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AT NATURAL BRIDGE
I WITH the
exception
of a tedious delay at East Radford it was a very enjoyable forenoon’s
ride from
Pulaski to Natural Bridge, through a country everywhere interesting,
and for
much of the distance gloriously wild and beautiful. Splendid hillside
patches
of mingled Judas-tree and flowering dogwood — one of a bright
peach-bloom
color, the other royal masses of pure white — brightened parts of the
way south
of Roanoke. There, also, hovering over a grassy field, were the first
bobolinks
of the season. From Buchanan northward (new ground to me by daylight)
we had
the company of mountains and the James River, the road following the
windings
of a narrow bank between the base of the ridge and the water. It
surprised me
to see the James so large and full at such a distance from its mouth, —
almost
as wide, I thought, as the Tennessee at Chattanooga. Shortly before
reaching the
Natural Bridge station the train stopped for water, and on getting off
the
steps of the car I heard a Maryland yellow-throat singing just below me
at the
foot of the bank, and in a minute more a kingfisher flew across the
stream, —
two additional names for my vacation catalogue. Then, while I waited at
the
station for a carriage from the hotel, — two miles and a half away, — I
added
still another. In the cloudy sky, between me and the sun, was a bird
which in
that blinding light might have passed for a buzzard, only that a
swallow was
pursuing it. Seeing that sign, I raised my glass and found the bird a
fish-hawk. Trifles these things were, perhaps, with mountains and a
river in
sight; but that depends upon one’s scale of values. To me it is not so
clear that
a pile of earth is more an object of wonder than a swallow that soars
above it;
and for better or worse, mountains or no mountains, I kept an
ornithological
eye open. On the way
to the
Bridge (myself the only passenger) the colored driver of the wagon
picked up a
brother of his own race, who happened to be traveling in the same
direction and
was thankful for a lift. And a real amusement and pleasure it was to
listen to
the two men’s palaver, especially to their “Mistering” of each other at
every
turn of the dialogue. I never saw two schoolmasters, even, who could do
more in
half an hour for the maintenance and increase of their mutual dignity.
It was
“Mr. Brown” and “Mr. Smith” with every other breath, until the second
man was
set down at his own gate. From their appearance they must have been of
an age
to remember the days “before the war,” and I did not think it
surprising that
men who had once been pieces of property should be disposed to make the
most of
their present condition of manhood, and so to give and take, between
themselves, as many reminders and tokens of it as the brevity of their
remaining time would permit. Once at
the hotel,
installed (literally) in my little room, the only window of which was
in the door,
— opening upon the piazza, for all the world as a prison cell opens
upon its
corridor, — once domiciled, I say, and a bite taken, I bought a season
ticket
of admission to the glen,” and went down the path and a flight of
steps, amid a
flock of trilling goldfinches and past a row of lordly arbor-vitæ
trees, to the
brook, and up the bank of the brook to the famous bridge. Of this,
considered
by itself, I shall attempt no description. The material facts are, in
the
language of the guidebook, that it is “a huge monolithic arch, 215 feet
high,
100 feet wide, and 90 feet in span, crossing the ravine of Cedar
Brook.”
Magnificent as it is, there is, for me at least, not much to say
concerning it,
or concerning my sensations in the presence of it. Not that it
disappointed me.
