I came to Washington to live in the
fall of 1863, and, with the exception of a month each
summer spent in the interior of New York, have lived
here ever since.
I saw my first novelty in Natural
History the day after my arrival. As I was walking
near some woods north of the city, a grasshopper of
prodigious size flew up from the ground and alighted
in a tree. As I pursued him, he proved to be
nearly as wild and as fleet of wing as a bird.
I thought I had reached the capital of grasshopperdom,
and that this was perhaps one of the chiefs or leaders,
or perhaps the great High Cock O’lorum himself,
taking an airing in the fields. I have never
yet been able to settle the question, as every fall
I start up a few of these gigantic specimens, which
perch on the trees. They are about three inches
long, of a gray striped or spotted color, and have
quite a reptile look.
The greatest novelty I found, however,
was the superb autumn weather, the bright, strong,
electric days, lasting well into November, and the
general mildness of the entire winter. Though
the mercury occasionally sinks to zero, yet the earth
is never so seared and blighted by the cold but that
in some sheltered nook or corner signs of vegetable
life still remain, which on a little encouragement
even asserts itself. I have found wild flowers
here every month of the year; violets in December,
a single houstonia in January (the little lump of earth
upon which it stood was frozen hard), and a tiny weed-like
plant, with a flower almost microscopic in its smallness,
growing along graveled walks and in old plowed fields
in February. The liverwort sometimes comes out
as early as the first week in March, and the little
frogs begin to pipe doubtfully about the same time.
Apricot-trees are usually in bloom on All-Fool’s
Day and the apple-trees on May Day. By August,
mother hen will lead forth her third brood, and I had
a March pullet that came off with a family of her
own in September. Our calendar is made for this
climate. March is a spring month. One is
quite sure to see some marked and striking change during
the first eight or ten days. This season (1868)
is a backward one, and the memorable change did not
come till the 10th.
Then the sun rose up from a bed of
vapors, and seemed fairly to dissolve with tenderness
and warmth. For an hour or two the air was perfectly
motionless, and full of low, humming, awakening sounds.
The naked trees had a rapt, expectant look. From
some unreclaimed common near by came the first strain
of the song sparrow; so homely, because so old and
familiar, yet so inexpressibly pleasing. Presently
a full chorus of voices arose, tender, musical, half
suppressed, but full of genuine hilarity and joy.
The bluebird warbled, the robin called, the snowbird
chattered, the meadowlark uttered her strong but tender
note. Over a deserted field a turkey buzzard
hovered low, and alighted on a stake in the fence,
standing a moment with outstretched, vibrating wings
till he was sure of his hold. A soft, warm, brooding
day. Roads becoming dry in many places, and looking
so good after the mud and the snow. I walk up
beyond the boundary and over Meridian Hill. To
move along the drying road and feel the delicious
warmth is enough. The cattle low long and loud,
and look wistfully into the distance. I sympathize
with them. Never a spring comes but I have an
almost irresistible desire to depart. Some nomadic
or migrating instinct or reminiscence stirs within
me. I ache to be off.
As I pass along, the high-bole calls
in the distance precisely as I have heard him in the
North. After a pause he repeats his summons.
What can be more welcome to the ear than these early
first sounds! They have such a margin of silence!
One need but pass the boundary of
Washington city to be fairly in the country, and ten
minutes’ walk in the country brings one to real
primitive woods. The town has not yet overflowed
its limits like the great Northern commercial capitals,
and Nature, wild and unkempt, comes up to its very
threshold, and even in many places crosses it.
The woods, which I soon reach, are
stark and still. The signs of returning life
are so faint as to be almost imperceptible, but there
is a fresh, earthy smell in the air, as if something
had stirred here under the leaves. The crows
caw above the wood, or walk about the brown fields.
I look at the gray silent trees long and long, but
they show no sign. The catkins of some alders
by a little pool have just swelled perceptibly; and,
brushing away the dry leaves and debris on a sunny
slope, I discover the liverwort just pushing up a fuzzy,
tender sprout. But the waters have brought forth.
The little frogs are musical. From every marsh
and pool goes up their shrill but pleasing chorus.
Peering into one of their haunts, a little body of
semi-stagnant water, I discover masses of frogs’
spawn covering the bottom. I take up great chunks
of the cold, quivering jelly in my hands. In
some places there are gallons of it. A youth who
accompanies me wonders if it would not be good cooked,
or if it could not be used as a substitute for eggs.
It is a perfect jelly, of a slightly milky tinge,
thickly imbedded with black spots about the size of
a small bird’s eye. When just deposited
it is perfectly transparent. These hatch in eight
or ten days, gradually absorb their gelatinous surroundings,
and the tiny tadpoles issue forth.
