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[Illustration]




                                OUTINGS
                              AT ODD TIMES

                                   BY

                        CHARLES C. ABBOTT, M. D.

              AUTHOR OF A NATURALIST’S RAMBLES ABOUT HOME,
                        DAYS OUT OF DOORS, ETC.

                             [Illustration]

                                NEW YORK
                        D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
                                  1890




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                            COPYRIGHT, 1890,
                      BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY.




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                               PREFATORY.

                                -------




                      Nature, and Books about it.


Often, during a long and dusty walk in midsummer, I have chanced
suddenly upon a wayside spring, and stooping drank directly from the
bosom of Mother Earth. Filled with the pleasant recollections of such
moments, how tame is all other tipple, even though the crystal is a
marvel of art, with “beady bubbles winking at the brim”!

So, too, I find it with matters of graver import. I would that no one
should aid me in gathering my stores, but with my own hands I would
delve at the fountain-head. The spirit of such an aim is a spur to
youth, but becomes a source of amusement rather than a more serious
matter in our maturer years. I am more than willing now to take nature
at second hand. But is this safe? How far can we trust another’s eyes,
ears, and sense of touch and smell? There are critics scattered as
thickly as motes in a sunbeam, veritable know-alls, who shriek “Beware!”
when nature is reported; but, for all this, outdoor books are very
tempting to a host of people, and in the long run educate rather than
misinform. That ever two naturalists should wholly agree, after careful
study of an animal, is not probable. There will be the same differences
as exist between two translations of the same book. What a crow, a
mouse, or a gorgeous cluster of blooming lotus is to me, these will
never be to another; but, because of this, do not persist that your
neighbor is blind, deaf, or stupid. I recently had a horse ask me to let
down the bars; to another it would have been merely the meaningless fact
that the horse neighed.

Having an outdoor book in hand, when and how should it be read? It is no
doubt very tempting to think of a shady nook, or babbling brook, or
both, in connection with the latest outdoor volume. Possibly, as you
start out for a quiet day, you string together a bit of rhyme concerning
the book, as Leigh Hunt did and others have done since. It is a common
practice to carry a book into the fields, but not a logical one. How can
a book, even one of outdoor topics, compete with Nature? Certainly if
Nature is to the reader but a convenient room, a lighter and more airy
one than any at home, does it not signify a serious lack in the mind of
that person? From a notice of a recent publication I clip the following:
“A capital book to slip into one’s pocket when taking an outing.” If,
because of its size, it could be readily slipped into one’s pocket, then
it was a capital way of getting rid of it. What sort of an outing can
one have who reads all the while? Is not the cloud-flecked sky something
more than a ceiling, the surrounding hills more than mere walls, the
grass and flowers more than carpet? There is one pleasure even greater
than that of reading, and that is being out of doors. To read at such a
time seems to imply one of two things: either that the reader knows
Nature thoroughly, or is indifferent to such knowledge. The former
phenomenon the world has never seen; the latter, to speak mildly,
deserves our pity. To escape ridicule, which is something, to insure
happiness, which is more, to avoid great dangers, which is of even
greater importance, one must know something of Nature. In one sense she
is our persistent foe. She mantles with inviting cover of rank grass her
treacherous quicksands; she paints in tempting colors her most poisonous
fruits; she spreads unheralded the insidious miasma from the meadow and
the swamp; but neither the quicksand, the unwholesome fruit, nor noxious
vapors is an unmixed evil. Let us take them as they are, see them as
parts and parcels of a complete whole, and each hour of every outing is
an unclouded joy. Nature never excuses our ignorance.

Whatever one’s position in life, does a knowledge of Nature prove
unneeded? Should we not know that potatoes grow beneath the sod, as well
as apples grow upon trees? Gather a crowd at random on the streets, or
corner a half-dozen at some social gathering, and how many can tell you
the life-history of a mushroom or a truffle? “Do potatoes grow upon
bushes?” was asked not long since. This was positively painful, but
worse things have happened. A young lady, from a city renowned for its
schools, startled her country cousins by asking, while toying with an
ear of corn, “Which end, when you plant, do you put in the ground, the
blunt or the pointed one?” If botany is impracticable in the curriculum
of the public schools, ought not, at least, the natural history of our
common articles of food to be taught? Can not such ignorance as this
implied be banished from the land?

But I have wandered; let us come back to books. If books, even those
descriptive of nature, are out of place in the woods, meadows, or by the
brook-side, when should they be read? Clearly, when the scenes they
treat of are not accessible. Why should we be entertained with a
description of a bird or flower, when they are both before us? It seems
incredible that any one should be better pleased with another’s
impressions, however cunningly told, than with those of his own senses.
It is a strange mental condition that can delight in the story of a
bird, and yet have no desire to see the creature; to be a witness to all
the marvelous cunning that this bird exhibits. Few are those among us
whose outings cover a lifetime; and when the happy days of freedom come
to us, let books be kept behind, and with untrammeled eyes and ears let
us drink in the knowledge that comes to us at no other time. Summer is
all too short a season for other occupation than enthusiastic
sight-seeing and sound-hearing.

Long before autumn most of us must be back to the busy town. Business
demands our work-day hours; and now, during the leisure of long winter
evenings, with what delight one may recall vacation-days, reading
outdoor books! The library now becomes the mountain, lake, or river.
With Thoreau, Burroughs, or Jeffries at hand, one can hear the summer
birds in the shrill whistle of the wind, and the babbling of summer
brooks in the rattle of icy rain.

For permission to reprint, in this collected form, the brief essays here
brought together, the author is indebted to Messrs. Harper & Bros., D.
Appleton & Co., the editors of the Christian Union, Christian at Work,
and of Garden and Forest, of New York; and to the editor of the
American, of Philadelphia Pa.

                                                C. C. A.

               TRENTON, NEW JERSEY, _September 1, 1890_.




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                               CONTENTS.


                          _PART I.—IN WINTER._
                                                   PAGE
                 A WINTER SUNRISE                     1
                 MIDWINTER MINSTRELSY                 8
                 A COLD WAVE                         14
                 THE WOODS IN WINTER                 22
                 OLD ALMANACS                        29
                 A QUAKER CHRISTMAS                  41
                 A NEW PLACE TO LOAF                 46
                 ROUND ABOUT A SPRING IN WINTER      51
                 A BAY-SIDE OUTING                   60
                 FREE FOR THE DAY                    66
                 AN OPEN WINTER                      82
                 A FOGGY MORNING                     89
                 THE OLD FARM’S WOOD-PILE            96

                         _PART II.—IN SPRING._

                 THE APRIL MOON                     105
                 CONCERNING SMALL OWLS              111
                 A HIDDEN HIGHWAY                   117
                 WEATHERCOCKS                       127
                 APPLE-BLOSSOMS                     133
                 THE BUILDING OF THE NEST           139
                 A MEADOW MUD-HOLE                  147
                 AN OPEN WELL                       164

                         _PART III.—IN SUMMER._

                 A NOISOME WEED                     171
                 A WAYSIDE BROOK                    178
                 WAYSIDE TREES                      183
                 SKELETON-LIFTING                   186
                 WHY I PREFER A COUNTRY LIFE        190
                 A MIDSUMMER OUTING                 197
                 A WORD ABOUT KNOWLEDGE             203
                 THE NIGHT-SIDE OF NATURE           207
                 THE HERBS OF THE FIELD             215

                         _PART IV.—IN AUTUMN._

                 A LAKE-SIDE OUTING                 221
                 DEW AND FROST                      227
                 A HERMIT FOR THE DAY               232
                 SNOW-BIRDS                         243
                 BLUE JAYS                          249
                 THE GROWTH OF TREES                257
                 FOSSIL MAN IN THE DELAWARE VALLEY  260

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                PART I.

                               IN WINTER.

                                -------




                           A Winter Sunrise.


The waning moon was scarcely visible in the western sky and not a star
shone overhead, when I ventured out of doors, at the call of the
gathering crows. These noisy scavengers of the river’s shore had
evidently slept with one eye open, and at the first faint glimmering of
the dawn signaled, in no uncertain tones, the coming day. Across the
brown meadows floated their clamorous cries and roused me when my own
slumber was most profound; but I responded promptly, willing at least,
if not wildly anxious, to witness a winter sunrise.

I have said the meadows were brown; such was their color when I saw them
last; but now, every wrinkled blade of last year’s grass was daintily
feathered with pearly frost. A line, too, of steel-gray crystals topped
every rail of the old worm fence, and capped the outreaching branches of
the scattered trees. The glint of splintered glass filled the landscape.

Knowing the view would there be least obstructed, I walked leisurely to
a high knoll in the lower meadows, leaving a curiously dark streak
behind me where I brushed away the frost as I passed. Not a bird greeted
me. The sparrows and chickadees of yesterday were still asleep. The
crackling of brittle twigs beneath my feet was the only sound I heard,
save, of course, the blended voices of the distant crows. The
brightening of the eastern sky proceeded slowly. Cloud above cloud
threatened to shut out the light until the day had well advanced; while
from the river rose a filmy bank of smoke-like fog that settled in huge
masses over the intervening marshes. But still the crows were clamorous,
and I had been told that their songs at sunrise augured a fair day; so,
’twixt hope and fear, I reached the high knoll in my neighbor’s meadow.
It was at the nick of time. Without a heralding ray in the whole
horizon, a flood of rosy light leaped through a rift in the clouds and
every cold gray crystal of the frost glowed with ruddy warmth. Then
deafening loud was the din of the foraging crows, as though they exulted
at the fullfillment of their prediction; and from that moment on, the
day was beautiful.

And if crows could be so enthusiastic over a bright winter day, why not
other birds? What of that host of arctic finches that tarry with us
until spring? I listened in vain for the foxie sparrow’s warble, the
call of the Peabody bird, and whistling of the purple finch. These were
all here yesterday and making merry; now every one was mute. The
ceaseless cawing of the crows may have drowned their voices, but I think
not. However, in other ways and no less cheerful ones, the vivifying
effect of sunrise was soon apparent everywhere about me.

My friends, the meadow mice, were in their glory. Their grass-walled
runways were roofed with ice, and not a breath of the chilly breeze that
fretted the outer world could reach them. I quite forgot the increasing
beauty of the eastern sky in my eagerness to watch the mice. I could
look down upon them, through the transparent roofs of their crystal
palaces, and wonder what might be their errands. Every one was in a
hurry, and none stopped to nibble at a blade of grass or tarried at a
cluster of seed-pods. Was it the mere pleasure of activity that prompted
them? It was very warm beneath the ice and far from cold above it. But
all the while I might be frightening the poor creatures, so I withdrew,
at the thought, to the cover of a clump of bushes. Quiet then seemed
partially restored, and soon one mouse came from an opening in the roof,
where many runways met. It picked its painful way over the frost, as
though every crystal was a pricking needle. I moved and away it darted,
but not to tell its fellows. Another and another came, and, like the one
first seen, they simply ran from post to pillar and back from pillar to
post. Perhaps a weasel was on their track—but, if we commence surmising,
there will never be an end to it. Let me declare dogmatically, these
mice were taking a sun bath, and with this thought, leave them.

As I looked about me, the crows again became the most prominent feature
of the landscape. They hovered in a loose flock over all the meadows;
literally, in thousands, and as the rays of the sun struck them, they
too glistened as though the frost crystals had incased their feathers.
Higher and higher they rose into the misty air and soon dispersed in
every direction; but they will gather again as the day closes, for over
the river, somewhere in the woods, they have a roosting-place. I have
seen this knoll, now thickly tenanted by mice, black with crows, day
after day, within a fortnight. What then became of the mice? Surely
their cunning stood them well in need to escape these ravenous birds,
and yet they have done so. Stupid as they seem when studied
individually, these mice must have a modicum of mother-wit, to thrive in
spite of so many odds against them.

But now, as the day advanced, the wooded bluff a mile away and the
willows on the river-shore gave evidence that not alone were the crows
and mice awake to the beauty and warmth of a winter sunrise. The
feathered world was now astir and music from a hundred throats filled
the crisp air. There was, it is true, not that volume of sound that
greets the daybreak in June, and no one voice was as tuneful as a
thrush. This mattered not. The essential feature of a pleasant stroll,
evidence that I was not alone, was present; for I can not keep company
with meadow mice. I call it a dead day, when there are no birds, and he
who would know what such a day is should be on the marshes or the river
when not a sound rises from the wild waste about him.

I stood long listening to the afar-off choir, and then, turning my steps
homeward, fancied I could distinguish the different birds that now made
the woods fairly ring. There was a ditch to cross before reaching the
hillside, and right glad am I that I looked before leaping it, for I saw
a lazy frog slowly responding to the increasing warmth of the sunshine.
All night long this creature had been sleeping in a cosy nook, a foot
deep in the soft mud which was protected here from the north and west
and has never been known to freeze. One eye and a small fraction of the
frog’s head were visible, but the former was bright, and I was sure that
no accident had happened to bring it even so far above the surface. I
stood very still, expecting much, but it was like watching the hour-hand
of a clock. In time the whole head was exposed, then the fore-limbs, and
this, for many minutes, was the extent of the frog’s activity. I
ventured finally to assist, and lifting up the clammy creature, placed
it on a floating fence rail, whereon the sun shone as in summer. The
frog was happy. Its expression showed this, its pulsing sides proved it,
and could I have heard it croak, my own satisfaction would have been
complete; but this it would not do. But let it be remembered, the
croaking can not be forced, either in June or January, and the voices of
frogs have been heard frequently during the latter month. Even when the
winter has been very severe, a typical January thaw has led them to give
tongue, to croak unmistakably, although in thinner tones than during a
summer’s night chorus.

There were hours yet before noon, and my little adventure with the
languid frog prompted me to explore the ditch in a rude way. All forms
of aquatic life seemed as active as in spring. Fish, salamanders,
snakes, turtles, and insects, were not only active but alert, and as
difficult to capture as I had ever found them. Actual sluggishness
characterized the frogs only, and yet these creatures are supposed to be
less susceptible to cold than all the others. The truth is, the winter
habits of every form of life are little known, and what impressions, if
any, most have upon the subject are more or less erroneous. We have had
no winter as yet, but the same conditions that I found to-day were true
of the ditch-dwellers last year and the year before, when we had not
only winter, but winter intensified.

I did not enumerate the many birds aright as I approached the hillside.
My attention was suddenly called from the ditch to the green-brier
thicket beyond by a familiar sound, yet which now, late in January,
seemed quite out of place if not out of tune and harsh. It was the
querulous cry of a cat-bird. This familiar thrush is no _rara avis_ at
such a time, although probably in Audubon’s day few if any remained in
New Jersey during the winter. No author makes mention, I believe, of
such an occurrence. The number seen each winter gradually increases, and
the disposition to remain affects apparently these birds over a steadily
extending area. So, at least, from correspondence, I am led to believe.

I found but three flowers as I neared my home—a dandelion, a violet, and
a pale spring beauty; but earlier in the month, a friend had been more
successful, and gathered not only those I have named, but others.
Doubtless these superlatively early blossomings have to do with the
present extraordinary winter, now more than half gone, but not
altogether, perhaps. Many a plant is more vigorous than we suspect, and
stray flowers are hidden beneath the fallen leaves more often than we
know.

When, in the forbidding gloom of a winter dawn, I ventured out of doors,
it was with the anticipation of a cheerless walk, if not fear of actual
discomfort; but the brilliant sunrise promptly dispelled all this, my
fears giving way to hopes that were more than realized.




                         Midwinter Minstrelsy.


It is a common impression, I find, that when the Northern song-birds
come in autumn from Canada to the Middle and Southern States, they leave
their music behind them, and during their sojourn here they only chirp
and twitter at best, and far oftener are moody and silent. This
absurdity is not readily explained, unless it be that lovers of birds
are persistently indoors from November until May. I do not pretend to
say that a keen, cold, frosty morning is rendered the more charming by
reason of the best efforts of the winter wren, purple finch, or
white-crowned sparrow, but that not one of them is necessarily mute
because the mercury is down to zero. Indeed, temperature alone seems to
have almost nothing to do with the movements or habits generally of our
birds, either the resident or migratory species. All depends upon the
food-supply, and a feast in winter is followed by a merry heart as
surely as a successful wooing in May results in ecstatic song. I think
this is borne out by the fact that during the present season—as yet
winter only in name—there has been really less activity and disposition
on the part of all our birds to sing than when we have had snow and ice
in abundance. I worked my way recently through a tangled, trackless bit
of swamp, and, while climbing over the prostrate trunk of a huge tree,
startled a winter wren as it crept from beneath a smaller log near by.
It seemed as astonished that I should have ventured so far from the open
meadow as I was to see any bird less mopish than an owl. The wren stood
contemplating me for at least one minute—a long time for a wren to
remain in one spot—and then gave vent to its astonishment by, not a
chirp, but a short series of sweet notes, that well repaid me for my
recent labors. Then, darting into the thicket, the wren was gone, but I
was not left alone. At the same moment, a troop of tree-sparrows settled
upon the clustered water-birches, and their united voices rose to the
dignity of a bird’s song. Such it evidently was intended to be, for the
chattering of birds, when they merely chirp or twitter—which is but
their conversation—is never so softly modulated, but pitched in a
hundred different keys. This became noticeable directly afterward, for
the birds scattered among the undergrowth, and the short, quick
utterances that I soon continually heard bore no resemblance to the two
or three notes, which, before they had separated, they uttered in
concert.

And as I returned home, while crossing a wide meadow where the rank
grasses afforded excellent cover, I found many small brown birds that
ran through them as aimlessly as frightened mice; they were titlarks, as
it proved. None sang until I was near at hand, when one after the other
rose a short distance from the ground, flew a few feet, and uttered,
while on the wing, a sharp, but bell-like note that was truly musical.
Another and another started up, at almost every step, but only to alight
again directly. At times there were four or five in sight at once, and
then their united voices sounded sweetly in the still air. Quickening my
steps, the flock finally rose in a body, and, so fitful and irregular
was their progress, had there been a stiff breeze at the time they might
have been mistaken for drifting autumn leaves. I need not pursue this
feature of winter bird life further, so far as the migratory species are
concerned; but a word with reference to those birds which are here
throughout the year—the resident species. The robin, Carolina wren,
song-sparrow, and thistle-bird sing, I am sure, with unabated ardor, in
spite of the cold. A miserably damp, foggy, or even windy day has a
depressing effect, and at such a time I usually find the woods, meadows,
and the river shore quite silent, unless, indeed, there be crows in
abundance. During the last week in January, 1889, when much of the time
there was a chilly northwest wind and often a clouded sky, the
song-sparrows thronged the willow hedges, and sang their May-day
melodies. I heard them soon after sunrise, at midday, and once after the
sun had gone down and it was fast growing dark.

There is yet another feature of bird music which is characteristic of
winter—the singing of passing flocks when high in the air. Day after
day, of late, soon after sunrise, a merry company of bluebirds fly over
the house, and each one sings as he passes by. Toward sunset they return
to the cedar and pine woods across the river, and then, too, they may be
heard. Their movements are as regular as those of the crows that roost
somewhere in the same neighborhood. I have often failed to see them,
they flew at so great an elevation, but their song is not to be
confounded with that of any other bird; nor are they like the
chats—ventriloquists. Somewhere in the upper regions they were floating
along, and their music, drifting earthward, brightens the winter
landscape until we think of early spring. But the bluebirds are not
always so unsociable. There is a rick of cornstalks not far away, about
which I find a pair almost daily, and did not the pestiferous
house-sparrows worry them so much, I am sure they would sing more
frequently. They appear to realize that their songs may be heard, and so
bring down upon them an attack; so, if they warble at all, it is very
softly, as though not quite discouraged, and hopeful of better times.
They have held their little fort, however, since early autumn, and I am
in hopes will outwit their enemies when nesting time arrives.

No, it is not true that the country is desolate, even in midwinter. I
heard a bluebird sing during the great storm of March, 1888, and since
then have been hopeful, although for more than one mile, during my
recent outings, comparative silence reigned. And now, what of to-day,
the last one of the month? I heard the crested tit whistling in the
far-off woods before the sun had risen, and not less musical was the
distant cawing of the myriad crows that were just leaving their roost.
Overhead, in the tops of the tall pines, were nuthatches and chicadees,
and shortly after a host of pine finches. They were all fretting, as I
fancied, because the wide reaches of meadow near by were still shut from
view, but it was not harsh scolding, after all; and as the day
brightened, their voices cleared, until later, when the birds had
scattered among the hedges, they all sang sweetly; for at such a time
the ear is not critical, and even the plaint of the nuthatch is not out
of tune. On and on I walked, expecting in the wilder woods and about the
marshy meadows to find birds and birds—many that sang and others that
would interest by virtue of their ways. I confidently looked for the
host of winter finches and the overstaying herons, but I saw none, heard
none. By noon the whole country was sadly silent, and not even a crow
passed by. Yet the day was perfect; save a little cooler, it was typical
Indian-summer weather. Plant life responded to the inviting sunshine,
and I gathered violets and spring beauty. Even the saxifrage shone
through the brown leaves, its white buds almost unfolded. It is in vain
to conjecture what had become of the birds of the early morning. Let it
suffice to say that I was greatly disappointed, and had I not been astir
so very early would have been the more sorely puzzled. As it was, the
birds had not utterly forsaken us, and proved in their own way and in
their own time that midwinter minstrelsy is not a myth.




                              A Cold Wave.


When Mr. Isaac Norris, of Philadelphia, merchant and man of observation,
recorded the weather in the vicinity of that city, 1749 and earlier, he
did not mention “cold waves,” as such, but remarked that there was
greater irregularity then than formerly, adding the significant
statement, “at present it is warm, even the very next day after a severe
cold, and sometimes the weather changes several times a day.”

Whether since 1749 these sudden changes of temperature have become more
frequent or not, I have no satisfactory means of determining, but am
inclined to think such to be the case; but new or old as a
meteorological freak, a cold wave is worthy of the rambler’s study, in
spite of the discomforts sure to be encountered, for it necessarily
affects all animal life that was astir before it reached us. Yesterday,
there were birds in the woods and about the meadows; even spiders had
spread their webs in the sunny glades, and stray flies hummed in the
sheltered hollows of the hill; so that thoughts of an early spring came
continually to the fore, as I watched and listened to the busy life
about me, myself reclining at full length, on a prostrate tree.

Had there been no intimation of the cold wave’s coming in the morning
paper, it would have been suspected as on its way, for all day the
barometer was suspiciously low, and soon after sunset a faint moaning in
the chimney corner and a far shriller sound among the tree-tops
suggested a coming change. The sudden up-leaping of sparks, too, from
the back-log counts for something. For an hour or more the coals had
been red or purple and scarcely a flame, however small, shot from the
glowing mass; then, at the whisper of the fretful wind, suddenly long
trains of brilliant sparks flew upward, and again, both the back-log and
the black fore-sticks were ablaze. Doubtless, in the good old times,
this never passed unnoticed and every one ventured a prediction when
there was no likelihood of erring. So he who spake first, in the days of
our grandfathers, became the greater weather-prophet.

During the night the cold wave came. As I write, we are having the first
ice-making weather of the season, although February is well advanced.
The chill, gray clouds scarcely concealed the sun as it rose, and later,
when the sky was clear, a rosy blush tinted the drifted snow upon the
fields. What now of the busy birds, the spiders, and humming flies of
yesterday? Have they folded their tents like Arabs and silently
disappeared?

Facing the north wind, I pushed through brake and brier, listening at
every step for the chirp of a startled bird. For some time I neither saw
nor heard a living creature, nor, indeed, did I wonder at their absence.
At last a solitary crow struggled against the fierce wind and uttered at
times a most melancholy plaint. It was all but sufficient to send me
home, and I stood for a moment pitifully undecided; but the crow, I saw,
did make some headway, and I took a hint of it. The icy gusts that swept
the hillside soon forced me, however, to seek shelter, and I crept for
some distance along the bed of a deep dry ditch overhung by blackberry
canes and smilax. Here I found a more spring-like temperature, and was
not surprised when from the clusters of dead grass blue jays hopped
before me. They were evidently startled at my appearance in their snug
retreat, but still were not timid, as when in the open woods. I often
approached within a few paces, and they hid, I am sure, in the tangled
vines and bushes on the banks of the ditch, instead of flying out into
the meadow. But if jays, there should be other birds I thought, and I
stopped again and again to listen. It was the same old story—nothing was
to be heard but the roar of the wind overhead. Weary at last with
creeping through such cramped quarters, I sat down to rest at a
convenient point, and never have I been so fortunate in the choice of an
outlook.

It is clearly evident that our resident birds and mammals soon know
every nook and corner of their chosen haunts, and more, that they pass
from point to point in accordance with fixed plans and do not wander
aimlessly about. If you overtake in broad daylight, as sometimes
happens, any animal larger than a mouse, it is not likely to be
confused, not knowing which way to turn. Such indecision would
invariably prove fatal. Their actions under such circumstances indicate
full knowledge of their surroundings, and convince one of this fact. If
not true, then every surprised animal must take in at a glance every
tree, burrow, ditch, and path, and select between them, in the twinkling
of an eye. My own observations lead me to conclude that our mammals,
which are largely nocturnal, survey at night the whole country and know
every inch of the ground. Every tanglewood is to them a city with its
main thoroughfares and side alleys, and it is this knowledge that
enables them to outwit their foes. Within a few days, a skunk came
boldly into the yard, in broad daylight; defied the dog by assuming a
bold front, and was making for the only near place of safety within easy
reach, when in the yard, an opening under a side porch. By mere accident
only it was run down and killed. This dreaded creature had evidently
been belated, and coming home after sunrise used wonderful tactics when
it encountered the dog. It played with him. It ran this way and that,
but never far, and always faced the half-timid mastiff. It shook its
huge tail, bristled its long fur, snapped, squeaked, and all the while
approached in short stages the porch. At last, seeing more than an even
chance of reaching it, the cunning creature bolted, and I am almost
sorry that it did not escape.

So, too, with our birds. Not all of them act upon foreknowledge of a
coming cold wave, and temporarily migrate. On the other hand, had they
no places of refuge, the majority would perish. No bird could have
weathered the cold cutting winds that prevailed last night, with the
air, too, at times, filled with stinging sleet. Yet, hunt the country
over, after such a night, and how seldom will you find a dead bird lying
upon the ground. Even after such a storm as the historic blizzard of a
year ago, birds that had succumbed through exposure, were comparatively
few. The fact that the alien sparrows in our cities were destroyed in
large numbers, strengthens my previous assertion, for they, unlike wild
life, are largely deprived of the advantage of snug harbors, such as the
country affords our native birds; and their semi-domesticated condition
has rendered them less provident and observing. Such, at least, was the
tenor of my thoughts while resting in my sheltered outlook.

Before many minutes had elapsed the expected chirping of winter finches
was heard; at first in the distance, but directly almost overhead; then,
everywhere about me. A moment later, and a dozen were in full view.
Myself, a shapeless mass upon a mossy log, the birds mistook me for a
part of it, and I had but to look and listen. Foxie sparrows threaded
the tangled maze of vine and cane, singing a few sweet notes at times,
as the wind lulled and the warm sunshine flooded the shelter with a
brighter glow; white-throats warbled in their listless way, and one
fearless winter wren peered into every cranny of the hollowed earth,
spider-hunting wherever the waters of the last freshet had caverned the
overhanging banks. As it drew near, I almost held my breath, hoping it
would venture to creep over me. Once it came very near, stopped and
looked me squarely in the face, but without its suspicions being
aroused. Probably I needed but a few cobwebs to have brought it even
closer.

For long the light-hearted birds, in joyous mood, passed up and down
this hidden highway, often within arm’s reach, and not one recognized
me. It was much like being alone in a strange city, where the feeling of
desolate isolation can best be realized. Much as I might desire it, I
could in no sense become a part of the happy world about me. Here, at
times, is the shadow that rests upon the rambler’s path—to feel that at
best he is but tolerated, and to know that had these happy creatures the
power they would drive him into the bleak world beyond.

One interesting feature of bird life was to-day very apparent. Never did
two or more individuals meet upon the same twig but a low, scarcely
audible twitter was uttered. I could often see a slight movement of the
beak, without hearing a sound, and notice a gentle tremor of the wings,
that doubtless meant much to them, but can not be interpreted by us.
Then away they would go, following the line of the long ditch without
grazing the tiniest twig that bent above them. Why many a sparrow,
apparently in reckless haste, did not come to grief, is indeed a puzzle;
for never, I thought, had I found thorns so sharp, so slender, and so
thickly set.

But not birds alone had sought shelter here; the mice also had been
driven from the wind-swept meadows, and these ventured into the
sunlight, but were cautious to a marked degree. None came very near, and
when I was in full view they stopped, sat upon their haunches and felt
sure, if I correctly read their thoughts, that all was not quite right.
Not one passed by me. Their keen noses detected what the proverbially
keen sight of the birds had failed to discover, that I was not a
harmless bit of driftwood. Or did the sense of hearing catch the sound
of my breathing? Explain it as one may, meadow-mice were never before so
knowing, and I recall the charge that I have often made, that they are
stupid.

So here I sat for two whole hours, yet not aware that so long a time had
elapsed. It mattered nothing that the fierce wind raged above me; that
the bending oaks echoed its heartless boast:

              “I come from the fields of the frozen north,
                 O’er the waste of the trackless sea,
               Where the winter sun looks wearily forth,
                 And yieldeth his strength to me.”

This lessened not my comfort nor quickened my homeward steps. Wrapping
my cloak the closer, I recalled the day’s adventures as I withdrew,
thinking how true it was that pleasant surprises are ever in store for
the earnest rambler and many a loss for him who is faint-hearted. It is
not well to judge the world through a window.




                          The Woods in Winter.


When I walk in the woods in summer I think of the trees as a shelter.
They go to form a protection alike against the sun and passing shower.
And if I turn from the old cart-path it is but to enter some one-side
compartment of a great labyrinth of rooms. No one tree calls for
observation. They are as the inner walls of a great house, and what they
surround alone commands attention. It is going out of doors as much to
leave the thick woods as to pass from your dwelling. But now, during
December’s bright, cheery, winter days, every tree in these same woods
becomes my companion. We are exposed to the same sunny sky, and as I
wander from one to another, each has its pleasant greeting for me. This
has been a life-long fancy of mine. Walk up to a century-old oak, and
how promptly it speaks to you of giant strength and sturdy independence;
turn then to a stately liquidambar and you are greeted with exquisite
grace. I can point out in the old woods here at home the counterparts of
many a man I know. The lonely wild apple on a gravelly knoll is as
crabbed as my crusty neighbor who begrudges me a few flint arrow-heads.
I think I should be soured by wandering half a day in a forest of
wild-apple trees. There is no such feeling when with the oaks, beeches,
chestnuts, and silver birch. They recall no unfortunates among one’s
acquaintance. Every tree of them is content with the world as it finds
it, and so too am I when surrounded by them.

The woods were quiet when I entered. Not a twig trembled, and the dead
leaves were too limp to crackle beneath my feet. Dainty frost crystals
were plentifully strown over the dwarfed bushes by the roadside, and a
film of glittering ice with jagged sides reached out from the banks of a
little brook near by. Nowhere did the ice reach wholly across the
stream, and so was the more beautiful by reason of the inky waters that
flowed sluggishly beneath it.

Where, about the roots of a massive beech, the brook had become a little
pool, I stood for many minutes, alternately watching the waters that
here seemed roused to a semblance of activity, and then listening to the
welcome cawing of the over-flying crows. Brooks, birds, and trees! Your
choice of such good company, and yet there are those who would have gone
mad here from loneliness! For the time I gave heed to the brook,
wondering as usual what might be beneath the surface, and all the while,
as ever happens, the creatures of the brook were wondering about myself.
If one turns to the text-books he will find much said of the instinct
that leads the lower forms of life to seek a safe shelter as winter
approaches. The lower forms of life in this brook had no such intention.
First, I detected dainty little frogs—the peeping hylodes—squatted on
dead leaves and yellow pebbles, and so spotted, splotched, and wrinkled
were they that it took sharp eyes to find them. Their idea of a shelter
in winter is from enemies, and not from the frosty air; a little warmer
sunshine to-day would have moved them to sing. Time and again during
November they rattled and “peeped” almost as shrilly as ever in April,
and they will again, if we are treated to a green Christmas.

The spirit of exploration seized me now, and I brushed the shallow
waters with a cedar branch. Lazy mud minnows were whipped from their
retreats, and a beautiful red salamander that I sent whizzing through
the air wriggled among the brown leaves upon the ground. It was only
after a hard chase that I captured it, and, holding it in my hand until
rested, I endeavored to induce it to squeak, for it is one of a very few
that has a voice; but it was not to be coaxed. It suffered many
indignities in silence, and so shamed me by its patience that I gently
placed it in the brook. Soon, black, shining whirligigs—the
gyrinus—suddenly appeared, and a turtle, as if wondering what might be
the cause of the commotion, thrust its head in the air, stared angrily
at me, and returned to its hidden home. There was no dearth of life in
the brook, yet this is a winter day. The ground is frozen, and the
rattle of wagons upon the highway penetrates even to this remote recess
in the deep woods.

As a child soon tires of one toy, so I longed, after an hour’s play, for
a new field and other forms of life, and so much for serious study as
that I might vary my amusement; but let not this apparent aimlessness be
held unworthy of the rambler. Call it play, if you choose, but the
incidents of such a day come back in bold relief when, with or without
an effort, they are recalled. I have found it most fortunate that
unconscious cerebation is so active when I wander about, toying, as here
by the forest brook, with many forms of life. More than half the acts of
every creature I meet are apparently meaningless at the moment of their
occurrence, but their full significance is evident when in thought I
wander a second time over the same ground. Scarcely regarded incidents
come well to the fore and throw a flood of light upon what lacked at the
time any evidence, on the creature’s part, of complicated thought.

Herein, I think, lies the secret of so much disappointment when some
people—and they are many—wander in the fields. Filled with enthusiastic
desire upon laying down the teeming pages of Thoreau and Burroughs, they
expect to see with another’s eyes and appreciate with another’s brain.
They see a bird, a mammal, or a host of butterflies, and then ask
themselves upon the spot, Well! what of them? The bare fact of their
presence is all that the minds of inexperienced ramblers encompass. The
wild life they have met excites a passing thrill and they give no
further heed to it. And it never occurs to many to recall the incidents.
Being a bit disappointed then, why give heed to the subject later? On
the contrary, if at the close of the day, in the hills and hollows of
the blazing wood upon the andirons, if the walk was in winter, we
picture the scenes of the recent ramble, these same birds or mammals, or
whatsoever else we saw, will be seen again in a new light. Why those
birds and not others were where we found them; why the field-mice or
rabbits or a weasel were where we saw them or it, will become evident.
The various features of every visited spot will be remembered; and the
cheery blaze upon the hearth tells us, as it were, the story that could
not be read when facing Nature’s open page. Some of us inveterate
ramblers read more than others, when in the fields, but no one can
afford to trust to this alone. To extract the whole truth, the past must
be recalled again and again.

As I whiled away the time with the tenants of the brook, so I gave heed
to every passing bird, and what a strange panorama, as one kind after
another flitted by! The happy association of woods and water here, as it
attracted me, drew them to the spot, yet no one loitered long. The busy
brown tree-creeper traced the crannies of the wrinkled oaks; the
nuthatches followed, and their complaining squeaks seemed expressive of
disappointment that so little food was to be found. Was this true? Were
these little birds really complaining? It certainly seemed so. But how
treacherous is this impression of seeming so! Too often, I fear, the
rambler is content with it and goes his way convinced that what was
vaguely apparent was the truth, the whole truth, and nothing more nor
less. I hold it probably true that if every bird which found itself too
late was disposed to complain, there would be a vast deal more
quarreling than actually occurs. How little contention there is in the
bird-world! While it is true that birds of a feather flock together, it
is equally so that widely different species also amicably associate, and
flagrant is the act that calls for punishment. Better luck next time is
the homely proverb that actuates all non-predatorial bird life.

But the merit of birds is their suggestiveness. Promptly following the
nuthatches came the ever-welcome song-sparrow. It hopped, with
springtide liveliness, among the dead leaves near the brook, and then,
flying to a hazel bush near by, it sang that sweet song that not even
the mocking-bird ventures to repeat. The woods vanished, and the old
garden with its gooseberry hedge was before me. I was a wondering child
again, listening and looking at the happy bird, happy as itself.

It is December, the day is cold, the trees are leafless, the ground
frozen; but not a thought of all this had clouded my joy for half a day.
There is the elixir of perpetual summer even in the woods in winter, and
happy is he who can find it.




                             Old Almanacs.


It is a dilapidated outbuilding now, and the merest ghost of its former
self. Scarcely one of the many marked features of the old kitchen is
left. The cavernous fireplace, the corner cupboard, the narrow box
staircase, the heavy double doors, with their long strap hinges, the
long narrow table by the south windows, have all been removed. And sad,
too, to think that, one by one, the sturdy farmer folk that lived in and
loved this now dark and dingy room have all passed away. For me, it is
the Mecca to which I most fondly turn when indulging in retrospection.
In and about it were passed many of those peculiarly happy days, the
recollection of which grows brighter as the years roll by. From late
autumn until spring, when for five months the nights were long, this
kitchen was the favorite rendezvous, and conversation, rather than
reading, the popular amusement. Not that there were no books in the
house. There were fifty volumes, at least, in the old book-case, but I
can not recall one in the hands of a reader. There are many of them now
on my own shelves—Gibbon, Johnson, Goldsmith, Burns, and the journal of
many a Quaker of colonial times. It would be unfair to say that books
were unpopular, but rather that conversation was held in higher esteem.
Then, certainly, every neighborhood had its characters, and their like
has not been transmitted to the present generation. I saw the last of a
native folk who had occupied my neighborhood since 1680. Now a new
people, and as different as black from white, occupy the land; but
during my early childhood, my grandfather’s help, like himself, had
always lived in the neighborhood. They had been boys together, and
little wonder that, when a day’s work was done, the evening should have
been spent in reminiscent talk. The farmer was not off to his book at
candle-light, and the “hands” left to their thoughts.

How glad, now, am I, that I caught, even in early youth, a glimpse of
simpler times! In one way, however, the world has not changed;
conversation continually turned upon the weather, and there was one book
to which reference was often made and quite frequently consulted—the
almanac. How plainly I can see my grandfather adjust his heavy-rimmed
spectacles and turn to the record of the current month! “Yes, thee is
right, Abijah; the moon changes in the forenoon.” Then the thin pamphlet
was hung again in its place in the chimney corner. Hard-headed and
alertly observant as were the farmers of fifty years ago, they all
deferred to the almanac’s dictum. Men might say, perhaps, what they
pleased; but if he who could write an almanac ventured to predict, who
were they to dispute it? So they thought, and if snow had been foretold
for the Fourth of July, they would have explained the reason why it did
not come, and pity, not scorn, the prophet.