On the contrary, it was from the first more imposing than I had
expected to
find it. I loved to look at it, from one side and from the other, from
beneath
and from above. I walked under it and over it (on the public highway,
for it is
a bridge not only in name, but in fact) many times, by sunlight and by
moonlight, and should be glad to do the same many times more; but
perhaps my
taste is peculiar; at all events, such “wonders of nature” do not charm
me or
wear with me like a beautiful landscape. It was so, I remember, at
Ausable
Chasm; interesting, grand, impressive, but a place in which I had no
passion
for staying, no sense of exquisite delight or solemnity. In Burlington,
just
across Lake Champlain, I could sit by the hour, even on the flat roof
of the
hotel, and gaze upon the blue water and the blue Adirondacks beyond, —
the
sight was a feast of beauty; but this cleft in the rocks, — well, I was
glad to
walk through it and to shoot the rapids; there was nothing to be said
in
disparagement of the place, but it put me under no spell. I fear it
would be
the same with those marvelous Colorado canons and “gardens of the
gods.” A
wooded mountain side, a green valley, running water, a lake with
islands, best
of all, perhaps (for me, that is, and taking the years together), a New
England
hill pasture, with boulders and red cedars, berry bushes and fern
patches, the
whole bounded by stone walls and bordered with gray birches and pitch
pines, —
for sights to live with, let me have these and things like them in
preference
to any of nature’s more freakish work, which appeals rather to
curiosity than
to the imagination and the affections. Having gone under the arch (and looked in vain for Washington’s initials on the wall), the visitor to Natural Bridge finds himself following up the brook — a lively stream — between lofty precipitous cliffs, that turn to steep wooded slopes as he proceeds. If he is like me, he pursues the path to the end, stopping here and there, — at the saltpetre cave, at Hemlock Island, and at Lost River, if nowhere else, — till he comes to the end at the falls, a distance of a mile, more or less. That is my way always. I must go straight through the place once; then, the edge of my curiosity dulled, I am in a condition to see and enjoy. The ravine
is a
botanist’s paradise: that, I should say, must be the first thought of
every
appreciative tourist. The elevation (fifteen hundred feet), the
latitude, and
the limestone rocks work together to that end. In a stay of a week I
could see,
of course, but one set of flowers; and in my preoccupation I passed
many herbs
and shrubs, mostly out of bloom, the names of which I neither knew nor
attempted to discover. One of the things that struck my admiration on
the
instant was the beauty of the columbine as here displayed; a favorite
with me
always, for more reasons than one, but never beheld in all its
loveliness till
now. If the election could be held here, and on the 1st of May, there
would be
no great difficulty in securing a unanimous vote for Aquilegia Canadensis as the
national flower.” It was in its
glory at the time of my earlier visits, brightening the face of the
cliffs, not
in a mass, but in scattered sprays, as high as the eyesight could
follow it;
looking, even under the opera-glass, as if it grew out of the rock
itself. With
it were sedges, ferns, and much of a tufted white flower, which at
first I made
no question must be the common early saxifrage. When I came upon it
within
reach, however, I saw at once that it was a plant of quite another
sort, some
member of the troublesome mustard family, — Draba
ramosissima, as afterward turned out. It was wonderful how
closely
it simulated the appearance of Saxifraga
Virginiensis,
though the illusion
was helped, no doubt, by the habit I am in of seeing columbine and
saxifrage
together. The ground
in many
places was almost a mat of violets, three kinds of which were in
special
profusion: the tall, fragrant white Canadensis,
the long-spurred rostrata,—
of a
very pale blue, with darker streaks and a darker centre (like our blue
meadow
violets in that respect), — and the common palmata.
The long-spurred violet was new to me, and both for that reason and for
itself
peculiarly attractive. As I passed up the glen on the right of the
brook beyond
Hemlock Island, so called, carpeted with partridge-berry vines bearing
a
wondrous crop (“See the berries!” my notebook says), I began to find
here and
there the large trillium (T.
grandiflorum),
some of the blossoms clear white, others of a delicate rosy tint. The
rosy ones
had been open longer than the others, it appeared; for the flowers
blush with
age, — a very modest and graceful habit. Like the spurred violet, the
trillium
is a plant also of northern New England, but happily for my present
enjoyment I
had never seen it there. And the same is to be said of the large yellow
bell-wort, which was here the trillium’s neighbor, and looked only a
little
less distinguished than the trillium itself. If I were
to name
all the plants I saw, or even all that attracted my particular notice,
the
non-botanical reader would quit me for a tiresome chronicler. Hepatica
and
bloodroot had dropped their last petals; but anemone and rue anemone
were still
in bloom, with cranesbill, spring beauty, ragwort, mitrewort, robin’s
plantain,
Jack-in-the-pulpit, wild ginger (two thick handsome leaves hiding a
dark-purplish three-horned urn of an occult and almost sinister
aspect), two or
