Spring in our northern climate may
fairly be said to extend from the middle of March
to the middle of June. At least, the vernal tide
continues to rise until the latter date, and it is
not till after the summer solstice that the shoots
and twigs begin to harden and turn to wood, or the
grass to lose any of its freshness and succulency.
It is this period that marks the return
of the birds, one or two of the more hardy
or half-domesticated species, like the song sparrow
and the bluebird, usually arriving in March, while
the rarer and more brilliant wood-birds bring up the
procession in June. But each stage of the advancing
season gives prominence to the certain species, as
to certain flowers. The dandelion tells me when
to look for the swallow, the dogtooth violet when
to expect the wood-thrush, and when I have found the
wake-robin in bloom I know the season is fairly inaugurated.
With me this flower is associated, not merely with
the awakening of Robin, for he has been awake for
some weeks, but with the universal awakening and rehabilitation
of nature.
Yet the coming and going of the birds
is more or less a mystery and a surprise. We
go out in the morning, and no thrush or vireo is to
be heard; we go out again, and every tree and grove
is musical; yet again, and all is silent. Who
saw them come? Who saw them depart?
This pert little winter wren, for
instance, darting in and out the fence, diving under
the rubbish here and coming up yards away, how
does he manage with those little circular wings to
compass degrees and zones, and arrive always in the
nick of time? Last August I saw him in the remotest
wilds of the Adirondacks, impatient and inquisitive
as usual; a few weeks later, on the Potomac, I was
greeted by the same hardy little busybody. Does
he travel by easy stages from bush to bush and from
wood to wood? or has that compact little body force
and courage to brave the night and the upper air,
and so achieve leagues at one pull?
And yonder bluebird with the earth
tinge on his breast and the sky tinge on his back, did
he come down out of the heaven on that bright March
morning when he told us so softly and plaintively that,
if we pleased, spring had come? Indeed, there
is nothing in the return of the birds more curious
and suggestive than in the first appearance, or rumors
of the appearance, of this little blue-coat. The
bird at first seems a mere wandering voice in the
air: one hears its call or carol on some bright
March morning, but is uncertain of its source or direction;
it falls like a drop of rain when no cloud is visible;
one looks and listens, but to no purpose. The
weather changes, perhaps a cold snap with snow comes
on, and it may be a week before I hear the not again,
and this time or the next perchance see this bird sitting
on a stake in the fence lifting his wing as he calls
cheerily to his mate. Its notes now become daily
more frequent; the birds multiply, and, flitting from
point to point, call and warble more confidently and
gleefully. Their boldness increases till one sees
them hovering with a saucy, inquiring air about barns
and out-buildings, peeping into dove-côtés and
stable windows, inspecting knotholes and pump-trees,
intent only on a place to nest. They wage war
against robins and wrens, pick quarrels with swallows,
and seem to deliberate for days over the policy of
taking forcible possession of one of the mud-houses
of the latter. But as the season advances they
drift more into the background. Schemes of conquest
which they at first seemed bent upon are abandoned,
and the settle down very quietly in their old quarters
in remote stumpy fields.
Not long after the bluebird comes
the robin, sometimes in March, but in most of the
Northern States April is the month of the robin.
In large numbers they scour the fields and groves.
You hear their piping in the meadow, in the pasture,
on the hillside. Walk in the woods, and the dry
leaves rustle with the whir of their wings the air
is vocal with their cheery call. In excess of
joy and vivacity, they run, leap, scream, chase each
other through the air, diving and sweeping among the
trees with perilous rapidity.
In that free, fascinating, half-work
and half-play pursuit, sugar-making, a
pursuit which still lingers in many parts of New York,
as in New England, the robin is one’s
constant companion. When the day is sunny and
the ground bare, you meet him at all points and hear
him at all hours. At sunset, on the tops of the
tall maples, with look heavenward, and in a spirit
of utter abandonment, he carols his simple strain.
And sitting thus amid the stark, silent trees, above
the wet, cold earth, with the chill of winter still
in the air, there is no fitter or sweeter songster
in the whole round year. It is in keeping with
the scene and the occasion. How round and genuine
the notes are, and how eagerly our ears drink them
in! The first utterance, and the spell of winter
is thoroughly broken, and the remembrance of it afar
off.
Robin is one of the most native and
democratic of our birds; He is one of the family,
and seems much nearer to us than those rare, exotic
visitants, as the orchard starling or rose-breasted
grosbeak, with their distant, high-bred ways.
Hardy, noisy, frolicsome, neighborly, and domestic
in his habits, strong of wing and bold in spirit, he
is the pioneer of the thrush family, and well worthy
of the finer artists whose coming he heralds and in
a measure prepares us for.
I could wish Robin less native and
plebeian in one respect, the building of
his nest. Its coarse material and rough masonry
are creditable neither to his skill as a workman nor
to his taste as an artist. I am the more forcibly
reminded of his deficiency in this respect from observing
yonder hummingbird’s nest, which is a marvel
of fitness and adaptation, a proper setting for this
winged gem, the body of it composed of
a white, felt-like substance, probably the down of
some plant or the wool of some worm, and toned down
in keeping with the branch on which it sits by minute
tree-lichens, woven together by threads as fine and
grail as gossamer. From Robin’s good looks
and musical turn, we might reasonably predict a domicile
of him as clean and handsome a nest as the king-bird’s,
whose harsh jingle, compared with Robin’s evening
melody, is as the clatter of pots and kettles beside
the tone of a flute. I love his note and ways
better even than those of the orchard starling or
the Baltimore oriole; yet his nest, compared with
theirs, is a half-subterranean hut contrasted with
a Roman villa. There is something courtly and
poetical in a pensile nest. Next to a castle
in the air is a dwelling suspended to the slender
branch of a tall tree, swayed and rocked forever by
the wind. Why need wings be afraid of falling?