In the city, even before the shop-windows
have caught the inspiration, spring is heralded by
the silver poplars which line all the streets and
avenues. After a few mild, sunshiny March days,
you suddenly perceive a change has come over the trees.
Their tops have a less naked look. If the weather
continues warm, a single day will work wonders.
Presently each tree will be one vast plume of gray,
downy tassels, while not the least speck of green
foliage is visible. The first week of April these
long mimic caterpillars lie all about the streets
and fill the gutters.
The approach of spring is also indicated
by the crows and buzzards, which rapidly multiply
in the environs of the city, and grow bold and demonstrative.
The crows are abundant here all winter, but are not
very noticeable except as they pass high in air to
and from their winter quarters in the Virginia woods.
Early in the morning, as soon as it is light enough
to discern them, there they are, streaming eastward
across the sky, now in loose, scattered flocks, now
in thick dense masses, then singly and in pairs or
triplets, but all setting in one direction, probably
to the waters of eastern Maryland. Toward night
they begin to return, flying in the same manner, and
directing their course to the wooded heights on the
Potomac, west of the city. In spring these diurnal
mass movements cease; the clan breaks up, the rookery
is abandoned, and the birds scatter broadcast over
the land. This seems to be the course everywhere
pursued. One would think that, when food was
scarcest, the policy of separating into small bands
or pairs, and dispersing over a wide country, would
prevail, as a few might subsist where a larger number
would starve. The truth is, however, that, in
winter, food can be had only in certain clearly defined
districts and tracts, as along rivers and the shores
of bays and lakes.
A few miles north of Newburgh, on
the Hudson, the crows go into winter quarters in the
same manner, flying south in the morning and returning
again at night, sometimes hugging the hills so close
during a strong wind as to expose themselves to the
clubs and stones of schoolboys ambushed behind trees
and fences. The belated ones, that come laboring
along just at dusk, are often so overcome by the long
journey and the strong current that they seem almost
on the point of sinking down whenever the wind or
a rise in the ground calls upon them for an extra
effort.
The turkey buzzards are noticeable
about Washington as soon as the season begins to open,
sailing leisurely along two or three hundred feet
overhead, or sweeping low over some common or open
space where, perchance, a dead puppy or pig or fowl
has been thrown. Half a dozen will sometimes
alight about some object out on the commons, and, with
their broad dusky wings lifted up to their full extent,
threaten and chase each other, while perhaps one or
two are feeding. Their wings are very large and
flexible, and the slightest motion of them, while
the bird stands upon the ground, suffices to lift its
feet clear. Their movements when in the air are
very majestic and beautiful to the eye, being in every
respect identical with those of our common hen or
red-tailed hawk. They sail along in the same calm,
effortless, interminable manner, and sweep around
in the same ample spiral. The shape of their
wings and tail, indeed their entire effect against
the sky, except in size and color, is very nearly
the same as that of the hawk mentioned. A dozen
at a time may often be seen high in air, amusing themselves
by sailing serenely round and round in the same circle.
They are less active and vigilant
than the hawk; never poise themselves on the wing,
never dive and gambol in the air, and never swoop
down upon their prey; unlike the hawks also, they appear
to have no enemies. The crow fights the hawk,
and the kingbird and the crow blackbird fight the
crow; but neither takes any notice of the buzzard.
He excites the enmity of none, for the reason that
he molests none. The crow has an old grudge against
the hawk, because the hawk robs the crow’s nest
and carries off his young; the kingbird’s quarrel
with the crow is upon the same grounds. But the
buzzard never attacks live game, or feeds upon new
flesh when old can be had.
In May, like the crows, they nearly
all disappear very suddenly, probably to their breeding-haunts
near the seashore. Do the males separate from
the females at this time, and go by themselves?
At any rate, in July I discovered that a large number
of buzzards roosted in some woods near Rock Creek,
about a mile from the city limits; and, as they do
not nest anywhere in this vicinity, I thought they
might be males. I happened to be detained late
in the woods, watching the nest of a flying squirrel,
when the buzzards, just after sundown, began to come
by ones and twos and alight in the trees near me.
Presently they came in greater numbers, but from the
same direction, flapping low over the woods, and taking
up their position in the middle branches. On
alighting, each one would blow very audibly through
his nose, just as a cow does when she lies down; this
is the only sound I have ever heard the buzzard make.
