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Title: In New England Fields and Woods
Author: Robinson, Rowland E. (Evans), 1833-1900
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "In New England Fields and Woods" ***


        By Rowland E. Robinson

        OUT OF BONDAGE. 16mo, $1.25.

        IN NEW ENGLAND FIELDS AND WOODS. 16mo, $1.25.

        DANVIS FOLKS. A Novel. 16mo. $1.25.

        UNCLE 'LISHA'S OUTING. 16mo, $1.25.

        A DANVIS PIONEER. 16mo, $1.25.

        SAM LOVEL'S BOY. 16mo, $1.25.

        VERMONT: A Study of Independence. In American
                 Commonwealths Series. With Map.
                 16mo, gilt top, $1.25.

        HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & COMPANY,
        BOSTON AND NEW YORK.



    In New England Fields and Woods


    By Rowland E. Robinson


    _Boston and New York_
    Houghton, Mifflin and Company
    The Riverside Press, Cambridge

    Copyright, 1896,
    BY ROWLAND E. ROBINSON.

    _All rights reserved._


    TO THE MEMORY OF MY MOTHER

    THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED


    The weather and the changes of the seasons are such common and
    convenient topics that one need not apologize for talking about
    them, though he says nothing new.

    Still less need one make an apology if he becomes garrulous in
    relation to scenes which are now hidden from him by a curtain of
    darkness, or concerning some humble acquaintances with whom he
    was once on familiar terms, but who now and hereafter can only
    be memories, though they are yet near him and he may still hear
    their voices.

    So without excuse I offer this collection of sketches, which
    with a few exceptions were first published in the columns of
    "Forest and Stream."
                                                              R. E. R.



             CONTENTS


          I. THE NAMELESS SEASON
         II. MARCH DAYS
        III. THE HOME FIRESIDE
         IV. THE CROW
          V. THE MINK
         VI. APRIL DAYS
        VII. THE WOODCHUCK
       VIII. THE CHIPMUNK
         IX. SPRING SHOOTING
          X. THE GARTER-SNAKE
         XI. THE TOAD
        XII. MAY DAYS
       XIII. THE BOBOLINK
        XIV. THE GOLDEN-WINGED WOODPECKER
         XV. JUNE DAYS
        XVI. THE BULLFROG
       XVII. THE ANGLER
      XVIII. FARMERS AND FIELD SPORTS
        XIX. TO A TRESPASS SIGN
         XX. A GENTLE SPORTSMAN
        XXI. JULY DAYS
       XXII. CAMPING OUT
      XXIII. THE CAMP-FIRE
       XXIV. A RAINY DAY IN CAMP
        XXV. AUGUST DAYS
       XXVI. A VOYAGE IN THE DARK
      XXVII. THE SUMMER CAMP-FIRE
     XXVIII. THE RACCOON
       XXIX. THE RELUCTANT CAMP-FIRE
        XXX. SEPTEMBER DAYS
       XXXI. A PLEA FOR THE UNPROTECTED
      XXXII. THE SKUNK
     XXXIII. A CAMP-FIRE RUN WILD
      XXXIV. THE DEAD CAMP-FIRE
       XXXV. OCTOBER DAYS
      XXXVI. A COMMON EXPERIENCE
     XXXVII. THE RED SQUIRREL
    XXXVIII. THE RUFFED GROUSE
      XXXIX. TWO SHOTS
         XL. NOVEMBER DAYS
        XLI. THE MUSKRAT
       XLII. NOVEMBER VOICES
      XLIII. THANKSGIVING
       XLIV. DECEMBER DAYS
        XLV. WINTER VOICES
       XLVI. THE VARYING HARE
      XLVII. THE WINTER CAMP-FIRE
     XLVIII. JANUARY DAYS
       XLIX. A NEW ENGLAND WOODPILE
          L. A CENTURY OF EXTERMINATION
         LI. THE PERSISTENCY OF PESTS
        LII. THE WEASEL
       LIII. FEBRUARY DAYS
        LIV. THE FOX
         LV. AN ICE-STORM
        LVI. SPARE THE TREES
       LVII. THE CHICKADEE



IN NEW ENGLAND FIELDS AND WOODS



I

THE NAMELESS SEASON


In the March page of our almanac, opposite the 20th of the month we find
the bold assertion, "Now spring begins;" but in the northern part of New
England, for which this almanac was especially compiled, the weather
does not bear out the statement.

The snow may be gone from the fields except in grimy drifts, in hollows
and along fences and woodsides; but there is scarcely a sign of spring
in the nakedness of pasture, meadow, and ploughed land, now more dreary
in the dun desolation of lifeless grass, débris of stacks, and black
furrows than when the first snow covered the lingering greenness of
December.

It is quite as likely that the open lands are still under the worn and
dusty blanket of snow, smirched with all the litter cast upon it by
cross-lot-faring teams, and wintry winds blowing for months from every
quarter. The same untidiness pervades all outdoors. We could never
believe that so many odds and ends could have been thrown out of doors
helter-skelter, in three months of ordinary life, till the proof
confronts us on the surface of the subsiding snow or lies stranded on
the bare earth. The wind comes with an icier breath from the wintrier
north, and yet blows untempered from the south, over fields by turns
frozen and sodden, through which the swollen brooks rush in yellow
torrents with sullen monotonous complaint.

One may get more comfort in the woods, though the snow still lies deep
in their shelter; for here may be found the sugar-maker's camp, with its
mixed odors of pungent smoke and saccharine steam, its wide environment
of dripping spouts and tinkling tin buckets, signs that at last the
pulse of the trees is stirred by a subtle promise of returning spring.

The coarse-grained snow is strewn thickly with shards of bark that the
trees have sloughed in their long hibernation, with shreds and tatters
of their tempest-torn branches. But all this litter does not offend the
eye nor look out of place, like that which is scattered in fields and
about homesteads. When this three months' downfall of fragments sinks to
the carpet of flattened leaves, it will be at one with it, an inwoven
pattern, as comely as the shifting mesh of browner shadows that trunks
and branches weave between the splashes of sunshine. Among these is a
garnishment of green moss patches and fronds of perennial ferns which
tell of life that the stress of winter could not overcome. One may
discover, amid the purple lobes of the squirrelcup leaves, downy buds
that promise blossoms, and others, callower, but of like promise, under
the rusty links of the arbutus chain.

One hears the resonant call of a woodpecker rattled out on a seasoned
branch or hollow stub, and may catch the muffled beat of the partridge's
drum, silent since the dreamy days of Indian summer, now throbbing
again in slow and accelerated pulsations of evasive sound through the
unroofed arches of the woodlands. And one may hear, wondering where the
poor vagrants find food and water, the wild clangor of the geese
trumpeting their aerial northward march, and the quick whistle of the
wild duck's pinions,--hear the carol of an untimely bluebird and the
disconsolate yelp of a robin; but yet it is not spring.

Presently comes a great downfall of snow, making the earth beautiful
again with a whiteness outshining that of the winter that is past. The
damp flakes cling to every surface, and clothe wall, fence and tree,
field and forest, with a more radiant mantle than the dusty snow and
slanted sunshine of winter gave them.

There is nothing hopeful of spring but a few meagre signs, and the
tradition that spring has always come heretofore.

It is not winter, it is not spring, but a season with an individuality
as marked as either, yet without a name.



II

MARCH DAYS


Back and forth across the land, in swift and sudden alternation, the
March winds toss days of bitter cold and days of genial warmth, now out
of the eternal winter of the north, now from the endless summer of the
tropics.

Repeated thawing and freezing has given the snow a coarse grain. It is
like a mass of fine hailstones and with no hint of the soft and feathery
flakes that wavered down like white blossoms shed from the unseen bloom
of some far-off upper world and that silently transformed the
unseemliness of the black and tawny earth into the beauty of immaculate
purity.

One day, when the wind breathes from the south a continuous breath of
warmth, your feet sink into this later coarseness come of its base
earthly association, with a grinding slump, as in loose wet sand, so
deep, perhaps, that your tracks are gray puddles, marking your toilsome
way.

As you wallow on, or perch for a moment's rest on a naked fence-top
among the smirched drifts, you envy the crows faring so easily along
their aerial paths above you. How pleasant are the voices of these
returning exiles, not enemies now, but friendly messengers, bringing
tidings of spring. You do not begrudge them the meagre feasts they find,
the frozen apple still hanging, brown and wrinkled, in the bare orchard,
or the winter-killed youngling of flock or herd, cast forth upon a
dunghill, and which discovered, one generous vagabond calls all his
black comrades to partake of.

Watching them as they lag across the sky, yet swifter than the white
clouds drift above them, you presently note that these stand still, as
you may verify by their blue shadows on the snow, lying motionless, with
the palpitating shadows of the crows plunging into them on this side,
then, lost for an instant in the blue obscurity, then, emerging on that
side with the same untiring beat of shadowy wings. A puff of wind comes
out of the north, followed by an angry gust, and then a howling wintry
blast that the crows stagger against in labored flight as they make for
the shelter of the woods.

You, too, toil to shelter and fireside warmth, and are thankful to be
out of the biting wind and the treacherous footing. The change has come
so suddenly that the moist, grainy snow is frozen before it has time to
leach, and in a little while gives you a surface most delightful to walk
upon, and shortens distances to half what they were. It has lost its
first pure whiteness wherewith no other whiteness can compare, but it is
yet beyond all things else, and in the sunlight dazzles you with a broad
glare and innumerable scintillating points of light, as intense as the
sun itself.

The sunshine, the bracing air, the swaying boughs of the pines and
hemlocks beckoning at the woodside, and the firm smooth footing,
irresistibly invite you forth. Your feet devour the way with crisp
bites, and you think that nothing could be more pleasant to them till
you are offered a few yards of turf, laid bare by winds and sun, and
then you realize that nothing is quite so good as the old stand-by, a
naked ground, and crave more of it, even as this is, and hunger for it
with its later garnishing of grass and flowers. The crows, too, are
drawn to these bare patches and are busy upon them, and you wonder what
they can find; spiders, perhaps, for these you may see in thawy days
crawling sluggishly over the snow, where they must have come from the
earth.

The woods are astir with more life than a month ago. The squirrels are
busy and noisy, the chickadees throng about you, sometimes singing their
sweet brief song of three notes; the nuthatches pipe their tiny trumpets
in full orchestra, and the jays are clamoring their ordinary familiar
cries with occasional notes that you do not often hear. One of these is
a soft, rapidly uttered cluck, the bird all the time dancing with his
body, but not with his feet, to his own music, which is pleasant to the
ear, especially when you remember it is a jay's music, which in the main
cannot be recommended. To-day, doubtless, he is practicing the
allurements of the mating season.

You hear the loud cackle of a logcock making the daily round of his
preserves, but you are not likely to get more than a glimpse of his
black plumage or a gleam of his blood-red crest.

By rare luck you may hear the little Acadian owl filing his invisible
saw, but you are likelier to see him and mistake him for a clot of last
year's leaves lodged midway in their fall to earth.

The forest floor, barred and netted with blue shadows of trunks and
branches, is strewn with dry twigs, evergreen leaves, shards of bark,
and shreds of tree-moss and lichen, with heaps of cone scales,--the
squirrel's kitchen middens,--the sign of a partridge's nightly roosting,
similar traces of the hare's moonlight wanderings, and perhaps a fluff
of his white fur, showing where his journeys have ended forever in a
fox's maw.

Here and there the top of a cradle knoll crops out of the snow with its
patches of green moss, sturdy upright stems and leaves and red berries
of wintergreen, as fresh as when the first snow covered them, a rusty
trail of mayflower leaves, and the flat-pressed purple lobes of
squirrelcup with a downy heart of buds full of the promise of spring.

The woods are filled with a certain subtle scent quite distinct from the
very apparent resinous and balsamic aroma of the evergreens, that eludes
description, but as a kind of freshness that tickles the nose with
longing for a more generous waft of it. You can trace it to no source,
as you can the odors of the pine and the hemlocks or the sweet fragrance
of the boiling sap, coming from the sugar-maker's camp with a pungent
mixture of wood-smoke. You are also made aware that the skunk has been
abroad, that reynard is somewhere to windward, and by an undescribed,
generally unrecognized, pungency in the air that a gray squirrel lives
in your neighborhood. Yet among all these more potent odors you still
discover this subtle exhalation, perhaps of the earth filtered upward
through the snow, perhaps the first awakening breath of all the
deciduous trees.

Warmer shines the sun and warmer blows the wind from southern seas and
southern lands. More and more the tawny earth comes in sight among
puddles of melted snow, which bring the mirrored sky and its fleecy
flocks of clouds, with treetops turned topsy-turvy, down into the bounds
of fields. The brooks are alive again and babbling noisily over their
pebbled beds, and the lake, hearing them, groans and cries for
deliverance from its prison of ice.

On the marshes you may find the ice shrunken from the shores and an
intervening strip of water where the muskrat may see the sun and the
stars again. You hear the trumpets of the wild geese and see the gray
battalion riding northward on the swift wind.

The sun and the south wind, which perhaps bears some faint breath of
stolen fragrance from far-off violet banks, tempt forth the bees, but
they find no flowers yet, not even a squirrelcup or willow catkin, and
can only make the most of the fresh sawdust by the wood-pile and the
sappy ends of maple logs.

Down from the sky, whose livery he wears and whose song he sings, comes
the heavenly carol of the bluebird; the song sparrow trills his cheery
melody; the first robin is announced to-day, and we cry, "Lo, spring has
come." But to-morrow may come winter and longer waiting.



III

THE HOME FIRESIDE


Weeks ago the camp-fire shed its last glow in the deserted camp, its
last thin thread of smoke was spun out and vanished in the silent air,
and black brands and gray ashes were covered in the even whiteness of
the snow. The unscared fox prowls above them in curious exploration of
the desolate shanty, where wood-mice are domiciled and to whose sunny
side the partridge comes to bask; the woodpecker taps unbidden to enter
or departs from the always open door; and under the stars that glitter
through the net of branches the owl perches on the snowy ridge and mopes
in undisturbed solemnity.

For a time, camping-days are over for the sportsman, and continue only
for the lumberman, the trapper, and the merciless crust-hunter, who
makes his secret lair in the depths of the forest. In the chill days
and evenings that fall first in the interim between winter and summer
camping, the man who makes his outings for sport and pleasure must
content himself by his own fireside, whose constant flame burns
throughout the year.

Well may he be content when the untempered winds of March howl like a
legion of wolves at his door, snow and sleet pelt roof and pane with a
continuous volley from the lowering sky, or when the chilly silence of
the last winter nights is broken by the sharp crack of frozen trees and
timbers, as if a hidden band of riflemen were besieging the house. Well
may he be content, then, with the snug corner of his own hearthstone,
around which are gathered the good wife, the children, and his camp
companions, the dogs.

Better than the camp, is this cosy comfort in days and nights such as
these, or in those that fall within that unnamed season that lies
between winter and spring, when, if one stirs abroad, his feet have
sorry choice between saturated snow and oozy mould,--a dismal season
but for its promise of brighter days, of free streams, green trees, and
bird songs.

Better, now, this genial glow that warms one's marrow than the camp-fire
that smokes or roasts one's front while his back freezes. With what
perfect contentment one mends his tackle and cleans his gun for coming
days of sport, while the good wife reads racy records of camp-life from
Maine to California, and he listens with attention half diverted by
break or rust spot, or with amused watching of the youngsters playing at
camping out. The callow campers assail him with demands for stories, and
he goes over, for their and his own enjoyment, old experiences in camp
and field, while the dogs dream by the fire of sport past or to
come,--for none but dogs know whether dog's dreams run backward or
forward.

Long-used rod and gun suggest many a tale of past adventure as they
bring to mind recollections of days of sport such as may never come
again. The great logs in the fireplace might tell, if their flaming
tongues were given speech, of camps made long ago beneath their lusty
branches, and of such noble game as we shall never see,--moose, elk,
deer, panther, wolf, and bear, which are but spectres in the shadowy
forest of the past. But the red tongues only roar and hiss as they lick
the crackling sinews of oak and hickory, and tell nothing that ordinary
ears may catch. Yet one is apt to fall dreaming of bygone days, and then
of days that may come to be spent by pleasant summer waters and in the
woods gorgeous with the ripeness of autumn.

So one is like to dream till he awakens and finds himself left with only
the dogs for comrades, before the flameless embers, deserted even by the
shadows that erstwhile played their grotesque pranks behind him. Cover
the coals as if they were to kindle to-morrow's camp-fire, put the
yawning dogs to bed, and then to bed and further dreaming.



IV

THE CROW


The robin's impatient yelp not yet attuned to happy song, the song
sparrow's trill, the bluebird's serene melody, do not herald the coming
of spring, but attend its vanguard. These blithe musicians accompany the
soft air that bares the fields, empurples the buds, and fans the bloom
of the first squirrelcups and sets the hyla's shrill chime a-ringing.

Preceding these, while the fields are yet an unbroken whiteness and the
coping of the drifts maintain the fantastic grace of their storm-built
shapes, before a recognized waft of spring is felt or the voice of a
freed stream is heard, comes that sable pursuivant, the crow, fighting
his way against the fierce north wind, tossed alow and aloft, buffeted
to this side and that, yet staggering bravely onward, and sounding his
trumpet in the face of his raging antagonist, and far in advance of its
banners, proclaiming spring.

It is the first audible promise of the longed-for season, and it
heartens us, though there be weary days of waiting for its fulfillment,
while the bold herald is beset by storm and pinched with hunger as he
holds his outpost and gleans his scant rations in the winter-desolated
land.

He finds some friendliness in nature even now. Though her forces assail
him with relentless fury, she gives him here the shelter of her
evergreen tents, in windless depths of woodland; bares for him there a
rood of sward or stubble whereon to find some crumb of comfort; leaves
for him ungathered apples on the naked boughs, and on the unpruned
tangles of vines wild grapes,--poor raisins of the frost,--the remnants
of autumnal feasts of the robins and partridges.

Thankful now for such meagre fare and eager for the fullness of
disgusting repasts, in the bounty of other seasons, he becomes an
epicure whom only the choicest food will satisfy. He has the pick of
the fattest grubs; he makes stealthy levies on the earliest robins'
nests; and from some lofty lookout or aerial scout watches the farmer
plant the corn and awaits its sprouting into the dainty tidbits, a
fondness for whose sweetness is his overmastering weakness. For this he
braves the terrible scarecrow and the dread mystery of the cornfield's
lined boundary, for this risks life and forfeits the good name that his
better deeds might give him. If he would not be tempted from grubs and
carrion, what a worthy bird he might be accounted. In what good if
humble repute might he live, how lamented, die. O Appetite! thou base
belly-denned demon, for what sins of birds and men art thou accountable!

In the springtide days, the crow turns aside from theft and robbery to
the softer game of love, whereunto you hear the harsh voice attuned in
cluttering notes. After the wooing the pair begin house building and
keeping.

It is the rudest and clumsiest of all bird architecture that has become
the centre of their cares--such a jumble of sticks and twigs as chance
might pile on its forked foundations; but woe betide the hawk who
ventures near, or owl who dares to sound his hollow trumpet in the
sacred precincts. At the first alarm signal, as suddenly and
mysteriously as Robin Hood's merry men appeared at the winding of his
horn, the black clansmen rally from every quarter of the greenwood, to
assail the intruder and force him to ignominious retreat.

When at last the young crows, having clad their uncouth nakedness with
full sable raiment, are abroad in the world, they, with unwary
foolhardiness and incessant querulous cries of hunger or alarm, are
still a constant source of anxiety to parents and kindred. But in the
late summer, when the youngsters have come to months of discretion and
the elders are freed from the bondage of their care, a long holiday
begins for all the tribe. The corn has long since ceased to tempt them,
and the persecution of man has abated. The shorn meadows and the
close-cropped pastures swarm with grasshoppers, and field and forest
offer their abundant fruits.

Careless and uncared for, what happy lives they lead, sauntering on
sagging wing through the sunshine from chosen field to chosen wood, and
at nightfall encamping in the fragrant tents of the pines.

At last the gay banners of autumn signal departure, and the gathered
clans file away in straggling columns, flecking the blue sky with
pulsating dots of blackness, the green earth with wavering shadows.
Sadly we watch the retreat of the sable cohorts, whose desertion leaves
our northern homes to the desolation of winter.



V

THE MINK


This little fur-bearer, whose color has been painted darker than it is,
singularly making his name proverbial for blackness, is an old
acquaintance of the angler and the sportsman, but not so familiar to
them and the country boy as it was twoscore years ago.

It was a woeful day for the tribe of the mink when it became the fashion
for other folk to wear his coat, which he could only doff with the
subtler garment of life.

Throughout the term of his exaltation to the favor of fashion, he was
lain in wait for at his own door and on his thoroughfares and by-paths
by the traps, dead-falls, and guns of professional and amateur trappers
and hunters, till the fate of his greater cousin the otter seemed to
overtake him. But the fickle empress who raised him to such perilous
estate, changing her mood, thrust him down almost to his old ignoble but
safer rank, just in time to avert the impending doom of extermination.
Once more the places that knew him of old, know him again.

In the March snow you may trace the long span of his parallel footprints
where, hot with the rekindled annual fire of love, he has sped on his
errant wooing, turning not aside for the most tempting bait, halting not
for rest, hungering only for a sweetheart, wearied with nothing but
loneliness. Yet weary enough would you be if you attempted to follow the
track of but one night's wandering along the winding brook, through the
tangle of windfalls, and across the rugged ledges that part stream from
stream. When you go fishing in the first days of summer, you may see the
fruits of this early springtide wooing in the dusky brood taking their
primer-lesson in the art that their primogenitors were adepts in before
yours learned it. How proud one baby fisher is of his first captured
minnow, how he gloats over it and defends his prize from his envious
and less fortunate brothers.

When summer wanes, they will be a scattered family, each member shifting
for himself. Some still haunt the alder thicket where they first saw
light, whose netted shadows of bare branches have thickened about them
to continued shade of leafage, in whose midday twilight the red flame of
the cardinal flower burns as a beacon set to guide the dusky wanderer
home. Others have adventured far down the winding brook to the river,
and followed its slowing current, past rapids and cataract, to where it
crawls through the green level of marshes beloved of water fowl and of
gunners, whose wounded victims, escaping them, fall an easy prey to the
lurking mink.

Here, too, in their season are the tender ducklings of wood duck, teal,
and dusky duck, and, all the year round, fat muskrats, which furnish for
the price of conquest a banquet that the mink most delights in.

In the wooded border are homes ready builded for him under the
buttressed trunks of elms, or in the hollow boles of old water maples,
and hidden pathways through fallen trees and under low green arches of
ferns.

With such a home and such bountiful provision for his larder close at
hand, what more could the heart and stomach of mink desire? Yet he may
not be satisfied, but longs for the wider waters of the lake, whose
translucent depths reveal to him all who swim beneath him, fry
innumerable; perch displaying their scales of gold, shiners like silver
arrows shot through the green water, the lesser bass peering out of
rocky fastnesses, all attainable to this daring fisher, but not his
great rivals, the bronze-mailed bass and the mottled pike, whose jaws
are wide enough to engulf even him.

Here, while you rest on your idle oar or lounge with useless rod, you
may see him gliding behind the tangled net of cedar roots, or venturing
forth from a cranny of the rocks down to the brink, and launching
himself so silently that you doubt whether it is not a flitting shadow
till you see his noiseless wake breaking the reflections lengthening
out behind him.

Of all swimmers that breathe the free air none can compare with him in
swiftness and in a grace that is the smooth and even flow of the poetry
of motion. Now he dives, or rather vanishes from the surface, nor
reappears till his wake has almost flickered out.

His voyage accomplished, he at once sets forth on exploration of new
shores or progress through his established domain, and vanishes from
sight before his first wet footprints have dried on the warm rock where
he landed.

You are glad to have seen him, thankful that he lives, and you hope
that, sparing your chickens and your share of trout, partridges, and
wild ducks, he too may be spared from the devices of the trapper to fill
his appointed place in the world's wildness.



VI

APRIL DAYS


At last there is full and complete assurance of spring, in spite of the
baldness of the woods, the barrenness of the fields, bleak with sodden
furrows of last year's ploughing, or pallidly tawny with bleached grass,
and untidy with the jetsam of winter storms and the wide strewn litter
of farms in months of foddering and wood-hauling.

There is full assurance of spring in such incongruities as a phoebe
a-perch on a brown mullein stalk in the midst of grimy snow banks, and
therefrom swooping in airy loops of flight upon the flies that buzz
across this begrimed remnant of winter's ermine, and of squirrelcups
flaunting bloom and fragrance in the face of an ice cascade, which, with
all its glitter gone, hangs in dull whiteness down the ledges, greening
the moss with the moisture of its wasting sheet of pearl.

The woodchuck and chipmunk have got on top of the world again. You hear
the half querulous, half chuckling whistle of the one, the full-mouthed
persistent cluck of the other, voicing recognition of the season.

The song of the brooks has abated something of its first triumphant
swell, and is often overborne now by the jubilant chorus of the birds,
the jangled, liquid gurgle and raucous grating of the blackbirds, the
robin's joyous song with its frequent breaks, as if the thronging notes
outran utterance, the too brief sweetness of the meadowlark's whistle,
the bluebird's carol, the cheery call of the phoebe, the trill of the
song sparrow, and above them all the triumph of the hawk in its regained
possessions of northern sky and earth.

The woods throb with the muffled beat of the partridge's drum and the
sharp tattoo of the woodpecker, and are filled again with the sounds of
insect life, the spasmodic hum of flies, the droning monotone of bees
busy among the catkins and squirrelcups, and you may see a butterfly,
wavering among the gray trees, soon to come to the end of his life,
brief at its longest, drowned in the seductive sweets of a sap bucket.

The squirrels are chattering over the wine of the maple branches they
have broached, in merrier mood than the hare, who limps over the matted
leaves in the raggedness of shifting raiment, fitting himself to a new
inconspicuousness.

We shall not find it unpleasant nor unprofitable to take to the woods
now, for we may be sure that they are pleasanter than the untidy fields.
Where nature has her own way with herself, she makes her garb seemly
even now, after all the tousling and rents she gave it in her angry
winter moods. The scraps of moss, bark, and twigs with which the last
surface of the snow was obtrusively littered lie now unnoticed on the
flat-pressed leaves, an umber carpet dotted here with flecks of moss,
there sprigged with fronds of evergreen fern, purple leaves of
squirrelcups, with their downy buds and first blossoms. Between banks so
clad the brook babbles as joyously as amid all the bloom and leafage of
June, and catches a brighter gleam from the unobstructed sunbeams. So
befittingly are the trees arrayed in graceful tracery of spray and beads
of purpling buds, that their seemly nakedness is as beautiful as attire
of summer's greenness or autumn's gorgeousness could make them.

Never sweeter than now, after the long silence of winter, do the birds'
songs sound, and never in all the round of the year is there a better
time to see them than when the gray haze of the branches is the only
hiding for their gay wedding garments.

If you would try your skill at still-hunting, follow up that muffled
roll that throbs through the woods, and if you discover the ruffed
grouse strutting upon his favorite log, and undiscovered by him can
watch his proud performance, you will have done something better worth
boasting of than bringing him to earth from his hurtling flight.

Out of the distant fields come, sweet and faint, the call of the
meadowlark and the gurgle of the blackbirds that throng the brookside
elms. From high overhead come down the clarion note of the goose, the
sibilant beat of the wild ducks' wings, the bleat of the snipe and the
plover's cry, each making his way to northern breeding grounds. Are you
not glad they are going as safely as their uncaught shadows that sweep
swiftly across the shadowy meshes of the forest floor? Are you not
content to see what you see, hear what you hear, and kill nothing but
time?

Verily, you shall have a clearer conscience than if you were disturbing
the voice of nature with the discordant uproar of your gun, and marring
the fresh odors of spring with the fumes of villainous saltpetre.

