And
oft an unintruding guest,
I watched her
secret toils from day to day;
How true she warped the moss
to form the nest,
And modeled it
within with wood and clay.
And by and by, like heath-bells
gilt with dew,
There lay her
shining eggs as bright as flowers,
Ink-spotted over, shells of
green and blue:
And there I witnessed
in the summer hours
A brood of Nature’s
minstrels chirp and fly,
Glad as the sunshine and the
laughing sky.
JOHN CLARE.
“Ears have they, but they hear
not,” may be said of all the world. Tragedies
and comedies go on continually before us which we neither
see nor hear; cries of distress and prattle of infants,
songs of love and screams of war, alike fall upon
deaf ears, while we calmly discuss the last book or
the news from Borriboo-lah-Gha, as completely oblivious
as if all this stirring life did not exist.
To be sure these things take place
in the “upper stories,” as Thoreau says,
but they are none the less audible, and one is tempted
to believe that bird voices are on a scale to which
the untrained ear is not attuned. Once learn
to hear, and nature is full of life and interest.
The home affairs of our little neighbors whose modest
cottage swings on a branch of the elm beside the door
are more attractive than those of our fellow creatures
in the house across the way partly because they are
so open in their lives that our attentions do not seem
intrusive, but more because their ways are not so
familiar. We can guess how men and women pass
their time, but we cannot guess why the cat-bird always
sings from the middle of one particular shrub, nor
where he has hidden his dusky spouse and nest full
of babies; and after we know him we are eager to discover.
Upon reaching the charming home of
a friend in Massachusetts last June, almost the first
thing I saw was a pair of purple crow blackbirds in
trouble. First arose a medley of queer husky tones,
clamorous baby cries, and excited oriole voices, with
violent agitation of the leaves of a tall elm, ending
with the sudden exit of a blackbird, closely followed
by a pair of Baltimore orioles. The pursued flew
leisurely across the lawn, plainly in no haste, and
not at all with the air of the thief and nest robber
he is popularly supposed to be. Clearly the elm
belonged by bird custom to the orioles, for their pretty
swinging hammock could be seen partly hidden by leaves,
about halfway up the tree, and what business other
than that of marauder had the sombre-hued enemy upon
it?
Now the blackbird has no secrets in
his life; the whole world is welcome to know his affairs,
and in fact he proclaims them loudly himself.
It was easy to see that he had anxiety enough of his
own just then, without thinking of disturbing his
neighbors, for he was engaged in the task of introducing
his young family to the world, and every bird watcher
knows that is attended with almost as many difficulties
as is the same operation in what we call “society.”
If the youngster escape the dangers
peculiar to the nest, the devouring jaws of squirrel
or owl, the hands of the egg thief, being shaken out
by the wind, smothered by an intrusive cow-bunting,
or orphaned by the gun of a “collector;”
if, neither stolen, eaten, thrown out, nor starved,
he arrives at the age that his wings begin to stir
and force him out of the leafy green tent of his birth,
a new set of dangers meet him at the door. He
may entangle himself in a hair of the nest-lining,
and hang himself at the very threshold of life a
not uncommon occurrence; or he may safely reach the
nearest twig and from there fall and break his neck not
a rare accident; he may be attacked by a bird who questions
his right to be on the tree; he may fly, and, not reaching
his goal, come to the ground, an easy prey to any
prowler.
In this blackbird family one of the
little ones had taken his first ambitious flight to
the oriole’s tree, where he must and should be
fed and comforted, in spite of the hostile reception
of its gayly dressed proprietor. The father took
upon himself this duty, and many times during the
day the above-mentioned scene was reenacted, loud blackbird
calls, husky baby notes, the musical war-cry of the
oriole, and a chase.
A second infant had wisely confined
his wandering to his own tree, one of a group of tall
pines that towered above the roofs of the village.
This one could be easily watched as he stood on one
branch for an hour at a time, sometimes in the nest
attitude, head sunk in shoulders and beak pointed
toward the sky, again looking eagerly around on his
new world, turning his head from side to side, changing
position to see the other way, and showing himself
wide awake although the yellowish baby-down was still
on his head, and his tail was not an inch long.