They would then stretch themselves, after the manner
of turkeys, and walk along the limbs. Sometimes
a decayed branch would break under the weight of two
or three, when, with a great flapping, the would take
up new positions. They continued to come till
it was quite dark, and all the trees about me were
full. I began to feel a little nervous, but kept
my place. After it was entirely dark and all
was still, I gathered a large pile of dry leaves and
kindled it with a match, to see what they would think
of a fire. Not a sound was heard till the pile
of leaves was in full blaze, when instantaneously
every buzzard started. I thought the treetops
were coming down upon me, so great was the uproar.
But the woods were soon cleared, and the loathsome
pack disappeared in the night.
About the 1st of June I saw numbers
of buzzards sailing around over the great Falls of
the Potomac.
A glimpse of the birds usually found
here in the latter part of winter may be had in the
following extract, which I take from my diary under
date of February 4th:
“Made a long excursion through
the woods and over the hills. Went directly
north from the Capitol for about three miles.
The ground bare and the day cold and sharp. In
the suburbs, among the scattered Irish and negro shanties,
came suddenly upon a flock of birds, feeding about
like our northern snow buntings. Every now and
then they uttered a piping, disconsolate note, as
if they had a very sorry time of it. They proved
to be shore larks, the first I had ever seen.
They had the walk characteristic of all larks; were
a little larger than the sparrow; had a black spot
on the breast, with much white on the under parts
of their bodies. As I approached them the nearer
ones paused, and, half squatting, eyed me suspiciously.
Presently, at a movement of my arm, away they went,
flying exactly like the snow bunting, and showing
nearly as much white.” (I have since discovered
that the shore lark is a regular visitant here in
February and March, when large quantities of them
are shot or trapped, and exposed for sale in the market.
During a heavy snow I have seen numbers of them feeding
upon the seeds of various weedy growths in a large
market-garden well into town.) “Pressing on,
the walk became exhilarating. Followed a little
brook, the eastern branch of the Tiber, lined with
bushes and a rank growth of green-brier. Sparrows
started out here and there, and flew across the little
bends and points. Among some pines just beyond
the boundary, saw a number of American goldfinches,
in their gray winter dress, pecking the pinecones.
A golden-crowned kinglet was there also, a little
tuft of gray feathers, hopping about as restless as
a spirit. Had the old pine-trees food delicate
enough for him also? Farther on, in some low
open woods, saw many sparrows, the fox,
white-throated, white-crowned, the Canada, the song,
the swamp, all herding together along the
warm and sheltered borders. To my surprise, saw
a chewink also, and the yellow-rumped warbler.
The purple finch was there likewise, and the Carolina
wren and brown creeper. In the higher, colder
woods not a bird was to be seen. Returning, near
sunset, across the eastern slope of a hill which overlooked
the city, was delighted to see a number of grass finches
or vesper sparrows, birds which will be
forever associated in my mind with my father’s
sheep pastures. They ran before me, now flitting
a pace or two, now skulking in the low stubble, just
as I had observed them when a boy.”
A month later, March 4th, is this note:
“After the second memorable
inaguration of President Lincoln, took my first trip
of the season. The afternoon was very clear and
warm, real vernal sunshine at last, though
the wind roared like a lion over the woods. It
seemed novel enough to find within two miles of the
White House a simple woodsman chopping away as if
no President was being inaugurated! Some puppies,
snugly nestled in the cavity of an old hollow tree,
he said, belonged to a wild dog. I imagine I saw
the ‘wild dog,’ on the other side of Rock
Creek, in a great state of grief and trepidation,
running up and down, crying and yelping, and looking
wistfully over the swollen flood, which the poor thing
had not the courage to brave. This day, for the
first time, I heard the song of the Canada sparrow,
a soft, sweet note, almost running into a warble.
Saw a small, black velvety butterfly with a yellow
border to its wings. Under a warm bank found
two flowers of the houstonia in bloom. Saw frogs’
spawn near Piny Branch, and heard the hyla.”
Among the first birds that make their
appearance in Washington is the crow blackbird.
He may come any time after the 1st of March. The
birds congregate in large flocks, and frequent groves
and parks, alternately swarming in the treetops and
filling the air with their sharp jangle, and alighting
on the ground in quest of food, their polished coats
glistening in the sun from very blackness as they walk
about. There is evidently some music in the soul
of this bird at this season, though he makes a sad
failure in getting it out. His voice always sounds
as if he were laboring under a severe attack of influenza,
though a large flock of them, heard at a distance
on a bright afternoon of early spring, produce an
effect not unpleasing. The air is filled with
crackling, splintering, spurting, semi-musical sounds,
which are like pepper and salt to the ear.
All parks and public grounds about
the city are full of blackbirds. They are especially
plentiful in the trees about the White House, breeding
there and waging war on all other birds. The occupants
of one of the offices in the west wing of the Treasury
one day had their attention attracted by some object
striking violently against one of the window-panes.
