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VI
BIRDS AND BIRDS I THERE is an old legend which
one of our poets has made use of about the bird in the brain,
— a legend based,
perhaps, upon the human significance of our feathered neighbors. Was
not
Audubon's brain full of birds, and very lively ones, too? A person who
knew him
says he looked like a bird himself; keen, alert, wide-eyed. It is not
unusual
to see the hawk looking out of the human countenance, and one may see
or have
seen that still nobler bird, the eagle. The song-birds might all have
been
brooded and hatched in the human heart. They are typical of its highest
aspirations, and nearly the whole gamut of human passion and emotion is
expressed more or less fully in their varied songs. Among our own
birds, there
is the song of the hermit thrush for devoutness and religious serenity;
that of
the wood thrush for the musing, melodious thoughts of twilight; the
song
sparrow's for simple faith and trust, the bobolink's for hilarity and
glee, the
mourning dove's for hopeless sorrow, the vireo's for all-day and
every-day
contentment, and the nocturne of the mockingbird for love. Then there
are the
plaintive singers, the soaring, ecstatic singers, the confident
singers, the
gushing and voluble singers, and the half-voiced, inarticulate singers.
The
note of the wood pewee is a human sigh; the chickadee has a call full
of
unspeakable tenderness and fidelity. There is pride in the song of the
tanager,
and vanity in that of the catbird. There is something distinctly human
about
the robin; his is the note of boyhood. I have thoughts that follow the
migrating
fowls northward and southward, and that go with the sea-birds into the
desert
of the ocean, lonely and tireless as they. I sympathize with the
watchful crow
perched yonder on that tree, or walking about the fields. I hurry
outdoors when
I hear the clarion of the wild gander; his comrade in my heart sends
back the
call.
II
Here comes the cuckoo, the
solitary, the joyless, enamored of the privacy of his own thoughts;
when did he
fly away out of this brain? The cuckoo is one of the famous birds, and
is known
the world over. He is mentioned in the Bible, and is discussed by Pliny
and
Aristotle. Jupiter himself once assumed the form of the cuckoo in order
to take
advantage of Juno's compassion for the bird. We have only a reduced and
modified cuckoo in this country. Our bird is smaller, and is much more
solitary
and unsocial. Its color is totally different from the Old World bird,
the
latter being speckled, or a kind of dominick, while ours is of the
finest
cinnamon-brown or drab above, and bluish white beneath, with a gloss
and
richness of texture in the plumage that suggests silk. The bird has
also mended
its manners in this country, and no longer foists its eggs and young
upon other
birds, but builds a nest of its own and rears its own brood like other
well-disposed birds. The European cuckoo is
evidently much more of a spring bird than ours is, much more a
harbinger of the
early season. He comes in April, while ours seldom appears till late in
May,
and hardly then appears. He is printed, as they say, but not published.
Only
the alert ones know he is here. This old English rhyme on the cuckoo
does not
apply this side the Atlantic: —
The European cuckoo, on the other hand, seems to be a joyous, vivacious bird. Wordsworth applies to it the adjective "blithe," and says: —
English writers all agree
that its song is animated and pleasing, and the outcome of a light
heart.