Why build only where boys can climb? After all,
we must set it down to the account of Robin’s
democratic turn: he is no aristocrat, but one
of the people; and therefore we should expect stability
in his workmanship, rather than elegance.
Another April bird, which makes her
appearance sometimes earlier and sometimes later than
Robin, and whose memory I fondly cherish, is the phoebe-bird,
the pioneer of the flycatchers. In the inland
farming districts, I used to notice her, on some bright
morning about Easter Day, proclaiming her arrival,
with much variety of motion and attitude, from the
peak of the barn or hay-shed. As yet, you may
have heard only the plaintive, homesick note of the
bluebird, or the faint trill of the song sparrow;
and Phoebe’s clear, vivacious assurance of her
veritable bodily presence among us again is welcomed
by all ears. At agreeable intervals in her lay
she describes a circle or an ellipse in the air, ostensibly
prospecting for insects, but really, I suspect, as
an artistic flourish, thrown in to make up in some
way for the deficiency of her musical performance.
If plainness of dress indicates powers of song as
it usually does, then Phoebe ought to be unrivaled
in musical ability, for surely that ashen-gray suit
is the superlative of plainness; and that form, likewise,
would hardly pass for a “perfect figure”
of a bird. The seasonableness of her coming, however,
and her civil, neighborly ways, shall make up for all
deficiencies in song and plumage. After a few
weeks phoebe is seldom seen, except as she darts from
her moss-covered nest beneath some bridge or shelving
cliff.
Another April comer, who arrives shortly
after Robin-redbreast, with whom he associates both
at this season and in the autumn, is the gold-winged
woodpecker, alias “high-hole,” alias “flicker,”
alias “yarup.” He is an old favorite
of my boyhood, and his note to me means very much.
He announces his arrival by a long, loud call, repeated
from the dry branch of some tree, or a stake in the
fence, a thoroughly melodious April sound.
I think how Solomon finished that beautiful description
of spring, “And the voice of the turtle is heard
in the land,” and see that a description of spring
in this farming country, to be equally characteristic,
should culminate in like manner, “And
the call of the high-hole comes up from the wood.”
It is a loud, strong, sonorous call,
and does not seem to imply an answer, but rather to
subserve some purpose of love or music. It is
“Yarup’s” proclamation of peace and
good-will to all. On looking at the matter closely,
I perceive that most birds, not denominated songsters,
have, in the spring, some note or sound or call that
hints of a song, and answers imperfectly the end of
beauty and art. As a “livelier iris changes
on the burnished dove,” and the fancy of the
young man turns lightly to thoughts of his pretty cousin,
so the same renewing spirit touches the “silent
singers,” and they are no longer dumb; faintly
they lisp the first syllables of the marvelous tale.
Witness the clear sweet whistle of the gray-crested
titmouse, the soft, nasal piping of the
nuthatch, the amorous, vivacious warble
of the bluebird, the long, rich note of
the meadowlark, the whistle of the quail, the
drumming of the partridge, the animation
and loquacity of the swallows, and the like.
Even the hen has a homely, contented carol; and I
credit the owls with a desire to fill the night with
music. Al birds are incipient or would be songsters
in the spring. I find corroborative evidence
of this even in the crowing of the cock. The
flowering of the maple is not so obvious as that of
the magnolia; nevertheless, there is actual inflorescence.
Few writers award any song to that
familiar little sparrow, the Socialis; yet who
that has observed him sitting by the wayside, and
repeating, with devout attitude, that fine sliding
chant, does not recognize the neglect? Who has
heard the snowbird sing? Yet he has a lisping
warble very savory to the ear. I have heard him
indulge in it even in February.
Even the cow bunting feels the musical
tendency, and aspires to its expression, with the
rest. Perched upon the topmost branch beside his
mate or mates, for he is quite a polygamist,
and usually has two or three demure little ladies
in faded black beside him, generally in
the early part of the day, he seems literally to vomit
up his notes. Apparently with much labor and
effort, they gurgle and blubber up out of him, falling
on the ear with a peculiar subtile ring, as of turning
water from a glass bottle, and not without a certain
pleasing cadence.
Neither is the common woodpecker entirely
insensible to the wooing of the spring, and, like
the partridge, testifies his appreciation of melody
after quite a primitive fashion. Passing through
the woods on some clear, still morning in March, while
the metallic ring and tension of winter are still
in the earth and air, the silence is suddenly broken
by long, resonant hammering upon a dry limb or stub.
It is Downy beating a reveille to spring. In the
utter stillness and amid the rigid forms we listen
with pleasure; and, as it comes to my ear oftener
at this season than at any other, I freely exonerate
the author of it from the imputation of any gastronomic
motives, and credit him with a genuine musical performance.
It is to be expected, therefore, that
“yellow-hammer” will respond to the general
tendency, and contribute his part to the spring chorus.
His April call is his finest touch, his most musical
expression.
I recall an ancient maple standing
sentry to a large sugar-bush, that, year after year,
afforded protection to a brood of yellow-hammers in
its decayed heart. A week or two before nesting
seemed actually to have begun, three or four of these
birds might be seen, on almost any bright morning,
gamboling and courting amid its decayed branches.