Looking up, they beheld a crow blackbird pausing in
midair, a few feet from the window. On the broad
stone window-sill lay the quivering form of a purple
finch. The little tragedy was easily read.
The blackbird had pursued the finch with such murderous
violence that the latter, in its desperate efforts
to escape, had sought refuge in the Treasury.
The force of the concussion against the heavy plateglass
of the window had killed the poor thing instantly.
The pursuer, no doubt astonished at the sudden and
novel termination of the career of its victim, hovered
for a moment, as if to be sure of what had happened,
and made off.
(It is not unusual for birds, when
thus threatened with destruction by their natural
enemy, to become so terrified as to seek safety in
the presence of man. I was once startled, while
living in a country village, to behold, on entering
my room at noon, one October day, a quail sitting
upon my bed. The affrighted and bewildered bird
instantly started for the open window, into which it
had no doubt been driven by a hawk.)
The crow blackbird has all the natural
cunning of his prototype, the crow. In one of
the inner courts of the Treasury building there is
a fountain with several trees growing near. By
midsummer the blackbirds became so bold as to venture
within this court. Various fragments of food,
tossed from the surrounding windows, reward their temerity.
When a crust of dry bread defies their beaks, they
have been seen to drop it into the water, and, when
it has become soaked sufficiently, to take it out
again.
They build a nest of coarse sticks
and mud, the whole burden of the enterprise seeming
to devolve upon the female. For several successive
mornings, just after sunrise, I used to notice a pair
of them flying to and fro in the air above me as I
hoed in the garden, directing their course about half
a mile distant, and disappearing, on their return,
among the trees about the Capitol. Returning,
the female always had her beak loaded with building
material, while the male, carrying nothing, seemed
to act as her escort, flying a little above and in
advance of her, and uttering now and then his husky,
discordant note. As I tossed a lump of earth
up at them, the frightened mother bird dropped her
mortar, and the pair scurried away, much put out.
Later they avenged themselves by pilfering my cherries.
The most mischievous enemies of the
cherries, however, here as at the North, are the cedar
waxwings, or “cherry-birds.” How quickly
they spy out the tree! Long before the cherry
begins to turn, they are around, alert and cautious.
In small flocks they circle about, high in the air,
uttering their fine note, or plunge quickly into the
tops of remote trees. Day by day they approach
nearer and nearer, reconnoitring the premises, and
watching the growing fruit. Hardly have the green
lobes turned a red cheek to the sun, before their beaks
have scarred it. At first they approach the tree
stealthily, on the side turned from the house, diving
quickly into the branches in ones and twos, while
the main flock is ambushed in some shade tree not far
off. They are most apt to commit their depredations
very early in the morning and on cloudy, rainy days.
As the cherries grow sweeter the birds grow bolder,
till, from throwing tufts of grass, one has to throw
stones in good earnest, or lose all his fruit.
In June they disappear, following the cherries to
the north, where by July they are nesting in the orchards
and cedar groves.
Among the permanent summer residents
here (one might say city residents, as they seem more
abundant in town than out), the yellow warbler or
summer yellowbird is conspicuous. He comes about
the middle of April, and seems particularly attached
to the silver poplars. In every street, and all
day long, one may hear his thin, sharp warble.
When nesting, the female comes about the yard, pecking
at the clothes-line, and gathering up bits of thread
to weave into her nest.
Swallows appear in Washington form
the first to the middle of April. They come twittering
along in the way so familiar to every New England
boy. The barn swallow is heard first, followed
in a day or two by the squeaking of the cliff swallow.
The chimney swallows, or swifts, are not far behind,
and remain here in large numbers, the whole season.
The purple martíns appear in April, as they pass
north, and again in July and August on their return,
accompanied by their young.
The national capital is situated in
such a vast spread of wild, wooded, or semi-cultivated
country and is in itself so open and spacious, with
its parks and large government reservations, that an
unusual number of birds find their way into it in the
course of the season. Rare warblers, as the black-poll,
the yellow-poll, and the bay-breasted, pausing in
May on their northward journey, pursue their insect
game in the very heart of the town.
I have heard the veery thrush in the
trees near the White House; and one rainy April morning,
about six o’clock, he came and blew his soft,
mellow flute in a pear-tree in my garden. The
tones had all the sweetness and wildness they have
when heard in June in our deep northern forests.
