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The season is always a
little behind the sun in our climate, just as the tide is always a
little behind
the moon. According to the calendar, the summer ought to culminate
about the
21st of June, but in reality it is some weeks later; June is a maiden
month all
through. It is not high noon in nature till about the first or second
week in
July. When the chestnut-tree blooms, the meridian of the year is
reached. By
the first of August it is fairly one o'clock. The lustre of the season
begins
to dim, the foliage of the trees and woods to tarnish, the plumage of
the birds
to fade, and their songs to cease. The hints of approaching fall are on
every
hand. How suggestive this thistle-down, for instance, which, as I sit
by the
open window, comes in and brushes softly across my hand! The first
snowflake
tells of winter not more plainly than this driving down heralds the
approach of
fall. Come here, my fairy, and tell me whence you come and whither you
go? What
brings you to port here, you gossamer ship sailing the great sea? How
exquisitely frail and delicate! One of the lightest things in nature;
so light
that in the closed room here it will hardly rest in my open palm. A
feather is
a clod beside it. Only a spider's web will hold it; coarser objects
have no
power over it. Caught in the upper currents of the air and rising above
the
clouds, it might sail perpetually. Indeed, one fancies it might almost
traverse
the interstellar ether and drive against the stars. And every
thistle-head by
the roadside holds hundreds of these sky rovers, — imprisoned
Ariels unable to
set themselves free. Their liberation may be by the shock of the wind,
or the
rude contact of cattle, but it is oftener the work of the goldfinch
with its
complaining brood. The seed of the thistle is the proper food of this
bird, and
in obtaining it myriads of these winged creatures are scattered to the
breeze.
Each one is fraught with a seed which it exists to sow, but its wild
careering
and soaring does not fairly begin till its burden is dropped, and its
spheral
form is complete. The seeds of many plants and trees are disseminated
through
the agency of birds; but the thistle furnishes its own birds,
— flocks of them,
with wings more ethereal and tireless than were ever given to mortal
creature.
From the pains Nature thus takes to sow the thistle broadcast over the
land, it
might be expected to be one of the most troublesome and abundant of
weeds. But
such is not the case; the more pernicious and baffling weeds, like
snapdragon
or blind nettles, are more local and restricted in their habits, and
unable to
fly at all.
In the fall, the battles of
the spring are fought over again, beginning at the other or little end
of the
series. There is the same advance and retreat, with many feints and
alarms,
between the contending forces, that was witnessed in April and May. The
spring
comes like a tide running against a strong wind; it is ever beaten
back, but
ever gaining ground, with now and then a mad "push upon the land" as
if to overcome its antagonist at one blow. The cold from the north
encroaches
upon us in about the same fashion. In September or early in October it
usually
makes a big stride forward and blackens all the more delicate plants,
and
hastens the "mortal ripening" of the foliage of the trees, but it is
presently beaten back again, and the genial warmth repossesses the
land. Before
long, however, the cold returns to the charge with augmented forces and
gains
much ground.
The course of the seasons
never does run smooth, owing to the unequal distribution of land and
water,
mountain, wood, and plain.
An equilibrium, however, is
usually reached in our climate in October, sometimes the most marked in
November, forming the delicious Indian summer; a truce is declared, and
both
forces, heat and cold, meet and mingle in friendly converse on the
field. In
the earlier season, this poise of the temperature, this slack-water in
nature,
comes in May and June; but the October calm is most marked. Day after
day, and
sometimes week after week, you cannot tell which way the current is
setting.
Indeed, there is no current, but the season seems to drift a little
this way or
a little that, just as the breeze happens to freshen a little in one
quarter or
the other. The fall of '74 was the most remarkable in this respect I
remember
ever to have seen. The equilibrium of the season lasted from the middle
of
October till near December, with scarcely a break. There were six weeks
of
Indian summer, all gold by day, and, when the moon came, all silver by
night.
The river was so smooth at times as to be almost invisible, and in its
place
was the indefinite continuation of the opposite shore down toward the
nether
world. One seemed to be in an enchanted land, and to breathe all day
the
atmosphere of fable and romance. Not a smoke, but a kind of shining
nimbus
filled all the spaces. The vessels would drift by as if in mid-air with
all their
sails set. The gypsy blood in one, as Lowell calls it, could hardly
stay
between four walls and see such days go by. Living in tents, in groves
and on
the hills, seemed the only natural life.
Late in December we had
glimpses of the same weather, — the earth had not yet passed
all the golden
isles. On the 27th of that month, I find I made this entry in my
note-book:
"A soft, hazy day, the year asleep and dreaming of the Indian summer
again. Not a breath of air and not a ripple on the river. The sunshine
is hot
as it falls across my table."