I do not know when the first almanac was hung in the chimney corner, but
the custom, once started, continued to the end, and when the kitchen was
dismantled, a great pile of “Poor Richards” were brought to light from a
dark hole in the cavernous corner cupboard. The wisdom crowded upon
those torn and tattered pages seems to have been lost, and the later
generations were content, if I do not misunderstand them, with the
commonplaces and predictions to which reference has been made. But with
all their unquestioning reliance upon the almanac, the men who were
daily out of doors were prophets unto themselves, and proud of the petty
discoveries they claimed to have made. This it was that spiced their
conversation and made the meeting of two or three in a cozy kitchen an
attractive occurrence to young ears. I do not wonder that books were
ignored, when every laboring man laid claim to peculiar knowledge, and,
of course, formulated weather proverbs, the like of which have never got
into print. For while the neighborhood had, like all others, its common
stock of accepted “sayings,” not a man for miles around but had some two
or three that he had framed for his own guidance. Every discussion
teemed with “according to Joshua,” or “Jeremiah’s saying is,” but every
man was largely a follower of himself. Looking backward, and studying my
grandfather’s “help,” and even my farmer neighbors, I see, in the light
of the present, that these men were both ignorant and wise; having a
rich store of facts from which they drew illogical deductions.

Apropos of this, let me add that of a series of sixteen newspaper
clippings, from papers published in October and November, 1889, fifteen
of them were predictions of a winter of unusual severity in the Middle
States. The one that maintained the coming of a mild winter gave no
reasons for such a conclusion, but stated very briefly that “certain
never-failing signs pointed that way.” It is a pity that such signs were
not generally known, now that the “ground-goose, hog-bone” theory has
proved unreliable.

And so it was, a year earlier. During the autumn of 1888, I gathered, by
the aid of several friends, a considerable number of newspaper clippings
concerning the character of the coming winter. Most of them predicted a
very severe season and a late spring; a few were somewhat more moderate
in the use of superlatives, and one long essay on the breast-bone of the
goose made me shiver to read, although the day was warm, and in spite of
the assurance that each of the “phenomenally cold periods” would be
alternated by “spells of fall-like weather.” Not one hit the nail upon
the head and foretold that December and January would be winter with
winter left out. And only to-day (January 31) I find in a local paper
that the musk-rats are stopping up the entrances to their homes, and
February will be very cold. Perhaps! On the other hand, I have just
received Volume I of the Geological Survey of New Jersey, in which is a
most interesting chapter on the climate of this State. Looking over a
tabulated statement of the weather, as characteristic of seasons, I find
that we have had six notably mild winters in the past forty years, that
of ’81-’82 being “one of the warmest on record.” Armed with these facts,
I hunted up our oldest neighbor, Zephaniah Blank, and plied him with
questions. Of course, as I intended, the conversation turned upon the
weather, as it usually does, and he was very positive that we had had no
such winter as the present for “nigh on to thirty years.” The old
gentleman could recollect the moderately warm winter of ’57-’58, but
that of ’81-’82 had passed from his mind. Had a reporter overheard our
talk upon the subject, the local paper would doubtless have recorded the
present as the warmest winter in thirty years, which is not the fact.
Besides, we are not yet out of the woods, for February is often very
cold, and March, to put the best face upon it, exceedingly tricky.
Considering that weather is the most talked-of of subjects, is it not
strange that upon no other is so much ignorance displayed?

It has been said that every man is a fool or a physician at forty.
Whether true or not, every sexagenarian hereabouts is a weather prophet,
and their combined wisdom is, as might be seen, valueless. Every one of
these worthy men, as such, is a delusion and a snare, but all have
faithful followers. Uncle Zephaniah, for instance, was very impatient,
to express it mildly, when I spoke of the winter of 1881-’82. The curl
of his lip, the glitter of his eyes and wave of his hand, when he
remarked, “As if I didn’t know!” spoke volumes. Yet, in spite of his
eighty years, he did not know. There is still another feature of weather
wisdom, if I can call it such, that is even more remarkable—the
proneness to forget the character of a season so soon after it has
passed. It may be hard to believe, but many a person will stop to think
when the question is put whether the great March blizzard was last year
or the year before. Unless such a storm is coupled with some political
event or a great disaster, as fire or shipwreck, it passes almost
directly out of mind, and its magnitude dwindles in comparison to some
lesser event with which the world’s history was connected. And the moral
of all this is: keep a diary, swear only by it, and give nothing more
than a respectful hearing to unlettered historians and weather prophets.

But if the people have changed, the country has not; and from the same
woodland almanac from which they drew their facts we can draw ours. Can
any one read it aright? Verily, is not Nature a tricksy author? There
are the flowers that many a town dweller thinks truly report the
seasons. Pshaw! Away up in Massachusetts, Bradford Torrey found over
seventy plants in bloom during a November afternoon; and full well I
know of a meadow where violets, bluets, dandelions, and blue-curl can be
gathered, even at Christmas, and all the year round, when we have, as
now (1889-’90) a typical open winter.

What of the birds? For of these and blossoms is a naturalist’s year made
up. The woodland almanac goes for little so far as they are
concerned—unless, indeed, you have a trained ear for varying twitters.
Bird music is never lacking, and I have long held it an open question if
we may not spare the thrush, when there are foxy-sparrows among the
briers. So far as weather is concerned, we can not build upon our birds,
and no one of our seasons lacks them. It is the whim of closet
ornithologists and petty critics to assert that winter is comparatively
birdless, but even this is not true. There are not so many species, but
often quite as many individuals, and oftener more. Birdless, indeed!
Redbirds, meadow-larks, song-sparrows, and blue jays at this moment are
making merry in my garden. Notwithstanding all this, there will always
be those who will strive to the end to decipher the woodland almanac,
and where is he who claims not to have solved its meaning? It were well
if every one spelled over a few pages of it every day. It is healthy
exercise, fitting one to duties of all kinds, and never tending to sour
the temper of a sane person if, at the close of threescore years and
ten, he finds that he is sure of but the first lesson—there are four
seasons. Weather wisdom, as we all know, meets us at every turn, and
while usually irritating, occasionally proves a source of amusement.
Some such experience as the following, may have been the fate of many
more than I suppose.

John Blank is one of those unfortunates who desire to be thought a
genius. To float with the current is beneath his dignity. Uz Gaunt
described him well as one who persists in looking toward the west to see
the sun rise. Knowing my love for the open fields, this would-be genius
has kindly treated me, of late, to innumerable accounts of recent
observations of beasts, birds, reptiles, and wild life’s less noble
forms, and certainly the man has remarkable powers in one direction—he
can misinterpret admirably. “Think of it!” he exclaimed excitedly; “here
it is December, and I have heard a frog croak! It was not a springtime
croak, of course, but a cry of pain, and I believe a musk-rat dug it out
of its winter quarters, and the sound I heard was a cry of pain.” It is
a wonder that he did not hear the musk-rat’s chuckle over a good dinner,
also. Here we have three assumptions—that frogs never sing in winter;
that they habitually hibernate; and that musk-rats dig them out of the
mud. The aforesaid John Blank had lived forty-odd years on a farm, and
did not know that frogs voluntarily sang or croaked during mild winter
days. Like many another, finding that it is cold in December, he turns
his back on winter sunshine.

Here are some statistics concerning frogs in winter. Previous to Oct.
20, 1889, there had been white frost, some chilly days as well as
nights, and yet the frogs sang merrily on that date. There was frost,
snow, and ice during the following week, and then these same frogs were
again in full chorus; and later, in November, as late as the 19th, they
rattled and piped, not only in the sheltered marshes, but among the
wilted stalks of lotus in an exposed upland field. Then a long interim,
when I was constantly in town, but at noon, December 19, I heard them
again, and on Jan. 12, 1890, frogs of at least two species were
croaking; and, too, bees were about, snakes were sunning themselves,
turtles crawled from the mud, and salamanders squatted on dead oak
leaves in the full glare of an almost midsummer sun. When John Blank was
told of this he looked his name; but he was not disconcerted. “Did you
ever examine the marshes in winter?” I asked.

“Certainly not,” he replied, and added: “What’s to be found in frozen
mud, cold water, and about dead grass?”

“More life than you ever saw in midsummer,” was the impatient reply, and
with this I moved off.

Blank maintained his reputation and declined to take a hint. “Did you
ever see wild violets at Christmas?” he asked. I laughed, and assuming
good-nature, said, “Come along,” and started with the conceited nuisance
to a sheltered meadow. The grass was not dead, although Christmas was at
hand; there were even green leaves on the sassafras sprouts; the water
was not cold, although its surface had been frozen; the mud was very
soft. Clustered about the roots of a noble tulip tree were claytonias in
bloom; in the moist meadows were pale-blue violets, and beyond, exposed
to the sweep of every chilly breeze from the west, were houstonias, and
scattered here and there were single dandelions. “This,” I remarked, “is
no unusual matter, referable to midwinter, and ought to be familiar to
you; but you have probably not looked in the proper places for these
things”; and, taking my cue from dear old Uz Gaunt, added, “don’t look
in the west to see the sun rise.”

Then, pleading an engagement with solitude, I bade John Blank
“Good-morning.”

The landscape lightened as the bore disappeared. And how an hour’s
outing with nature soothes the irritation of an unwelcome interview! If
I were an editor, I would have a cage of frogs, with a bit of green moss
and a pool of water like that now at my elbow. To this I could turn for
mental refreshment the moment the retiring intruder faced the door of
the sanctum. There is nothing so reviving as to contemplate a frog, or,
better yet, a tree-toad. Here is one from Florida that takes the world
philosophically. When it is too cool on the shady side of his home he
creeps to the sunny side; and as the sun will not stand still, the toad
moves with it; This seems too trivial to mention, but really is not.
There are people in my neighborhood who growl because the sun does not
shine through the north windows, and more than one old farmer who
persists in shivering in the wagon-house, under protest, of course,
while the woodshed is warm and sunny. There is a chance for every man
born in the world, but this same world is not to be molded to every
crank’s convenience. Even my tree-toad knows that a fly may be on the
wrong side of the glass for him; although it took months of vain bumping
of his precious head before the idea reached his brain, and even now he
sometimes forgets the lesson so painfully learned. On the other hand,
there is little reason to believe that John Blank will look in the sunny
meadows next year for belated blossoms. If he finds one by accident in a
corner of a cold upland field, it will be heralded as a great discovery.

There is another tree-toad in the frog-pen that is a happy philosopher.
Of late, either the food offered is not the proper sort, or the creature
habitually fasts at this time of year, which is not improbable. Be this
as it may, there is no giving way to despondency because of an empty
stomach, and when his companions are taking noonday naps, or recalling
the outer world that once they knew, this little fellow, from the door
of his mossy cave, or perched upon a dead twig near by, sings merrily.
There are doubtless some who would be stupid enough to declare it the
cry of despair; but there is no trace of trouble in the sound; no
tremulous quaver as though fraught with grief. It is the clear, joyous
exultation of supreme content, as we hear it in the woods during bright
October days. Again, perhaps those gifted with an ear for music would
call the tree-toad’s song a “squeak.” This matters not, for when that
tree-toad pipes his single note, I take an outing. My study walls
vanish; the hillside and meadow, the winding creek, rolling field, and
shady orchard are again, as of old, the playground of my rambling life.




                          A Quaker Christmas.


The winters seemed colder, whether they were or not, when I was a boy;
and some thirty years ago there was one Christmas week when it seemed as
if the glacial period had suddenly returned. There was snow on the
ground, and thick blue-black ice on the creeks and flooded meadows. One
had not to take a circuitous route to reach whatever point he wished,
and this to the boys of the neighborhood made the outdoor world more
attractive. Not an old hollow tree, even, in the treacherous swamps, but
could now be reached, and so the home of every owl, <DW53>, or opossum,
was at every boy’s mercy. What, then, if it were cold! Boots and
overcoat were equal to every need, and the wide and wild world was
before us. There was a skeleton in my closet, nevertheless. Christmas
was approaching, but never a sign of it within the walls of the old
farm-house. For years it had come and gone with scarcely a mention made
of the fact; and now, having heard something of holiday festivities from
city cousins, I vowed I would revolutionize the family custom in one
respect. But how? A hundred plans came as if by magic, but each was
handicapped by impracticability—a condition of affairs that is very
common to most men’s maturer years. It must be a secret, of course. The
opposition would prove formidable indeed if the matter were openly
discussed. Never a Christmas had been celebrated for a full century in
the old house, and why now? But I was determined, and so it came about
that I had a merry Christmas.

It was a simple matter, after all; and how often it happens that, after
days of puzzling over the impossible, an easy solution of a difficulty
comes at the proper moment! When it was time to act, all was plain
enough. On one plea or another, I went from house to house, as if the
call was by mere accident, and made known my wishes to a judicious
member of each family visited. All agreed to broach the subject, and so
it resulted that two or more members of five families, each group in
blissful ignorance of his neighbor’s movements, determined to spend the
day with my grandfather. It was the first surprise party in that staid
Quaker neighborhood, and never before so merry a Christmas. Of course
the originator was all innocence; but the puzzled expression on his
grandfather’s face and the perplexity of the women-folk were fun indeed
to him. “There’s company coming,” I remarked, as a carriage turned in
the lane. “Sure enough!” remarked my aunt, who, turning to her sister,
added, “And there is almost nothing for dinner.” I grinned. Before the
first carriage drove up to the house, a second was in sight, and the
third was not far behind.

“Truly,” remarked neighbor A to neighbor B, “we did not expect to meet
thee here. We’ve been intending to drive over for some time, but the
work at home prevented.”

“And that is what I was about to remark; the same impulse has moved us
both.” A certain small boy smiled.

“This is quite a Christmas celebration,” the somewhat bewildered host
replied, and no sooner had the sound of his voice died away than
neighbor C was announced; and neighbors D and E followed in his wake. I
lingered to hear the result, but did not dare show myself. My face was
very red, for poor sedate grandfather was stuttering! “Really, truly;
this is, treally, ruly”—I heard no more, but made a dash for the back
yard. Unlucky dash! I collided with my portly aunt, and both sprawled
upon the entry floor. The company came streaming from the parlor, but
what came of it I never learned. I was up and away before the mystery
was solved. A rest on the far side of the barn finally restored me. Joy
and fear made it a merry and mad Christmas both, but the point was
gained. The monotony of winter farm-life was broken—very much broken, in
fact—for now the tables were turned, and voices were calling for me,
some in persuasive, some in authoritative, tones. At last I responded;
and oh! what relief, when the one thing needed was to run down chickens.
“How many?” I quietly asked, “a dozen?” It was an unfortunate question.
A glitter, full of meaning, flashed in the eyes of my portly aunt. She
held me responsible for the day’s excitement and extra labor, and I knew
it; but I grinned whenever I caught glimpses of the gathered neighbors,
who could not cease to wonder over the strange coincidence.

Dinner was served in due time. It took two tables to seat the guests,
and the old kitchen was full for once. All went well until the portly
lady, who still smarted from her fall, asked of me “what all this
meant?”

“What does what mean?” I asked in reply.

“That all these friends should happen here to-day?”

“How should I know?” I asked.

“Thee does know all about it,” the old lady insisted, and so a
confession was forced. What else could I do? Twenty curious faces were
centered upon me, and the truth came out.

“Never mind, never mind!” chimed in my good grandfather, at the proper
moment. “I was sure a committee was about to take me to task for some
offense, and as I have come off so well, so shall he.”

“That boy will make something some of these days,” remarked one
long-headed man; but, alas! his usual good judgment failed for once.
That boy, so far as he is aware, has not made much since then—much worth
the making; but has, no end of blunders.

Who cares? It was my first jolly Christmas and a complete success; and
would that the same season could once again be jolly!




                          A New Place to Loaf.


One must plow deeply nowadays to unearth novelty. The world has been
written up, and that which we now read is but the echo of some well-nigh
forgotten author. Many will be quick to question this, and battle for
their originality, but a few days of honest search on their part among
really old books will bring them to confusion. It is with living writers
as with the “oldest inhabitants” who declare they never knew such
weather—they had better not face statistics. Blooming orchards in
January are on record, and February roses gladdened our
great-grandmothers.

“Is there nothing more to be said?” I had been asking of myself as I
daily tramped about the farm, or, on rainy days, ruminated in the attic
in a forest of discarded furniture. The outlook, for a while, was
certainly discouraging, and then suddenly the hay-mow came to mind. As a
boy, I loved the hay-mow; how is it now, in my maturer years?

Spurred by the impulse of so bright a thought, I went to the stable, and
with old-timed suppleness clomb the straight ladder. What memories of
summer days in the meadows rushed in with the odor of the heaped-up hay!
A fancy, perhaps; but even the sweet-scented vernal grass that yearly
adds its charm to a single corner of one field seemed stored in the dark
loft. It matters not; that corner, with its wealth of bright blossoms,
the glittering sunshine of May’s perfect mornings, the song of nesting
thrushes, and the rose-throated grosbeak’s matchless song, were plainly
seen and heard. It mattered not that it was January instead of June, and
the shrill north wind whispered its well-nigh forgotten warnings—summer
reigned in the hay-mow. The noontide glare that webbed the dark with
trembling threads of light aided my fancy, and I reveled in day-dreams.

That was a painful pleasure when the past was measured, and forty years
marked off the distance between my first visit and the present. Would
life have appeared as rosy-hued could I have looked as far forward as
unto to-day? Perhaps not. And what of the retrospective glances that
dimly discern the timid child floundering then in the half-filled mow?
With what wonder were the darting swallows marked as they sped to their
nests upon the rafters, and then fled through a gaping chink to the
outer world! What mystery shrouded the hastening mice that ran across
the mow’s wide window-sill, squeaked as they met, and hurried on their
way! Why would they not stop and speak to the little child? Even then,
birds and mice gave rise to strange and painful thoughts, for why,
indeed, should they fear the child that longed to be their playmate?
That fancy has not fled unto this day. I love them now as then, and, no
longer wondering why they fear man, regret the fact almost as keenly as
in days gone by.

And later, when a sturdy lad—but lazy—what a favorite hiding-place when
there were distasteful tasks to be shirked! The rattle of a loose
shingle to-day became the familiar calling of my name when errands were
to be run, when the hated churn was ready, wood to be cut or burdens to
be carried. But, like all else that this world offers, the hay-mow was
not perfection. I paid dearly for my thoughtlessness more than once.
There was much evidence of a busy day about the house, some thirty years
ago, and at breakfast I imagined that I would be in demand; but to even
think of work upon such a perfect day for idling was painful, and, as
usual, I soon disappeared. But nature was perverse. Not a familiar nook
about the farm responded as it usually did. Even the trees were so
wrapped in their own affairs as to turn the cold shoulder. Everything
went wrong, and hours before noon I longed to be called. I listened for
some familiar voice or the regulation toot-toot of the dinner-horn. The
old roosters about the barn crowed in a bantering way, as if calling me
the foolish boy that I was. It was irritating beyond endurance, and so,
with the usual unreason of piqued youth, I crept into the hay-mow, and,
while smarting from self-inflicted pain, fell asleep. Hours passed, and
then, starting from a nightmare dream, I went sullenly to the house.
Every one smiled as I entered. What was the matter? Every one was
silent, but the secret could not be kept. A picnic party had called for
me. “It is so seldom thee hears me,” remarked my aunt, “that I did not
think it worth my while to call thee to-day,” and then every one smiled
exasperatingly. No dinner, no picnic, no appetite for supper; but my
eyes were opened.

It is the same hay-mow as forty years ago, when first I saw it; the same
as eighty years ago, when my father watched it building, and made it his
playground, if not a lazy lad’s refuge. Here is the same loose floor
that needs a thick mat of hay to render it safe to walk over, and, in
one sense, the same dusty festoons of cobwebs clinging to every corner;
while the roof, as of old, is starred with mud-wasps’ nests and dotted
with the swallows’ masonry. My father’s playground! Did he, too, I
wondered, often linger here, thinking much the same thoughts and
planning his life’s battles while idly resting on the hay? It is not
upon record, nor need be, but the old hay-mow bears testimony to his
one-time presence here. Flinging open the heavy shutter of the south
window, I glanced at the shining oaken sill and frame. Both were covered
with rudely carved letters, initials of many a lad long since grown to
manhood, and not one of them now living. How closely I was linked to a
long-gone past! In the bright sunshine of this January day there was no
trace of winter in the landscape. From my outlook I saw nothing of the
familiar fields and distant river so dear to my own boyhood, but that
wilder valley and more rugged fields that were the pet theme of my
father’s stories when he charmed his hearers telling of his youth. How
tame is the present when compared with what has been! What though the
world has wonderfully advanced, there is not for me, for one—and I voice
many another—aught in the present, or aught that imagination conjures up
as the possible future, that can charm as does the sweet calling back of
days gone by.




                    Round about a Spring in Winter.


We dwellers in the northern hemisphere naturally think of winter as
cold, and shudder at the idea of plunging into the water at this season.
The common demand is, if cold must be endured, let it at least be rid of
moisture. But all animals are not of this way of thinking. To avoid the
cutting blasts of the north wind, the stinging sleet, the pelting hail,
and driving snow, many a creature boldly plunges in or hovers about the
sparkling waters of every bubbling spring. The reason is, at such spots
there is a uniform and not low temperature.

The impression is well-nigh universal that the great majority of
animals, other than a few hardy birds, are asleep from autumn until
spring; that they are hibernating, as it is called. It is quite true
when we walk across an exposed field or follow a wood-path over some
high hill, such an impression will not be disturbed by anything that we
see or hear; but these are not the only routes open to us. Stroll along
the river shore, even when it is blocked with ice, and in the little
ponds of open water you will be pretty sure to see abundant forms of
life; but, better yet, stray over the meadows, where, in more senses
than one, perpetual summer reigns. Break the thick ice, if necessary,
that shuts from view the shallow pool, scoop up the dead pond weeds that
mat the soft mud below, and see how every bit of it teems with curious
life. The brilliant dragon-flies that darted so angrily about you last
summer dropped their eggs here in the water, and these, hatching,
produced creatures so widely different from their parents that few
people suspect any kinship. Veritable dragons, on a small scale, they
are none the less active because ice and snow have shut out the
sunlight. With their terrible jaws they tear to fragments in a moment
every insect within their reach.

Like the dragon-flies, better known perhaps as “devil’s
darning-needles,” there are many other insects that likewise spend their
early days in the meadow pools, and, as the collector will find, every
scoopful of mud and leaves will be tenanted by a range of forms, some
grotesque, others graceful, and all of abounding interest.

These curious creatures have not their little world to themselves. There
are many fishes continually plowing up the mud with their gristly
snouts, and ready to swallow every protesting wriggler that dares show
itself in spite of the nipping jaws. Whether the slim and slippery
salamanders, commonly called lizards, do the same, I do not know, but
they tunnel the mud and burrow under every heap of water-soaked leaves,
and are so active, be the weather what it may, that some nourishment
must be taken. And there are frogs; not one of them disposed to
exertion, perhaps, but none the less able to leap or burrow headlong in
the yielding mud the instant they suspect danger. During the present
winter I have even heard them faintly croaking at midday, but this, of
course, is quite unusual.

During January not a turtle need be looked for, sunning itself, however
warm may be the weather, but, like the other creatures I have named,
they are not asleep. In a shallow basin, lined with the cleanest of
white sand, through which bubbled an intermitting stream of sparkling
water, I recently surprised a mud-turtle poking anxiously about,
evidently in search of food. The creature had a lean and anxious look,
and its bright eyes meant mischief, as it proved, when I reached forward
to pick it up. I was bitten after a fashion, and therefore delighted,
for I had never before known these turtles to be snapping, and a
discovery, however insignificant, is truly delightful.

Active life, then, in many of its varied forms, can be found during the
winter in the mud, sand, and water of almost every spring, and this fact
very naturally has its influence round about the spot. There is no small
winter bird, sparrow, titmouse, wren, or creeper, that evidently prefers
the immediate surroundings of a spring to all other spots, but every one
of twenty or more delights to make daily visits to such a locality, and
the sight of the green growths that crowd the water’s edge prompts them
all to greater cheerfulness, I have thought, than when treading the
mazes of upland thickets or scanning the dreary outlook of a snow-clad
field. But yesterday, more like June than January, it is true, I stood
by a little spring that welled up from among the roots of an old maple,
to watch the movements of a minnow that had strayed from the creek near
by. While there a wee nuthatch came darting down from the trees and
perched upon a projecting root, scarcely an inch above the water. It sat
for a moment, like a fairy kingfisher, and then plunged into the shallow
depths with all the grace of an accomplished diver. More than this, as
it shook the glittering drops from its feathers upon emerging it sang
sweetly. This unlooked-for conclusion of its bathing frolic was the more
remarkable, as the ordinary utterance of the bird is anything but
musical.

There are large birds also that frequent the springs habitually in
winter, and the fact of their presence is of itself evidence that other
active animal life must also abound. I refer to herons, bitterns, and I
may add crows. The former two subsist almost exclusively upon frogs and
fish, while the latter are content with anything not absolutely
indigestible.

How vividly I can recall my astonishment when stooping once to drink
from a bubbling spring at the base of the river bluff a dark shadow
passed over me, and I sprang with such a sudden motion to my feet that I
lost my balance! A great blue heron, unheeding my presence or ignoring
it, was slowly settling down to the very spot where I stood, and had I
remained quiet it would have perched upon me, I believe. As it was, it
gave an impatient flirt to its whole body, showing annoyance and not
fear, and flew slowly down the river. Before I had wholly regained my
composure and had time to step aside, the huge bird returned, and at
once took its stand in the shallow water, as silent, motionless, erect
as a sentinel is supposed to be. This was many years ago, and I have
seldom failed to see them, sometimes many together, winter after winter
since. The moody bittern, on the other hand, is much more disposed to
migrate in autumn; but at least a single one is likely to be found on
sheltered hillsides, particularly where there are springs with marshy
areas surrounding them. I have learned this recently of these birds, and
either have overlooked them in years past, or it is a new departure for
them. It is not unlikely that the latter should be true. Our familiar
cat-bird is losing its migratory instinct very rapidly, judging from the
numbers that winter in the valley of the Delaware River. I have seen
several recently, and every one of them was in a green-brier thicket,
and feeding on the berries of this troublesome vine.

But if there were no green things in or about the springs in winter they
would be cheerless spots, after all, in spite of the many forms of
animal life that we have seen frequent them. The fact that it is winter
would constantly intrude if the water sparkled only among dead leaves.
Happily this is not the case. At every spring I saw—and there were many
of them—during a recent ramble there was an abundance of chickweed,
bitter-dock, corydalis, and a species of forget-me-not; sometimes one or
two of these only, and more often all of them; none in bloom, but all as
fresh and bright as ever a plant in June. Then, too, in advance of the
plant proper, we find the matured bloom of the skunk-cabbage—would that
it had as pretty a name as the plant deserves!—with its sheath-like
covering, bronze, crimson, golden, and light green, brightening many a
dingy spot where dead leaves have been heaped by the winds all winter
long. These fresh growths cause us to forget that the general outlook is
so dreary, and give to the presence of the abundant animal life a
naturalness that would otherwise be wanting.

And not only about the springs, but in them, often choking the channels
until little lakes are formed, are found many plants that know no summer
of growth and then a long interval of rest. The conditions of the season
are too nearly alike, and while in winter there is less increase, growth
never entirely ceases, and certainly the bright green of the delicate
foliage is never dulled. Anacharis, or water-weed, I find in profusion
at all the larger springs; if not, then callitriche, or water-starwort.
The latter is as delicate as the finer ferns, and often conceals much of
the water in which it grows, as it has both floating and submerged
leaves.

In both these plants fish, frogs, and salamanders and large aquatic
insects congregate, and are so effectually hidden that when standing on
the side of the spring basin a person is not likely to see any living
thing, and if the spirit of investigation does not move him he will go
away thinking animal life is hibernating, for so indeed it is set down
in many books. But it does not always do to plunge the hand in among the
weeds, and so try to land whatever may be tangled in the mass you pull
ashore. Some of the insects resent such interference by biting
severely—the water-boatmen, or _Notonectæ_, for instance—and they have
the advantage of seeing all that is going on in the world about them,
for they swim upon their backs.

A delicate and beautifully marked sunfish that is silvery white with
inky black bands across it is common in the Delaware tide-water meadows,
and is found nowhere else. Recently in a spring pool, where the flow of
water was almost stopped by aquatic mosses, _Hypnum_ and _Fontinalis_, I
found nearly a hundred of these fish gathered in a little space. All
were active, and so vigorous that an abundant food supply can be
presupposed; but I did not bring the microscope to bear upon this
question, and it is upon minute forms of life such as would be readily
overlooked by the casual observer that they subsist. But, as is
everywhere the case, these fish are not free from molestation, although
to the onlooker they seem to be dwelling in a paradise. There is a huge
insect, murderous as a tiger, that singles them out, I have thought,
from the hosts of more commonplace species which we can easily spare. It
is known as a _Belostoma_, and has not, so far as I can learn, any
common name. If they were better known they probably would have a dozen.
They are “wide and flat-bodied aquatic insects, of more or less ovate
outline, furnished with powerful flattened swimming legs,” and the front
ones are “fitted for seizing and holding tightly the victims upon which
they pounce.” When I found the timid banded sunfish huddled together in
the water moss I thought of the savage _Belostoma_ and hunted for them.
None seemed to be lurking in the moss, but just beyond, in an open space
where twigs had drifted and dead leaves lay about, I found two of them,
and I doubt not they were lying in wait, knowing where the fish then
were and that sooner or later some would pass that way. To determine by
means of crude experiments how far a water-bug has intelligence is a
difficult if not impracticable undertaking, but I can assure the reader
that the many I have watched in aquaria _seemed_ to be very cunning, and
constantly planning how they might surprise the fish, for these, on the
other hand, knew the danger of their presence, and shunned them in every
possible way.

It is much to be regretted, I think, that aquaria have fallen into
disrepute. They are not, as has been said, failures; but if the labor of
their care can not be undertaken, let him who would know more of common
aquatic life not fail to occasionally ramble round about the springs in
winter.




                           A Bay-Side Outing.


A cool, gray mist overspread the wide reach of meadows, and shut from
view the still wider reach of water beyond. The clouds were sullen, and
with each gusty sweep of sharp east wind were dashes of chilling rain.
The outlook was dismal; the more so that my companions and myself had
journeyed scores of miles to reach the Pleasantville meadows. Perhaps
the village itself was pleasant, but now its suburbs were forbidding.
Let me misquote Euripides:

                      What _the morning_ is to be
                      Human wisdom never learns.

So it proved; the east wind was soon tempered to three shorn lambs, the
sun peeped out upon us from time to time, and long before noon Nature
was smiling and contentment reigned.

That which most impressed me as I neared the water was the painful
silence that prevailed over all the scene. Not a sound save that of
one’s own footsteps was to be heard. The impression of an absolutely
deserted country, of a region that had been swept by a pestilence fatal
even to insect life, took strong hold of me; but only for a moment.
Presently, up from the tufts of tall grass rose, on every side,
whistling meadow-larks, filling the air at once with sweet sounds. How
my heart leaped, my cheeks tingled! With what eagerness I strove to
catch their every note! for dear to me now as, when a boy, the world
daily opened up a new scene of delights, is that old, ever-new refrain
of the meadow-lark—_I see you—you can’t see me_.

But I did see them. To the few scattered, stunted trees they flew, and,
perching at the very tops, were sharply limned against the pale-gray
sky. Did I exert some subtle influence over them? Whether or not, they
soon returned, and from hidden by-ways in the rank grass sang again and
again, to cheer me, while at work. For not as a rambler merely, but to
labor diligently, had I come so far.

Separated from the bay by a narrow strip of meadow, rises a little
hillock that tall weeds would have hidden. This was one of our objective
points; the other was an adjoining sand-ridge. Over the former we
proposed to search for whatsoever the Indians had left behind; into the
latter we proposed to dig, believing some of these people had been
buried there; all this we did. The little hillock was a shell-heap, or
“kitchen refuse-heap,” as they are called by European archæologists.
Probably nothing tells so plainly the story of the past as do these
great gatherings of burned and broken shells. So recent was every
fire-mark, so fresh the bits of charcoal, so sharp the fragments of
roasted shells, it would not have startled the relic-hunters had the
Indians filed past on their way to the adjoining fishing grounds; and
yet, when critically examined, this particular spot had evidently been
long deserted. Careful and long-protracted search failed to bring to
view any trace of other than most primitive Indian handiwork. One
patient searcher, in fact, had to content himself with a few flint
flakes and the tiniest bits of rude pottery; while another hunter was
more fortunate and drew from the side of a deep and narrow path a pretty
quartz knife; and later, two slender, shapely arrow-heads were found.

A beggarly show, perhaps, but what if our hands were not busy picking up
relics; our fancies were up and doing. We had evidences and to spare
that a primitive people had once dwelt here, and imagination supplied
all deficiencies as to the matter of when and why and of the manner of
their simple lives. Such ever is the charm of an outing like this. One
has to deal so continually with stern facts in every-day life that fancy
is the better company when out for a stroll. Nor need we deceive
ourselves. A bit of burned clay in hand means the primitive potter in
the near foreground. Given a single flake of stone, and the knife,
spear, arrow, and all their belongings are in the hands of men who stand
out boldly before us. Fancy within bounds is the twin-sister of fact,
but mischief brews when she oversteps the mark. An hour with potsherds
is monotonous. One longs for some more shapely trace of human handiwork,
but among heaps of broken and burned shells, these are not frequent.
Herein the kitchen-middens of the New Jersey coast differ, as a rule,
from the former village sites in the river valleys. It would appear that
the Indian’s life as a coast-dweller was simplicity itself. It meant the
mere gathering of food from the shallow water. No contrivances were
called for, so no specialized tools were left behind, and in their
annual pilgrimages to the coast, the inland people either took but
little with them, or were very careful to carry back everything they had
brought. No wonder, then, we grow restive when a richer harvest is
promised by the mere leaping of a fence. There, in a grassy field, it
was reported, Indians had been buried, and how exciting it is to know
that a skeleton may be brought to light by the mere turning of the sod.
It has been cruelly said that he who removes from the ground a recently
buried body is a ghoul, but if we wait until the flesh has decayed, then
the collector of dry bones becomes an archæologist. It is not a fair
statement; but whether true or not, we gave it no heed, but proceeded to
dig. Scanning each spadeful of dirt for traces of bones, we soon found
them, and all was excitement. Little by little, whole bones were exposed
to view, and, following these up with the greatest care, that first of
prizes to an archæologist, a skull, was secured. Later a second and a
third were found. Our day was full. No, not quite full. We knew that
often a bowl, trinkets, and a weapon or two were buried with the body,
but nothing of the kind was found. It was a matter of dry bones only,
unless we except the one instance where the upper shell of a large
turtle rested on one of the skulls. This was a cap that would scarcely
prove comfortable to a living person, although not without the merit of
being quite water-proof.

The longest summer’s day is all too short for such eventful outings; so
little wonder that the early setting of the sun in February prompted our
discontent. Who was ever satisfied in this world? He is a half-hearted
rambler, at best, that loves to quit such work; but the night came down
upon us, nevertheless. Silence brooded over the broad meadows, and the
larks that had cheered us until sunset ceased to sing. Could there have
been a happier combination? Meadow-larks and Indian relics; aye, even
the bones of the Indians themselves; to say nothing of a soft sea-breeze
and a clear sky.

Laden with valued spoils, we at last reluctantly drew near the village,
and would that it had been wrapped in Egyptian darkness! How the aged
villagers scowled at us as we passed by! The lame, the halt, the blind,
all came hobbling to the front windows of their homes and hurled silent
imprecations after us. What a sad ending to our happy day! and why,
forsooth? In our innocent zeal, we had disturbed the bones of a few
Indian fishermen that for centuries had been resting in perfect peace.
We, the irate villagers claimed, being in full possession of good
health, could withstand the fury of the outraged spirits of departed
red-skins, but not so the afflicted villagers. Every rheumatic crone
averred that her pains had grown to agony since we broke the sod.
Invisible arrows had whizzed by their ears, and more than one sufferer
had been struck, as the red marks upon their persons proved. Vengeance
had gone astray and sorely pressed the innocent; while the guilty walked
without shame through the long village street. This was indeed adding
insult to injury.

Speaking for myself, did I know the meaning of the word “impatience,” I
should have been vexed. As it was, the day deserved to be recorded in
red letters.

As a lover of quiet country strolls, I had been happy beyond measure,
but the way of the archæologist, it would seem, is beset with thorns.




                           Free for the Day.


             Free for the day! I scarce need tell the rest:
             An aimless youth again, and Nature’s guest.

If magic lurks in any four words of the queen’s English, it is to be
looked for here. Free for the day! Neither in books nor out of them have
I met with a phrase more full of meaning, one more comprehensively
suggestive. To me, eight weeks in the noisy city had seemed almost a
year, and at last came a pause in my occupation and a day to myself. No
decision could be reached in a reasonable time by calmly thinking the
matter over, so, closing my eyes, I spun myself on one heel, determined
to walk a good ten miles in whatever direction I faced when my whirling
body came to rest. Fortune favored me, for I found myself looking
directly toward the river. This put an end to my walking ten miles in a
bee line, for the river was not one mile distant, and, except at a
distant point, could not be crossed. With a light heart I made for the
river, and, reaching the shore, sat in a cozy nook where driftwood had
conveniently lodged. Walking is capital sport at all times, but a
comfortable outlook never comes amiss, and resting at the end of one
mile is as natural as at the end of a dozen. Thoreau speaks of looking
seaward while at Cape Cod and having all America behind him. I took my
cue from him, and, looking only down stream and not far beyond, saw only
the rippling waters. Every ripple carried its atom of the town dust from
my eyes, and in an hour I saw the world again with clear vision.
Something of the old self thrilled my veins, but still I was loath to
leave so sweet a spot. I had no promise of better things, and, though
early February, the wild words of an ancient chronicler came to mind.
Wrote a mendacious Englishman in 1648, of this river—the Delaware—that
it was “scituate in the best and same temper as Italy,” and goes on to
say, it “is freed from the extreme cold and barrennesse of the one [New
England] and heat and aguish marshes of the other [Virginia]”; all of
which is a (to put it mildly) mistake. And then the romancer adds, the
Delaware Valley “is like Lombardy, ... and partaketh of the healthiest
aire and most excellent commodities of Europe.” Then follows a bit of
nonsense about the wild beasts and agricultural capabilities. Why could
not those old travelers be truthful? There is not one but deals in
absurdities, and it would appear that they rounded off every paragraph
with a flight of the imagination. If his account be true, reindeer and
moose, as well as elk and deer, tramped these river shores but three
centuries ago, and the buffalo roamed over the Crosswicks meadows. This
is extremely improbable. Moose and reindeer bones have been found, it is
true, and even traces of the musk-ox, but all goes to show that it was
far longer ago than three centuries. That there are traces, too, of man
found associated with them goes for nothing. Such association does not
bring the now arctic animals down to a recent date in this river valley,
but places man in an indefinitely long ago. If there is any one fact
well established, it is the antiquity of man in America, and those who,
even in scientific journals, say the evidences so far are not
trustworthy, and all that, utter greater absurdities than the old
chronicler I have quoted.