Now and then the mother was heard calling in the distance,
and as she approached he became all excitement, fluttering
his wings, and answering in the husky tones of the
family. A moment later, after a quick glance
around, but without alighting and reconnoitring the
whole neighborhood, as the robin does, she came down
beside the eager youngling, administered to the wide
open mouth what looked like two or three savage pecks,
but doubtless were nothing worse than mouthfuls of
food, and instantly flew again, while the refreshed
infant stretched his wings and legs, changed his place
a little, and settled into comfortable quiet after
his lunch.
The urchin in the enemy’s tree
was not the most unfortunate of the nestlings.
One already lay dead on the ground under the nest where
it had fallen, and another came down during the day,
though happily without injury. This one was not
very bright, or perhaps his baby wits were dazed by
his sudden descent. He made no objection to staying
in my hand as long as I liked to look at him, and
when I placed him on a low branch, as a hint that
it was safer there, he declined to accept my advice,
but flew off and came to the ground again. He
was a scraggy looking, rusty black little fellow,
the most unattractive young bird I ever saw.
Shortly after this he clambered up on a pile of brush
about a foot high, without so much as a leaf to screen
him, and there he stayed all day, motionless, being
fed at long intervals; and there I left him at night,
never expecting to see him again. But in the morning
he appeared on a low shrub on the lawn, and about
nine o’clock he took courage to launch himself
on wing. He flew very low across the street,
and dropped into the tall grass at the foot of a lilac
bush. Why the parents considered that less safe
than the open lawn I could not see, but they evidently
did, for one of them perched upon the lilac, and filled
the air with anxious “chucks,” announcing
to all whom it might concern after the
fashion of some birds that here was a stray
infant to be had for the picking up. Perhaps,
however, the hue-and-cry kept off the quiet-loving
cat; at any rate nothing happened to him, I think,
for in a day or two the three young birds became so
expert on wing that the whole family left us, and
I hope found a place where they were more welcome
than in that colony of house and orchard birds.
Not so quiet in their ways are the
babies of another blackbird family the
redwings; restless and uneasy, the clumsy little creatures
climb all about the bushes and trees, and keep both
parents busy, not only in filling their gaping mouths,
but in finding them when the food is brought.
They are always seeking a new place, and from the moment
of leaving the nest show in a marked way the unrest,
the impatience of the redwing family.
Quite as erratic is a much smaller
bird, the yellow throated warbler, whose baby ways
I have seen at the South. One of these bantlings
no bigger than the end of a thumb will easily keep
its parent frantically busy rushing about after food,
and hunting up the capricious wanderer on its return.
The wood thrush, on the contrary,
is patience itself. A youngster of this lovely
family sits a half hour at a time motionless and silent
on a branch, head drawn down upon his shoulders, apparently
in the deepest meditation. When he sees food
coming he is gently agitated, rises upon his weak
legs, softly flutters his wings and opens his mouth,
but never never cries. Should one
put a hand down to take him, as seemingly could be
done easily, he will slip out from under it, drop to
the ground, and disappear, in perfect silence.
The cry-baby of the bird world is
the Baltimore oriole. As soon as this fluffy
young person appears outside of his nursery, sometimes
even before, he begins to utter a strange almost constant
“chrr-r-r.” He is not particularly
active of movement, but he cannot keep silent.
One little oriole mother whom I watched in Massachusetts
had no help in raising her brood, her mate spending
his time on the upper branches of the tree. He
could not be blamed, however; he was, so far as I could
see, perfectly willing to aid in the support of the
family, but Madam actually would not allow him even
to visit the homestead. When the young were out
he assumed his share of the labor. The first yellow-haired
bairn mounted the edge of the nest one morning, and
after a little stretching and pluming, tried to fly.
But alas he was held! Two or three times he renewed
the attempt, his struggles always ending in failure,
and I feared I should see a tragedy. Half an hour
later the mother returned, and whether she pushed
him down, or merely advised him to go back and try
again, I cannot say. The fact is that he did
disappear in the nest, where he remained for two or
three hours, for it is probably safe to assume that
the urchin who came up later was the same. This
time, without delay upon the brink, he climbed upon
a twig, hopped about a little, and before long flew
several feet, alighting on a small branch of the same
tree. Hardly had he established himself safely
and resumed his ordinary call, when down upon him from
above came a robin, who, strange to say, had a nest
in one of the upper branches of the same tall maple.