Thomas Hardy, whose touches always seem true to nature, describes in
one of his
books an early summer scene from amid which "the loud notes of three
cuckoos were resounding through the still air." This is totally unlike
our
bird, which does not sing in concert, but affects remote woods, and is
most
frequently heard in cloudy weather. Hence the name of rain-crow that is
applied
to him in some parts of the country. I am more than half inclined to
believe
that his call does indicate rain, as it is certain that of the
tree-toad does. The cuckoo has a slender,
long-drawn-out appearance on account of the great length of tail. It is
seldom
seen about farms or near human habitations until the June canker-worm
appears,
when it makes frequent visits to the orchard. It loves hairy worms, and
has
eaten so many of them that its gizzard is lined with hair. The European cuckoo builds
no nest, but puts its eggs out to be hatched, as does our cow
blackbird, and
our cuckoo is master of only the rudiments of nest-building. No other
bird in
the woods builds so shabby a nest; it is the merest makeshift,
— a loose
scaffolding of twigs through which the eggs can be seen. One season, I
knew of
a pair that built within a few feet of a country house that stood in
the midst
of a grove, but a heavy storm of rain and wind broke up the nest. If the Old World cuckoo had
been as silent and retiring a bird as ours is, it could never have
figured so
conspicuously in literature as it does, — having a prominence
that we would
give only to the bobolink or to the wood thrush, — as witness
his frequent
mention by Shakespeare, or the following early English ballad (in
modern
guise): —
III
I think it will be found, on
the whole, that the European birds are a more hardy and pugnacious race
than
ours, and that their song-birds have more vivacity and power, and ours
more
melody and plaintiveness. In the song of the skylark, for instance,
there is
little or no melody, but wonderful strength and copiousness. It is a
harsh strain
near at hand, but very taking when showered down from a height of
several
hundred feet. Daines Barrington, the
naturalist of the last century, to whom White of Selborne addressed so
many of
his letters, gives a table of the comparative merit of seventeen
leading
song-birds of Europe, marking them under the heads of mellowness,
sprightliness, plaintiveness, compass, and execution. In the aggregate,
the
songsters stand highest in sprightliness, next in compass and
execution, and
lowest in the other two qualities. A similar arrangement and comparison
of our
songsters, I think, would show an opposite result, — that is,
a predominance of
melody and plaintiveness. The British wren, for instance, stands in
Barrington's table as destitute of both these qualities; the reed
sparrow also.
Our wren-songs, on the contrary, are gushing and lyrical, and more or
less
melodious, — that of the winter wren being preeminently so.
Our sparrows, too,
all have sweet, plaintive ditties, with but little sprightliness or
compass. The
English house sparrow has no song at all, but a harsh chatter that is
unmatched
among our birds. But what a hardy, prolific, pugnacious little wretch
it is!
These birds will maintain themselves where our birds will not live at
all, and
a pair of them will lie down in the gutter and fight like dogs.
Compared with
this miniature John Bull, the voice and manners of our common sparrow
are
gentle and retiring. The English sparrow is a street gamin, our bird a
timid
rustic. The English robin redbreast
is tallied in this country by the bluebird, which was called by the
early
settlers of New England the blue robin. The song of the British bird is
bright
and animated, that of our bird soft and plaintive. The nightingale stands at
the head in Barrington's table, and is but little short of perfect in
all the
qualities. We have no one bird that combines´ such strength
or vivacity with
such melody. The mockingbird doubtless surpasses it in variety and
profusion of
notes; but falls short, I imagine, in sweetness and effectiveness. The
nightingale will sometimes warble twenty seconds without pausing to
breathe,
and when the condition of the air is favorable, its song fills a space
a mile
in diameter. There are, perhaps, songs in our woods as mellow and
brilliant, as
is that of the closely allied species, the water-thrush; but our bird's
song
has but a mere fraction of the nightingale's volume and power. Strength and volume of
voice, then, seem to be characteristic of the English birds, and
mildness and
delicacy of ours. How much the thousands of years of contact with man,
and
familiarity with artificial sounds, over there, have affected the bird
voices,
is a question. Certain it is that their birds are much more domestic
than ours,
and certain it is that all purely wild sounds are plaintive and
elusive. Even
of the bark of the fox, the cry of the panther, the voice of the coon,
or the
call and clang of wild geese and ducks, or the war-cry of savage
tribes, is
this true; but not true in the same sense of domesticated or
semi-domesticated
animals and fowls. How different the voice of the common duck or goose
from
that of the wild species, or of the tame dove from that of the turtle
of the
fields and groves! Where could the English house sparrow have acquired
that
unmusical voice but amid the sounds of hoofs and wheels, and the
discords of
the street? And the ordinary notes and calls of so many of the British
birds,
according to their biographers, are harsh and disagreeable; even the
nightingale has an ugly, guttural "chuck." The missel-thrush has a
harsh scream; the jay a note like "wrack," "wrack;" the
fieldfare a rasping chatter; the blackbird, which is our robin cut in
ebony,
will sometimes crow like a cock and cackle like a hen; the flocks of
starlings
make a noise like a steam saw-mill; the white-throat has a disagreeable
note;
the swift a discordant scream; and the bunting a harsh song. Among our
song-birds, on the contrary, it is rare to hear a harsh or displeasing
voice.