In the open marshes the lodges of the muskrats have gone adrift in the
floods; but the unhoused inmates count this a light misfortune, since
they may voyage again with heads above water, and go mate-seeking and
food-gathering in sunshine and starlight, undimmed by roof of ice. As
you see them cutting the smooth surface with long, swift, arrowy wakes,
coasting the low shore in quest of brown sweethearts and wives,
whimpering their plaintive call, you can hardly imagine the clumsy body
between that grim head and rudder-like tail capable of such graceful
motion.

The painted wood drake swims above the submerged tree roots; a pair of
dusky ducks splash to flight, with a raucous clamor, out of a sedgy cove
at your approach; the thronging blackbirds shower liquid melody and hail
of discord from the purple-budded maples above you. All around, from the
drift of floating and stranded water weeds, arises the dry, crackling
croak of frogs, and from sunny pools the vibrant trill of toads.

From afar come the watery boom of a bittern, the song of a trapper and
the hollow clang of his setting pole dropping athwart the gunwales of
his craft, the distant roar of a gun and the echoes rebounding from
shore to shore.

The grateful odor of the warming earth comes to your nostrils; to your
ears, from every side, the sounds of spring; and yet you listen for
fuller confirmation of its presence in the long-drawn wail of the plover
and the rollicking melody of the bobolink.



VII

THE WOODCHUCK


Chancing to pass a besmirched April snowbank on the border of a hollow,
you see it marked with the footprints of an old acquaintance of whom for
months you have not seen even so much as this.

It is not that he made an autumnal pilgrimage, slowly following the
swift birds and the retreating sun, that you had no knowledge of him,
but because of his home-keeping, closer than a hermit's seclusion. These
few cautious steps, venturing but half way from his door to the tawny
naked grass that is daily edging nearer to his threshold, are the first
he has taken abroad since the last bright lingering leaf fluttered down
in the Indian summer haze, or perhaps since the leaves put on their
first autumnal tints.

He had seen all the best of the year, the blooming of the first flowers,
the springing of the grass and its growth, the gathering of the
harvests and the ripening of fruits, and possibly the gorgeousness of
autumn melting into sombre gray. He had heard all the glad songs of all
the birds and the sad notes of farewell of bobolink and plover to their
summer home; he had seen the swallows depart and had heard the droning
of the bumblebee among the earliest and latest of his own clover
blossoms. All the best the world had to give in the round of her
seasons, luxuriant growth to feed upon, warm sunshine to bask in, he had
enjoyed; of her worst, he would have none.

So he bade farewell to the gathering desolation of the tawny fields and
crept closer to the earth's warm heart to sleep through the long night
of winter, till the morning of spring. The wild scurry of wind-tossed
leaves swept above him unheard, and the pitiless beat of autumnal rain
and the raging of winter storms that heaped the drifts deeper and deeper
over his forsaken door. The bitterness of cold, that made the furred fox
and the muffled owl shiver, never touched him in his warm nest. So he
shirked the hardships of winter without the toil of a journey in
pursuit of summer, while the starved fox prowled in the desolate woods
and barren fields, the owl hunted beneath the cold stars, and the
squirrel delved in the snow for his meagre fare.

By and by the ethereal but potent spirit of spring stole in where the
frost-elves could not enter, and awakening the earth awakened him. Not
by a slow and often impeded invasion of the senses, but as by the sudden
opening of a door, he sees the naked earth again warming herself in the
sun, and hears running water and singing birds. No wonder that with such
surprise the querulous tremolo of his whistle is sharply mingled with
these softer voices.

Day by day as he sees the sun-loved banks blushing greener, he ventures
further forth to visit neighbors or watch his clover, or dig a new home
in a more favored bank, or fortify himself in some rocky stronghold
where boys and dogs may not enter. Now, the family may be seen moving,
with no burden of furniture or provision, but only the mother with her
gray cubs, carried as a cat carries her kittens, one by one to the new
home among the fresher clover.

On the mound of newly digged earth before it, is that erect, motionless,
gray and russet form a half decayed stump uprising where no tree has
grown within your memory? You move a little nearer to inspect the
strange anomaly, and lo! it vanishes, and you know it was your old
acquaintance, the woodchuck, standing guard at his door and overlooking
his green and blossoming domain.

Are you not sorry, to-day at least, to hear the boys and the dog
besieging him in his burrow or in the old stone wall wherein he has
taken sanctuary? Surely, the first beautiful days of his open-air life
should not be made so miserable that he would wish himself asleep again
in the safety and darkness of winter. But you remember that you were
once a boy, and your sympathies are divided between the young savages
and their intended prey, which after all is likelier than not to escape.

He will tangle the meadow-grass and make free with the bean patch if he
chances upon it, yet you are glad to see the woodchuck, rejoicing like
yourself in the advent of spring.



VIII

THE CHIPMUNK


As the woodchuck sleeps away the bitterness of cold, so in his narrower
chamber sleeps the chipmunk. Happy little hermit, lover of the sun, mate
of the song sparrow and the butterflies, what a goodly and hopeful token
of the earth's renewed life is he, verifying the promises of his own
chalices, the squirrelcups, set in the warmest corners of the woodside,
with libations of dew and shower drops, of the bluebird's carol, the
sparrow's song of spring.

Now he comes forth from his long night into the fullness of sunlit day,
to proclaim his awakening to his summer comrades, a gay recluse clad all
in the motley, a jester, maybe, yet no fool.

His voice, for all its monotony, is inspiring of gladness and
contentment, whether he utters his thin, sharp chip or full-mouthed
cluck, or laughs a chittering mockery as he scurries in at his narrow
door.

He winds along his crooked pathway of the fence rails and forages for
half-forgotten nuts in the familiar grounds, brown with strewn leaves or
dun with dead grass. Sometimes he ventures to the top rail and climbs to
a giddy ten-foot height on a tree, whence he looks abroad, wondering, on
the wide expanse of an acre.

Music hath charms for him, and you may entrance him with a softly
whistled tune and entice him to frolic with a herds-grass head gently
moved before him.

When the fairies have made the white curd of mallow blossoms into
cheeses for the children and the chipmunk, it is a pretty sight to see
him gathering his share handily and toothily stripping off the green
covers, filling his cheek pouches with the dainty disks and scampering
away to his cellar with his ungrudged portion. Alack the day, when the
sweets of the sprouting corn tempt him to turn rogue, for then he
becomes a banned outlaw, and the sudden thunder of the gun announces
his tragic fate. He keeps well the secret of constructing his cunning
house, without a show of heaped or scattered soil at its entrance.
Bearing himself honestly, and escaping his enemies, the cat, the hawk,
and the boy, he lives a long day of happy inoffensive life. Then when
the filmy curtain of the Indian summer falls upon the year again, he
bids us a long good-night.



IX

SPRING SHOOTING


The Ram makes way for the Bull; March goes out and April comes in with
sunshine and showers, smiles and tears. The sportsman has his gun in
hand again with deadly purpose, as the angler his rod and tackle with
another intention than mere overhauling and putting to rights. The
smiles of April are for them.

The geese come wedging their way northward; the ducks awaken the silent
marshes with the whistle of their pinions; the snipe come in pairs and
wisps to the thawing bogs--all on their way to breeding grounds and
summer homes. The tears of April are for them. Wherever they stop for a
day's or an hour's rest, and a little food to strengthen and hearten
them for their long journey, the deadly, frightful gun awaits to kill,
maim, or terrify, more merciless than all the ills that nature inflicts
in her unkindest moods.

Year after year men go on making laws and crying for more, to protect
these fowl in summer, but in spring, when as much as ever they need
protection, the hand of man is ruthlessly against them.

When you made that splendid shot last night in the latest gloaming that
would show you the sight of your gun, and cut down that ancient goose,
tougher than the leather of your gun-case, and almost as edible, of how
many well-grown young geese of next November did you cheat yourself, or
some one else of the brotherhood?

When from the puddle, where they were bathing their tired wings, sipping
the nectar of muddy water, and nibbling the budding leaves of water
weeds, you started that pair of ducks yesterday, and were so proud of
tumbling them down right and left, you killed many more than you saw
then; many that you might have seen next fall.

When the sun was shining down so warm upon the steaming earth that the
robins and bluebirds sang May songs, those were very good shots you
made, killing ten snipe straight and clean, and--they were very bad
shots. For in November the ten might have been four times ten fat and
lusty, lazy fellows, boring the oozy margins of these same pools where
the frogs are croaking and the toads are singing to-day.

"Well, it's a long time to wait from November till the earth ripens and
browns to autumn again. Life is short and shooting days are few at most.
Let us shoot our goose while we may, though she would lay a golden egg
by and by."

Farmers do not kill their breeding ewes in March, nor butcher cows that
are to calve in a month; it does not pay. Why should sportsmen be less
provident of the stock they prize so dearly; stock that has so few
care-takers, so many enemies? Certainly, it does not pay in the long
run.



X

THE GARTER-SNAKE


When the returned crows have become such familiar objects in the forlorn
unclad landscape of early spring that they have worn out their first
welcome, and the earliest songbirds have come to stay in spite of
inhospitable weather that seems for days to set the calendar back a
month, the woods invite you more than the fields. There nature is least
under man's restraint and gives the first signs of her reawakening. In
windless nooks the sun shines warmest between the meshes of the slowly
drifting net of shadows.

There are patches of moss on gray rocks and tree trunks. Fairy islands
of it, that will not be greener when they are wet with summer showers,
arise among the brown expanse of dead leaves. The gray mist of branches
and undergrowth is enlivened with a tinge of purple. Here and there the
tawny mat beneath is uplifted by the struggling plant life below it or
pierced through by an underthrust of a sprouting seed. There is a
promise of bloom in blushing arbutus buds, a promise even now fulfilled
by the first squirrelcups just out of their furry bracts and already
calling the bees abroad. Flies are buzzing to and fro in busy idleness,
and a cricket stirs the leaves with a sudden spasm of movement. The
first of the seventeen butterflies that shall give boys the freedom of
bare feet goes wavering past like a drifting blossom.

A cradle knoll invites you to a seat on the soft, warm cushion of dead
leaves and living moss and purple sprigs of wintergreen with their blobs
of scarlet berries, which have grown redder and plumper under every snow
of the winter. This smoothly rounded mound and the hollow scooped beside
it, brimful now of amber, sun-warmed water, mark the ancient place of a
great tree that was dead and buried, and all traces by which its kind
could be identified were mouldered away and obliterated, before you were
born.

The incessant crackling purr of the wood-frogs is interrupted at your
approach, and they disappear till the wrinkled surface of the oblong
pool grows smooth again and you perceive them sprawled along the bottom
on the leaf paving of their own color. As you cast a casual glance on
your prospective seat, carelessly noting the mingling of many hues, the
brightness of the berries seems most conspicuous, till a moving curved
and recurved gleam of gold on black and a flickering flash of red catch
your eye and startle you with an involuntary revulsion.

With charmed eyes held by this new object, you grope blindly for a stick
or stone. But, if you find either, forbear to strike. Do not blot out
one token of spring's awakening nor destroy one life that rejoices in
it, even though it be so humble a life as that of a poor garter-snake.
He is so harmless to man, that, were it not for the old, unreasoning
antipathy, our hands would not be raised against him; and, if he were
not a snake, we should call him beautiful in his stripes of black and
gold, and in graceful motion--a motion that charms us in the undulation
of waves, in their flickering reflections of sunlight on rushy margins
and wooded shores, in the winding of a brook through a meadow, in the
flutter of a pennant and the flaunting of a banner, the ripple of
wind-swept meadow and grain field, and the sway of leafy boughs. His
colors are fresh and bright as ever you will see them, though he has but
to-day awakened from a long sleep in continual darkness.

He is simply enjoying the free air and warm sunshine without a thought
of food for all his months of fasting. Perhaps he has forgotten that
miserable necessity of existence. When at last he remembers that he has
an appetite, you can scarcely imagine that he can have any pleasure in
satisfying it with one huge mouthful of twice or thrice the ordinary
diameter of his gullet. If you chance to witness his slow and painful
gorging of a frog, you hear a cry of distress that might be uttered with
equal cause by victim or devourer. When he has fully entered upon the
business of reawakened life, many a young field-mouse and noxious
insect will go into his maw to his own and your benefit. If there go
also some eggs and callow young of ground-nesting birds, why should you
question his right, you, who defer slaughter out of pure selfishness,
that a little later you may make havoc among the broods of woodcock and
grouse?

Of all living things, only man disturbs the nicely adjusted balance of
nature. The more civilized he becomes the more mischievous he is. The
better he calls himself, the worse he is. For uncounted centuries the
bison and the Indian shared a continent, but in two hundred years or so
the white man has destroyed the one and spoiled the other.

Surely there is little harm in this lowly bearer of a name honored in
knighthood, and the motto of the noble order might be the legend written
on his gilded mail, "Evil to him who evil thinks." If this sunny patch
of earth is not wide enough for you to share with him, leave it to him
and choose another for yourself. The world is wide enough for both to
enjoy this season of its promise.



XI

THE TOAD


During our summer acquaintance with her, when we see her oftenest, a
valued inhabitant of our garden and a welcome twilight visitor at our
threshold, we associate silence with the toad, almost as intimately as
with the proverbially silent clam. In the drouthy or too moist summer
days and evenings, she never awakens our hopes or fears with shrill
prophecies of rain as does her nimbler and more aspiring cousin, the
tree-toad.

A rustle of the cucumber leaves that embower her cool retreat, the spat
and shuffle of her short, awkward leaps, are the only sounds that then
betoken her presence, and we listen in vain for even a smack of pleasure
or audible expression of self-approval, when, after a nervous,
gratulatory wriggle of her hinder toes, she dips forward and, with a
lightning-like out-flashing of her unerring tongue, she flicks into her
jaws a fly or bug. She only winks contentedly to express complete
satisfaction at her performance and its result.

Though summer's torrid heat cannot warm her to any voice, springtime and
love make her tuneful, and every one hears the softly trilled,
monotonous song jarring the mild air, but few know who is the singer.
The drumming grouse is not shyer of exhibiting his performance.

From a sun-warmed pool not fifty yards away a full chorus of the rapidly
vibrant voices arises, and you imagine that the performers are so
absorbed with their music that you may easily draw near and observe
them. But when you come to the edge of the pool you see only a
half-dozen concentric circles of wavelets, widening from central points,
where as many musicians have modestly withdrawn beneath the transparent
curtain.

Wait, silent and motionless, and they will reappear. A brown head is
thrust above the surface, and presently your last summer's familiar of
the garden and doorstep crawls slowly out upon a barren islet of
cobble-stone, and, assured that no intruder is within the precincts
sacred to the wooing of the toads, she inflates her throat and tunes up
her long, monotonous chant. Ere it ceases, another and another take it
up, and from distant pools you hear it answered, till all the air is
softly shaken as if with the clear chiming of a hundred swift-struck,
tiny bells. They ring in the returning birds, robin, sparrow, finch and
meadow lark, and the first flowers, squirrelcup, arbutus, bloodroot,
adder-tongue and moose-flower.

When the bobolink has come to his northern domain again and the oriole
flashes through the budding elms and the first columbine droops over the
gray ledges, you may still hear an occasional ringing of the toads, but
a little later the dignified and matronly female, having lost her voice
altogether, has returned to her summer home, while her little mate has
exchanged his trill for a disagreeable and uncanny squawk, perhaps a
challenge to his rivals, who linger about the scenes of their courtship
and make night hideous until midsummer. Then a long silence falls on the
race of toads--a silence which even hibernation scarcely deepens.



XII

MAY DAYS


The lifeless dun of the close-cropped southward slopes and the tawny
tangles of the swales are kindling to living green with the blaze of the
sun and the moist tinder of the brook's overflow.

The faithful swallows have returned, though the faithless season delays.
The flicker flashes his golden shafts in the sunlight and gladdens the
ear with his merry cackle. The upland plover wails his greeting to the
tussocked pastures, where day and night rings the shrill chorus of the
hylas and the trill of the toads continually trembles in the soft air.

The first comers of the birds are already mated and nest-building, robin
and song sparrow each in his chosen place setting the foundations of his
house with mud or threads of dry grass. The crow clutters out his
softest love note. The flicker is mining a fortress in the heart of an
old apple-tree.

The squirrels wind a swift ruddy chain about a boll in their love chase,
and even now you may surprise the vixen fox watching the first gambols
of her tawny cubs by the sunny border of the woods.

The gray haze of undergrowth and lofty ramage is turning to a misty
green, and the shadows of opening buds knot the meshed shadows of twigs
on the brown forest floor, which is splashed with white moose-flowers
and buds of bloodroot, like ivory-tipped arrows, each in a green quiver,
and yellow adder-tongues bending above their mottled beds, and rusty
trails of arbutus leaves leading to the secret of their hidden bloom,
which their fragrance half betrays.

Marsh marigolds lengthen their golden chain, link by link, along the
ditches. The maples are yellow with paler bloom, and the graceful
birches are bent with their light burden of tassels. The dandelion
answers the sun, the violet the sky. Blossom and greenness are
everywhere; even the brown paths of the plough and harrow are greening
with springing grain.

We listen to the cuckoo's monotonous flute among the white drifts of
orchard bloom and the incessant murmur of bees, the oriole's half
plaintive carol as of departed joys in the elms, and the jubilant song
of the bobolink in the meadows, where he is not an outlaw but a welcome
guest, mingling his glad notes with the merry voices of flower-gathering
children, as by and by he will with the ringing cadence of the scythe
and the vibrant chirr of the mower. Down by the flooded marshes the
scarlet of the water maples and the flash of the starling's wing are
repeated in the broad mirror of the still water. The turtle basks on the
long incline of stranded logs.

Tally-sticks cast adrift are a symbol that the trapper's warfare against
the muskrats is ended and that the decimated remnant of the tribe is
left in peace to reëstablish itself. The spendthrift waste of untimely
shooting is stayed. Wild duck, plover, and snipe have entered upon the
enjoyment of a summer truce that will be unbroken, if the collector is
not abroad at whose hands science ruthlessly demands mating birds and
callow brood.

Of all sportsmen only the angler, often attended by his winged brother
the kingfisher, is astir, wandering by pleasant waters where the bass
lurks in the tangles of an eddy's writhing currents, or the perch poises
and then glides through the intangible golden meshes that waves and
sunlight knit, or where the trout lies poised beneath the silver domes
of foam bells.

The loon laughs again on the lake. Again the freed waves toss the
shadows of the shores and the white reflections of white sails, and
flash back the sunlight or the glitter of stars and the beacon's
rekindled gleam.

Sun and sky, forest, field, and water, bird and blossom, declare the
fullness of spring and the coming of summer.



XIII

THE BOBOLINK


The woods have changed from the purple of swelling buds to the tender
grayish green of opening leaves, and the sward is green again with new
grass, when this pied troubadour, more faithful to the calendar than
leaf or flower, comes back from his southern home to New England meadows
to charm others than his dusky ladylove with his merry song. He seldom
disappoints us by more than a day in the date of his arrival, and never
fails to receive a kindly welcome, though the fickle weather may be
unkind.

"The bobolinks have come" is as joyful a proclamation as announces the
return of the bluebird and robin. Here no shotted salute of gun awaits
him, and he is aware that he is in a friendly country. Though he does
not court familiarity, he tolerates approach; and permits you to come
within a dozen yards of the fence stake he has alighted on, and when
you come nearer he goes but to the next, singing the prelude or finale
of his song as he flies. Fewer yards above your head he poises on wing
to sing it from beginning to end, you know not whether with intent to
taunt you or to charm you, but he only accomplishes the latter. He seems
to know that he does not harm us and that he brings nothing that we
should not lose by killing him. Yet how cunningly he and his mate hide
their nest in the even expanse of grass. That is a treasure he will not
trust us with the secret of, and, though there may be a dozen in the
meadow, we rarely find one.

Our New England fathers had as kindly a feeling for this blithe comer to
their stumpy meadows, though they gave him the uncouth and malodorous
name of skunk blackbird. He sang as sweetly to them as he does to us,
and he too was a discoverer and a pioneer, finding and occupying meadows
full of sunshine where had only been the continual shade of the forest,
where no bobolink had ever been before. Now he has miles of grassy
sunlit fields wherein he sings violet and buttercup, daisy and clover
into bloom and strawberries into ripeness, and his glad song mingles
with the happy voices of the children who come to gather them, and also
chimes with the rarer music of the whetted scythe.

Then, long before the summer is past, he assumes the sober dress of his
mate and her monosyllabic note, and fades so gradually out of our sight
and hearing that he departs without our being aware of it. Summer still
burns with unabated fervor, when we suddenly realize that there are no
bobolinks. Nor are there any under the less changeful skies whither our
changed bird has flown to be a reed-bird or rice-bird and to find
mankind his enemies. He is no longer a singer but a gourmand and valued
only as a choice morsel, doubtless delicious, yet one that should choke
a New Englander.



XIV

THE GOLDEN-WINGED WOODPECKER


The migrant woodpecker whose cheery cackle assures us of the certainty
of spring is rich in names that well befit him. If you take to
high-sounding titles for your humble friends, you will accept _Colaptes
auratus_, as he flies above you, borrowing more gold of the sunbeams
that shine through his yellow pinions, or will be content to call him
simply golden-winged. When he flashes his wings in straight-away flight
before you, or sounds his sharp, single note of alarm, or peers down
from the door of his lofty tower, or hangs on its wooden wall, or
clinging to a fence stake displays his mottled back, you recognize the
fitness of each name the country folk have given him--flicker,
yellow-hammer, yarrup, highhole or highholder, and what Thoreau often
termed him, partridge-woodpecker. It is a wonder that the joyous cackle
wherewith he announces his return from his winter sojourn in the South
has not gained him another, and that love note, so like the slow
whetting of a knife upon a steel, still another. Perhaps it is because
they are especially sounds of spring and seldom if ever heard after the
season of joyful arrival and love-making.

During the same season you frequently hear him attuning his harsh sharp
voice to its softest note of endearment, a long-drawn and modulated
variation of his cackle. When household cares begin, the lord and lady
of the wooden tower, like too many greater and wiser two-legged folk,
give over singing and soft words. At home and abroad their deportment is
sober and business-like, and except for an occasional alarm-cry they are
mostly silent.

As you wander through the orchard of an early midsummer day and pause
beside an old apple-tree to listen to the cuckoo's flute or admire the
airy fabric of the wood pewee's nest, a larger scale of lichen on the
lichened boughs, you hear a smothered vibrant murmur close beside you,
as if the heart of the old tree was pulsating with audible life. It is
startlingly suggestive of disturbed yellow-jackets, but when you move
around the trunk in cautious reconnoissance, you discover the round
portal of a flicker's home, and the sound resolves itself into
harmlessness. It is only the callow young clamoring for food, or
complaining of their circumscribed quarters.

Not many days hence they will be out in the wide world of air and
sunshine of which they now know as little as when they chipped the
shell. Lusty fellows they will be then, with much of their parents'
beauty already displayed in their bright new plumage and capable of an
outcry that will hold a bird-eating cat at bay. A little later they will
be, as their parents are, helpful allies against the borers, the
insidious enemies of our apple-tree. It is a warfare which the
groundling habits of the golden-wings make them more ready to engage in
than any other of the woodpecker clans.

In sultry August weather, when the shrill cry of the cicada pierces the
hot air like a hotter needle of sound, and the dry husky beat of his
wings emphasizes the apparent fact of drouth as you walk on the
desiccated slippery herbage of meadow and pasture, the golden-wings with
all their grown-up family fly up before you from their feast on the ant
hills and go flashing and flickering away like rockets shot aslant, into
the green tent of the wild cherry trees to their dessert of juicy black
fruit.

Early in the dreariness of November, they have vanished with all the
horde of summer residents who have made the season of leaf, flower, and
fruit the brighter by their presence. The desolate leafless months go
by, till at last comes the promise of spring, and you are aware of a
half unconscious listening for the golden-wings. Presently the loud,
long, joyous iteration breaks upon your ear, and you hail the
fulfillment of the promise and the blithe new comer, a golden link in
the lengthening chain that is encircling the earth.



XV

JUNE DAYS


June brings skies of purest blue, flecked with drifts of silver, fields
and woods in the flush of fresh verdure, with the streams winding among
them in crystal loops that invite the angler with promise of more than
fish, something that tackle cannot lure nor creel hold.

The air is full of the perfume of locust and grape bloom, the spicy odor
of pine and fir, and of pleasant voices--the subdued murmur of the
brook's changing babble, the hum of bees, the stir of the breeze, the
songs of birds. Out of the shady aisles of the woods come the flute note
of the hermit thrush, the silvery chime of the tawny thrush; and from
the forest border, where the lithe birches swing their shadows to and
fro along the bounds of wood and field, comes that voice of June, the
cuckoo's gurgling note of preparation, and then the soft, monotonous
call that centuries ago gave him a name.

General Kukushna the exiles in Siberia entitle him; and when they hear
his voice, every one who can break bounds is irresistibly drawn to
follow him, and live for a brief season a free life in the greenwood. As
to many weary souls and hampered bodies there, so to many such here
comes the voice of the little commander, now persuasive, now imperative,
not to men and women in exile or wearing the convict's garb, but
suffering some sort of servitude laid upon them or self-imposed. Toiling
for bread, for wealth, for fame, they are alike in bondage--chained to
the shop, the farm, the desk, the office.

Some who hear, obey, and revel in the brief but delightful freedom of
June days spent in the perfumed breath of full-leafed woods, by cold
water-brooks and rippled lakes. Others listen with hungry hearts to the
summons, but cannot loose their fetters, and can only answer with a
sigh, "It is not for me," or "Not yet," and toil on, still hoping for
future days of freedom.

But saddest of all is the case of such as hear not, or, hearing, heed
not the voice of the Kukushna, the voices of the birds, the murmurous
droning of bees amid the blossoms, the sweet prattle of running waters
and dancing waves. Though these come to them from all about, and all
about them are unfolded the manifold beauties of this joyous month, no
sign is made to them. Their dull ears hear not the voices of nature,
neither do their dim eyes see the wondrous miracle of spring which has
been wrought all about them. Like the man with the muck-rake, they toil
on, intent only upon the filth and litter at their feet. Sad indeed must
it be to have a soul so poor that it responds to no caress of nature,
sadder than any imposition of servitude or exile which yet hinders not
one's soul from arising with intense longing for the wild world of woods
and waters when Kukushna sounds his soft trumpet call.



XVI

THE BULLFROG


The flooded expanse of the marshes has shrunken perceptibly along its
shoreward boundaries, leaving a mat of dead weeds, bits of driftwood,
and a water-worn selvage of bare earth to mark its widest limits. The
green tips of the rushes are thrust above the amber shallows, whereon
flotillas of water-shield lie anchored in the sun, while steel-blue
devil's-needles sew the warm air with intangible threads of zigzag
flight.

The meshed shadows of the water-maples are full of the reflections of
the green and silver of young leaves. The naked tangle of button-bushes
has become a green island, populous with garrulous colonies of redwings.
The great flocks of wild ducks that came to the reopened waters have had
their holiday rest, and journeyed onward to summer homes and cares in
the further north. The few that remain are in scattered pairs and
already in the silence and seclusion of nesting. You rarely see the
voyaging muskrat or hear his plaintive love calls.

Your ear has long been accustomed to the watery clangor of the bittern,
when a new yet familiar sound strikes it, the thin, vibrant bass of the
first bullfrog's note. It may be lacking in musical quality, but it is
attuned to its surroundings, and you are glad that the green-coated
player has at last recovered his long-submerged banjo, and is twanging
its water-soaked strings in prelude to the summer concert. He is a
little out of practice, and his instrument is slightly out of tune, but
a few days' use will restore both touch and resonance, when he and his
hundred brethren shall awaken the marsh-haunting echoes and the sleeping
birds with a grand twilight recital. It will reach your ears a mile
away, and draw you back to the happy days of boyhood, when you listened
for the bullfrogs to tell that fish would bite, and it was time for boys
to go a-fishing.

