Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924090296918 THRUSH RAVINE BIRD PARADISE AN INTIMATE ACCOUNT OF A LIFELONG FRIENDSHIP WITH BIRD PARISHIONERS By JOHN BARTLETT WICKS PHILADELPHIA GEORGE W. JACOBS & COMPANY PUBLISHERS Copyright, 1914, by Georce W. Jacoss & Company Published June, 1914 Oovn ih Qu le Vis Wox ie All rights reserved Printed in U.S. A. In memory of my boyhood home, and of those who lived and died there, and lived agatn, T dedicate this book to the ever gracious spirit of the lines: «« How dear to my heart Are the scenes of my childhood When fond recollection Presents them to view. The orchard, the meadow, The deep tangled wildwood, And every loved spot That my infancy knew.” 1 Lllustrations Turusw Ravine . Brrp ParapisE THe Western Gate Tanacer Ho tow . Fox Run 3 = Warsier Retreat Grospeak GLEN. CurckapeeE Ovur.oox SguirreL Home . Tue Western Heicur . Facing page 6 oe oe ce ce cits e ce - Frontispiece oe oe oe oe crs “ ce 14 30 48 68 go 116 150 178 210 Introduction Years of close and cordial friendship yield all the cardinal elements of true life. The ex- perience of youth, and mature age,—the ripening of advancing years—in short, the friendship of the entire life, appears in the pages of this book. The daily intercourse,—life living with life—the citizens of nature walking hand in hand with man. Surely the story of such a fellowship must be replete with thought and things of vital interest to every soul. The name of the book ‘Bird Paradise’’ is suggested in the very nature and shaping of the story itself. The wooded tract on the eastern slope of the old farm has long borne the name of Bird Paradise. It is an ideal home of the birds. The life of its many residents appears in these pages, just as that life is passed in the daily experience of the creatures, each page the shaping of an incident complete in itself. The varied nature of the incidents re- corded is of the varied nature of the real ex- perience of true life. The key to it all is in the 7 8 INTRODUCTION incidents themselves—the living of the daily life. The outlook of it all is surely heavenward—the windows of its ‘‘House Beautiful” being open toward the light, day and night. Bird Paradise THE migration of birds yet holds many secrets, and I conclude will for many years to come. Just why they migrate in many cases is yet a mystery. One of the best reasons that I know contrasts nicely with the action of the human brother. The bird is free from all care and can spend the winter in the South without neglecting a single duty. Why should he not take one of the many trains offered him and hie away to warmth and ease? He can do it by easy journey- ing if he so chooses. An hour’s travel every day will bring him easily to the haven where he would be, and the haven is bright with sunshine and replete with food. On the simple ground of change of scenery the bird is fully justified, or change of food, or greater supply. Any of these will do as a reason. So, too, the claim of a milder climate has place, easily rivaled by the strong inducement of plenty of good company. In fact, I hardly know of any good reason for 9 10 BIRD PARADISE the bird to refuse the winter outing in the South. It does not, however, have the character of a holiday outing as much as I should think it would. The romping and the playing are in it, and the feasting also, as well as entire freedom from care, but the singing, cheery and bright, is unknown. Why they should drop the song en- tirely goes unexplained. There they are silent, save a sort of monotonous chirp. Happier fel- lows, however, are not to be met with anywhere. To and fro they go, eating and drinking, careless, almost entirely, of everything else. The migration of birds, common as the years are common, is crowded with mysteries and won- ders. We know something of them, here and there an item, but most of it is a sealed book to us. Why they migrate is a question with a va- riety of answers and perhaps most of them have some place in the reply. Some birds change location doubtless in order to secure their neces- sary food. Others make the long journey as in- stinct prompts, knowing nothing of the reason for the impulse. Still others journey, I believe, as people travel, for the enjoyment of the thing. Some journey slowly and are weeks in making the passage. Others accomplish the flight in a single journey, like the Labrador plover, which BIRD PARADISE II leaves Newfoundland and, keeping well out from the coast, passes to the tropics without making a Single stop. Some birds fly in the night, others in the daytime. Some winter just on the edge of the snow line, others near the Gulf. Others in far-off South America. I have often heard their call in the night-time as they were passing over and have seen the flocks dropping down to the ground in the early morning light. In their flight northward the same rules govern as in the passage to the South. With some birds as with geese and ducks the migratory instinct seems to be a gift to the flock, the single bird being unable to use it. We often see birds of the migratory species remaining at the North through the winter. Someway they fall out of the regular line and seem unable to pick it up again. As Artemus Ward would say, ‘‘ There is a good deal of hu- man nature in birds.”’ The best authority I can command makes the assertion that nearly 400,000 species of creatures have been discovered and classified in this world of ours. Think of it, think of the number, then of the creatures—each by itself—and the longest life vouchsafed to man in the realm of time affords 12 BIRD PARADISE but partial acquaintance with a small portion of the great host. The largest we see only in part, and the smallest we do not see at all, only with the aid of the most powerful glass. Care for them all, watchful care—the kind that knows where they all are; just what they are doing— the ‘“‘open hand,’’ which fills all things living with plenteousness. Ah! the nearer vision of the wondrous scenes. Only the infinite gathers all the wheat in this boundless field. I glance from this sheet to the window-pane at my side, and there I note a minute speck, moving briskly over the hard service. Nothing but the black mote, visible to the naked eye. I put my glass over the object and the transformation reveals the perfect creature after its kind. Unlike the work of man, the more I magnify the creature the more wonderful it becomes. Bright colors appear, and the texture of all I see glows with a radiance that is surely born from above. As I gaze, the insect moves from my sight into the great world space—an aeroplane most perfect. The thought quickly has place, “‘ the world about us—a great school—the ‘university of univer- sities.’’’ Knowledge free as the air we breathe, the student always graduating, but always a student. BIRD PARADISE 13 Our fields have worn very gracefully the gar- ments of early spring. How bright the green has been, and what a variety of shades appear all along the hillside. Just now the dandelion is changing the color rapidly. How curiously the golden blossoms are distributed. In a field just beyond the cemetery they appear in groups, each a household by itself. Farther along on the hillside they seem to have place throughout the entire field with no particular difference in the distribution. In the old pasture at the swamp-side they are given a formation like the well-ordered ranks of a great army. I half fancy that I can easily point out the headquarters as well as the other principal places in the camp of the great host. Far down the Waterville road I catch glimpses of the blossoms forming a broad, beautiful selvage at the roadside extending to the point where the hill hides the view. But what a pure gold the color is—surely it is a standard that lacks nothing. The texture of the blossom rivals the color in beauty of shape and finish. The entire disk of yellow is made up of hundreds of minute flowers, each perfect after its kind. I frequently put one under my glass, getting a vision that always seems new. The 14 BIRD PARADISE natural eye sees but a small part of what each blossom contains. I find often that a tribe of minute insects occupy the flower, making it their home. Sometimes there will be several of these tribes dwelling in the same blossom. Curious how active these little fellows are. They go in and out, between the minor blossoms, and seem to have plenty of room—a palace of gold surely. How clearly the heart of this common flower is given expression in Lowell’s familiar lines : ‘“‘My childhood’s earliest thoughts are linked with thee, The sight of thee calls back the robins’ song, Who, from the dark old tree Beside the door sang clearly all day long, And I secure in childish piety, Listened as I heard an angel sing With news from heaven which he could bring Fresh every day to my untainted ears, When birds and flowers, and I were happy peers,”’ From some points on our hill I can see with my field-glass twenty and more teams plowing. Such an outlook savors altogether of the spring time. There is something in the steady move- ment of the teams that is a picture of sturdy strength, while the bearing of the plowman uplifts the banner of one who rules. How easy aslavavg aig BIRD PARADISE 1g it all seems when seen from a distance. It is one of the instances where a certain kind of enchant- ment becomes the offspring of distance. As I see it from my far-off point of view the idea of any effort on the part of the team or driver is wholly eliminated. As a matter of fact, the oc- cupation is a kind of service that is far up on the list of man’s wide field of duties. On a bright day, with the scene spread out before me, I cannot very well connect it with the idea of service and duty at all. It seems more like a great privilege—a sort of deciphering of wonder- ful things in a great temple of wonders. The furrows roll into their places and I fancy the hearing ear gathers of sounds that are the earth’s shouts of joy. Why not? More and more I get the idea that the earth itself is a sort of force, alive in more senses than I know. Why should it not cry out with joy when its brother man extends the hand of cheery help? While I write the sower is sowing the seed in the great field opposite my study window. Here again the machine is doing its work, and here again I entertain the notion that the happy, mellow earth opens its heart to receive the gift. Some- thing there calls for its own, and as surely as the call is made its own is responding cheerily 16 BIRD PARADISE to the call. Life finds life, and the husbandman is ever at the point where the two great seas meet. Right well he may rejoice, as a student in the school of schools. Occasionally I catch sight of a small flock of shore or horned larks. They are common along the New England seashore in the winter, scat- tering out into the country, as the fancy seizes them. Two little tufts of feathers give them the appearance of wearing a pair of horns—thus securing one of their names. The other name is readily reached from the fact that the seashore ig their favorite haunt. Unlike most other small birds, they walk through the grass as they are feeding. In manners they resemble somewhat the other members of the family, giving vent to ‘their feelings in a breezy way. I understand that they extend their journeying over quite a portion of our north country, frequently passing well down into the Carolinas. I sometimes come upon their nests in the spring and I think they are the earliest housekeepers among our smaller birds. In the realm of song they are not profi- cient. Of course they have their common eall note, and in the breeding season, a succession of BIRD PARADISE 17 notes that might be termed asong. The nest is put into a little cavity in the ground, being con- structed of grass and moss. When I come upon them suddenly in the field they have a way of throwing themselves into the air, whirling up- ward as though shot from some strong bow. Audubon says that they have the practice of soaring and singing in the air, like the English lark, but I have never seen them. A family of bluebirds have made me a visit of at least a week’s duration. They do their own cooking, provide their own lodging, in short, are no expense to the parson in the slight- est degree. The young fellows look plump, and are so. Their new coats fit them without a wrinkle, but their voices are way off from the usual cheery song of the race. At first I thought some new bird had appeared, but investigation revealed the fact that it was the old, old story, and bluebird’s way of telling it. There is something quite interesting in these family outfits, especially as they draw on to the point of separating for the rest of life’s journey. There doesn’t seem to be any particular sentiment in their action, and they go apart as a sort of matter of course; in 18 BIRD PARADISE fact, it sometimes appears as though they really enjoyed it. How is it that so much affection apparently can be felt for a time, and then all disappear, as with a turn of the hand? To-day strong, to-morrow nothing. In brief, now ready to die in the defense of the child, but soon for- getting that the child ever was. Verily life’s paradoxes are many and varied. I hear the drumming of the partridge from the eoverts of the swamp. It is a spring sound, and I sometimes think it is the fellow’s way of doing his singing. Once in my boyhood I saw the bird in the act itself. As he went along the log upon which he was moving, he brought his wings together in front of him, making the hol- low sound which we give the name of drumming. I enjoy watching these birds. They have an independent way of doing things which renders them quite attractive. In their leisure moments they do some playing, but I fancy it does not come quite natural to them. Of all our native birds there is none that excels the partridge in shyness. He is ever on the watch., How he can get in a stroke of anything else is a problem. Occasionally one comes into my lawn trees, but BIRD PARADISE 19 I conclude from his actions that he has been seriously disturbed in his native haunts, or he would not be seen so far from home. An event of my boyhood reads: ‘‘ To-day, in the old cedar swamp, I came upon a family of partridges that were only a few days from the nest. There was a commotion in the camp, and in less than a min- ute the young fellows all disappeared among the leaves. With the help of my spaniel dog I found them all—fifteen in number. After a few minutes I gave them their freedom again, greatly to the delight of the parent birds.’’ A pair of bluebirds spent a good part of a day investigating a cavity in one of my apple trees this week. They went in and out, talked the matter over, apparently a dozen times, and I suppose reached the conclusion that the place was not suited for their purpose, as I have seen nothing of them since. The gentility of good breeding appears in all that the bluebird says and does. I never have known him to speak harshly or behave unkindly. If other birds take his coat he is pretty certain to let them have his cloak also. His song is always keyed to a gentle quaver that overflows with peace and good will. 20 BIRD PARADISE I have seen him give up on the demand of others until he had nothing left for himself. Not a word of complaint did he utter ; on the contrary he seemed more and more the embodiment of the very spirit of patient, genial good nature. As he does no striking, of course, he never strikes back. If, as Burroughs says, ‘‘the bluebird is the bird of nature, being earth brown below, and sky blue above,’’ he is certainly most heavenly through the pure white within. The old saying that ‘‘it takes two to make a quarrel”’ is illus- trated nicely in this bird’s behavior. He goes about owning in fee simple everything, just happy in the ownership, and yet never proclaims his rights in any way only by letting the other fellow have them all. Ah! what grace there is in this one bird of all the birds. He is a preacher of righteousness that needeth not to be ashamed. The parson gives him the right hand of fellow- ship as one sent by the Master in whom there is indeed no guile. Sitting in my porch last evening I noticed, when it had become quite dark, not only my pair of bats on duty but several chimney swifts circling about with them, the entire company intent on securing a sumptuous supper. They continued BIRD PARADISE 21 the exercise until I could only see them as they passed from the shadow of the trees into the lighter open space. The whole procedure was exactly what I should expect from the bats but I never before had seen the swifts up so late. It occurred to me that flies of a particularly luscious sort were making a short stop on our hilltop and the swifts had to keep awake late in the evening in order to get their share. There seemed to be a sort of fellowship between the creatures which argued well for the characters of both. I could hear the bills of the birds snap as the flies passed their portals but my bat friends gave no sound. One of the toothsome viands that the bat enjoys is the common mosquito. I encourage this taste in the creatures, feeling that it is a good thing for the bats and really a commendable use to which the insects can be put. It may be that the swift has a relish for the best groomed mosquitoes. If it be so his indulgence of it to the utmost is fully approved by the parson. I notice that the ants are busy with household duties very similar to those now occupying the attention of the thrifty housewives in our hill country. Among the busiest of these active citi- zens I class those which bear the name of mound 22 BIRD PARADISE builders. In the old pastures near the swamp the little mounds of these tireless workers may be seen scattered over quite an extent of ground. Two or three of these curious houses have been erected in my orchard and I saw last evening that one which I have known many years, located in the farther part of the cemetery, had been given a new story this spring. Somewhere in the ground below, the work of excavation had gone on, the earth being brought up by the ants in small particles and added to the stature of the house. Fifteen or twenty doors were wide open and hundreds of the dwellers were going and coming every moment. I used what diplomacy I was possessed of in trying to fellowship with my diminutive neighbors, but they were too busy to make much response to my effort. I half suspect that they work night and day when they have anything to do and I am pretty sure they always have something to do. Why not aschool of industry right under my eye ever proclaiming ‘“‘to him who works as well as waits all things come.’’ A friend brought me this morning a curiosity in the construction of birds’ nests. He found BIRD PARADISE 23 it on a beam in the barn where a robin had been in the habit of putting its summer cottage. There were three complete nests built in a row and joined together strongly with stalks of dried grass. I am at a loss just how to account for such a novelty. A pair of robins frequently rear two broods in one season, but I have not known them to add still another. In those cases where I have known two broods reared the second nest was a new one in another place. I never have known them to use a nest the second time. Ifthe nests were separate and only placed side by side without being joined together firmly I should conclude that they were built by the same pair of birds—a nest yearly for three years. But here they are with the foundation of dried grass extending under the three, making them in that particular virtually one nest. The theory that three pairs of birds joined in the construc- tion of the nests is not tenable from the fact that in a venture of this nature the parties cannot agree well enough to make such a common plana real success. I am quite disposed to regard the venture as that of a single pair of robins who took a ‘‘long look ahead,’ planning their house scheme so that three households were successfully reared in one season. It certainly has the merit 24 BIRD PARADISE of being a real time-saver and perhaps at times robin needs to practice economy in that direction. I hear occasionally the plaintive note of the wood pewee. It has little in mere sound to rec- ommend it, but I conclude it carries the heart of the would-be singer, therefore is always valuable. Pewee belongs to the family of the flycatchers— none of them so far as I know noted as the possessor of beauty of person. Sometimes with the birds there is lack of personal attraction that is nicely compensated in great beauty of song, but nothing of the kind appears with pewee. His voice, though clear, is keyed so sharply that it avoids everything musical. Two notes comprise the venture and the very close of the refrain is its best feature. Pewee and his young family are all voracious feeders. All kinds of small insects are viands at his feasting, and his feasting occupies his attention every moment through the day. I notice he has a special fondness for the mosquito and in their season cheerfully appropriates multi- tudes of them every day. While nearly all writers agree that this bird is a migrant—spend- ing his winters in the South, I often hear his call in the winter and frequently see him flitting BIRD PARADISE 25 among the trees. Just what he finds of appetiz- ing food in the cold weather I do not know. I conclude, however, from what I have seen, that the grubs and insects under the bark of the trees furnish him with an abundant supply. I see him sometimes enjoying the friendship of the woodpeckers, so I conclude he is more socially inclined than some other members of his family. The birds are now well entered upon their long vacation season. I fancy a real change in char- acter marks their demeanor from this time on un- til the housekeeping season returns again. The young fellows, as a rule, dress in suits of their own, though in some cases, as with the bobolinks, the entire race adopt acommonraiment. In some instances, notably with the blue jays, the children of the family are attired in a manner entirely their own. A year passes before they don their regular suits. Just how the plumage is shaped and reshaped, sometimes appearing in the guise of one color, then another—no mistake made in any case—is no small mystery. The bobolinks are now gathered in flocks and in a few days will be on their way southward. I can easily see how the annual journey southward is one of large ad- 26 BIRD PARADISE vantage, but how it should begin as early as it does with the bobolinks and swallows is certainly @ puzzling thing. Plenty of food here, and good weather, ‘‘ why not stay ?’’ is all answered by the going, and the going seems to be all the answer there is. Go and come at will seems to be the law governing the birds’ migration very largely. The killdeer plover has taken his flight to the Sunny South. The other members of his large family are keeping him company—a merry party wherever they are. With the killdeers, as with the other birds, the season has favored the growth and safety of their young. Years ago we had in the spring and fall flights what was known as the field or golden plover. They came to us from the North at the time of wheat sowing, and usually spent a month or morein our hill country. They were sought as a table delicacy, and by some were ‘considered more appetizing than the wild pigeon. I saw them on the plains of Oklahoma in great ‘flocks, where they spent most of the winter. On ‘some of our long journeys we found them quite an addition to our daily cuisine. All the plovers are bright stirring birds, seemingly ever on the BIRD PARADISE arn move. In their migratory flight I think they outdo almost all other birds. Far upin the Arctic regions they build their nests and rear their young. Once on the wing for the South they seem to think that the journey is incomplete un- less they push far down to distant Patagonia. Not all the species make this record, but some of them do and seem to be none the worse for the extended journey. The song of the plovers is nothing more than a call note uttered mostly in flight. Asa scavenger among the grubs and insects they are very helpful to the farmer, and their cheery way of making the most of life recommends them highly. A friend sends me a clipping from the New York Times bearing the date of March 8th. It is an item of news from Montclair, New Jersey, con- cerning the birds. It announces that almost all over the mountain top in Montclair to-day could be seen robins and bluebirds in abundance. “To-day,” it says, ‘‘the robins are taking pos- session of their old nestsand putting them in order for spring.’’ My friend who sends me the para- graph thinks the last item must be a dream. Very likely, however, the snow in that locality 28 BIRD PARADISE has gone and usually the birds come trooping in as soon as it has melted away, especially if the weather be warm and sunny. The species named in the article push northward about March 1st, keeping pace with the disappearance of the snow. In 1857 many of them reached us in Feb- ruary, both February and March being open warm months. Some of the robins nested and were caught in the great April snow-storms— learning when too late that the birds with the best intentions cannot force the season. Large numbers of the robins when they migrate stop for the winter just south of the snow line of lati- tude. Some go farther, even extending their journey to the shores of the Gulf. All of them, however, turn their steps northward about the first of February—ready, if all things are favora- ble, to occupy the summer home. A week of sunny weather now would bring them to us in large numbers. There seems to be no instinctive guidance concerning the proper time for the birds to inaugurate their summer housekeeping. The junco sparrows are now guests of ours from the far North. What travelers they are and how little they show the wear and care of extensive BIRD PARADISE 29 journeying. Some of these fellows that greet me so cheerily have roamed over the continent far within the Arctic regions. Of course I get noth- ing from them concerning their trip, and still, perhaps, the case hardly warrants so strong a statement. There is no experience lost. Wherever its lines fall it leaves its mark and a little observ- ance reveals the fact. The junco of extensive travel is a larger bird than the plodder that has never been outside itsown dooryard. Whether he realizes it or not he has gathered from the wider fields and the harvest a new feather in his cap. I like to see him wear it; yes, even when his small head seems to be a little turned by the experience. I never have heard the fellow’s song, but read that it is a pleasant sparrow war- ble. They will stay about here a few days then take their trolley line for the South, returning in the spring happy and careless apparently as the day is long. A killdeer passed over the rectory last evening Moving on rapid wing. At every stroke of the wings he gave his peculiar ery, moving appar- ently without effort. A pair of killdeers nest near the swamp, and I hear their sharp call 30 BIRD PARADISE every day. Of all the birds, this fellow seems the most nervous. Sitting still is no part of his experience, and he has shown me how he does it. I hear him sometimes in the night ; probably an owl or a fox is the cause of the wakefulness and hurried call. In the spring lot on the old farm, a family of killdeer were on duty every season. Driving the cows home at milking time was sure to be delayed somewhat by attention given to the young killdeer. The tip-up is a sort of first cousin to the killdeer and I sometimes think it a trifle more nervous. His practice of tilting his little body every time he utters his brief note gives him his name. I have often watched these water birds where there was a clean stretch of hard sand, and the ease and swiftness with which they run over it is not excelled by any other bird. The little kinglets from the far North looked in upon me this week. What bright, active fellows they are and how easily they accomplish their purposes as they go to and fro in the wide pas- tures of the trees. The pair that made me a visit said nothing about the particular places that they had visited during the summer, neither did they Tue WESTERN GATE BIRD PARADISE 3r make any statement concerning the place where. they expected to spend the winter. When they push their flight northward I have the notion that they find their way well up to the precincts of the pole. They are chary singers and are not. given to any extra amount of talking. As Isee them they are usually in company with the warblers and are so like the company they are in that it is sometimes quite difficult to tell them apart. I am told that they sometimes nest in northern New York but I have the notion that most of their nesting is far up in the wilds of Canada. The descriptions that I have of their nests are curious, the strangest being the fact that they frequently put two layers of eggsin the same nest. Just how they manage to hatch such @ number deponent saith not. Next month my visitors will go on their way, finally reaching the wilds of South America. Back they come in the spring, repeating the journey year after year. What witnesses they are to the settled order and stability of all the ways of bird life. I have seen a few members of the junco sparrow family during the past week. What bright lit- tle fellows they are and what activity they show 22 BIRD PARADISE as they go to and fro in the trees and hedgerows. They are socially inclined, for I rarely see them unless they are in company with not only their own kind, but with the members of other sparrow species. That slate-colored coat of theirs reflects the sunbeams handsomely, while the genial man- ners of the species mark them as creatures of good breeding. A little later they will hie away to the South, turning their backs on snow and cold. When I want the best of bird manners I am sure of finding them among the juncos. At this point in writing these notes I glance from the window and there a few feet away isa red squirrel busy with duties which he takes great pleasure in discharging at this season of the year. Evidently he had his eye on part of an apple that lay temptingly on the ground a few feet from the foot of the tree. It was a real les- son in squirrel athletics to see him whirling down the trunk of the tree and returning in the same manner. The morsel he secured was conveyed to an old summer nest of his, far up among the branches. There at his leisure he made a feast that he gave every evidence of enjoying with real zest. I suppose the pair that dwell on my emi- nent domain have a supply of food laid up that will serve them nicely for at least two winters. BIRD PARADISE 33 Two species of the kinglet family—the golden erowned and the ruby crowned—visit us twice during the year. ‘They nest far to the northward and look in upon us in the spring and fall as they journey on the annual migration. I sometimes think that they rank next to the humming-bird in smallness of size. I have never seen their nest, though I am told that they sometimes breed in northern New York. The nest is described as quite bulky for the size of the bird. One writer speaks of one he saw as being nicely constructed and containing a large number of eggs, placed in two layers, one above the other. How the in- cubation under such conditions can be carried out is something of a problem. When they visit us in the fall they are usually in company with the warblers, and it is difficult to tell them apart as they pass to and fro in the trees. I think I have seen them here in the winter, and doubtless some of them tarry in our hill country during the cold weather. The greater number, however, journey far down to the genial weather of the torrid zone. Their song is scarcely more than a call note, re- peated several times in a bright, cheery way. When I pass in review the species of birds that rank in size and habits with these active kinglets, 34 BIRD PARADISE I get a new revelation of the diversity of gifts, all in the house of the same spirit. The birds are interpreters of the abundant life, and the book of their scripture speaks with full voice of the good- ness of the common Father. I passed yesterday a brook that flows from the hillside—a full, cheery stream in the first step it takes. I lingered a little while to give greeting to one of the children of the fields and groves that always seems to me a living thing. Did you ever shake hands with a brook %—a real hearty, whole-souled. hand-shake? If there be a sacrament of life in the great church of nature I am sure it is found in the brook, as it is discov- ered nowhere else. This particular stream rip- pled away for a hundred yards, then crossed the road, and just ambled off through a pasture that seemed made especially for it. The channel in the field was shallow, too shallow for the water that would flow in its bed. How easily the brooklet met the new conditions. Like a good general in a strange land it threw out skirmish- ers upon both flanks, and I noticed that in their advance they covered the entire ground clear to the base of the hills on each side. The grass in BIRD PARADISE 35 the wide channel was a bright green, and as the water flowed along it seemed to play with the spears of grass as though they were living crea- tures. I half fancied that the gurgling sounds I heard were the commands issued to the rippling cohorts, and I noticed that they were obeyed implicitly. Below where I stood the scattered waters joined their forces and I heard that pe- culiar sound of the wandering streamlet that always seems to me one of the sweetest sounds in the great Temple of Nature. From where I stood I could see the channel for quite a distance, but the story it told came from the heart of the brook wandering far beyond my sight—all of it the perfect gentleness of a waitress in the halls of the ‘‘ great king.” I parted with the vision, the words of the wise man giving form to the lesson, ‘‘The well-spring of wisdom, as a flow- ing brook.” It is not often that a member of the hawk family visits my lawn. It is only occasionally that I see them in the village. This week, how- ever, was the hawk’s opportunity, and he im- proved it after the spirit of his tribe. I heard the robins and smaller birds sounding their loud warning cries and knew that some serious trouble 36 BIRD PARADISE was being experienced. Going down to the gar- den I soon discovered the cause of the commo- tion. A sparrow hawk had captured one of the smaller birds and was so busy dissecting his prize that he did not see me until I was quite near him. I felt no enmity toward the fellow, as I knew he was simply providing food for his breakfast. I do not see him when I think he is really hunting for the sport of the thing. It may be that there are times when he makes a pastime of securing his meals. He certainly moves with a celerity and skill that might well awaken a feeling of real pride over the posses- sion and use of such a gift. I have seen him when he took great risks ; in fact, all of the hawk family will, at times, incur great danger in carry- ing out their plans. On the old farm the visits of these birds was a daily occurrence through the summer. All sorts of devices were used to pre- vent their depredations. I remember well think- ing in my boy way that the hawk was really not to be blamed for being a hawk and using his powers as it was intended he should use them. My flicker tenants are present at the summer trysting place in full season. A whir of wings BIRD PARADISE 37 followed by a loud call was the first knowledge I had of their presence. They went up and down the bird ways of the village park and made merry in the lawns and orchards. I had the notion that they were trying to tell our peo- ple where they had spent the winter, and of the new life it had put into their keeping. I have seen the fellows in the South and they carry about with them the same rollicking spirit that marks their demeanor here at the North. Flicker seems to be true to his flicker nature wherever he may be. Work and play with him are golden opportunities for being cheery and stout hearted and he improves to the utmost all that is offered him in this way. I noticed that the pair who made me the visit so early in the season called at the flicker home in the maple front of the church. The English sparrows vacated the premises at the first warning. Someway they have a wholesome fear of flicker and never dis- pute his title to any of the things in mother nature’s house. From what I see I judge that flicker repairs his old home each spring—papers and paints as it were—using it for several years. One of my favorite pastimes is watching the workmen when they are constructing a new house. The stout bill is all the tool they have, 38 BIRD PARADISE and they use it with wonderful power and skill. Some one has said ‘‘that without humor there can be no genius.’’ By that rule flicker ranks high as a bird genius. He is all alive with abun- dant humor. Among the water birds that spend the summers in our hill country killdeer ranks with the first. He comes northward quite early and I conclude from his actions passes several weeks in real bird-pastime before he takes up the regular busi- ness of housekeeping. His entire song is meas- ured by the one word, which has become his name, killdeer. Curious how he uses it when on the wing. He flies rapidly and at almost every stroke of the wings the note is uttered shrill and clear. The bird gives one the impression, like the blue jay, that it is very much in love with its song. In the marshy ground just east of the vil- lage there are several places where killdeer nests. The nest is hardly more than a slight cavity in the ground, though it is sometimes partially lined with a few spears of dried grass. The little stretches of sandy beach that are found here and there in the marsh are favorite runways for the killdeer. I have watched them at times when I thought every bird was full of the spirit BIRD PARADISE 39 of real gaming. The good sense of the company seemed to be the real umpire of the game, and the charge carried the idea with it that it was honest oversight. The suit worn by these birds is attractive in appearance and while not con- spicuous for color is every way becoming in finish and neatness. No harm ensues to the farmers’ crops in any of the acts of killdeer so far as I know. On the contrary, he is an all around good fellow, doing good service at every turn. In the village cemetery a colony of red ants preempted a claim some years ago and by an industrious course of their kind of work reared a mansion that could be seen from all parts of the ground. Last spring it became necessary to re- move the mound. It was done by simply level- ing it with the surface of the yard. It was a great surprise to the red-coated citizens of the borough. I saw them running to and fro, evi- dently taking observations as to the best method of repairing damages. The result appears in a deposit of fine earth over a space measured by the extent of the original home—perhaps a quarter of an inch in thickness. What workers they are! When destruction came upon their house scattering the entire structure to the winds 40 BIRD PARADISE not a moment was spent bemoaning the mishap. At least so it all appeared. With the finishing of the leveling process came the uprising of every creature in the band. Hardly an hour passed ere the old order was restored and the bands of workers were on duty in every direction. The strokes of the levelers opened to the light the inner chambers of the dwelling. The first work was to put new doors to all these places. I estimated that on the space of three feet square there were two or three thousand workers. Ina few days the first new roof was in place. This was soon followed by another, and I suppose if they were left undisturbed this would go on through the years to the house restored. All done without one word of protest. What in- structors the ants are ! Merry-hearted I have written before concern- ing the flicker and every year I have the truth of the statement reaffirmed. The pair that have located in one of my maple trees are the busiest, merriest creatures that I meet with anywhere. The first gleam of light in the morning kindles the fire of flicker’s daily life. I hear him hurry- ing through the lawn trees uttering his loud BIRD PARADISE 4! calls. When I appear on the scene I fancy that the pair vie together in giving me a cheery greet- ing. I take it as a morning salutation and I am sure it does me good. Such an amount of talk- ing as they do at the door of their house is not rivaled by any other bird. If free-spirited dis- cussion contributes to the well-being of the flicker home, then these birds are greatly blessed. Some of their talks convey the idea that they do not always fully agree on the shape and finish of the house they are building. The disagreements, however, do not seem to interfere particularly with the progress of the work. I noticed this evening that when the rain came on both birds managed to find cover in the cavity they had made. I was reading recently of the fact that a few of the old-time passenger pigeons were still left far up in the wilds of British Columbia and that a brief time more would entirely exterminate the species. It seems impossible that a bird which was found in every part of our country in such immense numbers should have reached the end of its career. We well remember when the spring and fall flights of these birds fairly darkened the air. In 1840 the fall flight menaced the wheat 42 BIRD PARADISE fields with utter destruction. The parson, then @ mere boy, recalls the fact of being placed in a part of the wheat field on the old farm while the workmen were engaged in another portion. His business was to frighten away the pigeons which came down upon the stacks of wheat in immense numbers. What a rushing sound the great flocks made in passing! Thousands were killed by the hunters, and thousands more caught in nets, being kept and fattened for future use. It was a common saying when the beechnuts were plenti- fal, ‘‘The woods are full of pigeons.”” I have seen the ground covered with the great flocks— thousands being under the eye. Curious how these birds nested. Multitudes of nests were put near together, the limbs sometimes breaking under the weight. I was told of their roosting places when I was in Oklahoma, where they as- sembled night after night in vast numbers. Wild animals of many kinds preyed upon them and the hunters came from every direction, securing great quantities of the birds. Crossing the fields this morning I came upon @ large flock of meadow-larks. There were fifty aud more birds in the flock and every one seemed BIRD PARADISE 43 to be bubbling over with lark fun. When I first saw them about half the company was occupying the branches of a large elm tree, the other mem- bers of the party being on the ground on all sides of the tree. They seemed to be jollying each other, after the manner of men, the jokes flying back and forth thick and fast. Of course I had no way by which I could be sure as to just what they were doing, but to all appearance it seemed to be an occasion of sport pure and simple. I found myself wondering whether I had not lost much of what the birds say and do by not being around early enough in the morning. My inter- view with the larks was just as day was break- ing, about five o’clock in the morning. On the principle that the early bird secures the worm, I had gotten into the fields by moonlight, hoping to secure a fine basket of mushrooms. The growth in the fangus world had not taken place as I an- ticipated, so I improved the occasion by inter- viewing the birds. I cherished the notion that the flock I saw might have been on the wing most of the night and had just dropped down in the old pasture to take breakfast. After a little I noticed they all scattered over the field, each intent upon securing what he could to break the morning fast. 44 BIRD PARADISE There are mornings and mornings in the dis- pensation of our hill country weather. Each season of the passing year gives a message all its own. Curious that the observer usually con- cludes that the pageant of the present is superior to all that has preceded it. One of the distin- guishing marks of personal growth is the vision broader and richer in each passing moment. This very week the day was ushered in three separate times, not a discordant note in the entire scene. From my garden outlook the Oriskany Valley, for miles in extent, wore a beautiful veil of pure white. Here and there the church tower or the tall tree stood uncovered in the great temple. When the sun looked out from the eastern sky its beams of light played along the slope of the hills, riding glad and free over the highways of the great fog bank, every one of them really ‘‘the ransomed of the Lord.’’ Inthe fulness of the day the open sacrament of heaven appeared, every breath of thescene ‘‘ the given of the Lord’s life, radiant with the glory that never fades.’’ A family of flickers are making daily visits to my lawn. They come usually in the afternoon BIRD PARADISE 45 and spend an hour or two in a manner peculiar to this bird. As they come from the direction of Burritt’s hill I conclude that their early home was in that locality. I don’t know that the alti- tude has anything to do with a bird’s welfare, but certainly the elevation of 1,650 feet makes an ideal place to begin the journey of life. It is quite a lesson in bird coasting to watch the flickers as they come down from the hill. They move in broad curves, gliding down to the vil- lage with the greatest ease. I notice they seem to have a preference for the large apple tree in my front yard. When the six birds are duly gathered in the old tree the fun begins. They glide around the great trunk, up and down, like boys at play. I know of no other bird that in- dulges in bird humor as the flickers do. If I understand it at all it ripples, innocent and clear, very much as it does with human beings. The old birds range about the lawn, uncovering many - adainty morsel for the hungry youngsters. While they are at play they use a sort of subdued chuckle that seems the very embodiment of cheery sport. I notice that the other birds show great deference to the flickers. From what I have seen I judge that the flicker is a peaceable fellow, but is ready to resent with vigor any tres- 46 BIRD PARADISE passing upon his rights by other birds. I extend the right hand of fellowship to them always, being well assured that they rank among the well-bred gentlemen of my feathered friends. Curious that the bird, which at one time was more plentiful here than all the other species put together, should have been completely exter- minated. The wild or passenger pigeon, as it is sometimes called, has entirely disappeared. Isay entirely, but I read that a few of them still exist in the wilds of British America. The last that I saw was in 1882, in the forests of southern Oklahoma. Sixty years ago this bird was so common throughout the settled portions of our country that at times the growing crops were greatly injured by their depredations. I recall the time when they flocked here in vast numbers —the spring and fall flights lasting for several days. At times the immense flocks could be seen in every direction—sometimes darkening the sun as they passed. Wild pigeons, cooked in differ- ent ways, formed the staple food of most of our families for the time being. Many were netted, and kept in some convenient outhouse, where they were fattened and used through the season. BIRD PARADISE 47 I have seen in the spring of the year the ground in Bird Paradise literally covered with the birds feeding. They were searching for the sprouting beechnuts and my father’s common expression concerning their numbers was, ‘‘ There are acres of them there.” One of our boyish pastimes was startling the host by a sudden loud noise. What a roar of wings followed, and what multi- tudes of birds rushed to and fro, apparently wild with fright. The flickers are busy with their peculiar kind of nest building. One of the maples on my lawn furnishes a large dead limb, which they examine with the greatest care. Several years ago they excavated a home there, and a family of sprightly young birds graduated in due time from the cozy spot. Every year since they gather there in April, five or six of them, and spend a number of days, talking and flying about, evidently greatly in earnest. Sometimes it results ina pair of them occupying the old mansion for the season. At other times the result of the conclave is the abandonment of the locality by all the birds. Yesterday six of the fellows spent the entire day going to and fro, busy every moment. From my 48 BIRD PARADISE study window, I could see the parties, rushing hither and thither, calling out to each other, and by turns examining the old maple. How easily they balanced along in their peculiar way, com- ing down from the Burritt grove. Then such scurrying through the trees, around and up the trunks, in and out of the old nesting place—hour after hour of it. What a flicker day it was and how the birds seemed to enjoy every moment. Toward night I saw them rushing away to the grove, apparently as far from a decision as to whom should occupy the old homestead as when they first took the matter up in the morning. Judging from what has occurred in previous years, they will require four or five more days of conference before the final decision is reached. Birds, like human beings, have curious freaks. A large gray woodpecker spent the entire day re- cently drumming on one of the maple trees directly in front of my study window. Just what he meant by it I could not learn. The tree is perfectly sound, to all appearance, and the fellow did not seem to secure anything in the way of food. Occasionally he would pound away ina sort of ecstasy, as though the work itself was the TanaAGER HoLLtow BIRD PARADISE 49 merriest kind of fun; then he would patrol the limbs, far out to the small twigs, and I half fan- cied that his manner said several times, ‘‘ Didn’t I do that well?”’ The robins and blackbirds were not at all pleased with the fellow’s opera- tions. They looked him over several times and sat as near to him as they dared, but did not ven- ture to interfere with any of his plans. I rather enjoy seeing both the blackbird and robin non- plussed now and then. I don’t know that they learn anything by it, but thereisa sort of ‘‘ quid- pro-quo’’ in the stroke that looks wholesome. I noticed that the woodpecker paid no attention to any of the spectators, but kept strictly to his own business, though I have not been able, as yet, to find out just what that was. The first accents of the morning song of the birds are now heard about half-past three. ‘Karly to bed and early to rise’’ is the reading of the entire bird record. The robins seem to be the pioneers in the great waking up. What an awakening it is and what a song follows! All along the line of longitude flashes the first rays of light. The choir seems to be waiting for them. From among the apple blossoms of my orchard 50 BIRD PARADISE there is the response of half a dozen species of birds. It ripples away down into the meadow below like the wandering murmur of the brook. I can hear the members of the great choir joining in the refrain until thirty and more different species are greeting the sun, ‘‘ rejoicing to run its course.’’ Curious that this offering of the birds is never twice alike. Curious, too, that there are no discords. The choirs that are trained in the great temple of nature sing out of the heart, and heart singing is sure of its footing always. A favorite nook of mine when all nature is clapping its hands together is down by the old cemetery where I get the music of both the field and wood birds. I like to fancy the entire scene as a great offering of real worship-——a multitude of ways and forms, every one in its proper place, and all look- ing up. No contention among the birds about the way of getting into the Father’s house or of the way of getting to His heart when they are once in the house. Their offering in some ways is my offering in them. It takes the parson to the gates wide open, where the morning stars still sing together, and will forever. I have just seen a bird known in the books as the brown creeper. He has many of the habits BIRD PARADISE 51 of the woodpecker as well as an appearance in color of plumage very similar. The fellow has a way of locating his nest in a crevice that often is not very secure. His song is a pleasant warble that is not easy to put into words. The worm- eating warbler is a bird of about the same size as the creeper, and is very similar in its habits. It is easy to confound the two if we have only a distant view of them. Sitting in my friend’s house in Holland Patent last week, I heard the call note of the brown creeper. Turning to the window, there the little fellow was on the trunk of a tree not more than six feet from where I was sitting. His movements were not very rapid, and he did not seem in the least disturbed by his proximity to the human brother. His spring at- tire, neat and clean, gave him a very attractive appearance, while his gentle manners recom- mended him as a bird well worth knowing. How easily he traversed the trunk of the old tree. Round and round he went, working his way up to the branches—a model of diligence and easy familiarity. His first cousin, the worm-eating warbler, is quicker in his movements and wears a little brighter dress. I never have seen the fel- low’s nest, but am told that he places it on the ground, in general appearance much like that of 52 BIRD PARADISE the oven bird. The song has a domestic flavor like that of the tree sparrow, and is certainly a credit to the singer. I give them the full freedom of my small city, knowing that they can be trusted anywhere in its streets and houses. Occasionally I see the kingfisher watching the gateways of our ponds and creeks. What an active, contented sportsman he is. Like other sportsmen, he fails now and then to strike the quarry, but it inno way dampens his ardor. Fishing with him is a business and he follows it with zeal whether the returns be large or small. I have seen them put forth large effort to capture our common brook trout, but never with much success. Fish of slower movement are the game he seeks and usually secures. I hear his voice sometimes, but never with anything of a musical nature in the utterance. A hollow tree furnishes them with an excellent nesting place, but when none is convenient they bore a hole deep into the bank, making a very safe retreat for their young. I am told that when they secure a large fish they prepare it for eating by pounding it against the trunk of a tree until it is reduced to pulp. I never see them taking any pastime so conclude BIRD PARADISE 53 they use their business in such a manner that it serves as a sort of vacation. If the streams keep open kingfisher stays North well into the winter. When he journeys South, however, he usually pushes on to South America—returning with the first real softening of the spring days. This bird’s shape and attire give him very. little that is at- tractive to look upon. Bright colors and beauty of attire are both denied him. He gives no sign, however, that he is cognizant of the fact, passing, as he does, a very cheery sort of life. A pair of flickers were having a merry time on my lawn this morning. They seemed to have lost their shyness in good part and allowed me to come quite near them. They were intent on securing a breakfast, still they had time to in- dulge in some real flicker jollying. I watched them for some time, and while I did not under- stand all they said, I caught a part of it. No way that I know of that uncovers life anywhere only by living it. To know what the flicker says one must be what he says. This pair certainly said ‘‘Good-morning,’’ in their way. I don’t know that they inquired after the parson’s health, and yet some of their movements seemed to in- 54 BIRD PARADISE dicate it. The thing, however, in their manner that gave me the most satisfaction was the air of true freedom with which they bore themselves. The field and the grove, air and water, sunlight and darkness, the flicker spirit and all bird spirit seem to say, ‘‘ They are all mine—not a thing in the wide house of my home that is aught else but mine.” Free born, free livers, free in every sense that exalts true character. A long line of illus- trious ancestors appears in my visitors, and I ex- tend to them my heartiest fellowship. The recent warm weather opened a wide door in the fields and groves. Not that any of the in- habitants therein really awakened from their sleep, though possibly some of them might have done so. But the door was opened and the op- portunity given to all the residents to say some- thing if the mood was on. I watched the dane- ing sunbeams on one of the clear days and surely their movements were indicative of a lease of new life. The winds gathered their legions and when they had once gotten down to their special work there were no echoes left to slumber in field or grove. Sometimes I half fancy that the echoes are living things. Anyway the rollicking winds BIRD PARADISE 55 awaken them and I don’t know how anything can sleep and awake without being alive. I saw some small insects tossing up and down outside my study window and very likely the warm sun- beams had quickened them into life as they lay dormant in the thick mat of grass. What a multitude of little fellows are tucked away in the great carpet of grass and how nicely they are preserved. Someway they die and at the same time live. The entire surface of the ground with the covering of grass forms Nature’s vast refrig- erator. For the needs of a great host of crea- tures this kind of food is always ready for use. The crows revel in the feast and I judge never fail to partake when the opportunity offers. Dining out is without any question the real forte of most of our birds. One of my real favorites among the field birds is the meadow-lark. He has a way of living bird life that recommends him highly. His ar- rival from the South in the spring is a sort of challenge to his fellow birds, inciting them to new endeavor in the affairs of life. Their song is given shape in a sort of ringing cheer that seems to give the stirring greeting of the meadows 56 BIRD PARADISE themselves. Their method of flight is breezy, like their song, and I notice that in graduating their families from the home nest they push mat- ters in real lark fashion. Very little skill is shown in arranging the summer cottage. Some small depression in the surface of the meadow is selected and given a lining of dried grass. Both parent birds join in the nest building and both, I think, share in the process of incubation. When once the young fellows appear, the old birds show a kind of nervous activity quite out of keeping with their ordinary life. Almost every moment food is brought to the hungry brood and no amount, however large, seems to appease in the slightest degree the insatiable appetites. Among all our birds the young larks seem to take up the journey of life with a kind of “ go-as- you-please’’ character that is most interesting. They have a practice of using the hillside as a sort of coasting place, making merry in the exer- cise like a party of children. Great-hearted, genial fellows they are, lovable in every sense of the word. When preparing these notes I glanced from my study window and there in the lawn trees were a BIRD PARADISE wa number of small birds that I knew from their actions belonged to the warbler family. They were the first I had seen of the migrants from the North. I took my glass and looked them over and I soon learned that the brown creeper was there and the worm-eating warbler. The young of two or three other species were present also, but I did not see any of the old birds. The warblers are all born acrobats. Of them it can be truly said that as they pass through the trees their movements are all of the go-as-you-please charac- ter. Occasionally they tumble through the limbs, as though they had lost their balance, but noth- ing of that kind ever appears, Iam sure. Even as I write the little fellows are doing this very thing and the show of pastime which accom- panies it determines its meaning. I cannot with- hold the questions: ‘‘ Just where in the wide North did you spend the summer? How far north of the Arctic circle did you locate your home? Did you in your farthest flight see just where the Pole is, or just where it ought to be?”’ The answers I get very likely throw light some- where, but not on the way of the inquirer. Not yet does the vernacular of the birds find an in- terpreter in the counsels of men. Right here I notice a larger bird among the warblers. I am 58 BIRD PARADISE quite sure it is a member of the sparrow family, but it passes out to the field before I have a fair view of his trim form. Very soon the sparrows from the North will appear, adding not a little to the attractions of our bird world. Most of our birds have now graduated their young, leaving the old birds free to roam far and wide for the next ten months. Adjourning the housekeeping adjourns the song also, no more Singing until they come on for the season’s work next spring. As a rule the vacation time is the oceasion for ‘‘ breaking forth into singing,’’ but it is not so with the birds. They have no use for music only when they are putting both hands to toil with all their might. I remember seeing many of our song birds wintering in Oklahoma, each having his own special chirp with him, but not a particle of song. It is a marvel how the fellows pick it up so easily when they have been without it so long. The great singers of the hu- man family need to be in daily practice, and a silence of ten months would almost destroy voice and all use of it. Not so, however, with the birds. They pick up the thread right where they dropped it and go right on as though they BIRD PARADISE 59 had been in full practice every day. I notice that the class of birds that have simply the call note keep that practically unchanged throughout the year. Every morning I have as a most interesting guest a large and uncommonly intelligent flicker. He sounds his note once or twice from a distance, then swings along to the orchard, making his best bow from the large tree at the garden gate. I give him most cordial greeting and wish I had command of the flicker tongue. But what is command? I certainly know some good things that he speaks. They come to me freighted with a friendliness that I can understand and do greatly enjoy. The large table of my lawn is always spread and flicker—like the other birds— sits right down to his morning meal without waiting for any special invitation. I notice that his manner of taking his meals is all his own. He puts his long bill right through the table spread, down into the soft mold an inch or more. Just what he gets or just how it is cooked I have no means of knowing. That he smacks his lips over the delicate morsels I can attest ; also that his appetite is always first-class. One 60 BIRD PARADISE day he brought one of his children with himn— his oldest son, I fancied—and such a time as he had in giving the boy a few lessons in flicker housekeeping. I found time to take in the scene and do a little hand-clapping over the young fel- low’s success. Sometimes when I am watching one of these family scenes I feel that a little wholesome correction would do the youngster good, and greatly relieve the mind of the parent bird, but they get on with little or no discipline and get on well. My visitor spends an hour or more with me usually, then hies away to the grove on Burritt’s Hill, where I presume the other members of his family await his coming. Sunday was a full day, rain falling steadily almost without intermission from sun to gun. The thirsty earth drank it with avidity and the plants and trees clapped their hands with joy. The birds seemed to share in the general out- burst of praise. Some of the songs were all the better for the rain. The next morning dawned bright and fair, all cheery with new life. I was out early and more than half fancied that garden, lawn and birds were unusually jubilant with praise. I put my ear to the service of catching BIRD PARADISE 61 the sounds that the old brown earth was emitting. The response was all aglow with life. Every rootlet, part and creature was alert with that genial flow of life which never palis on the taste. The birds caught the key-note of the refrain and I found it not a little difficult to put in a stroke of work where all was festal to the eye and ear. One robin, I am quite sure, continued his song for a full hour, and the English sparrows rivaled him in time if not in music. The meadow birds in the fields beyond the cemetery joined as one in saluting the morning, and even the crows seemed to have a little more cheer in their solemn notes. Someway the morning was so fresh and fair and everything was so in keeping with the new day that I was somewhat averse to even removing the weeds. Each was a temple not made with hands and to destroy such a structure is not an easy task. On such a morn- ing they stand as perfected praise, and who can wantonly put a jarring note into such an anthem ? I notice that the toads are now on duty in larger numbers. I have a notion that some of them were late in coming out of their winter quarters. 62 BIRD PARADISE Just how they tell when to wake up I have no means of knowing. Very likely all they have to do with it is simply to obey the summons when it comes. Curious that I rarely see two dwelling together in the same house and very rarely meet two of the same size. The venerable fellows, large in body as well as in number of years, I see occasionally. One resides under the woodbine near the barn door, and has all the ap- pearance of having numbered a score of years. He is chary of speech, and when he uses his voice he gives forth a guttural sound that seems with- out meaning. His success as a fly catcher is. pronounced. No one would ever imagine that the fellow could make a quick movement by his general appearance. The moment, however, he sits down—or rather sits up—to one of his daily meals he appears in a new réle altogether. He takes his dinner on the wing, and does it with a skill and grace that becomes him handsomely. Sometimes I get the idea that when he once be- gins to eat he has no conception when to stop. So far as I know he has but very little to do be- sides eating. If he has any regular work by which he earns his daily bread he never has given me an inkling of what it is. The little house roofed with leaves, just a few feet square, BIRD PARADISE 63 is the whole world to him, and so far as I can see it is all he cares for. Toad character has some things to recommend, but on the whole is not. very attractive. I have noticed several robins lately that seemed in a half-dazed mood. In each case I have found the bird near the mountain ash tree where it had been feasting on the berries. Can it be that the overeating of the bright red fruit produces a kind of intoxication? Or was it an effect of a different character? The way in which the birds. eat these berries savors of a sort of infatuation. When they are ripe a large flock is on duty every moment of the day eating with scarcely a particle of intermission. I do not know of any other creature that uses them for food. The variety of food used by birds covers a wide range. I have no knowledge of seeds or insects that are unused. Unlike the animals, the birds provide no supply for the winter months. Their facilities for mov- ing from place to place are such that a store of food is unnecessary. Even those who remain at the North through the winter find sufficient to supply all their wants without any thought for the morrow. What a great full storehouse the 64 BIRD PARADISE bird commissary is! Wherever the fellow stops on his flight there the storehouse is and there the food is all prepared for his use. ‘‘ They toil not, neither do they spin,’’ but the feast is ever spread for them and they are always ready for it. I hear occasionally the whistling flight of the woodcock. Just at the northern gate of the old swamp seems to be a favorite spot for their daily gatherings. As they depend largely on the sense of touch in selecting their food they can do much of their hunting for it in the night. I often see in the soft mud where they have been busy prob- ing for worms and grubs. The long bill is the member used in the search. The end is keenly sensitive and the kind of food is determined easily by the sense of touch. In my boyhood we often saw the fellows early in the morning wing- ing their way to the corn-fields, where they pro- cured a part of their food. The nestlings, like the young of the partridge, find their way out of the nest very soon after they are hatched. The families are usually large, taxing the parent birds heavily in caring for them. The woodcock uses two or three call notes, sometimes uttering them in succession after the pattern of a song. The BIRD