Even their notes of anger and alarm are more or less soft. I would not imply that our
birds are the better songsters, but that their songs, if briefer and
feebler,
are also more wild and plaintive, — in fact, that they are
softer-voiced. The
British birds, as I have stated, are more domestic than ours; a much
larger
number build about houses and towers and outbuildings. The titmouse
with us is
exclusively a wood-bird; but in Britain three or four species of them
resort
more or less to buildings in winter. Their redstart also builds under
the eaves
of houses; their starling in church steeples and in holes in walls;
several
thrushes resort to sheds to nest; and jackdaws breed in the crannies of
the old
architecture, and this in a much milder climate than our own. They have in that country no
birds that answer to our tiny, lisping wood-warblers, — genus
Dendroica,
— nor to our vireos, Vireonidæ.
On the other hand, they have a larger
number of field-birds and semi-game-birds. They have several species
like our
robin; thrushes like him, and some of them larger, as the ring ouzel,
the
missel-thrush, the fieldfare, the throstle, the redwing, White's
thrush, the
blackbird, — these, besides several species in size and
habits more like our
wood thrush. Several species of European
birds sing at night besides the true nightingale, — not
fitfully and as if in
their dreams, as do a few of our birds, but continuously. They make a
business
of it. The sedge-bird ceases at times as if from very weariness; but
wake the
bird up, says White, by throwing a stick or stone into the bushes, and
away it
goes again in full song. We have but one real nocturnal songster, and
that is
the mockingbird. One can see how this habit might increase among the
birds of a
long-settled country like England. With sounds and voices about them,
why should
they be silent, too? The danger of betraying themselves to their
natural
enemies would be less than in our woods. That their birds are more
quarrelsome and pugnacious than ours I think evident. Our thrushes are
especially mild-mannered, but the missel-thrush is very bold and saucy,
and has
been known to fly in the face of persons who have disturbed the sitting
bird.
No jay nor magpie nor crow can stand before him. The Welsh call him
master of
the coppice, and he welcomes a storm with such a vigorous and hearty
song that
in some countries he is known as storm-cock. He sometimes kills the
young of
other birds and eats eggs, — a very unthrushlike trait. The
whitethroat sings
with crest erect, and attitudes of warning and defiance. The hooper is
a great bully;
so is the greenfinch. The wood-grouse — now extinct, I
believe — has been known
to attack people in the woods. And behold the grit and hardihood of
that little
emigrant or exile to our shores, the English sparrow! Our birds have
their
tilts and spats also; but the only really quarrelsome members in our
family are
confined to the flycatchers, as the kingbird and the great crested
flycatcher.
None of our song-birds are bullies. Many of our more vigorous
species, as the butcherbird, the crossbills, the pine grosbeak, the
redpoll,
the Bohemian chatterer, the shore lark, the longspur, the snow bunting,
etc.,
are common to both continents. Have the Old World creatures
throughout more pluck and hardihood than those that are indigenous to
this
continent? Behold the common mouse, how he has followed man to this
country and
established himself here against all opposition, overrunning our houses
and
barns, while the native species is rarely seen. And when has anybody
seen the
American rat, while his congener from across the water has penetrated
to every
part of the continent! By the next train that takes the family to some
Western
frontier, arrives this pest. Both our rat and mouse or mice are timid,
harmless, delicate creatures, compared with the cunning, filthy, and
prolific
specimens that have fought their way to us from the Old World. There is
little
doubt, also, that the red fox has been transplanted to this country
from
Europe. He is certainly on the increase, and is fast running out the
native
gray species. Indeed, I have thought that
all forms of life in the Old World were marked by greater prominence of
type,
or stronger characteristic and fundamental qualities, than with us,
— coarser
and more hairy and virile, and therefore more powerful and lasting.