In the first days of his return to the upper world of water, this old
acquaintance may be shy, and neither permit nor offer any familiarity.
The fixed placidity of his countenance is not disturbed by your
approach, but if you overstep by one pace what he considers the proper
limit, down goes his head under cover of the flood. Marking his jerky
course with an underwake and a shiver of the rushes, he reappears, to
calmly observe you from a safer distance.

Custom outwears his diffidence, and the fervid sun warms him to more
genial moods, when he will suffer you to come quietly quite close to him
and tickle his sides with a bullrush, till in an ecstasy of pleasure he
loses all caution, and bears with supreme contentment the titillation of
your finger tips. His flabby sides swell with fullness of enjoyment, his
blinking eyes grow dreamy and the corners of his blandly expressionless
mouth almost curve upward with an elusive smile. Not till your fingers
gently close upon him does he become aware of the indiscretion into
which he has lapsed, and with a frantic struggle he tears himself away
from your grasp and goes plunging headlong into his nether element,
bellowing out his shame and astonishment.

Another day as you troll along the channel an oar's length from the
weedy borders, you see him afloat on his lily-pad raft, heeding you no
more than does the golden-hearted blossom whose orange odor drifts about
him, nor is he disturbed by splash of oar nor dip of paddle, nor even
when his bark and her perfume-freighted consort are tossed on your
undulating wake.

As summer wanes you see and hear him less frequently, but he is still
your comrade of the marshes, occasionally announcing his presence with a
resonant twang and a jerky splash among the sedges.

The pickerel weeds have struck their blue banners to the conquering
frost, and the marshes are sere, and silent, and desolate. When they are
warmed again with the new life of spring, we shall listen for the
jubilant chorus of our old acquaintance, the bullfrog.



XVII

THE ANGLER


I

Angling is set down by the master of the craft, whom all revere but none
now follow, as the Contemplative Man's Recreation; but is the angler,
while angling, a contemplative man?

That beloved and worthy brother whose worm-baited hook dangles in quiet
waters, placid as his mind--till some wayfaring perch, or bream, or
bullhead shall by chance come upon it, he, meanwhile, with rod set in
the bank, taking his ease upon the fresh June sward, not touching his
tackle nor regarding it but with the corner of an eye--he may
contemplate and dream day dreams. He may watch the clouds drifting
across the blue, the green branches waving between him and them,
consider the lilies of the field, note the songs of the catbird in the
willow thicket, watch the poise and plunge of the kingfisher, and so
spend all the day with nature and his own lazy thoughts. That is what he
came for. Angling with him is only a pretense, an excuse to pay a visit
to the great mother whom he so dearly loves; and if he carries home not
so much as a scale, he is happy and content.

But how is it with him who comes stealing along with such light tread
that it scarcely crushes the violets or shakes the dewdrops from the
ferns, and casts his flies with such precise skill upon the very
handsbreadth of water that gives most promise to his experienced eye; or
drops his minnow with such care into the eddying pool, where he feels a
bass must lie awaiting it. Eye and ear and every organ of sense are
intent upon the sport for which he came. He sees only the images of the
clouds, no branch but that which impedes him or offers cover to his
stealthy approach. His ear is more alert for the splash of fishes than
for bird songs. With his senses go all his thoughts, and float not away
in day dreams.

Howsoever much he loves her, for the time while he hath rod in hand
Mother Nature is a fish-woman, and he prays that she may deal generously
with him. Though he be a parson, his thoughts tend not to religion;
though a savant, not to science; though a statesman, not to politics;
though an artist, to no art save the art of angling. So far removed from
all these while he casts his fly or guides his minnow, how much further
is his soul from all but the matter in hand when a fish has taken the
one or the other, and all his skill is taxed to the utmost to bring his
victim to creel. Heresy and paganism may prevail, the light of science
be quenched, the country go to the dogs, pictures go unpainted, and
statues unmoulded till he has saved this fish.

When the day is spent, the day's sport done, and he wends his way
homeward with a goodly score, satisfied with himself and all the world
besides, he may ponder on many things apart from that which has this day
taken him by green fields and pleasant waters. Now he may brood his
thoughts, and dream dreams; but while he angles, the complete angler is
not a contemplative man.


II

The rivers roaring between their brimming banks; the brooks babbling
over their pebbled beds and cross-stream logs that will be bridges for
the fox in midsummer; the freed waters of lakes and ponds, dashing in
slow beat of waves or quicker pulse of ripples against their shores, in
voices monotonous but never tiresome, now call all who delight in the
craft to go a-fishing.

With the sap in the aged tree, the blood quickens in the oldest angler's
veins, whether he be of the anointed who fish by the book, or of the
common sort who practice the methods of the forgotten inventors of the
art.

The first are busy with rods and reels that are a pleasure to the eye
and touch, with fly-books whose leaves are as bright with color as
painted pictures, the others rummaging corner-cupboards for mislaid
lines, searching the sheds for favorite poles of ash, ironwood,
tamarack, or cedar, or perhaps the woods for one just budding on its
sapling stump.

Each enjoys as much as the other the pleasant labor of preparation and
the anticipation of sport, though perhaps that of the scientific angler
is more æsthetic enjoyment, as his outfitting is the daintier and more
artistic. But to each comes the recollection of past happy days spent on
lake, river and brook, memories touched with a sense of loss, of days
that can never come again, of comrades gone forever from earthly
companionship.

And who shall say that the plebeian angler does not enter upon the
untangling of his cotton lines, the trimming of his new cut pole, and
the digging of his worms, with as much zest as his brother of the finer
cast on the testing and mending of lancewood or split bamboo rod, the
overhauling of silken lines and leaders, and the assorting of flies.


III

Considering the younger generation of anglers, one finds more enthusiasm
among those who talk learnedly of all the niceties of the art. They
scorn all fish not acknowledged as game. They plan more, though they may
accomplish less than the common sort to whom all of fishing tackle is a
pole, a line, and a hook. To them fishing is but fishing, and fish are
only fish, and they will go for one or the other when the signs are
right and the day propitious.

Descending to the least and latest generation of anglers, we see the
conditions reversed. The youth born to rod and reel and fly is not so
enthusiastic in his devotion to the sport as the boy whose birthright is
only the pole that craftsman never fashioned, the kinky lines of the
country store, and hooks known by no maker's name. For it is not in the
nature of a boy to hold to any nicety in sport of any sort, and this
one, being herein unrestrained, enters upon the art called gentle with
all the wild freedom of a young savage or a half-grown mink.

For him it is almost as good as going fishing, to unearth and gather in
an old teapot the worms, every one of which is to his sanguine vision
the promise of a fish. What completeness of happiness for him to be
allowed to go fishing with his father or grandfather or the acknowledged
great fisherman of the neighborhood, a good-for-nothing ne'er-do-well,
but wise in all the ways of fish and their taking and very careful of
and kind to little boys.

The high-hole never cackled so merrily, nor meadow lark sang sweeter,
nor grass sprang greener nor water shone brighter than to the boy when
he goes a-fishing thus accompanied. To him is welcome everything that
comes from the waters, be it trout, bass, perch, bullhead, or sunfish,
and he hath pride even in the abominable but toothsome eel and the
uneatable bowfin.

Well, remembering that we were once boys and are yet anglers, though we
seldom go a-fishing, we wish, in the days of the new springtide, to all
the craft, whether they be of high or low degree, bent and cramped with
the winter of age or flushed with the spring of life, pleasant and
peaceful days of honest sport by all watersides, and full creels and
strings and wythes.


IV

In the soft evenings of April when the air is full of the undefinable
odor of the warming earth and of the incessant rejoicing of innumerable
members of the many families of batrachians, one may see silently moving
lights prowling along the low shores of shallow waters, now hidden by
trunks of great trees that are knee-deep in the still water, now
emerging, illuminating bolls and branches and flashing their glimmering
glades far across the ripples of wake and light breeze.

If one were near enough he could see the boat of the spearers, its bow
and the intent figure of the spearman aglow in the light of the jack
which flares a backward flame with its steady progress, and drops a slow
shower of sparks, while the stern and the paddler sitting therein are
dimly apparent in the verge of the gloom.

These may be honest men engaged in no illegal affair; they exercise
skill of a certain sort; they are enthusiastic in the pursuit of their
pastime, which is as fair as jacking deer, a practice upheld by many in
high places; yet these who by somewhat similar methods take fish for
sport and food are not accounted honest fishermen, but arrant poachers.
If jacking deer is right, how can jacking fish be wrong? or if jacking
fish be wrong, how can jacking deer be right? Verily, there are nice
distinctions in the ethics of sport.



XVIII

FARMERS AND FIELD SPORTS

    "Happy the man whose only care
      A few paternal acres bound,
    Content to breathe his native air
      On his own ground."


Happier still is such a one who has a love for the rod and gun, and with
them finds now and then a day's freedom from all cares by the side of
the stream that borders his own acres and in the woods that crest his
knolls or shade his swamp.

As a rule none of our people take so few days of recreation as the
farmer. Excepting Sundays, two or three days at the county fair, and
perhaps as many more spent in the crowd and discomfort of a cheap
railroad excursion, are all that are given by the ordinary farmer to
anything but the affairs of the farm. It is true that his outdoor life
makes it less necessary for him than for the man whose office or shop
work keeps him mostly indoors, to devote a month or a fortnight of each
year to entire rest from labor. Indeed, he can hardly do this except in
winter, when his own fireside is oftener the pleasantest place for rest.
But he would be the better for more days of healthful pleasure, and many
such he might have if he would so use those odd ones which fall within
his year, when crops are sown and planted or harvested. A day in the
woods or by the stream is better for body and mind than one spent in
idle gossip at the village store, and nine times out of ten better for
the pocket, though one come home without fin or feather to show for his
day's outing. One who keeps his eyes and ears on duty while abroad in
the field can hardly fail to see and hear something new, or, at least,
more interesting and profitable than ordinary gossip, and the wear and
tear of tackle and a few charges of ammunition wasted will cost less
than the treats which are pretty apt to be part of a day's loafing.

Barring the dearth of the objects of his pursuit, the farmer who goes
a-fishing and a-hunting should not be unsuccessful if he has fair skill
with the rod and gun. For he who knows most of the habits of fish and
game will succeed best in their capture, and no man, except the
naturalist and the professional fisherman and hunter, has a better
chance to gain this knowledge than the farmer, whose life brings him
into everyday companionship with nature. His fields and woods are the
homes and haunts of the birds and beasts of venery, from the beginning
of the year to its end, and in his streams many of the fishes pass their
lives. By his woodside the quail builds her nest, and when the foam of
blossom has dried away on the buckwheat field she leads her young there
to feed on the brown kernel stranded on the coral stems. If he chance to
follow his wood road in early June, the ruffed grouse limps and flutters
along it before him, while her callow chicks vanish as if by a
conjurer's trick from beneath his very footfall. A month later, grown to
the size of robins, they will scatter on the wing from his path with a
vigor that foretells the bold whir and the swiftness of their flight in
their grown-up days, when they will stir the steadiest nerve, whether
they hurtle from an October-painted thicket or from the blue shadows of
untracked snow. No one is likelier to see and hear the strange wooing of
the woodcock in the soft spring evenings, and to the farmer's ear first
comes that assurance of spring, the wail of the Bartram's sandpiper
returning from the South to breed in meadow and pasture, and then in
hollow trees that overhang the river the wood ducks begin to spoil their
holiday attire in the work and care of housekeeping. The fox burrows and
breeds in the farmer's woods. The raccoon's den is there in ledge or
hollow tree. The hare makes her form in the shadow of his evergreens,
where she dons her dress of tawny or white to match the brown floor of
the woods or its soft covering of snow. The bass comes to his river in
May to spawn, the pike-perch for food, and the perch lives there, as
perhaps the trout does in his brook.

All these are his tenants, or his summer boarders, and if he knows not
something of their lives, and when and where to find them at home or in
their favorite resorts, he is a careless landlord. His life will be the
pleasanter for the interest he takes in theirs, and the skill he
acquires in bringing them to bag and creel.



XIX

TO A TRESPASS SIGN


Scene, _A Wood. An old man with a fishing-rod speaks_:--

What strange object is this which I behold, incongruous in its staring
whiteness of fresh paint and black lettering, its straightness of lines
and abrupt irregularity amid the soft tints and graceful curves of this
sylvan scene? As I live, a trespass sign!

Thou inanimate yet most impertinent thing, dumb yet commanding me with
most imperative words to depart hence, how dost thou dare forbid my
entrance upon what has so long been my own, even as it is the birds' and
beasts' and fishes', not by lease or title deed, but of natural right?
Hither from time immemorial have they come at will and so departed at no
man's behest, as have I since the happy days when a barefoot boy I cast
my worm-baited hook among the crystal foam bells, or bearing the heavy
burden of my grandsire's rusty flint-lock, I stalked the wily grouse in
the diurnal twilight of these thickets.

Here was I thrilled by the capture of my first trout; here exulted over
the downfall of my first woodcock; here, grown to man's estate, I
learned to cast the fly; here beheld my first dog draw on his game, and
here, year after year, till my locks have grown gray, have I come, sharp
set with months of longing, to live again for a little while the
carefree days of youth.

Never have I been bidden to depart but by storm or nightfall or satiety,
until now thou confrontest me with thy impudent mandate, thou, thou
contemptible, but yet not to be despised nor unheeded parallelogram of
painted deal, with thy legal phrases and impending penalties; thou, the
silent yet terribly impressive representative of men whose purses are
longer than mine!

What is their right to this stream, these woods, compared with mine?
Theirs is only gained by purchase, confirmed by scrawled parchment,
signed and sealed; mine a birthright, as always I hoped it might be of
my sons and my sons' sons. What to the usurpers of our rights are these
woods and waters but a place for the killing of game and fish? They do
not love, as a man the roof-tree where-under he was born, these arches
and low aisles of the woods; they do not know as I do every silver loop
of the brook, every tree whose quivering reflection throbs across its
eddies; its voice is only babble to their ears, the song of the pines
tells them no story of bygone years.

Of all comers here, I who expected most kindly welcome am most
inhospitably treated. All my old familiars, the birds, the beasts, and
the fishes, may fly over thee, walk beneath thee, swim around thee, but
to me thou art a wall that I may not pass.

I despise thee and spit upon thee, thou most impudent intruder, thou
insolent sentinel, thou odious monument of selfishness, but I dare not
lay hands upon thee and cast thee down and trample thee in the dust of
the earth as thou shouldst of right be entreated. To rid myself of thy
hateful sight, I can only turn my back upon thee and depart with sorrow
and anger in my heart.

Mayst thou keep nothing but disappointment for the greedy wretches who
set thee here.



XX

A GENTLE SPORTSMAN


All the skill of woodcraft that goes to the making of the successful
hunter with the gun, must be possessed by him who hunts his game with
the camera. His must be the stealthy, panther-like tread that breaks no
twig nor rustles the fallen leaves. His the eye that reads at a glance
the signs that to the ordinary sight are a blank or at most are an
untranslatable enigma. His a patience that counts time as nothing when
measured with the object sought. When by the use and practice of these,
he has drawn within a closer range of his timid game than his brother of
the gun need attain, he pulls trigger of a weapon that destroys not, but
preserves its unharmed quarry in the very counterfeit of life and
motion. The wild world is not made the poorer by one life for his shot,
nor nature's peace disturbed, nor her nicely adjusted balance jarred.

He bears home his game, wearing still its pretty ways of life in the
midst of its loved surroundings, the swaying hemlock bough where the
grouse perched, the bending ferns about the deer's couch, the dew-beaded
sedges where the woodcock skulks in the shadows of the alders, the
lichened trunks and dim vistas of primeval woods, the sheen of voiceless
waterfalls, the flash of sunlit waves that never break.

His trophies the moth may not assail. His game touches a finer sense
than the palate possesses, satisfies a nobler appetite than the
stomach's craving, and furnishes forth a feast that, ever spread, ever
invites, and never palls upon the taste.

Moreover, this gentlest of sportsmen is hampered by no restrictions of
close time, nor confronted by penalties of trespass. All seasons are
open for his bloodless forays, all woods and waters free to his harmless
weapon.

Neither is he trammeled by any nice distinctions as to what may or may
not be considered game. Everything counts in his score. The eagle on
his craggy perch, the high-hole on his hollow tree, are as legitimate
game for him as the deer and grouse. All things beautiful and wild and
picturesque are his, yet he kills them not, but makes them a living and
enduring joy, to himself and all who behold them.



XXI

JULY DAYS


The woods are dense with full-grown leafage. Of all the trees, only the
basswood has delayed its blossoming, to crown the height of summer and
fill the sun-steeped air with a perfume that calls all the wild bees
from hollow tree and scant woodside gleaning to a wealth of honey
gathering, and all the hive-dwellers from their board-built homes to a
finer and sweeter pillage than is offered by the odorous white sea of
buckwheat. Half the flowers of wood and fields are out of bloom.
Herdsgrass, clover and daisy are falling before the mower. The early
grain fields have already caught the color of the sun, and the tasseling
corn rustles its broad leaves above the rich loam that the woodcock
delights to bore.

The dwindling streams have lost their boisterous clamor of springtide
and wimple with subdued voices over beds too shallow to hide a minnow
or his poised shadow on the sunlit shallows. The sharp eye of the angler
probes the green depths of the slowly swirling pools, and discovers the
secrets of the big fish which congregate therein.

The river has marked the stages of its decreasing volume with many lines
along its steep banks. It discloses the muskrat's doorway, to which he
once dived so gracefully, but now must clumsily climb to. Rafts of
driftwood bridge the shallow current sunk so low that the lithe willows
bend in vain to kiss its warm bosom. This only the swaying trails of
water-weeds and rustling sedges toy with now; and swift-winged swallows
coyly touch. There is not depth to hide the scurrying schools of
minnows, the half of whom fly into the air in a curving burst of silver
shower before the rush of a pickerel, whose green and mottled sides
gleam like a swift-shot arrow in the downright sunbeams.

The sandpiper tilts along the shelving shore. Out of an embowered harbor
a wood duck convoys her fleet of ducklings, and on the ripples of
their wake the anchored argosies of the water lilies toss and cast
adrift their cargoes of perfume. Above them the green heron perches on
an overhanging branch, uncouth but alert, whether sentinel or scout,
flapping his awkward way along the ambient bends and reaches. With slow
wing-beats he signals the coming of some more lazily moving boat, that
drifts at the languid will of the current or indolent pull of oars that
grate on the golden-meshed sand and pebbles.

Lazily, unexpectantly, the angler casts his line, to be only a
convenient perch for the dragonflies; for the fish, save the affrighted
minnows and the hungry pickerel, are as lazy as he. To-day he may enjoy
to the full the contemplative man's recreation, nor have his
contemplations disturbed by any finny folk of the under-water world,
while dreamily he floats in sunshine and dappled shadow, so at one with
the placid waters and quiet shores that wood duck, sandpiper, and heron
scarcely note his unobtrusive presence.

No such easy and meditative pastime attends his brother of the gun
who, sweating under the burden of lightest apparel and equipment, beats
the swampy covers where beneath the sprawling alders and arching fronds
of fern the woodcock hides. Not a breath stirs the murky atmosphere of
these depths of shade, hotter than sunshine; not a branch nor leaf moves
but with his struggling passage, or marking with a wake of waving
undergrowth the course of his unseen dog.

Except this rustling of branches, sedges and ferns, the thin, continuous
piping of the swarming mosquitoes, the busy tapping and occasional harsh
call of a woodpecker, scarcely a sound invades the hot silence, till the
wake of the hidden dog ceases suddenly and the waving brakes sway with
quickening vibrations into stillness behind him. Then, his master draws
cautiously near, with gun at a ready and an unheeded mosquito drilling
his nose, the fern leaves burst apart with a sudden shiver, and a
woodcock, uttering that shrill unexplained twitter, upsprings in a halo
of rapid wing-beats and flashes out of sight among leaves and branches.
As quick, the heelplate strikes the alert gunner's shoulder, and, as if
in response to the shock, the short unechoed report jars the silence of
the woods. As if out of the cloud of sulphurous smoke, a shower of
leaves flutter down, with a quicker patter of dry twigs and shards of
bark, and among all these a brown clod drops lifeless and inert to
mother earth.

A woodcock is a woodcock, though but three-quarters grown; and the shot
one that only a quick eye and ready hand may accomplish; but would not
the achievement have been more worthy, the prize richer, the sport
keener in the gaudy leafage and bracing air of October, rather than in
this sweltering heat, befogged with clouds of pestering insects, when
every step is a toil, every moment a torture? Yet men deem it sport and
glory if they do not delight in its performance. The anxious note and
behavior of mother song-birds, whose poor little hearts are in as great
a flutter as their wings concerning their half-grown broods, hatched
coincidently with the woodcock, is proof enough to those who would heed
it, that this is not a proper season for shooting. But in some northerly
parts of our wide country it is woodcock now or never, for the birds
bred still further northward are rarely tempted by the cosiest copse or
half-sunned hillside of open woods to linger for more than a day or two,
as they fare southward, called to warmer days of rest and frostless
moonlit nights of feeding under kindlier skies.

While the nighthawk's monotonous cry and intermittent boom and the
indistinct voice of the whippoorwill ring out in the late twilight of
the July evenings, the alarmed, half-guttural chuckle of the grass
plover is heard, so early migrating in light marching order, thin in
flesh but strong of wing, a poor prize for the gunner whose ardor
outruns his humanity and better judgment. Lean or fat, a plover is a
plover, but would that he might tarry with us till the plump
grasshoppers of August and September had clothed his breast and ribs
with fatness.

Well, let him go, if so soon he will. So let the woodcock go, to offer
his best to more fortunate sportsmen. What does it profit us to kill
merely for the sake of killing, and have to show therefor but a beggarly
account of bones and feathers? Are there not grouse and quail and
woodcock waiting for us, and while we wait for them can we not content
ourselves with indolent angling by shaded streams in these melting days
of July rather than contribute the blaze and smoke of gunpowder to the
heat and murkiness of midsummer? If we must shed blood let us tap the
cool veins of the fishes, not the hot arteries of brooding mother birds
and their fledgelings.



XXII

CAMPING OUT


"Camping out" is becoming merely a name for moving out of one's
permanent habitation and dwelling for a few weeks in a well-built lodge,
smaller than one's home, but as comfortable and almost as convenient;
with tables, chairs and crockery, carpets and curtains, beds with sheets
and blankets on real bedsteads, a stove and its full outfit of cooking
utensils, wherefrom meals are served in the regular ways of
civilization. Living in nearly the same fashion of his ordinary life,
except that he wears a flannel shirt and a slouch hat, and fishes a
little and loafs more than is his ordinary custom, our "camper" imagines
that he is getting quite close to the primitive ways of hunters and
trappers; that he is living their life with nothing lacking but the
rough edges, which he has ingeniously smoothed away. He is mistaken. In
ridding himself of some of its discomforts, he has lost a great deal of
the best of real camp life; the spice of small adventure, and the woodsy
flavor that its half-hardships and makeshift appliances give it. If one
sleeps a little cold under his one blanket on his bed of evergreen
twigs, though he does not take cold, he realizes in some degree the
discomfort of Boone's bivouac when he cuddled beside his hounds to keep
from freezing--and feels slightly heroic. His slumbers are seasoned with
dreams of the wild woods, as the balsamic perfume of his couch steals
into his nostrils; his companions' snores invade his drowsy senses as
the growl of bears, and the thunderous whir of grouse bursting out of
untrodden thickets. When he awakes in the gray of early morning he finds
that the few hours of sleep have wrought a miracle of rest, and he feels
himself nearer to nature when he washes his face in the brook, than when
he rinses off his sleepiness in bowl or basin. The water of the spring
is colder and has a finer flavor when he drinks it from a birch bark
cup of his own making. Tea made in a frying-pan has an aroma never known
to such poor mortals as brew their tea in a teapot, and no mill ever
ground such coffee as that which is tied up in a rag and pounded with a
stone or hatchet-head. A sharpened stick for a fork gives a zest to the
bit of pork "frizzled" on as rude a spit and plattered on a clean chip
or a sheet of bark, and no fish was ever more toothsome than when
broiled on a gridiron improvised of green wands or roasted Indian
fashion in a cleft stick.

What can make amends for the loss of the camp-fire, with innumerable
pictures glowing and shifting in its heart, and conjuring strange shapes
out of the surrounding gloom, and suggesting unseen mysteries that the
circle of darkness holds behind its rim? How are the wells of
conversation to be thawed out by a black stove, so that tales of
hunters' and fishers' craft and adventure shall flow till the measure of
man's belief is overrun? How is the congenial spark of true
companionship to be kindled when people brood around a stove and light
their pipes with matches, and not with coals snatched out of the
camp-fire's edge, or with twigs that burn briefly with baffling flame?

But it will not be long before it will be impossible to get a taste of
real camping without taking long and expensive journeys, for every
available rod of lake shore and river bank is being taken up and made
populous with so-called camps, and the comfortable freedom and seclusion
of a real camp are made impossible there. One desiring that might better
pitch his tent in the back woodlot of a farm than in any such popular
resort. This misnamed camping out has become a fashion which seems
likely to last till the shores are as thronged as the towns, and the
woods are spoiled for the real campers, whom it is possible to imagine
seeking in the summers of the future a seclusion in the cities that the
forests and streams no longer can give them.

Yet, let it be understood that make-believe camping is better than no
camping. It cannot but bring people into more intimate relations with
nature than they would be if they stayed at home, and so to better
acquaintance with our common mother, who deals so impartially with all
her children.



XXIII

THE CAMP-FIRE


If "the open fire furnishes the room," the camp-fire does more for the
camp. It is its life--a life that throbs out in every flare and flicker
to enliven the surroundings, whether they be the trees of the forest,
the expanse of prairie, shadowed only by clouds and night, or the barren
stretch of sandy shore. Out of the encompassing gloom of all these, the
camp-fire materializes figures as real to the eye as flesh and blood. It
peoples the verge of darkness with grotesque forms, that leap and crouch
and sway with the rise and fall and bending of the flame to the wind,
and that beckon the fancy out to grope in the mystery of night.

Then imagination soars with the updrift of smoke and the climbing galaxy
of fading sparks, to where the steadfast stars shine out of the
unvisited realm that only imagination can explore.

The camp-fire gives an expression to the human face that it bears in no
other light, a vague intentness, an absorption in nothing tangible; and
yet not a far-away look, for it is focused on the flame that now licks a
fresh morsel of wood, now laps the empty air; or it is fixed on the
shifting glow of embers, whose blushes flush or fade under their ashen
veil. It is not the gaze of one who looks past everything at nothing, or
at the stars or the mountains or the far-away sea-horizon; but it is
centred on and revealed only by the camp-fire. You wonder what the gazer
beholds--the past, the future, or something that is neither; and the
uncertain answer you can only get by your own questioning of the
flickering blaze.

       *       *       *       *       *

As the outers gather around this cheerful centre their lips exhale
stories of adventure by field and flood, as naturally as the burning
fuel does smoke and sparks, and in that engendering warmth, no fish
caught or lost, no buck killed or missed, suffers shrinkage in size or
weight, no peril is lessened, no tale shorn of minutest detail. All
these belong to the camp-fire, whether it is built in conformity to
scientific rules or piled clumsily by unskilled hands. What satisfaction
there is in the partnership of building this altar of the camp, for
though a master of woodcraft superintends, all may take a hand in its
erection; the youngest and the weakest may contribute a stick that will
brighten the blaze.