PARADISE 65 nest is not much more than a slight cavity in the ground, given perhaps a thin lining of dried grass. Like the other members of the snipe family the woodcock is an active stirring bird. During his waking hours he keeps busy most of the time hunting for food for himself and his hungry brood. The young woodcock never seems to reach the point in taking food when he acts as though he had eaten enough. They are cunning little fellows and soon learn to secure food for themselves. I think the sportsmen have done but little in the way of hunting these birds in our hill country. Hence, it is not so difficult to in- terview them as it is in many places where they make their home. The morning after the rain the robins seemed to be unusually lively. The air was cool and the clouds heavy and dark—not just the condi- tions wherein I have found the birds stirring early or actively. As I looked out through the mists I could see a dozen or more of my red- breasted friends thoroughly excited and evidently in a state of war that to all appearances meant death in the last ditch. At first nothing was discovered which gave the least indication what 66 BIRD PARADISE the uproar was about or whether the combatants were really arranged on two distinct sides. At times two birds would contend vigorously, the others looking on quietly or running nervously about, then the entire company would rush to- gether screaming loudly and striking most vigor- ously with bills and wings. They rolled them- selves into a ball of feathers so tightly packed that they seemed one solid mass. For several minutes the battle went on, no one apparently hurt and nothing really gained by any of the contestants. Finally a truce was agreed upon. But the bone of contention, what was it? I could not uncover it and I doubt if the birds knew what it was. It was a case of the army marching up the hill and down again. No one hurt. The greater surprise that I received. on the occasion was the perfect command the students had over that in which they had known no real experience. When called to tell what they knew, each one made an almost perfect success of the effort. ‘Flicker on the Wing” was the subject of all the orations of the day. Alpha responded to his name, with light step and an apparent confidence in himself that fully betokened real BIRD PARADISE 67 success. The first sentence he muttered was a bold assertion of winged thought that carried him bodily nearly over to the little red schoolhouse. Think of it, a complete novice in every sense of the word, touching all he was doing, and yet doing it with the utmost ease—utterance in word and gesture—bird elocution at its best. Number two followed, but put his first stroke in the direc- tion of the rising sun. Away he soared, astonish- ing the whole audience, but himself more than all. When he finally paused he found that his zeal had carried him to the front door of my neighbor’s cottage. Time was given him to con- tinue when all seemed favorable in his judgment, which he did, with renewed success. Number three came from the door of the tree temple— announced with the loud calls of the entire faculty. With just the semblance of a bow he threw himself into his part, completing the first sentence far down in the park. He spent an hour or more in that locality, shouting and clapping his hands in true flicker fashion. The bobolinks seem to be out in a little more than full numbers in the meadows beyond my garden. This morning they appeared to be. hold- 68 BIRD PARADISE ing a sort of convention—all singing and talking at the same time. I could not make outjust what they were saying, but I was quite sure they were doing it well. There is nothing slow about the song of the bobolink. It goes with arush, a great outpouring of notes that are no sooner poured out than they begin to pour again, the stream rip- pling and hurrying all day long. I fancy at times they reach out a hand for a little praise from the human brother. This very morning one came from the field to where I was at work in the garden. He circled about, singing as only the bobolink can sing—the same song over aud over, but new every time. He took a high seat—there are no low seats among birds—on the old apple tree, and such a concert as he put in motion is never known anywhere else. A song fellow joined him soon, and for five minutes all the gar- dening that I did was keeping both ears open to a hymn that is America from start to finish. For aught the parson knows these fellows have been trilling their songs for hundreds of years. How much evolution there has been in getting where they are I have no means of knowing. They have certainly got there, and I have a notion there is nothing new to be added to the song. What preachers of righteousness they are and Fox Run BIRD PARADISE 69 how cleanly they hold the truth. There is no heresy among the bobolinks. I notice that the song of the thrushes is shading off quite perceptibly. Like the other song birds they have had their carnival of music and are now passing to the monotonous chirp which will mark their demeanor for the next ten months. How do they ever pick up the song again? Surely the skill with which they do it is one of the wonderful things in mother nature’s great house. My thrush parishioners journey far away to their Southern home. They dwell there for months, but never once trill their wonderful song. Jour- neying northward in the spring and lo, the old song appears—not a note missing, not a strain lost. Young and old alike come to the house- keeping of a brief two months simply bubbling over with song. Why it is so I cannot tell—the fact is patent, but its best telling abounds in mys- tery. There is no other place that the thrush gives me quite so much as he does in the glades of Bird Paradise. When the song rises from the lower part of the glen and comes wandering up the defile I fancy it gathers something from everything asit passes. By the time it reaches me 70 BIRD PARADISE it has levied tribute upon trees and brook, shrubs and flowers—all the wealth of the gorge. It has multiplied itself a hundred times, and I bow to the wizard bird that fills me with the inspiration of the song of songs. On the Sauquoit road, half a mile from our vil- lage, is the crossing between the two swamps. Logs are found here which tradition says were put in place by a division of Sullivan’s army during his celebrated march through the Iroquois country. Among the willows at the roadside a pair of catbirds build their nest every season. To look at, the same birds, the same nest, the same song make up the household and its work each year. The catbird gets his name from one of the calls he uses, which sounds at a little dis- tance like the mewing of ahalf-grown kitten. Their success in nest construction is only a partial one, although it serves all the needs of the birds. As asinger the catbird ranks high. His penchant for trilling the songs of other birds is well known. He gives what seem to be almost the precise notes of several of his fellow birds. I wonder some- times whether it be asong adopted by the bird or his own in a special manner, none of it bor- BIRD PARADISE 71 rowed. The movement of the catbird bears the stamp of asly, shrewd character, though I know of nothing standing against him that is not to his eredit. As I see him he is nearly always gliding around among the willows, so much so that he night appropriately take the name of willow bird. I have seen the catbird several times in the hedges and thickets in Utica. Like some other of our wood birds he is becoming more cosmo- politan in his habits every year. Nearly all our birds are now here. Another week will bring the cuckoo, which completes the list. I notice that the bobolinks and orioles seem to be on duty in unusual numbers. [I hear their songs everywhere in the trees and fields, full and cheery as they should be in the day-dawn of the spring time. Curious, and ever more curious, to me is their method of dropping the song when the nesting season is over, leaving it entirely unused for three-quarters of the year, then picking it up, every note in place, and as musical as though they had been daily practicing allthetime. Someway in this particular they have gotten well ahead of the human brother. Curious, too, that among the birds the gentlemen do all the singing. The 72 BIRD PARADISE ladies of the house have a cold note or two, but no song. It occurs to me that it would be an ad- mirable scheme if the females could put the song into shape and use it through the long vacation. But it is not for me to regulate their matters. Among their own affairs their knowledge of what is best for them is far in advance of any that the parson has, and their wisdom is to use the best they can command. Bobolinks reached us on the 12th of May. Here and there the bird had been seen two or three days before, but the full company did not appear until the 12th. I was out in my garden early, just in time to welcome the advance guard as they alighted from their aerial trolley car. Their salutation to the parson was given in song, every one apparently doing his best in mak- ing the greeting. What an outburst of rattling notes the song is! I wonder how the fellow ever gets it into shape twice alike. But he does, and it certainly, in some respects, has no rival among bird songs. I notice that the bird’s location when singing has something to do with the finish of the song. When he sends forth the music on the wing he often puts in a note or two that do BIRD PARADISE 73 not appear at other times. After he has settled down in the grass he frequently indulges in a chuckle that gives the song a very pleasant varia- tion. From the cozy perch in the top of an old apple tree there is really a little apple blossom melody indulged in that one can easily imagine is the carol of the tree itself as it bursts into bloom. When the females arrive at the Northern home the song sparkles with new life. In fact the cheery fellow seems to meet each new turn of life with a new turn of bobolink speech that fits the case exactly. No bird of my acquaintance has more to say than bobolink or can say it any better. During my stroll I came upon a family of blue- birds—two old birds and four young ones in the family. When I first saw them they were seated on the telephone wires, and I fancied a mild lecture was being given by the mother of the household. No other lecture is ever given by bluebird. If he knows how to employ his tongue in scolding or raillery, he never has given the parson any sign of it. Whether he turns away wrath or not I do not know, but this is true of him : he never deals in any reply but the soft answer. 74 BIRD PARADISE The young fellows of this family were active and evidently were fast learning the mysteries of bird life. I have a notion that the families of this species of birds remain together longer than those of their fellow birds. The number that I usually see together are about the measure of a single household. I am a little at a loss to determine just what this bird uses for food. I rarely ever see him using anything—in fact itis the only bird that seems to get on without a large commissary. The family I saw kept company with me, for ‘quite a distance, then balanced away to the far side of the adjacent pasture. What a mellow richness there is in their song. It is as Bur- roughs says, ‘‘ purity in its completest sense.’’ He says also that it is the bird of nature, being in color ‘‘sky blue above, and earth brown be- low,” adding, ‘‘ that his appearance in the spring ‘denotes that the war between sky and earth is ended, in him the celestial and terrestrial striking hands and becoming fast friends.” I hear the call of the bobolink from high in the air. The flocks are passing daily and the wonder is where so many come from. They are all of one color—a sort of olive green—and seem to be BIRD PARADISE 75 animated by the common spirit of getting some- where just as soon as possible. Why they should start on their Southern journey so early in the season is a secret which they keep to themselves. Food is abundant and the weather pleasant, still at such a time every season they get upon the wing for their extensive travels. I havea notion that they take their time in the passage, being several days reaching their first stopping place in Pennsylvania. Of course they have no idea of what is in store for them as they gather the fruits of their extensive trip. Living on the choicest viands of the land they soon become candidates for the epicure’s table. I like the cheery way with which the bobolinks say their ‘‘ good-bye.” Vacation with the birds means a long season of rollicking life with hardly a flaw in the entire round of festivities. Several of the robins’ nests in my lawn trees now shelter the young birds. I notice that with the advent of the little fellows the care and concern of the old birds is greatly increased. Itis aston- ishing what an amount of food a nest of young birds will consume in one day. Their capacity for food seems to be unlimited. They feast all day long, and then wear the air of hungry crea- 76 BIRD PARADISE tures. I never have known them to refuse food. If there were any regular meals then it could be truly said of them that their eating between meals fills every particle of space from feast to feast. ‘* All the time at it,’? was what a friend of mine said when the process of feeding for the first time was brought to his attention. ‘Is it aleaf in the book of nature which we have not yet quite understood or are the birds blundering workmen —building less wisely than they know?” The answer seems to take this form: These denizens of the air eat, drink, sleep and be merry, escap- ing all sickness, ignoring all doctors, and dying of old age if they have half a chance. One thing can be said of the food that it rarely ever is of the kind that pampers the appetit-. Earth- worms, which constitute the daily bread of the young robins, so far as I know, are not a rich viand. Possibly the more they eat of these wriggling fellows, the morethey want. If adopt- ing their style of eating involves the necessity of adopting their kind of food, why of course none of us would care to dine with the robins. I saw this morning the largest flock of crow blackbirds, or grackle, that I have seen in many BIRD PARADISE 77 years. They located in the large maples just north of the church, and spent several minutes in a sort of conclave which was lively, and which possibly the birds understood. I was curious to know the number of black fellows in the party and counted them off until the record read 135. Their free and easy way of doing things was most noticeable. I could not discover that the presiding officer, if there was one, had the least authority in the assembly. They all talked at the same time and apparently under- stood one another. The language they used is one of the primitive tongues that I suppose has been in vogue without any perceptible change for hundreds of years. The smooth flowing song that followed seemed unusually full of the softer notes. I suppose the concert was a succession of set pieces, with their accompanying encores, prima donnas having to do with them, and stars also of the other sex. I watched them for some little time, thinking, perhaps, there might be a clue uncovered somewhere by which I could divine the real object that called so many of the dusky fellows together. I fancied half a dozen good reasons for their action, but had no way of determining whether any one of them had the slightest application to the case in hand. Off 78 BIRD PARADISE they all went finally to the swamp, where I heard them still later in the day telling their blackbird story with the same fervor as when I first saw them early in the day. At five o’clock this morning I stood in my orchard and yielded a listening ear to the con- cert of the birds. The singers were everywhere, on all sides of the place where I was standing. The air was clear and warm, and the sun just lifting its broad face above the horizon. I was curious to know how many of the different species were lifting their voices in common on the occasion. I jotted down the names, and here they are: Robins, grackle, flickers, orioles, hawks, red-headed woodpeckers, marsh spar- rows, crows, starlings, warblers, swallows, meadow-larks, pewees, tree sparrows, vireos, English sparrows, wrens, vesper sparrow, bob- olinks, purple-crowned sparrows, chimney-swifts, twenty-one in all—a very fair showing for such an early hour, and a very fair concert. Curious how this morning festival of song is rendered daily, and the listener of even the most critical taste never detects any discord in the perform- ance! The fact is, there are no discords in BIRD PARADISE 79 nature! When discord enters, nature steps out. The birds lift up their voices together, and, someway, they all seem to harmonize—no break in the great anthem from first to last. While something of this festival can be enjoyed in the city and larger villages, the beauty and the glory of it are only found in the open country. To get its inspiration as often as possible is a duty that glows with the privilege of new life. All of the first and second quotas of spring birds are now here. The advanced guard con- sists of robins, bluebirds, blackbirds and spar- rows. Next come the larks, flickers and two or three species of the sparrows. Then follow the wood birds, red-headed woodpeckers, swallows, orioles, bobolinks, and last of all the cuckoo. How the fellows shape their coming to suit the weather and the supply of food is outside of my knowledge. Just now all that are here are get- ting their full amount of regular food, and seem to be entirely at home. Curious how they ap- pear to be entirely at home anywhere that they happen to be. True, they form attachments for certain localities, and find their way there with @ sagacity that is simply wonderful. Still in 80 BIRD PARADISE their yearly wanderings they give each locality where they tarry enough of their attention, so that it really appears as though they regarded it with a homelike feeling. All the Northern birds that I saw wintering in Oklahoma seemed en- tirely contented and happy. I apprehend that when they are once entered upon their vacation any place where they are is the spot where they like to be. Plenty of good food, with fairly comfortable quarters, gives most of our birds a homelike feeling. All the members of the swallow family seem to be masters of the science and beanty of flight. Each species illustrates movements that it has in common with all the others, and each excels in some special grace. The eave swallow is par- ticularly graceful in some of its upward eurves— @ trait of character gradually attained, doubt- less, from the Jong practice of moving in that manner, as they leave their nests under the eaves of the barn. A colony of these fellows practice a: very pleasant kind of social bird life. The nests are placed on some slight projection, shel- tered by the overhanging roof, and are very good examples of the skill of birds having for their BIRD PARADISE 81 material the mud of the roadside. They scein to be quite firm and with thorough repairing are used year after year. Some of them have pas- sageways like the neck of a bottle, and frequently at each opening may be seen the heads of the parent birds quietly surveying the outside world. The young of the swallow family must be adepts in the use of their wings, for I never have seen them tumbling about half fledged. I fancy they keep close within the home nest until they are quite fully grown, then flight is a sort of second nature to them. I have no way of computing the number of insects a swallow secures as he goes to and fro through the day, but it must be a large number. I hear the little bills snap sharply, and know that each stroke is the full end of a fly’s career. Multiplying swallows are carrying large destruction into the crowded ranks of the great fly host. Among my parishioners none ranks higher in my regard than the wide-awake flicker. His doing, I am sure, is always up to the full mark of the Scriptural injunction, ‘‘ With all his might.’’ Six years ago a pair of them located their summer home in one of my lawn maples. 