A day or two afterward, in the same tree, I heard
for the first time the song of the ruby-crowned wren,
or kinglet, the same liquid bubble and
cadence which characterize the wren-songs generally,
but much finer and more delicate than the song of any
other variety known to me; beginning in a fine, round,
needle-like note, and rising into a full, sustained
warble, [symbol deleted] a strain, on whole,
remarkably exquisite and pleasing, the singer being
all the while as busy as a bee, catching some kind
of insects. It is certainly on of our most beautiful
bird-songs, and Audubon’s enthusiasm concerning
its song, as he heard it in the wilds of Labrador,
is not a bit extravagant. The song of the kinglet
is the only characteristic that allies it to the wrens.
The Capitol grounds, with their fine
large trees of many varieties, draw many kinds of
birds. In the rear of the building the extensive
grounds are peculiarly attractive, being a gentle slope,
warm and protected, and quite thickly wooded.
Here in early spring I go to hear the robins, catbirds,
blackbirds, wrens, etc. In March the white-throated
and white-crowned sparrows may be seen, hopping about
on the flower-beds or peering slyly from the evergreens.
The robin hops about freely upon the grass, notwithstanding
the keepers large-lettered warning, and at intervals,
and especially at sunset, carols from the treetops
his loud, hearty strain.
The kingbird and orchard starling
remain the whole season, and breed in the treetops.
The rich, copious song of the starling may be heard
there all the forenoon. The song of some birds
is like scarlet, strong, intense, emphatic.
This is the character of the orchard starlings, also
the tanagers and the various grosbeaks. On the
other hand, the songs of other birds, as of certain
of the thrushes, suggest the serene blue of the upper
sky.
In February one may hear, in the Smithsonian
grounds, the song of the fox sparrow. It is a
strong, richly modulated whistle, the finest
sparrow note I have ever heard.
A curious and charming sound may be
heard here in May. You are walking forth in
the soft morning air, when suddenly there comes a
burst of bobolink melody form some mysterious source.
A score of throats pour out one brief, hilarious,
tuneful jubilee and are suddenly silent. There
is a strange remoteness and fascination about it.
Presently you will discover its source skyward, and
a quick eye will detect the gay band pushing northward.
They seem to scent the fragrant meadows afar off,
and shout forth snatches of their songs in anticipation.
The bobolink does not breed in the
District, but usually pauses in his journey and feeds
during the day in the grass-lands north of the city.
When the season is backward, they tarry a week or ten
days, singing freely and appearing quite at home.
In large flocks they search over every inch of ground,
and at intervals hover on the wing or alight in the
treetops, all pouring forth their gladness at once,
and filling the air with a multitudinous musical clamor.
They continue to pass, traveling by
night and feeding by day, till after the middle of
May, when they cease. In September, with numbers
greatly increased, they are on their way back.
I am first advised of their return by hearing their
calls at night as they fly over the city. On
certain nights the sound becomes quite noticeable.
I have awakened in the middle of the night, and, through
the open window, as I lay in bed, heard their faint
notes. The warblers begin to return about the
same time, and are clearly distinguished by their timid
yeaps. On dark, cloudy nights the birds seem confused
by the lights of the city, and apparently wander about
above it.
In the spring the same curious incident
is repeated, though but few voices can be identified.
I make out the snowbird, the bobolink, the warblers,
and on two nights during the early part of May I heard
very clearly the call of the sandpipers.
Instead of the bobolink, one encounters
here, in the June meadows, the black-throated bunting,
a bird very closely related to the sparrows and a
very persistent if not a very musical songster.
He perches upon the fences and upon the trees by the
roadside, and, spreading his tail, gives forth his
harsh strain, which may be roughly worded thus:
fscp fscp, fee fee fee. Like all sounds associated
with early summer, it soon has a charm to the ear
quite independent of its intrinsic merits.
Outside of the city limits, the great
point of interest to the rambler and lover of nature
is the Rock Creek region. Rock Creek is a large,
rough, rapid stream, which has its source in the interior
of Maryland, and flows in to the Potomac between Washington
and Georgetown. Its course, for five or six miles
out of Washington, is marked by great diversity of
scenery. Flowing in a deep valley, which now and
then becomes a wild gorge with overhanging rocks and
high precipitous headlands, for the most part wooded;
here reposing in long, dark reaches, there sweeping
and hurrying around a sudden bend or over a rocky
bed; receiving at short intervals small runs and spring
rivulets, which open up vistas and outlooks to the
right and left, of the most charming description, Rock
Creek has an abundance of all the elements that make
up not only pleasing but wild and rugged scenery.
There is perhaps, not another city in the Union that
has on its very threshold so much natural beauty and
grandeur, such as men seek for in remote forests and
mountains. A few touches of art would convert
this whole region, extending from Georgetown to what
is known as Crystal Springs, not more than two miles
from the present State Department, into a park unequaled
by anything in the world. There are passages
between these two points as wild and savage, and apparently
as remote from civilization, as anything one meets
with in the mountain sources of the Hudson or the
Delaware.