A word more. If the author quoted had in mind such a winter as this,
perhaps he can not be held as intentionally wrong as to the climate; but
why need he have exaggerated? As if the round of the seasons in Jersey
could be better, when they are as they should be! The truth, two hundred
and odd years ago, would not have frightened a would-be settler; but
such a winter as this might. The present meteorological “flummux,” which
plays the fool with all animate nature, is what the old-time Indians
called _niskelan_—ugly weather; and they gave it the proper name.

But hang the whole crew of historians and scientists! this is my
holiday! The water is very blue to-day, very ripply, and flaked here and
there with a dainty bit of foam. This is running water at its best. It
smells sweetest now. And what an odor that is which rises from a broad
river! The essence of the mountains many a mile away, the ooze of the
black-soiled meadows over which I have just passed, the dead leaves and
brushwood, and, too, the grand old trees that line the river’s shore,
all give up some subtle perfume, which, mingling over the river, is
wafted to the shore. It intoxicates. Every breath indrawn thrills the
nerves and cleanses the city-soiled fibers of our being. But let no more
be said. As I stood, straight as a signal-light upon the shore, my eye
caught a strange mound of bleached driftwood in the distance, and
curiosity at once drew me toward it—a recently drowned cow that dogs had
torn. Such possible drawbacks warn one against enthusiasm as to country
odors. As for myself, I walked down stream, thinking new thoughts.

Having an odd fish in sight when by the river’s side, I am never lonely.
Odd fish are too plentiful in town; never a glut of them—the proper
sort—in the water. The average minnow is an endless source of amusement.
Its rough and tumble existence is encouraging to striving mortals. The
minnow’s ingenuity is hourly taxed to escape danger, yet never have I
seen one in despair. To-day was a red-letter one in this respect. Off in
a shallow pool, not two yards square, was a huge hump-backed minnow. Its
spine was as twisted as a corkscrew, and its locomotion as erratic as
lightning. How could such a fish secure its prey? was the question that
puzzled me; and, failing to hit upon a solution, I tried to capture the
fish for my aquarium. When one has neither net, line, nor other device,
fishing is uncertain, except with the professional liars. I tried
scooping with my hands, and have only to relate as a result that the
hump-backed minnow appeared to make a springboard of its tail and leap
over my hands with the grace and ease of a professional acrobat. After
several attempts on my part to circumvent the minnow, it suddenly
disappeared. I looked in vain for it all through the little pool. It had
gone. At last I stepped back to turn to new scenes, when the hump-backed
minnow leaped from a pebble on the water’s edge, with about the agility
of a frog! Of course, this will go the way of all fish stories; but I do
not mind telling it, for all that.

It is the unexpected that happens—a remark, by the way, that dates B.
C.—when the rambler has no particular quest in mind. I had almost
forgotten that birds were in existence, when a large one ran along the
pebbly beach, not more than a rod before me. It was a king-rail. With
the thoughtlessness characteristic of a half fool, I hurled a stone
after it, with the usual result of frightening it and so losing a golden
opportunity to observe a rather rare bird at a most unusual season. Why
will people be such ninnies? If a companion had been with me and
attempted this, I would have prevented him; yet, nine times in ten, I
give way to the unfortunate impulse to capture, if not destroy, the
rarer creatures I meet. Had I been born without arms, I would by this
time have become a naturalist. This tendency is due, without doubt, to
our non-human ancestry, but will we never outgrow it?

The king-rail is a noble bird, and a few haunt the marshes all summer
long, nesting where the tall grass is too rank and tangled even to tempt
a restless cow. Perhaps they have in mind the danger of meddlesome
mankind, and dwell in such spots accordingly. Taking the whole range of
bird life into consideration, it certainly would appear that birds give
a good deal of attention to such matters. And, before leaving the
subject, I will add that, to be intelligible in discussing birds’ ways,
one must assume that they have minds akin to ours; and this leads to the
suspicion on the part of some, and conviction in my own case, that the
birds’ mind and that of man are too closely akin to warrant much
distinction.

Birds, then, as usual, trooped to the fore as I rambled down the river.
I saw nothing else, yet not a bird was in view. The old histories came
to mind, and closed my eyes to other than an inner vision. “Greate
stores of swannes, geese, and ducks, and huge cranes, both blue and
white.” Is it not exasperating to think of the change wrought in two
centuries? A mile-wide river, and banks of old-time wildness still
remaining, yet not a feather rests upon the one or shadow of a walking
bird falls upon the other. Far and near, up and down, and high overhead
I scan the country for a glimpse of some one bird, but in vain. The
crows nowadays have the river to themselves, and none of these were
about to-day.

The day has been a marked one for its emptiness. Tracing the river’s
shore for miles ought to yield rich results, but here, at my journey’s
end, I am empty-handed. What little I have seen has but soured my
temper. It is most unwise to be ever mourning over the unrecoverable
past, but how can one avoid it? Such a walk, productive of nothing worth
recording, may not, I hope, be in vain. It at least provokes me to say,
Can not wild life, or what little remains of it, be effectually
protected? Can not swans, geese, and ducks be induced to return? They
can never prove an obstruction to navigation, so why should legislation
on this point be, as at present, a mere farce? The day will never come,
perhaps, when people who prefer a living to a dead bird will be
acknowledged as having a claim to the wild life that would appear to be
no man’s peculiar property. By an overwhelming majority, mankind hold,
if a creature is good to eat, it must be killed. But the insignificant
minority still feel they have a claim. I would walk twenty miles to see
a wild swan on the Delaware; my neighbor would walk forty if sure of
shooting it.

Water birds are safe on the Back Bay in Boston, and seem to know it. I
have watched them with delight, morning after morning, while dressing;
but here, miles from town, you may pass a week and see no trace of even
a duck. A few come and go, but there are men with guns lying in wait,
both day and night. Time was when there were wild fowl and to spare—not
so now; and the day is quickly coming when geese even will rank with the
great auk and the dodo.

It is probably not difficult to prove that a return ramble is less
suggestive, even if more objects cross our path than when we were
outward bound. At the close of a long day, we are, without suspecting
it, brain-weary, as well as physically tired. What interested us in the
morning falls flat in the evening; the mingled voices of many birds
roused enthusiasm at sunrise, and proved irritating at sunset. It was so
to-day. My one thought was to reach home, but not without lazily
thinking, as I retraced my steps. I discussed with myself, as often
before, that important question—how to see. Then, again, I have often
been asked the same question by various people. On one occasion, I
replied, “With your wits as well as your eyes.” But this does not cover
the ground. After all, how is a person to recognize a thrush from a
sparrow among birds, or a perch from a minnow among fishes? When the
question was last put, I found that I had but one course to pursue—to
admit that I could not tell. The occurrence was somewhat mortifying, and
I have, time and time again since then, endeavored to discuss, upon
paper, this very interesting subject.

The result, to date, is flat failure; but a history of nugatory effort
may prove of some value. Can it be done? Is there a secret, through
knowledge of which a young person or an inexperienced adult can be
taught to intelligently observe and correctly interpret the course of
nature? Are not those, in truth, who do see to advantage, and quickly
comprehend the purport of what they see, born with a faculty that can
not be acquired through any course of training? I believe this to be
true.

But, on the other hand, there are those who, though less favored, have
their interest aroused whenever out of doors; and these are spurred to
the acquisition of knowledge, however toilsome, because of the demands
of that interest. Such find the pursuit of natural knowledge far from
easy, but are compensated by the fact that “the play is worth the
candle.” With due modesty, I speak now from experience.

“How am I to know,” asked my friend, “that the bird I see or hear is
what it is?” I, for one, can not solve the problem. Certainly, even if
our language was adequate to describe the appearance, voice, and habits
of a bird, for instance, so accurately that it would instantly be
recognized, it is not to be expected that any one, save a professional
naturalist, will know our ornithology by heart; and even he falls very
short of that. In hopes of simplifying the matter, I have been
endeavoring to recall my own experiences; not that I am a trained
observer, but because I can not remember when I did not know the more
common objects of wild life that I met with. This knowledge—a life-long
source of pleasure—was acquired at an early age, probably because I had
a naturalist-mother, who correctly explained the little mysteries that
perplexed me, and, above all, taught me to be considerate toward and
respect the rights of every living creature. So it happened that I came
to love even every creeping thing; and with love came knowledge. But the
names of things! Until he knew its name, Thoreau looked upon a flower,
however beautiful, as a stranger, and held aloof. Certainly one feels a
great lift in his pursuit of knowledge as soon as he learns the name of
an object; and until then, however interesting that object may be, it
baffles him. Let the observer, if an adult, remember, and the child be
assured, that every creature has a name, and that it can sooner or later
be determined; and now what remains is to so closely examine it that,
when opportunity affords to describe it to a specialist, or a
description is found in a book, the creature will at once be recognized.

Years before I had access to Audubon’s or Wilson’s American Ornithology,
I was delighted, one summer day, with a large bird that played bo-peep
with me in the orchard. I watched it carefully, studied to repeat its
cries, and then attempted to describe it. The bird was pronounced a
creation of my imagination, and my labors rewarded with a lecture on
romancing; but long afterward I recognized the bird in a museum, and
found that I had seen a rare straggler from the Southern States. But
nothing of all this bears much, if any, upon my friend’s question, and
no definite conclusion has, perhaps, been reached; so I put myself in my
friend’s place, and ask, Will some one give me the information required?
The more the question, as originally put, is conned over, the more it is
like unto asking, How do we learn to talk? Let there be a desire for
knowledge, and the problem will solve itself. And as to natural history,
the earnest observer will invent names for objects, which will serve his
purpose until he learns those, as in time he will, by which they have
been recognized by others and are in common use. He who does this will
have taken the first and most important step, and all that follows will
be pleasure rather than toil.

Another phase of this subject is that of properly observing. Do we
always “see straight”? I prefer this homely phrase in putting the
question, because I was so often asked, when reporting the results of
youthful rambles, “Did you see straight? Are you sure?” And so the
familiar questions come to mind now: Have the summer tourists seen
straight? Was everything they saw really as they saw it? “Can I not
believe my own eyes?” is the usual reply. It is the commonly accepted
opinion that we can, certainly; but may not many an error arise from
such testimony? Undoubtedly; but, on the other hand, if the sight-seer
is really anxious to learn the exact truth, if he guards himself
continuously against false impressions, the danger is comparatively
slight, and diminishes to practically nothing by repetition of
observation. It must be remembered, too, that an occurrence may be very
rare, and, if observed by one not familiar with the ordinary conditions,
he may be misled so far as to suppose it not unusual; but it is far from
justifiable to assert that he did not “see straight.”

This is particularly true in the study of nature; by which is meant, at
this time, the observation of objects, animate and inanimate, as they
are and where they belong, not the study of “specimens” taken from their
proper places. If a bird is seen out of season, or out of place, or
copies the song and manners of a far different species, the observer is
not true to himself if he withholds a statement as to the fact, although
others may not have been so fortunate as to witness this; and no less
imperative is it to express his opinions and give his own
interpretations of what he sees. To say that it is indiscreet to set his
“unsupported opinion against the facts gathered by a host of observers”
is simply absurd. To fail to speak out boldly is miserable cowardice;
and he who advises silence because an honest conviction wars with
others’ opinions is contemptible. Evidently, having no opinions or
knowledge of his own, he champions the cry of the crowd, be it right or
wrong. When a friend returns from a distant land, or even from a walk in
the country, we do not ask concerning what we have often seen for
ourselves, or know from hearsay, is a feature of the land, but of those
peculiarities that particularly impress him, and his personal
adventures; and, by proper questioning, a dozen ramblers over the same
area will tell as many different stories. If every observer or traveler
was a mere cataloguing machine what a cool welcome would each receive on
his return from an outing.

How are we to know whether or not we “see straight”—whether or not we
correctly interpret? Time alone will decide this; adding thereto the
experiences of others. From the sum total of many observers will
ultimately spring the truth, if happily we shall ever possess it; but no
one experience must be suppressed. I saw the Niagara River recently
where it is crossed by the suspension bridge, and the water was
intensely black save where flecked with snowy foam. I had seen this
river at this same spot previously, and had seen it since, and always,
except this one instance, the water was deeply blue or brilliantly
green. It may never have been black before, and may never be so again,
but this has no bearing upon the fact that once, at least, that torrent
was as a torrent of ink. And so it certainly is in one’s observations of
animal life, if one is a persistent, painstaking observer. His
experience will teem with unique occurrences; but they are none the less
valuable and worthy of record because of their character.

We hear now and then of misconception of nature—some pretentious critic
assuming that another sees what is not to be seen, hears what is not to
be heard, and attributes to the lower forms of life faculties beyond
their capabilities. By what authority comes this—provided absurdity does
not enter into the case? Has the whole region of the United States been
so ransacked by a handful of professionals that the habits of every
living creature other than man are known even to the minutest details?
If so, where is this vast store of learning garnered? It must still be
religiously guarded by this same handful. The world at large knows this
is nonsense. There have not been enough facts gathered to enable one to
more than conclude tentatively. A botanist, not far away, remarked in my
hearing that he had tramped over the whole neighborhood in search of
sun-dews. He was positive that none grew within miles of his home.
Another, with keener vision, tramped the same ground, and found them in
abundance. A host of careful, earnest, and devoted observers may be
unsuccessful, but that does not prove that some one may not succeed
where the others failed; nor can the animadversions of the critical
alter the fact that some one has succeeded.

Have any of those who have spent the summer in the country amused
themselves by watching some one animal as it was busy with life’s cares?
I hope so; and while so doing, was the creature credited with
intelligence or blind instinct? I trust with the former. But “Stay!”
shouts the critic, “do you realize the danger of loose interpretation?”
How are we to decide whether or not an animal thinks as we do? Hereon
hinges the whole matter. Obviously, it can never be demonstrated with
what may be called mathematical certainty; but the average, unbiased
observer will admit that when a creature acts under given circumstances
precisely as he would do, that the brain directing those movements is
essentially such a brain as his own. To prove that it is something else
is left with those who deny the position that I take. Animals think;
they are not mere machines; this position is as rational as to claim it
of some of the lowest existing races of mankind, for the claim is laid
upon the same class of occurrences. To wander abroad, whether in the
forest or on the plain, and not to look upon animate creation as endowed
with intelligence—of course, of varying degrees—is to go, not as an
observer in the true sense, but as one deaf and blind. To ramble with
this conviction, one will not misread the book of nature, and so be
guilty of a literary crime if he gives his story to the world.




                            An Open Winter.


I have heard or read that one may experience a sense of weariness when
surrounded by the best that Nature has to offer—a cloying with too many
sweets, as it were. It seems hard to believe, so rejoiced is the average
rambler at the return of spring, but that it is true has recently dawned
upon me, here in the wilds of Jersey, after some six weeks of merely
nominal winter.

Wherever there is a little shelter from the occasional north winds, the
immediate outlook is suggestive of early April, but the growing
daffodils and blooming hunger-plant, dead-nettle, chickweed, spring
beauties, violets, and dandelions, do not give us a springtide
landscape, although columbine, giant hyssop, motherwort, self-heal,
yellow corydalis, alum root, false mitrewort, and star of Bethlehem, are
all green in the sheltered nooks, and the waters of many a spring-basin
glow as emeralds with their wealth of aquatic plant life. It avails
nothing that these springs and outflowing brooks teem with fish, frogs,
salamanders, and spiders; nor does it matter that the sun gives us
summer heat and that birds throng the underbrush as in nesting days;
still it is winter. This is the crowning fact that colors every thought,
and though we can not step but we crush a flower, winter will not be
ignored. Nor would I have it so. January has its merits as well as June,
and I hail with pleasure that spot where frost has gained a foothold.
Here is one such spot; a circle of dead weeds bordering one of moss, and
blackberry canes in rank profusion arising as an oval mound within all.
It is an odd-looking spot to-day, and sure to attract attention. It is
unlike the average clump of briers, and properly should be, as it is the
sorry monument to a giant that for century after century dwelt here in
glory. It was my good fortune to know him well, but my misfortune to be
too young to assume the role of historian. Here stood the Pearson Oak.
Perhaps my learned botanical friends may take exceptions, but I hold
that this tree was nearly, if not quite, one thousand years old. How the
Indian looms up when we think of such a tree! Here was a silent witness
to the every-day life of an Indian village that in part rested in the
mighty shadows that it cast. And later, from one huge limb dangled the
rude pole swing that was the delight of the first of my people born in
America. Being the most prominent feature of the neighborhood, this oak
was brought within the boundary line of two great plantations, and the
half acre beneath its branches was the common playground of two
families. Little wonder, then, that in time it was also common courting
ground. Indeed, the phrase common in several families now, referring to
engaged couples, “under the oak,” has reference to this tree and the
engagements that arose from frequently meeting there, during the first
half-century after the place was settled.

But what has this to do with winter? Nothing, perhaps, but it seemed
fitting that a film of ice should cover the little pool in the circle,
as frost had blighted every shrub about, when recalling that long-gone
past that seems to us so rosy-hued when comparing it with the present.
Ruin is stamped upon every feature of the landscape here, and it is well
that the old oak that witnessed more mirth than sadness should have
passed away.

To those who can walk eight furlongs and see only a milestone, winter
may be a dreary season: but Nature at rest, for those who love her, is a
sleeping beauty. Again, if it so happens death is everywhere about you,
it should not prove repulsive. Death is the law of life, and not a
flower in June can boast greater beauty than the empty seed-pods of many
a decaying plant. Shudder, if you will, at the word “skeleton,” but
handle that of many a creature or plant, and enthusiastic admiration is
sure to follow. In June, we glory in the deadly struggle for existence
that everywhere is raging; charmed by the flaunting banners, the music,
the “pomp and circumstance of glorious war”; why not then be rational
and cull beauty as well as profit from the battle-field when the
struggle is over? If a shrub is beautiful clad in motley garb, should
not its filmy ghost in silvery gray merit a passing glance?

So ran my thoughts as I crossed my neighbor’s field, seeking new traces
of frost’s handiwork, but here I failed. The general aspect was wintry,
but definite results of wintry weather could not be found. Even on cold
clay soil dandelions bloomed, and tissue-ice in the wagon ruts had no
discouragement for the grass that bordered it. To sum up the result,
rambling in January during such winter as this is not attractive, unless
one is carried away by the novelty of plants blooming out of season, or
hearing sounds when he expected silence. And a word here of winter
sounds. Except immediately before a snow-storm, the country is never
silent. Here and there, the fields may be deserted, but birds are
somewhere, and these, of both sexes, can not keep quiet long. Of our
winter birds, it can be said that they are essentially noisy, and chirp
more, if they sing less, than birds in summer; and in the anomalous
condition of the outdoor world, at present it was a relief to reach a
hedge with its complement of birds. Their listless chirping now recalled
days with the mercury near zero, when, defying the keen wind from the
north, they sang a hearty welcome to the season and hailed every
snow-squall as a gift from the gods. Nowhere else, however, and I walked
several miles, were birds to be found, save here and there a solitary
crow, and the conclusion is, that such a season drives off rather than
attracts certain species, while others having no incentive to migrate,
have not wandered this far south. I do not know what the result of
observation in general has been, but certainly over my own rambling
ground birds have been noticeably scarce. Flowers out of season are no
compensation for the losses that a thoroughly open winter brings upon
us; the more so, if an open winter lessens the number of our birds.

As the sun rose to-day, the thought “what splendid weather!” was
uppermost, and, impelled by it, I struck across lots for the
uncultivated nooks that are so pitifully few near by. The result has
been given—not a single satisfactory feature in the whole range of half
a dozen miles. A little here and there to wonder over, disappointment at
nearly every turn; more, many more somber than merry thoughts; and not
one successful effort at thinking any thought to a logical conclusion.
To what is this due? Without doubt, to the “open” season. Nor is it
strange. In no respect is nature soul-satisfying when unseasonable. A
cool June morning is not a contradiction, and is delightful; but sultry
January days are an utter abomination. Midwinter kicks over the traces
when daffodils sport in January sunshine, as they are doing this morning
about the crooked maple wherein I sit and write. The truth is, the
present conditions offer no pronounced feature of the open country;
nothing hot or cold, but all in that lukewarm condition tending to
nausea. Nor is this feeling of dissatisfaction that takes so strong a
hold upon mankind confined thereto. It is seen in half the creatures
that one meets. A meadow-mouse is no sluggard at other times, and a lazy
deer-mouse is a contradiction; but with what measured steps and slow a
mouse comes hobbling over the dead leaves about the maple I am perched
in! The creature looks at the sky, then at the ground, and finally at a
sorry shrub with seedless pods. Not a bit of animation in its motions,
but the same dejected feelings I recognize in myself evidently held the
mouse in bondage. Then I moved suddenly, but the creature merely looked
up, as if surprised at so much energy on my part. This was irritating,
so I sprang cat-like to the ground, but only to find the mouse just out
of reach and evidently not alarmed. Climbing again into the maple, I
awaited further developments, and saw at last a white-footed or
deer-mouse that seemed to me to drop from branch to branch, as it
descended from its bush nest, a dozen feet from the ground. This was
indeed discouraging. Usually there is no more graceful sight in the
woods, during autumn or winter, than that of this dainty mammal, picking
its way a-down a crooked highway of a tangled brier-patch. It is a sight
sure to be recorded in full in my note-books, as every time I witness it
some new grace marks the event, so I anticipated the old delight when I
caught my first glimpse of the mouse, and such a result!

It is true that if one’s feelings are out of tune, there may be a
distorted vision, but not so to-day. The world was askew, and has been
since the first frost, for whoever knew the crows to be
silent—positively silent, as compared with crows—on a crisp, frosty
morning? There were forty, by count, that flew over the maple, and only
one gave tongue. Here I may be charged with fancy, but that one crow
gave out no ringing _caw_, that is music to him who loves the country.
It was rather a fretful, long-drawn _pshaw!_ and fittingly voiced the
surroundings.

A winter in the tropics may be very delightful, but an “open” winter in
New Jersey is an utter abomination.




                            A Foggy Morning.


We know too little of the world except when bathed in sunshine. Not that
I recognize any advantage in groping in darkness—this is too like
dogmatizing on a theory; but between the obscurity of night and
brilliancy of the day there are happy mediums, too commonly neglected. I
have lately been wandering through a thick fog. Not a metaphysical, but
a material one; nor was it gloomy. The fog was thick, yet through it
streamed the level rays of the rising sun, gilding the topmost twigs of
the forest trees, roofing with gold a trackless wild beneath. So changed
for an hour or more was every long-familiar scene that, as I wandered, I
was a stranger in a strange land.

The late John Cassin, the ornithologist, has left on record how a vast
multitude of crows tarried for some time in Independence Square,
Philadelphia, having, after leaving their roosting grounds, lost their
reckoning in a dense fog. He tells us how the masses obeyed a few
leaders, and how methodically they all departed, led by their appointed
scouts. It was an incident that thrilled him more than all else that he
had witnessed; and none knew our birds in their homes better than he.

The bewildered crows this morning recalled this story, for the poor
birds were in a hopeless plight. Perhaps their leaders were at
loggerheads, or, being none, it was a case of each for himself and
ill-luck catch the hindmost. Be this as it may, their party-cries filled
the misty air and relieved me of all feeling of loneliness. From the
open meadows I ventured into a gloomy wood, leaving the crows to solve
their own problems. Here the fog proved an enormous lens, and, at the
same time obscuring the tops of even dwarfed undergrowth, made them
appear as trees, and the taller grasses that had withstood the winter
were as shrubbery. It was this most strange effect that made my old
playground as a land unknown. But as the wild cries of the troubled
crows grew faint, the sense of loneliness, against which one naturally
rebels, assumed mastery, and I longed for at least sunlight, that the
familiar trees might be stripped of their masks. One’s own thoughts
should be acceptable company at all times, but mine are not in the gray
of a winter morning, and fog-wrapped at that. Nevertheless, longing as I
did for others’ voices, I protested then and there against my dependence
upon bird-life. “Are there no other creatures astir?” I asked, and
pushed on yet deeper, where the old oaks were clustered. Into whatever
seemed a shelter I peered, and often thrust my arm, in hopes of feeling
some furry yet not too responsive mass. Nothing resented my unmannered
intrusion. Then into sundry hollow trees I thrust my cane, thinking at
least an owl might be roused from his slumbers; but ill-luck attended
me.

A little later, as the sun rose fairly high, the upper fog descended,
and so far increased the gloom in the forest; but beyond it, as I looked
down a long wood-path, I saw the cold gray light that brightened the
outer world. Among the trees there was no dispelling force, and the fog
became denser, until, overcome by its own weight, it turned to rain, and
such a shower! The mists of the open air had fled, while through the
woods the rain-drops, touched with a mellow light, shone as molten
metal. Rebounding from the interlacing twigs above and the carpet of
matted leaves below, these golden drops rang up, as might a myriad of
bells, the laggard life about me. Rang up the timid shrews, and one
darted among the dead leaves and moss, as though hotly pursued; aroused
the squirrels, and creeping stealthily down an oak’s extended arms, a
pair passed by, thinking by their cunning to escape my notice; called
forth a white-footed mouse, daintiest of all our mammals, that picked
its tortuous way to the meadow from its bush-nest in the briers. What
folly to suppose there is no life about you because it eludes your
search! The quickening rays of the sun have keener vision than any man,
however gifted in woodcraft, and these to-day peered directly into every
creature’s lair.

I might have searched in vain for half a day, yet found nothing among
the trees. Even the nest of the mouse in the bushes I had mistaken for a
cluster of thorn-pierced autumn leaves. It would seem as if every
creature anticipated the possible visit of a Paul Pry, and was cunning
enough to outwit him. The greater the effort made by the intruder, the
less are his chances of seeing much. Let him be patient. Often a moment
or two spent leaning against a tree effects more than a mile of noisy
plowing through the brittle, crackling leaves. The careless snapping of
a twig may not startle you, but it telegraphs your whereabouts to
creatures many a rod away. How do I know this? In this way: Not long
since I was watching a weasel as it tipped along the rough rails of an
old worm fence. It was intently engaged, following the trail of a ground
squirrel perhaps. Suddenly, as if shot, it stood in a half-erect
posture; turned its head quickly from one side to the other; then rested
one ear on or very near the rail, as I thought; then reassumed a
semi-erect position, gave a quick, bark-like cry, and disappeared. There
was no mistaking the meaning of every movement. The animal had heard a
suspicious sound, and recognizing it as fraught with danger, promptly
sought safety.

Extremely curious myself to learn what the weasel had heard, for I was
sure it was the sound of an approaching object, I sat perfectly still,
awaiting coming events. The mystery was quickly solved; a man drew near.
In about two minutes I heard footsteps, and in two more saw the man
approaching. Calculating the element of time in the succession of
events, it appeared that the weasel heard the approaching footsteps
first, fully one minute before I did, and about six elapsed before the
man reached me from the time of the weasel’s disappearance; in all, some
seven minutes. Now, allowing twenty paces to the minute and two and one
half feet to the pace, this man was considerably more than one hundred
yards distant. Indeed, I think he was walking faster and took longer
steps than I have allowed in my calculation, and was really still
farther away than 116 yards when the weasel caught the sound of his
approach. Is it any wonder, then, that the woods seem silent as we
saunter carelessly along?

The question now arises, Can any animal distinguish between the sounds
of the footsteps of our many wild and domestic animals? Can any one of
them recognize the difference between the steps of a man, fox, cow, or
rat? Now, a weasel, for instance, would not fear a cow or a sheep, but
would flee ordinarily from a man or a dog, and so such power of
discrimination would be very useful to it. I am positive that they can
distinguish, in the manner pointed out, between friend and foe, and so
are not required to seek safety at every unusual sound. I know that the
most dolorous screeching made by branches rubbing together whenever the
wind blew had no terror for squirrels or rabbits, yet they must have
trembled when they first heard it; I remember very well that I did. That
fish can recognize the approach of a man and will hide, and yet pay not
the slightest attention to galloping horses or tramping cattle that come
near, is well known; and I can see no reason to deny a like
discriminating ability to those animals whose very existence depends
upon it. The fact that such a power is the mainspring of their safety is
of itself a warrant for our belief that they possess it. And from what I
have observed of animal life, I am further convinced that the power
grows with the animal’s growth; hence the necessity of the young
remaining, as they do, with their parents until well matured. The sense
of hearing in a weasel, raccoon, or other creature is one that develops,
and doubtless varies, in efficiency among individuals. There is no
cut-and-dried instinct about it. I have often thought how much there is
in the saying common among trappers concerning very cunning animals of
any kind, “He is too old to be caught.” As chance has offered, I have
experimented upon our wild animals as to this very point, and though the
results were largely negative, there was nothing in them that showed my
inference, or conviction rather, to be untrue; and, on the other hand,
much that pointed unmistakably the other way.

But what of the clearing fog? True enough, I have drifted from it, and
it has passed earthward and away. So may it ever be! Let but a bird pass
by, singing or silent, it matters not; let but the shadow of a fleeing
creature cross my path, and clouds, sunshine, storm, or fairest weather
are alike one.




                       The Old Farm’s Wood-Pile.


           “In winter’s tedious nights sit by the fire
            With good old folks, and let them tell thee tales
            Of woful ages long ago.”

This was my wont just forty years ago; but such nights were never
tedious; nor were the ages woful of which the old folks chatted. Sitting
by the fire to-night, I am led to contemplate, not so much the heaped-up
logs and cheerful blaze before me as that other feature of days gone by,
the old farm’s wood-pile.

Recalling both what I saw and heard when a lad of a few summers, I am
startled to find that, one after the other, the prominent features of my
childhood’s days have largely disappeared. Improved farm machinery may
delight the economist, but its introduction has added no new charm to
country life, and robbed it of more than one. Was there not a subtle
something in the swish of the scythe to be preferred to the click of the
modern mower? Harvest comes and goes now without a ripple of excitement
upon the farm. A hum of the reaper for a few hours, and the work is
done. A portable steam-engine puffs in the field for a day, and the
threshing is over. But what a long series of delights, at least to the
onlooker, when grain was cradled, shocked, and then carted to the barn!
And, later, far in the winter, what music was the measured thumping of
the flails!

In due course came the present order, the natural outcome of relentless
evolution, and it is affectation to decry it. Mankind in the long run
has been benefited, and all should be thankful. But with these major
changes have come minor ones that I trust can be mourned without risking
a charge of silliness. I need not name them. Mention of any one calls up
the rest, so closely related were they all. Who can think of the old
wood-pile, a maze of gnarly sticks, huge chopping-log, and the rudely
hafted axe, without a vision also of the old kitchen with its cavernous
fireplace, and, just outside the door, the mossy well with its ungainly
sweep! All these were practically out of date in my time, but here and
there were retained on more than one old farm I knew, and are still in
use within walking distance of my home.

To many, perhaps, a wood-pile is but a pile of wood; but it is something
more. Can you not see that the ground is depressed, as though the earth
had been beaten down by the continued blows of axe and beetle? Do you
not notice that the outlying weeds are different from those that are
scattered elsewhere about the dooryard? Here, there is not only a
wood-pile now, but there has been one for many a long year, perhaps for
more than a century. Turn up the soil and you will find it black;
examine it with a lens, and you will find it filled with wood fiber in
every stage of decomposition. Dig deeper and you will find many a relic
of a by-gone generation. Pewter buttons that once shone like silver, the
pride of beaux who, though Quakers, loved a smart-looking coat; buckles
worn at the knee and upon the shoes; bits of spectacle rims that once
held circular glasses of enormous diameter; a thousand odds and ends,
indeed, of metal, glass, and china, discarded, one by one, as they were
broken; for the wood-pile was a dust-heap as well, and the last
resting-place of every small object that could not be burned.

My own earliest recollection of outdoor sport is of “playing house”
about the generous heap of gnarly logs and crooked branches that had
been brought from the woods during the winter. At some convenient corner
the loose earth would be scooped away, water brought until the hollow
was filled, and a long row of mud pies molded in clamshells, the product
of a happy morning’s work. It was usually when thus engaged that some
curious object would be brought to light and referred for explanation to
the wood-chopper, if he were present. I can see two old men now, whose
sole occupation in their later years, so far as I can recall, was to
split wood. These two men, Uz Gaunt and Miles Overfield, were “master
hands with an axe,” as they promptly said of themselves. With one foot
resting upon the chopping-block, and leaning upon his axe, Uz or Miles
would critically examine whatever I had found; and then, after silently
gazing into the distance to recall the past, with what an air of wisdom
would the information be forthcoming! Nor would either of these old men
ever promptly resume his labor. Such an interruption was sure to call up
a flood of memories, and delightful stories of long ago made me quite
forget my play. Nothing that my own or another’s brain could suggest
ever equaled in interest these old men’s stories. I can not clearly
recall a single one of them now, but simply the effect they produced and
the sad fact that, in their estimation, the present never favorably
compared with the days when they were young. And is it not ever so? If I
have learned nothing else since then I have learned this—that the
glorious future to which as a child I looked forward has proved
everything but what my fancy painted.

There was a comic side to my interviews with the wood-choppers which I
recall even now with grim satisfaction, for I think it was right that I
outwitted an unreasonably cross-grained aunt. Often my heart was sorely
troubled because, in the midst of a most exciting story, Aunt would call
out, “Thee is hindering Miles at his work; he doesn’t like to be
bothered;” all of which was in the interest of the work being done, and
not Miles’s comfort. Not like to be bothered, indeed! Neither he nor Uz
disapproved of loitering, for both were old, and Aunt knew this as well
as they. Before summer was over, a stratagem was devised that succeeded
admirably. I had merely to take my place on the off side of the
wood-pile, where I was quite out of sight, and Miles or Uz would work,
oh, so diligently! at the light wood for half a day, which needed next
to no exertion, and all the while could talk as freely as when taking
his nooning. Perhaps it was not well, but, young as I then was, I
learned that in human nature the real and the apparent are too often as
widely apart as the poles.

The wild life that forty years ago lurked in the woods and swamps of the
old farm was not different from what is still to be found there, but
there has been a great decrease in the numbers of many forms. The wild
cat and fox, perhaps, may be considered as really extinct, although both
are reported at long intervals in the immediate neighborhood. These, it
is certain, are stragglers—the former from the mountains to north, the
latter from the pine regions toward the sea-coast. But it has not been
long since the raccoon was regularly hunted during the moonlit winter
nights and the opposum found security in half the hollow trees along the
hillside. The dreaded skunk was then abundant. None of these, however,
can be said to be of common occurrence now, and their discovery produces
a ripple of excitement at present, while in my early days their capture
excited scarcely a word of comment. Then the old wood-pile was not
infrequently the hiding-place of one or more of these “varmints,” which
raided the hen-roost, kept the old dog in a fever of excitement, and
baffled the trapping skill of the oldest “hands” upon the farm. Now, at
best, when the last sticks are cut and stored in the woodshed, the
burrow of a rat is all we find.

With what glee do I still recall an autumn evening, years ago, when the
unusually furious barking of the old mastiff brought the whole family to
the door! In the dim twilight the dog could be seen dashing at and
retreating from the wood-pile, and at once the meaning of the hubbub was
apparent. Some creature had taken refuge there. A lantern was brought,
and as every man wished to be the hero of the hour, my aunt held the
light. The wood-pile was surrounded; every stick was quickly overturned,
and finally a skunk was dislodged. Confused or attracted by the light, I
do not know which, the “varmint” made straightway for the ample skirts
of the old lady, followed by the dog, and, in a second, skunk, dog,
lady, and lantern were one indistinguishable mass. My aunt proved the
heroine of the evening, nor did the men object. I often pause at the
very spot, and fancy that “the scent of the roses” doth “hang round it
still.”

A wood-pile, if it be not too near the house, has many attractions for
birds of various kinds, and I am at a loss to know why the
whip-poor-will should, of recent years, have forsaken it. Formerly, the
first of these birds heard in early spring was that which perched upon
the topmost stick and whistled his trisyllabic monologue from dark to
dawn. Now they frequent only the retired woodland tracts. Various
insect-eating birds continually come and go, attracted by the food they
find in the decayed wood, but the house-wren remains throughout its
summer sojourn here—that is, from April to October; while during the
colder months the winter wren takes the other’s place. These little
brown birds are exceedingly alike in appearance, in habits, and in size,
and I shall never forget my communicating the fact that they were not
the same to Miles Overfield. It was almost my last conversation with
him.

“Not the same?” he exclaimed. “You might as well tell me that a
snow-bird isn’t a chippy in its winter dress!”

“They are not, indeed!” I replied, astonished to hear so remarkable a
statement.

“So you set up book-learnin’ against me about such things as that, eh?”
Miles remarked, with unlimited scorn in both his voice and manner; and
from that time I lost favor in his eyes. Such crude ideas concerning our
common birds are still very common, nor is it to be wondered at.
Knowledge of local natural history is still at a discount. Is there a
country school where even its barest rudiments are taught?

The heaped-up logs that, burning brightly, made cheery my room when I
sat down for a quiet evening’s meditation, are now a bed of ashes and
lurid coals. They typify the modern wood-piles about our farms—mere
heaps of refuse sticks and windfall branches of our dooryard trees. Fit
for kindling, perhaps, but never for a generous fire upon an open
hearth. As I linger over them, the irrecoverable past, with all its
pleasures to the fore, comes back with painful vividness. The fantastic
shapes of the ruddy coals, the caverns in the loose ashes, the shadows
of the andirons, the filmy thread of smoke, are a landscape to my fancy,
upon which my eyes can never dwell again. In the faint moaning of the
wind that fills the chimney corner I hear a voice, long stilled, whose
music led me dancing through the world. Place and people are alike
changed. “All, all are gone, the old familiar faces.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                PART II.

                               IN SPRING.

                                -------




                            The April Moon.