more showy chickweeds, two kinds of white stone-crop (Sedum ternatum and S. Nevii, the latter a
novelty), mandrake
(sheltering its precious round bud under an umbrella, though to-day it
neither
rained nor shone), pepper-root, gill-over-the-ground (where did it come
from, I
wondered), Dutchman’s breeches (the leaves only), Orchis spectabilis (which I did
not know till after a few
days it blossomed), and many more. A new shrub — almost a tree — was
the
bladder-nut, with drooping clusters of small whitish flowers, like
bunches of
currant blossoms in their manner of growth and general appearance;
especially
dear to humble-bees, which would not be done with a branch even while I
carried
it in my hand. In one place, as I stooped to examine a boulder covered thickly with the tiny walking fern, of which the ravine contains a great abundance, — faded, ill conditioned, and homely, but curious, and, better still, a stranger, — I found the ground littered with bright yellowish magnolia petals; and if I looked into the sky for a passing bird, it was almost as likely as not that I should find myself looking through the branches of a soaring tulip-tree, — a piece of magnificence that is one of the most constant of my Alleghanian admirations. All the upper part of the glen is pervaded by a dull rumbling or moaning sound, — the voice of Lost River, out of which the tourist is supposed to have drunk at the only point where it shows itself (and there only to those who look for it), a quarter of a mile back. Another all-pervasive thing is the wholesome fragrance of arbor-vitæ. It is fitting, surely, that the tree of life should be growing in this floral paradise. There are few places, I imagine, where it flourishes better. On my way back toward the bridge I discovered, as was to be expected, many things that had been overlooked on my way out; and every successive visit was similarly rewarded. A pleasing sight at the bridge itself was the continual fluttering of butterflies — Turnus and his smaller and paler brother Ajax, especially — against the face of the cliffs, sipping from the deep honey-jars of the columbines. Here, too, I often stopped awhile to enjoy the doings of several pairs of rough-winged swallows that had their nests in a row of holes in the rock, between two of the strata. Most romantic homes they looked, under the overhanging ledge, — a narrow platform below, ferns and sedges nodding overhead, with tall arborvitae trees a little higher on the cliff, and water dropping continually before the doors. One of the nests, I noticed, had directly in front of it a patch of low green moss, the neatest of door-mats. The holes were only a few feet above the level of the stream, but there was no approach to them without wading; for which reason, perhaps, the owners paid little attention to me, even when I got as near them as I could. In and out they went, quite at their ease, resting now and then upon a jutting shelf, or perching in the branches of some tree near at hand. Once three of them sat side by side before one of the openings, which after all may have admitted to some sizable cavern wherein different pairs were living together. They are the least beautiful of swallows, but for this time, at all events, they had displayed a remarkably pretty taste in the choice of a nesting-site. The birds of Cedar Creek,
however, were
not the rough-wings, but the Louisiana water thrushes. On my first
jaunt
through the ravine (May 1) I counted seven of them, here one and there
another,
the greater part in free song; and while I never found so many again at
any one
visit, I was never there without seeing and hearing at least two or
three. It
was exactly such a spot as the water thrush loves, — a quick stream,
with
boulders and abundant vegetation. The song, I am sorry to be obliged to
confess, as I have confessed before, is not to me all that it appears
to be to
other listeners; probably not all that a longer acquaintance and a more
intimate association would make it. It is loud and ringing, — for a
warbler’s
song, I mean; in that respect well adapted to the bird’s ordinary
surroundings,
being easily heard above the noise of a pretty lively brook. It is
heard the
better, too, because of its remarkably disconnected, staccato
character. Every
note is by itself. Though the bird haunts the vicinity of running
water, there
is no trace of fluidity in its utterance. No bird-song could be less
flowing.
It neither gurgles nor runs smoothly, note merging into note. It would
be too
much to call it declamatory, perhaps, but it goes some way in that
direction.
At least we may call it emphatic. At different times I wrote it down in
different
words, none of which could be expected to do more than assist, first
the
writer’s memory, and then the reader’s imagination, to recall and
divine the
rhythm and general form of the melody. For that — I speak for myself —
a verbal
transcription, imperfect as it must be, in the nature of the case, is
likely to
prove more intelligible, and therefore more useful, than any attempt to
reproduce the music itself by a resort to musical notation. As most
frequently
heard here, the song consisted of eight notes, like “Come — come — come
— come,
— you’re a beauty,” delivered rather slowly. “Lazily “was the word I
sometimes
employed, but “slowly “is perhaps better, though it is true that the
song is
cool and, so to speak, very unpassionate. Dynamically I marked it
<>,
while the variations in pitch may be indicated roughly thus: - - - -_ _
_ _ -.