One of the tributaries to Rock Creek
within this limit is called Piny Branch. It is
a small, noisy brook, flowing through a valley of great
natural beauty and picturesqueness, shaded nearly all
the way by woods of oak, chestnut, and beech, and
abounding in dark recesses and hidden retreats.
I must not forget to mention the many
springs with which this whole region is supplied,
each the centre of some wild nook, perhaps the head
of a little valley one or two hundred yards long, through
which one catches a glimpse, or hears the voice, of
the main creek rushing along below.
My walks tend in this direction more
frequently than in any other. Here the boys go,
too, troops of them, of a Sunday, to bathe and prowl
around, and indulge the semi-barbarous instincts that
still lurk within them. Life, in all its forms,
is most abundant near water. The rank vegetation
nurtures the insects, and the insects draw the birds.
The first week in March, on some southern slope where
the sunshine lies warm and long, I usually find the
hepatica in bloom, though with scarcely an inch of
stalk. In the spring runs, the skunk cabbage
pushes its pike up through the mould, the flower appearing
first, as if Nature had made a mistake.
It is not till about the 1st of April
that many wild flowers may be looked for. By
this time the hepatica, anemone saxifrage, arbutus,
houstonia, and bloodroot may be counted on. A
week later, the claytonia or spring beauty, water-cress,
violets, a low buttercup, vetch, corydalis, and potentilla
appear. These comprise most of the April flowers,
and may be found in great profusion in the Rock Creek
and Piny Branch region.
In each little valley or spring run,
some one species predominates. I know invariably
where to look for the first liverwort, and where the
largest and finest may be found. On a dry, gravelly,
half-wooded hill-slope the bird’s-foot violet
grows in great abundance, and is sparse in neighboring
districts. This flower, which I never saw in the
North, is the most beautiful and showy of all the violets,
and calls forth rapturous applause from all persons
who visit the woods. It grows in little groups
and clusters, and bears a close resemblance to the
pansies of the gardens. Its two purple, velvety
petals seem to fall over tiny shoulders like a rich
cape.
On the same slope, and on no other,
I go about the 1st of May for lupine, or sun-dial,
which makes the ground look blue from a little distance;
on the other or northern side of the slope, the arbutus,
during the first half of April, perfumes the wildwood
air. A few paces farther on, in the bottom of
a little spring run, the mandrake shades the ground
with its miniature umbrellas. It begins to push
its green finger-points up through the ground by the
1st of April, but is not in bloom till the 1st of
May. It has a single white, wax-like flower,
with a sweet, sickish odor, growing immediately beneath
its broad leafy top. By the same run grow watercresses
and two kinds of anémones, the Pennsylvania
and the grove anemone. The bloodroot is very
common at the foot of almost every warm slope in the
Rock Creek woods, and, where the wind has tucked it
up well with the coverlid of dry leaves, makes its
appearance almost as soon as the liverwort. It
is singular how little warmth is necessary to encourage
these earlier flowers to put forth. It would
seem as if some influence must come on in advance
underground and get things ready, so that, when the
outside temperature is propitious, they at once venture
out. I have found the bloodroot when it was still
freezing two or three nights in the week, and have
known at least three varieties of early flowers to
be buried in eight inches of snow.
Another abundant flower in the Rock
Creek region is the spring beauty. Like most
others, it grows in streaks. A few paces from
where your attention is monopolized by violets or
arbutus, it is arrested by the claytonia, growing
in such profusion that it is impossible to set the
foot down without crushing the flowers. Only the
forenoon walker sees them in all their beauty, as
later in the day their eyes are closed, and their
pretty heads drooped in slumber. In only one locality
do I find the lady’s-slipper, a yellow
variety. The flowers that overleap all bounds
in this section are the houstonias. By the 1st
of April they are very noticeable in warm, damp places
along the borders of the woods and in half-cleared
fields, but by May these localities are clouded with
them. They become visible from the highway across
wide fields, and look like little puffs of smoke clinging
close to the ground.
On the 1st of May I go to the Rock
Creek or Piny Branch region to hear the wood thrush.
I always find him by this date leisurely chanting his
lofty strain; other thrushes are seen now also, or
even earlier, as Wilson’s, the olive-backed,
the hermit, the two latter silent, but
the former musical.
Occasionally in the earlier part of
May I find the woods literally swarming with warblers,
exploring every branch and leaf, from the tallest
tulip to the lowest spice-bush, so urgent is the demand
for food during their long northern journeys.