       *       *       *       *       *

What hospitality the glow of the camp-fire proclaims in inviting always
one more to the elastic circle of light and warmth, that if always
complete, yet expands to receive another guest. A pillar of cloud by
day, of fire by night, it is a beacon that guides the wanderer to
shelter and comfort.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Indian weed has never such perfect flavor as when, contending with
heat and smoke, one lights his pipe with a coal or an elusive flame,
snatched from the embers of the camp-fire, and by no other fireside does
the nicotian vapor so soothe the perturbed senses, bring such lazy
contentment, nor conjure such pleasant fancies out of the border of
dreamland.

       *       *       *       *       *

There is no cooking comparable with that which the camp-fire affords. To
whatever is boiled, stewed, roasted, broiled or baked over its blaze, in
the glow of its embers or in its ashes, it imparts a distinctive woodsy
flavor that it distills out of itself or draws from the spiced air that
fans it; and the aroma of every dish invites an appetite that is never
disappointed if the supply be large enough.

       *       *       *       *       *

It cannot be denied that the camp stove gives forth warmth and, with
more comfort to the cook, serves to cook food of such tame flavor as one
may get at home. But though the serviceable little imp roar till its
black cheeks glow red as winter berries, it cannot make shanty or tent a
camp in reality or impart to an outing its true flavor. This can only be
given by the generous camp-fire, whose flames and embers no narrow walls
inclose, whose hearth is on every side, whose chimney is the wide air.



XXIV

A RAINY DAY IN CAMP


The plans of the camper, like those of other men, "gang aft agley." The
morrow, which he proposed to devote to some long-desired hunting or
fishing trip, is no more apt to dawn propitiously on him than on the
husbandman, the mariner, or any other mortal who looks to the weather
for special favor. On the contrary, instead of the glowing horizon and
the glory of the sunburst that should usher in the morning, the slow
dawn is quite apt to have the unwelcome accompaniment of rain.

The hearing, first alert of the drowsy senses, catches the sullen patter
of the drops on tent or shanty, their spiteful, hissing fall on the
smouldering embers of the camp-fire, and with a waft of damp earth and
herbage stealing into his nostrils, the disappointed awakener turns
fretfully under his blanket, then crawls forth to have his lingering
hope smothered in the veil of rain that blurs the landscape almost to
annihilation.

He mutters anathemas against the weather, then takes the day as it has
come to him, for better or for worse. First, to make the best of it, he
piles high the camp-fire, and dispels with its glow and warmth some
cubic feet of gloom and dampness. Then he sets about breakfast-making,
scurrying forth from shelter to fire, in rapid culinary forays, battling
with the smoke, for glimpses of the contents of kettle and pan. His
repast is as pungent with smoke as the strong waters of Glenlivat, but
if that is valued for its flavor of peat-reek, why should he scorn food
for the like quality?

Then if he delights in petty warfare with the elements, to bide the
pelting of the rain, to storm the abatis of wet thickets and suffer the
sapping and mining of insidious moisture, he girds up his loins and goes
forth with rod or gun, as his desire of conquest may incline him.

But if he has come to his outing with the intention of pursuing sport
with bodily comfort, he is at once assured that this is unattainable
under the present conditions of the weather. Shall he beguile the
tediousness of a wet day in camp with books and papers?

Nay, if they were not left behind in the busy, plodding world that he
came here to escape from, they should have been. He wants nothing here
that reminds him of traffic or politics; nothing of history, for now he
has only to do with the present; nothing of travel, for his concern now
is only with the exploration of this wild domain. He does not wish to be
bothered with fiction, idealized reality is what he desires. Neither
does he care for what other men have written of nature. Her book is
before him and he may read it from first hands.

Looking forth from his snug shelter on the circumscribed landscape, he
marvels at the brightness of a distant yellow tree that shines like a
living flame through the veil of mist. The blaze of his sputtering
camp-fire is not brighter. He notices, as perhaps he never did before,
how distinctly the dark ramage of the branches is traced among the
brilliant leaves, as if with their autumnal hues they were given
transparency. Some unfelt waft of the upper air casts aside for a moment
the curtain of mist and briefly discloses a mountain peak, radiant with
all the hues of autumn, and it is as if one were given, as in a dream, a
glimpse of the undiscovered country. He realizes a dreamy pleasure in
watching the waves coming in out of the obscurity and dashing on the
shore, or pulsing away in fading leaden lines into the mystery of the
wrack.

In the borders of the mist the ducks revel in the upper and nether
wetness, and with uncanny laughter the loon rejoices between his long
explorations of the aquatic depth. A mink, as heedless of rain as the
waterfowl, comes stealing along the shore, thridding the intricacies of
driftwood and web of wave-washed tree roots, often peering out in
inquisitive examination of the quiet camp. Less cautious visitors draw
nearer--the friendly chickadee, hanging from the nearest twig; the
nuthatch, sounding his penny trumpet, accompanied by the tap of the
woodpecker, as one creeps down, the other up a tree trunk; the scolding
jays, making as noisy protest over human intrusion as if they had just
discovered it; a saucy squirrel, scoffing and jeering, till tired of his
raillery he settles down to quiet nut-rasping under shelter of his tail.

There are unseen visitors, too: wood-mice, astir under cover of the
fallen leaves, and, just discernible among the patter of the falling
rain and of the squirrels' filings, footfalls unidentified, till a
ruffed grouse starts new showers from the wet branches in the thunder of
his flight.

Narrowed to the width of tent or shanty front, the background but a
pallid shroud of mist, the landscape yet holds much for pleasant study.
But if the weather-bound camper exhausts this or tires of it, he may
turn to gun-cleaning or tackle-mending. If a guide be with him, he can
listen to his stories of hunting, fishing, and adventure, or learn
woodcraft of him and the curious ways of birds and beasts. He may
fashion birch-bark camp-ware, dippers, cups, and boxes, or whittle a
paddle from a smooth-rifted maple. If he is of artistic turn, he can
pleasantly devote an hour to etching pictures on the white under surface
of the fungus that grows on decaying trees, and so provide himself with
reminders of this rainy day in camp.

So, with one and another pastime, he whiles away the sunless day, which,
almost before he has thought of it, merges into the early nightfall, and
he is lulled to sleep by the same sound that wakened him, the drip and
patter of the rain. And when he looks back to these days of outing he
may count this, which dawned so unpropitiously, not the least pleasant
and profitable among them, and mark with a white stone the rainy day in
camp.



XXV

AUGUST DAYS


With such unmistakable signs made manifest to the eye and ear the summer
signals its fullness and decline, that one awakening now from a sleep
that fell upon him months ago might be assured of the season with the
first touch of awakening.

To the first aroused sense comes the long-drawn cry of the locust fading
into silence with the dry, husky clap of his wings; the changed voice of
the song birds, no more caroling the jocund tunes of mating and nesting
time, but plaintive with the sadness of farewell.

The bobolink has lost, with his pied coat, the merry lilt that tinkled
so continually over the buttercups and daisies of the June meadows;
rarely the song sparrow utters the trill that cheered us in the doubtful
days of early spring. The bluebird's abbreviated carol floats down from
the sky as sweet as then, but mournful as the patter of autumn leaves.
The gay goldfinch has but three notes left of his June song, as he tilts
on the latest blossoms and fluffy seeds of the thistles. The meadowlark
charms us no more with his long-drawn melody, but with one sharp,
insistent note he struts in the meadow stubble or skulks among the
tussocks of the pasture and challenges the youthful gunner. What an easy
shot that even, steady flight offers, and yet it goes onward with
unfaltering rapid wing-beats, while the gun thunders and the harmless
shot flies behind him. The flicker cackles now no more as when he was a
jubilant new comer, with the new-come spring for his comrade, but is
silent or only yelps one harsh note as he flashes his golden wings in
loping flight from fence-stake to ant-hill.

The plover chuckles while he lingers at the bounteous feast of
grasshoppers, but never pierces the August air with the long wail that
proclaimed his springtime arrival. After nightfall, too, is heard his
chuckling call fluttering down from the aerial path, where he wends his
southward way, high and distinct above the shrill monotony of crickets
and August pipers. The listening sportsman may well imagine that the
departing bird is laughing at him as much as signaling his course to
companion wayfarers.

The woodland thrushes' flutes and bells have ceased to breathe and
chime, only the wood pewee keeps his pensive song of other days, yet
best befitting those of declining summer.

The trees are dark with ripened leafage; out of the twilight of the
woodside glow the declining disks of wild sunflowers and shine the
rising constellations of asters. The meadow sides are gay with unshorn
fringes of goldenrod and willow-herb, and there in the corners of the
gray fences droop the heavy clusters of elderberries, with whose purple
juice the flocking robins and the young grouse, stealing from the
shadowed copses along this belt of shade, dye their bills.

The brook trails its attenuated thread out of the woodland gloom to gild
its shallow ripples with sunshine and redden them with the inverted
flames of the cardinals that blaze on the sedgy brink. Here the brown
mink prowls with her lithe cubs, all unworthy yet of the trapper's
skill, but tending toward it with growth accelerated by full feasts of
pool-impounded minnows. Here, too, the raccoon sets the print of his
footsteps on the muddy shores as he stays his stomach with frogs and
sharpens his appetite with the hot sauce of Indian turnip while he
awaits the setting of his feast in the cornfields. The hounds are more
impatient than he for the opening of his midnight revel, and tug at
their chains and whimper and bay when they hear his querulous call
trembling through the twilight. They are even fooled to melodiously
mournful protest when their ears catch the shriller quaver of the
screech owl's note.

The woodcock skulks in the bordering alders, and when forced to flight
does so with a stronger wing than when a month ago his taking off was
first legally authorized. Another month will make him worthier game; and
then, too, the ruffed grouse need not be spared a shot, as full grown
and strong of pinion he bursts from cover; nor need the wood duck, now
but a vigorous bunch of pin feathers, be let go untried or unscathed,
when from his perch on a slanted log or out of a bower of rushes he
breaks into the upper air with startling flutter of wings and startled
squeak of alarm.

Summer wanes, flowers fade, bird songs falter to mournful notes of
farewell; but while regretfully we mark the decline of these golden
days, we remember with a thrill of expectation that they slope to the
golden days of autumn, wherein the farmer garners his latest harvest,
the sportsman his first worthy harvest, and that to him that waits, come
all things, and even though he waits long, may come the best.



XXVI

A VOYAGE IN THE DARK


A few days ago, a friend who is kind and patient enough to encumber
himself with the care of a blind man and a boy took me and my
twelve-year-old a-fishing. It was with a fresh realization of my
deprivation that I passed along the watery way once as familiar as the
dooryard path, but now shrouded for me in a gloom more impenetrable than
the blackness of the darkest night. I could only guess at the bends and
reaches as the south wind blew on one cheek or the other, or on my back,
only knowing where the channel draws near the shore upon which the
Indians encamped in the old days by the flutter of leaves overbearing
the rustle of rushes. By the chuckle of ripples under the bow, I guessed
when we were in mid-channel; by the entangled splash of an oar, when we
approached the reedy border where the water-lilies rode at anchor, and
discharged their subtle freight of perfume as they tossed in our wake. I
knew by his clatter, drawing nearer only with our progress, that a
kingfisher was perched on a channel-side fishing-stake, used in turn by
him and bigger but not more skillful fishers. I heard his headlong
plunge, but whether successful or not the ensuing clatter did not tell
me, for he has but one voice for all expressions. Yet as his rattling
cry was kept up till the rough edge of its harshness was worn away in
receding flight, I fancied he was proclaiming an unusually successful
achievement. For the sake of his reputation, he would never make such a
fuss over a failure, unless he was telling, as we do, of the big fish he
just missed catching. At any rate, I wished him good luck, for who would
begrudge a poor kingfisher such little fish as he must catch! They would
need years of growth to make them worth our catching or bragging over
the loss of, and by that time we may be done with fishing.

Suddenly there was a roar of multitudinous wings as a host of redwings
upburst from springing and swaying wild rice stalks, all of which I saw
through the blackness illumined for an instant by memory,--the dusky
cloud uprising like the smoke of an explosion, the bent rice springing
up beneath its lifted burden, the dull-witted or greedy laggards
dribbling upward to join the majority. My companions exclaimed in one
voice at the rare sight of a white bird in the flock, and by the same
light of memory I also saw it as I saw one in an autumn forty years ago,
when, with my comrade of those days, I came "daown the crik"
duck-shooting, or trolling as to-day. Again and again we saw this
phenomenal bird like a white star twinkling through a murky cloud. The
fitful gleam was seen day after day, till the north wind blew him and
his cloud away southward.

The pother of the blackbirds overhead disturbed the meditations of a
bittern, who, with an alarmed croak, jerked his ungainly form aloft in a
flurry of awkward wing-beats, and went sagging across the marshes in
search of safer seclusion. I wished that he might find it, and escape
the ruthless gunners that will presently come to desolate these
marshes. Very different from his uprising was that of a pair of wood
ducks, revealing their unsuspected presence with startling suddenness,
as they sprang from water to air with a splash and whistle of rapid
wings and their squeaking alarm cry, and then flew swiftly away, the
sibilant wing-beats pulsing out in the distance. These, too, I wished
might safely run the gauntlet of all the guns that will be arrayed
against them when the summer truce is broken. If I had not been mustered
out, or if my boy were mustered in, no doubt I should feel differently
toward the inhabitants of these marshes. Compulsory abstinence makes one
exceedingly virtuous, and because I am virtuous there shall be no cakes
and ale for any one.

The absence of the rail's cackle was noticeable, a clamor that used to
be provoked at this season by every sudden noise. We never got sight of
the "ma'sh chickens" as they skulked among the sedges; and when the
birds were pressed to flight, rarely caught more than a fleeting glimpse
as they topped the rushes for an instant, and dropped again into the
mazes of the marsh. But they were always announcing a numerous if
invisible presence where now not one answered to our voices or the noise
of our oars.

All this while our trolling gear was in tow: the boy's a "phantom
minnow" bristling with barbs, a veritable porcupine fish; mine a fluted
spoon. The larger fish seemed attracted by the better imitation, or
perhaps age and experience had given them discernment to shun the other
more glaring sham, and the best of them went to the boy's score; but the
unwise majority of smaller fish were evidently anxious to secure
souvenir spoons of Little Otter, and in consequence of that desire I was
"high hook" as to numbers. They were only pickerel at best, though some
of them, bearing their spots on a green ground, are honored with the
name of "maskalonge" by our fishermen. A scratch of the finger-nail
across the scaly gill-cover gives proof enough to convince even a blind
man of the worthlessness of this claim to distinction.

Once I enjoyed an exaltation of spirit only to suffer humiliation. There
was a tug at the hooks, so heavy that my first thought was of a snag,
and I was on the point of calling out to my friend to stop rowing. Then
there was a slight yielding, and the tremor that tells unmistakably of a
fish. "Now," said I, with my heart but a little way back of my teeth, "I
am fast to something like a fish, but I shall never be able to boat him.
He is too big to lift out with the hooks, and I can't see to get him by
the gills, and so I shall lose him." As he came in slowly, stubbornly
fighting against every shortening inch of line, I almost wished he had
not been hooked at all only to be lost at last. When, after a time, my
fish was hauled near the boat and in sight of my companions, my catch
proved to be no monster, but a pickerel of very ordinary size hooked by
the belly, and so my hopes and fears vanished together.

I think distances are magnified to the blind, for it seemed twice as far
as it did of old from the East Slang to the South Slang, as we passed
these oddly named tributaries of Little Otter.

At last I sniffed the fragrance of cedars and heard the wash of waves on
the southward-slanted shore of Garden Island, and these informed me we
were at the lake. In confirmation thereof was the testimony of my
companions, given out of their light to my darkness, of an eagle's royal
progress through his ethereal realm, making inspection of his disputed
earthly possession. I was glad to know that his majesty had escaped the
republican regicides who haunt the summer shores.

We made a difficult landing on the mainland, on the oozy shore of mixed
sawdust and mud, and followed the old trail to the old camping ground
under the rocks, a place full of pleasant memories for the elder two of
our trio, and offering to the boy the charms of freshness and discovery.
For him the cliff towered skyward but little below the eagle's flight;
its tiny caves were unexplored mysteries, their coral-beaded curtains of
Canada yew and delicate netting of mountain-fringe strange foreign
growths. Through his undimmed eyes I had glimpses of those happy shores
whereon the sun always shines and no cloud arises beyond. What a little
way behind they seem in the voyage that has grown wearisome, and yet we
can never revisit them for a day nor for an hour, and it is like a dream
that we ever dwelt there.

Bearing with us from this port something not marketable nor even
visible, yet worth carrying home, we reëmbarked, and the wind, blowing
in my face, informed me we were homeward bound. One after another, we
passed five boats of fishing parties tied up at as many stakes, the
crews pursuing their pastime with steadfast patience, as their intent
silence proclaimed. To me they were as ships passed in the night. I had
no other knowledge of them than this, except that my friend told me
there was a fat woman in each boat, and that one of them boasted to us,
with motherly pride, of a big pickerel caught by her little girl.

A blended hum of bumblebees droned in among us, and my companions
remarked that one of the aerial voyagers had boarded our craft, while I
maintained there were two, which proved to be the fact; whereupon I
argued that my ears were better than their eyes, but failed to convince
them or even myself. I welcomed the bees as old acquaintances, who, in
the duck-shooting of past years, always used to come aboard and bear us
company for awhile, rarely alighting, but tacking from stem to stern on
a cruise of inspection, till at last, satisfied or disappointed, they
went booming out of sight and hearing over marshfuls of blue spikes of
pickerel weed and white trinities of arrowhead. I cannot imagine why
bees should be attracted to the barrenness of a boat, unless by a
curiosity to explore such strange floating islands, though their dry
wood promises neither leaf nor bloom.

I hear of people every year who forsake leafage and bloom to search the
frozen desolation of the polar north for the Lord knows what, and I
cease to wonder at the bees, when men so waste the summers that are
given them to enjoy if they will but bide in them.

We passed many new houses of the muskrats, who are building close to the
channel this year in prophecy of continued low water. But muskrats are
not infallible prophets, and sometimes suffer therefor in starvation or
drowning. The labor of the night-workers was suspended in the glare of
the August afternoon, and their houses were as silent as if deserted,
though we doubted not there were happy households inside them,
untroubled by dreams of famine or deluge, or possibly of the
unmercifulness of man, though that seems an abiding terror with our
lesser brethren. Winter before last the marshes were frozen to the
bottom, blockading the muskrats in their houses, where entire families
perished miserably after being starved to cannibalism. Some dug out
through the house roofs, and wandered far across the desolate wintry
fields in search of food. Yet nature, indifferent to all fates, has so
fostered them since that direful season that the marshy shores are
populous again with sedge-thatched houses.

As we neared our home port we met two trollers, one of whom lifted up
for envious inspection a lusty pickerel. "He's as big as your leg," my
friend replied to my inquiry concerning its dimensions, and in aid of my
further inquisitiveness asked the lucky captor how much the fish would
weigh. "Wal, I guess he ought to weigh abaout seven pounds," was
answered, after careful consideration. We learned afterwards that its
actual weight was nine pounds, and I set that man down as a very honest
angler.

Presently our boat ran her nose into the familiar mire of well-named Mud
Landing, and we exchanged oars for legs, which we plied with right good
will, for a thunderstorm was beginning to bellow behind us.



XXVII

THE SUMMER CAMP-FIRE


A thin column of smoke seen rising lazily among the leafy trees and
fading to a wavering film in the warm morning air or the hotter breath
of noon, a flickering blaze kindling in the sultry dusk on some quiet
shore, mark the place of the summer camp-fire.

It is not, like the great hospitable flare and glowing coals of the
autumn and winter camp-fires, the centre to which all are drawn, about
which the life of the camp gathers, where joke and repartee flash to and
fro as naturally and as frequently as its own sparks fly upward, where
stories come forth as continuously as the ever-rising volume of smoke.

Rather it is avoided and kept aloof from, held to only by the unhappy
wretch upon whom devolves the task of tending the pot and frying-pan,
and he hovers near it fitfully, like a moth about a candle, now backing
away to mop his hot face, now darting into the torrid circle to turn a
fish or snatch away a seething pot or sizzling pan. Now and then the
curious and hungry approach to note with what skill or speed the cookery
is progressing, but they are content to look on at a respectful distance
and to make suggestions and criticisms, but not to interfere with aid.
The epicurean smoker, who holds that the finest flavor of tobacco is
evoked only by coal or blazing splinter, steals down upon the windward
side and snatches a reluctant ember or an elusive flame that flickers
out on the brink of the pipe bowl, but most who burn the weed are
content now to kindle it with the less fervid flame of a match.

And yet this now uncomfortable necessity is still the heart of the camp,
which without it would be but a halting place for a day, where one
appeases hunger with a cold bite and thirst with draughts of tepid
water, and not a temporary home where man has his own fireside, though
he care not to sit near it, and feasts full on hot viands and refreshes
himself with the steaming cup that cheers but not inebriates.

Its smoke drifted far through the woods may prove a pungent trail,
scented out among the odors of balsams and the perfume of flowers that
shall lead hither some pleasant stranger or unexpected friend, or its
firefly glow, flashing but feebly through the gloaming, may be a beacon
that shall bring such company. In its praise may also be said that the
summer camp-fire demands no laborious feeding nor careful tending, is
always a servant, seldom a master.



XXVIII

THE RACCOON


Summer is past its height. The songless bobolink has forsaken the shorn
meadow. Grain fields, save the battalioned maize, have fallen from
gracefulness and beauty of bending heads and ripple of mimic waves to
bristling acres of stubble. From the thriftless borders of ripening
weeds busy flocks of yellowbirds in faded plumage scatter in sudden
flight at one's approach like upblown flurries of dun leaves. Goldenrod
gilds the fence-corners, asters shine in the dewy borders of the woods,
sole survivors of the floral world save the persistent bloom of the wild
carrot and succory--flourishing as if there had never been mower or
reaper--and the white blossoms of the buckwheat crowning the filling
kernels. The fervid days have grown preceptibly shorter, the lengthening
nights have a chilly autumnal flavor, and in the cool dusk the katydids
call and answer one to another out of their leafy tents, and the
delicate green crickets that Yankee folks call August pipers play their
monotonous tune. Above the katydid's strident cry and the piper's
incessant notes, a wild tremulous whinny shivers through the gloom at
intervals, now from a distant field or wood, now from the near orchard.
One listener will tell you that it is only a little screech owl's voice,
another that it is the raccoon's rallying cry to a raid on the
cornfield. There is endless disputation concerning it and apparently no
certainty, but the raccoon is wilder than the owl, and it is pleasanter
to believe that it is his voice that you hear.

The corn is in the milk; the feast is ready. The father and mother and
well grown children, born and reared in the cavern of a ledge or hollow
tree of a swamp, are hungry for sweets remembered or yet untasted, and
they are gathering to it, stealing out of the thick darkness of the
woods and along the brookside in single file, never stopping to dig a
fiery wake-robin bulb nor to catch a frog nor harry a late brood of
ground-nesting birds, but only to call some laggard, or distant
clansfolk. So one fancies, when the quavering cry is repeated and when
it ceases, that all the free-booters have gained the cornfield and are
silent with busy looting. Next day's examination of the field may
confirm the fancy with the sight of torn and trampled stalks and munched
ears. These are the nights when the coon hunter is abroad and the
robbers' revel is likely to be broken up in a wild panic.

Hunted only at night, to follow the coon the boldest rider must
dismount, yet he who risks neck and limbs, or melts or freezes for
sport's sake, and deems no sport manly that has not a spice of danger or
discomfort in it, must not despise this humble pastime for such reason.

On leaving the highway that leads nearest to the hunting ground, the way
of the coon hunters takes them, in darkness or feeble lantern light,
over rough and uncertain footing, till the cornfield's edge is reached
and the dogs cast off. Away go the hounds, their course only indicated
by the rustling of the corn leaves, as they range through the field,
until one old truth-teller gives tongue on the track of a coon who
perhaps has brought his whole family out on a nocturnal picnic. The
hounds sweep straight away, in full cry, on the hot scent to hill or
swamp, where their steadfast baying proclaims that the game is treed.

Then follows a pell-mell scramble toward the musical uproar. Stones,
cradle knolls, logs, stumps, mud holes, brambles and all the inanimate
enemies that lie in wait for man when he hastens in the dark, combine to
trip, bump, bruise, sprain, scratch, and bemire the hurrying hunters.

Then when all have gathered at the centre of attraction, where the
excited hounds are raving about the boll of some great tree, the best
and boldest climber volunteers to go aloft into the upper darkness and
shake the quarry down or shoot him if may be. If he succeeds in
accomplishing the difficult task, what a mêlée ensues when the coon
crashes through the branches to the ground and becomes the erratic
centre of the wild huddle of dogs and men.

Fewer voices never broke the stillness of night with sounds more
unearthly than the medley of raging, yelping, growling, cheering, and
vociferous orders given forth by dogs, coon, and hunters, while hillside
and woodland toss to and fro a more discordant badinage of echo. The
coon is not a great beast, but a tough and sharp-toothed one, who
carries beneath his gray coat and fat ribs a stout heart and wonderful
vitality; and a tussle with a veteran of the tribe of cornfield robbers
tests the pluck of the dogs.

If the coon takes refuge in a tree too tall and limbless for his
pursuers to climb, there is nothing for them but to keep watch and ward
till daylight discovers him crouched on his lofty perch. A huge fire
enlivens the long hours of guard keeping. A foraging party repairs to
the nearest cornfield for roasting ears, and the hunters shorten the
slow nighttide with munching scorched corn, sauced by joke and song and
tales of the coon hunts of bygone years.

The waning moon throbs into view above a serrated hill-crest, then
climbs the sky, while the shadows draw eastward, then pales in the dawn,
and when it is like a blotch of white cloud in the zenith, a sunrise gun
welcomes day and brings the coon tumbling to earth. Or perhaps not a
coon, but some vagrant house cat is the poor reward of the long watch.
Then the weary hunters plod homeward to breakfast and to nail their
trophies to the barn door.

When the sweet acorns, dropping in the frosty night, tempt the coon to a
later feast, there is as good sport and primer peltry. In any of the
nights wherein this sport may be pursued, the man of lazy mould and
contemplative mind loves best the hunt deemed unsuccessful by the more
ardent hunters, when the hounds strike the trail of a wandering fox and
carry a tide of wild music, flooding and ebbing over valley and hilltop,
while the indolent hunter reclines at ease, smoking his pipe and
listening, content to let more ambitious hunters stumble over ledges and
wallow through swamps.

When winter begins, the coon retires for a long and comfortable sleep,
warmly clothed in fur and fat. A great midwinter thaw awakens him,
fooled out of a part of his nap by the siren song of the south wind, and
he wanders forth in quest of something. If food, he never finds it, and
as far as I have been able to determine, does not even seek it. I should
imagine, reading the record of his journey as he prints it in his course
from hollow tree or hollow ledge to other hollow trees and hollow
ledges, that he had been awakened to a sense of loneliness and was
seeking old friends in familiar haunts, with whom to talk over last
year's cornfield raids and frogging parties in past summer
nights--perchance to plan future campaigns. Or is it an inward fire and
no outward warmth that has thawed him into this sudden activity? Has he,
like many of his biggers and betters, gone a-wooing in winter nights?

At such times the thrifty hunter who has an eye more to profit and prime
peltry than to sport, goes forth armed only with an axe. Taking the
track of the wanderers, he follows it to their last tarrying place. If
it be a cave, they are safe except from the trap when they come forth to
begin another journey; but if it is a hollow tree, woe betide the poor
wretches. The hunter saps the foundation of their castle, and when it
crashes to its fall he ignominiously knocks the dazed inmates on the
head. It is fashionable for others to wear the coat which becomes the
raccoon much better than them and which once robbed of he can never
replace.

During the spring and early summer little is seen of the raccoon. His
tracks may be found on a sandy shore or margin of a brook and
occasionally his call can be heard, if indeed it be his, but beyond
these he gives little evidence of his existence. There must be nocturnal
excursions for food, but for the most part old and young abide in their
rocky fortress or wooden tower. They are reported to be a playful
family, and the report is confirmed by the pranks of domesticated
members of it. Sometimes there will be found in one of their ravaged
homes a rounded gnarl worn smooth with much handling or pawing, the
sole furniture of the house and evidently a plaything.