But what a terrible winter
followed! what a savage chief the fair Indian maiden gave birth to!
This halcyon period of our
autumn will always in some way be associated with the Indian. It is red
and
yellow and dusky like him. The smoke of his camp-fire seems again in
the air.
The memory of him pervades the woods. His plumes and moccasins and
blanket of
skins form just the costume the season demands. It was doubtless his
chosen
period. The gods smiled upon him then if ever. The time of the chase,
the
season of the buck and the doe, and of the ripening of all forest
fruits; the
time when all men are incipient hunters, when the first frosts have
given
pungency to the air, when to be abroad on the hills or in the woods is
a delight
that both old and young feel, — if the red aborigine ever had
his summer of
fullness and contentment, it must have been at this season, and it
fitly bears
his name.
In how many respects fall
imitates or parodies the spring! It is indeed, in some of its features,
a sort
of second youth of the year. Things emerge and become conspicuous
again. The
trees attract all eyes as in May. The birds come forth from their
summer
privacy and parody their spring reunions and rivalries; some of them
sing a
little after a silence of months. The robins, bluebirds, meadowlarks,
sparrows,
crows, all sport, and call, and behave in a manner suggestive of
spring. The
cock grouse drums in the woods as he did in April and May. The pigeons
reappear, and the wild geese and ducks. The witch-hazel blooms. The
trout
spawns. The streams are again full. The air is humid, and the moisture
rises in
the ground. Nature is breaking camp, as in spring she was going into
camp. The
spring yearning and restlessness is represented in one by the increased
desire
to travel.
Spring is the inspiration,
fall the expiration. Both seasons have their equinoxes, both their
filmy, hazy
air, their ruddy forest tints, their cold rains, their drenching fogs,
their
mystic moons; both have the same solar light and warmth, the same rays
of the
sun; yet, after all, how different the feelings which they inspire! One
is the
morning, the other the evening; one is youth, the other is age.
The difference is not merely
in us; there is a subtle difference in the air, and in the influences
that
emanate upon us from the dumb forms of nature. All the senses report a
difference. The sun seems to have burned out. One recalls the notion of
Herodotus that he is grown feeble, and retreats to the south because he
can no
longer face the cold and the storms from the north. There is a growing
potency
about his beams in spring, a waning splendor about them in fall. One is
the
kindling fire, the other the subsiding flame.
It is rarely that an artist
succeeds in painting unmistakably the difference between sunrise and
sunset;
and it is equally a trial of his skill to put upon canvas the
difference
between early spring and late fall, say between April and November. It
was long
ago observed that the shadows are more opaque in the morning than in
the
evening; the struggle between the light and the darkness more marked,
the gloom
more solid, the contrasts more sharp. The rays of the morning sun
chisel out
and cut down the shadows in a way those of the setting sun do not. Then
the
sunlight is whiter and newer in the morning, — not so yellow
and diffused. A
difference akin to this is true of the two seasons I am speaking of.
The spring
is the morning sunlight, clear and determined; the autumn, the
afternoon rays,
pensive, lessening, golden.
Does not the human frame
yield to and sympathize with the seasons? Are there not more births in
the
spring and more deaths in the fall? In the spring one vegetates; his
thoughts
turn to sap; another kind of activity seizes him; he makes new wood
which does
not harden till past midsummer. For my part, I find all literary work
irksome
from April to August; my sympathies run in other channels; the grass
grows
where meditation walked. As fall approaches, the currents mount to the
head
again. But my thoughts do not ripen well till after there has been a
frost. The
burrs will not open much before that. A man's thinking, I take it, is a
kind of
combustion, as is the ripening of fruits and leaves, and he wants
plenty of
oxygen in the air.
Then the earth seems to have
become a positive magnet in the fall; the forge and anvil of the sun
have had
their effect. In the spring it is negative to all intellectual
conditions, and
drains one of his lightning.
To-day, October 21, I found
the air in the bushy fields and lanes under the woods loaded with the
perfume
of the witch-hazel, — a sweetish, sickening odor. With the
blooming of this
bush, Nature says, "Positively the last." It is a kind of birth in
death, of spring in fall, that impresses one as a little uncanny. All
trees and
shrubs form their flower-buds in the fall, and keep the secret till
spring. How
comes the witch-hazel to be the one exception, and to celebrate its
floral
nuptials on the funeral day of its foliage? No doubt it will be found
that the
spirit of some lovelorn squaw has passed into this bush, and that this
is why
it blooms in the Indian summer rather than in the white man's spring.