At night they are up and away. Some varieties,
as the blue yellow-back, the chestnut-sided, and the
Blackburnian, during their brief stay, sing nearly
as freely as in their breeding-haunts. For two
or three years I have chanced to meet little companies
of the bay-breasted warbler, searching for food in
an oak wood on an elevated piece of ground. They
kept well up among the branches, were rather slow
in their movements, and evidently disposed to tarry
but a short time.
The summer residents here, belonging
to this class of birds, are few. I have observed
the black and white creeping warbler, the Kentucky
warbler, the worm-eating warbler, the redstart, and
the gnat-catcher, breeding near Rock Creek.
Of these the Kentucky warbler is by
far the most interesting, though quite rare.
I meet with him in low, damp places in the woods, usually
on the steep sides of some little run. I hear
at intervals a clear, strong, bell-like whistle or
warble, and presently catch a glimpse of the bird
as he jumps up from the ground to take an insect or
worm from the under side of a leaf. This is his
characteristic movement. He belongs to the class
of ground warblers, and his range is very low, indeed
lower than that of any other species with which I am
acquainted. He is on the ground nearly all the
time, moving rapidly along, taking spiders and bugs,
overturning leaves, peeping under sticks and into
crevices, and every now and then leaping up eight or
ten inches to take his game from beneath some overhanging
leaf or branch. Thus each species has its range
more or less marked. Draw a line three feet from
the ground, and you mark the usual limit of the Kentucky
warbler’s quest for food. Six or eight feet
higher bounds the usual range of such birds as the
worm-eating warbler, the mourning ground warbler,
the Maryland yellow-throat. The lower branches
of the higher growths and the higher branches of the
lower growths are plainly preferred by the black-throated
blue-backed warbler in those localities where he is
found. The thrushes feed mostly on and near the
ground, while some of the vireos and the true flycatchers
explore the highest branches. But the warblers,
as a rule, are all partial to thick, rank undergrowths.
The Kentucky warbler is a large bird
for the genus and quite notable in appearance.
His back is clear olive-green, his throat and breast
bright yellow. A still more prominent feature
is a black streak on the side of the face, extending
down the neck.
Another familiar bird here, which
I never met with in the North, is the gnatcatcher,
called by Audubon the blue-gray flycatching warbler.
In form and manner it seems almost a duplicate of the
catbird on a small scale. It mews like a young
kitten, erects its tail, flirts, droops its wings,
goes through a variety of motions when disturbed by
your presence, and in many ways recalls its dusky prototype.
Its color above is a light gray-blue, gradually fading
till it becomes white on the breast and belly.
It is a very small bird, and has a long, facile, slender
tail. Its song is a lisping, chattering, incoherent
warble, now faintly reminding one of the goldfinch,
now of a miniature catbird, then of a tiny yellow-hammer,
having much variety, but no unity and little cadence.
Another bird which has interested
me here is the Louisiana water thrush, called also
large-billed water-thrush, and water-wagtail.
It is one of a trio of birds which has confused the
ornithologists much. The other two species are
the well-known golden-crowned thrush or wood-wagtail,
and the northern, or small, water-thrush.
The present species, though not abundant,
is frequently met with along Rock Creek. It is
a very quick, vivacious bird, and belongs to the class
of ecstatic singers. I have seen a pair of these
thrushes, on a bright May day, flying to and fro between
two spring runs, alighting at intermediate points,
the male breaking out into one of the most exuberant,
unpremeditated strains I ever heard. Its song
is a sudden burst, beginning with three or four clear
round notes much resembling certain tones of the clarinet,
and terminating in a rapid, intricate warble.
This bird resembles a thrush only
in its color, which is olive-brown above and grayish
white beneath, with speckled throat and breast.
Its habits, manners, and voice suggest those of a
lark.
I seldom go the Rock Creek route without
being amused and sometimes annoyed by the yellow-breasted
chat. This bird also has something of the manners
and build of the catbird, yet he is truly an original.
The catbird is mild and feminine compared with this
rollicking polyglot. His voice is very loud and
strong and quite uncanny. No sooner have you
penetrated his retreat, which is usually a thick undergrowth
in low, wet localities, near the woods or in old fields,
than he begins his serenade, which for the variety,
grotesqueness, and uncouthness of the notes is not
unlike a country skimmerton. If one passes directly
along, the bird may scarcely break the silence.