This robin had always recognized the right of the
oriole parents to their share of the tree, but the
young one was a stranger, and he fell upon him accordingly.
He knocked him off his perch; the unfortunate little
fellow fell a few feet, then gathered himself, fluttered
and caught at the outside of a clump of leaves on the
end of a twig, where after frantic struggling he managed
to secure a hold. Perhaps the robin saw his mistake,
for he paid no more attention to the new-comer, who
did not stay long on the tree after this second disaster.
The next morning came up out of the
nest quite an unnatural oriole baby he
did not cry. Silently, he stepped out upon a twig,
and looked about in the new world around him.
He carefully dressed his feathers, and often rose
to his full height and stretched his legs, as if it
were legs and not wings he needed in his new life.
The third scion of the household had also a marked
character of his own. Having planted himself
on the threshold, and found it a convenient place to
intercept all food on its way to the younger ones
still unseen, he remained. Every time the mother
came with a mouthful, he fluttered and coaxed, and
usually got it. It was too good a situation to
leave and he seemed to have settled for life; but
his wings overpowered his inertia or greed, about four
o’clock in the afternoon.
So long had the third young oriole
occupied his position, that the fourth made his appearance
almost immediately, as though he had been waiting.
There does appear to be some regulation of this sort
among the orioles, for in all that I have noticed,
no two ever came out together (excepting once, when
both went back almost instantly, and one returned
alone). This late comer had not the whole long
sunny day to loiter away, and he flew in an hour.
The fifth and last came up early the next morning
evidently in haste to join the scattered family, for
he bade farewell to the native tree in a short time.
No more orioles appeared upon the maple from this
day, but for two weeks I saw the little party about;
the father, whom I had missed after the flight of the
first infant, working like a drudge, with two or three
hungry urchins wherever he went, excepting when he
sought food in the new-cut grass on the ground.
He gave us no more songs, but his sweet, low call sounded
all day on the place.
Another family of little folk came
upon the maple after the orioles were gone, a nuthatch
tribe. There were three or four of them exactly
like the mother excepting a shorter tail, and they
followed her like a flock of sheep, over and under
branches, around the trunk, up or down or any way,
never pausing more than an instant, not even when she
plumped a morsel into a waiting mouth. She led
her little procession by her querulous-sounding “quank,”
while they replied with a low “chir-up”
in the same tone. It was a very funny sight.
They could fly nicely, but never seemed to think of
looking for food, and it was plain that the busy little
mother had no time to teach them. It was interesting
to see her deal with a moth which she found napping
on a fence. She ran at once to a crack or some
convenient hole in the rough rail, thrust it in and
hammered it down. When it was quiet she snipped
off the wings, dragged it out, and beat it on the
fence till it was fit for food, the family meanwhile
gathered around her, clinging closely to the fence,
and gently fluttering. These nuthatches were
remarkably silent, but some that I once saw living
near the top of two or three tall pines were quite
noisy, and I spent much time trying to see what they
were forever complaining about. There always
seemed to be some catastrophe impending up in that
sky parlor, but it never appeared to reach a climax.
Charming to watch is the bluebird
nestling; cheery and gentle like the parents, he seems
to escape the period of helplessness that many birds
suffer from, perhaps because he is patient enough to
stay in the nest till his wings are ready to use.
The mocking-bird baby has a far different time.
Victim of a devouring ambition that will not let him
rest till either legs or wings will bear him, he scrambles
out upon his native tree, stretches, plumes a little
in a jerky, hurried way, and then boldly launches
out in the air alas! to come
flop to the ground, where he is an easy prey to boys
and cats, both of whom are particularly fond of young
mocking-birds. These parents are wiser than the
crow blackbirds, for not a sound betrays the accident
in the family, unless, indeed, the little one is disturbed,
when they make noise enough. They keep out of
sight, no doubt closely watching the straggler until
he gets away from people, for although he has proved
that he cannot fly, the young mocker is by no means
discouraged; he trusts to his legs, and usually at
once starts off on a run “anywhere, anywhere,
out (in) the world.” When far enough away
for them to feel safe in doing so, the parents come
down and feed and comfort the wanderer, and it is a
day or two before his wings are of much use to him.