But it makes the floral
series of the woods complete. Between it and the shad-blow of earliest
spring
lies the mountain of bloom; the latter at the base on one side, this at
the
base on the other, with the chestnut blossoms at the top in midsummer.
A peculiar feature of our
fall may sometimes be seen of a clear afternoon late in the season.
Looking
athwart the fields under the sinking sun, the ground appears covered
with a
shining veil of gossamer. A fairy net, invisible at midday and which
the
position of the sun now reveals, rests upon the stubble and upon the
spears of
grass, covering acres in extent, — the work of innumerable
little spiders. The
cattle walk through it, but do not seem to break it. Perhaps a fly
would make
his mark upon it. At the same time, stretching from the tops of the
trees, or
from the top of a stake in the fence, and leading off toward the sky,
may be
seen the cables of the flying spider, — a fairy bridge from
the visible to the
invisible. Occasionally seen against a deep mass of shadow, and perhaps
enlarged by clinging particles of dust, they show quite plainly and sag
down
like a stretched rope, or sway and undulate like a hawser in the tide.
They recall a verse of our
rugged poet, Walt Whitman: —
"A
noiseless patient spider, I mark'd where, in a little promontory, it stood isolated: Mark'd how, to explore the vacant, vast surrounding, It launch'd forth filament, filament, filament out of itself; Ever unreeling them — ever tireless spreading them. "And you, O my soul, where you stand, Surrounded, surrounded, in measureless oceans of space, Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throwing, — Seeking the spheres to connect them; Till the bridge you will need be formed — till the ductile anchor hold; Till the gossamer thread you fling, catch somewhere, O my soul." |
To return a little,
September may be described as the month of tall weeds. Where they have
been
suffered to stand, along fences, by roadsides, and in forgotten
corners, —
redroot, pigweed, ragweed, vervain, goldenrod, burdock, elecampane,
thistles,
teasels, nettles, asters, etc., — how they lift themselves up
as if not afraid
to be seen now! They are all outlaws; every man's hand is against them;
yet how
surely they hold their own! They love the roadside, because here they
are
comparatively safe; and ragged and dusty, like the common tramps that
they are,
they form one of the characteristic features of early fall.
I have often noticed in what
haste certain weeds are at times to produce their seeds. Redroot will
grow
three or four feet high when it has the whole season before it; but let
it get
a late start, let it come up in August, and it scarcely gets above the
ground
before it heads out, and apparently goes to work with all its might and
main to
mature its seed. In the growth of most plants or weeds, April and May
represent
their root, June and July their stalk, and August and September their
flower
and seed. Hence, when the stalk months are stricken out, as in the
present
case, there is only time for a shallow root and a foreshortened head. I
think
most weeds that get a late start show this curtailment of stalk, and
this
solicitude to reproduce themselves. But I have not observed that any of
the
cereals are so worldly wise. They have not had to think and to shift
for
themselves as the weeds have. It does indeed look like a kind of
forethought in
the redroot. It is killed by the first frost, and hence knows the
danger of
delay.
How rich in color, before
the big show of the tree foliage has commenced, our roadsides are in
places in
early autumn, — rich to the eye that goes hurriedly by and
does not look too
closely, — with the profusion of goldenrod and blue and
purple asters dashed in
upon here and there with the crimson leaves of the dwarf sumac; and at
intervals, rising out of the fence corner or crowning a ledge of rocks,
the
dark green of the cedar with the still fire of the woodbine at its
heart. I
wonder if the waysides of other lands present any analogous spectacles
at this
season.
Then, when the maples have
burst out into color, showing like great bonfires along the hills,
there is
indeed a feast for the eye. A maple before your windows in October,
when the
sun shines upon it, will make up for a good deal of the light it has
excluded;
it fills the room with a soft golden glow.
Thoreau, I believe, was the
first to remark upon the individuality of trees of the same species
with
respect to their foliage, — some maples ripening their leaves
early and some
late, and some being of one tint and some of another; and, moreover,
that each
tree held to the same characteristics, year after year. There is,
indeed, as
great a variety among the maples as among the trees of an apple
orchard; some
are harvest apples, some are fall apples, and some are winter apples,
each with
a tint of its own. Those late ripeners are the winter varieties,
— the Rhode
Island greenings or swaars of their kind. The red maple is the early
astrachan.
Then come the red-streak, the yellow-sweet, and others. There are
windfalls
among them, too, as among the apples, and one side or hemisphere of the
leaf is
usually brighter than the other.