Sometimes you would hear only a gentle persuasive cooing,
or a quiet confidential chattering, then
that long, loud call, taken up by first one, then
another, as they sat about upon the naked limbs, anon,
a sort of wild, rollicking laughter, intermingled with
various cries, yelps, and squeals, as if some incident
had excited their mirth and ridicule. Whether
this social hilarity and boisterousness is in celebration
of the pairing or mating ceremony, or whether it is
only a sort of annual “house-warming” common
among high-holes on resuming their summer quarters,
is a question upon which I reserve my judgment.
Unlike most of his kinsmen, the golden-wing
prefers the fields and the borders of the forest to
the deeper seclusion of the woods, and hence, contrary
to the habit of his tribe, obtains most of his subsistence
from the ground, probing it for ants and crickets.
He is not quite satisfied with being a woodpecker.
He courts the society of the robin and the finches,
abandons the trees for the meadow, and feeds eagerly
upon berries and grain. What may be the final
upshot of this course of living is a question worth
the attention of Darwin. Will his taking to the
ground and his pedestrian feats result in lengthening
his legs, his feeding upon berries and grains subdue
his tints and soften his voice, and his associating
with Robin put a song into his heart?
Indeed, what would be more interesting
than the history of our birds for the last two or
three centuries. There can be no doubt that the
presence of man has exerted a very marked and friendly
influence upon them, since they so multiply in his
society. The birds of California, it is said,
were mostly silent till after its settlement, and I
doubt if the Indians heard the wood thrush as we hear
him. Where did the bobolink disport himself before
there were meadows in the North and rice fields in
the South? Was he the same lithe, merry-hearted
beau then as now? And the sparrow, the lark,
and the goldfinch, birds that seem so indigenous to
the open fields and so adverse to the woods, we
cannot conceive of their existence in a vast wilderness
and without man.
But to return. The song sparrow,
that universal favorite and firstling of the spring,
comes before April, and its simple strain gladdens
all hearts.
May is the month of the swallows and
the orioles. There are many other distinguished
arrivals, indeed nine tenths of the birds are here
by the last week in May, yet the swallows and the
orioles are the most conspicuous. The bright
plumage of the latter seems really like an arrival
from the tropics. I see them dash through the
blossoming trees, and all the forenoon hear their
incessant warbling and wooing. The swallows dive
and chatter about the barn, or squeak and build beneath
the eaves; the partridge drums in the fresh sprouting
woods; the long, tender note of the meadowlark comes
up from the meadow; and at sunset, from every marsh
and pond come the ten thousand voices of the hylas.
May is the transition month, and exists to connect
April and June, the root with the flower.
With June the cup is full, our hearts
are satisfied, there is no more to be desired.
The perfection of the season, among other things, has
brought the perfection of the song and the plumage
of the birds. The master artists are all here;
and the expectations excited by the robin and the
song sparrow are fully justified. The thrushes
have all come; and I sit down upon the first rock,
with hands full of the pink azalea, to listen.
With me the cuckoo does not arrive till June; and
often the goldfinch, the kingbird, the scarlet tanager
delay their coming till then. In the meadows
the bobolink is in all his glory; in the high pastures
the field sparrow sings his breezy vesper-hymn; and
the woods are unfolding to the music of the thrushes.
The cuckoo is one of the most solitary
birds of our forests, and is strangely tame and quiet,
appearing equally untouched by joy or grief, fear
or anger. Something remote seems ever weighing
upon his mind. His note or call is as of one
lost or wandering, and to the farmer is prophetic
of rain. Amid the general joy and the sweet assurance
of things, I love to listen to the strange clairvoyant
call. Heard a quarter of a mile away, from out
the depths of the forest, there is something peculiarly
weird and monkish about it. Wordsworth’s
lines upon the European species apply equally well
to ours: “O blithe new-comer!
I have heard, I hear thee and rejoice: O cuckoo!
shall I call thee bird? Or but a wandering voice?
“While I am lying on
the grass,
Thy loud note smites my ear!
From hill to hill it seems to pass,
At once far off and near!
“Thrice welcome, darling
of the spring!
Even yet thou art to me
No bird, but an invisible thing,
A voice, a mystery.”
The black-billed is the only species
found in my locality, the yellow-billed abounds farther
south. Their note or call is nearly the same.
The former sometimes suggests the voice of a turkey.
The call of the latter may be suggested thus:
k-k-k-k-k-kow, kow, kow-ow, kow-ow.
The yellow-billed will take up his
stand in a tree, and explore its branches till he
has caught every worm. He sits on a twig, and
with a peculiar swaying movement of his head examines
the surrounding foliage. When he discovers his
prey, he leaps upon it in a fluttering manner.
In June the black-billed makes a tour
through the orchard and garden, regaling himself upon
the canker-worms. At this time he is one of the
tamest of birds, and will allow you to approach within
a few yards of him. I have even come within a
few feet of one without seeming to excite his fear
or suspicion. He is quite unsophisticated, or
else royally indifferent.
The plumage of the cuckoo is a rich
glossy brown, and is unrivaled in beauty by any other
neutral tint with which I am acquainted. It is
also remarkable for its firmness and fineness.
Notwithstanding the disparity in size
and color, the black-billed species has certain peculiarities
that remind one of the passenger pigeon. His
eye, with its red circle, the shape of his head, and
his motions on alighting and taking flight, quickly
suggest the resemblance; though in grace and speed,
when on the wing, he is far inferior. His tail
seems disproportionately long, like that of the red
thrush, and his flight among the trees is very still,
contrasting strongly with the honest clatter of the
robin or pigeon.