This
opinion is still subject to revision, but I find it easier to confirm
it than
to undermine it. IV
But let me change the strain
and contemplate for a few moments this feathered bandit, —
this bird with the
mark of Cain upon him, Lanius
borealis, — the great
shrike or
butcher-bird. Usually the character of a bird of prey is well defined;
there is
no mistaking him. His claws, his beak, his head, his wings, in fact his
whole
build, point to the fact that he subsists upon live creatures; he is
armed to
catch them and to slay them. Every bird knows a hawk and knows him from
the
start, and is on the lookout for him. The hawk takes life, but he does
it to
maintain his own, and it is a public and universally known fact. Nature
has
sent him abroad in that character, and has advised all creatures of it.
Not so
with the shrike; here she has concealed the character of a murderer
under a
form as innocent as that of the robin. Feet, wings, tail, color, head,
and
general form and size are all those of a songbird, — very
much like that master
songster, the mockingbird, — yet this bird is a regular
Bluebeard among its
kind. Its only characteristic feature is its beak, the upper mandible
having
two sharp processes and a sharp hooked point. It cannot fly away to any
distance with the bird it kills, nor hold it in its claws to feed upon
it. It
usually impales its victim upon a thorn, or thrusts it in the fork of a
limb.
For the most part, however, its food seems to consist of insects,
— spiders,
grasshoppers, beetles, etc. It is the assassin of the small birds, whom
it
often destroys in pure wantonness, or merely to sup on their brains, as
the
Gaucho slaughters a wild cow or bull for its tongue. It is a wolf in
sheep's
clothing. Apparently its victims are unacquainted with its true
character and
allow it to approach them, when the fatal blow is given. I saw an
illustration
of this the other day. A large number of goldfinches in their fall
plumage,
together with snowbirds and sparrows, were feeding and chattering in
some low
bushes back of the barn. I had paused by the fence and was peeping
through at
them, hoping to get a glimpse of that rare sparrow, the white-crowned.
Presently I heard a rustling among the dry leaves as if some larger
bird was
also among them. Then I heard one of the goldfinches cry out as if in
distress,
when the whole flock of them started up in alarm, and, circling around,
settled
in the tops of the larger trees. I continued my scrutiny of the bushes,
when I
saw a large bird, with some object in its beak, hopping along on a low
branch
near the ground. It disappeared from my sight for a few moments, then
came up
through the undergrowth into the top of a young maple where some of the
finches
had alighted, and I beheld the shrike. The little birds avoided him and
flew
about the tree, their pursuer following them with the motions of his
head and
body as if he would fain arrest them by his murderous gaze. The birds
did not
utter the cry or make the demonstration of alarm they usually do on the
appearance of a hawk, but chirruped and called and flew about in a
half-wondering, half-bewildered manner. As they flew farther along the
line of
trees the shrike followed them as if bent on further captures. I then
made my
way around to see what the shrike had caught, and what he had done with
his
prey. As I approached the bushes I saw the shrike hastening back. I
read his
intentions at once. Seeing my movements, he had returned for his game.
But I
was too quick for him, and he got up out of the brush and flew away
from the
locality. On some twigs in the thickest part of the bushes I found his
victim,
— a goldfinch. It was not impaled upon a thorn, but was
carefully disposed upon
some horizontal twigs, — laid upon the shelf, so to speak. It
was as warm as in
life, and its plumage was unruffled. On examining it I found a large
bruise or
break in the skin on the back of the neck, at the base of the skull.