Of the thirteen moons of the year, not one is of such significance to
the outdoor naturalist as that of April. I think that there can be no
doubt but that a clear sky, rather than temperature, is the important
factor in the migratory movement of our birds that come from the South
in spring. Certainly the morning of April 14th, of this year, was cool
enough to have retarded birds sensitive to cold. Ice formed on shallow
ponds and a heavy frost rested upon all the upland fields; yet at
sunrise the old beeches were alive with those beautiful birds, the
yellow red-polled warblers. Nor were they numb or dumb. There was not an
instant that they rested, nor a moment that they did not sing. The April
moon, too, has the merit of brightening the marshes, when in fullest
force the frog-world comes to the fore, and perhaps never are these
slimy batrachians so noisy as when the night is warm, the sky clear, and
the moon full in April. Take a midnight ramble then, and see if I am not
right. Of course, no one wishes to be confined to the company of
croaking frogs, but other creatures will doubtless cross your path, and
I assume the reader does not live in an utterly desolate region. My
reference to frogs may seem to imply contempt, but it is not deserved.
If they are not overwise, neither are they wholly stupid, and it is well
for all men to be chary of their judgments. There are times and
occasions when a frog may outwit a philosopher. Try to catch one on
slippery mud, and see which sprawls the more gracefully.

I recently rambled for half a night over acres of wild marsh, and, while
I often wished myself at home or that I could grasp the arm of a friend,
yet am heartily glad, now that it is over, that I undertook to trespass
upon the haunts of owls, frogs, bitterns, and a host of minor creatures.
But let me be more explicit, and a word further concerning frogs. In the
tide marshes, where the shallow water has been warmed by the noonday
sun, the pretty little _hylodes_ were holding high carnival. I strolled
leisurely, at this stage of my ramble, to the water’s edge, but only to
find that the creatures could only be heard, not seen; unless, indeed,
the trembling specks upon the glimmering pools, which faded out at my
approach, were they. The piercing shrillness of their united songs was
something wonderful. It was not so much a chorus as the wildest orgies
of Lilliputian fifers. At times the song of this same frog is the sharp
clicking of a castanet, hence their name in zoölogy, _Acris crepitans_,
but none were crepitating that night. Yesterday I waded into a wet
meadow and crouched upon a projecting hassock. Thousands of the fifing
frogs were about me, but I could see none. I long sat there, hoping that
my patience would be rewarded in time, and so it was. At last one came
cautiously from its hiding-place in the submerged grass, thrusting but
its head above the water’s surface, and scanned closely its
surroundings. It eyed me most suspiciously, and then slowly crawled out
upon outreaching grass until quite above the water. It seemed very long
before it was suited to its perch but when comfortably fixed, appeared
to gulp in a great mouthful of air; in fact, must have done so, for
immediately an enormous globular sac formed beneath its lower jaw. The
sunlight being favorable, I could see that the sac contained about two
drops of water. Then the fifing commenced. The motion of the mouth was
too slight to be detected, but the membranous globe decreased or
increased with each utterance. At no time did it wholly disappear.
Noting so much, I then moved slightly to attract the creature’s
attention. Immediately it ceased fifing, but the sac remained slightly
diminished in size. As I was again perfectly quiet, its confidence
returned, and the shrill monotonous “peep!” was resumed, but pitched in
even a higher key, as though to make good the loss of time my slight
interference had caused.

When Peter Kalm, the Swedish naturalist, was studying the natural
history of New Jersey, he was much struck with the noises made by
certain small frogs which he heard, and supposed that he saw; but it
would appear, from a recent study of the subject by Prof. Garman, of
Cambridge, Mass. that Kalm attributed the voices of one species to a
very different and much larger frog. The reasons given for this opinion
by Prof. Garman are conclusive; that author remarks; “Apparently the
frog Kalm heard was not the one he caught. The cry is that of _Hyla
Pickeringii_; the frog taken was probably ... the leopard, frog.” So
far, Garman; but I am convinced my friend is mistaken, and that Kalm
heard the shrill peeping of the little _Acris crepitans_, which is
extraordinarily abundant, while, in the locality where Kalm was,
Pickering’s _hyla_ is comparatively rare.

I lingered long by the resounding marsh—so long that the chilly damp
provoked an aguish pain, and admonished by it I turned toward the
leafless trees upon the bluff, where I hoped to find a drier atmosphere.
The moon was well upon her westward course when I reached higher ground,
and what a change from the open meadows to gloomy woodland! The dark
shadows of noonday are not repeated during a moonlit night. They are not
only less distinct, but quivering, as though they, too, shivered as the
air grew cold. It is not strange that one peoples the distance then with
uncouth shapes, and sees a monster wherever moves a mite. However one
may argue to himself that this is the same wood-path down which he daily
passes without a thought, and that since sunset no strange creatures can
have come upon the scene, he sees a dozen such, it may be, in spite of
every effort to laugh them out of existence. Let a spider crawl over
your face at noon, and you brush the creature from you almost
unconsciously. Let a filmy cobweb rest upon your damp forehead at
midnight, and you struggle to be rid of it, as though bound with a rope.
The mingled sounds of myriad frogs, the hooting of owls, the rustling
leaves beneath the shrew’s light tread, even the chirping of a dreaming
bird, can not assure you. Every tree is the ambush of a lurking elf;
ghosts and hobgoblins follow in your steps. I have abundant sympathy for
those who, walking through moonlit woods, whistle to keep their courage
up.

Such, in a measure, were my own feelings until I reached a glade where
the light fell softly upon the wind-swept sod. There the immaterial
world vanished, and I was no longer the companion of uncanny sprites.
Resting from a long journey, yet not disposed to sleep, a pair of
woodcocks stalked leisurely across my path without deigning to notice my
approach. I drew back a pace or two, and watched them pass by. They did
not leave the glade, but seemed to be scanning every foot of it, perhaps
discussing its merits as a summer resort. Then first one and then the
other took a short upward and circuitous flight, and in a few seconds
returned. This was frequently done. Was it to hail passing migrants? I
ask this seriously, for I have known several pairs to frequent a cluster
of rhododendrons all through the month of March, and yet none nested
until late in April: _per contra_, I have found their eggs in February.
The movements of this pair, as I saw them, were mysterious, but I could
do nothing in so uncertain a light toward unraveling the mystery, and
contented myself with attracting their attention. I whistled shrilly but
a single note, and as if shot the birds came to a halt. I whistled
again, and they drew nearer to me, as I thought; but if so, I became no
mystery to them, and upward and outward over the meadows, with a great
whirring of their wings, they vanished.

This was so trivial an incident that, had it no sequel, would not be
worthy of record. I have said I whistled shrilly a single note. It
roused a sleeping cardinal near by, which straightened its crest, shook
out its rumpled down, stared into vacant space, and whistled in return.
I quickly replied, and so we had the woods to echo with our calls. “What
can the matter be?” asked another and another of these birds, until the
whole hillside sounded with their cries. I was lonely no longer. The
moon shone with added luster, the grewsome shadows of the dwarfed cedars
fled, and, but for the twinkling of a million stars, I might have
thought it day. But the pleasing fancy was of short duration. Bird after
bird resumed its slumbers. Silence and a deeper gloom reigned in the
forest, nor did my heart cease to beat nervously until I reached my
home.




                         Concerning Small Owls.


It may be April according to the almanac, and yet midwinter, judging by
the thermometer; and perhaps, as a rule, March winds continue their
chilly gustiness until the fourth month is well advanced. I have scoured
a weather-wise neighborhood for some “saying” about this feature of our
climate, but gathered nothing not absolutely childish; but, if so run
the days, the nights of April have a merit peculiarly their own; by the
light of the waxing moon, let the temperature be high or low, the
north-bound migratory birds begin to come. I saw a few of them during
the last week in March; but it was when the April moon was eight days
old that field sparrows trooped hitherward by thousands, and how the
bare upland fields rang with their glee!

There is another happy feature of spring’s initial days. The winds, be
they never so boisterous from dawn to sunset, rest during the night, and
nocturnal life rejoices. What a mighty volume of sound arises from the
marshes when the wind-tossed waters are at rest! The tiny hylodes, the
smallest of our frogs, is fairly ecstatic now, and, were there no other
voices to be heard, this creature alone would dispel all feeling of
loneliness.

But what of a ramble during an April night? After an almost tempestuous
day, there was little promise of anything akin to adventure, judging the
landscape from my open door. However confirmed in the strolling habit
might be the saunterer, rambling at night, with but frogs for company,
is scarcely tempting, even though the moon shines brilliantly. Then, it
occurred to me, is it not enough that the wind had ceased, and that
out-of-doors it is something more than merely April in name? Therefore,
expecting little and hoping less, I ventured abroad, directing my steps,
as usual, meadow-ward. And it was not with, as might seem at first, an
altogether undesirable and non-receptive frame of mind. One is far more
likely to be content with little, and not wholly disappointed if his
walk proves without adventure. But the latter is seldom or never the
result. It is a strange night that finds the whole world asleep.
Certainly I never found it so before, and did not to-night. By the pale
light of the cloud-wrapped moon, stately herons wended their way from
the river to the meadows, and twice a little owl hooted at me as I
passed by the hollow hickory that stands as a lonely sentinel in the
midst of a wide reach of pasture. Here was an instance when to be hooted
at was a positive pleasure. The little owlet questioned the propriety of
my being abroad at night, nor was he at all mealy-mouthed. He did not
complain merely, but scolded unmistakably; and hovering above me as well
as when flitting from branch to branch, he snapped his little beak most
viciously. It was evident that fear of myself did not influence the owl
at all, but he was provoked because my presence interfered with his
plans. The bird knew well enough that I would keep the mice away by
standing in full sight out in the open meadow. I have been puzzled, at
times, to interpret the chirps and twitters of excited birds, and this
irate little owl cried “Get out!” as plainly as man could speak it, and
I got out.

In all works treating of the intelligence of animals there is much said
of the mental status of parrots, and little or nothing of the mother-wit
of owls. Why this oversight is a mystery, unless it arises from the fact
that “from the nocturnal preferences of most owls their habits are very
slightly known, and many interesting facts are doubtless to be
discovered in this direction. More often heard than seen, even their
notes are only imperfectly known as yet.” Notwithstanding this, owls are
well known in a general way—better known, indeed, than any other family
of birds. Their appearance is striking, their expression intelligent,
and that they were selected, in ancient and more poetical times, as the
emblem of wisdom, is not to be wondered at. The bird of Minerva does not
belie its looks. To speak of an owl’s wisdom in a Pickwickian sense, is
to publish one’s own ignorance. I would that I might venture to give in
merited detail an account of the wise doings, if not sayings, of little
red owls that I have held captives for months. And, better yet, narrate
the summer histories of owls at freedom that nested in the old orchard.
Or write of the cunning ways of the handsome barn-owls, those beautiful
cosmopolite birds, that made their home in a hollow oak upon an upland
field.

To do this would be to place our common owls where, in the scale of
intelligence, they rightfully belong. Of all our birds, they are the
least governed by mere impulse, and pass their days, as it has appeared
to me, in a most methodical and reasonable manner. It has been admitted
by many a traveler that to shoot a monkey was too like murder; they
could not do it. Would that every farmer in the land had the same
feeling with reference to the owls; for the same reason holds good, only
to a less extent.

It is true that we know very little about the various cries of owls, but
every country lad, at least, knows that the bird’s utterances are not
merely slight variations of a typical hoot, or the _to-whit to-whoo_ of
the poets. Well I remember how, evening after evening, when in camp in
southern Ohio, the great horned owls made night melancholy rather than
hideous, by their sonorous _hoo-hoo-hoo!_ At first afar off, and then
nearer and clearer, sounded their incessant call, as, flitting from one
tall sycamore to another, they slowly approached the red glare of the
camp-fire. Their hooting varied not a whit, but merely grew more
distinct, and for long I thought them capable of no other utterance, but
how great an error this was evident, when at last one of these huge
birds perched in the oak that sheltered my tent. The melancholy
_hoo-hoo-hoo!_ was the same, but with this were a host of minor notes,
and these were once followed by a series of explosive, ill-tempered
ejaculations when the little red owls that had their home in this same
oak scolded without ceasing at the intrusion. I can liken the hubbub to
nothing but the subdued clamor of excited geese. In like manner I was
scolded by the little owl on the meadow hickory. The moonlit September
night on the bluff of Brush Creek was vividly recalled.

Owls need but to be more closely studied, and, if in confinement, to be
treated with kindness and attended by one person, to demonstrate that
all the wisdom seeming to lurk behind their expressive faces is really
there. In matters of animal intelligence I know that I am heterodox, for
I give the crow prominence equal to the parrot, and strongly doubt if
owls should stand much behind them.




                           A Hidden Highway.


A wide tract of meadows that skirt the river near my home, and upon
which much wealth and labor have been expended in years past, was the
abode of desolation in the eyes of the sturdy settlers two hundred years
ago, and so treacherous the footing in every direction—so the record
runs—that the hunted bears and deer would come to a stand rather than
plunge headlong into the trackless waste. With proper caution the tract
was finally explored, mapped, and ditched, and now there is small chance
of disaster unless the rambler is culpably negligent.

I hold that one should think kindly of a ditch. The commonly imputed
repulsiveness of such a waterway is more often wanting than present, and
nearly all that I have seen have teemed with interesting life. What are
the brooks, indeed, that turn a poet’s head, but Nature’s own ditches?
As to those of man’s creation, they need but a little time, and they
will assume every function of a natural watercourse.

As I stood recently upon rising ground overlooking a pasture meadow that
was brown as a nut with its carpet of dead grass, I noticed a long,
straight line of weed-like growths still showing a tinge of green, as if
the frost had spared a narrow strip of the exposed tract. Viewing it
from other points, it was evident that a ditch had once been dug where
these ranker grasses grew, and through long neglect it had finally been
choked with weeds and almost obliterated. It was a delightful discovery.
Armed with a spade, a hoe, and sundry tools of greater or less
efficiency, I set out to explore this one-time watercourse, thinking it
child’s play to move tons of matted weeds and mud. How much or how
little I accomplished it matters not, but the fierce onslaught of
unreasoning enthusiasm broke in the door of a zoölogical El Dorado.

Jetsam and flotsam from the yearly freshets, showers of wind-tossed
autumn leaves, a forest of rank growths that revel in the mud, all had
added their quota, unchecked, to the baneful work of damming the little
stream, which finally had been shut from view, but, as it proved, not
wholly overcome. A narrow, tube-like channel still remained, with the
mud below and upon each side almost as yielding as the water itself.
Here fish, turtles, and creeping things innumerable not only lived, but
wended their darksome way from the open ditch not far off to the basins
of the sparkling springs at the hill-foot. I had discovered a hidden
highway, a busy thoroughfare that teemed with active life.

Except with those forms of life that by their construction are solely
adapted to a subterranean existence, as the earth-worm, or to a fixed
one, as the oyster, we commonly associate our familiar forms of wild
animals with unlimited freedom of movement, and suppose that they have
the wide world before them to wander where they list; and, again, that
of creatures as high in the scale as fishes and upward the supposition
is that in proportion to their freedom of movement are their chances of
escape when pursued. Now these, like many another common impression, are
true in a general way, but fairly bristle with exceptions. For instance,
there are many extremely sluggish fishes, yet what creatures are more
agile and swift than the minnows in our brooks? And there are fishes
that can walk on the mud with their bodies entirely out of the water.
Dr. Gunther tells us that “the Barramunda is said to be in the habit of
going on land, or at least on mud-flats; and this assertion appears to
be borne out by the fact that it is provided with a lung.... It is also
said to make a grunting noise, which may be heard at night for some
distance.”

So far Australia; and now what of New Jersey mud-flats and the fishes
that frequent them? As I continued to explore the hidden highway of
snakes, turtles, and fishes, I found in almost every spadeful of mud and
matted weeds one or more brown-black fishes that were as much at home as
ever an earth-worm in the firmer soil. Blunt-headed, cylindrical,
thick-set, and strongly finned, these fishes were built to overcome many
an obstacle that would prove insuperable to almost any other. How,
indeed, they burrowed even in soft mud is not readily explained; that
they do advance head-foremost into such a trackless mass is
unquestionable.

How long these mud-fish tarry in such spots I can not say, but during
the long-dry summer this one-time ditch must be almost as dry as dust,
and then probably it is quite forsaken; but their powers of endurance
may be underestimated. Of the African “Lepidosiren” Dr. Gunther remarks:
“During the dry season specimens living in shallow waters which
periodically dry up form a cavity in the mud, the inside of which they
line with a protecting capsule of mucus, and from which they emerge
again when the rains refill the pools inhabited by them. While they
remain in this torpid state of existence the clay balls containing them
are frequently dug out, and if the capsules are not broken the fishes
imbedded in them can be transported to Europe, and released by being
immersed in slightly tepid water.”

The many mud-fishes that I tossed upon the dead grass had clearly no
liking for an atmospheric bath, and floundered about in a typical
fish-like fashion; but not for long. Finding no open water near, they
became quiet at once when by chance they fell into some little cavity of
the mud masses from which the water had not drained. All such fortunate
fishes seemed quite at ease, and remained motionless where their good
luck had brought them; but the moment I attempted to pick them up they
twisted like eels upon their muddy beds, and buried themselves
head-foremost with a rapidity that was simply marvelous. This perhaps is
what the reader would expect, but it struck me as a little strange,
because, when I startled others of these fishes as they rested among the
weeds or on the sand of the open ditches, they usually gave a twist of
the tail that dug a pit in a twinkling, and in this the fishes sank,
tail-foremost.

When in the mud these curious minnows can only feel their way, and if
they procure any food at all at such a time it can only be such objects
as come directly in contact with their mouths. But how different is it
when these same fishes are in open water! They are expert fly-catchers
then, and capture many an insect that would be lost to a trout or chub.
They have not to wait for flies to fall upon the surface, but seize
those that happen to alight upon overhanging blades of grass or any
projecting twig. The distance that they will leap above the water is
remarkable, the spring being preceded by a withdrawal from the object
and a slight sigmoid curvature of the body, involving, I suppose, the
same principle as that of a short run before jumping. Mud minnows two
inches in length, which I kept in an aquarium, were proved capable of
leaping above the water a distance equal to twice their length; but
others, much larger, could not or would not leap so far. So far as my
own observations extend, exhibitions of this leaping from the water to
seize insects are not often witnessed, and it was my aquarium studies
that led me to watch these fishes closely when in the muddy ponds and
ditches. Once, when so engaged, I saw the following: One of these
minnows, little more than an inch in length, sighted an insect at the
same moment that it was seen by a huge female minnow more than thrice
the other’s length. The little fellow had all the advantage, however, as
it was much nearer the fly, and at the proper instant away it leaped,
caught the insect, and sank back—but not to the water. That hungry
ogress was willing to be fed by proxy, as it were, and, permitting the
little minnow to swallow the fly, she promptly swallowed both.

Tiring of the fish at last, and having long since wearied of reopening
the ditch, I turned my attention to the other creatures that I had
unearthed. Among them were four species of turtles, each represented by
several individuals. One of these was the Muhlenberg tortoise, the
rarest of American chelonians. Probably just here, over a few hundred
acres of the Delaware meadows, there are more of them than in the whole
world besides. The fact of their great rarity makes them the more
interesting to a naturalist; but to-day they proved exceedingly stupid,
far more so than the others, which in a mild way resented my
interference, and pranced over the dead grass quite energetically,
reaching the nearest open ditch in good time, and to my surprise they
all seemed governed by a sense of direction. They went but little if any
out of their way. Not so with the “Muhlenbergs”; they seemed dazed for a
long time, and finally, after much looking about, they started, the four
together, in the wrong direction, and would have had a weary journey to
reach open water. Again and again I faced them about, but they would not
go as I wished. Such obstinate turtles I had never seen before, and I
almost felt convinced that they were impelled by some common impression
very different from that which actuated the others. As is often the
case, I was all at sea in my efforts to interpret their purposes.
Letting them alone, they waddled through the grass for a few yards only,
when they reached little pools that met all their needs.

About what time the summer birds have arrived, and golden-club blooms in
the tide-water creeks, gilding the mud-flats that have so long been
bare, the turtles, or three at least of our eight aquatic species, begin
“sunning” themselves, as it is usually said, but they continue the
practice through rainy and cloudy days. Every projecting stump, stranded
fence-rail or bit of lumber capable of bearing any weight is sure to be
the resting-place of one, and if there is room, of a dozen turtles. I
once counted seventeen on a fence-rail, and thirty-nine on a raft-log
that the freshets had stranded on the meadows. Why, at such a time,
should these creatures be so timid? They certainly have no enemies about
here, and their horny shields would effectually protect them if fishing
mammals like the mink and otter should acquire aldermanic tastes; and
yet, so far as I can determine by experimentation, there is scarcely an
animal more timid than the painted or spotted water-turtle. Fear, with
nothing to be afraid of, is a contradiction, and I am led to suggest
that the timidity is hereditary. Something over two centuries ago the
Delaware Indians hunted and fished these meadows without ceasing; and
there can still be gathered the bones of such animals as they ate from
the ashes of their camp-fires. Turtle-bones almost equal in number those
of our larger fishes. Have we a clew here to the mystery? Do the turtles
of to-day inherit a fear of man? This may seem an absurdity, or verging
toward it, but it is not. A critic at my elbow—a plague upon their
race!—reminds me that I once commented upon the tameness of the turtles
at Lake Hopatcong, in northern New Jersey, and adds, aggravatingly, that
that region was a favorite resort of the Indians. If this stricture
holds, then I can suggest for the Delaware Valley turtles that it is a
fear, born with each generation, of the railway cars that hourly rumble
over an elastic road-bed, and cause the whole meadows to tremble. Terror
may seize the turtles when they feel their world shake beneath them, and
this disturbance they may attribute to man’s presence. This is not so
rational, and I do know that turtles distinguish between men and
domestic animals. They are not afraid of cows; of this I have abundant
proof, although I do not accept as true the remark of Miles Overfield:
“Afeard o’ cattle? Not much. Why, I’ve seen tortles line a cow’s back,
when she stood flank-deep in the water.”

I had noticed that the narrow, tube-like channel of the obliterated
ditch grew less defined as I dug in one direction, so I paced off a rod
in advance and made a cross-section. Here it could not be traced, but a
half-dozen very small openings, circular in outline, could be seen, and
through some of these the water slowly trickled. I found a single
mole-cricket, and attribute to it and others of its kind these little
tunnels. Certainly more persistent burrowers do not exist, and I have
known them to cause mischief to a mill-dam which was attributed to
musk-rats. “They are,” says Prof. Riley, “the true moles of the insect
world, and make tortuous galleries, destroying everything that comes in
their way, cutting through roots, and eating the fine underground twigs,
as well as the worms and grubs, which they meet with during their
burrowings.”

A volume would not suffice to enumerate the invertebrate or insect-like
life that lived in this dark passage-way beneath the sod; nor do we
wonder at finding such low forms groping in utter darkness; but why
higher animals that are found, and far more frequently, in the open air
and sunlit waters should delight to crowd these same gloomy quarters, is
a problem not so easily solved. We are left to conjecture, and
invariably do so, and are often overwhelmed when an army of objections
confront our theories. Notwithstanding this, there is a pleasure in
reopening an obliterated ditch, in letting in the light upon a hidden
highway, for by so doing we also let in light upon ourselves, seeing
with clearer vision the wonderful world about us.




                             Weathercocks.


During a six-mile drive, recently, I passed by eleven barns, upon nine
of which were weathercocks. No two, I am positive, pointed in the same
direction, and only one was very near to being right. Such, at least,
was the conclusion, testing them by the compass, the movement of the
clouds, and the wetted fingers which my companion and myself held up.
Alas! I and my friend were at odds so far as the last test was
concerned. It is little wonder that weather-prophets are so apt to be at
loggerheads, if the direction of the wind admits of discussion. Could
the various shapes of these weathercocks have had to do with the matter,
assuming that the nine we saw were in working order? If so, what is a
reliable pattern? I remember a remarkable wooden Indian with one foot
raised as if the fellow was hopping, and with an impossible bow so held
as to indicate that an arrow was about to be discharged. This wooden man
obediently twirled to and fro in every passing breeze; but you were left
in a quandary as to whether the wind’s direction was indicated by the
uplifted foot or by the bow and arrow; for they pointed in opposite
directions. “That is the merit of the vane,” once said the owner of the
barn over which this “shapeless sculpture” towered; “you can use your
own judgment.” Of the weathercocks seen on our ride there were one deer,
two fishes, three arrows, a wild goose, and two gilded horses at full
gallop. Only the wild goose told the truth, or almost told it. Now, as
each farmer judges the weather of the day by the direction of the wind,
think of bringing the owners of these nine differing weathercocks
together! Each puts implicit faith in his own vane, and we all know what
subject is first broached when two or twenty men are gathered together.
Something like this would be the classification of the unhappy nine: Two
positive clear-weather folk, two hopefully ditto, and five that
predicted rain before night. Put it in another way: Four men would
think, if they did not call, five men fools; and, all being equally
obstinate, there would be the same division whatever was discussed. So,
at least, the world wags in one section of our country.

There is much more stress laid upon the direction of the wind, in this
matter of the weather, than is warranted by the facts. Those deadly
statistics, that are gall and wormwood to the weather-wise, prove this.
Even a northeast wind may blow for three days without one drop of rain.
When this happens, we hear of a “dry storm”—curious name for bright,
clear days, perhaps with a cloudless sky, that, by virtue of the cool
breeze, from the east, are well-nigh perfect. Or we are told that the
moon held back the water and the next storm will be doubly wet. Ay! even
that Jupiter or Mars had a finger in the pie and disturbed the proper
order of wind and rain. It is painful to think that so many thousands
still believe that not only ourselves, but even the poor weather, is
under the domination of the moon and stars. How little the planets must
have to do, to trouble themselves about our little globe! “I don’t like
to see that star so shiny,” a wiseacre recently remarked, pointing to
Venus; “it’s a bad sign”; but of what, the simpleton could not or would
not tell. And as to comets, or even meteors, if they are more numerous
than usual, they make hundreds miserable. The truth is, that the
valuable treatises upon weather, the outcome of patient study and
scientific method, still go a-begging, while the crudities of
weather-cranks find ready credence. And the day is still distant, I
believe, when it will be otherwise.

What can not be said of weathercocks as symbols of disappointment? To
how many a country-bred boy has fallen the unhappy lot of being
storm-bound when a fishing frolic has been planned! My initial grief was
that an April day proved stormy that should have been clear as crystal.
The time, the tide, the moon, all the essential and unessential
requirements of shad-fishing in Crosswicks Creek, were favorable, and
to-morrow, Saturday, I was to be one of the party. A mere onlooker, to
be sure, but what mattered that? I had heard of shad-fishing all winter
long, and now, being seven years old, was allowed to be one of the
party. O tedious Friday! Would school never be dismissed? O endless
Friday night! Had the sun forgotten to rise? And all Saturday it rained!
That horrid wooden Indian, of which we have heard, fairly grinned with
fiendish delight as it faced the leaden east and received the driving
rain with open arms. It never moved an inch from dawn to sunset. Yes,
once it moved. During a lull I slipped out-of-doors, and bribed an older
lad to stone the obstinate vane. One sharp pebble mutilated the
head-dress and sent the Indian spinning about, regardless of wind or
weather; but when at rest again the face was looking eastward. O
pestiferous weathercocks that point to the east on Saturday!

Why vanes should have been so generally shaped like a crowing
chanticleer as to give rise to the more common name of “weathercocks” is
not easily determined. Of a few explanations seen or heard, none had a
modicum of common sense. When and where, too, the first vane was set up,
whether cock or arrow, is an unsolvable problem. Possibly it is
necessary to grope backward into prehistoric times; although Rütimeyer
does not give the common fowl as one of the birds found in the _débris_
beneath the ancient lake-dwellings of Switzerland. It may be added, too,
that chickens are not weather prophets, as are geese and peacocks;
notwithstanding they figure somewhat conspicuously in all animal
weather-lore, and have done so since 250 B. C., if not earlier. Aratus,
in his Diosemeia, or Prognostics, for instance, claims that a cock, when
unusually restless or noisy, foretells a coming storm, and this nonsense
is believed to-day by a fair proportion of our rural population. Of
course, modifications of this are well-nigh innumerable, and one of
them, when a small boy, I found useful. If a cock came to the open
kitchen door, company was coming—such was the firm conviction of a trio
of aunts who ruled the household. Now, company-coming meant pie or
pudding, and to a small boy this means a great deal. Acting upon it, the
crowing of a cock was faithfully practiced in the woods, and then, while
my brother singled out a rooster and drove it to the door, I crowed
lustily from behind the lilac-bushes; and the _ruse_ brought pie and
pudding more than once, but not too often to weaken these credulous
women’s faith.

I have mentioned a dry storm with the wind due east. There was one such
at the close of the first week in April, 1889. The air was
exasperatingly chilly. Even the frogs in the marshes were silent, and
humanity was ill-natured and despondent. While standing on the lee side
of an old oak I chanced upon a glorious weathercock—one that would shame
the despairing thoughts of any reasonable man. That prince of winter
birds, a crested tit, sat long upon a leafless twig facing the cruel
east wind, sat there and sang, clinging, as for dear life, to the
swaying branch, _T’sweet here! T’sweet here!_ the burden of its song;
the ever-hopeful story of this incomparable bird. What if the east wind
did blow? Was there not, here and there, a trembling violet in the
woods; a filmy veil of white where the whitlow grasses bloomed; a
flashing of the maple’s ruddy fire where the fitful sunshine fell? All
these gave promise to the brave-hearted bird, of spring as coming, if
not quite here. Let me take the hint. Give me just such a weathercock
for each day of the year.




                            Apple-Blossoms.


During the whole of April, the old apple-trees in the lane are closely
watched, and not without a deal of impatience, too. “Will they blossom
freely?” is asked almost daily, and what a world of anticipation hinges
upon this wondrous wealth of bloom!

To linger in the lane when the old trees are flower-laden; when the air
is heavy with a honeyed scent; when the bees’ low hum fills the long,
leafy arch, and every summer bird is happiest—this is an experience too
valued to be lost; one that sweetens life until spring shall come again.

The trees are old. They have more than rounded a full half-century, and
now bend with the weight of many winters. They are ragged rather than
rugged; yet, game to the last, are again sturdily upholding to the
bright sunshine of merry May mornings a marvelous wealth of bloom.

As seen from the crests of the rolling hills beyond, this double row of
trees recalls a huge snow-bank, such as has often filled the lane in
winter—recalls such as I have seen at sunrise, when they were tinged
with a rosy light. In winter, I have often thought of the blossoming
trees in May: now I recall the lifeless beauty of midwinter snows. In
winter the beauty of the marble statue held me: now, the joy of a living
form.

But apple-blossoms bear well a close inspection. Better than a
comprehensive view from the neighboring fields is to draw near, to walk
beneath and beside them, to linger in their scented shade. Time after
time, until now, a shadow of doubt has crossed our paths, when we
gathered early bloom. The wail of winter winds still sounded in every
passing breeze, although we plucked violets from the greensward beneath
budding trees. Too often, in April, we are over-confident; but there is
little danger of disaster now. Apple-blossoms are the first assuring
gift of fruitful summer. Grim winter is powerless now, to wound us.
Tricksy April can play no heartless pranks.

What summer sound is more suggestive than the hum of bees? Certainly not
even the song of the returning birds. As I look among the flower-laden
boughs above me, I can see not only the bees from the hive, the true
honey-gatherers, but burly humble-bees go whizzing through the rosy
labyrinths, or, dipping down to a level with my upturned face, threaten
fierce vengeance if I draw too near. Again and again they come, one
after another, and each time, I think, a little nearer, yet never,
despite their bluster, venturing to sting. To be sure, I make no threats
in return, nor run away, and so my bold front may deter them, for they
really seem to read our thoughts at times. Not so their cousins, the
autumn wasps. They brook nothing. I remember, one October morning,
throwing a stone at and bringing down an apple, upon which, as it
happened, a wasp was feeding at the time. The ruffled insect came the
first to the ground, and not only promptly stung me when I stooped to
pick up the apple, but followed me across the lawn, into the house, and
darted most viciously at my face, time after time.

When the old bee-bench, with its half-dozen rude boxes, stood by the
gooseberry hedge in my grandfather’s garden, the lane, when the trees
were in blossom, was, as I recall that time, even more thronged by bees
than now, and the mighty humming of their wings forcibly suggested the
rapid flow of water; as the roar of the mill-dam, after a heavy rain. So
great a volume of sound, indeed, was there all day, that the night was
silent in comparison. So ran my thoughts; so returned vague visions of
past years, as I lingered in the lane to-day. But after all, may it not
be that I, rather than the conditions, have changed? How often have I
longed to hear the songs, to see the bloom, to catch the fragrant breeze
that held me spellbound when a boy; and all these later, fleeting years,
I have hoped for them in vain!

With the apple-blossoms come the birds’ nests, and who that has lived in
the country knew not of a robin’s home in some old apple tree? And did
ever a bird sing merrier strains than this same robin at sunrise? Or,
even better, as the sun shone forth again, after a shower, the rapid
roll of his rejoicing, as he perched upon his home-tree’s loftiest
branch.

It is the rule, apparently, that very old apple-trees have great hollows
in them. If the entire trunk is not a shell, then here and there, where
branches have decayed and fallen, caves of considerable depth are found,
and how quickly wild life tenants such snug quarters! A few of our
mammals, many birds, several snakes, besides one species of salamander,
and the tree-toad, have been found at home in hollow apple-trees. If,
therefore, such a tree stands not too near a dwelling, its occupants may
epitomize the fauna of a farm. Although, after a rain, I have found
pools of water in old trees, there were no fish, and these need not be
looked for, unless some venturous mud-minnow, that now can work its way
over narrow mud-flats, shall, in time, take to climbing trees, as does a
perch that is well known to ichthyologists. “In 1794, Daldorf,” says Dr.
Gunther, “in a memoir ... mentions that in 1791 he had himself taken an
Anabas in the act of ascending a palm-tree which grew near a pond. The
fish had reached the height of five feet above the water, and was going
still higher.”

When I peer into the hollow trees in the lane, here, at home, I only
expect to find birds, and seldom have been disappointed, except so far
as the English sparrow has ousted the old-time bluebird. It is
exasperating to think that the latter have been crowded out and now
gather in the more retired woodland areas to breed. What song better
fitted with apple-blossoms of a bright May morning, than that of the
bluebird? And now, we have instead, the ill-tempered chirping of an
alien sparrow!

But apple-blossoms are none the less beautiful because of the
unfortunate changes meddlesome men have brought about. They hold their
ancient glory still and yield, as of old, that rich, rare fragrance
which never cloys. Surely no one ever walked among rows of blooming
apple-trees, and said, “It is too sweet.” Not even of our native wild
crab-apple is this lightly to be said, and it is unquestionably of
deeper tints and richer fragrance than the average cultivated tree. I
know of one exception. At the end of the row upon one side of the lane,
there stands a vigorous apple-tree. It has more the appearance of the
trees in the forest than of those in an orchard, and if its fruit is not
quite so small as that of the wild crab, it is but one remove therefrom.
This tree rests its glory upon its blossoms, and well it may! Upon these
go out all its strength, offering, therefore, beauty to the eye, rather
than food for the body. It is a tree with a history, perhaps, not worth
relating. When set where it now stands, it appears to have been more
exposed to the wind than its companions and was twice blown down. When
last put back, my grandfather remarked, rather impatiently, “Now stay,
at least, if you never bear an apple!” And the tree stood, still stands.
What of the fruit it bears? Tough, wrinkled as a toad, and sour; it is
said that even the pigs refuse it, squealing in disgust when, by
mistake, they crunch it. So, if my grandfather’s muttered curse fell
upon the fruit, the tree revenged itself by adding beauty to its
blossoms, and to-day, though twice hoar-frost has chilled the open buds,
if judged by the eye alone, it stands, among a goodly number, brightest
of them all.




                       The Building of the Nest.


Those who have lived a part or all of their lives in the country know
from observation, while those who have spent their days in town know
from hearsay or books, that a very large proportion of our birds remain
with us only from April to October or later; while yet others, on the
approach of winter, come from the north to escape the rigors of an
arctic climate, and a considerable number of most interesting species
are strictly resident. This striking feature of bird life is by no means
confined to North America, and perhaps it is, in most respects, more
suggestive as observed on other continents. However this may be, it is
so noticeable an occurrence on our Atlantic seaboard, that the coming
and going of this or that bird has passed into our folk-lore, and more
than one weather proverb is based upon the arrival or departure of
wild-geese, fish-hawks, and the swallows.

Although very much more is now known of these seasonal movements of our
birds than was but a few years ago, it is not yet, and probably never
will be, possible to determine the “law” of migration, for the simple
reason that the springtide northward and autumnal southward flight of
our inland birds has not that element of regularity as to dates or
method that has been so frequently insisted upon. They come and go, but
beyond this we can be sure of nothing from year to year. Sooner or
later, our warblers, thrushes, and fly-catchers come as the world grows
green; sooner or later, as the meadows and upland grow drearily brown,
these same birds depart.

But if, as to birds collectively, we can not be positive in this matter
of the time, place, and manner of migration, we can feel moderately
confident of a return, summer after summer, of certain individual birds,
if they have escaped life’s perils in the mean while. Says Dr. Robert
Brown (Birds of Passage): “The individual swallow, it is now
ascertained, returns from the Canaries or North Africa to the very spot
on which it built its little mud mansion the previous summer; and,
according to the observations of the celebrated Jenner, marked birds
were caught at their old nests every year for three successive seasons.”

I find the home hillside luxuriantly green to-day, although the first
week of May has not yet passed. Even the tardy oaks are well in leaf,
and from every nook and corner of the woods and fields there floats the
merry song of a nesting bird. Among them, are there any friends of a
year ago? Surely I recognize one. Long before sunrise on the morning of
April 26th I heard a loud chatter near my chamber windows. There was no
mistaking the creature that uttered it, and I knew, although it had
rained violently all the night, and was still storming, that the
house-wren had come back to his old castle on the post. I peeped through
the shutter as soon as there was sufficient light, and there stood the
little bird, braving a keen east wind and singing with all his might.
Now, the day before there were no wrens near; not one was skulking along
the hillside looking for nesting sites. Had there by chance been even a
straggler ahead of time, as is not uncommon with many migratory birds,
it would have been heard, if not seen, for wrens are never silent for a
day, if indeed for any five minutes of it, unless asleep. Therefore I am
confident that the plucky bird that I saw in the dawn of April 26th had
been guided by the prominent landmarks, such as the river, meadows, and
the wooded bluff, and had come directly to his home of the past summer,
hastening, when once he started, to the inconspicuous box that is
perched upon a pole close to my house, and hidden by two great
locust-trees and a towering wild-cherry. No stranger wren while yet it
was dark could have found the spot and proved himself so promptly at
home, for early that same day, while yet alone, the bird commenced
house-cleaning, preparatory to the one great event of the coming
summer—nest-building.

While not quite true that all worth knowing of a bird is centered in the
few weeks occupied in rearing its young, certainly at no other time is
it seen to the same advantage. Every faculty is quickened then, and all
that a bird is capable of effecting is apparent. Something more
important than food-getting commands its attention, and reason is
exercised almost if not quite to the exclusion of instinct, for the nest
of every bird must meet its builder’s peculiar needs, and is not
fashioned blindly after the homes of its ancestors. It is true that a
family likeness runs through the nests of a given species of bird, but
to say of a deserted one in autumn this or that bird built it is a rash
procedure.