Have you heard the song of the field
sparrow? If you have lived in a pastoral country
with broad upland pastures, you could hardly have
missed him. Wilson, I believe, calls him the grass
finch, and was evidently unacquainted with his powers
of song. The two white lateral quills in his
tail, and his habit of running and skulking a few yards
in advance of you as you walk through the fields, are
sufficient to identify him. Not in meadows or
orchards, but in high, breezy pasture-grounds, will
you look for him. His song is most noticeable
after sundown, when other birds are silent; for which
reason he has been aptly called the vesper sparrow.
The farmer following his team from the field at dusk
catches his sweetest strain. His song is not so
brisk and varied as that of the song sparrow, being
softer and wilder, sweeter and more plaintive.
Add the best parts of the lay of the latter to the
sweet vibrating chant of the wood sparrow, and you
have the evening hymn of the vesper-bird, the
poet of the plain, unadorned pastures. Go to
those broad, smooth, uplying fields where the cattle
and sheep are grazing, and sit down in the twilight
on one of those warm, clean stones, and listen to
this song. On every side, near and remote, from
out the short grass which the herds are cropping,
the strain rises. Two or three long, silver notes
of peace and rest, ending in some subdued trills and
quavers, constitute each separate song. Often,
you will catch only one or two of the bars, the breeze
having blown the minor part away. Such unambitious,
quiet, unconscious melody! It is one of the most
characteristic sounds in nature. The grass, the
stones, the stubble, the furrow, the quiet herds,
and the warm twilight among the hills, are all subtly
expressed in this song; this is what they are at last
capable of.
The female builds a plain nest in
the open field, without so much as a bush or thistle
or tuft of grass to protect it or mark its site; you
may step upon it, or the cattle may tread it into the
ground. But the danger from this source, I presume,
the bird considers less than that from another.
Skunks and foxes have a very impertinent curiosity,
as Finchie well knows; and a bank or hedge, or a rank
growth of grass or thistles, that might promise protection
and cover to mouse or bird, these cunning rogues would
be apt to explore most thoroughly. The partridge
is undoubtedly acquainted with the same process of
reasoning; for, like the vesper-bird, she, too, nests
in open, unprotected places, avoiding all show of
concealment, coming from the tangled and
almost impenetrable parts of the forest to the clean,
open woods, where she can command all the approaches
and fly with equal ease in any direction.
Another favorite sparrow, but little
noticed, is the wood or bush sparrow, usually called
by the ornithologists Spizella pusilla. Its
size and form is that of the socialis, but is
less distinctly marked, being of a duller redder tinge.
He prefers remote bushy heathery fields, where his
song is one of the sweetest to be heard. It is
sometimes very noticeable, especially early in spring.
I remember sitting one bright day in the still leafless
April woods, when one of these birds struck up a few
rods from me, repeating its lay at short intervals
for nearly an hour. It was a perfect piece of
wood-music, and was of course all the more noticeable
for being projected upon such a broad unoccupied page
of silence. Its song is like the words, fe-o,
fe-o, fe-o, few, few, few, fee fee fee, uttered
at first high and leisurely, but running very rapidly
toward the close, which is low and soft.
Still keeping among the unrecognized,
the white-eyed vireo, or flycatcher, deserves particular
mention. The song of this bird is not particularly
sweet and soft; on the contrary, it is a little hard
and shrill, like that of the indigo-bird or oriole;
but for brightness, volubility, execution, and power
of imitation, he is unsurpassed by any of our northern
birds. His ordinary note is forcible and emphatic,
but, as stated, not especially musical; Chick-a-re’r-chick,
he seems to say, hiding himself in the low, dense
undergrowth, and eluding your most vigilant search,
as if playing some part in a game. But in July
of August, if you are on good terms with the sylvan
deities, you may listen to a far more rare and artistic
performance. Your first impression will be that
that cluster of azalea, or that clump of swamp-huckleberry,
conceals three of four different songsters, each vying
with the the others to lead the chorus. Such a
medley of notes, snatched from half the songsters
of the field and forest, and uttered with the utmost
clearness and rapidity, I am sure you cannot hear
short of the haunts of the genuine mockingbird.
If not fully and accurately repeated, there are at
least suggested the notes of the robin, wren, catbird,
high-hole, goldfinch, and song sparrow. The pip,
pip, of the last is produced so accurately that I verily
believe it would deceive the bird herself; and the
whole uttered in such rapid succession that it seems
as if the movement that gives the concluding note
of one strain must form the first note of the next.
The effect is very rich, and, to my ear, entirely
unique. The performer is very careful not to
reveal himself in the mean time; yet there is a conscious
air about the strain that impresses me with the idea
that my presence is understood and my attention courted.
A tone of pride and glee, and, occasionally, of bantering
jocoseness, is discernible. I believe it is only
rarely, and when he is sure of his audience, that
he displays his parts in this manner. You are
to look for him, not in tall trees or deep forests,
but in low, dense shrubbery about wet places, where
there are plenty of gnats and mosquitoes.