Here the
bandit had no doubt griped the bird with his strong beak. The shrike's
blood-thirstiness was seen in the fact that he did not stop to devour
his prey,
but went in quest of more, as if opening a market of goldfinches. The
thicket
was his shambles, and if not interrupted, he might have had a fine
display of
titbits in a short time. The shrike is called a
butcher from his habit of sticking his meat upon hooks and points;
further than
that, he is a butcher because he devours but a trifle of what he slays.
A few days before, I had
witnessed another little scene in which the shrike was the chief actor.
A
chipmunk had his den in the side of the terrace above the garden, and
spent the
mornings laying in a store of corn which he stole from a field ten or
twelve
rods away. In traversing about half this distance, the little poacher
was
exposed; the first cover going from his den was a large maple, where he
always
brought up and took a survey of the scene. I would see him spinning
along
toward the maple, then from it by an easy stage to the fence adjoining
the
corn; then back again with his booty. One morning I paused to watch him
more at
my leisure. He came up out of his retreat and cocked himself up to see
what my
motions meant. His forepaws were clasped to his breast precisely as if
they had
been hands, and the tips of the fingers thrust into his vest pockets.
Having
satisfied himself with reference to me, he sped on toward the tree. He
had
nearly reached it, when he turned tail and rushed for his hole with the
greatest precipitation. As he neared it, I saw some bluish object in
the air
closing in upon him with the speed of an arrow, and, as he vanished
within, a
shrike brought up in front of the spot, and with spread wings and tail
stood
hovering a moment, and looking in, then turned and went away.
Apparently it was
a narrow escape for the chipmunk, and, I venture to say, he stole no
more corn
that morning. The shrike is said to catch mice, but it is not known to
attack
squirrels. He certainly could not have strangled the chipmunk, and I am
curious
to know what would have been the result had he overtaken him. Probably
it was
only a kind of brag on the part of the bird, — a bold dash
where no risk was
run. He simulated the hawk, the squirrel's real enemy, and no doubt
enjoyed the
joke. On another occasion, as I
was riding along a mountain road early in April, a bird started from
the fence
where I was passing, and flew heavily to the branch of a near
apple-tree. It
proved to be a shrike with a small bird in his beak. He thrust his
victim into
a fork of a branch, then wiped his bloody beak upon the bark. A youth
who was
with me, to whom I pointed out the fact, had never heard of such a
thing, and
was much incensed at the shrike. "Let me fire a stone at him," said
he, and jumping out of the wagon, he pulled off his mittens and fumbled
about
for a stone. Having found one to his liking, with great earnestness and
deliberation he let drive. The bird was in more danger than I had
imagined, for
he escaped only by a hair's breadth; a guiltless bird like the robin or
sparrow
would surely have been slain; the missile grazed the spot where the
shrike sat,
and cut the ends of his wings as he darted behind the branch. We could
see that
the murdered bird had been brained, as its head hung down toward us. The shrike is not a summer
bird with us in the Northern States, but mainly a fall and winter one;
in summer
he goes farther north. I see him most frequently in November and
December. I
recall a morning during the former month that was singularly clear and
motionless; the air was like a great drum. Apparently every sound
within the
compass of the horizon was distinctly heard. The explosions back in the
cement
quarries ten miles away smote the hollow and reverberating air like
giant
fists. Just as the sun first showed his fiery brow above the horizon, a
gun was
discharged over the river. On the instant a shrike, perched on the
topmost
spray of a maple above the house, set up a loud, harsh call or whistle,
suggestive of certain notes of the blue jay. The note presently became
a crude,
broken warble. Even this scalper of the innocents had music in his soul
on such
a morning. He saluted the sun as a robin might have done. After he had
finished, he flew away toward the east. The shrike is a citizen of
the world, being found in both hemispheres. It does not appear that the
European species differs essentially from our own. In Germany he is
called the
nine-killer, from the belief that he kills and sticks upon thorns nine
grasshoppers a day. To make my portrait of the
shrike more complete, I will add another trait of his described by an
acute
observer who writes me from western New York. He saw the bird on a
bright
midwinter morning when the thermometer stood at zero, and by cautious
approaches succeeded in getting under the apple-tree upon which he was
perched.