Not every bird builds a nest, although all lay eggs, and, as has been
intimated, all nests are not alike. Perhaps the cup-shaped structure
built of twigs and lined with fine grass may be said to be the typical
form, but many are the modifications of this simple pattern. And now
this beautiful May morning the birds are building. Not here and there a
sparrow or a thrush, but birds of many kinds, and building everywhere. I
can not even mention them by name, or my article would run into a
catalogue. Suffice it to say they are building in the barn and on it, in
my house and down in the chimney; under the floor of the bridge in the
lane is a nest, and the trees, shrubbery, and bare ground are all
occupied. There is now a nest for every nook and corner, and I would
that the young people of everywhere were my guests to-day, provided they
would live up to the law I long ago passed for my own government—eyes
on; hands off.

And now what of the building of particular nests? I know of twenty
within a stone’s-throw of my front door, and the making of each one had
its serious as well as comic side. At the very outset a conflict of
interests arose on account of some bits of material being equally
valuable in the minds of several birds; and when an oriole, a wren, and
an English sparrow wish to pull at the frayed end of a rope at the same
time, something more than a mere ripple of excitement is likely to
ensue. In short, nest-building brings out in a bird not only all its
belligerency, which during the rest of the year is dormant, but a great
deal of strategic skill as well, for many a time I have seen the smaller
bird succeed through cunning in outwitting the bully that depended on
mere strength of beak and claws.

The burden of each bird’s mind in spring being, “I must build me a
nest,” let us follow the wakeful wren that came on a stormy morning to
his old home. He evidently was sure of his mate, and was for four days
ceaselessly at work. Perhaps he found odd moments when he could eat, as
he constantly did to sing, but never a leisurely meal was his, I am very
sure. The old homestead must be made habitable again. And how he worked!
All the old rubbish of last summer was pulled from the box, and none of
it taken back, I fancy. While I watched the busy bird two days after his
arrival, I recalled an occurrence of last summer, and wondered if there
might be a repetition of it, with my aid; and at all events the bird’s
movements would tend to show whether it was the same wren or not. So I
placed tempting material for nest-building on a piece of very thin
board, and set it afloat in a huge basin. It was directly discovered;
the old wren was looking for it, I am sure now, but last year’s tactics
were not repeated as a whole. Then the bird alighted on the strands of
hemp and submerged them and almost itself, and only after many trials
hit upon the plan of dipping down and seizing a strand while on the
wing. Would it do this now, a year later? I was all impatience while the
wren flittered nervously about the basin, but was encouraged by its
contemplative manner. At last it attempted to alight on the mass, and I
felt angry at its stupidity and my own overconfidence. But no! it proved
only to be an attempt; last year’s experience was remembered, and strand
after strand was deftly picked up while the bird was flying. I am
confident now that I am listening, while I write, to the very wren that
comforted me last summer.

While some of our birds content themselves with but shallow depressions
in the ground, and many others place together so few sticks (and these
ill-arranged) that the nest might readily be overlooked, there is one
bird that is too lazy to do even so much, but drops an egg in the nest
of another bird. This is the habit, too, of the European cuckoo, but our
cuckoos are nest-builders, and the bird to which I have referred belongs
to a very different group. Few people seem to know it at all, and yet it
is abundant over a wide range of country, and has a dozen names, mostly
meaningless. The best, perhaps, of them is “cowpen bird,” a name
derived, I suppose, from the fact that the bird is often found in
pastures where there are cattle or sheep. Indeed, I have often seen them
standing upon the backs of cows and sheep, catching flies, I presume,
though they seem to be quite inactive when upon such a perch. Although
not nest-builders, they have something to do with the building of nests.
When that tireless songster the red-eyed vireo builds its pensile nest
on the hillside, the necessity for concealment does not occur to the
bird, and so its home is often invaded by the female cow-bird, and a
single egg dropped into the structure as soon as, if not before, it is
finished. Sometimes this is put up with, sometimes not. I have many
times found nests that were two-storied, the intrusive egg being, of
course, in the basement, and destroyed. This is one of the best examples
of bird wit of which I know. A vast deal is taken into consideration
while the decision is being reached to build a floor over the obnoxious
egg, and so prevent its hatching. There can be nothing of all this
ascribed to instinct, for then all such eggs would be destroyed by this
means, and the bird become extinct. On the other hand, it is but a very
small percentage that have the wit or courage to undertake the work,
which is evidence enough that, of a given species of bird, the variation
in intelligence among individuals is very marked. This, indeed, we see
on every hand when birds are building. Particularly noticeable is it
when the female bird stays at home and arranges the material which her
mate brings to her. This is mere drudgery to the male bird, and too
often worthless bits are brought which the toiling builder promptly
rejects, and not always with becoming patience either. She speaks her
mind in unmistakable tones, and if not heeded after the second or third
scolding, open war is declared on the spot, followed too often by a
wreck of all their hopes.

A word more. If people, young or old, would get a correct knowledge of a
wild bird’s ways, would know what is meant by animal intelligence, let
them study a pair of nest-building birds while they are at work. Let
them draw near, but not too near, and see how carefully the work
progresses, how skillfully many a difficulty is overcome, how completely
the finished structure meets all requirements. Do this, but do nothing
more. Refrain from disturbing the timid builders; abstain from robbing
them when their work is done. By gentleness prove yourselves the friends
of birds, and they will return your kindness with a measure heaped up
and overflowing.




                           A Meadow Mud-Hole.


The least suggestive spot in the world to most people is a mud-hole. The
common impression seems to be that fish avoid it, that frogs and birds
pass it by, and plants decline to cover its nakedness. This, like a
great many other common impressions, is really very wide of the mark. If
the water be not unutterably filthy, fish will condescend to tenant the
shallow depths, frogs will thrive therein, bitterns and the little
rail-bird find such a spot attractive, and many an aquatic plant grows
nowhere else so vigorously.

There are, as all know, mud-holes that are but blotchy remnants of man’s
interference—mere accidents, as it were, which do not concern us; and
also those deeper scars where the fair face of the landscape has been
wounded severely, as when the ice-gorged river bursts its proper bounds,
leaving a shallow pool in my pasture meadow: such as these are never
beneath the notice of a contemplative rambler. The truth is, in the
valley of the Delaware the average mud-hole is eminently respectable.
Giving the matter a sober second thought, one will see that mud is not
necessarily offensive. That of the meadows, if analyzed, proves to be
compounded of very worthy entities—water, clay, sand, and leaf-mold.
Why, because they are associated, should they be so studiously shunned?
No chemical change has taken place resulting in the formation of a
dangerous mixture. Mud is unlovable only when you are made its prisoner;
but even a fool knows it is best to remain outside the bars when he
comes to a lion’s cage. The lily loves the mud from which it springs,
and who in the wide world loves not the lily? Let us accept her as an
authority that this mud has merit.

There is a typical earth scar of the worthier sort within easy reach of
my dooryard. I chanced upon it one February morning when the surrounding
meadows were frost-bound, but the water was free, sparkling, and full of
aquatic life; and there is not a month that it has not its growth of
green, if not a wealth of blossoms. Even the plant life of the preceding
summer serves as a covering in winter, and a January thaw starts the
hardier grasses as surely as it quickens the sheltered upland dandelions
into bloom. And on this bleak February day, when the meadows were like
smooth rock, the river a glacier, and with scarce a trace of green to be
seen on the hillside, the expanding spathe of the fetid cabbage—a plant
full worthy of a better name—was well above the ground, darkly green and
beautifully streaked with purple and gold; and a foot or more below the
surface of the water were even greener growths, tangles of thread-like
vine that quivered whenever a frightened fish rushed by. Indeed, these
delicate growths are a delight to our many hardy fishes that, scorning
to hibernate when food and shelter are so accessible, must laugh, I
think, at the darting ice-crystals that gather and grow strong until
they shut out the sun, but never reach their weed-grown habitations.

It was greener still in March; but in April, when the meadow ditches are
being decked with splatter-dock and calla, arrow-head and sweet-flag,
golden-club and equisetum, then from the bottom of more than one small
pond spring up sharp, spear-pointed rolls of rank green leaves, growing
until the water’s quiet surface is pierced, and a stout stem bears into
view two parallel rolls of delicate leaf tissue. I refer to the rare
yellow lotus. Perhaps not for all time a native, but it has long since
earned its right to a place in our flora.

Most interesting is the beautiful adaptation of the leaf to its
surroundings at the outset of its growth. Tightly twisted and pointed
obliquely upward, it meets with no resistance from the water, and runs
no risk of entanglement with other growths. Once at the surface, the
unrolling is rapidly effected, and a bronze chalice with an emerald
lining is ready to catch the dew as it falls. The circular perfected
leaf, often twenty inches in diameter, is usually supported on a
foot-stalk five or six feet in height, and among them often many
floating leaves. Certainly no other of our aquatic plants has so
striking an appearance, not even the wild-rice at its best—

              That tangled, trackless, wind-tossed waste,
              Above a watery wilderness.

Gray gives as the range of the American species the “waters of the
Western and Southern States; rare in the Middle States; introduced into
the Delaware below Philadelphia.” Introduced by whom? The Indians are
said to have carried it to the Connecticut Valley, where it still
flourishes in circumscribed localities, and this I find is the
impression in southern New Jersey and in the neighborhood of a little
lake in the northern part of the State, where also the native lotus is
found growing, but I have not yet found a positive statement to that
effect. Rafinesque in 1830 remarked, “As it is scarce in the Atlantic
States, it is said to have been planted in some ponds by the Indians.”

The fact that the Southern and Western Indians valued the plant is
significant. Nuttall records that “the Osages and other Western natives
employ the roots of this plant, which is of common occurrence, for food,
preparing them by boiling. When fully ripe, after a considerable boiling
they become as farinaceous, agreeable, and wholesome as the potato. This
same species ... is everywhere made use of by the natives, who collect
both the nuts and the roots.”

Early in the century it was growing in the meadows of the Delaware below
Philadelphia, and Dr. Benjamin Smith Barton considered it indigenous. He
says also that “efforts at cultivating this plant and multiplying its
sites of growth have been unsuccessfully made in the neighborhood.”

It is curious that Kalm, who gave so much attention to the food plants
of our Indians, should not mention the lotus. It certainly could not
have been at the time of his visit here (1748) a common plant, yet the
lower Delaware, where a half-century later it was still found, was a
locality about which he botanized with much industry. It is hard to
believe that, had he once caught sight of its enormous leaves, often
thirty inches in diameter, or seen the bright yellow blossoms on their
towering stems, he would have omitted to make mention of such an
experience. Kalm spent a considerable part of his time among his
countrymen at Raccoon, now Swedesboro; and at Woodstown, but a few miles
away, the native lotus grows luxuriantly, a relic, it is believed, of
Indian water-farming.

There is no improbability in the opinion that the Indians cultivated the
plant. They were certainly practical horticulturists as well as growers
of field crops. It was of an Indian orchard that the pioneer settler of
a New Jersey town wrote when he stated, in 1680, that peaches were “in
such plenty that some people took their carts a peach-gathering. I could
not but smile at the conceit of it. They are a very delicate fruit, and
hang almost like our onions that are tied on ropes.” The peach was
probably introduced into Florida by the Spaniards, and in about a
century or less its cultivation by the Indians had reached northward as
far as New Jersey. The nuts and roots of the lotus could as readily be
transported as the pits of the peach, so no obstacle was in the way.
Intertribal intercourse was very far-reaching, as shown by the
occurrence of peculiar forms of stone implements common in distant
localities, and Mexican obsidian and Minnesota red pipe-clay along our
eastern Atlantic seaboard.

While yet we have the Indian in mind it is well to refer also to the
very significant fact that these people took the golden-club (_Orontium
aquaticum_) from the tide-waters and planted it in upland sink-holes,
miles from the nearest spot where it grew naturally.

Perhaps we can never be positive about the matter. If a fiction, it is
so pleasing a one I trust it will never be overthrown. To stand upon the
bank of a pond and see in it traces of both an aboriginal flower-garden
and a farm certainly adds to the interest that surrounds the plant.

We have it on the authority of Emerson that Thoreau expected to find the
_Victoria regia_ about Concord. It was but an extravagant method of
expressing his opinion of the merits of that region; but I am not so
sure that the Victoria is the most beautiful of all aquatic plants.
Finding it growing and blooming every summer in an open field near by, I
have surely the right to express my preference for another. It and the
lotus grow in the same waters, and I love the lotus more, give it the
first place among flowers, although there floats upon the surface of
these same waters royal red lilies of India, tooth-leaved white lilies
from Sierra Leone, the golden one of Florida, and, perhaps more
magnificent than all, the splendid purple lily of Zanzibar. I can start
across-lots and quickly come upon them all in an open field; but it is
the lotus that holds me.

I can not rid myself of the thought that with the Victoria, as with all
its attendant lilies, the hand of the care-taker is necessary. A very
Amazon itself, it needs an Amazonian setting. We look for a naked baby
on the largest pad, and the infant’s mother in a canoe gathering
Victorian seed-vessels. These, with a troop of scarlet ibises,
spur-winged jacanas, and chattering macaws, are all needed to complete
the picture. With them, the world has perhaps nothing more striking to
offer; without them, the plant is too bizarre, too like the eagle when
shorn of its priceless gift of liberty. Not so with the lotus; it
accords well with the unpretending valley of the Delaware, is not a
thing apart, but the culmination, as it were, of Nature’s vigor here,
and seemingly not out of place even when it fills a meadow mud-hole.

One species is, as we have seen, truly American, native and to the
manner born, even if introduced and cared for by the Indian along our
Eastern seaboard; but now, where the wildness of the Indians’ day has
been long lost to us, and novelty is sweet, we rejoice to find the lotus
of the East is no longer a stranger in the land.

In a now nameless little stream, filling the narrow interval between low
hills, till within a few years there grew little but the yellow dock,
white arrow-leaf, blue pickerel-weed, and here and there a lily. It was
simply a typical muddy brook, such as is found everywhere in the “drift”
areas of the State. Every plant was commonplace; but far be it from me
to infer that any one was mean or meritless. Not a flower named but is
really beautiful; yet, save the lily, none would be gathered for
nosegays. Why, as is so common, speak disparagingly of the yellow
nuphar, our familiar splatter-dock? Let it be gathered with care, with
no fleck of tide-borne mud upon its petals, and see how rich the
coloring, and with what grace the flower has been molded. I doubt not,
were the nuphar fragrant, it would be extolled as it deserves, as, were
the rose fetid, it would be despised. Thus one writer remarks, “From its
filthy habits it has been called, with some justice, the frog-lily.” But
wherein lies its filthiness it is hard to determine. It has no decided
preference for waters too stagnant for its fairer cousin the white
nymphæa; and then smirched lilies are no novelties. A pond may be too
muddy for even them to preserve their purity, yet they will grow as
luxuriantly as their unstained sisters. That the nuphar may remain
longer in the polluted waters than will the nymphæa does not argue that
it prefers such conditions, and never a frog but loved clean water
better than foul. Botanists should not speak slightingly of the animal
world; it too has its beauties. And the reference to the frog shows a
woful ignorance of that creature.

How many have held the flower-stalk of the arrow-head—a sea-green staff
studded with ivory? They, at least, will admit its beauty. Nor will the
spike of violet-blue flowers of the pickerel-weed fail to be admired
even if gathered; and what flower when torn from its stem but loses
grace? No shrub so sprawling but fills its niche fittingly.

Where these native aquatic plants grow they complete the little
landscape. Each would be quickly missed were it absent; they are part
and parcel of an evolved microcosm, needing nothing. Such was this
little creek.

Into the deep mud of the stream, widened here by a dam to a pond of
several acres, a single tuber of the Egyptian lotus was placed eight
years ago, and the result awaited with much curiosity, if not anxiety.
That same year it sprouted and grew luxuriantly. It was soon too
prominent a feature of the landscape for its own good—the cows came,
saw, and tasted, but did not fatally wound. It withstood the summer’s
heat, but would it withstand the winter’s cold? The pond that before was
like all other ponds is so no longer. The native growths that seemed so
firmly rooted have disappeared, and the lotus has taken all their
places—so completely, indeed, that now even the water is shut from view
for more than an acre’s space. As the spot is approached from the
neighboring hill-top we get a bird’s-eye view, the effect of which is
striking and thoroughly un-native, so far as plant life is concerned,
and in a measure disappointing. Recall some rainy day in a crowded city
when from an upper window you have looked down upon the street. No
sidewalk and but little wagon-way to be seen—nothing but a waving
expanse of upraised umbrellas. Hence the disappointment, if you have
read travelers’ tales of the lotus bloom. But worthier thoughts well up
as you draw nearer.

One has but to glance over Gray’s Botany to notice how many plants have
been introduced from Europe, and are now so firmly established that
native species are forced to retire before them. The pond before me
exhibits another, and so recent an instance it has not yet been
recorded. What radical changes this Egyptian plant will work are yet to
be determined; that we can foresee one of them—the crowding out of the
nuphar—is unquestionable. That any change will be one to be regretted is
highly improbable. To introduce the lotus is not to repeat the blunder
of the English sparrow. It is certain not to oust other plants that are
more valuable, for as yet we have found little if any value in the
products of our marshes. Since the country’s settlement it has been the
aim of the thrifty to convert them into dry land whenever practicable.
Thanks to whomsoever thanks are due, many are irreclaimable.

Seeing how forcibly this wonderful flower of the lotus impresses itself
upon the minds of the ancient Egyptians and the East generally, how
prominently it figures in Eastern religions—“all idols of Buddha are
made to rest upon opened lotus-flowers”—it is safe to conclude that when
familiar to all, even in this utilitarian age, it will not be merely
ranked as one of many flowering plants; it is of too commanding an
appearance for this, and to literature will prove a boon. Asters,
golden-rods, and buttercups can have a well-earned rest.

Years ago the cultivation of the American species proved a failure, and
those who are now best capable of judging still record the curious fact
that the native lotus is much more difficult to establish in our waters
than the Eastern, and does not grow with quite the same luxuriance. Its
introduction by the aborigines along our Eastern seaboard has been
mentioned; perhaps it has lost vigor since it lost their care, and has
disappeared excepting where its environment was peculiarly favorable.
And the question arises, after all, Is it in the strict sense a native?
May it not, indeed, have been brought hither in prehistoric times? The
question of a superlatively ancient communication between the continents
is a tempting subject for study, and how appropriate when resting in the
shade of the Eastern lotus! Such a train of thought need not stir up any
ghost of a mythical lost Atlantis. Still, the American form has certain
marked peculiarities. The mature torus has a decided constriction some
distance from the insertion of the stem, wanting in the foreign species,
and the seeds of the former are globular instead of distinctly oval.
Whatever the history of the American form, that of the Eastern, or
Egyptian, as it is usually called, is too well known to need repeating,
however briefly, and yet the plant is still wrapped in mystery. A word,
however, concerning the term Egyptian in connection with it. At present
it is a plant of India, of China and Japan, Australia, the Malay
Archipelago, and the Caspian Sea—an enormous range; but it is no longer
found in the valley of the Nile. The use of the name rests upon the fact
that it was once there, not only a cultivated plant, but held sacred by
the people of that country, as it is by the Hindoos. Egyptologists,
however, are not of one mind as to the relation of the lotus to the
antiquities of the Nile region, some questioning the matter altogether,
and considering the sculpturing to represent the lily of the Nile, one
of the grandest of the white nymphæas. Quite recently, too, it has been
ably argued to be the renowned rose of Sharon. “Of such a kingly flower
Solomon might well have said, ‘I am the rose of Sharon.’”

Perhaps we should be contented with our splendid native flora, but
surely there is room in waste places, our unappreciated marshes and
mud-holes, for the lotus—

                   “a flower delicious as the rose,
                 And stately as the lily in her pride.”

A treasure in other lands, why should it not be in ours? If he who
causes two blades of grass to grow where but one grew before is a public
benefactor, so he who adds the lotus to our meadows must likewise be so
accounted. “A piece of color is as useful as a piece of bread.”

With the blooming lotus within reach, let us come now to a few plain
statistics. In the little mill-pond it has been exposed to precisely the
same conditions as the native plants, and now flourishes in absolute
perfection. Mingled with the fully expanded blossoms may always be seen
the buds in every stage of growth, and this from early summer until
frost. Happily there is not, as is so often the case, a magnificent but
brief display, then nothing but leaves. If not a joy forever, it is at
least one of a protracted season. Buds or blossoms, they are alike
beautiful. Among many that are pale yet distinctively tinted there often
stands out one or more with the loosening petals tipped with deepest
crimson. Far more are like gigantic tea-rose buds, that soon open like a
tulip, creamy white and rosy at the tips. Often these glorious flowers
measure ten inches across when fully open, and are supported by stems
extending far beyond the tallest leaves. One such that I measured was
more than eight feet high.

When the flower is fully expanded, the huge seed-pod, or torus, is a
prominent object. Herodotus likened it aptly to the nest of a wasp. It
is of the richest yellow, and surrounded by a delicate fringe of the
same color. The seeds are seen imbedded in the flat upper surface, gems
in a golden setting so lavish that their own beauty is obscured. After
the petals have fallen—they are miniature boats of a beautiful pattern,
that, catching the breeze, sail with all the grace of model yachts—this
great seed-pod continues to grow, and is a curious funnel-shaped
structure, holding the many seeds securely, yet not concealing any. The
latter become as large as hazel-nuts, and are quite as palatable. And
so, here in New Jersey, one can be a lotus-eater, can float in his canoe
and pluck fruit from giant lilies. But be not too free to do so. It is
not the fabled lotus, after all, and one’s digestion may be more
disturbed than his mind pleasantly affected.

In this isolated pond, seen by but few, and unknown to hundreds living
near it, a bit of a far Eastern landscape is reproduced—a forest of
graceful lotus, with its strange leaves, matchless blossoms, and
wonderful seed-pods; and what has been here effected is being repeated
in the mud-hole of my pasture meadow.

Less than a year ago, when spring was well advanced, I placed a root in
the mud, and left it to battle with the crowding native growths.
Certainly the advantage was all upon one side, but it did not lose heart
at being pitted against such heavy odds. Now it overshadows them all.
For a time they are permitted to be co-occupants, but not for long. The
lusty lotus is even now reaching out to a wide stretch of marshy meadow;
and there too, I doubt not, it will flourish as at my neighbor’s. It is
a rightful ambition to be able to sit down beneath one’s own vine and
fig-tree. Let me add the lotus, for it has come to stay.

For how long have water-lilies been on sale in our streets and at our
railway stations, auguring well for the love of aquatic plants? And that
strange and scarcely known lily, alas! of almost mephitic odor, the
xerophyllum, is hawked about Philadelphia streets in early June, loved
for its beauty despite the unfragrance; and so too this famous flower of
other lands must soon appear, but not to sink to the level of a mere
pretty blossom: it is too suggestive a plant to meet with such a fate.
What Margaret Fuller once wrote to Thoreau well bears repeating: “Seek
the lotus, and take a draught of rapture.”




                             An Open Well.


It is none of my business, but I feel a twinge of indignation when, as
is frequently the case, I meet with a pump-maker. His long wagon, with
its load of wooden tubes and other fixtures of the latest patterns of
simple or compound pumps, is a positive eyesore; for, labor-saving as
this may all be, it means, nevertheless, the obliteration of the open
well, and for the old windlass, or still older sweep, a hideously
painted post of wood or iron. He who has drunk, at midday in July, from
an old oaken bucket, knows how great a loss one suffers by the change.
Not even Hawthorne’s rills from the town pump can quite reconcile one.
Perhaps it is a fool’s errand, but I have walked a mile out of my way,
scores of times, for no other purpose than the pleasure of hearing the
bucket splash in the waters of a deep well and to draw it up, by means
of the well-poised sweep, “dripping with coolness.”

It may be fancy, but even modern well-diggers are a different and prosy
folk compared with the old masters of the art—for art it was, they held,
to locate with the divining-rod just where the never-failing spring was
“bubbling” far beneath their feet. Was a well to be dug? Then Ezek
Sureshot must do the work; and not until years after did it occur to any
one that Ezek never failed to learn the wishes of the women-folk before
he took up the forked witch-hazel and quartered the ground. The result
was always the same: that mysterious switch never failed to point within
an inch of the desired spot. Ezek was never known to disappoint his
customers, so not one suspected his duplicity or lacked faith in the
divining-rod. Ay! and there are yet hosts of people who still uphold its
power to locate not only water, but lost articles. A wheat stubble was
recently gone over, crossed and criss-crossed, with a divining-rod, to
recover a piece of metal. As the field was divided by the man into
square yards, it is not strange the bit of iron was found, but the
credit was given to the rod, which pointed earthward at the moment the
man’s foot struck the missing object. “In spite of what people say,
there’s something very curious about it,” was the remark of one of the
“head men” of the village. But this is a digression.

Happily, there are yet a few open wells scattered over the country, and
one of these, with its sweep, is within my range. Of itself, perhaps,
not a great deal can be said; but not every hole in the ground has such
surroundings. How seldom do we find still standing, and in good repair,
houses that were built early in the preceding century! Looking west from
my study windows, there may be seen a substantial stone mansion, built
in 1708. Woe betide the tall man that enters it carelessly in the dark!
The ceilings are unaccountably low. Evidently there were few giants in
those days, at least among the early Quakers. And, looking east, can be
seen yet another house, nearly as old, built of huge oak logs, the
ceilings of which likewise threaten the careless six-footer. Surely, if
my ancestors were tall, they must have been painfully stoop-shouldered!
By the kitchen doors of all the original houses there were open wells;
and the sweep appears to have been the first apparatus in use for
drawing water. From the doorstep to the well-curb extended a rude
pavement of flat stones, and, if all poetry was not smothered in the
old-time peoples’ breasts, there was an elm, or drooping birch, casting
a delightful shade in summer over all. Later the weeping-willow became
the favorite tree. Such was the pretty picture seen upon every farm;
compare it with the ugly windmills that now rear their hideous nakedness
against the sky.

From the general to the particular, from the past to the present. There
still stands a cottage, off a by-road, mossy as a prostrate oaken tree,
hedged with gooseberry-bushes and a clump of lilacs; and, better than
all else, there is the well and its sweep. I could never learn when the
cottage was built, but it was many a year ago, and its present occupants
may have commenced housekeeping as far back in time, to judge from
appearances. May they and the cottage last forever! Nowhere else can so
much wood-lore and wise weather-saws be had at first hands. Nowhere else
is there, at least for me, “the moss-covered bucket that hangs in the
well.” There are many features of primitive country life that are
fascinating, yet why they are so can not readily be explained. To linger
by this open well is one of these, yet why even hours can be spent at
such a spot one can not tell. Has it to do with a love of retrospection
common to all past fifty?—let this go for an explanation, whether one or
not. Stay! can it be that, after quaffing a gourdful of the sweet
waters, I recall many an invitation to the cottage, and hope? Even yet I
am as ready to respond when the old lady’s kindly face beams from the
open door, for straightway there are visions of cakes and beer, the
liking for which has never been even dulled. Ginger-cakes merely, but
such ginger-cakes! Spicewood beer only, but what sparkle, what tingling
spiciness! The very essence of the wild woods about the cottage, the
brilliant glistening of the old well’s brightest drops, here are
combined in a beady, golden draught that quickly inebriates—makes
drunken with a love of old-time cottage days.

The old lady’s gossip of the days gone by adds to the very sparkle of
her beer; yet her whole life for more than half a century seems centered
upon her one adventure, the coming and going of her children passing as
too prosaic to mention. Not so that one great fright and its results.
The now almost forgotten Camden and Amboy Railroad was then in
operation; but though scarcely more than a mile distant, it was as
nothing to her. She knew neither what nor where it was. But where the
best whortleberries grew in the back swamp, that was knowledge worth
possessing. Although her cousin Abijah had killed a bear during the
winter, she did not think of it then, and started for berries where few
men would care to follow. She knew every crooked path in the
sprout-lands, and could find her way through them in the dark, she
boasted. And so, with a light heart, she gathered berries. But at last
an ominous screeching fell upon her ears. She stopped her work to
listen. Louder and more angry, ay, and nearer, too, was that portentous
scream. “Could it be another bear?” she thought, and at once turned her
face homeward. The big basket was not quite full, and there were such
loads of fruit within easy reach! It was tantalizing; but all doubt
vanished with the second, shriller, more unearthly scream. The path was
no longer plain, nor she sure-footed. Pitching recklessly forward, the
berries were bounced by handfuls from the basket, and it finally, as a
dragging weight, was thrown aside. And, still sounding through the
swamp, the terrible screeching of that angry bear! The cottage at last
was seen through the thick-set trees, but not so plainly the tortuous
path. The frightened woman was moved by but one thought—to reach her
home; and, escaping until now all other dangers, she took one misstep,
almost at her journey’s end, and sank waist-deep in yielding mud. There
was strength left for but one despairing cry, which fortunately fell not
upon deaf ears. In a moment her husband came to her rescue. Such was her
story, but by no means as she told it—a quaint narrative that invariably
concluded with the pathetic remark, “And to think I lost all them
beautiful berries!” The old lady had heard the first screech of a
locomotive that awoke the echoes in the Nottingham swamps.

All the while her patient husband sits by the fire, giving vent to his
feelings by a vicious poke at the smouldering back-log. For fifty years
he has been her audience, and the story is now a trifle monotonous—so
much so that, no sooner has she finished, at least when I was present,
than he remarks, “If you tell the lad that story any more, I’ll a-wished
you’d stayed stuck in the swamp.” And then we have another cup of beer,
and, followed by the old man, I start for home.

And—isn’t it funny?—the old man tells me, as he has never failed to do
for many a year as I pause by the open well, where we part, how he found
gold, as he thought, when he dug the well, and kept the mighty secret
until his plans were laid; and it proved to be nothing but lumps of iron
and brimstone!

If old ladies prove, at times, to be a bit garrulous, what of the old
men who are so prone to criticise?

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                               PART III.

                               IN SUMMER.

                                -------




                            A Noisome Weed.


The whispering breeze that at sunrise calls me out of doors is laden now
with the matchless odor of the blooming grape. Every draught of the
vinous air intoxicates and the eye rests upon the brilliant landscape,
but is scarce content. A curious feeling of indecision meets me at the
very outset. Meadow and upland are alike urgent; field and forest offer
their choicest gifts; rugged rocks and sparkling river both beckon to
me. Whither, then, of a bright June morning, should the rambler stroll?
For is it not true that beauty, when in bewildering confusion, ceases to
be beautiful? When a thousand birds, as a great cloud, shut out the sun,
they are but a cloud; but a single one, perched upon a tree, is a marvel
of grace and beauty. So, the sloping hillside and the weedy meadows,
brilliant with every shade of freshest green and starred with a hundred
tints, roseate, golden, and white, call for an infinite power of
contemplation, and leave the wanderer dazed.

Shutting my eyes to the wealth of bloom about me, closing my ears to the
melody of every nesting bird, I start upon the doubtful quest of the
commonplace, hoping to chance upon some neglected spot, that happily
generous June has overlooked.

As has happened so frequently before, where I least expected it, there
stood the object of my search—a gem in a setting not so elaborate that
its beauties were obscured. In a long-neglected pasture, a wide meadow
torn by freshets, foul with noisome weeds, and strown with the wreckage
left by winter’s storms, grew many a graceful vine that few have heeded;
for it is not enough that the botanist should long ago have named it and
that others should have besmirched its proper fame by calling it
“carrion-flower.” Can we not forgive the offense to the nostril, when
the eye is captivated? Does it go for nothing that a plant beautifies
the waste places and invites you to contemplate it as the acme of grace,
because in self-defense it warns you to keep at a respectful distance?

Sitting in the pleasant shade of clustering thorns, I see nothing now
that attracts me more than the leafy bowers of this curious vine. Every
one has sprung boldly from the sod in full faith of finding the support
it needs; at least, I see none that are standing quite alone. Two, it
may be, but oftener three or four, have started at convenient distances,
and, when well above the tallest grass, each has sought out the tendrils
of its nearest neighbor and these have closely intertwined. So, here and
there, we have a leafy arch, and scattered among them many a pretty
bower. These may well have given the Indian a clew to wigwam-building.
Had ever, in the distant past, a savage seen his child creep beneath the
overarching branches of the despised “carrion-flower,” he would have
seen how easily a summer shelter might be made. Perhaps upon some such
hint the stuffy caves and rock-shelters were abandoned, for the time
surely was when even a more primitive dwelling than a tent was man’s
protection against the summer’s sun.

And may not these mutually supporting vines have struck the fancy of
some Indian poet? In the wigwams of these people, who but two centuries
ago peopled these meadows and the surrounding hills, may not many a
pretty tale have been told of these same despised carrion-flowers? Dyer
states, in his charming Folk-Lore of Plants, how, “in the Servian
folk-song, there grows out of the youth’s body a green fir, out of the
maiden’s a red rose, which entwine together.” I should not wonder at
learning that so too the Indian believed that from the bodies of braves,
who had fallen together, fighting for the same cause, had sprung these
intertwining vines that cling now so firmly to each other. Why, indeed,
should not the tragedy of Tristram and Ysonde have been re-enacted on
the Delaware meadows?

But, though despised by man, this vigorous plant has hosts of other
friends. The summer long, scores of bugs, butterflies, and beetles crowd
about. Whether when in leaf only, or later when in bloom, or in autumn,
when laden with its wealth of blue-black berries, it is never quite
alone, and many of its attendants are fully as curious as the plant
itself. One or more minute beetles prefer it to all other plants, yet
not because of the peculiar odor. At least, the same creatures do not
crowd decaying flesh. On the other hand, the dainty flies that linger
about the ruddy phlox, the blue iris, and purple pentstemon tarry
likewise about the carrion-flower and find it a pleasant place, if one
may judge by the length of time they stay.

I was somewhat surprised to find this to be the case, as I looked for a
repetition on a small scale of what is recorded of those strange plants,
the _Rafflesiaceæ_ found in the tropics. Forbes, in his Wanderings in
the Eastern Archipelago, records that once he “nearly trampled on a
fine, new species of that curious family...; it smelt powerfully of
putrid flesh, and was infested with a crowd of flies, which followed me
all the way as I carried it home, and was besides overrun with ants.”

So far my own observation. What say others?

Let us turn, however, to a more savory subject. Undeterred by possible
whiffs of sickening scent, I followed the example of my friend the
meadow-mouse, and crept into the largest smilax wigwam I could find. It
was sufficiently roomy for all my needs, and shed the sun’s rays better
than it would have done the drops of a summer shower. The east wind
brought the rank odor of the marshes, and more fitfully the tinkling
notes of the marsh-wrens that now crowd the rank growths of typha; but
sweeter songs soon rang out near by, as the nervous Maryland
yellow-throat, thinking me gone, perched within arm’s length and sang
with all its energy. The power of that wee creature’s voice was
absolutely startling. We seldom realize how far off many a bird may be,
when we hear it sing; often looking immediately about us when a strange
note falls upon our ears. Certainly this yellow-throat’s utterance might
have been distinctly heard a quarter of a mile away. Such shrill
whistling is no child’s play, either. Every feather of the bird was
rumpled, the tail slightly spread, the wings partly uplifted, and the
body swayed up and down as the notes, seven of them, were screeched—I
can think of no more expressive word. It was not musical; and yet this
bird has long been ranked, to my mind, as one of our most pleasing
songsters. It needs a few rods’ distance however, to smooth away the
rough edges.

But the great point gained in the day’s outing was to find that even the
carrion-flower could be put to such good use. It makes a capital
observatory, wherein and wherefrom to study the life of the open
meadows. To these Nature-built shelters you are always welcome; the
latch-string is always hanging out, and if perchance you do not share
its single room with many a creature that loves the shade at noontide,
and, so while away many an hour in choicest company, you may lie at its
open door and watch the strange procession that forever passes by. It
may be a mink, a mouse, or a musk-rat may hurry by, bound on some errand
that piques your curiosity. A lazy turtle may waddle to your den and
gaze in blank astonishment at you; and, better than all else, the pretty
garter snakes will come and go, salute you with a graceful darting of
their forked tongues and then pass on, perhaps to tell their neighbor
what strange sights they have seen. And as the day draws to a close,
what myriad songs rise from every blade of grass! Hosts of unseen
musicians pipe to the passing breeze; and crickets everywhere chirp so
shrilly that the house about me trembles.

The day is done; but the night brings no end of novelty. The moping
herons are no longer stupid; the blinking owls are all activity. Afar
off the whip-poor-will calls—who knows why?—and the marsh-owl protests,
as well it may, at such unseemly clatter. How quickly into a new world
has the familiar meadow grown! Through the half-naked beam and rafters
of my leafy tent I watch the night-prowling birds go hurrying by, and
follow their shadows as the weird bats flit before me, for the moon has
risen, and in its pallid light every familiar tree and shrub and all the
night-loving wild-life of the meadows is wrapped in uncanny garbs. It is
fitting now that a filmy mist should rise as a curtain and shut out the
view. “He is none of us,” seems to shout every creature in my ear, and,
taking the hint, I pick my way homeward through the dripping grass.




                            A Wayside Brook.


It is not that I may indulge in mock heroics that I champion the
so-called waste-places, but out of pure love for the merits of even the
least of Nature’s work. A single cedar casts sufficient shade for me,
and, resting full length on a bed of yarrow, I have, at once the breath
of the tropics and the aroma of the Spice Islands wherewith to while
away these July days. From such a spot there is pleasure too in watching
the shifting scenes of the sunlit world beyond—a pleasure greater than
peering into the depths of a dark, monotonous swamp or pathless wood.
But if this is simplifying matters beyond reasonable limits, then let us
to a wayside brook, and to the shade and spiciness add the music of
rippling waters. Surely this should suffice the idle saunterer at
midsummer. When it is ninety in the shade, it is wiser to watch the
minnows in a brook than to battle with pickerel in the mill-pond. Nor
should such contemplation be too trivial for one’s fancy. Even little
fishes have their ups and downs, although everything goes swimmingly
with them. As has been said somewhere, if my memory plays me no tricks,
the fish-world is diversified by other occurrences than feeding or going
to feed others. In other words, they have impressions, vague though they
may be, of the world about them, and existence is something more than—

          “A cold, sweet, silver life, wrapped in round waves,
           Quickened with touches of transporting fear.”

The brook need not be deep nor wide, and may wander through many a rod
of dusty fields, scarcely covering the pebbles that bestrew its bed, and
yet contain fishes. I have often been surprised to find many small
minnows in brooks that were scarcely more than damp, except here and
there a spring-hole, or pool, about the roots of a tree. Such places are
noble hunting-grounds if the rambler is an enthusiastic naturalist, and
many a chapter might be written concerning our smallest fishes. Except
to very few, they are wholly unknown.