This little brother of the bear is one of the few remaining links that
connect us with the old times, when there were trees older than living
men, when all the world had not entered for the race to gain the prize
of wealth, or place, or renown; when it was the sum of all happiness for
some of us to "go a-coonin'." It is pleasant to see the track of this
midnight prowler, this despoiler of cornfields, imprinted in the mud of
the lane or along the soft margin of the brook, to know that he
survives, though he may not be the fittest. When he has gone forever,
those who outlive him will know whether it was his quavering note that
jarred the still air of the early fall evenings or if it was only the
voice of the owl--if he too shall not then have gone the inevitable way
of all the wild world.



XXIX

THE RELUCTANT CAMP-FIRE


The depressing opposite of the fire that is the warm heart of the camp
is the pile of green or rain-soaked fuel that in spite of all coaxing
and nursing refuses to yield a cheerful flame. Shavings from the
resin-embalmed heart of a dead pine and scrolls of birch bark fail to
enkindle it to more than flicker and smoke, while the wet and hungry
campers brood forlornly over the cheerless centre of their temporary
home, with watery eyes and souls growing sick of camp life.

Night is falling, and the shadows of the woods thicken into solid gloom
that teems with mysterious horrors, which stretch their intangible claws
through the darkness to chill the backs of the timid with an icy touch,
and the silence is terrible with unuttered howlings of imaginary beasts.

Each one is ready to blame the other for the common discomfort, and all,
the high priest, who so far fails to kindle the altar fire. He is an
impostor, who should be smothered in the reek of his own failure. Yet,
as the group regard him with unkind glances and mutterings of
disapproval, he perseveres, feeding the faint flame with choice morsels
of fat wood and nursing it with his breath, his bent face and puffed
cheeks now a little lightened, now fading into gloom, till suddenly the
sullenness of the reluctant fuel is overcome, wings of flame flutter up
the column of smoke, and the black pile leaps into a lurid tower of
light, from whose peak a white banner of smoke flaunts upward, saluted
by the waving boughs that it streams among.

Tent and shanty, familiar trees, and moving figures with their circle of
grotesque, dancing shadows, spring into sudden existence out of the
blank darkness. The magic touch of the firelight dispels every sullen
look, warms every heart to genial comradeship; jokes flash back and
forth merrily, and the camp pulses again with reawakened cheerful life.
Verily, fire worketh wonders in divers ways.



XXX

SEPTEMBER DAYS


September days have the warmth of summer in their briefer hours, but in
their lengthening evenings a prophetic breath of autumn. The cricket
chirps in the noontide, making the most of what remains of his brief
life; the bumblebee is busy among the clover blossoms of the aftermath;
and their shrill cry and dreamy hum hold the outdoor world above the
voices of the song birds, now silent or departed.

What a little while ago they were our familiars, noted all about us in
their accustomed haunts--sparrow, robin, and oriole, each trying now and
then, as if to keep it in memory, a strain of his springtime love song,
and the cuckoo fluting a farewell prophecy of rain. The bobolinks, in
sober sameness of traveling gear, still held the meadowside thickets of
weeds; and the swallows sat in sedate conclave on the barn ridge.
Then, looking and listening for them, we suddenly become aware they are
gone; the adobe city of the eave-dwellers is silent and deserted; the
whilom choristers of the sunny summer meadows are departed to a less
hospitable welcome in more genial climes. How unobtrusive was their
exodus. We awake and miss them, or we think of them and see them not,
and then we realize that with them summer too has gone.

This also the wafted thistledown and the blooming asters tell us, and,
though the woods are dark with their latest greenness, in the lowlands
the gaudy standard of autumn is already displayed. In its shadow the
muskrat is thatching his winter home, and on his new-shorn watery lawn
the full-fledged wild duck broods disport in fullness of feather and
strength of pinion. Evil days are these of September that now befall
them. Alack, for the callow days of peaceful summer, when no honest
gunner was abroad, and the law held the murderous gun in abeyance, and
only the keel of the unarmed angler rippled the still channel.
Continual unrest and abiding fear are their lot now and henceforth, till
spring brings the truce of close time to their persecuted race.

More silently than the fisher's craft the skiff of the sportsman now
invades the rush-paled thoroughfares. Noiseless as ghosts, paddler and
shooter glide along the even path till, alarmed by some keener sense
than is given us, up rise wood duck, dusky duck, and teal from their
reedy cover. Then the ready gun belches its thunder, and suddenly
consternation pervades the marshes. All the world has burst forth in a
burning of powder. From end to end, from border to border, the fenny
expanse roars with discharge and echo, and nowhere within it is there
peace or rest for the sole of a webbed foot. Even the poor bittern and
heron, harmless and worthless, flap to and fro from one to another now
unsafe retreat, in constant danger of death from every booby gunner who
can cover their slow flight.

The upland woods, too, are awakened from the slumber of their late
summer days. How silent they had grown when their songsters had
departed, rarely stirred but by the woodpecker's busy hammer, the
chatter and bark of squirrels, and the crows making vociferous
proclamation against some winged or furred enemy. The grouse have waxed
fat among the border patches of berry bushes, rarely disturbed in the
seclusion of the thickets but by the soft footfall of the fox, the
fleeting shadow of a cruising hawk, and the halloo of the cowboy driving
home his herd from the hillside pasture. Now come enemies more
relentless than beast or bird of prey, a sound more alarming than the
cowboy's distant call--man and his companion the dog, and the terrible
thunder of the gun. A new terror is revealed to the young birds, a
half-forgotten one brought afresh to the old. The crows have found fresh
cause for clamor, and the squirrels lapse into a silence of fear.

Peace and the quietness of peace have departed from the realm of the
woods, and henceforth while the green leaves grow bright as blossoms
with the touch of frost, then brown and sere, and till long after they
lie under the white shroud of winter, its wild denizens shall abide in
constant fear and unrest.

So fares it with the wood-folk, these days of September, wherein the
sportsman rejoiceth with exceeding gladness.



XXXI

A PLEA FOR THE UNPROTECTED


Why kill, for the mere sake of killing or the exhibition of one's skill,
any wild thing that when alive harms no one and when killed is of no
worth? The more happy wild life there is in the world, the pleasanter it
is for all of us.

When one is duck-shooting on inland waters, sitting alert in the bow of
the skiff with his gun ready for the expected gaudy wood duck, or plump
mallard, or loud quacking dusky duck, or swift-winged teal, to rise with
a splashing flutter out of the wild rice, and there is a sudden beating
of broad wings among the sedges with a startled guttural quack, and
one's heart leaps to his throat and his gun to his shoulder, and
then--only an awkward bittern climbs the September breeze with a slow
incline, there is a vengeful temptation to let drive at the
disappointing good-for-nothing. But why not let the poor fellow go? If
you dropped him back into the marsh to rot unprofitably there, disdained
even by the mink, unattainable to the scavenger skunk, what good would
it do you? If he disappointed you, you disturbed him in his meditations,
or in the pursuit of a poor but honest living. Perhaps a great heron too
intent on his fishing or frogging, or dozing in the fancied seclusion of
his reedy bower, springs up within short range and goes lagging away on
his broad vans. He may be taken home to show, for he is worth showing
even when killed. But if you wish your friends to see him at his best,
bring them to him and let them see how well he befits these sedgy
levels--a goodly sight, whether he makes his lazy flight above them or
stands a motionless sentinel in the oozy shallows. The marshes would be
desolate without him, or if one desires the charm of loneliness, his
silent presence adds to it.

A kingfisher comes clattering along the channel. As he jerks his swift
way over the sluggish water he may test your marksmanship, but as he
hangs with rapid wing-beats over a school of minnows, as steadfast for
a minute as a star forever, needing no skill to launch him to his final
unrewarded plunge, do not kill him! In such waters he takes no fish that
you would, and he enlivens the scene more than almost any other
frequenter of it, never skulking and hiding, but with metallic,
vociferous clatter heralding his coming. One never tires of watching his
still mid-air poise, the same in calm or wind, and his unerring headlong
plunge.

When one wanders along a willowy stream with his gun, cautiously
approaching every lily-padded pool and shadowed bend likely to harbor
wood duck or teal, and finds neither, and his ears begin to ache for the
sound of his gun--if a green heron flaps off a branch before him he is
sorely tempted to shoot the ungainly bird, but if the gun must be heard,
let it speak to a stump or a tossed chip, either as difficult a target
as he, and let the poor harmless little heron live. Uncouth as he is, he
comes in well in the picture of such a watercourse, which has done with
the worry of turning mills, left far behind with their noise and bustle
on foaming rapids among the hills, and crawls now in lazy ease through
wide intervales, under elms and water maples and thickets of willows.

On the uplands, where the meadow lark starts out of the grass with a
sharp, defiant "zeet!" and speeds away on his steady game-like flight,
remember before you stop it, or try to, of how little account he is when
brought to bag; and how when the weary days of winter had passed, his
cheery voice welcomed the coming spring, a little later than the
robin's, a little earlier than the flicker's cackle; and what an
enlivening dot of color his yellow breast made where he strutted in the
dun, bare meadows.

In some States the woodpeckers are unprotected and are a mark for every
gunner. Their galloping flight tempts the ambitious young shooter to try
his skill, but they are among the best friends of the arboriculturist
and the fruit-grower, for though some of them steal cherries and peck
early apples, and one species sucks the sap of trees, they are the only
birds that search out and kill the insidious, destructive borer.

In some States, too, the hare is unprotected by any law, and it is
common custom to hunt it, even so late as April, for the mere sake of
killing, apparently; or perhaps the charm of the hound's music, which
makes the butchery of Adirondack deer so delightful a sport to some,
adds a zest to the slaughter of these innocents--though, be it said,
there is no comparison in the marksmanship required. Alive, the northern
hare is one of the most harmless of animals; dead, he is, in the opinion
of most people, one of the most worthless; so worthless that hunters
frequently leave the result of all their day's "sport" in the woods
where they were killed. Yet the hare is legitimate game, and should be
hunted as such, and only in proper seasons, and not be ruthlessly
exterminated. A woodland stroll is the pleasanter if one sees a hare
there in his brown summer suit, or white as the snow about him in his
winter furs.

Where there are no statute laws for the protection of game and harmless
creatures not so classed, an unwritten law of common sense, common
decency, and common humanity should be powerful enough to protect all
these. The fox is an outlaw; it is every one's legal right to kill him
whenever and however he may, and yet wherever the fox is hunted with any
semblance of fair play, whether in New England with gun and hound, or
elsewhere with horse and hound, the man who traps a fox, or kills one
unseasonably, or destroys a vixen and her cubs, bears an evil
reputation. A sentiment as popular and as potent ought to prevail to
protect those that, though harmless, are as unshielded by legislative
enactments as the fox, and much less guarded by natural laws and inborn
cunning.



XXXII

THE SKUNK


Always and everywhere in evil repute and bad odor, hunted, trapped, and
killed, a pest and a fur-bearer, it is a wonder that the skunk is not
exterminated, and that he is not even uncommon.

With an eye to the main chance, the fur-trapper spares him when fur is
not prime, but when the letter "R" has become well established in the
months the cruel trap gapes for him at his outgoing and incoming, at the
door of every discovered burrow, while all the year round the farmer,
sportsman, and poultry-grower wage truceless war against him.

Notwithstanding this general outlawry, when you go forth of a winter
morning, after a night of thaw or tempered chill, you see his authentic
signature on the snow, the unmistakable diagonal row of four footprints
each, or short-spaced alternate tracks, where he has sallied out for a
change from the subterranean darkness of his burrow, or from his as
rayless borrowed quarters beneath the barn, to the starlight or pale
gloom of midnight winter landscape.

More often are you made aware of his continued survival by another sense
than sight, when his far-reaching odor comes down the vernal breeze or
waft of summer air, rankly overbearing all the fragrance of springing
verdure, or perfume of flowers and new-mown hay, and you well know who
has somewhere and somehow been forced to take most offensively the
defensive.

It may be said of him that his actions speak louder than his words. Yet
the voiceless creature sometimes makes known his presence by sound, and
frightens the belated farm boy, whom he curiously follows with a
mysterious, hollow beating of his feet upon the ground.

Patches of neatly inverted turf in a grub-infested pasture tell those
who know his ways that the skunk has been doing the farmer good service
here, and making amends for poultry stealing, and you are inclined to
regard him with more favor. But when you come upon the empty shells of a
raided partridge nest, your sportsman's wrath is enkindled against him
for forestalling your gun. Yet who shall say that you had a better right
to the partridges than he to the eggs?

If you are so favored, you can but admire the pretty sight of the mother
with her cubs basking in a sunny nook or leading them afield in single
file, a black and white procession.

If by another name the rose would smell as sweet, our old acquaintance
is in far better odor for change of appellation from that so suggestive
of his rank offenses. What beauty of fair faces would be spoiled with
scorn by a hint of the vulgar name which in unadorned truth belongs to
the handsome glossy black muff and boa that keep warm those dainty
fingers and swan-like neck. Yet through the furrier's art and cunning
they undergo a magic transformation into something to be worn with
pride, and the every-day wear of the despised outlaw becomes the prized
apparel of the fair lady.

If unto this humble night wanderer is vouchsafed a life beyond his brief
earthly existence, imagine him in that unhunted, trapless paradise of
uncounted eggs and callow nestlings, grinning a wide derisive smile as
he beholds what fools we mortals be, so fooled by ourselves and one
another.



XXXIII

A CAMP-FIRE RUN WILD


Some wooden tent-pins inclosing a few square yards of ground half
covered with a bed of evergreen twigs, matted but still fresh and
odorous, a litter of paper and powder-smirched rags, empty cans and
boxes, a few sticks of fire wood, a blackened, primitive wooden crane,
with its half-charred supporting crotches, and a smouldering heap of
ashes and dying brands, mark the place of a camp recently deserted.

Coming upon it by chance, one could not help a feeling of loneliness,
something akin to that inspired by the cold hearthstone of an empty
house, or the crumbling foundations of a dwelling long since fallen to
ruin. What days and nights of healthful life have been spent here. What
happy hours, never to return, have been passed here. What jokes have
flashed about, what merry tales have been told, what joyous peals of
laughter rung, where now all is silence. But no one is there to see it.
A crow peers down from a treetop to discover what pickings he may glean,
and a mink steals up from the landing, which bears the keelmarks of
lately departed boats, both distrustful of the old silence which the
place has so suddenly resumed; and a company of jays flit silently
about, wondering that there are no intruders to assail with their
inexhaustible vocabulary.

A puff of wind rustles among the treetops, disturbing the balance of the
crow, then plunges downward and sets aflight a scurry of dry leaves, and
out of the gray ashes uncoils a thread of smoke and spins it off into
the haze of leaves and shadows. The crow flaps in sudden alarm, the mink
takes shelter in his coign of vantage among the driftwood, and the jays
raise a multitudinous clamor of discordant outcry. The dry leaves alight
as if by mischievous guidance of evil purpose upon the dormant embers,
another puff of wind arouses a flame that first tastes them, then licks
them with an eager tongue, then with the next eddying breath scatters
its crumbs of sparks into the verge of the forest. These the rising
breeze fans till it loads itself with a light burden of smoke, shifted
now here, now there, as it is trailed along the forest floor, now
climbing among the branches, then soaring skyward.

Little flames creep along the bodies of fallen trees and fluffy windrows
of dry leaves, toying like panther kittens with their assured prey, and
then, grown hungry with such dainty tasting, the flames upburst in a mad
fury of devouring. They climb swifter than panthers to treetops, falling
back they gnaw savagely at tree roots, till the ancient lords of the
forest reel and topple and fall before the gathering wind, and bear
their destroyer still onward.

The leeward woods are thick with a blinding, stifling smoke, through
which all the wild creatures of the forest flee in terror, whither they
know not--by chance to safety, by equal chance perhaps to a terrible
death in the surging deluge of fire. The billows of flame heave and
dash with a constant insatiate roar, tossing ever onward a red foam of
sparks and casting a jetsam of lurid brands upon the ever-retreating
strand that is but touched with the wash of enkindling, when it is
overrun by the sea of fire.

The ice-cold springs grow hot in its fierce overwhelming wave, the
purling rills hiss and boil and shrink before it, then vanish from their
seared beds. All the living greenness of the forest is utterly
consumed--great trees that have stood like towers, defying the
centuries, with the ephemeral verdure of the woodland undergrowth; and
to mark the place of all this recent majesty and beauty, there is but
smouldering ruin and black and ashen waste. Little farms but lately
uncovered to the sun out of the wilderness, cosy homesteads but newly
builded, are swept away, and with them cherished hopes and perhaps
precious lives. What irreparable devastation has been wrought by the
camp-fire run wild!

Meanwhile the careless begetters of this havoc are making their
leisurely way toward the outer world of civilization, serenely noting
that the woods are on fire, and complacently congratulating themselves
that the disaster did not come to spoil their outing; never once
thinking that by a slight exercise of that care which all men owe the
world, this calamity, which a century cannot repair, might have been
avoided.



XXXIV

THE DEAD CAMP-FIRE


A heap of ashes, a few half-burned brands, a blackened pair of crotched
sticks that mark the place of the once glowing heart of the camp,
furnish food for the imagination to feed upon or give the memory an
elusive taste of departed pleasures.

If you were one of those who saw its living flame and felt its warmth,
the pleasant hours passed here come back with that touch of sadness
which accompanies the memory of all departed pleasures and yet makes it
not unwelcome. What was unpleasant, even what was almost unendurable,
has nearly faded out of remembrance or is recalled with a laugh.

It was ten years ago, and the winds and fallen leaves of as many autumns
have scattered and covered the gray heap. If it was only last year, you
fancy that the smell of fire still lingers in the brands. How vividly
return to you the anxious deliberation with which the site was chosen
with a view to all attainable comfort and convenience, and the final
satisfaction that followed the establishment of this short-lived home,
short-lived but yet so much a home during its existence. Nothing
contributed so much to make it one as the camp-fire. How intently you
watched its first building and lighting, how labored for its maintenance
with awkwardly-wielded axe, how you inhaled the odors of its cookery and
essayed long-planned culinary experiments with extemporized implements,
over its beds of coals, and how you felt the consequent exaltation of
triumph or mortification of failure.

All these come back to you, and the relighting of the fire in the sleepy
dawn, the strange mingling of white sunlight and yellow firelight when
the sun shot its first level rays athwart the camp, the bustle of
departure for the day's sport, the pleasant loneliness of camp-keeping
with only the silent woods, the crackling fire, and your thoughts for
company; the incoming at nightfall and the rekindling of the fire, when
the rosy bud of sleeping embers suddenly expanded into a great blossom
of light whose petals quivered and faded and brightened among the
encircling shadows of the woods. You laugh again at the jokes that ran
around that merry circle and wonder again and again at the ingenuity
with which small performances were magnified into great exploits, little
haps into strange adventure, and with which bad shots and poor catches
were excused.

At last came breaking camp, the desolation of dismantling and
leave-taking. How many of you will ever meet again? How many of those
merry voices are stilled forever, from how many of those happy faces has
the light of life faded?

Who lighted this camp-fire? Years have passed since it illumined the
nightly gloom of the woods, for moss and lichens are creeping over the
charred back-log. A green film is spread over the ashes, and thrifty
sprouts are springing up through them.

You know that the campers were tent-dwellers, for there stand the rows
of rotten tent pins inclosing a rusty heap of mould that once was a
fragrant couch of evergreens inviting tired men to rest,--or you know
they spent their nights in a shanty, for there are the crumbling walls,
the fallen-in roof of bark which never again will echo song or jest.

This pile of fish-bones attests that they were anglers, and skillful or
lucky ones, for the pile is large. If you are an ichthyologist, you can
learn by these vestiges of their sport whether they satisfied the desire
of soul and stomach with the baser or the nobler fishes; perhaps a
rotting pole, breaking with its own weight, may decide whether they
fished with worm or fly; but whether you relegate them to the class of
scientific or unscientific anglers, you doubt not they enjoyed their
sport as much in one way as in the other.

You know that they were riflemen, for there is the record of their shots
in the healing bullet wounds on the trunk of a great beech. For a moment
you may fancy that the woods still echo the laughter that greeted the
shot that just raked the side of the tree; but it is only the cackle of
a yellow-hammer.

There is nothing to tell you who they were, whence they came, or whither
they went; but they were campers, lovers of the great outdoor world, and
so akin to you, and you bid them hail and farewell without a meeting.



XXXV

OCTOBER DAYS


Fields as green as when the summer birds caroled above them, woods more
gorgeous with innumerable hues and tints of ripening leaves than a
blooming parterre, are spread beneath the azure sky, whose deepest color
is reflected with intenser blue in lake and stream. In them against this
color are set the scarlet and gold of every tree upon their brinks, the
painted hills, the clear-cut mountain peaks, all downward pointing to
the depths of this nether sky.

Overhead, thistledown and the silken balloon of the milkweed float on
their zephyr-wafted course, silver motes against the blue; and above
them are the black cohorts of crows in their straggling retreat to
softer climes. Now the dark column moves steadily onward, now veers in
confusion from some suspected or discovered danger, or pauses to assail
with a harsh clangor some sworn enemy of the sable brotherhood. Their
gay-clad smaller cousins, the jays, are for the most part silently
industrious among the gold and bronze of the beeches, flitting to and
fro with flashes of blue as they gather mast, but now and then finding
time to scold an intruder with an endless variety of discordant outcry.

How sharp the dark shadows are cut against the sunlit fields, and in
their gloom how brightly shine the first fallen leaves and the starry
bloom of the asters. In cloudy days and even when rain is falling the
depths of the woods are not dark, for the bright foliage seems to give
forth light and casts no shadows beneath the lowering sky.

The scarlet maples burn, the golden leaves of poplar and birch shine
through the misty veil, and the deep purple of the ash glows as if it
held a smouldering fire that the first breeze might fan into a flame,
and through all this luminous leafage one may trace branch and twig as a
wick in a candle flame. Only the evergreens are dark as when they bear
their steadfast green in the desolation of winter, and only they brood
shadows.

In such weather the woodland air is laden with the light burden of odor,
the faintly pungent aroma of the ripened leaves, more subtle than the
scent of pine or fir, yet as apparent to the nostrils, as delightful and
more rare, for in the round of the year its days are few, while in
summer sunshine and winter wind, in springtime shower and autumnal
frost, pine, spruce, balsam, hemlock, and cedar distill their perfume
and lavish it on the breeze or gale of every season.

Out of the marshes, now changing their universal green to brown and
bronze and gold, floats a finer odor than their common reek of ooze and
sodden weeds--a spicy tang of frost-ripened flags and the fainter breath
of the landward border of ferns; and with these also is mingled the
subtle pungency of the woodlands, where the pepperidge is burning out in
a blaze of scarlet, and the yellow flame of the poplars flickers in the
lightest breeze.

The air is of a temper neither too hot nor too cold, and in what is now
rather the good gay wood than green wood, there are no longer pestering
insects to worry the flesh and trouble the spirit. The flies bask in
half torpid indolence, the tormenting whine of the mosquito is heard no
more. Of insect life one hears little but the mellow drone of the
bumblebee, the noontide chirp of the cricket, and the husky rustle of
the dragonfly's gauzy wing.

Unwise are the tent-dwellers who have folded their canvas and departed
to the shelter of more stable roof-trees, for these are days that should
be made the most of, days that have brought the perfected ripeness of
the year and display it in the fullness of its glory.



XXXVI

A COMMON EXPERIENCE


The keenest of the sportsman's disappointments is not a blank day, nor a
series of misses, unaccountable or too well accountable to a blundering
hand or unsteady nerves, nor adverse weather, nor gun or tackle broken
in the midst of sport, nor perversity of dogs, nor uncongeniality of
comradeship, nor yet even the sudden cold or the spell of rheumatism
that prevents his taking the field on the allotted morning.

All these may be but for a day. To-morrow may bring game again to haunts
now untenanted, restore cunning to the awkward hand, steady the nerves,
mend the broken implement, make the dogs obedient and bring pleasanter
comrades or the comfortable lonesomeness of one's own companionship, and
to-morrow or next day or next week the cold and rheumatic twinges may
have passed into the realm of bygone ills.

For a year, perhaps for many years, he has yearned for a sight of some
beloved haunt, endeared to him by old and cherished associations. He
fancies that once more among the scenes of his youthful exploits there
will return to him something of the boyish ardor, exuberance of spirit
and perfect freedom from care that made the enjoyment of those happy
hours so complete. He imagines that a draught from the old spring that
bubbles up in the shadow of the beeches or from the moss-brimmed basin
of the trout brook will rejuvenate him, at least for the moment while
its coolness lingers on his palate, as if he quaffed Ponce de Leon's
undiscovered fountain. He doubts not that in the breath of the old woods
he shall once more catch that faint, indescribable, but unforgotten
aroma, that subtle savor of wildness, that has so long eluded him,
sometimes tantalizing his nostrils with a touch, but never quite inhaled
since its pungent elixir made the young blood tingle in his veins.

He has almost come to his own again, his long-lost possession in the
sunny realm of youth. It lies just beyond the hill before him, from
whose crest he shall see the nut-tree where he shot his first squirrel,
the southing slope where the beeches hide the spring, where he
astonished himself with the glory of killing his first grouse, and he
shall see the glint of the brook flashing down the evergreen dell and
creeping among the alder copses.

He does not expect to find so many squirrels or grouse or trout now as
thirty years ago, when a double gun was a wonder, and its possession the
unrealized dream of himself and his comrades, and none of them had ever
seen jointed rod or artificial fly, and dynamite was uninvented. Yet all
the game and fish cannot have been driven from nor exterminated in
haunts so congenial and fostering as these, by the modern horde of
gunners and anglers and by the latter-day devices of destruction, and he
doubts not that he shall find enough to satisfy the tempered ardor of
the graybeard.

Indeed, it is for something better than mere shooting or fishing that he
has come so far. One squirrel, flicking the leaves with his downfall,
one grouse plunging to earth midway in his thunderous flight, one trout
caught as he can catch him, now, will appease his moderate craving for
sport, and best and most desired of all, make him, for the nonce, a boy
again. He anticipates with quicker heartbeat the thrill of surprised
delight that choked him with its fullness when he achieved his first
triumph.

At last the hilltop is gained, but what unfamiliar scene is this which
has taken the place of that so cherished in his memory and so longed
for? Can that naked hillside slanting toward him from the further rim of
the valley, forlorn in the desolation of recent clearing, be the wooded
slope of the other day? Can the poor, unpicturesque thread of water that
crawls in feeble attenuation between its shorn, unsightly banks be the
wild, free brook whose voice was a continual song, every rod of whose
amber and silver course was a picture? Even its fringes of willow and
alders, useful for their shade and cover when alive, but cut down
worthless even for fuel, have been swept from its margin by the ruthless
besom of destruction, as if everything that could beautify the landscape
must be blotted out to fulfill the mission of the spoiler.

Near it, and sucking in frequent draughts from the faint stream, is a
thirsty and hungry little sawmill, the most obtrusive and most ignoble
feature of the landscape, whose beauty its remorseless fangs have gnawed
away. Every foot of the brook below it is foul with its castings, and
the fragments of its continual greedy feasting are thickly strewn far
and near. Yet it calls to the impoverished hills for more victims; its
shriek arouses discordant echoes where once resounded the music of the
brook, the song of birds, the grouse's drum call, and the mellow note of
the hound.

Though sick at heart with the doleful scene, the returned exile descends
to his harried domain hoping that he may yet find some vestige of its
former wealth, but only more disappointments reward his quest. Not a
trout flashes through the shrunken pools. The once limpid spring is a
quagmire among rotting stumps. The rough nakedness of the hillside is
clad only with thistles and fireweed, with here and there a patch of
blanched dead leaves, dross of the old gold of the beech's ancient
autumnal glory.