The most imperious young bird I know
is the robin. He is perfectly sure he has a right
to attention, and he intends to have it. If he
is neglected too long and gets hungry, he calls loudly
and impatiently, jerking himself up with a ludicrous
air of stamping his feet. Even when he does condescend
to go to the lawn with mamma, it is not to seek his
food far from it! It is to follow her
around, and call every moment or two for something
to eat. The idea that his individual exertions
have anything to do with the food supply seems never
to occur to him. He expects the fat morsels to
fall into his mouth as they always have, and why should
they not? He will soon be taught, for even baby-birds
have to be educated.
We have assumed in our easy-going
way that birds “toil not” because they
“do not spin,” because they have not surrounded
themselves with a thousand artificial wants, as we
have. But the truth is that nobody can work harder
than a pair of robins, for example, with four or five
hungry mouths to fill, and every mouthful to be hunted
up as it is wanted. No one would guess what an
ever-yawning cavern a baby robin’s mouth is,
till he has tried to bring up a nestling himself.
I once kept two small boys busy several days at high
wages, digging worms for one young bird, and then
I believe he starved to death.
The training of our winged neighbors
is most interesting, but so cautiously carried on
that we rarely see it, though we may often hear the
robin, oriole, whip-poor-will, and many others receive
instruction in singing. I have once or twice
surprised young birds at their lessons, as for instance,
a pewee family learning to hover over the daisies,
a beautiful operation of their parents which I never
tired of watching. I was behind a blind when
they came, a little flock of five or six. They
were very playful, and kept near together, flying low
over the grass, alighting in a row on the edge of
a pail, coming up on the clothes-line, banging awkwardly
against the house, and in every way showing ignorance
and youth. I studied one for a long time as he
balanced himself on the clothes-line and looked off
at the antics of his brothers trying to learn the
hovering. One of the parents flew out over the
tall flowers, poising himself gracefully, his body
held perfectly erect, legs half drawn up, turning
his head this way and that, hanging thus in the air
several seconds in one spot, then suddenly darting
off to another like a humming-bird. The little
ones in a row close together on a low branch of a
shrub, looked on, and in a moment two or three sallied
out and tried the same movement. They could fly
well enough, but when they tried to pause on wing
the failure was disastrous. Some tumbled out
of sight into the daisies, others recovered themselves
with violent efforts and returned hastily to the perch,
complaining loudly. Then the parents brought
food, and this went on for some time, while all the
time the air was full of gentle twitters and calls,
much baby-talk, and a little parental instruction
no doubt.
A delightful field of work awaits
the young naturalist of to-day. Our predecessors
have devoted their energies to classifying and arranging.
They have dissected and weighed and measured every
part of the little bodies; they know to a fraction
the length of wings and tails; they have pulled to
pieces the nests, “clutched” the eggs,
and blown and mounted and labeled and set up in cases
the whole external of the little creatures. All
that can be learned by violence, all the characteristics
evolved by fear and distress are duly set down in the
books. You shall find a catalogue of the robin’s
possessions in the shape of feathers and bones, pictures
of his internal anatomy, illustrations of his work
in nest building, and specimens in all stages, but
in the whole world of these books you shall not find
the robin. The soul of the robin has escaped
them, it is not to be taken by force.
I do not find fault; it needed to
be done, but happily let us hope it
is done, and a more enticing field is now open, namely:
to make personal acquaintance with the birds, find
out how they live, their manners and customs, and
their individual characters. This is one of the
most charming studies in the world, but much more
is required than a gun and a little or much scientific
knowledge. There is infinite patience, perseverance,
untiring devotion, and more, a quick eye
and ear, and a sympathetic heart. If you do not
love the birds you cannot understand them.
This is the pleasant path opening
now, and in some ways it is particularly suited to
woman with her great patience and quiet manners.
Once interested in the lives in the “upper stories,”
you will find them most absorbing; novels will pall
upon you, fancy work seem frivolous, society duties
a bore, and talk loud enough to interfere
with listening an impertinence.