The winter wren is another marvelous
songster, in speaking of whom it is difficult to avoid
superlatives. He is not so conscious of is powers
and so ambitious of effect as the white-eyed flycatcher,
yet you will not be less astonished and delighted
on hearing him. He possesses the fluency and
copiousness for which the wrens are noted, and besides
these qualities, and what is rarely found conjoined
with them, a wild, sweet, rhythmical cadence that
holds you entranced. I shall not soon forget
that perfect June day, when, loitering in a low, ancient
hemlock wood, in whose cathedral aisles the coolness
and freshness seems perennial, the silence was suddenly
broken by a strain so rapid and gushing, and touched
with such a wild, sylvan plaintiveness, that I listened
in amazement. And so shy and coy was the little
minstrel, that I came twice to the woods before I was
sure to whom I was listening. In summer he is
one of those birds of the deep northern forests, that,
like the speckled Canada warbler and the hermit thrush,
only the privileged ones hear.
The distribution of plants in a given
locality is not more marked and defined than that
of the birds. Show a botanist a landscape, and
he will tell you where to look for the lady’s-slipper,
the columbine, or the harebell. On the same principles
the ornithologist will direct you where to look for
the greenlets, the wood sparrow, or the chewink.
In adjoining counties, in the same latitude, and equally
inland, but possessing a different geological formation
and different forest-timber, you will observe quite
a different class of birds. In a land of the
beech and sugar maple I do not find the same songsters
that I know where thrive the oak, chestnut, and laurel.
In going from a district of the Old Red Sandstone
to where I walk upon the old Plutonic Rock, not fifty
miles distant, I miss in the woods, the veery, the
hermit thrush, the chestnut-sided warbler, the blue-backed
warbler, the green-backed warbler, the black and yellow
warbler, and many others, and find in their stead
the wood thrush, the chewink, the redstart, the yellow-throat,
the yellow-breasted flycatcher, the white-eyed flycatcher,
the quail, and the turtle dove.
In my neighborhood here in the Highlands
the distribution is very marked. South of the
village I invariably find one species of birds, north
of it another. In only one locality, full of azalea
and swamp-huckleberry, I am always sure of finding
the hooded warbler. In a dense undergrowth of
spice-bush, witch-hazel, and alder, I meet the worm-eating
warbler. In a remote clearing, covered with heath
and fern, with here and there a chestnut and an oak,
I go to hear in July the wood sparrow, and returning
by a stumpy, shallow pond, I am sure to find the water-thrush.
Only one locality within my range
seems to possess attractions for all comers.
Here one may study almost the entire ornithology of
the State. It is a rocky piece of ground, long
ago cleared, but now fast relapsing into the wildness
and freedom of nature, and marked by those half-cultivated,
half-wild features which birds and boys love.
It is bounded on two sides by the village and highway,
crossed at various points by carriage-roads, and threaded
in all directions by paths and byways, along which
soldiers, laborers, and truant school-boys are passing
at all hours of the day. It is so far escaping
from the axe and the bush-hook as to have opened communication
with the forest and mountain beyond by straggling
lines of cedar, laurel, and blackberry. The ground
is mainly occupied with cedar and chestnut, with an
undergrowth, in many place, of heath and bramble.
The chief feature, however, is a dense growth in the
centre, consisting of dogwood, water-beech, swamp-ash,
alder, spice-bush, hazel, etc., with a network
of smilax and frost-grape. A little zigzag
stream, the draining of a swam beyond, which passes
through this tanglewood, accounts for many of its
features and productions, if not for its entire existence.
Birds that are not attracted by the heath, or the cedar
and chestnut, are sure to find some excuse for visiting
this miscellaneous growth in the centre. Most
of the common birds literally throng in this idle-wild;
and I have met here many of the rarer species, such
as the great-crested flycatcher, the solitary warbler,
the blue-winged swamp warbler, the worm-eating warbler,
the fox sparrow, etc. The absence of all
birds of prey, and the great number of flies and insects,
both the result of the proximity to the village, are
considerations which ho hawk-fearing, peace-loving
minstrel passes over lightly; hence the popularity
of the resort.
But the crowning glory of all these
robins, flycatchers, and warblers is the wood thrush.
More abundant than all other birds, except the robin
and catbird, he greets you from every rock and shrub.
Shy and reserved when he first makes his appearance
in May, before the end of June he is tame and familiar,
and sings on the tree over your head, or on the rock
a few paces in advance. A pair even built their
nest and reared their brood within ten or twelve feet
of the piazza of a large summer-house in the vicinity.
But when the guests commenced to arrive and the piazza
to be thronged with gay crowds, I noticed something
like dread and foreboding in the manner of the mother
bird; and from her still, quiet ways, and habit of
sitting long and silently within a few feet of the
precious charge, it seemed as if the dear creature
had resolved, if possible, to avoid all observation.
If we take the quality of melody as
the test, the wood thrush, hermit thrush, and the
veery thrush stand at the head of our list of songsters.
The mockingbird undoubtedly possesses
the greatest range of mere talent, the most varied
executive ability, and never fails to surprise and
delight one anew at each hearing; but being mostly
an imitator, he never approaches the serene beauty
and sublimity of the hermit thrush. The word
that best expresses my feelings, on hearing the mockingbird,
is admiration, though the first emotion is one of surprise
and incredulity. That so many and such various
notes should proceed from one throat is a marvel,
and we regard the performance with feelings akin to
those we experience on witnessing the astounding feats
of the athlete or gymnast, and this, notwithstanding
many of the notes imitated have all the freshness
and sweetness of the originals. The emotions
excited by the songs of these thrushes belong to a
higher order, springing as they do from our deepest
sense of the beauty and harmony of the world.
The wood thrush is worthy of all,
and more than all, the praises he has received; and
considering the number of his appreciative listeners,
it is not a little surprising that his relative and
equal, the hermit thrush, should have received so
little notice. Both the great ornithologists,
Wilson and Audubon, are lavish in their praises of
the former, but have little or nothing to say of the
song of the latter. Audubon says it is sometimes
agreeable, but evidently has never heard it.