Of all he hoped for nothing is realized, and he finds only woful change,
irreparable loss. His heart heavy with sorrow and bursting with impotent
wrath against the ruthless spoiler, he turns his back forever on the
desolated scene of his boyhood's sports.

Alas! That one should ever attempt to retouch the time-faded but
beautiful pictures that the memory holds.



XXXVII

THE RED SQUIRREL


A hawk, flashing the old gold of his pinions in the face of the sun,
flings down a shrill, husky cry of intense scorn; a jay scolds like a
shrew; from his safe isolation in the midwater, a loon taunts you and
the awakening winds with his wild laughter; there is a jeer in the
chuckling diminuendo of the woodchuck's whistle, a taunt in the fox's
gasping bark as he scurries unseen behind the veil of night; and a scoff
on hunters and hounds and cornfield owners is flung out through the
gloaming in the raccoon's quavering cry. But of all the wild world's
inhabitants, feathered or furred, none outdo the saucy red squirrel in
taunts, gibes, and mockery of their common enemy.

He is inspired with derision that is expressed in every tone and
gesture. His agile form is vibrant with it when he flattens himself
against a tree-trunk, toes and tail quivering with intensity of ridicule
as fully expressed in every motion as in his nasal snicker and throaty
chuckle or in the chattering jeer that he pours down when he has
attained a midway or topmost bough and cocks his tail with a saucy curve
above his arched back.

When he persistently retires within his wooden tower, he still peers out
saucily from his lofty portal, and if he disappears you may yet hear the
smothered chuckle wherewith he continues to tickle his ribs. When in a
less scornful mood, he is at least supremely indifferent, deigning to
regard you with but the corner of an eye, while he rasps a nut or chips
a cone.

Ordinarily you must be philosophical or godly to suffer gibes with
equanimity, but you need be neither to endure the scoffs of this buffoon
of the woods and waysides. They only amuse you as they do him, and you
could forgive these tricks tenfold multiplied if he had no worse, and
love him if he were but half as good as he is beautiful.

He exasperates when he cuts off your half-grown apples and pears in
sheer wantonness, injuring you and profiting himself only in the
pleasure of seeing and hearing them fall. But you are heated with a
hotter wrath when he reveals his chief wickedness, and you catch sight
of him stealthily skulking along the leafy by-paths of the branches,
silently intent on evil deeds and plotting the murder of callow
innocents. Quite noiseless now, himself, his whereabouts are only
indicated by the distressful outcry of the persecuted and sympathizing
birds and the fluttering swoops of their futile attacks upon the
marauder. Then when you see him gliding away, swift and silent as a
shadow, bearing a half-naked fledgeling in his jaws, if this is the
first revelation of such wickedness, you are as painfully surprised as
if you had discovered a little child in some wanton act of cruelty.

It seems quite out of all fitness of nature that this merry fellow
should turn murderer, that this dainty connoisseur of choice nuts and
tender buds, and earliest discoverer and taster of the maple's
sweetness, should become so grossly carnivorous and savagely
bloodthirsty. But anon he will cajole you with pretty ways into
forgetfulness and forgiveness of his crimes. You find yourself offering,
in extenuation of his sins, confession of your own offenses. Have not
you, too, wrought havoc among harmless broods and brought sorrow to
feathered mothers and woodland homes? Is he worse than you, or are you
better than he? Against his sins you set his beauty and tricksy manners,
and for them would not banish him out of the world nor miss the
incomparable touch of wild life that his presence gives it.



XXXVIII

THE RUFFED GROUSE


The woods in the older parts of our country possess scarcely a trait of
the primeval forest. The oldest trees have a comparatively youthful
appearance, and are pygmies in girth beside the decaying stumps of their
giant ancestors. They are not so shagged with moss nor so scaled with
lichens. The forest floor has lost its ancient carpet of ankle-deep moss
and the intricate maze of fallen trees in every stage of decay, and
looks clean-swept and bare. The tangle of undergrowth is gone, many of
the species which composed it having quite disappeared, as have many of
the animals that flourished in the perennial shade of the old woods.

If in their season one sees and hears more birds among their lower
interlaced branches, he is not likely to catch sight or sound of many of
the denizens of the old wilderness. No startled deer bounds away before
him, nor bear shuffles awkwardly from his feast of mast at one's
approach, nor does one's flesh creep at the howl of the gathering wolves
or the panther's scream or the rustle of his stealthy footsteps.

But as you saunter on your devious way you may hear a rustle of quick
feet in the dry leaves and a sharp, insistent cry, a succession of
short, high-pitched clucks running into and again out of a querulous
"_ker-r-r-r_," all expressing warning as much as alarm. Your ears guide
your eyes to the exact point from which the sounds apparently come, but
if these are not keen and well trained they fail to detach any animate
form from the inanimate dun and gray of dead leaves and underbrush.

With startling suddenness out of the monotony of lifeless color in an
eddying flurry of dead leaves, fanned to erratic flight by his
wing-beats, the ruffed grouse bursts into view, in full flight with the
first strokes of his thundering pinions, and you have a brief vision of
untamed nature as it was in the old days. On either side of the
vanishing brown nebula the ancient mossed and lichened trunks rear
themselves again, above it their lofty ramage veils the sky, beneath it
lie the deep, noiseless cushion of moss, the shrubs and plants that the
old wood rangers knew and the moose browsed on, and the tangled trunks
of fallen trees. You almost fancy that you hear the long-ago silenced
voices of the woods, so vividly does this wild spirit for an instant
conjure up a vision of the old wild world whereof he is a survival.

Acquaintance with civilized man has not tamed him, but has made him the
wilder. He deigns to feed upon apple-tree buds and buckwheat and
woodside clover, not as a gift, but a begrudged compensation for what
you have taken from him, and gives you therefor not even the thanks of
familiarity; and notwithstanding his acquaintance with generations of
your race he will not suffer you to come so near to him as he would your
grandfather.

If, when the leaves are falling, you find him in your barnyard, garden,
or out-house, or on the porch, do not think he has any intention of
associating with you or your plebeian poultry. You can only wonder where
he found refuge from the painted shower when all his world was wooded.
If he invites your attendance at his drum solo, it is only to fool you
with the sight of an empty stage, for you must be as stealthy and
keen-eyed as a lynx to see his proud display of distended ruff and wide
spread of barred tail and accelerated beat of wings that mimic thunder,
or see even the leafy curtain of his stage flutter in the wind of his
swift exit.

How the definite recognition of his motionless form evades you, so
perfectly are his colors merged into those of his environment, whether
it be in the flush greenness of summer, the painted hues of autumn or
its later faded dun and gray, or in the whiteness of winter. Among one
or the other he is but a clot of dead leaves, a knot upon a branch, the
gray stump of a sapling protruding from the snow, or, covered deep in
the unmarked whiteness, he bursts from it like a mine exploded at your
feet, leaving you agape till he has vanished from your sight and your
ears have caught the last flick of his wings against the dry branches.

In May, his mate sits on her nest, indistinguishable among the brown
leaves and gray branches about her. Later, when surprised with her
brood, how conspicuous she makes herself, fluttering and staggering
along the ground, while her callow chicks, old in cunning though so
lately their eyes first beheld the world, scatter in every direction
like a shattered globule of quicksilver and magically disappear where
there is no apparent hiding-place. Did they con the first lesson of
safety in the dark chamber of the egg, or absorb it with the warmth of
the brooding breast that gave them life?

Listen, and out of the silence which follows the noisy dispersion of the
family hear the low sibilant voice of the mother calling her children to
her or cautioning them to continued hiding. Perhaps you may see her,
alertly skulking among the underbrush, still uttering that tender,
persuasive cry, so faint that the chirp of a cricket might overbear it.
Scatter her brood when the members are half grown and almost as strong
of wing as herself, and you presently hear her softly calling them and
assuring them of her continued care.

Among many things that mark the changing season, is the dispersion of
this wildwood family. Each member is now shifting for itself in matters
of seeking food, safety, pleasure, and comfort. You will come upon one
in the ferny undergrowth of the lowland woods where he is consorting
with woodcock, frighten another from his feast on the fence-side
elderberries, scare one in the thick shadows of the evergreens, another
on the sparsely wooded steep of a rocky hillside, and later hear the
drum-beat of a young cock that the soft Indian summer has fooled into
springtime love-making, and each has the alertness that complete
self-dependence has enforced.

Still, you may come upon them gathered in social groups, yet each going
his own way when flushed. Upon rare occasions you may surprise a grand
convention of all the grouse of the region congregated on the sunny lee
of a hillside. It is a sight and sound to remember long, though for the
moment you forget the gun in your hands, when by ones, twos, and dozens
the dusky forms burst away up wind, down wind, across wind, signalling
their departure with volleys of intermittent and continuous thunder. Not
many times in your life will you see this, yet, if but once, you will be
thankful that you have not outlived all the old world's wildness.



XXXIX

TWO SHOTS


A boy of fourteen, alert, but too full of life to move slowly and
cautiously, is walking along an old road in the woods, a road that winds
here and there with meanderings that now seem vagrant and purposeless
but once led to the various piles of cordwood and logs for whose
harvesting it was hewn. Goodly trees have since grown up from saplings
that the judicious axe then scorned. Beeches, whose flat branches are
shelves of old gold; poplars, turned to towers of brighter metal by the
same alchemy of autumn; and hemlocks, pyramids of unchanging green,
shadow the leaf-strewn forest floor and its inconspicuous dotting of
gray and russet stumps. How happy the boy is in the freedom of the
woods; proud to carry his first own gun, as he treads gingerly but
somewhat noisily over the fallen leaves and dry twigs, scanning with
quick glances the thickets, imagining himself the last Mohican on the
warpath, or Leather-Stocking scouting in the primeval wilderness.

Under his breath he tells the confiding chickadees and woodpeckers what
undreamed-of danger they would be in from such a brave, were he not in
pursuit of nobler game. Then he hears a sudden rustle of the dry leaves,
the _quit! quit!_ of a partridge, catches a glimpse of a rapidly running
brown object, which on the instant is launched into a flashing
thunderous flight. Impelled by the instinct of the born sportsman, he
throws the gun to his shoulder, and scarcely with aim, but in the
direction of the sound, pulls trigger and fires.

On the instant he is ashamed of his impulsive haste, which fooled him
into wasting a precious charge on the inanimate evergreen twigs and sere
leaves that come dropping and floating down to his shot, and is thankful
that he is the only witness of his own foolishness.

But what is that? Above the patter and rustle of falling twigs and
leaves comes a dull thud, followed by the rapid beat of wings upon the
leaf-strewn earth. With heart beating as fast he runs toward the sound,
afraid to believe his senses, when he sees a noble grouse fluttering out
feebly his last gasp. He cannot be sure that it is not all a dream that
may vanish in a breath, till he has the bird safe in his hand, and then
he is faint with joy. Was there ever such a shot? Would that all the
world were here to see, for who can believe it just for the telling?
There never will be another such a bird, nor such a shot, for him. He
fires a dozen ineffectual ones at fair marks that day, but the glory of
that one shot would atone for twice as many misses, and he need not tell
of them, only of this, whereof he bears actual proof, though he himself
can hardly accept it, till again and again he tests it by admiring look
and touch.

Years after the killing of grouse on the wing has become a
matter-of-course occurrence in his days of upland shooting, the memory
of this stands clearest and best. Sixty years later the old wood road
winds through the same scene, by some marvel of kindliness or
oversight, untouched by the devastating axe, unchanged but by the forest
growth of half a century and its seemly and decorous decay. A thicker
screen of undergrowth borders the more faintly traced way. The
golden-brown shelves of the beech branches sweep more broadly above it,
the spires of the evergreens are nearer the sky, and the yellow towers
of the poplars are builded higher, but they are the same trees and
beneath them may yet be seen the gray stumps and trunks mouldered to
russet lines, of their ancient brethren who fell when these were
saplings.

The gray-bearded man who comes along the old wood road wonders at the
little change so many years have made in the scene of the grand
achievements of his youth, and in his mind he runs over the long
calendar to assure himself that so many autumns have glowed and faded
since that happy day. How can he have grown old, his ear dull to the
voices of the woods, his sight dim with the slowly but surely falling
veil of coming blindness, so that even now the road winds into a misty
haze just before him, yet these trees be young and lusty?

As they and the unfaded page of memory record the years, it was but a
little while ago that his heart was almost bursting with pride of that
first triumph. Would that he might once more feel that delicious pang of
joy.

Hark! There is the _quit! quit!_ of a grouse, and there another and
another, and the patter and rustle of their retreating footsteps,
presently launching into sudden flight, vaguely seen in swift bolts of
gray, hurtling among gray tree trunks and variegated foliage. True to
the old instinct his gun leaps to his shoulder, and he fires again and
again at the swift target. But the quick eye no longer guides the aim,
the timely finger no longer pulls the trigger, and the useless pellets
waste themselves on the leaves and twigs.

The woods are full of grouse, as if all the birds of the region had
congregated here to mock his failing sight and skill. On every side they
burst away from him like rockets, and his quick but futile charges in
rapid succession are poured in their direction, yet not a bird falls,
nor even a feather wavers down through the still October air. His dim
eyes refuse to mark down the birds that alight nearest; he can only
vaguely follow their flight by the whirring rush of wings and the click
of intercepting branches.

He is not ashamed of his loss of skill, only grieved to know that his
shooting days are over, yet he is glad there is no one near to see his
failure. He makes renunciation of all title to the name of a crack shot,
too well knowing that this is no brief lapse of skill, but the final,
inevitable falling off of the quick eye and sure hand. Slowly and sadly
he makes his way to where the shaded path merges into the sunny
clearing. There, from the cover of the last bush, a laggard bird springs
as if thrown from a catapult, describing in his flight an arc of a great
circle, and clearly defined against the steel-blue sky.

Again the gun springs instinctively to the shoulder, the instantaneous
aim is taken well ahead on the line of flight, the trigger pressed in
the nick of time, the charge explodes, and out of a cloud of feathers
drifting and whirling in the eddies of his own wing-beats, the noble
bird sweeps downward in the continuation of the course that ends with a
dull thud on the pasture sward.

The old sportsman lifts his clean-killed bird without a thrill of
exultation--he is only devoutly thankful for the happy circumstance
which made successful the last shot he will ever fire, and that not as a
miss he may remember it. Henceforth untouched by him his gun shall hang
upon the wall, its last use linked with the pleasant memory of his last
shot.



XL

NOVEMBER DAYS


In a midsummer sleep one dreams of winter, its cold, its silence and
desolation all surrounding him; then awakes, glad to find himself in the
reality of the light and warmth of summer.

Were we dreaming yesterday of woods more gorgeous in their leafage than
a flower garden in the flush of profusest bloom, so bright with
innumerable tints that autumnal blossoms paled beside them as stars at
sunrise? Were we dreaming of air soft as in springtime, of the gentle
babble of brooks, the carol of bluebirds, the lazy chirp of crickets,
and have we suddenly awakened to be confronted by the desolation of
naked forests, the more forlorn for the few tattered remnants of gay
apparel that flutter in the bleak wind? To hear but the sullen roar of
the chill blast and the clash of stripped boughs, the fitful scurry of
wind-swept leaves and the raving of swollen streams, swelling and
falling as in changing stress of passion, and the heavy leaden patter of
rain on roof and sodden leaves and earth?

Verily, the swift transition is like a pleasant dream with an unhappy
awakening. Yet not all November days are dreary. Now the sun shines warm
from the steel-blue sky, its eager rays devour the rime close on the
heels of the retreating shadows, and the north wind sleeps. The voice of
the brimming stream falls to an even, softer cadence, like the murmur of
pine forests swept by the light touch of a steady breeze.

Then the wind breathes softly from the south, and there drifts with it
from warmer realms, or arises at its touch from the earth about us, or
falls from the atmosphere of heaven itself, not smoke, nor haze, but
something more ethereal than these: a visible air, balmy with odors of
ripeness as the breath of June with perfume of flowers. It pervades
earth and sky, which melt together in it, till the bounds of neither are
discernible, and blends all objects in the landscape beyond the near
foreground, till nothing is distinct but some golden gleam of sunlit
water, bright as the orb that shines upon it. Flocks of migrating geese
linger on the stubble fields, and some laggard crows flap lazily athwart
the sky or perch contentedly upon the naked treetops as if they cared to
seek no clime more genial. The brief heavenly beauteousness of Indian
summer has fallen upon the earth, a few tranquil days of ethereal
mildness dropped into the sullen or turbulent border of winter.

In November days, as in all others, the woods are beautiful to the lover
of nature and to the sportsman who in their love finds the finer flavor
of his pastime. Every marking of the gray trunks, each moss-patch and
scale of lichen on them, is shown more distinctly now in the intercepted
light, and the delicate tracery of the bare branches and their netted
shadows on the rumpled carpet of the forest floor, have a beauty as
distinctive as the fullness of green or frost-tinted leafage and its
silhouette of shade.

No blossom is left in woods or fields, save where in the one the
witch-hazel unfolds its unseasonable flowers yellow beneath cold skies,
or a pink blossom of herb-robert holds out with modest bravery in a
sheltered cranny of the rocks; and where in the other, the ghostly bloom
of everlasting rustles above the leafless stalks in the wind-swept
pastures. There are brighter flashes of color in the sombre woods where
the red winter-berries shine on their leafless stems and the orange and
scarlet clusters of the twining bitter-sweet light up the gray trellis
of the vagrant climber.

No sense of loss or sadness oppresses the soul of the ardent sportsman
as he ranges the unroofed aisles alert for the wary grouse, the skulking
woodcock, full-grown and strong of wing and keen-eyed for every enemy,
or the hare flashing his half-donned winter coat among the gray
underbrush as he bounds away before the merry chiding of the beagles.
The brown monotony of the marshes is pleasant to him as green fields,
while the wild duck tarries in the dark pools and the snipe probes the
unfrozen patches of ooze. To him all seasons are kind, all days
pleasant, wherein he may pursue his sport, though the rain pelt him,
chill winds assail him, or the summer sun shower upon him its most
fervent rays, and in these changeful days of November he finds his full
measure of content.



XLI

THE MUSKRAT


A little turning of nature from her own courses banishes the beaver from
his primal haunts, but his less renowned and lesser cousin, the muskrat,
philosophically accommodates himself to the changed conditions of their
common foster mother and still clings fondly to her altered breast.

The ancient forests may be swept away and their successors disappear,
till there is scarcely left him a watersoaked log to use as an
intermediate port in his coastwise voyages; continual shadow may give
place to diurnal sunshine, woodland to meadow and pasture, the plough
tear the roof of his underground home, and cattle graze where once only
the cloven hoofs of the deer and the moose trod the virgin mould, yet he
holds his old place.

In the springtides of present years as in those of centuries past his
whining call echoes along the changed shores, his wake seams with
silver the dark garment of the water, and his comically grim visage
confronts you now as it did the Waubanakee bowmen in the old days when
the otter and the beaver were his familiars.

Unlike the beaver's slowly maturing crops, his food supply is constantly
provided in the annual growth of the marshes. Here in banks contiguous
to endless store of succulent sedge and lily roots and shell-cased
tidbits of mussels, he tunnels his stable water-portaled home, and out
there, by the channel's edge, builds his sedge-thatched hut before the
earliest frost falls upon the marshes. In its height, some find prophecy
of high or low water, and in the thickness of its walls the forecast of
a mild or severe winter, but the prophet himself is sometimes flooded
out of his house, sometimes starved and frozen in it.

In the still, sunny days between the nights of its unseen building, the
blue spikes of the pickerel-weed and the white trinities of the
arrow-head yet bloom beside it. Then in the golden and scarlet
brightness of autumn the departing wood drake rests on the roof to preen
his plumage, and later the dusky duck swims on its watery lawn. Above it
the wild geese harrow the low, cold arch of the sky, the last fleet of
sere leaves drifts past it in the bleak wind, and then ice and snow draw
the veil of the long winter twilight over the muskrat's homes and
haunts.

These may be gloomy days he spends groping in the dark chambers of his
hut and burrow, or gathering food in the dimly lighted icy water, with
never a sight of the upper world nor ever a sunbeam to warm him.

But there are more woful days when the sun and the sky are again opened
to him, and he breathes the warm air of spring, hears the blackbirds
sing and the bittern boom. For, amid all the gladness of nature's
reawakened life, danger lurks in all his paths; the cruel, hungry trap
gapes for him on every jutting log, on every feeding-bed, even in the
doorway of his burrow and by the side of his house.

The trapper's skiff invades all his pleasant waters; on every hand he
hears the splash of its paddles, the clank of its setting pole, and he
can scarcely show his head above water but a deadly shower of lead
bursts upon it. He hears the simulated call of his beloved, and voyaging
hot-hearted to the cheating tryst meets only death.

At last comes the summer truce and happy days of peace in the tangled
jungle of the marsh, with the wild duck and bittern nesting beside his
watery path, the marsh wren weaving her rushy bower above it.

So the days of his life go on, and the days of his race continue in the
land of his unnumbered generations. Long may he endure to enliven the
drear tameness of civilization with a memory of the world's old
wildness.



XLII

NOVEMBER VOICES


With flowers and leaves, the bird songs have faded out, and the hum and
chirp of insect life, the low and bleat of herds and flocks afield, and
the busy sounds of husbandry have grown infrequent. There are lapses of
such silence that the ear aches for some audible signal of life; and
then to appease it there comes with the rising breeze the solemn murmur
of the pines like the song of the sea on distant shores, the sibilant
whisper of the dead herbage, the clatter of dry pods, and the fitful
stir of fallen leaves, like a scurry of ghostly feet fleeing in affright
at the sound of their own passage.

The breeze puffs itself into a fury of wind, and the writhing branches
shriek and moan and clash as if the lances of phantom armies were
crossed in wild mêlée.

The woods are full of unlipped voices speaking one with another in
pleading, in anger, in soft tones of endearment; and one hears his name
called so distinctly that he answers and calls again, but no answer is
vouchsafed him, only moans and shrieks and mocking laughter, till one
has enough of wild voices and longs for a relapse of silence.

More softly it is broken when through the still air comes the cheery
note of the chickadee and the little trumpet of his comrade the nuthatch
and far away the muffled beat of the grouse's drum, or from a distance
the mellow baying of a hound and its answering echoes, swelling and
dying on hilltop or glen, or mingling in melodious confusion.

From skyward comes the clangor of clarions, wild and musical,
proclaiming the march of gray cohorts of geese advancing southward
through the hills and dales of cloudland. There come, too, the quick
whistling beat of wild ducks' pinions, the cry of a belated plover, and
the creaking voice of a snipe. Then the bawling of a ploughman in a
far-off field--and farther away the rumble and shriek of a railroad
train--brings the listening ear to earth again and its plodding busy
life.



XLIII

THANKSGIVING


Doubtless many a sportsman has bethought him that his Thanksgiving
turkey will have a finer flavor if the feast is prefaced by a few hours
in the woods, with dog and gun. Meaner fare than this day of bounty
furnishes forth is made delicious by such an appetizer, and the
Thanksgiving feast will be none the worse for it.

What can be sweeter than the wholesome fragrance of the fallen leaves?
What more invigorating than the breath of the two seasons that we catch:
here in the northward shade of a wooded hill the nipping air of winter,
there where the southern slope meets the sun the genial warmth of an
October day. Here one's footsteps crunch sharply the frozen herbage and
the ice-bearded border of a spring's overflow; there splash in thawed
pools and rustle softly among the dead leaves.

The flowers are gone, but they were not brighter than the winter berries
and bittersweet that glow around one. The deciduous leaves are fallen
and withered, but they were not more beautiful than the delicate tracery
of their forsaken branches, and the steadfast foliage of the evergreens
was never brighter. The song-birds are singing in southern woods, but
chickadee, nuthatch, and woodpecker are chatty and companionable and
keep the woods in heart with a stir of life.

Then from overhead or underfoot a ruffed grouse booms away into the gray
haze of branches, and one hears the whirr and crash of his headlong
flight long after he is lost to sight, perchance long after the echo of
a futile shot has died away. Far off one hears the intermittent
discharge of rifles where the shooters are burning powder for their
Thanksgiving turkey, and faintly from far away comes the melancholy
music of a hound. Then nearer and clearer, then a rustle of velvet-clad
feet, and lo, reynard himself, the wildest spirit of the woods,
materializes out of the russet indistinctness and flashes past, with
every sense alert. Then the hound goes by, and footstep, voice, and echo
sink into silence. For silence it is, though the silver tinkle of the
brook is in it, and the stir of the last leaf shivering forsaken on its
bough.

In such quietude one may hold heartfelt thanksgiving, feasting full upon
a crust and a draught from the icy rivulet, and leave rich viands and
costly wines for the thankless surfeiting of poorer men.



XLIV

DECEMBER DAYS


Fewer and more chill have become the hours of sunlight, and longer
stretch the noontide shadows of the desolate trees athwart the tawny
fields and the dead leaves that mat the floor of the woods.

The brook braids its shrunken strands of brown water with a hushed
murmur over a bed of sodden leaves between borders of spiny ice
crystals, or in the pools swirl in slow circles the imprisoned fleets of
bubbles beneath a steadfast roof of glass. Dark and sullen the river
sulks its cheerless way, enlivened but by the sheldrake that still
courses his prey in the icy water, and the mink that like a fleet black
shadow steals along the silent banks. Gaudy wood duck and swift-winged
teal have long since departed and left stream and shore to these
marauders and to the trapper, who now gathers here his latest harvest.

The marshes are silent and make no sign of life, though beneath the
domes of many a sedge-built roof the unseen muskrats are astir, and
under the icy cover of the channels fare to and fro on their affairs of
life, undisturbed by any turmoil of the upper world.

When the winds are asleep the lake bears on its placid breast the
moveless images of its quiet shores, deserted now by the latest pleasure
seekers among whose tenantless camps the wild wood-folk wander as
fearlessly as if the foot of man had never trodden here. From the still
midwaters far away a loon halloos to the winds to come forth from their
caves, and yells out his mad laughter in anticipation of the coming
storm. A herald breeze blackens the water with its advancing steps, and
with a roar of its trumpets the angry wind sweeps down, driving the
white-crested ranks of waves to assault the shores. Far up the long
incline of pebbly beaches they rush, and leaping up the walls of rock
hang fetters of ice upon the writhing trees. Out of the seething waters
arise lofty columns of vapor, which like a host of gigantic phantoms
stalk, silent and majestic, above the turmoil, till they fall in
wind-tossed showers of frost flakes.

There are days when almost complete silence possesses the woods, yet
listening intently one may hear the continual movement of myriads of
snow fleas pattering on the fallen leaves like the soft purr of such
showers as one might imagine would fall in Lilliput.

With footfall so light that he is seen close at hand sooner than heard,
a hare limps past; too early clad in his white fur that shall make him
inconspicuous amid the winter snow, his coming shines from afar through
the gray underbrush and on the tawny leaves. Unseen amid his dun and
gray environment, the ruffed grouse skulks unheard, till he bursts away
in thunderous flight. Overhead, invisible in the lofty thicket of a
hemlock's foliage, a squirrel drops a slow patter of cone chips, while
undisturbed a nuthatch winds his spiral way down the smooth trunk. Faint
and far away, yet clear, resound the axe strokes of a chopper, and at
intervals the muffled roar of a tree's downfall.

Silent and moveless cascades of ice veil the rocky steeps where in more
genial days tiny rivulets dripped down the ledges and mingled their
musical tinkle with the songs of birds and the flutter of green leaves.

Winter berries and bittersweet still give here and there a fleck of
bright color to the universal gray and dun of the trees, and the carpet
of cast-off leaves and the dull hue of the evergreens but scarcely
relieve the sombreness of the woodland landscape.