On the bank of a little wayside brook I tarried for half a day recently,
with minnows, birds, and dragon-flies to keep me company, and what a
royal time we had! At first the fish were shy, and took refuge under
flat pebbles but I coaxed them forth at last by tossing crumbs before
them. At ease, so far as I was concerned, they commenced their beautiful
game of chasing sunbeams, the largest stone in the stream being the base
from which they ceaselessly darted to and fro. The flashing of the
fishes’ silvery sides, the darting rays of sunlight, the sparkle of the
great bubbles that danced on every ripple, proved a very carnival of
light and color, the soul of which was this company of fun-loving
minnows. In saying this, I intend to convey all the meaning that such a
phrase comprehends—in other words, to ascribe to these small fishes a
pronounced degree of intelligence.

Their life proved not without its shadows, however, as very often their
merriment was changed to terror in a twinkling. It happened that a
gorgeous dragon-fly came with a sudden onset to the little brook and
filled these fish with fear while it hovered above them. I leave it to
others to say why the minnows should have been afraid. Has any person
ever seen a dragon-fly catch a fish?

Prof. Seeley, writing of a European cyprinoid, remarks, “Probably every
person who has ever looked into a small stream has been surprised by the
singular way in which minnows constantly arrange themselves in circles
like the petals of a flower, with their heads nearly meeting in the
center, and tails diverging at equal distances.” I looked for this, but
our Jersey minnows were not so methodically inclined, and all kept their
heads in one direction, up-stream, until at a certain point, when, as if
on signal given, they would, right about face, and dart down-stream for
a yard or two, re-form, and as a company make their way to the
dispersing point, a thin slab of stone that barred their further
passage.

So, in this most unpromising spot I found no end of entertainment, and,
except in midsummer, would not have tired of any single feature; but
study, even studies a-field, are irksome in July, and I forgot the
minnows as my eyes fell upon a large slab of stone near where I was
lying. It was one of four broad stepping-stones that nearly two
centuries ago were placed here. Then, there flowed, through a thick
woods, a broad stream, and near here the first house was built. Upon
these stones had stepped the grave elders and loitered the light-hearted
children of three generations; and now not a trace of house, garden,
barn, woods, or pasture remains. Everything has given way to more
pretentious structures, broader fields, and painfully angular highways.
The one-time winding lane, shaded by noble oaks, is now not even to be
traced across the fields; and, instead thereof, a narrow sunny strip of
yellow sand leads to the public road. “What an improvement!” once
remarked a neighbor, when the change was made. What an improvement,
indeed! where once was beauty, one finds, save this little remnant of a
creek, an endless array of fields, with scarcely a tree along the
division fences. Doubtless, could the brook have been obliterated, the
work would have been undertaken. As it is, the narrow strip is all that
Nature can call her own, and so, whatever of her charms can find a
place, here she sets them down; and so here a rambler may be happy, or
fairly content at least, if he does not raise his eyes continually to
scan the horizon. I, for one, on the half-loaf principle, accept the
wayside brooks with thankfulness, and now after long years have found
that in many an essential feature they do not suffer so greatly as one
might suppose when compared with Nature’s more pretentious waterways.
Let Nature, on however small a scale, have the upper hand, and at such a
spot the rambler can afford to tarry. But perhaps I am partial, for this
was my playground, forty years ago; still, I would say—

          Let not the wayside dells go unregarded;
            Why ever longing for the hills or sea?
          Who loves earth’s modest gifts is well rewarded,
            And hears the wood-thrush sing as cheerily
          As when by mountain brooks it trills its lay,
          To soothe the dying moments of the day.

          Here, where no busy toilers ever rest,
            Where but the wayside weeds reach from the sod,
          I love to be the merry cricket’s guest,
            And find, though all is mean, no soulless clod;
          The bubbling spring, the mossy pebbles near,
          The stunted beech, they all are justly dear.

          Like-minded birds—so I am not alone—
            Linger as lovingly around the spot,
          Whose subtle charm such mighty spell has thrown,
            That wander where I will, ’tis ne’er forgot;
          Here, child and bird learned first to love the sky,
          The tree, the spring, the grass whereon I lie.

          When timid Spring warms with her smile the way,
            With all-impatient steps I hasten here;
          No bloom so bright in all the bowers of May,
            As the pale violets that cluster near:
          Bright grow the skies, nor troubling shadows fall;
          Childhood returns, when joy encompassed all.




                             Wayside Trees.


Who that has ever walked in the country has not blessed the farmer who
planted, or early settler who spared, the wayside trees? The average
country road, especially in the poorer farming districts, is something
deplorable. Only too often, even when shady and otherwise attractive,
there lies only the choice of wallowing through sand, stumbling over
rocks, or tripping over briers that would shame the Gordian knot for
close entanglement.

It is unreasonable to expect well-worn paths, far from the town’s
limits, unless Nature has provided them: but something a little better
than the remote highways, as they now are, might certainly be had. Is
there not sufficient tax collected in every township to secure this?
Probably the farmer who never walks to the village, and finds the
wagon-way fairly passable, may insist that the pedestrian can pick his
way, however rough the ground. True, but this does not dissipate the
pedestrian’s just claims. A man that must walk, because too poor to
ride, is none the less worthy of consideration, and may well grumble if
his right of way is blocked. Of course, man must take the world as he
finds it, and alter it if he can; and such an alteration is practicable
where good roads or foot-paths can not be, in the planting and
preservation of wayside trees.

Such was the current of my thoughts when I met, recently, the overseer
of a highway resting, at noon, from his labors. To him, and for him, a
little speech was made; and what was the reply? “Too many shade-trees
will encourage the tramps”! So he who loves to wander out of town must
take the dusty highways as they are, and sigh for pleasant shade he can
not enter. To plant a wayside tree, to have a country byway beautiful,
must not be thought of—it will encourage the tramps!

Now, it so happens that, near where I live, a chestnut-tree was spared,
two centuries ago, probably because it was too crooked for fence-rails.
Certainly for no praiseworthy motive was it allowed to stand; but it
does, and so to-day it casts a shadow in which half a regiment might
gather. Not strangely at all, every man, woman, and child in the
neighborhood loves the old tree, and points to it with pride. Were it
struck by lightning, it would have a public funeral. And yet I have not
found that any of my neighbors, except those very near the town, have
planted even a single wayside tree. On the contrary, a noble row of
catalpas was felled not long since for fence-posts!

A wayside tree means, to the pedestrian, something more than a mere
island of shade in an ocean of sunshine. A stately tree has many lovers,
and hosts of birds are sure to crowd its branches. Such a tree then
becomes the Mecca whereat the rambler spends the hours of hot high noon,
not only pleasurably but profitably—for I hold that a bird can not be
watched for long without gain. Is it nothing, as one rests in the shade
after a long tramp, to have a wood-thrush sing to him? Is it not a
lesson to the weak-hearted to hear the restless red-eye’s ceaseless
song? The perverse grumbler, has he a trace of reason, will, at least
secretly, own that much of which he complains might be far worse, after
listening to the singing of a bird perched in a wayside tree. Though
shorn of so much that Nature granted to the most commonplace of lands,
chaos has not quite come again. Certainly, however barren a sandy field
may look, it is not yet a desert.

As any ornithologist will tell you, birds, though there be little that
favors them and much that is harmful beset them everywhere, will
persistently cling to a tree by the roadside; will even nest in it,
although the ubiquitous small boy showers them with stones; and, more,
though persecution is the order of their day, will sing as in a paradise
regained, thankful that the world has even this much of untamed nature
left.

If, then, in spite of themselves, farmers love what wayside trees there
are, why can we not have more? Think of a leisured stroll, of a hot
summer’s day, through a long avenue of leafy oaks!




                           Skeleton-Lifting.


There are probably very few people but have seen the pretty stone
arrow-heads that are found, often in abundance, after the fields have
been plowed. I have often filled my pockets with them while wandering
about, and, in the words of a friend, “been amazed at the numbers which
are sown over the face of our country, betokening a most prolonged
possession of the soil by their makers. For a hunting population is
always sparse, and the collector finds only those arrow-heads which lie
upon the surface.” But if their handiwork is abundant, not so their
skeletons, and it is the uncanny taste of archæologists to prize the
bones as well as the weapons of the Indians. Still, it is not more
objectionable to carefully preserve the bones in a glass case than to
scatter them with the plowshare.

Because it is well to turn aside from beaten tracks occasionally, that
we may appreciate their beauty the more upon our return, and avoid the
danger of having the sweets of the upland or the meadow pall, I have
been indulging, of late, in archæological pursuits; been gathering
relics, though the locust and wild cherry drooped with their burden of
bright bloom, and the grosbeaks wooed me to the hillside.
Notwithstanding this, I resolutely turned my back upon bird and blossom
alike, and sought a neighbor’s field, over which waved tall and stately
grain. It was proposed to give the day, but, as it proved, the night was
added, to archæology.

There were weighty reasons, of course, for this intrusion upon my
neighbor’s land, as no sane man without a potent incentive would dare to
walk through growing grain. What moved me to so bold a deed was this:
Last autumn I discovered that my farmer neighbor had two skeletons, and
of one of which he neither had any use nor knowledge of its existence.
When apprised of the fact, he expressed no surprise, but resolutely
declined my offer to become the custodian of the superfluous bones, and
even went so far as to make appropriation next to impossible. But I
bided my time, and now, these bright June days, the grain kindly covers
the ground and every creeping thing upon it, as it proved when a dog
bounded into the field on the trail of a rabbit. I forthwith took the
hint and crept upon the trail of a dead Indian. The danger of
discovery—real, not fancied—gave something of zest to the work. With
only a garden trowel, the earth, over a marked spot, was carefully
removed, and as I had all the while to lie upon my breast while at work,
the task was a painfully slow one, and I more than once wished myself
away, until a few small bones were brought to light. Then all thought of
discomfort vanished. Bone after bone was slowly uncovered, but all,
alas! were so friable that not one could be removed with safety. In a
short time the entire skeleton was laid bare, but under what strange
circumstances! I had it within my grasp, but could not move it, nor
indeed myself, more than to crouch in the tall grain about me. It was
too like digging one’s own grave, and once, imagining an approach, I lay
full length by the side of my fleshless friend. The day of my rejoicing
had come, it is true, but there proved to be an overabundance of thorns
with the rose. Here was the long-coveted skeleton; but within hearing,
in the adjoining field, was a burly farmer, passing to and fro with his
plow. Whenever he came near, the grinning skull grew pale, as though it,
too, feared discovery; and so, until the dinner-horn sounded
across-lots, I was held a prisoner. How anxiously did I listen for
retreating steps and the rattling of the unloosened plow-chains!—welcome
sounds that came at last, assuring me that the coast was clear. Then,
leaving the treasure to the kindly sun that was rapidly warming it to
hardness, I sped dinnerward.

The Fates were intolerably cruel that day. At sunset, when I purposed to
return, innumerable obstacles loomed up, and every excuse to run away
from company that had most inopportunely arrived was pooh-poohed by
madam, in a most meaning manner; and it was just midnight when the open
grave was reached. The full moon at that moment broke through the
clouds, and a flood of pallid light filled the spot when I shook hands
with the fleshless warrior and forced myself to return the ghastly grin
of his angular countenance. There was something of defiance, too, in his
eyeless sockets, and a ghost of resistance as he was lifted from a couch
that he had occupied for some three thousand moons at least. The rattle
of his disjointedness was as harsh as the language that once he spake,
and while I thridded the woods and skirted, on my way home, the
resounding marshes, where every frog most ominously croaked, every
jostle of the warrior’s bones seemed to force a protesting syllable
between his rattling teeth.

With all deference to the votaries of archæology, skeleton-lifting by
moonlight is, I claim, a most uncanny pastime.




                      Why I prefer a Country Life.


Uz Gaunt was, in the writer’s experience, the most level-headed of
farmers. He once remarked, “Town folks smile at my vim and way of
putting things, but I’d rather be next neighbor to Natur’ than to most
of the town folks.” That remark impressed me many a year ago as a nugget
of pure wisdom, and now, when on the shady side of forty, I still think
it wiser than any casual remark, learned essay, or eloquent oration I
have ever heard in town.

It is a sad error to suppose that a rustic is akin to a fool; and a
citizen’s real worth may be measured by his manner of speaking of the
country people. That a significant difference obtains can scarcely be
denied, but it is not one that altogether exalts the dweller in town and
degrades the farmer. Will any one pretend to say that the latter is less
intelligent or refined? The simple fact is, the two classes are
differently educated: the townsman largely by books, the farmer to a
great extent by his surroundings; the former comes by his facts through
hearsay, the latter by observation. In other words, the citizen tends to
artificiality, the farmer to naturalness. The one is educated, the other
acquires knowledge. Dead, weigh their brains, and which may claim the
greater number of ounces?

And here let me say, in passing, that not all knowledge worth possessing
has yet got into books. Is it not true that the brightest features of
current literature treat of the world outside a city’s limits? What,
indeed, would modern novels be without something besides brick and
mortar for a background? Will the reader become enthusiastic over a
story the scenes of which shift only from Brown’s parlor to Jones’s and
back again?

The thrifty farmer may see nothing that attracts in the ball-room, and
fail to follow the thread of the story, or be charmed by the airs of an
opera; but has he not a compensation therefor in the Gothic arches of
his woodland, beneath which tragedy and comedy are daily enacted? And
what of the songs at sunrise, when the thrush, the grosbeak, and a host
of warblers greet him at the outset of his daily toil?

Town and country are interdependent; but, considered calmly and in all
its bearings, does not the former ask more of the latter, than _vice
versa_? Has not the influx of rural vigor an incalculable value? Does it
not prevent, in fact, the very destruction of the city, by checking the
downward course that artificiality necessarily takes?

But, as the heading of this article indicates, I do not propose to enter
into any controversy as to the relative merits of city or country life,
but simply to state why I prefer the latter. And may all those to whom
my reasons seem insufficient flock to the towns and become, what our
country certainly needs, good citizens.

I prefer an oak-tree to a temple; grass to a brick pavement; wild
flowers beneath a blue sky to exotic orchids under glass. I would walk
where I do not risk being jostled, and, if I see fit to swing my arms,
leap a ditch, or climb a tree, I want no gaping crowd, when I do so, to
hedge me in. In short, I prefer living “next neighbor to Nature.” I am
free to admit I know very little about the town. It has ever been a
cheerless place to me: cold as charity in winter, hot as an oven in
summer, and lacking nearly all those features that make the country
well-nigh a paradise in spring and autumn. Vividly do I recall the
saddest sight in my experience—that of seeing on the window-sill of a
wretched tenement-house a broken flower-pot holding a single wilted
buttercup, and near it was the almost fleshless face of a little child.

To be indifferent to the town is to be misanthropic, says one; and is
affectation, says another. Perhaps so; I neither know nor care. It
concerns me only to know it is the truth. None loves company better than
I; but may I not choose my friends? If I prefer my neighbor’s dog to my
neighbor, why not? I have not injured him, and, if harm comes of it, it
is the dog that suffers. Have not most people far too many friends?
Hoping to please all, you impress no one. You hold yourself up as a
model, and the chances are you are secretly voted a bore. Certainly, he
who lives where human neighbors are comparatively few and far between
runs the least risk of social disasters.

But there is a deal in the world besides humanity worth living for; and
I count it that the world was not made for man more than for his brute
neighbors. They, too, and their haunts, are worthy of man’s
contemplation.

Is it spring? I would catch the first whisperings of the soft south
wind, and hug the precious secret known, save to the flowers, only to
myself. And, as the days roll by, would watch the opening leaf-buds one
by one, and greet the first blossoms peeping above the dead year’s
scattered leaves. Is this a waste of time? If so, how is it, then, that
the earliest spring flowers need but to be taken to town to set the
people, one and all, agape? Is it nothing to brighten the dull eyes of
the weary toilers in the city? Verily, a violet plucked in February
preaches a refreshing sermon. And, yet again, when a faint shimmer of
green tints the wide landscape, I would catch the earliest note of the
returning bird as it floats across the wide meadow or rings with
startling clearness through the wood. Perchance along the river’s shore
I would hear the heaped ice crack and groan as the breath of Spring
snaps its bonds and sends this rugged gift of Winter whirling to the
sea.

Is it summer? I would catch the fragrant breeze at dawn, and mark the
day’s beauteous progress step by step; gather good cheer from the merry
thrushes’ song, and chirp as lustily as the robin though my task be
long. Even at noontide, be it never so sultry, I would take heart from
the brave field-sparrow’s hopeful tone, and lighten my labor with the
anticipation of long hours of rest, when the world’s best gift comes to
the fore—a moonlit summer night. Surely it is something to go hand in
hand with the year’s ripening harvest, for Nature unfolds many a secret
then, more strange than any fairy tale and more helpful than any fevered
fancy of vague theorist. Armed with such knowledge, the countryman is
well equipped to solve the problem of his life; and does not the toiler
in the town ask more frequently than all others that fearful question,
Is life worth living?

Is it autumn? The recompense for bearing the heat and burden of the
year’s long day is ours. What joy to contemplate the heaped-up treasures
of a fruitful summer, and know they are yours by right of a worthy
conquest wherein no one suffered wrong! Nor is Nature less beautiful or
less communicative now. Indeed, I hold her even more so. The ruddy tints
of the forest leaf mark the completion of a summer’s labor to which we
have given little heed as it progressed; but the woodlands invite us now
to see how beautiful as well as useful a tree may be, and open their
doors to “an annual exhibition” at which the world may well wonder. I
would rather have the autumn landscape before my door than its
counterfeit on canvas hung upon the wall. It is a comfort to know that,
be the former ever so gaudy, it can not be said to be unnatural. Thank
the stars! critics are dumb, whatever the garb Nature sees fit to put
on.

Is it winter? In a broad sense the world is now at rest, but one need
not sit down and mope because of it. It is a happy lot to be able to
lead a contemplative life; the better if it alternates with periods of
activity. And never a winter so dead as to be unsuggestive, not even
though the rigor of an arctic one be upon us. If the familiar river no
longer flows by, brimming, blue, and sparkling, flecked with the white
sails of busy craft or fretted with the tireless splash of hissing
steamers, what of the rugged highway it becomes for the wild life that
braves the north wind and its attendant storms? Whoso studies the flocks
of dainty sparrows that throng the wide, wind-swept wastes in winter
should have courage enough to face the world at all seasons. What a
pulpit becomes a cake of ice whereon a tree-sparrow is singing! and I
have heard hundreds of warbling sparrows when the day was cold and
dreary beyond description.

“How cheerless are the leafless oaks!”—these the strange words of a
storm-bound visitor. Cheerless? just now, perhaps; but wait, and what a
network of ruggedness will bar the deep blue sky, and let in the welcome
sunshine where the gnarly roots afford a tempting seat! It is winter
now, and as welcome the warmth and sunshine in this little nook as were
the coolness and shade in the leafy month of June.

And what a merry fate is his who is snow-bound! It is something to know
even a little of what Whittier has pictured for all time. Every feature
of a great snow-storm is a living poem that thrills us; and ever dearest
of all the open fire. “Back-log studies,” think of them! Everything,
down to the breaking of paths to the highway and the assurance received
at last that the world still lasts—everything, when snow-bound, cuts a
deep notch in the tally-stick of your memory.

The townsman may greet me with a pitying smile and turn with disdain
from the pleasures wherewith I am pleased; but nothing that he offers in
their place has yet tempted me to forsake the idols of my early days.
What though I am rough as the gnarly black-oak’s bark, have I not Nature
for my next neighbor?




                          A Midsummer Outing.


The gentle breeze that keeps the forest roof a-tremble whispers the
promise of a cool day, but breaks it long before noontide. It is wise,
therefore, to trust only to past experience, and, if you ramble at all
during the dog-days, consider yourself in the tropics and act
accordingly. Seek the shady nooks, and rest content to contemplate that
which is nearest at hand. He has traveled much who spends an hour in the
woods. The glamour of mystery rests as a veil over every tree and shrub,
and who has yet shown why the wayside weeds are all so brilliant and
beautiful? Where, except the damp shades of night, no cooling shadows
ever fall, even the well-traveled highway is now resplendent with
St.-John’s-wort, or white as with a snow-drift, where the blooming
yarrow clusters; but the pitiless sun threatens the rambler here, and I
turn to the little forest of sumach and locust which now nearly
obliterates the boundaries of a long-neglected pasture. Everywhere is
outspread the luxuriance of the tropics. Acres of lilies, ruddy and
golden, set in a cloud of tall meadow-rue; and this wealth of gorgeous
bloom upon which the eyes might feast the summer long, is hedged by a
glossy thicket of smilax, broken here and there only to give place to a
no less rank growth of pink roses. My neighbors hold the place a
disgrace to its owner, but I have long since cut the word “weed” from my
vocabulary.

In midsummer, it is too much like cataloguing to scan over-closely one’s
surroundings. General impressions are all that one should aim at, and
not fret if many a flower or bird should escape notice. When it is
ninety in the shade, it is well to carry even a light load of thoughts.
Lilies and yarrow, for instance, are enough for a hot July morning, and
I am quite content to have further details go to those botanists,
fearful bores, who

           “Love not the flower they pluck, and know it not,
            And all their botany is Latin names.”

Probably there was waving lizard-tail; I know there was purple milkweed;
but if there were a host of lesser growths, it availed nothing. I was
seated in a bit of shade, and from my cozy nook looked out, at my
leisure, upon acres of lilies; and when their fiery tints proved too
bright for such a day, I refreshed my sight by turning to the yarrow, on
my left, or that daintiest of blooming shrubs, tall meadow-rue. Is this
too objectless a way to spend the summer? Should an outing have higher
aims? Various comments that reach me imply that view, but I enter a plea
for such laziness. Whoso contemplates a flower logically, and sees not
only it, but all that it represents, has given his brain but little
rest, though he may never have moved a finger. A fig for the
loud-mouthed chatter of non-productive busy-bodies!

It was not long before the fact became evident that this sea of lilies
was the pathless highway of a busy world. Bees, wasps, and many a
creature akin to them hurried by, tarrying but for a moment here and
there, ever buzzing their displeasure or humming sweet satisfaction as
on they rush. As in the human world, success and want of it were the
essence of the steady ramble of that insect metropolis.

Though long I waited, not a bird came near. The kingbirds, that are held
to be such foes of the honey-bees, were not to be seen, nor any
fly-catchers came in view. Afar off in the shady copse I could hear the
wood-pee-wee lisp its languid notes, and nearer a field-sparrow trilled
its winsome lay, but neither dared venture to the open meadow. It was
the insects’ paradise for the time, and I must confess soon became
monotonous. But I struggled against tiring of the wild bees’ hum, and
hoped, if nothing more tasteful offered, I might gather a bit of
patience. If dished up daintily, perhaps it can be swallowed with a
smiling countenance, but the bare drug, in fly-time, rouses a rebellion.

I singled out the nearest lily, and armed with my field-glass became
statistician. The novelty wore off directly: it was too like work. The
procession of bees and bee-like flies that visited that one flower was
not to be counted like city street parades. The bees marched in every
direction, and the lily was simply the hub of a wheel with innumerable
spokes. Soon, however, the monotony was broken and my languishing
interest revived. There was a commotion in this particular nook of
lilydom. I cautiously drew near, and found a noisy humming-bird; then
nearer, and found it no bird at all, but a clear-winged sphinx, and was
not ashamed to find I had made so great a mistake at the outset. There
is no great harm done in jumping at a conclusion, if we follow it up and
verify or correct the original impression. Certainly at a little
distance the resemblance is very marked. On its appearance every near-by
insect seemed to take umbrage at the presence of the “clear-wing,” and
the volume of sound was largely increased. There was a change from a
contented hum to an angry buzz. This change was readily brought about I
found by agitating the lilies with a switch, and so I realized, more
clearly than ever before, how by the increased velocity of the wings’
movements an insect would express its emotions. For a time I forgot the
heat and the glare of the noontide sun, and, walking to and fro, I
roused at will an angry roar from thousands of disturbed bees, or, by
remaining quiet, allowed it to settle into the drowsy hum of
contentment.

But the unprotected tropic of that field of lilies proved too great a
strain, and I was glad to seek the shelter of the woods. And what a
change is wrought by a few degrees of temperature! Here I found the
humming-birds in _propriæ personæ_, but they would not hum or buzz as I
drew near or retreated, and proved to be veritable commonplaces,
although I am sure their nest was very near. Disgusted with their
unsuggestiveness, I went home, and there followed up the subject, so far
as these birds are concerned. Covering one side of a porch is a thrifty
trumpet creeper, now in full bloom. Here come the humming-birds
continually, morning, noon, and night, and here I heard their angry
buzz, and could see it, too, I think, in the motion of their wings. It
needed only a little irritation to make them buzz angrily; but this is
not their only means of making themselves heard. They can squeak quite
loudly, and very generally do, if the flower they alight upon or
actually enter, is not quite to their satisfaction. I used to think that
the wrens were the quickest tempered of all our birds, but probably the
humming-birds are their equals in this respect. This I learned from a
pair of nesting birds, but to-day, this terrible, tropical July day, I
had the other fact impressed upon me, that not alone do insects express
their feelings by the movements of the wings; it is true also of the
humming-bird.




                        A Word about Knowledge.


Half a loaf may be better than no bread, but such a rule will not apply
to all matters. Half a fact is not better than ignorance.

Recently, not very far from New York, the Boston idea of naming the
trees in the public grounds—painting upon narrow boards both the
botanical and common names—was adopted by the city authorities.

                    _Acer rubrum_, | _Quercus alba_,
                       Red maple,  |  White oak,

and so on, were nailed to the various trees, and each, as is not always
the case, in its proper place. While the work was in progress the
following conversation took place: “What a deal of money is spent in
advertising patent medicines and such stuff nowadays!” remarked Blank to
his friend. “See there!” and he pointed to a maple properly labeled,
adding, “That’s some new bitters or a salve for corns, I suppose.” “No,
it isn’t,” replied Double Blank, with an air of infinite wisdom; “these
boards are the names of the different kinds of trees, nailed up for the
benefit of the ignorant in such matters. Here’s another one, and, don’t
you see, it gives the scientific and common names both? _Quercus_,
white; _alba_, an oak. I remember that much Latin, anyhow.” Is it true
that life is too short to acquire decent knowledge of natural history,
along with arithmetic and geography? And what profiteth it to study
Latin if such a display of ignorance as the above is the ultimate
outcome? Botany and zoölogy are in the curriculum of many lesser
institutions than colleges; but, from the manner in which these subjects
are taught in some places, they would better be omitted. These two
worthy citizens whose conversation was overheard—and the report thereof
is not “doctored”—had both been through a course of botany, and one of
them had struggled through a Latin reader. There is undoubtedly still a
considerable amount of prejudice against science, or “organized common
sense,” as Kingdon Clifford has happily called it, though why I do not
pretend to know. If it is a fact that birds fly and fishes swim, can any
harm come of knowing it, and of how and why they fly and swim? And, a
step further, if some birds swim instead of fly, and certain fishes
climb trees, as is true, is knowledge of the fact likely to prove
dangerous? Yet again, if ten thousand facts have been discovered, as
they have, which upset the ideas of our grandfathers, need we tremble? I
trow not. And this leads me to a word also about “newspaper science,” of
which more anon. What wonderful statements creep into the local papers!
Impossible snakes, no less impossible birds, and creatures too strange
for even the nightmare of a zoölogist, figure now and then as captured
in the neighborhood of an inland town, yet no one contradicts the
reporter or sees the absurdity of it all. The mythical hoop-snake
bespatters the “patent outsides” of many a village weekly. Better, by
far, absolute ignorance than half the truth. _Quercus_, white; _alba_,
an oak, indeed!

While the aforesaid intellectual status causes us to pity our fellows
and at times to laugh at their expense, brazen assumption of knowledge,
which is far more common, is often positively exasperating.

What a sad spectacle, yet very common one, to find, even in our larger
towns, thousands led blindly by a half-dozen who, by reason of brazen
assumption, have stepped forth as leaders, and been meekly accepted as
such! The intellectual status of many a village is sometimes ludicrous.
In Smalltown there live a lawyer, a doctor, and a clergyman, who are
great cronies, past sixty, and puffed up with pride. As a matter of
course, they rule the little community with a rod of iron. Not a great
question of the day but is referred to some one of the three or to all,
and nothing concerning the past comes up but their opinion is sought and
relied upon. No one ever reaches an independent conclusion, nor thinks
for a moment that error may have crept in when the past is discussed.
The noble three were never known to admit their ignorance; and never,
during their joint reign, have their decisions been disputed. Of course,
the inhabitants of Smalltown see as through a glass, darkly; for who
such disseminators of untruth as those who lay claim to universal
knowledge? May a recent ray of light that recently penetrated their
darkness tend toward their awakening! It happened not long since that
the blacksmith fell ill, and a stranger took his place at the forge.
This newcomer had been taught his trade, and rightfully prided himself
that he thoroughly understood it. Such independence nettled the village
clergyman, and, when that worthy came to have his horse shod, there was
not a paring of the hoof, driving of a nail, or stroke of the hammer,
but under his explicit direction. The smith was patient, silent, and
obedient, but all the while there was a dangerous glitter in his eyes.
The horse went lame directly, and “That fellow is an ignorant bungler,”
was the minister’s outspoken decision.

That was Monday, and Smalltown moved with the monotony of the old hall
clock’s pendulum until Sunday morning. Then the quiet blacksmith took
his seat in church near the door and sat through the service. In due
course the sermon of the past half-century, with variations, was
preached, and ended with the usual peroration, “Brethren, is this not
true?” With the asking of that question Smalltown was shaken to its
foundations, for the blacksmith quickly shouted, “No!” and straightway
retired. That minister had no faith in the skill of the blacksmith; the
latter placed no confidence in the preacher’s logic. I do not defend the
blacksmith, but, somehow, when I heard the story, I was otherwise than
shocked. There is a bit of harshness in it, perhaps, but the remark must
needs be made: Pin not too much faith upon defective memory; and it may
be rightfully added, there is nothing but reasonableness in the
suggestion that he who presumes to know all things is no safe authority
upon any.




                       The Night-Side of Nature.


Not long since I checked the flow of a diminutive brook that barely
trickled over a most tortuous course, and during midsummer was often a
thing forgotten. By building a dam I raised a shallow pond about two
hundred feet square, and nowhere more than eighteen inches deep, save at
its outlet. Here are now growing beautiful water-lilies—pink, yellow,
blue, and white—the stately lotus, and many a pretty aquatic plant from
foreign lands. Of these I have nothing now to say, except incidentally,
but a good deal concerning the remarkable zoölogical features of this
artificial pond in the corner of an exposed upland field.

I am quite sure that the most skillful hunter would have found no game
had he scoured this and the adjoining fields, even with trained dogs; no
trapper would have deigned to set a snare anywhere about the place, and
the naturalist would have considered the outlook most unpromising. As in
every farming district, here were acres of corn-fields, wheat-fields,
truck-patch, and pasture, and nothing but grass or growing crops to
relieve the monotony of the landscape. Every vestige of wildness has
long since been improved off the face of this region, and grasshoppers,
mice, and field-sparrows constitute the fauna. That is, apparently so;
and how readily we underrate the merits of the so-called commonplace in
nature! The truth is, every inch of these unsuggestive fields has ever
been and is familiar ground to hosts of cunning creatures, or how else
could the pond that was formed in a few days have become tenanted as it
now is? The remarkable promptness with which every nook and corner was
occupied by some water-loving animal almost the very day the pond was
formed shows how much is overlooked if we familiarize ourselves only
with the events of the day, and ignore, as young naturalists are all too
apt to do, the night-side of nature.

If the reader were to stand on the bank of the little pond early in the
morning, his attention would doubtless be drawn exclusively to the
lilies, and the skimming barn-swallows or fiery dragon-flies that
outspeed them would not be seen. Here and there the waters would be
rippled, but only the broad leaves of the lotus trembling in the breeze
would catch his eye, yet that ripple marks the progress of a monstrous
water-snake. Charmed by the beauty of a trailing vine that rests like an
emerald serpent on the pond’s placid surface, the deep tones of enormous
frogs will be unheard, yet here are giants of their race that quickly
found the spot, many of them larger and more musical than their brethren
in the meadows. By the side of a miniature lily from Siberia, scarcely
an inch in width, may pop up the rugged head of the ferocious
snapping-turtle, but the onlooker will see only a bit of wood floating
in the water, so absorbed is he in the wonderful display of aquatic
bloom.

Now, this is not an imaginary case, but the record of more than one
actual occurrence, and I lay stress upon the particulars because it
shows how readily we overlook so much that is well worth seeing. These
few square rods of shallow water go not so much to make a lily-pond,
although this was my sole intention, as to form a zoölogical garden on a
quite extensive scale.

Let us consider now some of these unbidden and unwelcome occupants of
the pond. Of the mammalian life, first in bulk as well as
destructiveness is the musk-rat. It is not so much of a wonder that
these animals so soon appeared. They are given to nocturnal wanderings.
This is the night-side of their nature that we must keep in mind. In
this case they had but to follow the windings of the brook for a
thousand yards from a creek, where they have always been, to reach the
pond. The curious feature of their coming was, that in so short a time
they had securely established themselves. They seem to have said to
themselves, “This is to our liking,” and without delay dug their
underground retreats. They considered the pond their own, and in one
night the smooth and sodded bank was marred by a line of treacherous
hills and hollows. Then broad leaves and thick stems of lilies began to
float about, cleanly cut from the parent plant. The culprits were well
known, yet days and weeks passed without one being seen. But a single
moonlit night sufficed to tell me what I had guessed: their hours of
activity are when men are supposed to be asleep.

The wary mink, too, came nightly to the pond, and, if it fished in the
waters, it was for the many frogs that abounded, but I found no mangled
remains of the old fellows that out-croaked the myriads in the meadows.

Then rabbits, mice, and squirrels came trooping to the water’s edge,
stood there, and wondered at the novelty of a bit of the meadows being
brought from the lowlands to this dry and dusty field; and when a
prowling dog came by, how with one wild shriek they vanished, and left
the pond to the bewildered dog and myself, and then to myself only, for
the dog soon turned to follow the trail of the fleeing rabbits; and here
I tarried long, gazing in rapture upon the lotus by moonlight.

It is Gordon Cumming who has described with wonderful vividness how
herds of antelopes and elephants, and even many lions, came to drink at
night from pools near which he lay concealed. What a boon to a
naturalist to see these mighty beasts under such circumstances!

It may seem very absurd to think of one when speaking of the other, and
ludicrous to compare them; but when I sat concealed by the little
lily-pond and saw these little animals, musk-rats, rabbits, and even
smaller fry, come to the water’s edge, I did think of the great
lion-hunter of South Africa, and honestly believe I could realize, even
more vividly than when I read his thrilling pages, what he had seen.

Probably no feature of wild life is so characteristic of water-scenes as
the tall wading birds, herons, snipe, and sand-pipers. I did not
anticipate the coming of any of these, unless it might be the little
teetering sand-piper that is practically a land bird; but it has kept
aloof, so far as I know, while stately herons have come and trod the
grassy shores and fished in the shallow depths. These birds are not a
feature of the day, however, and unless you are abroad after sunset you
would not suspect their presence. And then do not expect too much.
Probably some of the wonderful stories concerning herons, bitterns,
cranes, and storks, have come to your notice, but it is quite certain
that our North American species are very prosy, and set off by their
size the waterscape far more than they embellish it by wonderful habits.
It is true they are expert in catching frogs, cray-fish, and even mice;
but, however bright the moonlight, you can see next to nothing of all
this. The facts have been reached from dissection more than observation.
And what of the “powder-down patches” upon a heron’s breast? The fable
that these emit light and illuminate the water sufficiently to enable
the bird to see a fish in the water is still repeated, and a greater
error never found utterance. It is a pretty fancy, so the more
dangerous, as it crops out every now and then, to the deceiving of the
unsuspecting reader.

I have spoken of a monstrous water-snake. This serpent has long been a
feature of the pond, and, when in the upland fields laying its eggs it
probably smelled the water, and so turned northward toward the lilies,
instead of returning southward to the splatter-docks in the meadows. I
have cornered the creature several times, and always found it
exceedingly surly. To be held in the hand it considers an insult, and
bites with a rapidity of motion of the head that is marvelous. Its teeth
are pretty sharp, too, and bring blood when the hand or bare arm is
struck; but then its violent efforts are so amusing that one forgets all
about the pain. The snake loves a moonlit night, and at such times
occasionally floats upon the surface of the pond without making the
slightest motion, and a stranger would suppose it to be a small limb of
a tree. This apparent rest, however, has a purpose behind, and is, I
think, connected with the capture of food; or so it has appeared to me
on several occasions.

That the several turtles of our meadow tracts should find their way to
the pond was not surprising, for even those most strictly aquatic take
long overland journeys in spring and early summer; but I did not look
for fish, as none could come down the brook, and I as little supposed
that any could climb fifty feet above the river and reach it; and then
they would have, besides, to jump over the dam or waddle around it. And
I saw no fish until weeks after the pond was completed. I stocked it
with carp, and then, lo! there were mud-minnows in these shut-off
waters. Of course, they were there before the dam was built, and now
they are too well established to be exterminated. I can only hope they
will not find the carps’ eggs, or feed exclusively on the young fish.

What, then, have I accomplished by damming a little brook? I have
changed to a watery wilderness the corner of a one-time dusty field. I
have brought representatives of many forms of animal life, hitherto
unknown to the spot, to a prosy nook, and so changed the whole face of
Nature. The very weeds are even now different from those of former
years, and hosts of insects that had not been here before now fill the
air and make it to tremble with their tireless wings. And to the
rambler, after long tramping in dusty fields or along the no less
cheerless highway, here is a pleasant spot indeed, one that epitomizes
half the country round, and offers, too, many a suggestive novelty. So
much by day; but let him tarry until the gloaming, and when the lilies
have folded he will catch, what is even better, glimpses of the
night-side of Nature.




                        The Herbs of the Field.


Wandering recently in and out the woods and fields, tramping aimlessly
whithersoever fancy led me, I crushed with my feet, at last, a stem of
pennyroyal. Catching the warm fragrance of its pungent oil, straightway
the little-loved present vanished. How true it is that many an odor,
however faint, opens the closed doors of the past! Prosy and commonplace
it may seem, but full many a time a whiff from the kitchen of some old
farm-house, where I have stopped for a drink of water, recalls another
farm-kitchen, redolent of marvelous gingerbread and pies, such as I have
failed to find in recent years, and with their tempting spiciness went
that subtle odor, from which indeed the whole house was never free, that
of sweet-smelling herbs. I am daily thankful that the herbs at least
have not changed, as the years roll by. It is the same pennyroyal that
my grandmother gathered; and think to what strange use she put it! Made
pennyroyal puddings! Let them go down to posterity by name only.