Nuttall, I am glad to find, is more discriminating,
and does the bird fuller justice.
It is quite a rare bird, of very shy
and secluded habits, being found in the Middle and
Eastern States, during the period of song, only in
the deepest and most remote forests, usually in damp
and swampy localities. On this account the people
in the Adirondack region call it the “Swamp
Angel.” Its being so much of a recluse accounts
for the comparative ignorance that prevails in regard
to it.
The cast of its song is very much
like that of the wood thrush, and a good observer
might easily confound the two. But hear them together
and the difference is quite marked: the song of
the hermit is in a higher key, and is more wild and
ethereal. His instrument is a silver horn which
he winds in the most solitary places. The song
of the wood thrush is more golden and leisurely.
Its tone comes near to that of some rare stringed
instrument. One feels that perhaps the wood thrush
has more compass and power, if he would only let himself
out, but on the whole he comes a little short of the
pure, serene, hymn-like strain of the hermit.
Yet those who have heard only the
wood thrush may well place him first on the list.
He is truly a royal minstrel, and, considering his
liberal distribution throughout our Atlantic seaboard,
perhaps contributes more than any other bird to our
sylvan melody. One may object that he spends
a little too much time in tuning his instrument, yet
his careless and uncertain touches reveal its rare
compass and power.
He is the only songster of my acquaintance
excepting the canary, that displays different degrees
of proficiency in the exercise of his musical gifts.
Not long since, while walking one Sunday in the edge
of an orchard adjoining a wood, I heard one that so
obviously and unmistakably surpassed all his rivals,
that my companion, although slow to notice such things,
remarked it wonderingly; and with one accord we paused
to listen to so rare a performer. It was not
different in quality so much as in quantity. Such
a flood of it! Such copiousness! Such long,
trilling, accelerating preludes! Such sudden,
ecstatic overtures would have intoxicated the dullest
ear. He was really without a compeer, a
master artist. Twice afterward I was conscious
of having heard the same bird.
The wood thrush is the handsomest
species of this family. In grace and elegance
of manner he has no equal. Such a gentle, high-bred
air, and such inimitable ease and composure in his
flight and movement! He is a poet in very word
and deed. His carriage is music to the eye.
His performance of the commonest act, as catching
a beetle, or picking a worm from the mud, pleases
like a stroke of wit or eloquence. Was he a prince
in the olden time, and do the regal grace and mien
still adhere to him in his transformation? What
a finely proportioned form! How plain, yet rich,
his color, the bright russet of his back,
the clear white of his breast, with the distinct heart-shaped
spots! It may be objected to Robin that he is
noisy and demonstrative; he hurries away or rises
to a branch with an angry note, and flirts his wings
in ill-bred suspicion. The mavis, or red thrush,
sneaks and skulks like a culprit, hiding in the densest
alders; the catbird is a coquette and a flirt, as
well as a sort of female Paul Pry; and the chewink
shows his inhospitality by espying your movements
like a Japanese. The wood thrush has none of
theses underbred traits. He regards me unsuspiciously,
or avoids me with a noble reserve, or, if
I am quiet and incurious, graciously hops toward me,
as if to pay his respects, or to make my acquaintance.
I have passed under his nest within a few feet of
his mate and brood, when he sat near by on a branch
eying me sharply, but without opening his beak; but
the moment I raised my hand toward his defenseless
household, his anger and indignation were beautiful
to behold.
What a noble pride he has! Late
one October, after his mates and companions had long
since gone south, I noticed one for several successive
days in the dense part of this next-door wood, flitting
noiselessly about, very grave and silent, as if doing
penance for some violation of the code of honor.
By many gentle, indirect approaches, I perceived that
part of his tail-feathers were undeveloped. The
sylvan prince could not think of returning to court
in this plight, and so, amid the falling leaves and
cold rains of autumn, was patiently biding his time.
The soft, mellow flute of the veery
fills a place in the chorus of the woods that the
song of the vesper sparrow fills in the chorus of the
fields. It has the nightingale’s habit of
singing in the twilight, as indeed have all our thrushes.
Walk out toward the forest in the warm twilight of
a June day, and when fifty rods distant you will hear
their soft, reverberating notes rising from a dozen
different throats.
It is one of the simplest strains
to be heard, as simple as the curve in
form, delighting from the pure element of harmony and
beauty it contains, and not from any novel or fantastic
modulation of it, thus contrasting strongly
with such rollicking, hilarious songsters as the bobolink,
in whom we are chiefly pleased with tintinnabulation,
the verbal and labial excellence, and the evident
conceit and delight of the performer.
I hardly know whether I am more pleased
or annoyed with the catbird. Perhaps she is a
little too common, and her part in the general chorus
a little too conspicuous. If you are listening
for the note of another bird, she is sure to be prompted
to the most loud and protracted singing, drowning
all other sounds; If you sit quietly down to observe
a favorite or study a new-comer, her curiosity knows
no bounds, and you are scanned and ridiculed from
every point of observation. Yet I would not miss
her; I would only subordinate her a little, make her
less conspicuous.
She is the parodist of the woods,
and there is ever a mischievous, bantering, half-ironical
undertone in her lay, as if she were conscious of
mimicking and disconcerting some envied songster.