Spanning forest and field with a low flat arch of even gray, hangs a sky
as cold as the landscape it domes and whose mountain borders lie hidden
in its hazy foundations. Through this canopy of suspended snow the low
noontide sun shows but a blotch of yellowish gray, rayless and giving
forth no warmth, and, as it slants toward its brief decline, grows yet
dimmer till it is quite blotted out in the gloom of the half-spent
afternoon.

The expectant hush that broods over the forlorn and naked earth is
broken only by the twitter of a flock of snow buntings which, like a
straight-blown flurry of flakes, drift across the fields, and, sounding
solemnly from the depths of the woods, the hollow hoot of a great owl.
Then the first flakes come wavering down, then blurring all the
landscape into vague unreality they fall faster, with a soft purr on
frozen grass and leaves till it becomes unheard on the thickening
noiseless mantle of snow. Deeper and deeper the snow infolds the earth,
covering all its unsightliness of death and desolation.

Now white-furred hare and white-feathered bunting are at one with the
white-clad world wherein they move, and we, so lately accustomed to the
greenness of summer and the gorgeousness of autumn, wondering at the
ease wherewith we accept this marvel of transformation, welcome these
white December days and in them still find content.



XLV

WINTER VOICES


Out of her sleep nature yet gives forth voices betokening that life
abides beneath the semblance of death, that her warm heart still beats
under the white shroud that infolds her rigid breast.

A smothered tinkle as of muffled bells comes up from the streams through
their double roofing of snow and ice, and the frozen pulse of the trees
complains of its thralldom with a resonant twang as of a strained cord
snapped asunder.

Beneath their frozen plains, the lakes bewail their imprisonment with
hollow moans awakening a wild and mournful chorus of echoes from
sleeping shores that answer now no caress of ripples nor angry stroke of
waves nor dip and splash of oar and paddle.

The breeze stirs leafless trees and shaggy evergreens to a murmur that
is sweet, if sadder than they gave it in the leafy days of summer, when
it bore the perfume of flowers and the odor of green fields, and one may
imagine the spirit of springtime and summer lingers among the naked
boughs, voicing memory and hope.

Amid all the desolation of their woodland haunts the squirrels chatter
their delight in windless days of sunshine, and scoff at biting cold and
wintry blasts. The nuthatch winds his tiny trumpet, the titmouse pipes
his cheery note, the jay tries the innumerable tricks of his unmusical
voice, and from their rollicking flight athwart the wavering slant of
snowflakes drifts the creaking twitter of buntings.

The sharp, resonant strokes of the woodman's axe and the groaning
downfall of the monarchs that it lays low, the shouts of teamsters, the
occasional report of a gun, the various sounds of distant farmstead
life, the jangle of sleigh bells on far-off highways, the rumbling roar
of a railroad train rushing and panting along its iron path, and the
bellowing of its far-echoed signals, all proclaim how busily affairs of
life and pleasure still go on while the summer-wearied earth lies
wrapped in her winter sleep.

Night, stealing upon her in dusky pallor, under cloudy skies, or
silvering her face with moonbeams and starlight, brings other and wilder
voices. Solemnly the unearthly trumpet of the owl resounds from his
woodland hermitage, the fox's gasping bark, wild and uncanny, marks at
intervals his wayward course across the frozen fields on some errand of
love or freebooting, and, swelling and falling with puff and lapse of
the night wind, as mournful and lonesome as the voice of a vagrant
spirit, comes from the mountain ridges the baying of a hound, hunting
alone and unheeded, while his master basks in the comfort of his
fireside.



XLVI

THE VARYING HARE


It is wonderful that with such a host of enemies to maintain himself
against, the varying hare may still be counted as one of our familiar
acquaintances. Except in the depths of the great wildernesses, he has no
longer to fear the wolf, the wolverine, the panther, and the lesser
_felidæ_, but where the younger woodlands have become his congenial
home, they are also the home of a multitude of relentless enemies. The
hawk, whose keen eyes pierce the leafy roof of the woods, wheels above
him as he crouches in his form. When he goes abroad under the moon and
stars, the terrible shadow of the horned owl falls upon his path, and
the fox lurks beside it to waylay him, and the clumsy raccoon, waddling
home from a cornfield revel, may blunder upon the timid wayfarer.

But of all his enemies none is more inveterate than man, though he is
not, as are the others, impelled by necessity, but only by that
savagery, the survival of barbarism, which we dignify by the name of the
sporting instinct.

Against them all, how slight seem the defenses of such a weak and timid
creature. Yet impartial nature, having compassed him about with foes,
has shod his feet with swiftness and silence, and clad his body with an
almost invisible garment. The vagrant zephyrs touch the fallen leaves
more noisily than his soft pads press them. The first snow that whitens
the fading gorgeousness of the forest carpet falls scarcely more
silently.

Among the tender greens of early summer and the darker verdure of
midsummer, the hare's brown form is as inconspicuous as a tuft of last
year's leaves, and set in the brilliancy of autumnal tints, or the
russet hue of their decay, it still eludes the eye. Then winter clothes
him in her own whiteness so he may sit unseen upon her lap.

When he has donned his winter suit too early and his white coat is
dangerously conspicuous on the brown leaves and among the misty gray of
naked undergrowth, he permits your near approach as confidently as if he
were of a color with his surroundings. Is he not aware that his spotless
raiment betrays him, or does he trust that he may be mistaken for a
white stone or a scroll of bark sloughed from a white birch? That would
hardly save him from the keener-sensed birds and beasts of prey, but may
fool your dull eyes.

In summer wanderings in the woods you rarely catch sight of him, though
coming upon many faintly traced paths where he and his wife and their
brown babies make their nightly way among the ferns. Nor are you often
favored with a sight of him in more frequent autumnal tramps, unless
when he is fleeing before the hounds whose voices guide you to a point
of observation. He has now no eyes nor ears for anything but the
terrible clamor that pursues him wherever he turns, however he doubles.
If a shot brings him down and does not kill him, you will hear a cry so
piteous that it will spoil your pleasant dreams of sport for many a
night.

After a snowfall a single hare will in one night make such a multitude
of tracks as will persuade you that a dozen have been abroad. Perhaps
the trail is so intricately tangled with a purpose of misleading
pursuit, perhaps it is but the record of saunterings as idle as your
own.

As thus you wander through the pearl-enameled arches, your roving
glances are arrested by a rounded form which, as white and motionless as
everything around it, yet seems in some way not so lifeless. You note
that the broad footprints end there, and then become aware of two wide,
bright eyes, unblinkingly regarding you from the fluffy tuft of
whiteness. How perfectly assured he is of his invisibility, and if he
had but closed his bright eyes you might not guess that he was anything
but a snow-covered clump of moss. How still and breathless he sits till
you almost touch him, and then the white clod suddenly flashes into life
and impetuous motion, bounding away in a halo of feathery flakes as if
he himself were dissolving into white vapor.

Happy he, if he might so elude all foes; but alas for him, if the
swift-winged owl had been as close above him or the agile fox within
leap. Then instead of this glimpse of beautiful wild life to treasure in
your memory, you would only have read the story of a brief tragedy,
briefly written, with a smirch of blood and a tuft of rumpled fur.



XLVII

THE WINTER CAMP-FIRE


The chief requisite of a winter camp-fire is volume. The feeble flame
and meagre bed of embers that are a hot discomfort to the summer camper,
while he hovers over coffee-pot and frying-pan, would be no more than
the glow of a candle toward tempering this nipping air. This fire must
be no dainty nibbler of chips and twigs that a boy's hatchet may
furnish, but a roaring devourer of logs, for whose carving the axe must
be long and stoutly wielded--a very glutton of solid fuel, continually
demanding more and licking with its broad red tongues at the branches
that sway and toss high above in its hot breath.

So fierce is it that you approach cautiously to feed it and the snow
shrinks away from it and can quench of it only the tiny sparks that are
spit out upon it. You must not be too familiar with it, yet it is your
friend after its own manner, fighting away for you the creeping demon of
cold, and holding at bay, on the rim of its glare, the wolf and the
panther.

With its friendly offices are mingled many elfish tricks. It boils your
pot just to the point you wish, then boils it over and licks up the
fragrant brew of celestial leaf or Javanese berry. It roasts or broils
your meat to a turn, then battles with you for it and sears your fingers
when you strive to snatch the morsel from its jaws, and perhaps burns it
to a crisp before your very eyes, vouchsafing but the tantalizing
fragrance of the feast.

Then it may fall into the friendliest and most companionable of moods,
lazily burning its great billets of ancient wood while you burn the
Virginian weed, singing to you songs of summer, its tongues of flame
murmuring like the south wind among green leaves, and mimicking the
chirp of the crickets and the cicada's cry in the simmer of exuding sap
and vent of gas, and out of its smoke blossom sparks, that drift away
in its own currents like red petals of spent flowers.

It paints pictures, some weird or grotesque, some beautiful, now of
ghosts and goblins, now of old men, now of fair women, now of lakes
crinkled with golden waves and towers on pine-crowned crags ruddy with
the glow of sunset, sunny meadows and pasture lands, with farmsteads and
flocks and herds.

The ancient trees that rear themselves aloft like strong pillars set to
hold up the narrow arch of darkness, exhale an atmosphere of the past,
in which your thoughts, waking or sleeping, drift backward to the old
days when men whose dust was long since mingled with the forest mould
moved here in the rage of war and the ardor of the chase. Shadowy forms
of dusky warriors, horribly marked in war paint, gather about the
camp-fire and sit in its glare in voiceless council, or encircle it in
the grotesquely terrible movement of the war dance.

Magically the warlike scene changes to one of peace. The red hunters
steal silently in with burdens of game. The squaws sit in the ruddy
light plying their various labors, while their impish children play
around them in mimicry of battle and the chase.

All then vanish, and white-clad soldiers of France bivouac in their
place--or red-coated Britons, or Provincial rangers, unsoldierly to look
upon, in home-spun garb, but keen-eyed, alert, and the bravest of the
brave.

These dissolve like wreaths of smoke, and a solitary white hunter,
clothed all in buckskin, sits over against you. His long flint-lock
rifle lying across his lap, he is looking with rapt gaze into the fire,
dreaming as you are.

So, growing brighter as the daylight grows dim and the gloaming thickens
to the mirk, and paling again as daylight creeps slowly back upon the
world, but always bright in the diurnal twilight of the woods, the
camp-fire weaves and breaks its magic spells, now leaping, now lapsing,
as its own freaks move it. Then, perhaps, when it has charmed you far
across the border of dreamland and locked your eyes in the blindness of
sleep, it will startle you back to the cold reality of the wintry woods
with a crash and roar of sudden revival.



XLVIII

JANUARY DAYS


In these midwinter days, how muffled is the earth in its immaculate
raiment, so disguised in whiteness that familiar places are strange,
rough hollows smoothed to mere undulations, deceitful to the eye and
feet, and level fields so piled with heaps and ridges that their owners
scarcely recognize them. The hovel is as regally roofed as the palace,
the rudest fence is a hedge of pearl, finer than a wall of marble, and
the meanest wayside weed is a white flower of fairyland.

The woods, which frost and November winds stripped of their leafy
thatch, are roofed again, now with an arabesque of alabaster more
delicate than the green canopy that summer unfolded, and all the floor
is set in noiseless pavement, traced with a shifting pattern of blue
shadows. In these silent aisles the echoes are smothered at their
birth. There is no response of airy voices to the faint call of the
winter birds. The sound of the axe-stroke flies no farther than the
pungent fragrance of the smoke that drifts in a blue haze from the
chopper's fire. The report of the gun awakes no answering report, and
each mellow note of the hound comes separate to the ear, with no jangle
of reverberations.

Fox and hound wallow through the snow a crumbling furrow that
obliterates identity of either trail, yet there are tracks that tell as
plain as written words who made them. Here have fallen, lightly as
snowflakes, the broad pads of the hare, white as the snow he trod;
there, the parallel tracks of another winter masker, the weasel, and
those of the squirrel, linking tree to tree. The leaps of a tiny
wood-mouse are lightly marked upon the feathery surface to where there
is the imprint of a light, swift pinion on either side, and the little
story of his wandering ends--one crimson blood drop the period that
marks the finis.

In the blue shadow at the bottom of that winding furrow are the dainty
footprints of a grouse, and you wonder why he, so strong of wing,
should choose to wade laboriously the clogging snow even in his briefest
trip, rather than make his easy way through the unresisting air, and the
snow-written record of his wayward wanderings tells not why. Suddenly,
as if a mine had been sprung where your next footstep should fall and
with almost as startling, though harmless effect, another of his wild
tribe bursts upward through the unmarked white floor and goes whirring
and clattering away, scattering in powdery ruin the maze of delicate
tracery the snowfall wrought; and vanishes, leaving only an aerial
pathway of naked twigs to mark his impetuous passage.

In the twilight of an evergreen thicket sits a great horned owl like a
hermit in his cell in pious contemplation of his own holiness and the
world's wickedness. But this recluse hates not sin, only daylight and
mankind. Out in the fields you may find the white-robed brother of this
gray friar, a pilgrim from the far north, brooding in the very face of
the sun, on some stack or outlying barn, but he will not suffer you to
come so near to him as will this solemn anchorite who stares at you
unmoved as a graven image till you come within the very shadows of his
roof.

Marsh and channel are scarcely distinguishable now but by the white
domes of the muskrats' winter homes and here and there a sprawling
thicket or button bush, for the rank growth of weeds is beaten flat, and
the deep snow covers it and the channel ice in one unbroken sheet.

Champlain's sheltered bays and coves are frozen and white with snow or
frost, and the open water, whether still or storm-tossed, black beneath
clouds or bluer than the blue dome that arches it, looks as cold as ice
and snow. Sometimes its steaming breath lies close above it, sometimes
mounts in swaying, lofty columns to the sky, but always cold and
ghostly, without expression of warmth or life.

So far away to hoary peaks that shine with a glittering gleam against
the blue rim of the sky, or to the furthest bluegray line of woodland
that borders the horizon, stretches the universal whiteness, so coldly
shines the sun from the low curve of his course, and so chilly comes the
lightest waft of wind from wheresoever it listeth, that it tasks the
imagination to picture any land on all the earth where spring is just
awakening fresh life, or where summer dwells amid green leaves and
bright flowers, the music of birds and running waters, and of warm waves
on pleasant shores, or autumn yet lingers in the gorgeousness of many
hues. How far off beyond this world seems the possibility of such
seasons, how enduring and relentless this which encompasses us.

And then, at the close of the brief white day, the sunset paints a
promise and a prophecy in a blaze of color on the sky. The gray clouds
kindle with red and yellow fire that burns about their purple hearts in
tints of infinite variety, while behind them and the dark blue rampart
of the mountains flames the last glory of the departing sun, fading in a
tint of tender green to the upper blue. Even the cold snow at our feet
flushes with warm color, and the eastern hills blush roseate against
the climbing, darkening shadow of the earth.

It is as if some land of summer whose brightness has never been told lay
unveiled before us, its delectable mountains splendid with innumerable
hues, its lakes and streams of gold rippling to purple shores seeming
not so far before us but that we might, by a little journey, come to
them.



XLIX

A NEW ENGLAND WOODPILE


When the charitable mantle of the snow has covered the ugliness of the
earth, as one looks towards the woodlands he may see a distant dark
speck emerge from the blue shadow of the woods and crawl slowly
houseward. If born to the customs of this wintry land, he may guess at
once what it is; if not, speculation, after a little, gives way to
certainty, when the indistinct atom grows into a team of quick-stepping
horses or deliberate oxen hauling a sled-load of wood to the farmhouse.

It is more than that. It is a part of the woods themselves, with much of
their wildness clinging to it, and with records, slight and fragmentary,
yet legible, of the lives of trees and birds and beasts and men coming
to our door.

Before the sounds of the creaking sled and the answering creak of the
snow are heard, one sees the regular puffs of the team's breath jetting
out and climbing the cold air. The head and shoulders of the muffled
driver then appear, as he sticks by narrow foothold to the hinder part
of his sled, or trots behind it beating his breast with his numb hands.
Prone like a crawling band of scouts, endwise like battering-rams, not
upright with green banners waving, Birnam wood comes to Dunsinane to
fight King Frost.

As the woodpile grows at the farmhouse door in a huge windrow of
sled-length wood or an even wall of cord wood, so in the woods there
widens a patch of uninterrupted daylight. Deep shade and barred and
netted shadow turn to almost even whiteness, as the axe saps the
foundations of summer homes of birds and the winter fastnesses of the
squirrels and raccoons. Here are the tracks of sled and team, where they
wound among rocks and stumps and over cradle knolls to make up a load;
and there are those of the chopper by the stump where he stood to fell
the tree, and along the great trough made by its fall. The snow is
flecked with chips, dark or pale according to their kind, just as they
alighted from their short flight, bark up or down or barkless or
edgewise, and with dry twigs and torn scraps of scattered moss.

When the chopper comes to his work in the morning, he finds traces of
nightly visitors to his white island that have drifted to its shores out
of the gray sea of woods. Here is the print of the hare's furry foot
where he came to nibble the twigs of poplar and birch that yesterday
were switching the clouds, but have fallen, manna-like, from skyward to
feed him. A fox has skirted its shadowy margin, then ventured to explore
it, and in a thawy night a raccoon has waddled across it.

The woodman is apt to kindle a fire more for company than warmth, though
he sits by it to eat his cold dinner, casting the crumbs to the
chickadees, which come fearlessly about him at all times. Blazing or
smouldering by turns, as it is fed or starved, the fire humanizes the
woods more than the man does. Now and then it draws to it a visitor,
oftenest a fox-hunter who has lost his hound, and stops for a moment to
light his pipe at the embers and to ask if his dog has been seen or
heard. Then he wades off through the snow, and is presently swallowed
out of sight by gray trees and blue shadows. Or the hound comes in
search of his master or a lost trail. He halts for an instant, with a
wistful look on his sorrowful face, then disappears, nosing his way into
the maw of the woods.

If the wood is cut "sled length," which is a saving of time and also of
chips, which will now be made at the door and will serve to boil the
tea-kettle in summer, instead of rotting to slow fertilization of the
woodlot, the chopper is one of the regular farm hands or a "day man,"
and helps load the sled when it comes. If the wood is four foot, he is a
professional, chopping by the cord, and not likely to pile his cords too
high or long, nor so closely that the squirrels have much more trouble
in making their way through them than over them; and the man comes and
goes according to his ambition to earn money.

In whichever capacity the chopper plies his axe, he is pretty sure to
bring no sentimentalism to his task. He inherits the feeling that was
held by the old pioneers toward trees, who looked upon the noblest of
them as only giant weeds, encumbering the ground, and best got rid of by
the shortest means. To him the tree is a foe worthy of no respect or
mercy, and he feels the triumph of a savage conquerer when it comes
crashing down and he mounts the prostrate trunk to dismember it; the
more year-marks encircling its heart, the greater his victory. To his
ears, its many tongues tell nothing, or preach only heresy. Away with
the old tree to the flames! To give him his due, he is a skillful
executioner, and will compel a tree to fall across any selected stump
within its length. If one could forget the tree, it is a pretty sight to
watch the easy swing of the axe, and see how unerringly every blow goes
to its mark, knocking out chips of a span's breadth. It does not look
difficult nor like work; but could you strike "twice in a place," or in
half a day bring down a tree twice as thick as your body? The wise
farmer cuts, for fuel, only the dead and decaying trees in his woodlot,
leaving saplings and thrifty old trees to "stand up and grow better," as
the Yankee saying is.

There is a prosperous and hospitable look in a great woodpile at a
farmhouse door. Logs with the moss of a hundred years on them, breathing
the odors of the woods, have come to warm the inmates and all in-comers.
The white smoke of these chimneys is spicy with the smell of seasoned
hard wood, and has a savor of roasts and stews that makes one hungry. If
you take the back track on a trail of pitchy smoke, it is sure to lead
you to a squalid threshold with its starved heap of pine roots and
half-decayed wood. Thrown down carelessly beside it is a dull axe,
wielded as need requires with spiteful awkwardness by a slatternly
woman, or laboriously upheaved and let fall with uncertain stroke by a
small boy.

The Yankees who possess happy memories of the great open fires of old
time are growing few, but Whittier has embalmed for all time, in
"Snow-Bound," their comfort and cheer and picturesqueness. When the
trees of the virgin forest cast their shadows on the newly risen roof
there was no forecasting provision for winter. The nearest green tree
was cut, and hauled, full length, to the door, and with it the nearest
dry one was cut to match the span of the wide fireplace; and when these
were gone, another raid was made upon the woods; and so from hand to
mouth the fire was fed. It was not uncommon to draw the huge backlogs on
to the hearth with a horse, and sometimes a yoke of oxen were so
employed. Think of a door wide enough for this: half of the side of a
house to barricade against the savage Indians and savage cold! It was
the next remove from a camp-fire. There was further likeness to it in
the tales that were told beside it, of hunting and pioneer hardships, of
wild beasts and Indian forays, while the eager listeners drew to a
closer circle on the hearth, and the awed children cast covert scared
backward glances at the crouching and leaping shadows that thronged on
the walls, and the great samp-kettle bubbled and seethed on its trammel,
and the forgotten johnny-cake scorched on its tilted board.

As conveniently near the shed as possible, the pile of sled-length wood
is stretching itself slowly, a huge vertebrate, every day or two gaining
in length; a joint of various woods, with great trunks at the bottom,
then smaller ones, gradually growing less to the topping out of saplings
and branches. Here is a sugar-maple, three feet through at the butt,
with the scars of many tappings showing on its rough bark. The oldest of
them may have been made by the Indians. Who knows what was their method
of tapping? Here is the mark of the gouge with which early settlers drew
the blood of the tree; a fashion learned, likely enough, from the
aboriginal sugar-makers, whose narrowest stone gouges were as passable
tools for the purpose as any they had for another. These more distinct
marks show where the auger of later years made its wounds. The old tree
has distilled its sweets for two races and many generations of men,
first into the bark buckets of Waubanakis, then into the ruder troughs
of Yankee pioneers, then into the more convenient wide-bottomed wooden
sap-tubs; and at last, when the march of improvement has spoiled the
wilderness of the woods with trim-built sugar-houses and patent
evaporators, the sap drips with resounding metallic tinkle into pails of
shining tin. Now the old maple has come to perform its last office, of
warming and cooking the food for a generation that was unborn when it
was yet a lusty tree.

Beside it lies a great wild-cherry tree that somehow escaped the cabinet
maker when there was one in every town and cherry wood was in fashion.
Its fruit mollified the harshness of the New England rum of many an
old-time raising and husking. Next is a yellow birch with a shaggy mane
of rustling bark along its whole length, like a twelve-foot piece of the
sea serpent drifted ashore and hauled inland; then a white birch, no
longer white, but gray with a coating of moss, and black with belts of
old peelings, made for the patching of canoes and roofing of shanties.

With these lies a black birch, whose once smooth bark age has scaled and
furrowed, and robbed of all its tenderness and most of its pungent,
aromatic flavor. Some of it yet lingers in the younger topmost twigs
which the hired man brings home to the little folks, who fall to gnawing
them like a colony of beavers. By it is an elm, whose hollow trunk was
the home of raccoons when it stood on its buttressed stump in the swamp.
Near by is a beech, its smooth bark wrinkled where branches bent away
from it, and blotched with spots of white and patches of black and gray
lichen. It is marked with innumerable fine scratches, the track of the
generations of squirrels that have made it their highway; and among
these, the wider apart and parallel nail-marks of a raccoon, and also
the drilling of woodpeckers. Here, too, are traces of man's visitation,
for distorted with the growth of years are initials, and a heart and
dart that symbolized the tender passion of some one of the past, who
wandered, love-sick, in the shadow of the woods. How long ago did
death's inevitable dart pierce his heart? Here he wrote a little of his
life's history, and now his name and that of his mistress are so
completely forgotten one cannot guess them by their first letters
inscribed in the yesterday of the forest's years.

Above these logs, rolled up on skids or sled stakes, are smaller yet
goodly bodies of white ash, full of oars for the water and rails for the
land; and of black ash, as full of barrel hoops and basket splints, the
ridged and hoary bark shagged with patches of dark moss; and a pine too
knotty for sawing, with old turpentine boxes gashing its lower part, the
dry resin in them half overgrown, but odorous still; and oaks that have
borne their last acorns; and a sharded hickory that will never furnish
another nut for boy or squirrel, but now, and only this once, flail
handles, swingles, and oxbows, and helves for axes to hew down its
brethren, and wood to warm its destroyers, and smoke and fry ham for
them; and a basswood that will give the wild bees no more blossoms in
July, hollow-hearted and unfit for sleigh or toboggan, wood straight
rifted and so white that a chip of it will hardly show on the snow, but
as unprofitable food for fires as the poplars beside it, which, in the
yellow-green of youth or the furrowed gray of age, have shivered their
last.

Still higher in the woodpile are white birches, yet in the smooth skin
of their prime, which is fit to be fashioned into drinking cups and
berry baskets, or to furnish a page for my lady's album. Here are
hardhacks, some with grain winding like the grooves of a rifle. This is
the timber the Indians made their bows of, and which now serves the same
purpose for the young savages whom we have always with us. There are
sinewy blue beeches, slowly grown up from ox-goads and the "beech seals"
of Ethan Allen's Green Mountain Boys to the girth of a man's thigh, a
size at which they mostly stop growing. A smaller trunk, like yet unlike
them, sets folks to guessing what kind of wood it is. He will hit the
mark who fires at random the names "shadblow," "service-berry," or
"amelanchier." If the axe had been merciful, in early May its branches
would have been as white with blossoms as if the last April snow still
clung to them. Tossed on a-top of all is a jumbled thatch of small
stuff,--saplings improvidently cut, short-lived striped maple, and
dogwood, the slender topmost lengths of great trees, once the perches of
hawks and crows, and such large branches as were not too crooked to lie
still on the sled.

The snow-fleas, harbingers and attendants of thaws, are making the snow
in the woods gray with their restless myriads, when the sled makes its
last trip across the slushy fields, which are fast turning from white to
dun under the March winds and showers and sunshine.

The completed woodpile basks in the growing warmth, as responsive to the
touch of spring as if every trunk yet upheld its branches in the forest.
The buds swell on every chance-spared twig, and sap starts from the
severed ducts. From the pine drip slowly lengthening stalactites of
amber, from the hickory thick beads of honeydew, and from the maples a
flow of sweet that calls the bees from their hives across the melting
drifts. Their busy hum makes an island of summer sound in the midst of
the silent ebbing tide of winter.

As the days grow warmer, the woodpile invites idlers as well as busy
bees and wood-cutters. The big logs are comfortable seats to lounge on
while whittling a pine chip, and breathing the mingled odors of the
many woods freshly cut and the indescribable woodsy smell brought home
in the bark and moss, and listening to the hum of the bees and harsher
music of the saws and axe, the sharp, quick swish of the whip-saw, the
longer drawn and deeper ring of the crosscut, and the regular beat of
the axe,--fiddle, bass-viol, and drum, each with its own time, but all
somehow in tune. The parts stop a little when the fiddler saws off his
string, the two drawers of the long bass-viol bow sever theirs, and the
drummer splits his drum, but each is soon outfitted again, and the
funeral march of the woodpile goes on. Here is the most delightful of
places for those busy idlers the children, for it is full of pioneers'
and hunters' cabins, robbers' caves and bears' dens, and of treasures of
moss and gum and birch, and of punk, the tinder of the Indians and our
forefathers, now gone out of use except for some conservative Canuck to
light his pipe or for boys to touch off their small ordnance.

It is a pretty sight to watch the nuthatches and titmice searching the
grooves of the bark for their slender fare, or a woodpecker chopping
his best for a living with his sharp-pointed axe, all having followed
their rightful possessions from the woods, taking perhaps the track of
the sled. It is wonderful to hear the auger of the pine-borer, now
thawed into life, crunching its unseen way through the wood. Then there
is always the chance of the axe unlocking the stores of deermice, quarts
of beechnuts with all the shells neatly peeled off; and what if it
should happen to open a wild-bee hive full of honey!

