious
fullness and variety of the months music (for May, in this latitude, is the
musical month of months) the reader has been put off with a few of the more
exceptional features of the carnival. He will overlook it, I trust; and as for
the great body of the chorus, who have not been honored with so much as a
mention, they, I am assured, are far too amiable to take offense at any such
unintentional slight. Let me conclude, then, with transcribing from my note-book
an evening entry or two. Music is never so sweet as at the twilight hour; and
the extracts may serve at least as a convenient and quasi-artistic ending for a
paper which, so to speak, has run away with its writer. The first is under date
of the 19th:-
“Walked, after dinner, in the
Old Road, as I have done often of late, and sat
for a while at the entrance to Pyrola Grove. A
wood thrush was singing not far off, and in the
midst a Swainson thrush vouchsafed a few measures.
I wished the latter would continue, but was thankful
for the little. A tanager called excitedly, Chip-cherr,
moving from tree to tree meanwhile, once to a birch
in full sight, and then into the pine over my
head. As it grew dark the crowd of warblers
were still to be seen feeding busily, making the most
of the lingering daylight. A small-billed water
thrush was teetering along a willow-branch, while
his congeners, the oven-birds, were practicing
their aerial hymn. One of these went past
me as I stood by the roadside, rising very gradually
into the air and repeating all the way, Chip,
chip, chip, chip, till at last he broke into
the warble, which was a full half longer than usual.
He was evidently doing his prettiest. No vireos
sang after sunset. A Maryland yellow-throat
piped once or twice (he is habitually an evening
musician), and the black-throated greens were in
tune, but the rest of the warblers were otherwise engaged.
Finally, just as a distant whippoorwill began to
call, a towhee sang once from the woods; and a
moment later the stillness was broken by the sudden
outburst of a thrasher. ‘Now then,’
he seemed to say, ’if the rest of you are
quite done, I will see what I can do.’
He kept on for two or three minutes in his best
manner, and at the same time a pair of cat-birds
were whispering love together in the thicket.
Then an ill-timed carriage came rattling along
the road, and when it had passed, every bird’s
voice was hushed. The hyla’s tremulous cry
was the only musical sound to be heard. As
I started away, one of these tree-frogs hopped
out of my path, and I picked him up at the second
or third attempt. What did he think, I wonder,
when I turned him on his back to look at the disks
at his finger-tips? Probably he supposed
that his hour was come; but I had no evil designs upon
him,-he was not to be drowned in alcohol
at present. Walking homeward I heard the
robin’s scream now and again; but the thrasher’s
was the last song, as it deserved to be.”
Two days later I find the following:-
“Into the woods by the Old Road.
As I approached them, a little after sundown,
a chipper was trilling, and song sparrows and golden
warblers were singing,-as were the black-throated
greens also, and the Maryland yellow-throats.
A wood thrush called brusquely, but offered no
further salute to the god of day at his departure.
Oven-birds were taking to wing on the right and
left. Then, as it grew dark, it grew silent,-except
for the hylas,-till suddenly a field
sparrow gave out his sweet strain once. After
that all was quiet for another interval, till
a thrasher from the hillside began to sing.
He ceased, and once more there was stillness.
All at once the tanager broke forth in a strangely
excited way, blurting out his phrase two or three
times and subsiding as abruptly as he had commenced.
Some crisis in his love-making, I imagined. Now
the last oven-bird launched into the air and let
fall a little shower of melody, and a whippoorwill
took up his chant afar off. This should have
been the end; but a robin across the meadow thought
otherwise, and set at work as if determined to
make a night of it. Mr. Early-and-late, the
robin’s name ought to be. As I left the
wood the whippoorwill followed; coming nearer
and nearer, till finally he overpassed me and
sang with all his might (while I tried in vain to
see him) from a tree or the wall, near the big
buttonwood. He too is an early riser, only
he rises before nightfall instead of before daylight.”