Ambitious of song, practicing and rehearsing in private,
she yet seems the least sincere and genuine of the
sylvan minstrels, as if she had taken up music only
to be in the fashion, or not to be outdone by the
robins and thrushes. In other words, she seems
to sing from some outward motive, and not from inward
joyousness. She is a good versifier, but not
a great poet. Vigorous, rapid, copious, not without
fine touches, but destitute of any high, serene melody,
her performance, like that of Thoreau’s squirrel,
always implies a spectator.
There is a certain air and polish
about her strain, however, like that in the vivacious
conversation of a well-bred lady of the world, that
commands respect. Her maternal instinct, also,
is very strong, and that simple structure of dead
twigs and dry grass is the center of much anxious
solicitude. Not long since, while strolling through
the woods, my attention was attracted to a small densely
grown swamp, hedged in with eglantine, brambles, and
the everlasting smilax, from which proceeded
loud cries of distress and alarm, indicating that some
terrible calamity was threatening my sombre-colored
minstrel. On effecting an entrance, which, however,
was not accomplished till I had doffed coat and hat,
so as to diminish the surface exposed to the thorns
and brambles, and, looking around me from a square
yard of terra firma, I found myself the
spectator of a loathsome yet fascinating scene.
Three or four yards from me was the nest, beneath
which, in long festoons, rested a huge black snake;
a bird two thirds grown was slowly disappearing between
his expanded jaws. As he seemed unconscious of
my presence, I quietly observed the proceedings.
By slow degrees he compassed the bird about with his
elastic mouth; his head flattened, his neck writhed
and swelled, and two or three undulatory movements
of his glistening body finished the work. Then
he cautiously raised himself up, his tongue flaming
from his mouth the while, curved over the nest, and
with wavy subtle motions, explored the interior.
I can conceive of nothing more overpoweringly terrible
to an unsuspecting family of birds than the sudden
appearance above their domicile of the head and neck
of this arch-enemy. It is enough to petrify the
blood in their veins. Not finding the object of
his search, he came streaming down from the nest to
a lower limb, and commenced extending his researches
in other directions, sliding stealthily through the
branches, bent on capturing on of the parent birds.
That a legless, wingless creature should move with
such ease and rapidity where only birds and squirrels
are considered at home, lifting himself up, letting
himself down, running out on the yielding boughs,
and traversing with marvelous celerity the whole length
and breadth of the thicket, was truly surprising.
One thinks of the great myth of the Tempter and the
“cause of all our woe,” and wonders if
the Arch One is not now playing off some of his pranks
before him. Whether we call it snake or devil
matters little. I could but admire his terrible
beauty, however; his black, shining folds, his easy,
gliding movement, head erect, eyes glistening, tongue
playing like subtle flame, and the invisible means
of his almost winged locomotion.
The parent birds, in the mean while,
kept up the most agonizing cry, at times
fluttering furiously about their pursuer, and actually
laying hold of his tail with their beaks and claws.
On being thus attacked, the snake would suddenly double
upon himself and follow his won body back, thus executing
a strategic movement that at first seemed almost to
paralyze his victim and place her within his grasp.
Not quite, however. Before his jaws could close
upon the coveted prize the bird would tear herself
away, and, apparently faint and sobbing, retire to
a higher branch. His reputed powers of fascination
availed him little, though it is possible that a frailer
and less combative bird might have been held by the
fatal spell. Presently, as he came gliding down
the slender body of a leaning alder, his attention
was attracted by a slight movement of my arm; eyeing
me an instant, with that crouching, utter motionless
gaze which I believe only snakes and devils can assume,
he turned quickly, a feat which necessitated
something like crawling over his own body, and
glided off through the branches, evidently recognizing
in me a representative of the ancient parties he once
so cunningly ruined. A few moments after, as he
lay carelessly disposed in the top of a rank alder,
trying to look as much like a crowded branch as his
supple, shining form would admit, the old vengeance
overtook him. I exercised my prerogative, and
a well-directed missile, in the shape of a stone,
brought him looping and writhing to the ground.
After I had completed his downfall and quiet had been
partially restored, a half-fledged member of the bereaved
household came out from his hiding-place, and, jumping
upon a decayed branch, chirped vigorously, no doubt
in celebration of the victory.
Till the middle of July there is a
general equilibrium; the tide stands poised; the holiday
spirit is unabated. But as the harvest ripens
beneath the long, hot days, the melody gradually ceases.
The young are out of the nest and must be cared for,
and the moulting season is at hand. After the
cricket has commenced to drone his monotonous refrain
beneath your window, you will not, till another season,
hear the wood thrush in all his matchless eloquence.
The bobolink has become careworn and fretful, and
blurts out snatches of his song between his scolding
and upbraiding, as you approach the vicinity of his
nest, oscillating between anxiety for his brood and
solicitude for his musical reputation. Some of
the sparrows still sing, and occasionally across the
hot fields, from a tall tree in the edge of the forest,
comes the rich note of the scarlet tanager. This
tropical-colored bird loves the hottest weather, and
I hear him even in dog-days.
The remainder of the summer is the
carnival of the swallows and flycatchers. Flies
and insects, to any amount, are to be had for the
catching; and the opportunity is well improved.
See that sombre, ashen-colored pewee on yonder branch.
A true sportsman he, who never takes his game at rest,
but always on the wing. You vagrant fly, you
purblind moth, beware how you come within his range!
Observe his attitude, the curious movement of his
head, his “eye in a fine frenzy rolling, glancing
from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven.”