The ash has been less
noticed for its autumnal foliage than it deserves. The richest shades
of
plum-color to be seen — becoming by and by, or in certain
lights, a deep maroon
— are afforded by this tree. Then at a distance there seems
to be a sort of
bloom on it, as upon the grape or plum. Amid a grove of yellow maple,
it makes
a most pleasing contrast.
By mid-October, most of the
Rip Van Winkles among our brute creatures have lain down for their
winter nap.
The toads and turtles have buried themselves in the earth. The
woodchuck is in
his hibernaculum, the skunk in his, the mole in his; and the black bear
has his
selected, and will go in when the snow comes. He does not like the
looks of his
big tracks in the snow. They publish his goings and comings too
plainly. The
coon retires about the same time. The provident wood-mice and the
chipmunk are
laying by a winter supply of nuts or grain, the former usually in
decayed
trees, the latter in the ground. I have observed that any unusual
disturbance
in the woods, near where the chipmunk has his den, will cause him to
shift his
quarters. One October, for many successive days, I saw one carrying
into his
hole buckwheat which he had stolen from a near field. The hole was only
a few
rods from where we were getting out stone, and as our work progressed,
and the
racket and uproar increased, the chipmunk became alarmed. He ceased
carrying
in, and after much hesitating and darting about, and some prolonged
absences,
he began to carry out; he had determined to move; if the mountain fell,
he, at
least, would be away in time. So, by mouthfuls or cheekfuls, the grain
was
transferred to a new place. He did not make a "bee" to get it done,
but carried it all himself, occupying several days, and making a trip
about
every ten minutes.
The red and gray squirrels
do not lay by winter stores; their cheeks are made without pockets, and
whatever they transport is carried in the teeth. They are more or less
active
all winter, but October and November are their festal months. Invade
some
butternut or hickory-nut grove on a frosty October morning and hear the
red
squirrel beat the "juba" on a horizontal branch. It is a most lively
jig, what the boys call a "regular break-down," interspersed with
squeals and snickers and derisive laughter. The most noticeable
peculiarity
about the vocal part of it is the fact that it is a kind of duet. In
other
words, by some ventriloquial tricks, he appears to accompany himself,
as if his
voice split up, a part forming a low guttural sound, and a part a
shrill nasal
sound.
The distant bark of the more
wary gray squirrel may be heard about the same time. There is a teasing
and
ironical tone in it also, but the gray squirrel is not the Puck the red
is.
Insects also go into
winter-quarters by or before this time; the bumble-bee, hornet, and
wasp. But
here only royalty escapes; the queen-mother alone foresees the night of
winter
coming and the morning of spring beyond. The rest of the tribe try
gypsying for
a while, but perish in the first frosts. The present October I
surprised the
queen of the yellow-jackets in the woods looking out a suitable
retreat. The
royal dame was house-hunting, and, on being disturbed by my inquisitive
poking
among the leaves, she got up and flew away with a slow, deep hum. Her
body was
unusually distended, whether with fat or eggs I am unable to say. In
September
I took down the nest of the black hornet and found several large queens
in it,
but the workers had all gone. The queens were evidently weathering the
first
frosts and storms here, and waiting for the Indian summer to go forth
and seek
a permanent winter abode. If the covers could be taken off the fields
and woods
at this season, how many interesting facts of natural history would be
revealed! — the crickets, ants, bees, reptiles, animals, and,
for aught I know,
the spiders and flies asleep or getting ready to sleep in their winter
dormitories; the fires of life banked up, and burning just enough to
keep the
spark over till spring.
The fish all run down the
stream in the fall except the trout; it runs up or stays up and spawns
in
November, the male becoming as brilliantly tinted as the deepest-dyed
maple
leaf. I have often wondered why the trout spawns in the fall, instead
of in the
spring like other fish. Is it not because a full supply of clear spring
water
can be counted on at that season more than at any other? The brooks are
not so
liable to be suddenly muddied by heavy showers, and defiled with the
washings
of the roads and fields, as they are in spring and summer. The
artificial
breeder finds that absolute purity of water is necessary to hatch the
spawn;
also that shade and a low temperature are indispensable.
Our northern November day
itself is like spring water. It is melted frost, dissolved snow. There
is a
chill in it and an exhilaration also. The forenoon is all morning and
the
afternoon all evening. The shadows seem to come forth and to revenge
themselves
upon the day. The sunlight is diluted with darkness. The colors fade
from the
landscape, and only the sheen of the river lights up the gray and brown
distance.