But pause a while, or loiter quietly about, and your
presence stimulates him to do his best. He peeps
quizzically at you from beneath the branches, and gives
a sharp feline mew. In a moment more he says
very distinctly, who, who. Then in rapid succession
follow notes the most discordant that ever broke the
sylvan silence. Now he barks like a puppy, then
quacks like a duck, then rattles like a kingfisher,
then squalls like a fox, then caws like a crow, then
mews like a cat. Now he calls as if to be heard
a long way off, then changes his key, as if addressing
the spectator. Though very shy, and carefully
keeping himself screened when you show any disposition
to get a better view, he will presently, if you remain
quiet, ascend a twig, or hop out on a branch in plain
sight, lop his tail, droop his wings, cock his head,
and become very melodramatic. In less than half
a minute he darts into the bushes again, and again
tunes up, no Frenchman rolling his r’s so fluently.
C-r-r-r-r-r Wrrr, that’s
it, chee, quack, cluck, yit-yit-yit,
now hit it, tr-r-r-r,
when, caw, caw, cut,
cut, tea-boy, who, who, mew,
mew, and so on till you are tired of listening.
Observing one very closely one day, I discovered that
he was limited to six notes or changes, which he went
through in regular order, scarcely varying a note
in a dozen repetitions. Sometimes, when a considerable
distance off, he will fly down to have a nearer view
of you. And such curious, expressive flight, legs
extended, head lowered, wings rapidly vibrating, the
whole action piquant and droll!
The chat is an elegant bird, both
in form and color. Its plumage is remarkably
firm and compact. Color above, light olive-green;
beneath, bright yellow; beak, black and strong.
The cardinal grosbeak, or Virginia
redbird, is quite common in the same localities, though
more inclined to seek the woods. It is much sought
after by bird fanciers, and by boy gunners, and consequently
is very shy. This bird suggests a British redcoat;
his heavy, pointed beak, his high cockade, the black
stripe down his face, the expression of weight and
massiveness about his head and neck, and his erect
attitude, give him a decided soldier-like appearance;
and there is something of the tone of the fife in
his song or whistle, while his ordinary note, when
disturbed, is like the clink of a sabre. Yesterday,
as I sat indolently swinging in the loop of a grapevine,
beneath a thick canopy of green branches, in a secluded
nook by a spring run, one of these birds came pursuing
some kind of insect, but a few feet above me.
He hopped about, now and then uttering his sharp note,
till some moth or beetle trying to escape, he broke
down through the cover almost where I sat. The
effect was like a firebrand coming down through the
branches. Instantly catching sight of me, he darted
away much alarmed. The female is tinged with brown,
and shows but a little red except when she takes flight.
By far the most abundant species of
woodpecker about Washington is the red-headed.
It is more common than the robin. Not in the deep
woods, but among the scattered dilapidated oaks and
groves, on the hills and in the fields, I hear almost
every day his uncanny note, ktr-r-r, ktr-r-r, like
that of some larger tree-toad, proceeding from an oak
grove just beyond the boundary. He is a strong-scented
fellow, and very tough. Yet how beautiful, as
he flits about the open woods, connecting the trees
by a gentle arc of crimson and white! This is
another bird with a military look. His deliberate,
dignified ways, and his bright uniform of red, white,
and steel-blue, bespeak him an officer of rank.
Another favorite beat of mine is northeast
of the city. Looking from the Capitol in this
direction, scarcely more than a mile distant, you
see a broad green hill-slope, falling very gently,
and spreading into a large expanse of meadow-land.
The summit, if so gentle a swell of greensward may
be said to have a summit, is covered with a grove of
large oaks; and, sweeping black out of sight like a
mantle, the front line of a thick forest bounds the
sides. This emerald landscape is seen from a
number of points in the city. Looking along New
York Avenue from Northern Liberty Market, the eye
glances, as it were, from the red clay of the street,
and alights upon this fresh scene in the distance.
It is a standing invitation to the citizen to come
forth and be refreshed. As I turn from some hot,
hard street, how inviting it looks! I bathe my
eyes in it as in a fountain. Sometimes troops
of cattle are seen grazing upon it. In June the
gathering of the hay may be witnessed. When the
ground is covered with snow, numerous stacks, or clusters
of stacks, are still left for the eye to contemplate.
The woods which clothe the east side
of this hill, and sweep away to the east, are among
the most charming to be found in the District.
The main growth is oak and chestnut, with a thin sprinkling
of laurel, azalea, and dogwood. It is the only
locality in which I have found the dogtooth violet
in bloom, and the best place I know of to gather arbutus.
On one slope the ground is covered with moss, through
which the arbutus trails its glories.
Emerging from these woods toward the
city, one sees the white dome of the Capitol soaring
over the green swell of earth immediately in front,
and lifting its four thousand tons of iron gracefully
and lightly into the air. Of all the sights in
Washington, that which will survive the longest in
my memory is the vision of the great dome thus rising
cloud-like above the hills.
1868.