His sight is microscopic and his aim
sure. Quick as thought he has seized his victim
and is back to his perch. There is no strife,
no pursuit, one fell swoop and the matter
is ended. That little sparrow, as you will observe,
is less skilled. It is the Socialis, and
he finds his subsistence properly in various seeds
and the larvae of insects, though he occasionally
has higher aspirations, and seeks to emulate the peewee,
commencing and ending his career as a flycatcher by
an awkward chase after a beetle or “miller.”
He is hunting around in the dull grass now, I suspect,
with the desire to indulge this favorite whim.
There! the opportunity is afforded him.
Away goes a little cream-colored meadow-moth in the
most tortuous course he is capable of, and away goes
Socialis in pursuit. The contest is quite
comical, though I dare say it is serious enough to
the moth. The chase continues for a few yards,
when there is a sudden rushing to cover in the grass, then
a taking to wing again, when the search has become
to close, and the moth has recovered his wind.
Socialis chirps angrily, and is determined not
to be beaten. Keeping, with the slightest effort,
upon the heels of the fugitive, he is ever on the point
of halting to snap him up, but never quite does it, and
so, between disappointment and expectation, is soon
disgusted and returns to pursue his more legitimate
means of subsistence.
In striking contrast to this serio-comic
strife of the sparrow and the moth, is he pigeon hawk’s
pursuit of the sparrow or the goldfinch. It is
a race of surprising speed and agility. It is
a test of wing and wind. Every muscle is taxed,
and every nerve strained. Such cries of terror
and consternation on the part of the bird, tacking
to the right and left, and making the most desperate
efforts to escape, and such silent determination on
the part of the hawk, pressing the bird so closely,
flashing and turning, and timing his movements with
those of the pursued as accurately and as inexorably
as if the two constituted one body, excite feelings
of the deepest concern. You mount the fence or
rush out of your way to see the issue. The only
salvation for the bird is to adopt the tactics of
the moth, seeking instantly the cover of some tree,
bush or hedge, where its smaller size enables it to
move about more rapidly. These pirates are aware
of this, and therefore prefer to take their prey by
one fell swoop. You may see one of them prowling
through an orchard, with the yellowbirds hovering about
him, crying, Pi-ty, pi-ty, in the most desponding
tone; yet he seems not to regard them, knowing, as
do they, that in the close branches they are as safe
as if in a wall of adamant.
August is the month of the high-sailing
hawks. The hen-hawk is the most noticeable.
He likes the haze and calm of these long, warm days.
He is a bird of leisure, and seems always at his ease.
How beautiful and majestic are his movements!
So self-poised and easy, such an entire absence of
haste, such a magnificent amplitude of circles and
spirals, such a haughty, imperial grace, and, occasionally,
such daring aerial evolutions!
With slow, leisurely movement, rarely
vibrating his pinions, he mounts and mounts in an
ascending spiral till he appears a mere speck against
the summer sky; then, if the mood seizes him, with
wings half closed, like a bent bow, he will cleave
the air almost perpendicularly, as if intent on dashing
himself to pieces against the earth; but on nearing
the ground he suddenly mounts again on broad, expanded
wing, as if rebounding upon the air, and sails leisurely
away. It is the sublimest feat of the season.
One holds his breath till he sees him rise again.
If inclined to a more gradual and
less precipitous descent, he fixes his eye on some
distant point in the earth beneath him, and thither
bends his course. He is still almost meteoric
in his speed and boldness. You see his path down
the heavens, straight as a line; if near, you hear
the rush of his wings; his shadow hurtles across the
fields, and in an instant you see him quietly perched
upon some low tree or decayed stub in a swamp or meadow,
with reminiscences of frogs and mice stirring in his
maw.
When the south wind blows, it is a
study to see three or four of these air-kings at the
head of the valley far up toward the mountain, balancing
and oscillating upon the strong current; now quite
stationary, except a slight tremulous motion like the
poise of a rope-dancer, then rising and falling in
long undulations, and seeming to resign themselves
passively to the wind; or, again sailing high and
level far above the mountain’s peak, no bluster
and haste, but as stated, occasionally a terrible
earnestness and speed. Fire at one as he sails
overhead and, unless wounded badly, he will not change
his course or gait.
His flight is a perfect picture of
repose in motion. It strikes the eye as more
surprising than the flight of a pigeon, and swallow
even, in that the effort put forth is so uniform and
delicate as to escape observation, giving to the movement
an air of buoyancy and perpetuity, the effluence of
power rather than the conscious application of it.
The calmness and dignity of this hawk,
when attacked by crows or the kingbird, are well worth
of him. He seldom deigns to notice his noisy
and furious antagonists, but deliberately wheels about
in that aerial spiral, and mounts and mounts till
his pursuers grow dizzy and return to earth again.
It is quite original, this mode of getting rid of an
unworthy opponent, rising to the heights where the
braggart is dazed and bewildered and loses his reckoning!
I am not sure but is is worthy of imitation.
But summer wanes, and autumn approaches.
The songsters of the seed-time are silent at the reaping
of the harvest. Other minstrels take up the strain.
It is the heyday of insect life. The day is canopied
with musical sound. All the songs of the spring
and summer appear to be floating, softened and refined,
in the upper air. The birds, in a new but less
holiday suit, turn their faces southward. The
swallows flock and go; the bobolinks flock and go;
silently and unobserved, the thrushes go. Autumn
arrives, bringing finches, warblers, sparrows, and
kinglets from the north. Silently the procession
passes. Yonder hawk, sailing peacefully away till
he is lost in the horizon, is a symbol of the closing
season and the departing bird.