82 BIRD PARADISE They had some difficulties to surmount in getting their house in order, and for a time I was quite doubtful about their success in the enterprise. The youngsters graduated in due time, and I concluded that some of them would occupy the old homestead every season. In a certain way they have. Each spring they come to the old place, and for several days hold a sort of bird car- nival. I get the notion each time that it is a kind of house-warming given by the pair that have just set up housekeeping in the old home. Each time, however, I have been mistaken. Since that first season there has been the annual gathering at the old hearthstone, any amount of flicker fun and talk but no family life has come from it. As I write this I glance from my study window, and there the birds are busy with their regular spring orgies. I say orgies, for the word seems to express exactly what they are doing. Half an hour ago they came balancing down from Burritt’s Hill, six of them in all, and their rol- licking call has been the very pulse beat of the village air ever since. They dart about among the trees apparently as full of fun as a party of boys. Up the trunks of the maples they scramble, chasing each other around the great limbs, ever on the move. If they have looked in at the old BIRD PARADISE 83 home once they have a dozen times. About the only language they use is the word flicker, pro- nounced with a great variety of inflections. Only one place that I know of about here where the eave swallow nests. Under the eaves of the barn on the old Osborn place near Day- tonville I counted forty nests last year. In my boyhood they made their homes every year on several different farms in this locality. The largest number I ever saw in any one place was at the barn of Harvey Head on the Cassville road. I have forgotten the number of nests he used to report but I remember the swallows were about the building in great numbers. Mr. Head gave them large welcome and they repaid it in the destruction of thousands of insects. Barns, as they are now built, furnish but little oppor- tunity for the swallow to place his nest securely. The flight of this bird is true to all the traditions of his large family. His movement is easy and graceful and from anything I can discover may be continued almost indefinitely without any ap- parent weariness. The nests are curious pockets built of mud with short necks through which the bird reaches the inner parts of the house. Some 84. BIRD PARADISE writers classify this and the cliff or bank swallow as one. species, As they pass in flight there seems to be no perceptible difference in shape or color. The song is a slight twitter usually given when on the wing. I received a curious invitation from my flicker friends last week—at least, so it seemed to me. On Friday morning the town crier of this small city went to and fro in my lawn trees proclaim- ing most vigorously some event of great impor- tance. I went out to the church steps and was hardly more than nicely fixed in my favorite seat when the whole matter was made clear. It was commencement week in the flicker university and the faculty and entire body of students were ready to give the parson special welcome to all the exercises. They did give the welcome and I accepted the greeting with both hands and all my heart. The day was ideal and I soon got the notion that the entire affair was of great moment to all concerned. The whole school of flickers were graduating—each valedictorian of his class. The great maple front of the church, long years in building, was the temple of their lifelong instruction. "What to say and do on the great BIRD PARADISE 85 occasion was all nicely pictured out by the two professors—faculty of the institution. The lawn of the rectory and church was the broad stage whereon the entire exercises were conducted. Just what was said as the students were called to take their parts I could not quite divine. The outcome, however, was the key to all that fol- lowed. The four students, each in his turn, stepped boldly out and in the ‘“‘born anew’’ of the moment went cheerily forward to the first full sweep of flicker life. The bobolink trills his song now only occa- sionally. Its bubbling over joy has sensibly changed into a kind of bird music that has a good many slow and heavy notes. Curious that when the fellow’s work and care are put aside the best part of him should go with them. I wonder if there be any scheme that could be put into operation whereby we might preserve not only this bird’s song, but the songs of all birds, through the vacation season. We need a Bur- bank to work in this direction, and it may not be a fruitless venture. The bird uses his short note or chirp the whole year through, and why should he not use his song? I often ask myself 86 BIRD PARADISE the questions, From what source did the bobo- link derive his song, and how does he keep the delicious medley in shape so handsomely? It rattles off a thousand times or more during the song season with never a note seemingly missing. I have tried again and again to reduce the refrain to a word form but never have made any large success of the effort. About the first of August the song ceases altogether. A month is then given to a kind of wild, free bird play. Then comes the first stroke of migration, ending with a change of name to Pennsylvania reed bird. About the last of September he wings his way still farther southward, again receiving a new name, that of rice bird. In December he reaches the shores of the Gulf, and a little later floats across to the wilds of South America where he spends the remaining winter months. One of our bright colored wood songsters bears the name of indigo bird, or woodfinch. An- other name he sometimes receives is that of blue- finch. He is also called the indigo bunting. He finds his way to the Northern home about the middle of May, and while he is not a great singer he adds a very pleasing melody to the forest BIRD PARADISE 87 choir. He belongs to the large sparrow family and the keen instincts of his race help him wonderfully in running the gauntlet of his many enemies. They are not very plentiful, for I rarely ever see more than a single pair in any one season. I find them often in company with the rose-breasted grosbeak, so I conclude they are fast friends. A favorite resort for this bird is a clearing near the wood, partly grown up with bushes. I notice that his perch for singing is some small tree in the clearing, where, seated on the topmost bough, he trills a song that ranks well with those of his fellow birds. I never have known any blemishes on his character. On the contrary he has a very clean record. Of course he meets with the vicissitudes that all bright colored birds meet with. His brilliant hue be- trays his hiding place, and I suppose that is one reason why his family numbers so few members. In my boyhood they frequently came into the orchard of the old homestead, and we saw several pair each season. The dense wood, however, is the fellow’s place of greater safety and he rarely ventures beyond its bounds. This week brought the birds in full numbers. I have already seen five or six different species. 88 BIRD PARADISE The weather has not been perfect, but it seems to make no difference with the birds. They go about with their usual spirit, apparently as con- tent with the storm as with thesunshine. Of the early comers the robin is the most active. Just how he keeps up his natural motion all day long is a problem to the parson. He does it, how- ever, and for anything I can see “‘ brings back at eve, immaculate, the manners of the morn.”’ I have been wondering a little how much truth there is in the saying that the male birds are the first to arrive in the Northern haunts. Iam quite sure that the two sexes appeared here together this year. Perhaps it is an off year, or it may be that the birds are off. Why should they not be, now and then? They have a right to make mistakes, and very likely make them. As I write half a dozen birds are rollicking on my lawn, giving every sign of being perfectly happy. The earth- worms seem to be ready for them, also the nicely prepared insects that have lain all winter in the grass. What a table is ready for them and how they partake of its bounty, never in the slightest degree acting as though they were not sure of their next meal. Robin faith has a good deal of that character which secures the ‘‘ Be it unto you even as thou wilt.’’ BIRD PARADISE 89 A_ red squirrel invaded the precincts of one of my robin homes and no doubt got some new ideas touching robin hospitality. I was sitting on the poreh at the time and my first knowledge of the adventure was a great fluttering noise in one of the maples. Almost immediately this was fol- lowed by Mr. Squirrel’s advent, every movement he made fairly crowded with hurry. Two robins were waiting upon him and they attended to all the details of the matter with scrupulous care. As he tumbled from the tree and struck the ground one of the birds struck him. He rolled over two or three times, then tried the treeagain. Here both robins met him and for a few moments the mixture of birds and squirrel was much closer than the four-footed fellow had any taste for. This time he sprang far out on to the lawn and made his way rapidly to his home in one of the large trees on the opposite side of the church. I rather enjoyed squirrel’s discomfiture for I know he has ruined more than one bird home in my lawn trees this season. Among my bird visitors this week was an entire family of orioles. They came into the lawn QO BIRD PARADISE maples very quietly, but they were no sooner seated in the easy chairs of the branches than they began to call loudly for the daily bread. The old birds responded quickly to the call and the more they responded the more there was of the call. Orioles are true to their kind in giving place to hunger that never seems to be appeased. Bird hunger is a commodity that is always kept in store and is always storing up the more— never by any manner of means crying out enough. I was hardly aware of orioles’ value as a farm helper, until I saw their work in supplying this family with food. The old birds were busy every moment, and I should conclude used in their feasting almost every kind of bug, grub and in- sect that we have in our lawns and gardens. I was quite willing to contribute every squash bug I had to the feast, and the orioles were quite will- ing to take them. They caught many insects on the wing, in fact levied on all the small creatures in the trees or on the ground and kept it up steadily during the hour they stayed with me. The pleasant song of the bird had been laid aside, old and young using the same call note. An- other week and the family life will cease, not to be known again until an entire year has passed. WaArBLER RETREAT BIRD PARADISE gl I conclude from what I see at the present time that there are at least a dozen or fifteen robins’ nests in process of construction here in our vil- lage. There is no lack of material and certainly the business is being prosecuted with commenda- ble zeal. Mud and dry grass are the materials used, and surely when one considers the charac- ter of the things put into the building it is quite apparent that robin makes a large success of the work. The heavy winds that we have had this season have interfered somewhat seriously with the birds’ building projects. I found on my lawn last week a nest nearly completed. It had been blown from the swinging limb, the owner losing both time and work in the accident. Someway the fellows tide over an experience of this char- acter without any serious loss. In a week’s time doubtless the wreck of the accident will all be cleared away and a new house put into place. I have seen the English sparrow play a very shrewd trick upon the robin when he is busy with his nest building. The other day the mother bird had just filled her bill with a tuft of dried grass when a sparrow flew and snatched it away, leav- ing robin an astonished and apparently disgusted bird. I have seen the sparrows snatch food in 92 BIRD PARADISE the same way, robin submitting to the indignity with no appearance of protest. My woodchuck parishioners have passed their quiet winter and are now taking up the duties of the rapidly advancing spring. What a curious scheme it is that this little animal employs to tide over the winter’s storm and cold. Last fall all the woodchuck residents of my parish folded their hands and went to sleep in their burrows, no eat- ing or drinking known by them until within the last week. I have known them to pass to the long sleep when the weather was warm and pleas- ant and food plentiful. Then I have known them to put aside the sleep in February, when the frost and cold were everywhere in our Northland. Once I was passing in the ravine near the Bartlett woods in February. The snow had drifted in until the bank on the west side was some twelve or fifteen feet deep. A woodchuck had dug through the snow and when I looked into the burrow he was sitting on the threshold of his earth cabin, evidently in a great quandary as to what was best for him to do next. I kept a little watch of the fellow and I found as the days passed he got along very com- BIRD PARADISE 93 fortably. Of course his supply of food was lim- ited but he found enough to keep the fires of life burning brightly, and so far as I could see, passed the hours of his somewhat narrow life quite pleasantly. A little later in the season a family of youngsters gladdened by their presence the rustic home. I found not a little recreation in watching them as they passed through the dif- ferent stages of woodchuck life. Curious that in their small world they are beset with enemies on every side. Hawks and foxes are on the watch for them, and I am told, though I have never seen it, that the old male members of the tribe appropriate them in acannibal way. ‘‘The price of liberty, even among the animals, is eternal vigilance.” My toad parishioners interview me now almost daily. When I find them in the grass they seem in a pleasant mood and, so far as I understand, say pleasant things. When my hoe or spade breaks into their snug winter quarters, giving them an unceremonious tumble out into the light, they wink some and blink some, and I am quite sure express themselves in as forcible a manner as the toad everemploys. I notice that they seem in fine heart as the spring opens. 94 BIRD PARADISE Wonderful how they pass through the winter months and apparently make some healthy growth. I never have been able to discover the slightest indication that they enjoy social con- verse with their fellows. All my toad tenants live a hermit life, and they secure the character which that kind of living gives. They havea taste for the flies and bugs which infest a garden, and I encourage all their forays into my small realm. It is surprising how expert they are in catching flies. It is about the only quick motion they make, and the only member they use in perform- ing the feat is their long, flexible tongue. Let the fly pass within striking distance and the stroke comes—a flash of red, which surely reaches the game every time. In a stage ranch in Oklahoma I saw the feat performed by a large toad again and again. I was sitting in the old cabin par- taking of a frugal lunch when this huge toad came out of his lair and showed me how he se- cured his lunch. The flies were present in full force—clouds of them. All the fellow had to do was to keep his tongue flashing—a fly, and I ‘sometimes thought two, secured every time. He spent what seemed to him a very agreeable half hour, and it was a revelation to the parson,—the BIRD PARADISE 95 number of flies one toad can devour in asingle meal. Occasionally I go down to the meadow and deep: tangled wildwood just as the last doors of day are closing for the night. The process of closing the doors is always interesting, and I never have known two of these occasions just exactly alike. Last evening I tarried a few minutes just beyond the confines of ‘‘God’s Acre,’’ the halo of dark- ness clothing all things in its restful sphere. So many friends have hung away the worn garments of time in the little wardrobe near the church that I love to tarry there, renewing life in the sacred. influences of ‘‘ Auld Lang Syne.’’? How delight- ful at such a place and time to have a little bevy of vesper sparrows shape a requiem of the day that seemed to be a real foretaste of ‘‘standing ever in the light.” Vespers’ song holds some things that are common to all the sparrows. But just as clearly it is guardian of many strains that no other bird commands. It was fully dark when this experience came to me, and at least five of the birds were opening their hearts in the song. Without the slightest stroke of effort the song eame to me clothed in the mantle of praise. The voice of the meadow, the wider voice of the stars, 96 BIRD PARADISE the wondrous harmony of all space, ah, the spar- rows, out of their simple, pure, gracious hearts, shaped it all into a vision—day born of night— the night of the silent city where I stood, passing surely to the Master’s broad, open day of ‘‘ Come again.’’? The song ceased, darkness had its place, and I came home from the scene, heart all aglow with the blessed inspiration of sparrow’s sermon on the mount. In some ways the thrush is the bird of promi- nence among our wood songsters. He comes and goes in a quiet way, in fact so quiet that I never have been able to discover him in the act itself. The thrush corner in Bird Paradise is tenantless or it is given a resident and no one but the bird itself knows when or how. Last week I knocked at the door of the corner named above, and my friend was there. A day or two before he was not there and no sign of his coming was visible anywhere. -I suppose that if I had been there early in the morning, I might have seen the birds arriving by the night train on their elevated road. The thrush usually appears when the leaves are about half out. This year, however, he has been a little ahead of time. The marvel is that he ar- BIRD PARADISE 97 rives or leaves his Northern haunts anywhere near the right time. Someway, however, he does it and makes little or no mistake. I under- stand that they pass the winter well down in the Gulf states, getting entirely away from the snow and cold. I never have known one to stay here through the winter, as some of our other birds oc- casionally do. I conclude from this fact that the fellow has no resources in case he is left stranded in his Northern home. Even in the summer he seems at times in a sort of quandary as to what is the best thing for him to do. Whoever writes, or attempts to write, the story of the bobolink will find a task on his hands that never can be quite all told. I have known the fellow nearly seventy years and each successive season he has brought something new to be recorded. This year he postponed his coming a little later than usual, but it was all the same to the rollicking fellow. He came with the genuine bobolink flourish of trumpets, not a note missing in his cheery song. It may have been that his trolley line was a little out of order or something may have miscarried in his calculations, for he arrived in our hill country fully an hour after 98 BIRD PARADISE .- daylight. The regular hour as I have observed him year after year is just at break of day. The call is sounded from high in the air, and a few minutes later I see the fellows dropping down a sort of mythical stairway, swaying back and forth as they descend. After their long flight—per- haps through the entire night—I look for weari- ness, but nothing of the kind appears. They seem as fresh as though the night had been spent in sleep rather than in flight. I have a notion that the flight of birds is restful to them rather than a burden. It is native air and native effort, both stimulating—rarely ever a task. It is but seldom that the flicker comes into my lawn and makes himself entirely athome. When he does, he recommends himself as one of my most interesting bird parishioners. The other day I noticed that there was considerable excite- ment among the robins. They flew to and fro, giving their loud sharp cry, and seemed possessed of the idea that their homes were invaded by some enemy. I looked around for the cause of the extra excitement, and finally discovered that a flicker had come in upon the lawn and was busy satisfying what appeared to be a pretty large ap- petite. He had selected a place only a few feet BIRD PARADISE OTe) from my study window and I had an excellent opportunity of viewing the entire process at close range. The long bill was thrust down into the ground and kept in constant motion. I soon saw that he depended upon the sense of touch in securing his food. Evidently any resident of the earth mansion that he came into contact with furnished one of the viands of the feast. While he was busy at his meal, one of the robins flew full tilt against him, but without diverting flicker’s attention in the slightest degree from the special object he had in view. I doubt if the at- tacks of other birds have any effect on flicker’s course. The even tenor of his way is about where he keeps, but what may happen. I never see him long at a time without his showing that he has a real and large sense of humor. At least, so his way of doing seems to me. I think he knows that he is always welcome to my small domain. Last evening I was quite sure I heard the spring note of one of the early birds among the frogs. It came up from the marsh beyond the cemetery, and was most decidedly a genuine call of the season. What a curious way the frogs have of launching the boat in which they sail the sea of 100 6.BIRD PARADISE life. In fact, I know of no forward movement anywhere that is anything else but curious. Three families of the frogs—counting the toads as one—begin their career in the shifting house of the water. I can understand the process of get- ting the eggs into the liquid incubator, but how hatching is brought about with all certainty lies wholly out of my sphere of knowledge. I am quite sure every egg hatches and occasionally I get the notion that some of them hatch twice. Stranger, however, than all else are the transfor- mations that take place ere the young fellows graduate as full-fledged adults in their respective clans. Not the slightest resemblance exists in form between the young and old of these curious creatures. But somebody cares for them and they come safely through all their perils and trials. Once or twice I have met with the young toads, when they were moving from the watery home. Hundreds were in the throng, all of them eager to get somewhere on the solid land. I give them hearty welcome to my lawn and garden, know- ing that their work among the insects is of large value to tillers of the soil. Years ago, one of our most common birds bore the name of cow-bunting. They belonged to the BIRD PARADISE 101 blackbird family and secured their full name through a habit they had of gathering in small flocks around the cows in the pasture. The ob- ject of their friendship for the cows was the increased opportunity it gave them of securing their accustomed food. I have seen them often on the old farm seated on the cows’ backs—the animals evidently enjoying their bird guests’ company. Among our many birds the cow- buntings are the only species that take no part in rearing their young. They build no nests, never pair like other birds, have no nuptial song, in short, so live that they throw aside everything that savors of the domestic life. I am sure such a course gives a peculiar kind of character that has but little in it that is attractive. Just how these fellows moored their craft at such an an- chorage I do not know. Neither do I know how extensively it is practiced. I never have seen a nest built by the cow-bunting, but I have seen their eggs deposited in the nests of other birds, always, I believe, in those of smaller size, a scheme that shows some little sign of thoughtful- ness. I am told that the yellow warbler on find- ing the egg deposited in its nest will build a new bottom, thus defeating the cowbird’s plan. Some one states that he has seen two of these 1o2 BIRD PARADISE guards interposed in the same nest. If it be not reason, what is it ? I do not recall a year when the wealth of robin life was so pronounced as it is this spring. They have come in large numbers and almost as soon as they arrive they take up the duties of house- keeping. Some writers say that the male birds arrive first, the females following in three or four days. This year, however, the birds seemed to have been paired when they came. I suppose that when the spring quota of birds is large it is good evidence that all, or nearly all, of the birds reared in this section last year have come back to the old haunts. Sometimes all the birds of a locality perish one way and another during the winter migration. It usually takes three or four years to restore the loss. Just here I notice from my study window a pair of red-breasted fellows putting grass and mud into place, shaping one of their summer cottages. Both birds work at it and both seem equally skilful. When they are nest building I have a notion that they spend but little time seeking the daily bread. It is all there in the brown earth, suited exactly to their taste, but they seem to bave no time or inclination to BIRD PARADISE 103 seek it. A little later in the season, however, they balance the books completely, scarcely doing anything else but eat. The dwellers on my smal] domain show many traits of character that seem closely allied with those of human nature. Each species of birds conducts its affairs as though the title to the entire lawn and garden was vested in that single species. Of course such a condition is sure to provoke somebody and that somebody is sure to resent all such provoking. The battle spirit, I notice, is fanned into a