The shrike was uttering a loud, clear note like clu-eet,
clu-eet, clu-eet,
and, on finding he had a listener who was attentive and curious, varied
his
performance and kept it up continuously for fifteen minutes. He seemed
to enjoy
having a spectator, and never took his eye off him. The observer
approached
within twenty feet of him. "As I came near," he says, "the
shrike began to scold at me, a sharp, buzzing, squeaking sound not easy
to
describe. After a little he came out on the end of the limb nearest me,
then he
posed himself, and, opening his wings a little, began to trill and
warble under
his breath, as it were, with an occasional squeak, and vibrating his
half-open
wings in time with his song." Some of his notes resembled those of the
bluebird, and the whole performance is described as pleasing and
melodious. This account agrees with
Thoreau's observation, where he speaks of the shrike "with heedless and
unfrozen melody bringing back summer again." Sings Thoreau: —
But
his voice
is that of a savage, — strident and
disagreeable. I have often wondered how
this bird was kept in check; in the struggle for existence it would
appear to
have greatly the advantage of other birds. It cannot, for instance, be
beset
with one tenth of the dangers that threaten the robin, and yet
apparently there
are a thousand robins to every shrike. It builds a warm, compact nest
in the
mountains and dense woods, and lays six eggs, which would indicate a
rapid
increase. The pigeon lays but two eggs, and is preyed upon by both man
and
beast, millions of them meeting a murderous death every year; yet
always some
part of the country is swarming with untold numbers of them.1
But
the shrike is one of our rarest birds. I myself seldom see more than
two each
year, and before I became an observer of birds I never saw any. In size the shrike is a
little inferior to the blue jay, with much the same form. If you see an
unknown
bird about your orchard or fields in November or December of a bluish
grayish
complexion, with dusky wings and tail that show markings of white,
flying
rather heavily from point to point, or alighting down in the stubble
occasionally, it is pretty sure to be the shrike.
V
Nature never tires of
repeating and multiplying the same species. She makes a million bees, a
million
birds, a million mice or rats, or other animals, so nearly alike that
no eye
can tell one from another; but it is rarely that she issues a small and
a large
edition, as it were, of the same species. Yet she has done it in a few
cases
among the birds with hardly more difference than a foot-note added or
omitted.
The cedar-bird, for instance, is the Bohemian waxwing or chatterer in
smaller
type, copied even to the minute, wax-like appendages that bedeck the
ends of
the wing-quills. It is about one third smaller, and a little lighter in
color,
owing perhaps to the fact that it is confined to a warmer latitude, its
northward range seeming to end about where that of its larger brother
begins.
Its flight, its note, its manners, its general character and habits,
are almost
identical with those of its prototype. It is confined exclusively to
this
continent, while the chatterer is an Old World bird as well, and ranges
the
northern parts of both continents. The latter comes to us from the
hyperborean
regions, brought down occasionally by the great cold waves that
originate in
those high latitudes. It is a bird of Siberian and Alaskan evergreens,
and
passes its life for the most part far beyond the haunts of man. I have
never
seen the bird, but small bands of them make excursions every winter
down into
our territory from British America. Audubon, I believe, saw them in
Maine;
other observers have seen them in Minnesota. It has the crest of the
cedar-bird,
the same yellow border to its tail, but is marked with white on its
wings, as
if a snowflake or two had adhered to it from the northern cedars and
pines. If
you see about the evergreens in the coldest, snowiest weather what
appear to be
a number of very large cherry-birds, observe them well, for the chances
are
that visitants from the circumpolar regions are before your door. It is
a sign,
also, that the frost legions of the north are out in great force and
carrying
all before them. Our cedar or cherry bird is
the most silent bird we have. Our neutral-tinted birds, like him, as a
rule are
our finest songsters; but he has no song or call, uttering only a fine
bead-like note on taking flight. This note is the cedar-berry rendered
back in
sound. When the ox-heart cherries, which he has only recently become