The herbs of the field and garden were gathered, each in its proper
season, by the folks at home, and in great bunches were suspended from
the exposed beams of the old kitchen. In early autumn they made quite a
display, but, as the winter wore away, became rather sorry-looking
reminders of the past summer. To a limited extent their bulk decreased
and their odor became less pronounced; but how seldom were they ever
disturbed! I have dared to think that herb-gathering was a survival from
prehistoric times, but I never dared to hint this to my grandmother. The
nearest to doing this was to coax a braver boy to ask if the old bunches
were burned at midnight with secret ceremonies, for they gave place to
the new crop each year, yet were not seen lying about the yard. Neither
the braver boy nor I could get any satisfaction, but a forcible
reprimand instead, for hinting at paganism. I hold, nevertheless, that a
trace of it did exist then, and does. Was it not something akin to this
that more than one medicinal herb had to be gathered at midnight? This,
it is true, was not openly admitted, but unquestionably faith in its
virtue as a remedy was diminished if the plant was not gathered as the
superstition dictated. Try as we may, the crude faiths of our
prehistoric ancestry we can not snap asunder. As elastic bands, they may
grow finer and finer with the tension of the centuries, but still,
perhaps as but invisible threads, they hold.

However steadily herb-using may have been going out of date in my early
boyhood, herb-gathering was not, and I may be mistaken when I say that,
except the pennyroyal in puddings, sage in sausage, and a bit of thyme
and parsley in soup, the dozen others hung in old kitchens were unused
except as fly-roosts—a fact that scarcely added to their virtues.

When I last lounged on the old settle and counted the several kinds of
herbs hanging overhead, an aged negress assured me that every “yarb”
kept some disease at bay, and predicted disaster as the new kitchens
with their plastered ceilings and modern stoves gave way to more
primitive architecture and methods. And I am half inclined to believe
that she was right. The old folks had their aches and pains, but not so
much of that depressing languor that we call _malaria_. Might not the
ever-present odors of sweet-smelling herbs have kept this at bay? I
fancied I felt the better for the whiff of pennyroyal, and, gathering a
handful of its leaves, breathed the spiciness until my lungs were
filled. It is something to have an herb at hand that revives the past,
and more perhaps to have many that add a charm to the present, for the
pastures in August would be somewhat dreary, I think, were there not in
almost every passing breeze the odor of sweet-smelling herbs.

But if pennyroyal, sweet cicely, and the spicy “mocker”-nut carry me
back some twoscore years, what shall be said of a faint odor that can
yet be distilled from plants that flourished in the same pastures or
where these pastures now are, perhaps a million years ago? One is not
given to thinking of anthracite as at one time wood, but it is different
in this instance, for the blackened, fern-like plants in the underlying
clays are still wood and not petrified; so that they burn with a feeble
flame when dry, and burning throw off a rich fragrance akin to
frankincense. I have often placed a splinter of these ancient trees in
the flame of a candle, and, sniffing the odor that arises, travel in
fancy to New Jersey’s upland and meadows before they were trodden by
palæolithic man; before even the mastodon and gigantic beaver had
appeared; when enormous lizards and a few strange birds ruled the wide
wastes. But the world here was not wholly strange, even then, for many a
familiar tree was growing in this old river valley, as the delicate
impressions of their leaves in the clay so clearly demonstrate.

If, then, one would indulge in retrospection—and therein lies one of
life’s most solid comforts—it will be found that suggestive objects are
ever about us, and the herbs of the field, in August, would scarcely be
missed, if unhappily they ceased to grow. But why, it may be asked, are
these same herbs so suggestive of the past, so certain to give rise to
retrospective thought? It is not a personal matter, for I have
questioned many people, and in this they all agree. One reply is a fair
representative of all. Offering a little bunch of garden herbs to an old
man no longer able to wander out of doors, he immediately buried his
nose in it, drew a long breath, and remarked, “How that carries me back
to the old homestead!”

As by the touch of a magician’s wand, in my walk to-day, the present
vanished when I crushed the pennyroyal, and the ringing songs of the
still tuneful summer birds were not exultant strains glorifying the
present, but echoes of a dim past over which, perhaps, I am too prone to
brood.

It is absurdly contradictory, of course, to say that I love
retrospection, and that in August one is more prone to think of the past
than the present, and yet not to love that month, but such is the case.
In other words, I am vacillating and contradictory, and fail to command
the words that might set me right before the world; but it is August
now, and, summer’s activity ended, why should I labor to think? Why not
build air-castles as I smell the herbs of the field; build and unbuild
them until the day closes, and later, lulled by the monotones of cricket
and katydid, hum those ever-melancholy lines—

           “Backward, turn backward, O Time, in your flight;
            Make me a child again, just for to-night.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                PART IV.

                               IN AUTUMN.

                                -------




                          A Lake-Side Outing.


Having been within the city’s bounds for a week—for me a novel
experience that has little merit—it was with the eagerness of a child
that I rode a short distance out of town, and, turning my back upon the
railway station, started with a few friends upon an old-time tramp. In
the company were a geologist, an engineer, a botanist, an artist, and
others who, like myself, professing nothing, were eager to extract the
good from everything that came in our way. We filed along the dusty
highway, some miles from Toronto, with Lake Ontario as our objective
point.

There was not a feature of that ancient highway that differed
essentially from the country roads at home. The same trees, wayside
weeds, and butterflies met me at every turn; even the crickets creaked
in the same key, and the farmers’ dogs were equally inquisitive. For
more than a mile I am not sure that I saw a bird of any kind. In this
respect we are surely better off at home. This absence of novelty was a
little disappointing, but I had no right to expect it. Canada has been
longer settled than New Jersey, and doubtless many a field we passed was
cleared years before the forest was felled along the Delaware.

However this may be, the outlook soon changed for the better, and
reaching the upper terrace, or ancient shore, the broad and beautiful
expanse of Lake Ontario lay before us. From the upper to the lower
terrace was but a step, and then, on the very edge of a precipitous
cliff, I looked over to see the waves dashing at its foot, and carrying
the loose sand and clay steadily into the lake. Clear as crystal and
brightly blue the waters as they struck the shore; roily and heavy laden
with the sand as they receded. It is little wonder that the cliff is
rapidly yielding; there is nothing to protect it even from the gentle
ripples of a summer sea. Yet wherever spared for a short season
vegetation came to the rescue, and the yellow-white cliff was dotted
with blooming clusters of tansy, golden-rod, eupatorium, and mullein
yellow and white, that were too like the background to be conspicuous;
but not so the scattered asters, which were large and very blue; more
so, indeed, than any that I saw elsewhere.

The proportion of clay in the cliff differed exceedingly, and where it
was greatly in excess of the sand had withstood the destructive action
of wind and wave, and stood out in great pillars, walls, and turrets,
that suggested at once the ruins of ancient lake-side castles.

Leaving the cliff, not because weary of it, but to crowd a week’s outing
into an hour, the party turned to a deep, shady, vine-entangled ravine.
I was happy. Indifferent to the geology ably explained by one, to the
botany by another, to the beauty as extolled by the artist, I found a
rustic seat and feasted upon raspberries. To eat is a legitimate pastime
of the confirmed rambler. One’s eyes and ears should not monopolize all
the good things in nature; but these again were not neglected, for I
stopped eating—when the berries gave out—and toyed with the beautiful
seed-pods of the _Actæa_, or bane-berry. This I never find near home,
and so its novelty gave it additional merit; but it needs no extraneous
suggestiveness. The deep, coral-red stems and snow-white seed-pods
completely captivated my fancy. Bearing this as a prize, I moved slowly
over a pathless wild, hearing pine finches to my delight, and above all
other sounds the muffled roar of the lake as it beat upon the narrow
beach nearly two hundred feet below me. At last I was in a strange
country; one that bore not the remotest resemblance to any I had seen
before.

There was no time to tarry, however attractive any spot might prove; and
next in order, having seen the uplands, was to descend to the foot of
the cliff and stroll along the beach. I was assured that Fortune favored
us, as near by was a well-worn path. Never was a path better
described—it was well worn. Smooth as a toboggan-slide and with few
shrubs or sturdy weeds to seize in case of accident, my steps were
clogged with fear; each foot weighted with a painful doubt. I hate to
run a risk, and fear so strained my nerves that when the base was
reached every muscle ached through sympathy.

If we limit the localities to sand and water, the lake was an ocean on a
small scale, and not a very small scale either. Sky and water closed in
the earth’s boundary upon three sides; but the water lacked life. Not a
shell, not an insect, not a fish had been tossed upon the sand—nothing
but sand. This want was a disappointment, for the gathering of flotsam
along our sea-coast is a never-ending source of pleasure. Perhaps, had
there been recently a violent storm, I might have been more successful,
but probably the water is too cold. On the other hand, it was a comfort
to have land and water about one free from every trace of man’s
interference. Thank goodness, there were no iron piers and hideous rows
of booths and bath-houses! For aught one could see, the Indians might
have left these shores but yesterday.

Where we now strolled the cliff had been spared for several years, and a
rank vegetation covered it from base to top. Squatty willows and dwarf
sumachs, golden-rod and chess, a wild grass that recalled the graceful
plumes of the _Panicum crusgalli_ at home; these held the winds at bay,
but were likely, when next it stormed to be carried out to sea, and with
them tons of the cliff upon which they grew. As so many of the rank
growths near by were heavy with seed, it was and is an unsolved puzzle
why there should have been a complete absence of birds. Everything that
an ornithologist would say seed-eating birds required was here in
profusion; yet the birds were not. Already the summer migrants had
departed—I found many warblers’ and fly-catchers’ nests—and the winter
birds of the region had not yet appeared. From what I saw this day and
afterward in other localities, I am well convinced that, taking the year
through, there is no spot, east of the Alleghanies, in the United States
where birds are so abundant as in the valley of the Delaware. I have
seen, since my return, more birds of many kinds in one half-hour at home
than I saw during two weeks’ rambles in Canada.

I was in no hurry to climb up the cliff, the descent of which was still
impressed upon my memory, but the order to march came from the guide,
and we struggled slowly up the well-worn path. If a brief rest had not
been permitted, I should have rebelled; but we were fortunate in this,
and never did lake look lovelier than “in the golden lightning of the
sunken sun.” It was with regret that we turned our faces landward and
crossed prosy fields, and even longed for the bright waters while
threading a fragment of Canadian forest. Here, too, silence brooded over
nature; not even a chickadee flitted among the branches of the sturdy
oaks and maples, nor a woodpecker rattled the rough bark of towering
white pines. As we reached the public road, and stopped for supper at an
old wayside inn, three silent crows passed by high overhead. They were
flying in a southeasterly direction, and I watched them long, and
wondered if they were bound for the far-off meadows at home, where
hundreds of their kind gather daily as the sun goes down.




                             Dew and Frost.


At sunrise to-day, by reason of the dew, the whole earth was beautiful.
Every harsh outline was softened to comely roundness. Not even an
ungainly fence scarred the landscape. Instead of Nature tortured out of
shape, the outlook was as a peep into a fairy-land. And all by reason of
the glittering dew. What is dew? Says the physical geography at hand:
“When at night the earth radiates the heat which it has received during
the day, the surface becomes colder than the ground beneath or the air
above. Vapor rises from the moist soil below, to be condensed at the
cooler surface. The adjacent layer of air above is also cooled to its
point of saturation, and its vapor is deposited. This condensed moisture
at the surface, whether from the soil or the air, is dew.... Dew does
not fall, but is condensed on the best radiators, such as grass and
trees.”

Going no further into explanations, let us consider the dewy morn as we
find it. What of this “early, bright, transient, and chaste” moisture
that bathes the world alike? No, it does not, by the way. Many a spot is
dry as powder, while elsewhere all is dripping. It does not do to make
sweeping assertions even about such a phenomenon as this. You will stir
the lurking critic in his den if you do, and what a fell catastrophe!

But to-day, October 3d, the dry spots are to be looked for, so scattered
are they, and practically everywhere are sparkling globules of pure
water. Finding the world so, it becomes the essential business of the
rambler to determine its effects. Are the birds chilled to silence? Does
the field-mouse shiver in his grassy nest? I think not. Often have I
wished to detect some marked evidence of the influence of dew, but my
sluggish senses have failed me. Up from the glistening expanse of weedy
meadows comes the blithe song of the sparrow; out from the misty depths
of the river valley floats the triumphant cawing of the crow. The
bluebird greets the dawn with prophetic warble, promising the brightness
of summer when the dew has gone; and chill though the night has been,
the twittering swifts are alert and aloft at daybreak. Whether there be
dew or none, it seems to matter nothing to the birds. But it is a
veritable tell-tale so far as the early stirring mammals are concerned.
They can never move so daintily that the dew-drops are not brushed
aside, and the long lines of swept herbage stand out in boldest relief
as the sunlight sweeps across the field. One can now track the belated
creature to his home.

Most marked of all the effects of a heavy dew is the beading of a
spider’s web. A more exquisite object than a dew-spangled gossamer I
have never seen. Within a week I saw a single silken strand that reached
a rod in length, and not a break was there in the row of sparkling beads
that clung to it. At the same time, from rail to rail of the roadside
fence were stretched the marvelous weavings of the geometric spider, and
every horizontal thread was dew-laden. I waited until the sun broke
through the bank of clouds in the east, anticipating a splendid
exhibition, nor was I disappointed. Alas! that language is so inadequate
to one’s needs, when such magnificence is before us. What the spiders
may think of dew remains to be determined. As I prodded several of them,
and forced them to the fore, they were a sorry-looking set, and shook
their webs and themselves in a disconsolate way, as though chilled to
the core. An hour later, as I passed by, their energy had revived.

And now what of dew as a weather sign? I turn to the “weather proverbs”
that have been gathered and made into a little book (Signal Service
Notes, No. IX), and find the sum and substance of fourteen “sayings” to
be that dew in summer and autumn is indicative of fair days; the absence
of it, of rain. “If your feet you wet with the dew in the morning, you
may keep them dry for the rest of the day.” It is a comfort to know that
a modicum of truth lies in some of the sayings in everybody’s mouth; and
certainly a dewy morn is likely to be followed by a dry and sunny noon.
Nevertheless, do not expect to notch off your three score and ten years
without a failure in these sayings. Euripides never hit the nail more
squarely on the head than when he wrote—

                       What to-morrow is to be
                       Human wisdom never learns.

Sooner or later in October we have frost. The beautiful dewy morning two
days ago was followed to-day by a no less beautiful morning; but the
meadows were gray with frost. Says the physical geography: “When the
weather is cold, so that but little vapor can be carried in the air, the
dew-point may be below 32 degrees Fahrenheit. In this event what is
deposited is solid frost.”

             The third day comes a frost, a killing frost,

and whatever it might have killed it compensated therefor by adding life
to the air. Despite its beauty, the country was reeking with an unseen,
unsuspected poison, but one none the less sure in its fell effects. How
different to-day! There is evidence of vigor so widely spread that the
blighted leaves and drooping blossoms may well be overlooked. No sounds
are muffled; the faintest chirping of a distant bird falls sharply on
the ear. The loose bark of the nut trees snaps and crackles at the
squirrel’s touch, and not a tiny twig breaks in the timid rabbit’s path
but we plainly hear it. The languor that held spellbound the woods and
fields fled with the coming of that “killing frost.” Well can we spare
the daintier bloom of summer, seeing how great a train of blessings
follows in the wake of frost.

There is a widespread impression that animal life is affected almost to
the same extent as vegetation by these so-called killing frosts. This is
not true. Insects are benumbed by it, but recover before noon. Frogs and
salamanders are silenced and sluggish, but the morning sun renews their
vigor; and who ever heard of a frostbitten bird? On the contrary,
scarcely an hour after the sun rose on October 5th, there were a dozen
birds, that, moping and peevish, had petulantly chirped for weeks, and
now sang gayly. Later there was an old-time concert in the hillside
thicket, even a brown thrush singing half his May-day song. Nature is
renewed by a killing frost. It destroys the old to give place to the
new; and this early autumn life that makes glorious October and softens
the gloom of November has charms too little heeded. The world does not
need to be embowered in green leaves to tempt the rambler. He who lives
out of town well knows how many are the frosty days when the uplands and
meadows alike teem with myriad forms of happy life.




                         A Hermit for the Day.


A peculiarly disagreeable northeast storm, continuing for some time,
kept me out of the woods, and it was long after the October moon had
fulled that my opportunity came. Then I turned hermit for the day.

I question if it matters much at what time of year you turn your back
upon civilization and take to the woods. They will greet you kindly at
all seasons. If, by reason of your delay, they do not charm you with
spring flowers, they have cool shades to offer when the dog-star rages;
and following these, a carnival of color and harvest of sweet nuts. If
you have tarried in town too long for these, then plunge into the forest
at midwinter, and, sheltered by a sturdy oak, build your camp-fire. Do
this, and if you return without a harvest of new thoughts, the chances
are that you have turned up on the wrong planet.

The best means of realizing what others have enjoyed or suffered is to
taste of their experience. I know of hermits from hearsay only, and I
wished to test the accuracy of what I had heard and read concerning
them. Pleased with the novelty of my quick-laid scheme, I renounced the
world at midnight, and, laden with a blanket and provisions, started
long before sunrise for a hollow sycamore miles deep in a lonely swamp.
Of what I was to do when I reached the proposed goal I had no idea. The
one controlling purpose was to get, not out of the world, but on one of
its edges. Trudging half-heartedly along—the silence of midnight clogs
one’s energy—I reached before dawn the confines of that lonely swamp. As
seen by the dim light of the drowsy stars, there was little to tempt me
to enter, although the now scarcely discerned wood road that crossed it
was familiar enough. What if there was no real danger (and he is a
coward who turns from an imaginary foe) still the imagination persists
in peopling a forest with most strange shapes—shapes at which one
shudders; and yet, contradictory as we are, we give no heed to hosts of
creatures daily about us that are far more marvelous. If I had any
purpose whatever in this unusual outing, it was to study wild life; and
now, because the dry twigs cracked loudly and the chafing branches
overhead groaned dolorously, I was disposed to forget that it was my own
feet that broke the former and the wind that moved the tree-tops. What a
fool man can be upon occasion! Be it on record, however, that the woods
were entered, and many a rod was measured with firm steps, when, at a
turn in the road, a flickering, sickly light danced in the foreground. A
gypsy camp, I thought, and how still I stood! Then, while staring
steadily at the pallid flame, I saw there was no one near it, and the
truth flashed upon me. It was merely a will-o’-the-wisp. I laughed at my
blunder; so did an owl. _Woo-roo-roo!_ shouted the feathered imp in my
ears. Never was sound more welcome. Now I was well at home. A hermit for
a day loves company—this I learned; and the little red owl and I are old
friends. I took his hooting as a hearty welcome, and with lighter steps
followed the crooked wood road. Now every sound excited curiosity, no
doubt; and when this is true, a walk in the woods, be it night or day,
is an unmixed delight. Later, as the pale gray dawn sifted its meager
light through the trees, I paused at many a familiar tree and shrub. All
regrets had vanished, and I bade the swamp “Good morning” with a hearty
shout, when the old sycamore loomed up before me, its scattered leaves
gilded by the herald rays of the slowly rising sun. There was scarcely a
dozen rods between us, but that much of my journey was not to be
accomplished. A huge old maple had fallen across the road, the course of
a little creek had recently been changed, and bees were swarming about
the hollow tree. It was plain that I must seek a new hermitage. But why
any particular spot? There was no tree so inhospitable as to refuse me a
shelter. But why seek shelter at all, under an unclouded sky? Placing my
burdens on a mossy knoll, I sat down. Now, I thought, I am a hermit, and
perhaps a fool. The latter thought nettled me, but what could I do?
Still I vowed that I would not return empty-handed. I had met Nature
half-way; would she make like advances?

_Click-click-clatter_, so it sounded, and I cut my meditations short.
The work of the hermit was, I hoped, about to commence. Chatter,
clatter, everywhere, as if every twig were busy; nor was all this varied
volume of sound derived from but one source. There were squirrels
overhead, and chipmunks among the dead leaves. Two downy woodpeckers
were scanning, in close company, the dead limb of an old oak, and
flitting everywhere were scores of kinglets and warblers. A host of
tree-sparrows and white-throated finches filled the chinkapin shrubbery;
while, dearest of all, a brave black-capped titmouse came almost within
reach, looked me boldly in the face, and twittered “Good morning.” It
was worth all the drawbacks of being a temporary hermit to be greeted so
cordially. It is true the woods are never quite deserted, and yet it is
not in them that birds most congregate; but here, this day, were more
birds immediately about me than I ever saw before. More tree-sparrows
directly from Canada than I saw in all my tramps there two months ago;
and certainly more kinglets than I ever saw before. The chilly northeast
storm doubtless had something to do with this abundance of birds, but
this matters not. Here were birds in abundance. What can they teach me?

To think that with one glance of the eye more Canadian sparrows could be
seen than I found in all my Canadian tramps two months ago! And they had
all the freshness, too, of this brisk October morning. There was no
listlessness, however long their journey may have been. _Snap—crackle_,
these crisp words best describe their songs and movements; and when life
snaps and crackles, whether it is our own or that of other creatures, it
is life worth living. So marked is the difference between bird life now
as compared with what we see of it in May that the same species are
scarcely to be recognized as such. This is peculiarly true when the
spring and autumn plumage are different, as in the case of bobolinks,
that now are flitting southward as yellow-brown reed-birds. With our
recent arrivals, as well as all-the-year-round birds, it is now a season
of fun and feasting. Life has few cares for them for months to come, and
they appreciate the fact.

It was the old story. I was seeing too much. Had I not kept in the
background, the day would have teemed with adventure, but I should have
been less of a hermit. It was hard to single out some one small bird
among a hundred. I turned from white-throats to kinglets, from
woodpeckers in the trees to chewinks on the ground, but everywhere there
was no end of bustle, if not confusion. Silent woods, indeed! No city
could have shown a busier thoroughfare than the interlocking branches of
the trees. The Stock Exchange was never noisier than when a crowd of
grakles came rushing from the outer world and settled in a little
cluster of white pines. Here seemed the opportunity of a lifetime, yet I
was puzzled to know what to do. To merely catalogue the species as they
came in view would have been absurd; to say that a flock of this or that
species was feeding in the tree tops is equally uncalled for. Would
there never come some startling incident? It came that moment. A
swift-winged hawk dashed through the trees. I fancied I felt the fanning
of his wings upon my face. But, better than all, I saw something of the
swifter tactics of threatened birds. Their darting earthward was simply,
marvelous; their clinging to the under side of branches was wonderful;
but, above all, the instantaneous recognition of danger and promptness
to find a safe shelter struck me. After all, the sense of danger was
ever present with these happy-go-lucky birds. Unless there was such a
sense controlling them their movements could not have been so
efficacious and so wholly free from confusion. Here is no loose
interpretation that profound critics love to dwell upon. One has but to
see a host of birds, and if of several species so much the better, to
recognize how busily their brains keep working that the dangers really
ever in attendance shall not rob them of all comfort.

Never shall I forget one tiny kinglet that squatted upon the blanket at
my feet. Its wings were outspread, and, looking directly up, it seemed
in utter despair; but the shadow passed as quickly as it came, and when
I innocently stooped to pick up and soothe the kinglet, it was too much
itself again, and sped away as cheerily as though nothing had happened.

“What next?” I asked after a moment’s quiet; for the kaleidoscopic
effect of ever-shifting flocks of busy birds soon became monotonous. I
longed for hawks at the rate of one every ten minutes at least; so
firmly fixed is one’s desire for adventure. But the hawks came not.
Instead, that matchless songster of sweet summer days appeared, and made
the woods ring with his sharp metallic “_click_.” How I longed for his
May-day melodies! But no, he chirped and teazed; and then, as if
ashamed, warbled a few faultless notes, and away he sped. The whole host
of finches caught the magic of that song, and every white throat
whistled at his best. Up from the woods rose a swelling volume of sweet
sound that should have bid murder pause. It only brought destruction
upon their heads again. A rush of wings, a dark streak across the sky,
and every bird was silent. But their plans varied in this. When the
danger had passed they seemed of one accord too insecure at this spot,
and left me to my meditations. Here again was a noticeable feature of
bird life. Either each group had its leader, or every individual was at
the same moment impelled by a like thought to seek safety, and all in
one direction. This is improbable, and certainly the fact of like
species flocking indicates that they find good in association and have
means of communication, for, without some sort of language, flocking
would be a source of danger. This has been shown, however, time and
again. Birds have language and an abundance of forethought, and so are
better worth study than some would have us believe.

The woods were now, for the first time, really silent. I listened for
several minutes, but could detect no sound, and was delighted at last
when the wind sprang up and rustled the dead leaves. Then a faint chirp
was heard, and a chickadee came within arm’s reach. Its busy search for
food reminded me that I had brought food with me, and I sat down to eat.
Tossing the crumbs before me, they were scrutinized by the little bird,
but not closely, and I was myself more the object of its curiosity. How
I longed for it to perch upon me! But it would not, and my opportunity
for a pretty story was lost. Birds do not like solitude. Where there is
one chickadee, rest assured another is not far off; and soon there were
two before me. And now I would that some critical know-all would tell us
the meaning of such an action as this: these chickadees came together;
they faced each other, twittered faintly in each other’s ears, then
looked directly toward me; then came nearer, and, alighting on a branch
not three feet from my head, looked down at me, twittering all the
while. Would they have done this had I been a stump? Were they not
discussing me? He who says they were not may be a “thorough naturalist,”
but he is something besides—no matter what.

And the chickadees passed by.

But the woods proved not an aviary only. I have spoken of squirrels.
There were rabbits, mice, and a stray mink, also, there, and what host
of hidden creatures, furred and feathered, we shall never know. The
heyday of the wood’s wild life, however, was well-nigh over. It was past
noon, and rest was the order of the hour. What creatures I saw moved
with great leisure, as if annoyed that they had to move at all. The mink
crept along a prostrate log as though stiff in every joint, but when at
the end of his short journey I whistled shrilly, with what animation it
stood erect and stared in the direction of the sound! How evident that
this feature of the sense of direction is well developed! Half concealed
as I was, the mink saw nothing to rouse its suspicions; it was merely
curious or puzzled; it was thinking. Here was an occurrence beyond the
range of its experience. What did it mean? The mink did not move a
muscle, but stared at me. Then I commenced whistling in a low tone, and
the animal became more excited; it moved its head from side to side, as
if in doubt, and needed but a slight demonstration upon my part to
convert this doubting into fear. I whistled more loudly, and moved my
arms. In an instant the mink disappeared. There was not in this case a
single act upon the part of the animal that differed from a timid and at
the same time inquisitive child, and however much others may demur, I
consider the mental activity the same in each.

Long before sunset the sky became clouded, the shadows in the wood were
deepened, and wild life was better heard than seen. Then the resounding
rain-drops striking the crisp leaves dulled all other sounds, and bade
me seek refuge. I had not long to search, and, without hesitation,
pushed through a jagged opening into a huge hollow maple. It is seldom
that such convenient shelters are unoccupied; certainly this one was
not.

                  Spiders in that hollow tree,
                  How they came and glared at me!
                  On trembling bridges overhead
                  To and fro in anger sped;
                  But the fear they would arouse,
                  While unbidden in their house,
                  Failed my stubborn nerves to touch,
                  Though they threatened overmuch.
                  From the moss, with glittering eye,
                  Mottled snake went gliding by;
                  With its forkéd tongue thrust out,
                  Wondered what I was about,
                  Standing in the hollow tree,
                  Wild-life’s home, this century.
                  Centipedes, uncanny forms,
                  Slimy, slippery, noisome worms,
                  From the cracks and crannies there
                  Startled each from hidden lair,
                  Crept and crawled, above, below,
                  Threatened me with direst woe
                  If I chanced to cross their path,
                  If I dared excite their wrath.
                  From a distant nook afar,
                  Gleaming like a double star,
                  Eyes of owlet, full of fire,
                  Questioned my insane desire
                  Here within the tree to stand,
                  Trespassing on wild-life’s land.
                  Why not in the outer world?
                  This the question at me hurled.
                  But I stubbornly refused
                  To be other than amused.
                  Nor till night I bent my way
                  Homeward, hermit for the day.




                              Snow-Birds.


If my memory serves me no tricks, I have never known an October without
snow-birds. This year, they appeared as early as the second day; and as
I have seen them daily since, it has been a source of wonder that they
should ever have been called “snow-birds.” Peter Kalm, writing of them
in 1749, remarks: “A small kind of birds which the Swedes call snow-bird
and the English chuck-bird, came into the houses about this time (Jan.
21). At other times they sought their food along the roads. They are
seldom seen but when it snows.” The same author, thirty pages further
on, says the English called it “snow-bird,” and the reason is that it is
only seen in winter, “when the fields are covered with snow.” This
impression, which there is no reason to believe was correct when Kalm
wrote, still prevails, and yet there is not a tittle of reason for
associating the bird with snow, as there is with the snow-bunting, an
Arctic bird that you may or may not see when the snow-storms come.

Neither Wilson nor Audubon gives any reason for such a name, and what
has been written since is of little moment. Wilson’s reference to one
phase of the bird’s habits would make the name “snow-bird” more
appropriate, but Wilson repeated ill-considered hearsay in this case,
for these birds care less about weather changes than many another. They
enjoy a foul day, whether it rains or snows, and hunt for food wherever
it is to be found. Being nearly black, of course they are very
conspicuous against a white background, and not at all so when the
ground is bare. Possibly this may have given rise to the name. Well,
this miscalled bird is now here, and has been for three weeks; and
to-day is twittering gayly over wilted asters, and so intent on
seed-hunting that I can almost reach it with my hand. It has always
seemed to me an autumn rather than a winter bird, and is one of several
that is loved because of association rather than for any marked trait of
its own. I never see them but I recall my first experience in trapping.
One December day, forty years ago, it was snowing, and I murmured that I
must remain indoors. As a recompense, I was allowed to trap. A sieve was
tilted up and rested upon a stick, to which was tied a string reaching
to the kitchen door. A few crumbs were sprinkled under the sieve. How I
watched! How quickly the stormy morning passed! The snow-birds came and
went, and at last, spying a crumb that had not been covered, a bird
hopped beneath the sieve. I pulled the string at the right moment. For
once there was a happy mortal upon earth. How impetuously I rushed out
to the sieve and, raising it, saw the frightened snow-bird fly away! Oh,
the bitterness of my grief! My bird had been fairly caught, but it would
not stay a captive. And I have had such adventures since. Painfully
often have I failed to make good my captures. A deal of labor and empty
hands at last!

But let us back to our ornithology. October 20th was a perfect day.
There were snow-birds in the gardens and the old maiden-blush apple tree
was in bloom. Nutty October and flowery May, each a delight, and here
commingled! There should have been music, but every bird was mute, and
the hyla piped his one note at long-drawn intervals.

So undemonstrative in every way, so silent save the occasional faint
twitterings, these birds of the summer-like afternoon might readily have
been passed by unnoticed; but it will not be so later. They gather
energy as the mercury falls, and when the next hoar-frost whitens the
meadows and the uplands’ weedy fields, then will they shake tall grass
and rattle the dry twigs as you approach. They are timid birds, and your
shadow or that of a hawk creates a riot in their ranks; but they find
their wits as soon as they lose them, and if you but stand quietly,
orderly, seed-hunting is promptly resumed. What, then, is their peculiar
merit, that attention should be asked to them? I am sure that I do not
know, unless it be that I love them. This is merit enough in my eyes;
and who that spent his youth in the country but recalls the birds of
winter? It may be that there was too much work to be done at other times
of the year to give heed to the summer songsters; but never in winter
were the days too short to set a rabbit trap, to follow a covey of
quails, or, less murderously inclined, to listen to the squirrel’s bark
or the chirping of the sparrows in the hedge. Seldom, indeed, are the
snow-birds alone. There are several other species of the same family
(the finches) here in the same weedy pastures, and far oftener all are
singing than that any are silent. Autumn, either early or late, is never
a dismal season. As you wander in the woods or near them, you can not
say—

                    “I walk as one
                     Who treads alone
                       Some banquet hall deserted.”

What Summer took away with her Autumn has replaced. There has been a
shifting of scenes, but the actors are as numerous as before. The round
of the seasons is a serio-comic drama with no heroes, or with every
creature one, as you happen to view it.

In midwinter, when the deep snows come—if they come at all—how
effectually the snow-birds enliven what might otherwise be a dreary
outlook! On the projecting twigs above the huge drifts they gather, and,
plunging down deeply into the snow, find seeds on many a sturdy weed
that winter winds have not cast down. Their curious antics at such a
time, so vividly described by Lockwood, make us forget that the day is
cold, and, whatever the weather, I would rather be among the birds and
see them close at hand—closer than is ever possible from my study
windows.

Perhaps snow and snow-birds is too short a list of attractions for a
winter-day outing. It is not for me; but I have never found it an
all-inclusive list. There was never a snow yet, since the days of
palæolithic man at least, that covered the tree-tops, and here the—

                 “_Chic-chicadee dee!_ saucy note
                  Out of sound heart and merry throat”

is very sure to be heard, even with the mercury below zero. It accords
well with the rippling twitter of the snow-birds, and completes the
day’s attraction, or should do so. How tiresome our northern summers
would be without a bit of winter, now and then, wherewith to contrast
them. It is strange, but true, that when the occasional rambler takes an
outing he must have a whole menagerie at his elbow or votes the woods in
winter a dismal solitude. It is seldom that our snow-birds have only the
titmouse for company. Given a blackberry thicket, and the white-throated
sparrows will be there and how gloriously they whistle! Overstaying
cat-birds, here in New Jersey, will be a surprise, and their midsummer
drawling will sound strangely coming over snow-banks; but of late it is
a feature of a winter walk. Winter, in fact, is overfull of sights and
sounds.

October to March. For five months we have had snow-birds, and none the
less a feature when the asters empurpled the hillsides than later when
the fields were snow-bound. What of them, too, as summer comes on apace?
Even above the wreckage of a wild winter, snow-birds can be cheerful.
Never so tattered and torn the rank growths of the dead year but the
snow-birds have reason to rejoice. If not at the present outlook, then
they take a peep into futurity and sing of what will be. Probably our
world looks its dreariest in March, as the darkest hour of night is just
before the dawn, but happily the gloom does not weigh upon snow-birds,
and to know how cheerfully they can sing one must hear them then. Their
whole souls are in their utterances, and when a hundred or more ring out
their gladness, March sunshine grows the brighter, the winds are
tempered, and many a yellow leaf becomes a golden blossom.




                               Blue Jays.


“What is the most characteristic feature of November?” asked a shivering
friend from town, as we stood with our backs to the rain-laden winds.
“Birds and blossoms,” I replied. Of course he thought me trifling with
him, and I asked if he expected me to say “rheumatism.”

What have birds and blossoms to do with such a dreary outlook? This was
evidently the tenor of my friend’s thought, although he said nothing
more. To him, as it was raining hard, the world was unutterably dreary,
and he longed for the crackling blaze upon the andirons which he knew
awaited us. In a few moments, as we skirted a bit of woodland, I
remarked: “Blue jays are a feature of this month. See! here are half a
dozen.” They were very tame and full of merry ways. They hunted the
leaf-strewed ground and played bo-peep among the lower branches of the
oaks. They screamed, laughed, chattered, and at times uttered that
peculiar flute-like note which sounds so strangely in the woods,
particularly when the silence of midwinter broods over all. My friend
forgot that it was a dull November day.

These dandies in their cerulean suits can do no mischief now, and I love
them for their vivacity. Their cunning shows out continually, and it
needs not the dictum of the naturalist to learn that they are cousins of
the crow. That they lived so largely upon eggs during May and June told
against them at the time, and they were then the incarnation of
fiendishness. Let the dead past bury its dead. One can not be happy who
is ever cherishing dislikes, and I find the blue jay of the present
sufficient unto November days. For my part, he is right welcome to the
woods as he finds them. While the six merry jays were before us, I
picked a violet, a bluet, and a daisy, and offered them as proof that
November blossoms were not a myth. There are, I assured my friend, more
than a score of flowers to be found by a little careful searching. What,
then, if Summer’s glory has departed; if her skies are no longer
overhead; her songs no longer fill the air; the odor of her blossoms no
longer scent the breeze; is it not a poor wheel that can not spare one
spoke? Nature is not so niggardly with her gifts in November as summer
tourists, for instance, are apt to suppose. November is comparatively
bare, it is true, and positively ragged; but it is not always safe to
judge a man by his coat.

A jay is something more than a bird with blue feathers. October 23,
1889, it snowed violently for three hours, and the ground was white.
Masses of snow, too, clung to the limp foliage that remained, and gave a
curious aspect to the wooded hillsides. It was then that the jays were
moved to unwonted activity, and I saw them at their best. The snow
puzzled them, and, being intent upon their own affairs, they paid no
heed to my proximity. “What does this mean?” was the question I fancied
each asked of his comrade, and then a dozen would attempt explanation at
the same time. Such a chattering! Although the air was thick with snow,
it did not muffle the harsh sounds—noises as distracting as cracked
sleigh-bells. A great company of these birds had been for a week in the
hillside woods, sociably inclined but not intimately associated. The
snow brought them together, and after an hour of vain discussion, as a
compact flock, they left the woods and flew in a direct line for a
cluster of cedars half a mile away. It appeared to me that some one of
these birds made the suggestion that the cedars were a better protection
than half-leaved oak woods, and all took up with it. At any rate, that
is where the birds went and remained until the snow-squall was over. Of
course, it might have been a mere coincidence, and all their chattering
mere meaningless noise, and so, to the end of the chapter; but I am not
disposed to view bird-life from such a stupid standpoint. It may suit
the “feather-splitters,” as Burroughs aptly calls them, to look upon
birds as mere conveniences for their nomenclatorial skill, but he is
happy who escapes them and seeks directly of each bird he sees to know
what thoughts well up from its little but lively brain. Now, I have
never seen, but upon this occasion, a large number of blue jays, a dozen
or more, fly in a compact flock. Here, on the home hillside, and I know
nothing of them elsewhere, they wander about during the autumn in
companies, but always in an independent manner, as if a very general
knowledge of the company’s whereabouts was quite sufficient; but to-day
such a method would have been impracticable. The air was too thick with
snow, and therefore, predetermining the direction, they gathered upon
the same tree, and then, when closer together than ever I saw red-winged
blackbirds, off they flew. To say that this simple occurrence does not
prove beyond question a wide range of mental faculties is to deny that
two and two make four. Probably the unhappy growler who descants upon
the all-essential importance of “the element of accuracy,” which no one
denies, will find this incident contrary to the officially recorded
conditions of jay life, and insist that I saw red-winged blackbirds and
mistook them.