brighter flame just after the young birds have left the nest. This morn- ing a mother robin was putting forth large effort to secure a miller that had strayed upon the lawn. Catching insects on the wing is not robin’s forte and yet he acts sometimes as though he was not at all conscious of the fact. After quite a little time of strenuous effort he managed to secure the prize. While he was busy I noticed an English sparrow equally busy in watching him. Hardly had the first motion in the way of dissecting the creature been made ere the spar- row by a sudden movement snatched the prize and darted away with it. Robin was too much 104 BIRD PARADISE astonished to do anything but submit to the affront with what grace he could command. The English sparrow is given to these shrewd meth- ods of replenishing his larder and, of course, the other birds do not love to have it so. I notice that during the dry weather the little red ants that bore holes and build houses in the hard trodden path are on duty, apparently, night and day. I see them everywhere and I conclude that almost any place where they can find footing in the hard earth will furnish them with the requisites of what they call home. Passing along the streets of New Hartford last week, I saw in the hard path the little circles of red earth in the centre of which appeared the open door with the stream of ants going in and out. Later in the day, in the city of Utica, I saw the little fel- lows on duty—putting the doors of their mansions into the seams of the great flagging stones. Hun- dreds of them are trodden on and killed every day, but someway they keep their numbers good. Of course in the city their supply of food is much greater than in the country, and in the main their home under the large stones is a safe and roomy one. I am at a loss in determining how these minute creatures can work their way BIRD PARADISE 105 down into the hard earth, building houses there that to them are abodes of light and cheer. The old adage ‘‘many hands make light work’? tells a part of the story, and ‘‘always at it’’ tells an- other part, but the task seems larger than the genius of the workmen can compass. Still, they do compass it and in so doing write out one of the parson’s great object lessons: ‘‘ Being and doing at one’s best is getting there in the first movement at the beginning and in all the move- ments that follow on to the end, and there is no end.” The dry weather has been quite a burden to many of my lawn tenants. Some of them are furnished with means of defense which they use freely. The earthworms laugh at the drought. The hot and dry vie together and the surface of the ground yields to their influence until there is not a particle of moisture left in at least a foot of the earth. The worms simply retire to the cool rooms of their castle a little farther down, and wait in comfort for the return of better days. What a house it is that these fellows build ! Chambers everywhere, down five or six feet from the surface of the ground. There are no other plowmen like them. Our best workers stir and 106 )60on BIRD: PARADISE pulverize the earth eighteen or twenty inches deep ; these fellows multiply that depth three or four times. I suppose they work night and day at their task. But is it a task? I never have seen anything on their part that seems to indi- cate it. If it be work then it is play also, and the spirit of such a combination is the very laughter of living. Sufficient unto the day is everything that belongs rightfully to the day is a prominent article in the earthworm’s creed. Nearly every day I make the acquaintance of some creature in my lawn or garden that I have not met before. This morning as I was inter- viewing the potato-bugs, a member of the beetle family came from somewhere, saying in his mild mannered way that he was a tenant of my small domain and would enjoy being a little better ac- quainted with the proprietor. Of course I as- sured him that I knew of no reason why he should not have place in my inheritance and not only place, but daily bread and all the protection that such a home provided. He certainly car- ried with him the attitude of a listener, though I discovered no full assurance that he understood the real meaning of the welcome. To the nat- ural vision there is nothing very attractive in BIRD PARADISE | 107 these creatures, but when I put him under my glass he passed to a beauty of person everyway attractive. Curious how the work of the Divine artist becomes more and more beautiful the closer we come to the secrets of its being. Each new revelation entrances the beholder and also gives sign of larger mysteries lying farther on. I love the realm of mystery, not that the realm of knowledge is without its satisfaction but the condition ‘‘seen and unseen’’ is the very order of being. In it my joy of living gets all its own —in short, lives, dies, lives again. The crea- tures that journey with me, how little I know of what they hold as their own. But much, or little, it is mine in being theirs and theirs in be- ing mine. I do not recall a season when the fireflies have been so plentiful as they have been during the past week. Usually they appear for a short time in low, wet places in comparatively small numbers. This year they are to be seen in every direction, making some of the evenings quite brilliant. What a curious furnishing itis. In a certain direction it aids the insect, but at the same time reveals him to his enemies. How full life is of these contradictions, and how true the 108 BIRD PARADISE passage of Browning reads, ‘‘ All our best inter- ests are on the dangerous edge of things.’’ Tire- fly has good command of his lantern. Easily he flashes the light, and just as easily commands the darkness. I half fancy, sometimes, that he makes use of his extra furnishing to guide him in his flight. Then, again, I get the notion that the fellows are having a sort of Fourth of July, or Old Home Week celebration. Each one lights a bonfire and carries it around with him. If there is any shouting I do not catch the ac- cents. About all I get of the gathering is the fireworks, and these last a good part of the night. I rather enjoy looking out in the night and see- ing these fellows going to and fro with their lan- terns. They seem to be saying, ‘‘Sleep on, parson, get a good rest, we will look after mat- ters outside,’ and so far I have found their vigil most efficient. A sparrow-hawk ventured into my orchard this week and not only failed to secure any prize, but met with several strokes of adversity that evidently he had not counted upon. From all I could gather I conclude that he made a vigorous attempt to bag one of the little chip sparrows that was housekeeping in the corner apple tree. BIRD PARADISE tog I heard the commotion and soon discovered that the fellow had not only missed his aim but was made the mark of all the birds in this part of the village. When I saw him he was rushing hither and thither, a dozen birds and more help- ing him to move with unusual celerity. Their methods of attack varied. The robins flew full tilt against him while the sparrows gave loose rein to their voices, but keeping at a respectful distance from their active enemy. The swallows were the most venturesome. Some of the chim- ney species went far up into the air, dropping down upon the hawk much to the fellow’s dis- comfort. After a few moments the hawk found his bearings, and went rapidly off to the swamp —no doubt glad to escape even though the feast he had anticipated lacked its principal viand. I know full well that the hawk is shaping his course aright when he levies on his fellow birds, making them contribute all that they are to sat- isfy his needs, but at the same time I have a de- cided feeling of pleasure when he fails to carry out his plans. Nearly all young swallows are now on the wing. I notice frequently a family of the fellows sitting quietly on the telephone wires, the children busy 110 BIRD PARADISE learning the many duties of outdoor swallow life. I have seen the old birds occasionally feed the youngsters as they flewby. Likeall other young birds they are more conscious of hunger the first week of outdoor life than they are of anything else. What a perfect movement the swallow uses as he passes to and fro on the wing. I never tire of watching them and the one I see last is the one I fancy is excelling all others. The young of the barn and eave swallows I never have known to tumble from the nest until they were ready to use their wings nicely. The children of the chimney swallow have quite a different experience. It is not an unusual thing with them to end their first journey from the home nest at the bottom of the chimney. With them, however, it is not a serious matter. They easily clamber up the sides of the chimney and soon emerge from the top none the worse for the first trip into the region below. Next month they all start on their long journey to the far South, giving us no more of their company until another spring. I notice that the killdeers are gathering in small flocks. Their annual housekeeping has had its day and the wider community life has taken its place. Curious how easily the home life is set BIRD PARADISE Ill aside and the new introduced. The children of the family roam far and wide, apparently entirely divorced from all home ties. One would very naturally conclude that they would grow stronger with the passing of the days. There is every in- dication during the helpless days of the young birds that the relations of the family are steadily increasing in strength. This continues until the nestlings are equipped to care for themselves. That point reached all home relations are sundered as with a single stroke. In fact, it seems to set aside with all species of birds very largely the real affection that appears so strong during the nesting season. The flocks that are now gather- ing will increase in size until they enter upon the flight southward next month. We saw the dif- ferent species of plover passing the winter on the plains of Oklahoma. Among them the killdeer had place as a stirring and attractive member. Sometimes when we were out on our long jour- neys we levied on these flocks for a portion of our supply of food and found it a most appetizing addition to the sometimes scanty stock. Occasionally I hear a call from high in the air, telling of a company of water-fowl passing on their way northward. Geese and ducks are both now 112 BIRD PARADISE on the wing and I hardly know which can make its call heard the greatest distance. The ducks I think are quite apt to do more talking than the geese, though both are pretty sure to be heard most of the time. Two or three times in my boy- hood I was present when a party of travelers were lost in a dense fog. Once it was in the early morning, before it was hardly light enough to discern objects very clearly. I heard the rush of wings, and the loud calls, the entire flock tossing about in the old orchard, apparently wild with fright. In and out among the trees they went, some of them almost fanning me with their wings. For several minutes they wandered back and forth from the pasture to the orchard, a really ludicrous sight. Finally the sun broke through the fog, giving the fellows the cue to where they were, and what they needed to do. The leader took his place, the others quickly following his example, and the entire flock was soon on its way none the worse for the misadventure of afew minutes. In my boyhood the fall and spring migrations of the ducks and geese were large, great flocks passing, sometimes, for several days in succession. Fre- quently they stopped for an hour or two on our ponds and streams, giving the local sportsmen a chance to bag a goodly number. BIRD PARADISE - 113 Our water birds seem to be all here. How quietly the creatures come and go in their migra- tions. Someway I think this class of birds move in their accustomed places with the least appear- ance of display of all our feathered friends. About all I know of their leaving us is that they are gone, and when they return in the spring to their Northern haunts when I first see them they are fully domiciled, no signs perceptible of their ever having been away. Downattheswamp side I hear the whistle of the woodcock, the sharper notes of the snipes, the loud call of the killdeer, and the softer strains of thelittle tip-up. Linter- view them and each has his own story to tell and he tells it well. Mr. Woodcock, the largest bird of the family, I usually see on the wing, though frequently I find him busy in a marshy place, securing his daily bread. He has a scheme of thrusting his long bill down into the soft mold and by the sense of touch uncovering his food. He must secure a large supply, for he always has the appearance of a well-kept bird. The snipe has many of the woodcock’s habits and is a good second to many of his ways. The killdeer comes out into the open fields, and is quite a master of rapid flight. I saw a small flock this week pass- 114 BIRD PARADISE ing high in the air—uttering frequently their loud clear call. Perhaps the most interesting of all our water birds is the littlesandpiper. From his frequent use of the word tip-up, we have given him that as his local name. In two or three places in the swamp there are sandy places where the tip-ups enjoy what I should term their many games. They are expert in these games, I am sure, and frequently an encore of mine closes a contest that looks like a great neighborhood gathering. I noticed that the robins engaged in nest build- ing about as soon as they arrived in their North- ern home. Mud, one of the principal materials for the nest, they find now in abundance. Dried grass also abounds, but perhaps the chief reason for the unusual haste lies in the fact that the sea- son is a little late. Then, too, they really have nothing else to do. So far as I can see they have, on their arrival, settled all the preliminaries of housekeeping, and of course the house after that is the first thing needed. I have no particular admiration for the robin as a house builder. I suppose he does the best he knows, and that is as high as the imperfect ever reaches. Just now I BIRD PARADISE 115 notice that the song sparrow is busy shaping a mansion which is really a work of art. On the swinging branch of one of my evergreens the foundation of the house is laid. What a marvel- ous cup itis! But the adorning of the inner walls is the marvel of this bird palace. The long fine hairs are woven in until it seems like a fairy home, born some way out of the very heart of na- ture. It is not at all strange that the author of it all should secure thereby the name of hair bird. Among the songs of our early birds I fancy there is no other that ranks quite as high as that of our chippy friend. I am quite apt to regard it as No. 1 among the sparrow melodies. My neighbor tells me that a pair of hen-hawks have put their nest in a large tree in the Birming- ham swamp. Just how they keep their incubator warm enough in this cool weather to hatch the hawk chickens is a problem with the parson. The nest is loosely constructed and even though the old birds alternate in keeping the house warm it would seem as though the venture would be a failure. In my boyhood the swamp covered many acres of land east of the village. Several of the hawks’ nests were built there every season. Part 116 BIRD PARADISE of the boys’ regular pastime was climbing ‘the great trees for an interview with the hawk house- hold. Several times we tried the experiment of domesticating one of the young birds, but never with any great success. Even when we had grad- uated the bird as a real member of the farm fam- ily he never became very domestic in his be- havior. The young crow repaid us for all the trouble we had with him in living such a humor- ous, jolly life that his presence was always quite enjoyable. The hawk never seemed to be quite at home in a domestic state. He was built for the wild and he seemed to know it, and I remem- ber we were quite well satisfied when he took wing and sailed away. One of my bird parishioners that interests me without being very attractive is the little fly- catcher. He has some of the traits of his race and some that are peculiarly his own. One of his habits keeps him before the public every mo- ment of his waking time. Several times a min- ute he expresses his feelings in a metallic voice that once heard is not easily forgotten. His rai- ment is plain, no bright colors being allowed. His form is that borne by his family, beauty hav- ing not been considered when he was given being. NII) Avagsoyy BIRD PARADISE = 117 After the housekeeping duties have once been assumed the male bird seems to consider it an im- portant part of his duty to scold vigorously every other bird that comes within range of his voice. I have noticed that the oriole seems to give the little fellow a stir-up that rouses all his ire. Let the notes of the bright-colored bird sound through my lawn, and flycatcher makes reply that lacks nothing in sharpness. The other birds as a rule pay no attention to the little fellow, none of them apparently taking him seriously. Curious how "the way one is considered by his fellows makes itself felt in the character. My little friend, pro- testing with all his might, grows red in the face as no one pays the slightest attention to what he is doing. He keeps the fires burning, however, and grows into a stout complainer that hasn’t a particle of influence with anybody. His work among the flies is the saving clause in his record. His appetite seems to crave anything in the shape of an insect, hundreds passing his way daily. Unlike many other species of birds, I have never known but one pair to nest in a given locality the same season. On Tuesday morning I saw the first oriole of the season. His hearty whistle from the maples 118 BIRD PARADISE in the churchyard told of his presence, and a lit- tle later his full song given in the old apple tree close to the rectory rehearsed the whole story. How fresh and bright his new suit appeared, and how his whistle seemed to give a stir-up to all the bird life that came under its influence. My little flycatcher had an attack of rage instantly. Such scolding as he indulged in seems to be an accom- plishment all hisown. Oriole paid no attention to the tirade, but went about his regular business in a matter-of-fact way which insured its being well done. No other bird rivals him in nest building. He seems to have a real genius for this kind of architecture, and expresses it in the deed with wonderful skill. How deftly he hangs the structure to the swaying limbs, and when once secured, with what rare finish he weaves and shapes his mansion. No other nest quite like it, and none that shelters the little brood in greater safety. Three or four of these oriole houses are built in our village every season. When the time came for the last member of the class to appear on the stage, he seemed a little dazed by the unusual performances of his fellows. He clambered up to the door of the BIRD PARADISE I1g flicker temple, took a long view of the outside world, then retreated to the remotest corner of the place. The second attempt was more suc- cessful. He stepped boldly out, and after bal- ancing a few moments on a near-by limb, went forward without a moment’s hesitation. How nicely he met all the calls of the moment. Out over the lawn, right toward the rectory, his flight of flicker oratory lifted him to the broad porch. Here he took his stand and after survey- ing his surroundings for a moment there came a clear, ringing shout of victory. Without any question his effort bore off the prize of the day. The happy faculty of the institution seemed to so consider it and the hand-shaking which fol- lowed was fully up to the commencement stand- ard. The entire afternoon was given up to a reception that was every way first-class. Feast- ing, speeches, songs, calls, dancing in the broad house of the summer air, how merrily each flicker took his part. When the day was measured, the sentiment of the entire assemblage gave voice, in a most resonant ‘‘ well done.”? The next day the halls of the bird university were silent, nothing more of flicker education to be known there until the advent of a new class in the coming year. 120 BIRD PARADISE Most of the bobolinks have left us and are journeying toward the South. I saw a flock this morning high in the air gaily pushing on their way. The monotonous chirp was all the sound they uttered and that they kept up while they were within hearing. The male birds have dropped their distinctive coloring, and the en- tire tribe appears in its common, sober brown dress. What an experience they will have from this time on to next spring! Perfectly free to go and come at will, plenty of food always at their command, nothing to do but live and enjoy life, it would seem that they might rank with the happiest of the happy. In a measure they do, but the vicissitudes of life company with them wherever they go. After they leave the North they lose largely all legal protection. When they reach the rice fields of the South they become real pests to the farmers of that section and in self-defense the farmers are obliged to wage war upon them. Thousands are killed and used for food. About the first of January they come to the waters of the Gulf. Here they tarry for a little time, then launch out for their ulti- mate destination in South America. Here they spend a few weeks on the great plains—entirely BIRD PARADISE 121 removed from all sights and sounds of civiliza. tion. Just how they know when to start north- ward again I have not discovered, but they do know, and as surely as May comes the bobolinks appear fully equipped for the summer’s campaign. The courage of the little sparrow-hawk is hardly excelled by any member of his large family. The other morning I was busy in my garden when suddenly a great commotion in the orchard attracted my attention. Thirty or forty birds of all species were participants in the up- roar, the noise increasing until I felt quite sure all birddom was celebrating a real Fourth of July. Just at this juncture I discovered a little spar- row-hawk, dashing out into the field beyond the garden. I saw he carried an extra burden, and a little later found that he had picked up one of the young robins on my lawn. The birds pur- sued him, making his course anything but pleas- ant. He dropped down on the farther end of the garden, but found that his troubles had only just begun. The attacking party grew more and more excited. They tumbled over the hawk almost in a body. Again he tried to escape by flight, but the birds kept with him, and the last I saw 122 BIRD PARADISE of the party they were far over by the swamp, where, no doubt, Mr. Hawk finally escaped with his prize. I felt like interfering but concluded on the whole to let the birds manage their own affairs. ‘‘Is there a place where the creatures will live, without preying upon one another ?”’ The great seams of deep ravines opening down the slope, each holding a rippling brook, and each a stroke among the hills, made when the “morning stars first sang together,” ah! how they seem to call to each other across the broad slope, ‘‘The hand that made us is divine.” The great hemlocks on their rugged sides are the green pastures of the wood, all the year through, and when the winter gale searches their high places, the harp of the forest yields its richest notes. But what shall we say of the life that nestles everywhere in these broad aisles? On the trees and in the trees, under the leaves, just at the surface of the ground, and deep down in the earth, life in a myriad forms revels and goes forward. All the new experiences are so much new life, and all the new life is the old trans- figured. ‘‘ Paradise regained’’ starts with para- dise, and moves on to paradise,—all of it that BIRD PARADISE 123 blessed ‘‘hath” to which all is given. Bird Paradise, as I see it, at any time, at all times, is the ‘‘house beautiful” always building, never built. I conclude, from what I see and hear, that at least two families of the large hen-hawks have nested in the cedar swamp east of the village. I hear their clear calls every pleasant day and usually see them soaring high in the air. I have thought that this species of hawk was gradually lessening in numbers, but this year, and last also, there appears to be a setting of the tide in the opposite direction. They have some virtues, though they are not well pronounced. Hawk virtue savors of the quarry from whence it is hewn and needs considerable pruning before it can be given much of a place among the good things of time. The old birds seem to live a sort of solitary life. Their predatory habits alienate them from all friendship with other birds. Ilike the way this bird defends his home castle. Un- like other birds he makes no noise aboutit. His blows come first, and they are hearty and vigor- ous. I remember an occasion when I was watch- ing a nest of them in the old swamp years ago. 124 BIRD PARADISE A party of crows were foraging on the upland just beyond. Something disturbed them and they came lumbering into the swamp in their heavy way. One of them dropped down into the very tree where the nest was, nearly into the nest it- self. He had no sooner struck the spot than‘the father of the callow brood struck him. He tumbled over and kept tumbling over, the hawk rendering all the assistance he could. The sounds the discomfited crow uttered are nowhere written in the vernacular of Croker’s tongue. The order of his going had no stay in it until he was well out of the woods. The entire flock took their departure with him, the hawk remaining master of the field. Passing near the Bailey swamp I discovered a marsh-hawk, evidently preparing his midday meal. Somewhere in the marsh he had picked up a savory morsel and when I saw him he was seated on a limb dissecting and eating his prize. Among our many species of hawks this fellow that dwells in the marshy places is in many respects the most interesting. He has many of the characteristics of his large family, though in the main he seems of a more genial temperament BIRD PARADISE 125 than most of his fellows. His cupboard which includes the entire swamp where he dwells is al- ways well filled with a great variety of food. From what I have seen I conclude that among the smaller creatures that live there he classes them all as welcome parts of his daily bread. This hawk is quite apt to take excursions in the night, being closely allied in some of its habits with the common barn-owl. It puts its nest on the ground or in a tussock of grass, taking care to select a location well surrounded by water. I enjoy the easy movements of the marsh-hawk as he goes to and fro over his watery domain. The other day I was watching one that seemed to be out for a little pastime when suddenly hestopped and dropped down to the bog and when he arose again bore a large frog in his talons. I have seen once or twice a party of crows invade the precincts of this hawk’s summer home. Their coming to the place is the signal for the most vigorous action on the part of the hawk, the crows tumbling over each other in their eagerness. I heard the call of the cuckoo this week. He is the last comer of all our birds and does not seem to have a friend outside of his own house- 126 BIRD PARADISE hold among the entire host of birds. He al- ways goes neatly dressed, and glides around among the trees very much like the catbird. We have two species, known as the black billed and the yellow billed cuckoos. In general appearance they are so much alike that one cannot tell the difference only by close inspection. From what I see of these birds I conclude that they are fully entitled to the dislike of their fellow birds. Their sly, gliding movements are a very fair in- dex of their character. Audubon gives them a name that is not at all to their credit. He says they not only lay their eggs in the nests of other birds but they suck their eggs and kill the young. I never have seen them engaged in these vandal acts, but from what I know of their habits I am prepared to believe that they are fully competent to show some bad behavior. Their call is broken and abrupt—a sort of breaking forth of the heat in sound. In my boyhood a pair of them nested in the large barberry bush on the old farm every year. I remember we gave them what fellowship we could, but they acted as though they cared little for it. I notice that with birds, as well as with men, the stroke of the will, made large enough, shapes all the character. Cuckoo wills the hurt of his fellows, and soon finds BIRD PARADISE 127 his hand against every man and every man’s hand. against him. Of all the smaller birds that visit my lawn the small flycatcher seems to be the most demonstra- tive in asserting his presence and proclaiming his wants. He has a metallic voice that he uses without much intermission, during all his wak- ing moments. He seems to regard himself as one of the magnates of the bird world. Other birds, however, accord him very doubtful prominence. His appearance is the signal for a sort of indiffer- ence on the part of his fellow birds that is quite noticeable. Just as soon as a pair of these fly- catchers establish their summer home the male bird is organized into a vigilance committee that leaves no stone unturned in doing his entire duty. The tone of his metallic voice is gauged to a key and manner of the genuine scold. The presence of any other bird opens the flood-gates of the fel- low’s feelings and the protest that follows is belligerent in every particular. The oriole seems to be his special dislike, so much so that I havea notion that the brilliant-colored fellow has in some way vented his spleen on his smaller brother. Of course the robins and blackbirds receive their 128 BIRD PARADISE share of the flycatcher’s attention, but it is not quite so sharp-edged as that which he bestows upon the oriole. How the diminutive body beare the stroke of his abrupt call all day long without being utterly worn out is a problem. In the realm of our innumerable flies the flycatcher does himself honor and performs a work that cannot be overvalued. I have a notion that the fellow’s eye can detect a fly that is too minute for the human sight to discover. I have watched them many times and was quite sure from the snapping of the bill that the flies were passing in goodly numbers, though I was not able to see any of them. Asa scavenger of the air our small friend shows a redeeming trait that goes far in restoring him to the good graces of the parson. Tuesday was a very perfect spring day. Its warmth and beauty lured the parson to a long walk far afield. The first sign of creature life that I saw were myriads of small flies that seemed to have just entered upon the journey of life. There were many species and all intensely active. I had the notion that once well out in the fields I should get entirely clear of the com- mon house-fly, but the fact was that I only BIRD PARADISE 129 seemed to get a little more right where he was. Curious that the fellow seemed glad to see me when I had no shadow of friendly greeting for him. The minute fellows that I could only see as the sunlight was reflected from their wings were in such numbers all along the swamp side that it could be truly said they filled the air. What a feasting place for the flycatchers who will be with us a little later. At the brook side I stopped for a time to hear the song it sings when the spring storms swell the volume of its waters. I had seen it a thousand times before, but this morning it was practically a new brook. The sun’s rays played with the ripples, shaping a variety of shadows—every one seemingly alive. In one place the long spears of sedge grass swayed from side to side like living creatures. Their shadows on the gravel of the channel gave them the appearance of gems of ‘“‘ purest ray serene.” Just at the crossing in the old road- way I sat for a little time, and to my astonish- ment and delight the water spiders made their appearance. There were a pair of them to look at, the same fellows I used to see there in my boyhood. How easily they walked over the sur- face of the water. I half fancied that they were moved by the desire to show the parson how 130 BIRD PARADISE easily they could pass and repass on the shifting element under their feet. Rising to go, my shadow was thrown across the brook and in- stantly the spiders dropped to the bottom and disappeared among the stones. I notice that the hawks of different species seem to enjoy the swamp scenery better than that of any other locality in our hill country ; at least their action seems to warrant that conclu- sion. Yesterday I saw a pair leisurely tossing about over the marsh just east of the village. They belonged to the species known as marsh- hawks, in some respects the most interesting of the large hawk family. How easily and grace- fully they move to and fro on their broad wings. It certainly looked like an hour of pastime, though there was every indication that they had an eye for business. Quite a variety of food was pre- sented for their choice and they improved the opportunity offered to the best of their ability. I am quite sure they picked up some frogs and in one instance a field-mouse was added to the menu for the day. I fancy the hawks really enjoy their hunting expeditions. Success quick- ens the blood in hawks as well asinmen. Espe- cially so when the effort is stimulated by hunger. BIRD PARADISE 131 In the bird it may not be less than a virtue and in the man ranks the same if it be rightly used. A fine specimen of a male bobolink came into my lawn this week and stayed some little time. During part of the visit he was quite close to the porch and seemed really disposed to make the parson understand that he meant to be especially friendly. I do not recall an instance where a member of this family put himself into such fa- miliar relations with the human brother. If he had his song with him he did not use it, neither did he open his mouth to say anything of why he was making such an unusual visit. From all that he did not say, however, I received the im- pression that the fellow had been grossly mis- used. Very likely a hawk or some wandering fox had visited his home and he only was left to tell the story of wreck and ruin. . What trage- dies there are in bird life! Every day they occur and it is only a few of the large number that we ever hear of. After an hour or two the fellow went his way, carrying with him my warmest sympathy, though I know it was very doubtful if he knew what it meant. This certainly is al- ways true, that true sympathy extended always 132 BIRD PARADISE does the sympathizer good whatever the effect may be on the one that it is intended to reach. I am now receiving visits from the warblers who have spent the summer in the far North. The little worm eating warbler was the first to pay his respects to the parson, and he did it handsomely, as all his family do. I saw him first gliding up one of the long limbs of the larches. How easily he threaded his way, just as much at home on the under side of the limb as on the upper. Evidently it was his dinner hour, the feast not limited in the least by time or quantity. Curious how birds keep so well, eating almost without intermission during the day. I see by the books that this warbler is given the range as far north as southern New York. I wonder if the books are correct. The birds I see answer to the description of the war- bler in every particular and I see them only in the fall and spring. I never have seen their nests but am told they are built on the ground and resemble very closely that of the oven bird. It speaks in audible tones very seldom and at its best uses but little that is very musical. My visitor stayed an hour or two and I should think BIRD PARADISE 133 managed to secure several score of grubs in that time. Passing near the swamp thicket this morning I was greeted cheerily by the song of the thrush. It came out of the coverts so smoothly and sweetly that one wondered how such a place could yield such music. It was the stirring trill of Mr. Thrush at his very best. What a songit is and how it commands the attention of all the denizens of the wood. I noticed that when it was given utterance the other singers were silent. Very likely the clear ripple of the notes was so bright and entrancing that no others could be given a moment’s thought. Usually the singing of one of these birds is answered by another from some point near by. I waited for the response and half fancied at times that it was in the air, but none was made. The lack of response, however, had no perceptible effect upon the singer. He went on and seemed entirely satisfied in having the parson for a listener. The nest, no doubt, was hidden away in the thicket, the young being now nearly ready to shift for themselves. It has occurred to me that if the young birds could only shape and use the song of the species it would add much to the attractiveness of our groves. We 134 BIRD PARADISE have four species that are common here—all of them fine singers. I saw on my recent journey south quite a number of hawks, large and small. They were far enough south to escape the snow, and seemed entirely at home. One large hen-hawk was en- gaged in the pastime of soaring high in the air. It was a bright, clear day, and the fellow ap- peared to be enjoying every moment of his out- ing. Not far from him were two or three turkey- buzzards—first-class rivals of the hawks in the art of soaring. With clear fields and warm weather I could readily understand that the con- dition of my old acquaintances was greatly im- proved over their winter condition at the North. But I could not help propounding the question, ‘ Will these bare fields yield the fellows any large supply of food?’’ The thick grass carpet which we have at the North is not seen at the South. With us this carpet furnishes the favorite resort for innumerable bugs, grubs and mice. The hawks know this fact and rely upon the supply for the main part of their food. Of course in the winter the doors of this great cupboard are all tightly shut. In the South they are all wide BIRD PARADISE 135 open, so far as the place itself is concerned, but the carpet being entirely absent, there is no cover for creatures of any kind. Doubtless there are other retreats for the fellows, but I have the no- tion that the fields of the South are not the pro- lific home of the smaller creatures such as I have named above. I noticed a small sparrow-hawk prospecting in the immediate vicinity of several negro cabins. He dropped down into one of the yards, and I thought secured a luckless sparrow. As we passed down the river from Wilmington I noticed a small conference of the buzzards gath- ered about some dead creature that the receding tide had left above the water line. Two or three hawks and as many crows took their departure when the buzzards came upon the scene. A large amount of food is furnished every day from the river and ocean. The keen sight of all the birds named above is simply wonderful. They quickly discover the dead as well as the living animals, and are certainly adepts in appropriating the de- licious viands offered them. In my boyhood several species of owls were common here. The great hollow trees of the wood furnished them with homes entirely to their 136 BIRD PARADISE liking. The trees are all gone and most of the owls also. I occasionally see the small screech- owl, but rarely any other. As a boy I well re- member hearing the calls of the larger owls in the great ravine of Bird Paradise. They often gave them in the daytime and we sometimes saw the staid fellows in the great openings of the trees. At one time a family of owls dwelt in the old farm wood, that indulged in unusual hoots and calls. Occasionally they would give a sound like the tolling of a bell, especially solemn on the evening of a calm summer day. I half fancied that the fellows were holding some sort of service, and that the bell sounding was a call to the gathering. Another fancy of mine was that the great horned owl was a sort of father and all around adviser among the birds of the wood. A slight increase of knowledge, however, dissipated all such crude ideas and left the owl barren of any particularly ornamental or useful traits of character. One thing, however, the owls made most familiar: they were lovers of the dark, and we were early taught that with such belonged the deeds that are evil. The haleyon days for the minute insects are mostly measured in the fall of the year. The BIRD PARADISE 137 sunny, dry afternoons they enjoy in the true in- sect manner. The little gossamer spider is among the most interesting of the great host. I was over at the old farm the other day and strolled down to the hillside near Bird Paradise. At first I thought the little fellows were not on duty. A little later, however, the company assembled and surely I never saw it larger. Out from the fence and bushes the silver threads streamed with a minute spider at the end of each one. There were thousands in sight from where I stood, and every fence and bush in our hill country was presenting the same scene. The threads and the insects can only be seen when the sun’s rays are reflected by them. Curious how the thread is spun from the little body—the creature letting it buoy him up as the spinning goes on. Curious, too, how it can all be wound up again and used over and over. Down at the swamp side I lingered, hoping to see another friend of my boyhood days, and sure enough there the fellow was, seemingly the same I saw sixty years ago. The little pool of water enticed the boy again, and there on the surface of the water was the happy boatman, just as I saw him in my boyhood, —the water-spider, walk- ing over the water as easily as some of his kin walk over the smooth surface of the wall. I take 138 BIRD PARADISE the old seat and watch the little creature. It goes to and fro, sinking to the bottom at will, a verita- ble wizard of navigation. Master of his craft in his appointed sphere, lacking nothing, so I sit at his feet sure that I am listening to one of nature’s great preachers. The growth of the present season, I think, I have never seen equaled. My garden apparently has not lost a moment since it entered upon the race last spring. I find it necessary to visit it several times a day in order to keep abreast of its forward march. At times I fancy there is a well-ordered contest between the different vege- tables. Those that revel in vines seem to have the advantage. A squash vine has pushed its way so vigorously that it is already twenty-five feet on its march and the end is not yet. Here and there it has camped, leaving a memento of the stay in a squash of no mean proportions. The wise heads of the place are the lettuce and cabbage. If they nod at all it is when I am look- ing the other way. Just now the early potatoes are proving their worth in the test that is the proof of the pudding. What delicious balls of fluffy white they present when they are bringing, BIRD PARADISE 139 as they do, the best bow the garden can make. But the variety of leaves that appear in the dif- ferent growths is a sort of school that I enjoy attending. Each has its own way of telling what it is, and each is fashioned after a pattern ‘‘ seen in the mount.’