If the man comes who made the round of the barns in the fall and early
winter with his threshing-machine, having exchanged it for a sawing
machine, he makes short work of our woodpile. A day or two of stumbling
clatter of the horses in their treadmill, and the buzzing and screeching
of the whirling saw, gnaws it into a heap of blocks.

Our lounging-place and the children's wooden playground have gone, and
all the picturesqueness and woodsiness have disappeared as completely as
when splitting has made only firewood of the pile. It will give warmth
and comfort from the stove, but in that black sepulchre all its beauty
is swallowed out of sight forever. If it can go to a generous fireplace,
it is beautified again in the glowing and fading embers that paint
innumerable shifting pictures, while the leaping flames sing the old
song of the wind in the branches.



L

A CENTURY OF EXTERMINATION


It seems quite probable that this nineteenth century may be unpleasantly
memorable in centuries to come as that in which many species of animate
and inanimate nature became extinct. It has witnessed the extinction of
the great auk, so utterly swept off the face of the earth that the skin,
or even the egg of one, is a small fortune to the possessor. Reduced
from the hundreds of thousands of twenty-five years ago to the few
hundred of to-day, it needs but a few years to compass the complete
annihilation of the bison. It is not improbable that the elk and the
antelope will be overtaken by almost as swift a fate. The skin hunters,
and the game butchers miscalled sportsmen, are making almost as speedy
way with them as they have with the buffalo.

The common deer, hedged within their narrowing ranges by civilization,
and hunted by all methods in all seasons, may outlast the century, but
they will have become wofully scarce at the close of it, even in such
regions as the Adirondacks which seem to have been set apart by nature
especially for the preservation of wild life.

The wild turkey is passing away, and it is a question of but few years
when he shall have departed forever. In some localities the next noblest
of our game birds, the ruffed grouse, has become almost a thing of the
past, and in some years is everywhere so scarce that there are sad
forebodings of his complete disappearance from the rugged hills of which
he seems as much a belonging as the lichened rocks, the arbutus and the
wind-swept evergreens. One little island on the New England coast holds
the handful that is left of the race of heath hens.

The woodcock is being cultivated and improved and murdered out of
existence with clearing and draining and summer shooting, and
unseasonable shooting is doing the same for many kinds of waterfowl. In
the Eastern States a wild pigeon is a rare sight now, and has been for
years; the netters and slaughterers have done their work too thoroughly.

Gentle woman is making an end of the song-birds that she may trick her
headgear in barbaric and truly savage fashion. The brighter plumaged
small birds are becoming noticeably scarce even in those parts of the
country that the milliners' collector and the pot-naturalist have not
yet invaded, and such as the scarlet tanager, never anywhere numerous,
are like to be soon "collected" out of living existence. If they are to
be saved, it is by no dallying, nor slow awakening of popular feeling in
their behalf.

There will be pine-trees, no doubt, for centuries to come, but who that
live twenty years hence will see one of these venerable monarchs of the
woods towering above all other forest growth, or see any ancient tree,
however historic or precious for its age and beauty and majesty and
mystery of long past years, if it is worth the cutting for timber or
fuel?

Even the lesser growths of the old woods are passing away. Some, as the
carpeting sphagnum and the sprawling hobble bush, disappear through
changed conditions; others, as the medicinal spikenard, sarsaparilla,
and ginseng, and the decorative running pine and the arbutus, through
ruthless, greedy gathering, which leaves no root nor ripened seed to
perpetuate their kind.

An old man may be glad that his eyes are not to behold the coming
desolation, but he must be sad when he thinks of the poor inheritance of
his children.



LI

THE PERSISTENCY OF PESTS


From the sowing and planting of his seed, almost indeed from the turning
of the furrow, the farmer enters upon a contest with the weeds, for a
place in which his crops may grow, and if he or the crops are not
vanquished, as the weeds never are, the warfare continues till harvest
time.

While he, with infinite labor, prepares the ground and sows his seed
with all care, praying that drouth may not wither nor floods drown it,
and that frosts may not cut down the tender plants, the winds of heaven
and the fowls of the air scatter broadcast the seeds of the noxious
weeds, or these lie dormant in the ground awaiting opportunity. They
germinate in sterile places, fence corners and nooks of the wayside, and
flourish alike in scorching sunshine and in sodden soil.

Weeds defy the latest and the earliest frosts, grow with their roots in
the air; and cut down, spring up, grow on, blossoming and ripening their
seed in creeping stealth and ever unscathed by blight; and so flourish
in spite of all unkindliness of man or stress of nature, that the
husbandman wishes that they might by some freak of demand become the
useful plants, his present crop the undesired ones.

Somewhat the same position in which weeds stand opposed to the plants
which the husbandman depends upon for his livelihood, vermin hold toward
the beasts and birds upon which the sportsman depends for his
recreation. While they whose protection men endeavor to maintain during
the season of procreation, and at times when scarcity of food prevails,
decrease often to complete extinction, the vermin, whom the hand of man
is always against, continue to increase and multiply, or at least hold
their own. With them as with the weeds nature seems to deal with a
kinder hand. She spares and nourishes them, while she destroys their
betters.

The snow crust, which walls the quail in a living tomb, makes a royal
banqueting hall for the pestiferous field mice, where they feast and
revel in plenty, secure from all their enemies, feathered or furred. It
impounds the deer, but gives free range to the wolf and to his as
pitiless two-legged brother, the crust hunter.

The wet seasons that drown the callow woodcock and grouse work no harm
to the ravenous brood of the hawk and owl, nor to the litter of fox,
mink, or weasel. Wet or dry, hot or cold, the year fosters them
throughout its varied round.

Winged ticks kill the grouse, but the owl endures their companionship
with sedate serenity and thrives with a swarm of the parasites in the
covert of his feathers.

The skunk has always been killed on sight as a pest that the world would
be the sweeter for being rid of. In later years the warfare against him
has received an impetus from the value of his fur, but though this has
gone on relentlessly for many years, his tribe still live to load the
air with a fragrance that incites the ambitious trapper to further
conquest.

All the year round, farmers and their boys wage war upon the crows, but
each returning autumn sees the columns of the black army moving
southward with apparently unthinned ranks, while, year by year, the
harried platoons of ducks and geese return fewer and less frequent.
Those detested foreigners, the English sparrows, increase and multiply
in spite of bitter winters and righteous persecution, while our natives,
the beloved song-birds, diminish in numbers. On every hand we find the
undesirable in animated nature, the birds and beasts that we would
gladly be rid of, maintaining their numbers, while those whose increase
we desire are losing ground and tending toward extinction.

The prospect for the sportsman of the future is indeed gloomy, unless he
shall make game of the pests and become a hunter of skunks and a shooter
of crows and sparrows. Who can say that a hundred years hence the
leading sportsmen of the period will not be wrangling over the points
and merits of their skunk and woodchuck dogs and bragging of their bags
of crows and sparrows?



LII

THE WEASEL


A chain that is blown away by the wind and melted by the sun, links with
pairs of parallel dots the gaps of farm fences, and winds through and
along walls and zigzag lines of rails, is likely to be the most visible
sign that you will find in winter of one bold and persistent little
hunter's presence.

Still less likely are you to be aware of it in summer or fall, even by
such traces of his passage, for he is in league with nature to keep his
secrets. When every foot of his outdoor wandering must be recorded she
makes him as white as the snow whereon it is imprinted, save his beady
eyes and dark tail-tip. When summer is green and autumn gay or sad of
hue she clothes him in the brown wherewith she makes so many of her wild
children inconspicuous.

Yet you may see him, now and then, in his white suit or in his brown,
gliding with lithe, almost snake-like movement along the lower fence
rails, going forth hunting or bearing home his game, a bird or a fat
field-mouse. In a cranny of an old lichen-scaled stone wall you may see
his bright eyes gleaming out of the darkness, like dewdrops caught in a
spider's web, and then the brown head thrust cautiously forth to peer
curiously at you. Then he may favor you with the exhibition of an
acrobatic feat: his hinder paws being on the ground in the position of
standing, he twists his slender body so that his forepaws are placed in
just the reverse position on the stone or rail above him, and he looks
upward and backward.

He may be induced to favor you with intimate and familiar acquaintance,
to take bits of meat from your hand and even to climb to your lap and
search your pockets and suffer you to lay a gentle hand upon him, but he
has sharp teeth wherewith to resent too great liberties.

While he may be almost a pet of a household and quite a welcome visitor
of rat-infested premises, he becomes one of the worst enemies of the
poultry-wife when he is tempted to fall upon her broods of chicks. He
seems possessed of a murderous frenzy, and slays as ruthlessly and
needlessly as a wolf or a human game-butcher or the insatiate angler.
Neither is he the friend of the sportsman, for he makes havoc among the
young grouse and quail and the callow woodcock.

The trapper reviles him when he finds him in his mink trap, for all the
beauty of his ermine a worthless prize drawn in this chanceful lottery.
When every one carried his money in a purse, the weasel's slender white
skin was in favor with country folk. This use survives only in the
command or exhortation to "draw your weasel." When the purse was empty,
it gave the spendthrift an untimely hint by creeping out of his pocket.
In the primest condition of his fur he neither keeps nor puts money in
your pocket now. He is worth more to look at, with his lithe body quick
with life, than to possess in death.



LIII

FEBRUARY DAYS


In the blur of storm or under clear skies, the span of daylight
stretches farther from the fading dusk of dawn to the thickening dusk of
evening. Now in the silent downfall of snow, now in the drift and whirl
of flakes driven from the sky and tossed from the earth by the shrieking
wind, the day's passage is unmarked by shadows. It is but a long
twilight, coming upon the world out of one misty gloom, and going from
it into another. Now the stars fade and vanish in the yellow morning
sky, the long shadows of the hills, clear cut on the shining fields,
swing slowly northward and draw eastward to the netted umbrage of the
wood. So the dazzling day grows and wanes and the attenuated shadows are
again stretched to their utmost, then dissolved in the flood of shade,
and the pursued sunlight takes flight from the mountain peaks to the
clouds, from cloud to cloud along the darkening sky, and vanishes beyond
the blue barrier of the horizon.

There are days of perfect calm and hours of stillness as of sleep, when
the lightest wisp of cloud fleece hangs moveless against the sky and the
pine-trees forget their song. But for the white columns of smoke that,
unbent in the still air, arise from farmstead chimneys, one might
imagine that all affairs of life had been laid aside; for no other sign
of them is visible, no sound of them falls upon the ear. You see the
cows and sheep in the sheltered barnyards and their lazy breaths arising
in little clouds, but no voice of theirs drifts to you.

No laden team crawls creaking along the highway nor merry jangle of
sleigh bells flying into and out of hearing over its smooth course, nor
for a space do the tireless panting engine and roaring train divide
earth and sky with a wedge of dissolving vapor. The broad expanse of the
lake is a white plain of snow-covered ice: no dash of angry waves
assails its shore still glittering with the trophies of their last
assault; no glimmer of bright waters greets the sun; no keel is afloat;
the lighthouse, its occupation gone, stares day and night with dull eyes
from its lonely rock, upon a silent deserted waste.

In the wood you may hear no sound but your own muffled footsteps, the
crackle of dry twigs, and the soft swish of boughs swinging back from
your passage, and now and then a tree punctuating the silence with a
clear resonant crack of frozen fibres and its faint echo. You hear no
bird nor squirrel nor sound of woodman's axe, nor do you catch the
pungent fragrance of his fire nor the subtler one of fresh-cut wood.
Indeed, all odors of the forest seem frozen out of the air or locked up
in their sources. No perfume drops from the odor-laden evergreens, only
scentless air reaches your nostrils.

One day there comes from the south a warm breath, and with it fleets of
white clouds sailing across the blue upper deep, outstripped by their
swifter shadows sweeping in blue squadrons along the glistening fields
and darkening with brief passage the gray woodlands. Faster come the
clouds out of the south and out of the west, till they crowd the sky,
only fragments of its intense azure showing here and there between them,
only now and then a gleam of sunlight flashing across the earth. Then
the blue sunlit sky is quite shut away behind a low arch of gray,
darkening at the horizon with thick watery clouds, and beneath it all
the expanse of fields and forest lies in universal shadow.

The south wind is warmer than yesterday's sunshine, the snow softens
till your footsteps are sharply moulded as in wax, and in a little space
each imprint is flecked thick with restless, swarming myriads of
snow-fleas. Rain begins to fall softly on snow-covered roofs, but
beating the panes with the familiar patter of summer showers. It becomes
a steady downpour that continues till the saturated snow can hold no
more, and the hidden brooks begin to show in yellow streaks between
white, unstable shores, and glide with a swift whisking rush over the
smooth bottom that paves their rough natural bed; and as their yellow
currents deepen and divide more widely their banks, the noise of their
onflow fills the air like an exaggeration of the murmur of pines, and
the song of the pines swells and falls with the varying wind.

After the rain there come, perhaps, some hours of quiet sunshine or
starlight, and then out of the north a nipping wind that hardens the
surface of the snow into solid crust that delights your feet to walk
upon. The rivulets shrink out of sight again, leaving no trace but
water-worn furrows in the snow, some frozen fluffs of yellow foam and
stranded leaves and twigs, grass and broken weeds. The broad pools have
left their shells of unsupported ice, which with frequent sudden crashes
shatters down upon their hollow beds.

When the crust has invited you forth, you cannot retrace your way upon
it, and the wild snow walkers make no record now of their recent
wanderings. But of those who fared abroad before this solid pavement was
laid upon the snow, fabulous tales are now inscribed upon it. Reading
them without question, you might believe that the well-tamed country
had lapsed into the possession of its ancient savage tenants, for the
track of the fox is as big as a wolf's, the raccoon's as large as a
bear's, the house cat's as broad as the panther's, and those of the
muskrat and mink persuade you to believe that the beaver and otter,
departed a hundred years ago, have come to their own again. Till the
next thaw or snowfall, they are set as indelibly as primeval footprints
in the rocks, and for any scent that tickles the hounds' keen nose,
might be as old. He sniffs them curiously and contemptuously passes on,
yet finds little more promising on footing that retains but for an
instant the subtle trace of reynard's unmarked passage.

The delicate curves and circles that the bent weeds etched on the soft
snow are widened and deepened in rigid grooves, wherein the point that
the fingers of the wind traced them with is frozen fast. Far and wide
from where they fall, all manner of seeds drift across miles of smooth
fields, to spring to life and bloom, by and by, in strange,
unaccustomed places, and brown leaves voyage to where their like was
never grown. The icy knolls shine in the sunlight with dazzling
splendor, like golden islands in a white sea that the north wind stirs
not, and athwart it the low sun and the waning moon cast their long
unrippled glades of gold and silver. Over all winter again holds sway,
but we have once more heard the sound of rain and running brooks and
have been given a promise of spring.



LIV

THE FOX


Among the few survivals of the old untamed world there are left us two
that retain all the raciness of their ancestral wildness.

Their wits have been sharpened by the attrition of civilization, but it
has not smoothed their characteristics down to the level of the
commonplace, nor contaminated them with acquired vices as it has their
ancient contemporary, the Indian. But they are held in widely different
esteem, for while the partridge is in a manner encouraged in
continuance, the fox is an outlaw, with a price set upon his head to
tempt all but his few contemned friends to compass his extermination.

For these and for him there is an unwritten code that, stealthily
enforced, gives him some exemption from universal persecution. They,
having knowledge of the underground house of many portals where the
vixen rears her cubs, guard the secret as jealously as she and her lord,
from the unfriendly farmer, poultry-wife, and bounty-hunting vagabond,
confiding it only to sworn brethren of woodcraft, as silent concerning
it to the unfriendly as the trees that shadow its booty-strewn precincts
or the lichened rocks that fortify it against pick and spade. They never
tell even their leashed hounds till autumn makes the woods gayer with
painted leaves than summer could with blossoms, how they have seen the
master and mistress of this woodland home stealing to it with a fare of
field mice fringing their jaws or bearing a stolen lamb or pullet.

They watch from some unseen vantage, with amused kindliness, the gambols
of the yellow cubs about their mother, alert for danger, even in her
drowsy weariness, and proud of her impish brood, even now practicing
tricks of theft and cunning on each other. They become abetters of this
family's sins, apologists for its crimes, magnifiers of its unmeant
well-doing.

When in palliation of the slaughter of a turkey that has robbed a field
of his weight in corn they offset the destruction of hordes of field
mice, they are reviled by those who are righteously exalted above the
idleness of hunting and the foolishness of sentiment.

At such hands one fares no better who covets the fox, not for the sport
he may give, but for the tang of wild flavor that he imparts to woods
that have almost lost it and to fields that lose nothing of thrift by
its touch.

You may not see him, but it is good to know that anything so untamed has
been so recently where your plodding footsteps go. You see in last
night's snowfall the sharp imprint of his pads, where he has deviously
quested mice under the mat of aftermath, or trotted slowly, pondering,
to other more promising fields, or there gone airily coursing away over
the moonlit pastures. In imagination you see all his agile gaits and
graceful poses. Now listening with pricked ears to the muffled squeak of
a mouse, now pouncing upon his captured but yet unseen prize, or where
on sudden impulse he has coursed to fresh fields, you see him, a dusky
phantom, gliding with graceful undulations of lithe body and brush over
the snowy stretches; or, halting to wistfully sniff, as a wolf a
sheepfold, the distant henroost; or, where a curious labyrinth of tracks
imprint the snow, you have a vision of him dallying with his tawny
sweetheart under the stars of February skies; or, by this soft mould of
his furry form on a snow-capped stump or boulder, you picture him
sleeping off the fatigue of hunting and love-making, with all senses but
sight still alert, unharmed by the nipping air that silvers his whiskers
with his own breath.

All these realities of his actual life you may not see except in such
pictures as your fancy makes; but when the woods are many-hued or brown
in autumn, or gray and white in winter, and stirred with the wild music
of the hounds, your blood may be set tingling by the sight of him, his
coming announced by the rustle of leaves under his light footfalls.
Perhaps unheralded by sound, he suddenly blooms ruddily out of the dead
whiteness of the snow.

Whether he flies past or carefully picks his way along a fallen tree or
bare ledge, you remark his facial expression of incessant intentness on
cunning devices, while ears, eyes, and nose are alert for danger. If he
discovers you, with what ready self-possession he instantly gets and
keeps a tree between himself and you and vanishes while your gun vainly
searches for its opportunity. If your shot brings him down, and you
stand over him exultant, yet pitying the end of his wild life, even in
his death throes fearing you no more, he yet strains his dulled ears to
catch the voices of the relentless hounds.

Bravely the wild freebooter holds his own against the encroachments of
civilization and the persecution of mankind, levying on the flocks and
broods of his enemy, rearing his yellow cubs in the very border of his
field, insulting him with nightly passage by his threshold.

Long ago his fathers bade farewell to their grim cousin the wolf, and
saw the beaver and the timid deer pass away, and he sees the eagle
almost banished from its double realm of earth and sky, yet he hardily
endures. For what he preserves for us of the almost extinct wildness,
shall we begrudge him the meagre compensation of an occasional turkey?



LV

AN ICE-STORM


Of all the vagaries of winter weather, one of the rarest is the
ice-storm; rain falling with a wind and from a quarter that should bring
snow, and freezing as it falls, not penetrating the snow but coating it
with a shining armor, sheathing every branch and twig in crystal and
fringing eaves with icicles of most fantastic shapes.

On ice-clad roofs and fields and crackling trees the rain still beats
with a leaden clatter, unlike any other sound of rain; unlike the
rebounding pelting of hail or the swish of wind-blown snow.

The trees begin to stoop under their increasing burden, and then to
crack and groan as it is laid still heavier upon them. At times is heard
the thin, echoless crash of an overladen branch, first bending to its
downfall with a gathering crackle of severed fibres, then with a sudden
crash, shattering in a thousand fragments the brief adornments that have
wrought its destruction.

Every kind of tree has as marked individuality in its icy garniture as
in its summer foliage. The gracefulness of the elms, the maples, the
birches, the beeches, and the hornbeams is preserved and even
intensified; the clumsy ramage of the butternut and ash is as stiff as
ever, though every unbending twig bears its row of glittering pendants.
The hemlocks and firs are tents of ice, but the pines are still pines,
with every needle exaggerated in bristling crystal.

Some worthless things have become of present value, as the wayside
thistles and the bejeweled grass of an unshorn meadow, that yesterday
with its dun unsightliness, rustling above the snow, proclaimed the
shiftlessness of its owner.

Things most unpicturesque are made beautiful. The wire of the telegraph
with its dull undulations is transformed to festoons of crystal fringe,
linking together shining pillars of glass that yesterday were but bare,
unsightly posts.

The woods are a maze of fantastic shapes of tree growth. Wood roads are
barricaded with low arches of ice that the hare and the fox can barely
find passage beneath, and with long, curved slants of great limbs bent
to the earth. The wild vines are turned to ropes and cables of ice, and
have dragged down their strong supports, about whose prostrate trunks
and limbs they writhe in a tangle of rigid coils. The lithe trunks of
second growth are looped in an intricate confusion of arches one upon
another, many upon one, over whole acres of low-roofed forest floor.

The hare and the grouse cower in these tents of ice, frightened and
hungry; for every sprout and bud is sheathed in adamant, and scarlet
berries, magnified and unattainable, glow in the heart of crystal
globules. Even the brave chickadees are appalled, and the disheartened
woodpecker mopes beside the dead trunk, behind whose impenetrable shield
he can hear the grub boring in safety.

Through the frozen brambles that lattice the doorway of his burrow the
fox peers dismayed upon a glassy surface that will hold no scent of
quarry, yet perhaps is comforted that the same conditions impose a
truce upon his enemies the hounds. The squirrel sits fasting in his
chamber, longing for the stores that are locked from their owner in his
cellar. It is the dismalest of all storms for the wood folk, despite all
the splendor wherewith it adorns their realm.

One holds out his hand and lifts his face skyward to assure himself that
the rain has ceased, for there is a continual clattering patter as if it
were yet falling. But it is only the crackling of the icy trees and the
incessant dropping of small fragments of their burden.

The gray curtain of the sky drifts asunder, and the low sun shines
through. It glorifies the earth with the flash and gleam of ten million
diamonds set everywhere. The fire and color of every gem that was ever
delved burn along the borders of the golden pathway that stretches from
your feet far away to the silver portals of the mountains that bar our
glittering world from the flaming sky.

The pallid gloom of the winter night falls upon the earth. Then the full
moon throbs up behind the scintillating barrier of the hills. She
presently paves from herself to us a street of silver among the long
blue shadows, and lights it with a thousand stars; some fallen quite to
earth, some twinkling among the drooping branches, all as bright as the
eternal stars that shine in the blue sky above.



LVI

SPARE THE TREES


All the protection that the law can give will not prevent the game
naturally belonging to a wooded country from leaving it when it is
deforested, nor keep fish in waters that have shrunk to a quarter of
their ordinary volume before midsummer. The streams of such a country
will thus shrink when the mountains, where the snows lie latest and the
feeding springs are, and the swamps, which dole out their slow but
steady tribute, are bereft of shade. The thin soil of a rocky hill, when
deprived of its shelter of branches, will be burned by the summer sun
out of all power to help the germination of any worthy seed, or to
nurture so noble a plant as a tree through the tender days of its
infancy. It supports only useless weeds and brambles. Once so denuded,
it will be unsightly and unprofitable for many years if not always.
Some swamps at great expense may be brought into tillage and meadow, but
nine times out of ten, when cleared of the lusty growth of woods, they
bear nothing but wild grass, and the streams that trickled from them all
the summer long in their days of wildness show in August only the
parched trail of the spring course.

Our natives have inherited their ancestors' hatred of trees, which to
them were only cumberers of the ground, to be got rid of by the
speediest means; and our foreign-born landholders, being unused to so
much woodland, think there can be no end to it, let them slash away as
they will.

Ledges and steep slopes that can bear nothing but wood to any profit,
are shorn of their last tree, and the margins of streams to the very
edge robbed of the willows and water-maples that shaded the water and
with their roots protected the banks from washing. Who has not known a
little alder swamp, in which he was sure to find a dozen woodcock, when
he visited it on the first day of the season each year? Some year the
first day comes and he seeks it as usual, to find its place marked only
by brush heaps, stubs, and sedges; and for the brook that wimpled
through it in the days of yore, only stagnant pools. The worst of it is,
the owners can seldom give any reason for this slaughter but that their
victims were trees and bushes.

The Yankee, with his proverbial thriftiness and forecast, appears
entirely to lose these gifts when it comes to the proper and sensible
management of woodlands. Can he not understand that it is more
profitable to keep a lean or thin soil that will grow nothing well but
wood, growing wood instead of worthless weeds? The crop is one which is
slow in coming to the harvest, but it is a sure one, and is every year
becoming a more valuable one. It breaks the fierceness of the winds, and
keeps the springs from drying up, and is a comfort to the eye, whether
in the greenness of the leaf or the barrenness of the bough, and under
its protecting arms live and breed the grouse, the quail and the hare,
and in its shadowed rills swim the trout.



LVII

THE CHICKADEE


The way to the woods is blurred with a mist of driven snow that veils
the portal of the forest with its upblown curtain, and blots out all
paths, and gives to the familiar landmarks a ghostly unreality. The
quietude of the woods is disturbed by turbulent voices, the angry roar
and shriek of the wind, the groaning and clashing of writhing, tormented
trees. Over all, the sunned but unwarmed sky bends its blue arch, as
cold as the snowy fields and woods beneath it.

In such wild weather you are not tempted far abroad in quest of old
acquaintances of fields and woods, yet from the inhospitable woods some
of them come to you. Among them all, none is more welcome than that
feathered atom of life, the chickadee. With the same blithe note that
welcomed you to his woodland haunts in spring, in summer, and in
autumn, when he attended you with such charming familiarity, amusing you
with pretty acrobatic feats, as he flitted now before, now beside, now
above you, he hails you now, and asks that hospitality be extended to
him.

Set forth a feast of suet on the window-sill, and he will need no
bidding to come and partake of it. How daintily he helps himself to the
tiniest morsels, never cramming his bill with gross mouthfuls as do his
comrades at the board, the nuthatch and the downy woodpecker! They, like
unbidden guests, doubtful of welcome or of sufferance even, make the
most of time that may prove all too brief, and gorge themselves as
greedily as hungry tramps; while he, unscared by your face at the
window, tarries at his repast, pecking his crumbs with leisurely
satisfaction. You half expect to see him swept from your sight like a
thistledown by the gusty blast, but he holds bravely to his perch,
unruffled in spirit if not in feathers, and defies his fierce assailant
with his oft-repeated challenge.

As often as you spread the simple feast for him he will come and sit at
your board, a confiding guest, well assured of welcome, and will repay
you with an example of cheerful life in the midst of dreariness and
desolation. In the still, bright days, his cheery voice rings through
the frosty air, and when the thick veil of the snow falls in a wavering
slant from the low sky its muffled cadence still heartens you.

What an intense spark of vitality must it be that warms such a mite in
such an immensity of cold; that floats his little life in this deluge of
frigid air, and keeps him in song while we are dumb with shivering! If
our huge hulks were endowed with proportionate vitality, how easily we
might solve the mysteries of the frozen north!

On some February day, when the first promise of spring is drifted to you
in the soft south wind, the tenderness of spring is voiced in his
love-note, brief but full of melody, and sweet as the evening song of
the wood pewee. When the spring songsters come, he takes leave of you.
He has seen you safely through the winter, and departs to the woods on
affairs of his own. He is no longer a vagrant, but at home in his own
greenwood, yet as unfretted by the cares of housekeeping as he was by
the heavy weariness of winter.





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "In New England Fields and Woods" ***

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