An ornithologist once wrote to me, “Some of your birds in New Jersey
have strange ways,” but this is not true in the sense he intended. Birds
about home are simply, here as elsewhere, wide-awake, cunning, quick to
scent danger, and wise enough to suit themselves to their surroundings.
This latter fact goes far to explain many a point, for it must be
remembered that it is the country that decides the bird’s habits, and
not that the latter are a stereotyped feature of the country. The same
people may dwell among the hills and upon the sea-coast, but how
different are the mountaineer and the ’long-shore man! Concerning birds,
the difficulty lies in the fact that so many people, even naturalists,
are too little concerned with birds’ ways, and rest content with a mere
knowledge of their names. I once attended, with a prominent naturalist,
an ornithological meeting. There were a score of bird-men present, and
very soon they fell to egg-measuring! My companion fell asleep!

But what of the flock of blue jays?

They had not long to wait for clearing weather. Soon the sun shone
brilliantly, and Nature for a brief hour wore a strange garb. Many a
tree was yet green, many were brilliant with gold and crimson, and all
were flecked with masses of glistening snow. It was a splendid
spectacle, a swiftly fading pageant, that, like a glowing sunset, is
remembered long after it has passed away. And how the lively blue jays
rejoiced at the return of the sunshine! “Now for the oak woods again!” I
could hear them scream, even though so far away; and sure enough, one
after the other came trooping back to the same trees whereon they had
sported when the snow commenced. How different now was their every
movement from the time that they counseled together and took refuge in
the cedar! Now, again, they are the blue jays that every country lad
well knows; when I saw them but a short time ago, they were almost as
strangers to me. It is something to have an outing during an October
snow-storm; when the next comes, let me have blue jays again for
company.

It was two weeks later when I next saw the same birds, and under widely
different circumstances. November had accomplished much in the way of
marring the fair face of Nature. Scarcely a leaf was left upon any tree
except the oaks, and the damp mist that veils the meadows during
November was never denser, gloomier, and more forbidding than on the 8th
of the month. Long before sunrise I was out of doors, and not a bird
greeted me until I came to the creek-bank, when out from gloomy depths
came the shrill scream that of itself is hideous, but at such a time
almost musical. I tried in vain to locate the sound, but could not while
the fog lasted; but this mattered little. All other birds seemed
depressed and moody. Not a sparrow chirped until the sun made the world
a little more distinct; not even a robin, if there were any about, cared
to salute such a sunrise. It was something then to have one brave heart
making merry, and I shall long thank the jays for cheering a lonely
traveler.

An hour later, the birds thought better of the day, and every hedge-row
rang with merry music, but the pleasure of the earliest sounds I had
heard was not forgotten, when their continuing screams marred the melody
of red-birds and foxy finches. But why were they so persistently noisy,
and so confined to one spot? My curiosity was aroused and I threaded a
tangled brake to my sorrow. In a cluster of sassafras sprouts were
several jays and all intent upon an object upon the ground. I hurried
on, held back by green briers that were really my friends, and finally
reached the spot. By mere accident I escaped a serious encounter with
our most treacherous if not dangerous mammal. A skunk had caught a blue
jay and scattered its feathers far and near. The victim’s companions
were bemoaning its fate or berating the murderer, I know not which, nor
did I pause to determine. I assumed the former as more creditable to
them and so score another point in favor of these maligned birds.

What though there are violets still in the meadows, Nature is rugged
now; and, among the gnarly branches of the oaks, better the shrill cry
of the jay, as the north wind sweeps by, than the soothing melody of
summer’s tuneful thrushes. November needs all the help that she can get
to escape our malediction; and the cry of the blue jay prompts me, at
least, to be charitable.




                          The Growth of Trees.


In the spring of 1835, a considerable number of white pines were planted
about my residence. Of these fifteen are still standing, and are
apparently in full vigor. My uncle, who planted these pines, states that
they were of very uniform size, their trunks measuring about two and a
half inches in diameter. At present the smallest of the series measures
forty-three inches in circumference, four feet from the ground, and the
largest seventy-nine inches. Nine of them vary from sixty-two to
sixty-eight inches. The average circumference of the fifteen trees is
sixty-two and a half inches.

These trees were not placed at uniform distances from each other, and
some show the certain ill-effect of overcrowding. This is conspicuously
the case with three of the pines, and these have suffered. Had the
planting been done with greater reference to the future, and an equal
chance given each tree, the average circumference would have been
greater by at least three inches; the girth of the twelve largest being
sixty-five inches. As it is, including the three somewhat stunted trees,
the growth (circumferential measurement) has been sixty inches in
fifty-four years; an annual increase of one and one ninth inches.[1]

These pines stand upon a bluff, composed of compact ferruginous sand of
great depth, and are exposed to the full sweep of the western and
northern winds. In the matter of soil and exposure they have had equal
chances. It is not readily seen, if at all determinable, why more of
these trees should not have reached the maximum size, and become stately
trees, which, in a sadly deforested landscape, are commanding objects.

A year later two wild cherries were planted near the pines by the same
person. “These trees were very small,” he writes me, “as I pulled them
up with my hand and carried them to the yard, as one would a
walking-stick. Probably neither was more than an inch in diameter.”
These trees are in full vigor to-day, one measuring seventy-three inches
and the other sixty-eight in circumference. The former is fully fifty
feet in height, and the crop of fruit it bears annually is enormous.

In 1836 my grandfather found among a lot of peach-trees that he had
purchased an elm (_Ulmus Americana_) which “was a mere switch.” It was
planted in an out-of-the-way corner, and is now a splendid tree, with a
spread of branches measuring seventy feet. The circumferential
measurement, at a height of four feet from the ground, is one hundred
and three inches.

Of the oaks, cedar, and beech, of which I have many fine specimens upon
the farm, I have not been able to gather any definite data, but it would
appear that the growth is exceedingly slow, after a certain term of
years. My uncle is very positive that a black oak in the lane and a red
cedar near by have not increased materially in growth in the past
half-century. He believes the cedar to have “quite stood still,” and
this may not be so strange, for it is known to be considerably over one
hundred years old. It was a conspicuous roadside tree in 1802. It
measures but eighteen inches in diameter.

-----

Footnote 1:

  Since the above was written, one of these pines has been felled, and
  the rings of annual growth carefully counted. They are sixty in
  number, which accords with the history given above of the planting,
  now nearly fifty-five years ago. It may be well to add that, while
  each ring is distinctly defined, there are several much larger than
  the others, and a general increase of the width of the rings upon the
  southeastern side of the trunk.

-----




                   Fossil Man in the Delaware Valley.


The modest, peaceful valley of the Delaware River, from the head of
tide-water southward, is as little suggestive of the Arctic Circle, for
at least nine months of the year, as do its low and weedy banks in
summer suggest the tropics. On the contrary, every tree, shrub, sedge,
beast, bird, or fish that you see above, about, or within it is a
feature of a strictly temperate climate. Nevertheless, a dim
recollection of more stirring times still clings to it, and the year not
unfrequently opens with the river firmly ice-bound. Over its shallows
are often piled great masses of up-river ice, borne hither after a storm
by the swollen current. Often the broad and shallow channel is
effectually closed, and the river becomes, for the time being, a frozen
lake.

But the ice, of late centuries, has not been able to hold its own for
any significant length of time. The increasing warmth of the sun, and
the south winds with their accompanying rains, soon start the little
icebergs oceanward, or melt them when they are securely stranded. Except
a few scattered masses along the shady shores, the river, by April, is a
quiet, shallow, tide-water stream again.

No appreciable amount of detritus is now brought from the up-river
region by a single winter’s accumulation of ice. As the river and its
shores are to-day, so they were a century ago—perhaps for many
centuries; but the winter of our varying year is a mere puppet-show
compared with what New Jersey winters once were, and the culmination of
arctic rigors gave our Delaware Valley, in that distant day, a far
different aspect; and, with each succeeding glacial flood, more and more
sand, gravel, and great bowlders were rolled down from the rock-ribbed
valley beyond and spread upon the open plain through which the present
stream unruffled flows.

The land was somewhat depressed then, and the water flowed at a higher
level, but nothing unfavorable to man’s existence obtained in the whole
region. As a skilled geologist has pointed out, “The northern ice was
one hundred miles away, and did not prevent primitive man from
assembling about the low and hospitable shores of the miniature sea, ...
and over the bosom of the bay, little affected by tide because of its
distance from the ocean, and little disturbed by waves because of its
shoalness, palæolithic man may have floated on the simplest craft, or
even have waded in the shallow waters.” Ay! may have; but did he? What
evidence is there that that most primitive of mankind, who left such
abundant traces of his presence in the valley of many a European river,
and also in Asia and Africa, was ever likewise here in eastern North
America? It is precisely the same evidence—rude stone implements of the
simplest type, often but slightly modified cobbles merely, that were
found to be more effective by having a chipped and jagged edge, rather
than the smooth and tapering one that water-wearing produces. These same
worked stones—in other countries always of flint, but in New Jersey of
argillite, a slate-like stone that has been altered by heat, and
possesses now a conchoidal fracture—these occur in the Delaware gravels;
and the vivid pictures of glacial time, with primitive man a prominent
feature thereof, that have been given by Wright, Wilson, Haynes, McGee,
Upham, Cresson, Babbitt, and others, are doubtless familiar to all
readers of recent scientific literature.

In associating man with ancient river valleys, we are too apt to think
only of the stream, and ignore the surrounding country. Though largely
so, palæolithic man was not strictly an amphibious creature; for
instance, on each side of the ancient Delaware River extended wide
reaches of upland forest, and here, too, the rude hunter of the time
found game well worthy of his ingenuity to capture, and so powerful that
all his wit stood him well in need to escape their equally determined
efforts to capture him. While the seal and walrus disported in the
river, while fish in countless thousands stemmed its floods, while geese
and ducks in myriads rested upon the stream, so, too, in the forest
roamed the moose, the elk, the reindeer, the bison, the extinct great
beaver, and the mastodon, all of which, save the elk, had long since
left for more northern climes when European man first sighted North
America.

The association of man and the mastodon is somewhat startling to most
people; but, as has been time and again conclusively shown, it is no
unwarranted fancy. We are apt to consider the mastodon as a creature of
so distant a time in the unrecorded past, that man must necessarily have
appeared much later upon the scene. The truth is, comparatively
speaking, the creature so recently became extinct that, in all
probability, our historic Indians were acquainted with it. Certain it is
that, in the distant long ago of the great Ice age, the mastodon
existed, and equally certain that with him lived that primitive man who
fabricated the rude implements we have described. The bones of the
animal and the bones and weapons of the man lie side by side, deep down
in the gravels deposited by the floods from the melting ice-sheet. In
February, 1885, I walked to and fro over the frozen Delaware, where it
reaches a full mile in width, and saw at the time many horses and
sleighs passing from shore to shore. I recalled, as I walked, what the
geologists have recorded of the river’s history, and it was no wild whim
of the unchecked imagination to picture the Delaware as a still more
firmly frozen stream; so firmly ice-bound, indeed, that the mastodon
might pass in safety over it—not cautiously, even, but with the quick
trot of the angry elephant—and picture still further a terror-stricken
Stone-age hunter fleeing for his life.

Just as our brief yearly winter gives way to milder spring, so, as the
centuries rolled by, the mighty winter of the Ice age yielded to changes
that were slowly wrought. Century by century, the sun’s power was
exerted with more telling effect; constantly increasing areas of
northward-lying land were laid bare, and the forest followed the
retreating glacier’s steps. This great but gradual change had, of
course, its influence upon animal life, and many of the large mammals
that have been named appear to have preferred the cooler to the warmer
climate and followed the ice-sheet on its northward march.

In the unnumbered centuries during which these changes came about, man
increased in wisdom, if not in stature, and the rude implements that
characterize the lowest known form of humanity—palæolithic man of
prehistoric archæology—were gradually discarded for smaller and more
specialized ones. This change was doubtless the result of faunal changes
that required a compound instead of a simple implement, as an effective
weapon—a small spear-head attached to a shaft, instead of a sharpened
stone held in the hand; and we find now, as characteristic of conditions
geologically later than the gravel-beds, a well-designed spear-point,
larger than Indian arrow-heads, of a remarkably uniform pattern, and
which might readily be supposed to be the handiwork of the historic
Indians. But let us examine into the history of these objects a little
closely. In the first place, the conditions under which these rude
spear-points are found, as a rule, are very significant. In certain
upland fields, never far from water-courses, and which were the high,
dry, habitable localities when the later gravel areas were yet
comparatively low and swampy, these objects are found in great
abundance, and very often not associated with the familiar forms of
Indian implements. Again, they also occur in the alluvial mud which has
been for centuries, and is still, accumulating over the tide-water
meadows that skirt the banks of the Delaware River from Trenton to the
sea. Now, it may be maintained that we are without warrant in assuming
that the age or object of any given form of stone implement can be
determined by the character of the locality where it happens usually to
be found—exception, of course, being made to the palæolithic implements
of an earlier geological period. To a certain extent this is true. A
bead is none the less an ornament, whether dredged from the river-bottom
or found in an upland field; and yet how very seldom does any implement
or other relic of the Indians occur, except where we should expect to
find it! In basing any conclusions upon the characteristic features of a
locality where implements are found, it is necessary to determine if
there has been any recent general disturbance of the spot. This is
readily done usually, and the principal barrier to a logical conclusion
is removed. Long experience in archæological field-work has fully
convinced me that, in the vast majority of instances, stone implements
are practically in the same position that they were when buried, lost,
or discarded. A single specimen or many of them might mislead; but it
becomes safe to base a conclusion upon the locality, when we have the
material in such abundance as in this instance of these rude
spear-points, and find that fully eighty per cent are from the alluvial
mud of the river meadows, or such isolated upland areas as have been
described. But more significant than all else is the fact that these
simply designed spear-points are all of argillite, the same material of
which are made the rude implements found in the gravel. There is,
therefore, no break, as it were, in the sequence of events in the
occupation of the region by man—no change of race, no evidence of an
abrupt transition from one method of tool-making to that of another, but
merely an improvement that was doubtless as gradual as the change from
the epoch of glacial cold to that of our moderate climate of to-day.
What at first sight appears fatal to the views here expressed is that a
people so far advanced as to make these spear-points should have made
many other forms of stone implements; but only the former are found
deeply buried in the mud of the river. If, as is believed, the spears
were used in fishing more than for any other purpose, they alone would
be likely to be lost. Other objects in use upon their village sites
would seldom, if ever, be taken to the fishing-grounds; and, as a matter
of fact, there are found numbers of stone objects of a rude character,
usually considered of Indian origin, but which are identical with those
used, for instance, by the boreal Chukches. In Nordenskiöld’s Voyage of
the Vega is described a series of stone hammers and a stone anvil which
are in use to-day for crushing bones. Every considerable collection of
“Indian relics” gathered along our seaboard, from Maine to Maryland,
contains examples of identical objects. Of course, the Indians might
have used—indeed, did use—such hammers and anvils, but, considering all
the evidence, and not merely a part of it, it does not follow that all
hammers and anvils are of Indian origin. I have only made incidental
mention of the historic Indian, and nothing further is necessary. He
plays an important part in our early history, but his origin is yet to
be deciphered from many sources. His arrival in the river’s valley
dates, as we reckon years, long, long ago; but no evidence is as yet
forthcoming that it was prior to the valley’s practically present
physical aspect.

Let us consider these rude argillite spear-points, and the circumstances
under which they occur, a little more closely. In this magazine
(January, 1883), I based the opinion that these objects were of an
earlier and other than Indian origin, because of their occurrence in so
many localities at a depth greater than that at which jasper and quartz
arrow-heads are found. In other words, the plow unearths the Indian
relics in great quantities; but, my digging deeper, objects of argillite
are found in significant numbers. In this earlier communication to the
magazine, reference was made only to scattered objects; but now I
propose to call attention to strictly surface-found specimens, where
they have been discovered in such abundance as to plainly indicate the
former sites of camps or villages. If such localities are really
pre-Indian in origin, then it remains but to consider the fate of this
earlier people; but, before indulging in speculation, what of the facts?
The results of my labors may be summed up in a brief account of a visit
to one locality; for all subsequent and preceding visits to distant
points resulted similarly.

In two instances, collections which I studied were of such magnitude,
and had been brought together with such care, that they had a decided
bearing upon the question. The particular fields from which the great
bulk of the specimens had been taken were studied most carefully, and it
soon became evident, in each case, that the reported commingling of all
forms of stone implements was more apparent than real. The physical
geography of each locality plainly showed that for a very protracted
period these spots had been habitable and inhabited. It was evident, in
each case, that a very undulating surface had existed, through which
meandered a small stream that had long since disappeared. These areas of
hillock and dale had been densely wooded, with here and there a little
clearing; and now, for nearly two centuries, plowed over almost every
year. What, then, should we expect, presuming that the relics of two
peoples had been left upon a tract of some two hundred acres? First, the
tract was deforested, which would lead to much disturbance of the
surface soil; secondly, the stumps of the trees were uprooted, which
would lead to a greater disturbance; and, lastly, constant plowing,
exposure of a raw surface to winds and rain, and the erosion due to the
flooding of the stream that drained the tract, would result inevitably
in the moving of objects, as small as arrow-points, to considerable
distances from where they were left in Indian or pre-Indian times. It
would be strange, indeed, if any evidence of earlier and later occupancy
had withstood such vicissitudes; and yet such was the case. The highest
ground afforded ninety per cent of the specimens I was able to find, of
argillite; while in the low-lying area of the one-time stream’s tortuous
bed the argillite and jasper implements were commingled, with a
preponderance of jasper and quartz in the ratio of seven to two. It was
evident that the washing down of the higher ground and partial
obliteration of the valley had transported the argillite and mingled it
with the jasper, and not generally commingled and brought to certain
points the equally scattered objects made of these minerals. During the
summer of 1887 a very careful and intelligent observer reported to me
that, in a field not far from where I live, he had found a considerable
deposit of argillite chips, rude arrow-heads, and bits of pottery; but
that there was no trace of jasper or quartz, or indeed of any other
mineral. As I had collected Indian relics by the hundreds, in this same
field, I refrained from visiting the spot, but requested my friend to
examine the locality again with great care, and report to Prof. Putnam,
of the Peabody Museum at Cambridge, Massachusetts. What was the result?
My friend reported, briefly, that the spot was one uncovered by heavy
rains, and formed part of the bank of a brook that crossed the field
(this brook, I would state, was a considerable creek in 1680); that the
argillite chips, rude arrow-points, knives, scrapers, and bits of
pottery were found at a common level, and about fifteen inches below the
present surface of the field. Prof. Putnam, in acknowledging the receipt
of the specimens and report as to their discovery, replied that “the
pottery was of unusual interest, as it was exceedingly rude and differed
very greatly from any that Dr. Abbott had sent from the same general
neighborhood.” As the bits of pottery from this general neighborhood
that I have collected amount to hundreds of thousands, it would seem
that Prof. Putnam’s remarks have a good deal of significance.

As having a most important bearing upon this general question, it is
well to refer to the results of others’ labors in the same general
field. In an address before the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, at its Cleveland (Ohio) meeting, August, 1888, I referred to
the Lockwood collection, now at the Peabody Museum at Cambridge, Mass.
This series of ancient stone implements is one of exceeding value,
because the objects are nearly all from shell-heaps on the coast of New
Jersey. When arranging this collection, I was much impressed with the
fact that the argillite implements, of which there were many
considerable lots, were all labeled by Prof. Lockwood as having been
found alone—i. e., not associated with similar objects of jasper or
quartz; and again, that with the argillite was much very rude pottery,
that bore little resemblance to the fragments of earthenware found in
other places associated with the jasper, quartz, and chert implements.
Subsequently, Prof. Lockwood informed me that, while these various finds
did not vary in depth, they were very marked otherwise, and he did not
recall any special “find” where the commingling of the two forms
indicated that they had been in use at the same time.

Taking a hint from little brooks and the surrounding fields, let us
consider, in conclusion, the more pretentious rivers and their
surrounding uplands. Will the same results be obtained? Can we venture
to reach out from the particular to the general? These were the
questions that I frequently asked myself, and, after many a weary tramp
and toilsome digging over a wide area, I am happy to state that I
believe my efforts have been crowned with a full measure of success.
What held good in a particular field holds good of a county, and what I
now claim for the tide-water portion of the valley of the Delaware I
believe is true of a much more extended area.

In no case have I been able to find stone implements significantly
distributed over a considerable space—i. e., tracts of five hundred to a
thousand acres—except where there was, or very recently had been,
running water. The ground then to be examined was either the high land
that shut in the valley, or the valley itself, limiting that term to the
banks of the stream and the immediately adjacent meadow tracts;
exception being made where the bank of the stream was and always had
been very precipitous. In such a case the brow of the bluff would be
equivalent to the meadow or low land of a gently sloping valley.

In every such instance—and I have made or have had made many careful
examinations of river and creek valleys—the result was the same: a very
marked preponderance of argillite implements on the crests of the
uplands, and a very great excess of jasper and quartz on the
bottom-land, or that directly adjacent to the stream. From this
condition I am led to infer that, when these higher points were
occupied, the present streams maintained a uniform flow as high as the
freshet stage of these water-courses; and the fact that an Indian
village site near by will be much nearer the river or creek shows
clearly, I hold, that on a small scale the same conditions were repeated
that occurred in the gradual change from glacial to post-glacial times.
The volume of water in all our streams, comparing century with century,
is gradually lessening.

Comparing then the rude objects of argillite, specialized as they are,
with the magnificent flint-work of the historic Indians, I would
designate the former as _fossil implements_, the latter as _relics_.

To this point I feel that I have been handling facts only, and deducing
from them only logical inferences; but now looms up the natural and
ever-interesting question, Who were these people? The origin of any race
is a difficult problem to solve, but none can compare with these misty
vestiges of prehistoric humanity. It seems to me but one inference is
permissible: they who fashioned these rude argillite implements were the
descendants of palæolithic man, and his superior in so far as a
knowledge of the bow and arrow and rude pottery indicates. Beyond this,
perhaps, we can not safely venture. Prof. Haynes has recently observed,
“The palæolithic man of the river gravels at Trenton and his
argillite-using posterity the writer believes to be completely extinct.”
While this at present seems to be the generally accepted conclusion,
there is a phase of the subject that merits consideration. May not this
“argillite-using” man have been a blood-relation of existing Eskimos? To
accept the view of Prof. Haynes that “argillite” man became extinct
infers an interval of indefinite length, when man did not exist on our
central Atlantic seaboard; but if we may judge from the abundant traces
of man that have been left and of the relation as to position that these
three general forms—palæolithic, later argillite, and Indian—bear to
each other, it would appear that, in the valley of the Delaware, at
least, man has not for a day ceased to occupy the land since the first
of his kind stood upon the shores of that beautiful river.

By referring these intermediate people to the existing Eskimos, I would
not be understood as maintaining that these boreal people were directly
descended from the argillite-using folk of the Delaware Valley, but that
both were derived from palæolithic man; in other words, that with the
disappearance of glacial conditions in the Delaware Valley, and the
retirement northward of the continental ice-sheet, if such there were,
the people of that distant day followed in its tracks, and lived the
same life their ancestors had lived when northern New Jersey was as
bleak as is Greenland to-day; but that not all of this strange people
were so enamored of an arctic life, and that many remained and, with the
gradual amelioration of the climate, their descendants changed in their
habits so far as to meet the requirements of a temperate climate. This
explanation, it seems to me, best accords with known facts.

It is fitting, after a long tramp in search of human relics or remains,
still so abundantly scattered over and through the superficial soil, to
halt, at the day’s close, upon the river’s bank, and rest upon one of
the huge ice-transported bowlders that reach above the sod. From such a
point I can mark the boundary of the latest phenomenon of the valley’s
geological history, and seem to see what time the walrus and the seal
sported in the river’s icy waters; what time the mastodon, the reindeer,
and the bison tenanted the pine forests that clad the river’s banks; and
what time an almost primitive man, stealing through the primeval
forests, surprised and captured these mighty beasts—what time, lingering
by the blow-holes of the seal and walrus in the frozen river, surprised
and killed these creatures with so simple a weapon as a sharply chipped
fragment of flinty rock. And, as the centuries rolled by, and the river
itself lessened in bulk, until it but little more than filled its
present channel, there still remained along its shores the more cultured
descendants of the primitive chipper of pebbles. As a savage, so like
the modern Eskimo that he has been held to be the same, this pre-Indian
people still wrought the argillite that their ancestors were forced to
use for their palæolithic tools; and as these spear-points are being
gathered from the alluvial deposits of the more modern river, I can
recall to their accustomed haunts this long-gone people, who, ere they
gave place to the fierce Algonkin, were the peaceful tenants of this
river’s valley. Then as we gather the beautiful arrow-heads of jasper
and quartz, and pick from superficial soils grooved axes, celts,
chisels, curiously wrought pipes, strange ornaments, ceremonial objects,
and fragments of pottery, literally without number, we marvel at the
skill of those who wrought them, and faintly realize how long these
comparatively recent comers must have dwelt in this same valley, to have
accumulated such an endless store of these imperishable relics.

We rightly speak of the antiquity of the Indian, but remote as is his
arrival on the Atlantic coast, it is modern indeed, in comparison with
the antiquity of man in the same region. We can think of it, and perhaps
faintly realize it, as “time relative,” but in no wise determine it as
“time absolute.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                 INDEX.


                 Acris crepitans, 107.

                 Actæa alba, 223.

                 Almanac, Poor Richard’s, 31.

                 Alum-root, 82.

                 Anabas, 136.

                 Anacharis sp., 57.

                 Apple, wild, 23.

                 Aratus, 130.

                 Arrow-head, 149, 154.
                   Indian, flint, 186.

                 Audubon, J. J., 76.


                 Babbitt, Franc C., 262.

                 Barramunda, 118.

                 Barton, Dr. Benj. Smith, 150.

                 Bear, 168.

                 Beaver, gigantic extinct, 218, 263.

                 Beech, 23, 259.

                 Bees, 200.

                 Birch, 23.

                 Bison, 263.

                 Bittern, 55.

                 Blackbird, red-winged, 253.

                 Bluebird, 11, 228.

                 Blue-curl, 35.

                 Bluets, 35, 251.

                 Blue jay, 15, 36, 249.

                 Brown, Dr. Robert, 139.

                 Buffalo, 68.

                 Burroughs, John, 26.


                 Calla, 149.

                 Callitriche, 57.

                 Carp, 214.

                 Carrion-flower, 172.

                 Cassin, John, 89.

                 Cat-bird, 7, 56, 248.

                 Cedar, 259.

                 Cherry, wild, 258.

                 “Chess,” 225.

                 Chestnut, 23, 184.

                 Chickadee, 2, 11.

                 Chickweed, 56, 82.

                 Chinkapin, 235.

                 Chipmunk, 235.

                 Chukches, 267.

                 Cicely, sweet, 218.

                 Claytonia, 39.

                 Clear-winged sphinx, 201.

                 Clifford, Kingdon, 204.

                 Columbine, 82.

                 Corydalis, 56, 82.

                 Cray-fish, 212.

                 Cresson, Hilborne T., 262.

                 Cricket, 177.

                 Crosswicks Creek, 130.
                   meadows, 68.

                 Crow, 1, 16, 23, 88, 226.

                 Cumming, Gordon, 211.


                 Daffodil, 82, 87.

                 Daisy, 251.

                 Daldorf, 135.

                 Dandelion, 8, 35, 82, 85.

                 Dead-nettle, 82.

                 Deer, 67.

                 Delaware River, 56, 67, 150, 154, 260.

                 Dew, 227.

                 Divining-rods, 165.

                 Dragon-flies, 52, 180.


                 Earth-worm, 117.

                 Elk, 67, 263.

                 Elm, 259.

                 Emerson, R. W., 152.

                 Equisetum, 149.


                 Florida, water-lily of, 153.

                 Fontinalis, 58.

                 Forget-me-not, 56.

                 Fox, 100.

                 Frankincense, 218.

                 Frog, 6, 37, 212.

                 Frost, 227.


                 Garman, Dr. S., 107.

                 Golden-club, 122, 149, 152.

                 Gossamer, 228.

                 Grasshopper, 208.

                 Gray, Dr. Asa, 150.

                 Green-brier, 7.

                 Grosbeak, rose-breasted, 47.

                 Gunther, Dr. Albert, 118, 136.

                 Gyrinus, 25.


                 Hawk, 239.

                 Haynes, Henry W., 262, 275.

                 Heron, great blue, 55.
                   night, 177, 212.

                 Hopatcong, Lake, 125.

                 Humming-bird, 202.

                 Hunger-plant, 82.

                 Hyla Pickeringii, 108.

                 Hylodes, 24, 105.

                 Hypnum, 58.

                 Hyssop, giant, 82.


                 Indians, Delaware, 123.
                   Osage, 150.

                 Iris, 174.


                 Kalm, Dr. Peter, 107, 151, 243.

                 King-bird, 200.

                 Kinglet, 238.


                 Lark, meadow, 36, 61.

                 Lepidosiren, 119.

                 Lily, water, 153, 160, 208, 209.

                 Liquidambar, 23.

                 Lizard-tail, 198.

                 Locust, 198.

                 Lotus, American, 149.
                   Egyptian, 156.


                 Man, fossil, 260.

                 Mastodon, 218, 263.

                 McGee, W. J., 262.

                 Meadow-rue, 198.

                 Mink, 176, 211, 241.

                 Minnow, clear-water, 70, 178.
                   mud, 24, 118, 214.
                   silvery, 54.

                 Mitrewort, false, 82.

                 Mole-cricket, 125.

                 Moose, 67.

                 Motherwort, 82.

                 Mouse, deer, 87.
                   house, 47, 208.
                   meadow, 3, 21, 87, 175, 228.

                 Muhlenberg tortoise, 121.

                 Musk-rat, 37, 176, 210.


                 Niagara River, 79.

                 Nordenskiöld, A. E., 267.

                 Norris, Isaac, 14.

                 Nuthatch, 13, 27, 54.

                 Nuttall, Thomas, 150.


                 Oak, 22, 259.

                 Ontario, Lake, 221.

                 Opossum, 101.

                 Owl, screech, 110, 234.


                 Peabody-bird, 3.

                 Pennyroyal, 215.

                 Penstemon hirsutus, 174.

                 Phlox maculata, 174.

                 Pickerel, 178.

                 Pickerel-weed, 154.

                 Pine finch, 13.

                 Pine, white, 257.

                 Purple finch, 3, 9.

                 Putnam, F. W., 271.


                 Raccoon, 101.

                 Raccoon, N. J. See Swedesboro.

                 Rafflesiaceæ, 175.

                 Rafinesque, C. S., 150.

                 Rail, king, 71.

                 Red-bird, 36.

                 Reindeer, 67, 263.

                 Rice, wild, 149.

                 Riley, Dr. C. V., 125.

                 Robin, 11.

                 Rose of Sharon, 160.

                 Rose, wild, 198.


                 Salamander, 24, 52.

                 Sandpiper, 212.

                 Seal, 263.

                 Seeley, H. G., Prof., 180.

                 Self-heal, 82.

                 Shell-heap, Indian, 61.

                 Sierra Leone, water-lily of, 153.

                 Skunk, 18, 256.

                 Skunk-cabbage, 56.

                 Snake, garter, 176.
                   water, 213.

                 Snipe, 212.

                 Snow-bird, 243.

                 Sparrow, field, 200, 208.
                   fox-, 3, 19, 36.
                   house (English), 11, 19.
                   song, 11, 28, 36, 228.
                   tree, 10, 235.
                   white-crowned, 9.
                   white-throated, 19, 235, 248.

                 Spider, 228.

                 Spring-beauty, 8, 82.

                 Splatter-dock, 149, 154.

                 Squirrel, 211.

                 Star of Bethlehem, 82.

                 St.-John’s-wort, 198.

                 Sumach, 198, 225.

                 Swallow, barn, 47, 209.

                 Swedesboro, N. J., 151.


                 Thistle-bird, 11.

                 Thoreau, H. D., 26, 66, 152.

                 Tit, crested, 13.

                 Titlark, 10.

                 Titmouse, black-capped, 235.

                 Toronto, Ontario, 221.

                 Torrey, Bradford, 35.

                 Tree-creeper, 27.

                 Tree-toad, 39.

                 Tulip-tree, 39.

                 Turtle, 25, 53, 176.

                 Typha angustifolia, 175.


                 Upham, Warren, 262.


                 Victoria regia, 152.

                 Violet, 8, 35, 38, 82, 251.

                 Vireo, red-eyed, 144.


                 Walrus, 263.

                 Warbler, yellow red-polled, 104.

                 Water-boatman, 57.

                 Water-lily, 153.

                 Water-moss, 58.

                 Water-starwort, 57.

                 Water-weed, 57.

                 Weasel, 92.

                 Whip-poor-will, 177.

                 Wild-cat, 100.

                 Willow, 225.

                 Wilson, Alexander, 76.

                 Wilson, Thomas, 260.

                 Woodcock, 109.

                 Woodpecker, 235.

                 Wood-pee-wee, 200.

                 Wren, Carolina, 11.
                   house, 40.
                   marsh, 175.
                   winter, 9, 19.

                 Wright, Geo. Frederick, 262.


                 Xerophyllum asphodeloides, 163.


                 Yarrow, 198.

                 Yellow-throat, Maryland, 175.


                 Zanzibar, water-lily of, 153.


                                THE END.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

                          Transcriber’s note:

    Page vii, comma changed to full stop, “and sound-hearing.”

    Page 10, comma changed to full stop, “dignity of a bird’s song.”

    Page 12, comma changed to full stop, “not always so unsociable.”

    Page 18, comma changed to full stop, “So, too, with our birds.”

    Page 23, ‘liquid-ambar’ changed to ‘liquidambar,’ “liquidambar and
    you are”

    Page 23, ‘arrowheads’ changed to ‘arrow-heads,’ “few flint
    arrow-heads”

    Page 25, comma changed to full stop, “the rambler. Call it”

    Page 31, ‘occurence’ changed to ‘occurrence,’ “attractive occurrence
    to young ears.”

    Page 39, comma changed to full stop, “of the sanctum. There”

    Page 40, comma changed to full stop, “and sunny. There is”

    Page 41, ‘rambing’ changed to ‘rambling,’ “playground of my rambling
    life.”

    Page 51, ‘wood path’ changed to ‘wood-path,’ “follow a wood-path
    over”

    Page 59, full stop added after ‘winter,’ “about the springs in
    winter.”

    Page 63, ‘harvent’ changed to ‘harvest,’ “a richer harvest”

    Page 64, ‘sec-’ changed to ‘second,’ “Later a second and a third”

    Page 70, ‘humpbacked’ changed to ‘hump-backed,’ “when the
    hump-backed minnow leaped”

    Page 72, comma changed to full stop, “be in vain. It”

    Page 75, ‘lifelong’ changed to ‘life-long,’ “a life-long source of”

    Page 78, ‘ocurrence’ changed to ‘occurrence,’ “that an occurrence
    may be very rare,”

    Page 81, ‘unsucessful’ changed to ‘unsuccessful,’ “may be
    unsuccessful, but”

    Page 82, ‘chick-weed’ changed to ‘chickweed,’ “chickweed, spring
    beauties,”

    Page 82, ‘spring-tide’ changed to ‘springtide,’ “a springtide
    landscape,”

    Page 83, ‘roll’ changed to ‘role,’ “assume the role of historian.”

    Page 84, ‘play-ground’ changed to ‘playground,’ “the common
    playground of”

    Page 90, full stop added after ‘unknown,’ “land unknown. But as the”

    Page 91, comma changed to full stop, “the outer world. Among the”

    Page 96, ‘age’ changed to ‘ago,’ “forty years ago; but”

    Page 96, ‘thrashing’ changed to ‘threshing,’ “the threshing is
    over.”

    Page 101, comma changed to full stop, “the sea-coast. But it has”

    Page 102, comma changed to full stop, “mass. My aunt proved”

    Page 103, ‘snowbird’ changed to ‘snow-bird,’ “a snow-bird isn’t a”

    Page 107, second ‘their’ struck, “hence their name in zoölogy”

    Page 107, comma changed to full stop, “and so it was. At last one”

    Page 108, comma changed to full stop, “in size. As I was”

    Page 119, full stop changed to comma, “on land, or at least on”

    Page 128, comma changed to full stop, “at full gallop. Only the”

    Page 128, comma changed to full stop, “was discussed. So, at least,”

    Page 129, comma changed to full stop, “and rain. It is painful”

    Page 144, comma changed to full stop, “very sure. The old homestead”

    Page 146, comma changed to full stop, “A word more. If people,”

    Page 149, ‘door-yard’ changed to ‘dooryard,’ “of my dooryard.”

    Page 152, ‘Swedesborough’ changed to ‘Swedesboro,’ “Raccoon, now
    Swedesboro;”

    Page 165, comma changed to full stop, “of metal. As the field”

    Page 166, comma changed to full stop, “unaccountably low. Evidently
    there were”

    Page 166, comma changed to full stop, “to the present. There still”

    Page 173, full stop struck after ‘closely,’ “have closely
    intertwined.”

    Page 173, comma changed to full stop, “to wigwam-building. Had
    ever,”

    Page 180, comma changed to full stop, “degree of intelligence.”

    Page 182, full stop changed to comma, “the upper hand, and at such”

    Page 182, ‘play-ground’ changed to ‘playground,’ “this was my
    playground,”

    Page 193, semicolon inserted after ‘so,’ “Perhaps so; I neither
    know”

    Page 195, ‘gaudy it,’ changed to ‘gaudy, it,’ “ever so gaudy, it can
    not”

    Page 209, ‘on-looker’ changed to ‘onlooker,’ “the onlooker will see”

    Page 228, ‘day-break’ changed to ‘daybreak,’ “aloft at daybreak.”

    Page 228, ‘sun-light’ changed to ‘sunlight,’ “as the sunlight sweeps
    across”

    Page 242, ‘raindrops’ changed to ‘rain-drops,’ “resounding
    rain-drops striking”

    Page 249, ‘snowbound’ changed to ‘snow-bound,’ “the fields were
    snow-bound.”

    Page 259, comma changed to full stop, “annually is enormous.”

    Page 259, ‘road-side’ changed to ‘roadside,’ “conspicuous roadside
    tree”

    Page 267, ‘o’ changed to ‘to,’ “tool-making to that of”

    Page 275, ‘intermmediate’ changed to ‘intermediate,’ “these
    intermediate people”

    Page 281, ‘St. John’s-wort’ changed to ‘St.-John’s-wort,’
    “St.-John’s-wort, 198.”

    Page 282, ‘Wood peewee’ changed to ‘Wood-pee-wee,’ “Wood-pee-wee,
    200.”





End of Project Gutenberg's Outings At Odd Times, by Charles Conrad Abbott

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