acquainted
with, have had time to enlarge his pipe and warm his heart, I shall
expect more
music from him. But in lieu of music, what a pretty compensation are
those
minute, almost artificial-like, plumes of orange and vermilion that tip
the
ends of his wing quills! Nature could not give him these and a song
too. She
has given the hummingbird a jewel upon his throat, but no song, save
the hum of
his wings. Another bird that is
occasionally borne to us on the crest of the cold waves from the frozen
zone,
and that is repeated on a smaller scale in a permanent resident, is the
pine
grosbeak; his alter ego,
reduced in size, is the purple finch, which
abounds in the higher latitudes of the temperate zone. The color and
form of
the two birds are again essentially the same. The females and young
males of
both species are of a grayish brown like the sparrow, while in the old
males
this tint is imperfectly hidden beneath a coat of carmine, as if the
color had
been poured upon their heads, where it is strongest, and so oozed down
and
through the rest of the plumage. Their tails are considerably forked,
their
beaks cone-shaped and heavy, and their flight undulating. Those who
have heard
the grosbeak describe its song as similar to that of the finch, though
no doubt
it is louder and stronger. The finch's instrument is a fife tuned to
love and
not to war. He blows a clear, round note, rapid and intricate, but full
of
sweetness and melody. His hardier relative with that larger beak and
deeper
chest must fill the woods with sounds. Audubon describes its song as
exceedingly rich and full. As in the case of the
Bohemian waxwing, this bird is also common to both worlds, being found
through
Northern Europe and Asia and the northern parts of this continent. It
is the
pet of the pine-tree, and one of its brightest denizens. Its visits to
the
States are irregular and somewhat mysterious. A great flight of them
occurred
in the winter of 1874-75. They attracted attention all over the
country.
Several other flights of them have occurred during the century. When
this bird
comes, it is so unacquainted with man that its tameness is delightful
to
behold. It thrives remarkably well in captivity, and in a couple of
weeks will
become so tame that it will hop down and feed out of its master's or
mistress's
hand. It comes from far beyond the region of the apple, yet it takes at
once to
this fruit, or rather to the seeds, which it is quick to divine, at its
core. Close akin to these two
birds, and standing in the same relation to each other, are two other
birds
that come to us from the opposite zone, — the torrid,
— namely, the blue
grosbeak and his petit duplicate, the indigo-bird. The latter is a
common
summer resident with us, — a bird of the groves and bushy
fields, where his
bright song may be heard all through the long summer day. I hear it in
the dry
and parched August when most birds are silent, sometimes delivered on
the wing
and sometimes from the perch. Indeed, with me its song is as much a
midsummer
sound as is the brassy crescendo of the cicada. The memory of its note
calls to
mind the flame-like quiver of the heated atmosphere and the bright
glare of the
meridian sun. Its color is much more intense than that of the common
bluebird,
as summer skies are deeper than those of April, but its note is less
mellow and
tender. Its original, the blue grosbeak, is an uncertain wanderer from
the
south, as the pine grosbeak is from the north. I have never seen it
north of
the District of Columbia. It has a loud, vivacious song, of which it is
not
stingy, and which is a large and free rendering of the indigo's, and
belongs to
summer more than to spring. The bird is colored the same as its lesser
brother,
the males being a deep blue and the females a modest drab. Its nest is
usually
placed low down, as is the indigo's, and the male carols from the tops
of the
trees in its vicinity in the same manner. Indeed, the two birds are
strikingly
alike in every respect except in size and in habitat, and, as in each
of the
other cases, the lesser bird is, as it were, the point, the
continuation, of
the larger, carrying its form and voice forward as the reverberation
carries
the sound. I know the ornithologists,
with their hair-splittings, or rather feather-splittings, point out
many
differences, but they are unimportant. The fractions may not agree, but
the
whole numbers are the same. _____________________
1 This
is no longer the
case. The passenger pigeon now
seems on the verge of extinction (1895).
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