? Why not a revelation—every leaf, every vegetable, all the growth of things unseen? Why not a school replete with law and gospel ? I have seen it stated that the rose-breasted grosbeak, whenever the opportunity offers, feasts upon the potato-bugs. How true the statement is I do not know, but if the fact be as stated it does seem as though the fellow’s taste had gotten largely astray. Of course I have no real concep- tion of the flavor of this species of bug. It may be of a luscious character and'no doubt the bird so regards it. The potato-bugs are scarce this year and as a matter of fact so are the grosbeaks. Like other birds, the fellow may go where he finds his favorite food abundant. By the way, what a curious package of life the potato-bug is. I know of but one attractive thing in his make-up. He wears a suit that shows a stroke of color all right. Otherwise he seems like a soft 140 BIRD PARADISE pulpy lump of matter that never is quite so happy as when gorging himself on a stalk of a potato vine. Grosbeak may show some defect of relish by using the fellow for food, but if he does it is about the only defect I know in the bird. Among our wood birds he ranks high in both song and appearance. The nest he constructs, while not first-class, serves his purpose hand- somely. The song is a warble that feels its course along the aisles of the wood in a way most attractive. In fact it is one of the delight- ful songs among the wood melodies. I think they extend the season of song longer than any other of our wood birds. I saw near the swamp last week a bright crim- son colored fly. It was perhaps half larger than the common house-fly, and appeared to be just entered upon the life of the spring season. What a singular provision it is that graduates the fly in full dress, thoroughly furnished for all the good work that he seems ready to engage in. This fellow was just a little dazed by the glamor of the new world upon which he had so recently entered. He would climb a spear of grass and, balancing himself at the top, spread and shake BIRD PARADISE 141 his wings as though he were testing his new capacities before he ventured to use them. With the glass I readily saw that his new suit was ornamented with a variety of colors, though he seemed quite unconscious of the fact. I saw, all about, where the crows had been, and congrat- ulated Mr. Fly on his good fortune of being hatched a little too late for their early visit. I looked about for the fellow’s native place, but did not discover it unless a little cavity at the base of a decayed stump was the spot. I saw several other species of flies—all of them accom- panied by a retinue of their fellows, but this one paddled his own canoe without fear or favor of any of his kind. After a brief space of balanc- ing and warming he set the entire machine of his powers in motion. To his evident surprise all went well with him and the last I saw of his retreating form he was well out over the marsh— gaming new confidence with every stroke of his wings. I could but moralize something like this : Here is an exposition older than any man has devised. He who made it all keeps it open and keeps it in order right through the ages. On every side are things and creatures, millions of them, each one a marvel of construction and beauty, in almost every respect. What else is it 142 BIRD PARADISE but a Jamestown of wonders, its myriad doors ever wide open to him who lingers there with eyes to see and ears to hear? I notice in my garden a great number of small toads. The little fellows do not look large enough to take care of themselves, but they seem to get along very well. A few days ago they left their home in the water and came out upon the land. I have seen them making the venture in com- panies of a hundred or more, all intent on finding a location that they can regard as home. What a curious instinct it is which leads them out of the water home and establishes them in the snug- gery on the land. Who would imagine that the curious thing hatched in the water would ever become a toad? The name tadpole or pollywog seems to represent the newcomer very nicely. : ‘¢Pretty much all head and tail’? was what the boy said when he first saw one of the fellows. For weeks they swim about in the water, furnish- ing food for the fish and many water birds. When the time arrives the great change occurs. The tail disappears, the legs are put in place and a new spirit takes possession of the fellow. He hies away to a new world and in a sense drops all the knowledge that his experience in the water BIRD PARADISE 143 house has given him. I suppose their food is the minute flies which are found in the grass in im- mense numbers. If the weather be warm, as it is this season, most any place in the lawn or garden will serve as an abiding spot. They grow quite rapidly for the first season, but I conclude are several years in obtaining their growth. It is a tradition in our hill country that they live to a great age and doubtless the idea is in the main correct. From what I see I infer that the crows make the young toad a favorite article of food. It is a little difficult to understand how such a creature can be a very savory morsel. The toad’s work in the garden catching flies commends him highly. He is a first-class helper in securing good vegetables. Among the diligent workers that dwell in the fastnesses of my lawn, I should give high rank to the burying beetles. Their right to the name is secured by askill and diligence as workers that are quite remarkable. Frequently on the old farm in my boyhood we would come upon the fellows pushing one of their ventures that meant food for the entire tribe for weeks to come. How they find the dead creature that they bury so nicely is an unsolved problem with the parson. 1444 BIRD PARADISE I have known the pioneer of the band to appear in a very few minutes after a young chicken had died. In a short time others would arrive—all bringing their burying tools with them, and all getting right to work just as soon as they arrived. Little by little they remove the dirt from under the body, letting it down gradually until it is well below the surface of the ground. Then they tumble the particles of earth on the upper side until the treasure is entirely covered. The time of the task may take many days, but when done it is certainly well done. The food which one creature repels is the favorite article of diet with another. The beetles enjoy with keen relish the food that is only made savory to them by corrup- tion. The eggs are deposited where the larvee as soon as hatched can feed upon the buried body. The beetle to the ordinary vision seems quite devoid of beauty, but when I put him under my magnifying glass a new creature appears. ‘‘ He hath made all things beautiful in his time’? is verified completely when we see things, “‘ not through a glass darkly, but face to face.” The other morning I discovered a piece of meat dropped by some one at the side of the road. A BIRD PARADISE 145 single blue fly was investigating the prize, not an- other of his fellows being insight. Returning about two hours later I found the single fly multiplied by at least two hundred. Where did they all come from and how did they learn of the feast spread for them? I think their system of conveying news must be wonderfully efficient. But the number assembled on the occasion noted above was simply astonishing. They must have been dwellers in the grass of the field near by and doubtless the company I saw was only a corporal’s guard of the vast number on duty in the wide country. They may do harm as our wise men tell us, and certainly they are not very agreeable companions, but there is the other side of the matter. The things they feed upon are of that character which would be injurious in many ways if they were not removed. The fly is ascavenger of large value, and until we have a better system of preventing his increase we shall need him for the good he does. If what the toad now says corresponds with what he does then it conveys the single idea of winter quarters. Under the clinging vines at the side of the barn a venerable specimen of this 146 BIRD PARADISE ancient family has passed the summer. He makes his presence known by certain utterances that surely have nothing pleasing in sound, and so far as my knowledge extends are not freighted with valuable meaning. Mr. Toad doubtless is more fully informed and in his own way enjoys his special knowledge. I notice the fellow makes full preparation for the winter some time before the chilly blasts are exerting their influence. I frequently find them nicely tucked away a foot or more down from the surface of the ground, early in October. It occurs to me that as the fellow is situated with nothing special to do, it is a nice arrangement if he can fold his hands and set the long winter sleep in motion. The secret of when to begin, however, belongs to the toad and will, I judge, for all the coming years. I know of no creature that counts the full grown toad as a special viand at its feasts. The young fellow is used, but the old fellow never! Early in the spring the toad puts its eggs into the incubator furnished by the pond, and I have the notion that all the eggs hatch. The parent’s form does not appear in the young toad. A few weeks spent in the water, however, graduates the entire family in full toad dress, ready for the summer campaign. Half of them, I judge, fall a prey to hawks and BIRD PARADISE 147 crows during the first summer. In fact only a few, comparatively, reach the full adult size. The dry warm weather does not quite suit the toad citizens of our hill country. They prefer more moisture and I judge are not over fond of the heated term. I have not seen a member of the family for several weeks. The last one I met was stopping under one of my large cabbages, and seemed a good deal annoyed when I lifted the great leaves and looked in upon the house and its household of one. Of course, he had no oppor- tunity to be other than quiet and peaceful, living alone as he did. From some significant signs which I saw, I concluded the fellow was arrang- ing to don a new suit of clothes. Curious how the toad divests himself of the entire suit that he has worn for months. Just how he does it, I do not know. I see the old put off and the new put on and there my knowledge halts, and I fancy the toad’s does also. Throwing aside the old skin and putting on a new one is exactly what is done. A few days in the new raiment gets every- thing into shape, so that the fellow feels entirely at home. The single suit serves for twelve months, and someway the wearer easily keeps it whole and clean all that time. 148 BIRD PARADISE Crossing the field near the swamp last week I interviewed several of my friends who make their home in that locality. I passed by the birds for the time being and shook hands espe- cially with a number of friends much smaller in bodily size but none the less dear to one who is in close touch with the children of the common household. A red fly, somewhat larger than the common house-fly, first attracted my attention and managed one way and another to keep it for some little time. Insects of different colors I had seen before, but I did not recall one dressed wholly in bright red. The fellow seemed to be enjoying his surroundings, though they were somewhat tame to the real lover of nature. I got the notion that he had just added to his equipment the pair of wings with which he was furnished, for he appeared to be feeling of them most of the time more as a plaything than a member to be put to actual use. He would run lightly up the spear of grass and balancing nicely on the top spread his wings and wave them. Then he would vary the movement, each new venture no doubt giving him larger confidence in the wider life upon which he had evidently just entered. Finally he pushed his way down BIRD PARADISE 149 into the dried grass apparently quite well satis- fied with all the experience the day had put into his keeping. Dry weather is not conducive to what the toad regards as his best welfare. Iam not sure that protracted wet weather suits him much better. Enough dampness, however, to remove all danger of drought is quite to his liking. How far he journeys during the night hours I have no means of knowing, but I conclude from what I have seen of his habits that most of his move- ments are made after dark. Occasionally the gruff voice of one of the veteran fellows comes to me from the thick grass of the orchard and I can hardly divest myself of the idea that Mr. Toad is more surprised at the sound than anybody else. Some six or seven of the venerables are quartered on my small domain and are not by any means the least interesting of my many tenants. Just here my neighbor’s little girl comes in with a box and removing the cover shows me a small toad which she found this morning in their ash barrel. The little fellow is lighter colored than most toads are and the girl thought it might be a different kind from those we usually see. I 150 BIRD PARADISE told her to put him somewhere that he could get the benefit of the sun’s rays, and he would soon show a different color. How nice it is when a girl of ten years can get near to these creatures of God. It shapes valuable character for the battle of life. Nearly every day I meet with a number of the humming-bird family. Sometimes their manner conveys the idea of a casual call—no particular stroke of friendship in it. Then they will give such a cordial greeting that I am quite sure it means the best kind of bird fellowship. Sitting on the porch this morning, enjoying the sun’s “‘eoming forth as a bridegroom out of his cham- ber,’’ I heard a slight humming sound. Glanc- ing around I saw a little ruby throat standing on his rapidly moving wings not three feet from me. How nicely he balanced there and what else was the meaning of the visit but the heartiest kind ‘of a cheery June greeting. He moved two or three times while he stayed, but how he did it was all a mystery to me. I could see the little head turn, then the body flash to another bird station several feet away, but there was no ap- pearance of effort, nothing to indicate that the rN » * ‘aed are CHICKADEE OUTLOOK BIRD PARADISE 151 creature used a particle of strength in making the movement. He gave me a few moments of his time, then darted away, his flight apparently vieing with the sunbeam in the compassing of distance. Think of it, the flight of this little fellow, recording, one hundred miles an hour. How does he command it, and how can he stop when once passing at that rate of speed? All through the summer a pair of bats have taken their evening pastime in the open reaches of my lawn. Lately the young fellows have joined in the outing so that five or six take their evening meal and mingle socially, if that be pos- sible, with these curious creatures. I have not been able to discover their summer cottage, but I am quite sure that it is located somewhere in the attic of the old church. The bats are lovers of darkness, but I have no knowledge that their deeds are evil. Their time for work and play is the early hours of the evening. During the day and most of the hours of the night I rarely see them. They move a little heavily on the wing and seem to soon weary of their flight. The young fellows must of necessity come short in the daily bread, still they seem to thrive fairly is2. BIRD PARADISE well. I was watching them for some time last evening and really found myself quite enlisted in the work claiming their attention. Small flies and mosquitoes are the main supply of food, but I judge other creatures form no inconsiderable part of the daily portion. Their work in deci- mating the ranks of the mosquitoes gives them place among our best toilers in the great vine- yard. The only sound I ever hear from them is a faint tremor of squeak like the soft cadence of a rusty door hinge. I noticed several new birds in my lawn trees this week. The vireos and warblers have arrived from the South and are busy locating their sum- mer homes. The warbling vireo is the most in- teresting of the birds bearing the name. His song allies him closely with the warblers. In fact, it is part and parcel with them. The energy with which this bird repeats his song through the summer is remarkable. His prin- cipal rival is the yellow warbler, and the two make themselves heard every minute of the day. Both have the faculty of keeping up a sort of perpetual motion and both make full use of the faculty. I fancy sometimes that the fellows are BIRD PARADISE 153 engaged in a spirited rivalry, each eager to outdo the other. After I have watched them a few minutes I find myself wondering how bodies that are turning in every direction, never still a mo- ment, can carry with them level heads. The full interpretation of it all is in the deed itself. So far as I can see they are never at fault for a mo- ment. Year in and year out they keep up their rapid pace and seem to be never in the least at fault. In the game of bird athletics they have no superior. The scarlet tanager family seems to be increas- ing innumbers. I hear of several being seen in the orchards of our hill country. In my boyhood they came out into the trees about the house every season, but for a number of years I have not seen one only in the wood, and only a few there. His name of fire bird is most appropriate, for his appearance in the forest is that of a gleam of fire among the green leaves. The male bird wears the brilliant colors and doesall the singing. The song of the tanager is a pleasing succession of notes, readily distinguished among the wood birds. The female and the young birds wear suits of sober colors, otherwise they would all fall 154 BIRD PARADISE a prey to their many enemies. In nest building this bird can scarcely be deemed much of a suc- cess. Of course, they know what they want, and, I suppose, secure it in the structure they build. What seems to us a defect may, after all, be an excellence that the bird recognizes in full. I am quite sure that these birds are profiting by the law which protects them in most of the states. A few years more and they will become as com- mon as in the olden days. Just here I heard the song of the yellow warbler —the first of the season. Glancing from the window I saw a pair of the little fellows explor- ing the tree directly in front. They were busy securing what food they could and at the same time intent on locating their summer cottage. The female seemed the most in earnest in the mat- ter, and I thought occasionally read a rather sharp lecture to her companion. The warbler family is a large one—some thirty and morespecies. They are the perpetual motion contingent among our great army of birds. Most of them I am sure have no knowledge of what it means to sit still for a moment in the daytime, at least I never have seen them making any attempt in that direction. BIRD PARADISE 155 The yellow warbler is the only one of the large family that spends much time outside the wood. As nest builders they are quite skilful, decorat- ing the inner part with the taste of a real artist. The song of this bird is sounded at all hours of the day. Most of our song birds are quiet in the heat of the summer’s day—not so the yellow warbler. Once in motion in the morning the song is in motion, and it is kept up three or four times a minute all day long. I sometimes fancy the song a sort of expression of the summer’s heat, sounding morning, noon and night as it does, through the hot season. Be that as it may, however, it has avery cheery rendering and I conclude cannot be given too often. Several times in the last few days the smallest of my bird parishioners has interviewed me evidently with the very best of intentions. His last visit was on a recent afternoon as I was sit- ting on the porch enjoying the perfect June day. My first intimation that I was the recipient of a eall was a low buzzing sound, hardly more than that made by the common fly. Glancing up I saw a little humming-bird standing on his wings scarcely three feet away. I say standing on his 156 BIRD PARADISE wings, and that was what he was doing and doing it nicely. He moved a little up and down, but remained several seconds in very nearly the same place. Ah, what bird gems these little fellows are! ‘Songless as they are they make up in other ways for any lack there may be in the element of music. My visitor turned around, two or three times while he stayed, as though he would impress me with a clear idea of his matchless suit and of his matchless way of wearing it. Then the movement of the bird so quickly done that I could hardly follow it with the eye! How can this small creature command the strength to flash from point to point annihilating distance at the rate of a hundred miles an hour? When the time came to close the interview my little friend darted away, moving his small craft more rapidly than is possible with any other bird. Years ago our hill country was visited annually by five or six species of these small birds. Now only one species is seen at the North, the little ruby- throat. JI am told that there are over 400 species of the humming-bird. They are essentially dwellers in the tropics, some of them having a very brilliant plumage. Somewhere in my lawn trees I am quite sure a nest is located, but just where I have not yet learned. BIRD PARADISE 157 Five or six species of the warblers nest in our hill country. They are all lively fellows, and some way practice a kind of friendship that is most enjoyable. Occasionally I take a free and easy saunter through the aisles of Bird Paradise. While there I am quite apt to be a ‘ boy again,” just for the fun of a real, old-time frolic. The other day I went far down the ravine, and when down lay down on the bed of leaves, and without an effort on my part passed into the cozy rooms of the ‘‘ house beautiful,’ that cheery temple of genuine, whole-souled boyhood. The greatcanopy of rustling leaves, woven in the wondrous loom of life, the same as in the years agone, and darting hither and thither, were the warblers—each one ‘I thought shouting an ‘‘all hail” to the boy far below. I wondered at the readiness with which they went to and fro in the highways of Bird Paradise. Work and pleasure were combined in all their movements, in fact, they really appeared as though they were doing their best in entertain- ing their old-time guest. Somehow a single member of this large family came a little nearer to me than any of the others. Earlier in the season I had interviewed the little redstart, who had put his nest in a small tree, a few feet: from 158 BIRD PARADISE the brook. I was almost sure that this was the same bird, at least, I counted him the same. To my delight he gave every indication that he knew me. His warble was of the fellowship sort, and every move he made was an epic of the days of “ Auld Lang Syne.’’ What a sermon the little fellow preached. Just a fine ‘‘send off’’ for the parson, who was treasuring notes for a real ser- mon. During our heated term I have listened with the keenest pleasure to the voice of the frogs. There is a sort of mouth-watering tone in the call of one of the large frogs on a hot evening that is most refreshing. Quite a little distance from the rectory lies a small pond. In the evening, sit- ting on my porch, I hear the gurgling strain of the dwellers there and half fancy that it is a breath of cooling influence from some grotto of the wood. I strolled down to the pond the other day and interviewed the residents there. I am quite sure hearing them from a distance is more satisfactory than a close inspection. A frog pond in the summer is not even one remove from what is commonly known as a mud-hole. There may be frogs that enjoy the clear water and BIRD PARADISE sg gravelly bottom of the flowing brook, but those: I am acquainted with are altogether careless about dwelling in a clean house. Still, I am quite willing to grant that cleanliness with the frogs may be many removes lower in the scale than would suit his human brothers. At the time of my visit I found the venerable citizens of the place sitting in state, each on his own hassock of grass—all looking wise, as only frogs can. I gave the frogs the credit of saying just what I would have said if I had been in their place. In other words, if I had been a frog, as I was a man, I should certainly have said, ‘‘ Cool, cool, comfortable, comfortable.’? Then, that ker-chug with which the fellows took the water, what a world of comfort there is in it and how it all suits the frog perfectly. Each season of the year I take a long stroll in Bird Paradise. To each season belongs its own expression of paradise life. Just the other day I made my bow there, and I am sure the homage paid by the parson was fraught with large good. I don’t know that I ever go into this ‘‘ house beautiful’? without seeing and feeling something new, and I am not quite sure that I ever get into. 160 BIRD PARADISE this house by the same door that I used before. My favorite way of approach is over the high point of. ground on the south side of the old Wicks farm. Here I get a broad view, which puts me into the best possible condition to enter paradise. Then, too, sacred memories throng every foot of the old farm, all closely associated with some revered kinsman, each an ‘‘open door”’ in paradise. By the time I set foot in the temple of the woods, mind and heart are both ready to see the ‘‘king in his beauty,’’ and he is always there in his beauty. The robes of summer, which the trees put on and wear so handsomely, had all been taken off, folded and put away in the great open cupboard of the place. A stroll in the aisles of Bird Paradise lately was full of autumn sights and sounds. The day was rich in the mellowness of the year and all the wide reaches of the grove were radiant in the quiet beauty of the season.