Two of the lower notes, the fifth and sixth, were shorter than the
others, —
half as long, if my ear and memory are to be trusted. Sometimes a bird
would
break out into a bit of flourish at the end, but to my thinking such
improvised
cadenzas, as they had every appearance of being, only detracted from
the
simplicity of the strain without adding anything appreciable to its
beauty or
its effectiveness. This song,
which
the reader will perhaps blame me for trying thus to analyze (I shall
not blame him), very
soon grew to be almost a part
of the glen; so that I never recall the brook and the cliffs without
seeming to
hear it rising clear and sweet above the brawling of the current; and
when I
hear it, I can see the birds flitting up or down the creek, just in
advance of
me, with sharp chips
of alarm or
displeasure; now balancing uneasily on a boulder in mid-stream (a
posterior
bodily fluctuation, half graceful, half comical, slanderously spoken of
as
teetering) and singing a measure or two, now taking to an overhanging
branch,
sometimes at a considerable height, for the same tuneful purpose. One
acrobatic
fellow, I remember, walked for some distance along the seemingly
perpendicular
face of the cliff, slipping now and then on the wet surface and having
to “wing
it “for a space, yet still pausing at short intervals to let out a
song. In
truth, the happy creatures were just then brimming over with music; and
if I
seem to praise their efforts but grudgingly, it is to be said, on the
other
hand, in justice to the song and to myself, that my appreciation of it
grew as
the days passed. Whatever else might be true of it, it was the voice of
the
place. Of birds
beside the
rough-wings and the water thrushes there were surprisingly few in the
glen,
though, to be sure, there may well have been many more than I found
trace of.
The splashing of a mountain brook is very pleasing music, — more
pleasing, in
itself considered, than the great majority of bird-songs, perhaps, —
but an
ornithological’ hobbyist may easily have too much of it. I call to mind
how
increasingly vexatious, and at last all but intolerable, a turbulent
Vermont
stream (a branch of Wait’s River) became to me, some years ago, as it
followed
my road persistently mile after mile in the course of a May vacation.
One gets
on the track of the smaller birds through hearing their faint calls in
the
bushes and treetops; and how was I to catch such indispensable signals
with
this everlasting uproar in my ears? So it was here in Cedar Creek
ravine; it
would have to be a pretty loud voice to be heard above the din of the
hurrying
water. And the birds, on their side, had something of the same
difficulty; or
so I judged from the unconventional behavior of a blue yellow-backed
warbler
that flitted through the hanging branches of a tree within a few inches
of my
hat, having plainly no suspicion of a human being’s proximity. The
tufted
titmouse could be heard, of course. He would make a first-rate
auctioneer, it
seemed to me, with his penetrating, indefatigable voice and his genius
for
repetition. Now and then, too, I caught the sharp, sermonizing tones of
a
red-eyed vireo. Once an ovenbird near me mounted a tree hastily, branch
by
branch, and threw himself from the top for a burst of his afternoon
medley; and
at the bridge a phoebe sat calling. These, with a pair of cardinal
grosbeaks,
were all the birds I saw in the glen during my first day’s visit. In fact, I
had the
place pretty nearly to myself, not only on this first day, but for the
entire
week. Once in a great while a human visitor was encountered, but for
the most
part I went up and down the path with no disturbance to my meditations.
Happily
for me, the Bridge was now in its dull season. Many tourists had been
here. The
trunks of the older trees, the beeches especially, were scarred thickly
with
inglorious initials, some of them so far from the ground that the
authors of
them must have stood on one another’s shoulders in their determination
to get
above the crowd. (In work of this kind an inch or two makes all the
difference
between renown and obscurity.) The fact was emblematic, I thought. So
do men
hoist and boost themselves into fame, not only in Cedar Creek ravine,
but in
the “great world,” as we call it, outside. Who so lowly-minded as not
to
believe that he could make a name for himself if only he had a
stepladder? At
the arch, likewise, such autographers had been busy ever since
Washington’s
day. I peeped into a crevice to obtain a closer view of a tiny fern,
and there
before me was a penciled name, invisible till I came thus near to it.
One of
the meek the writer must have been; a lead pencil, and so fine a hand!
Dumphy
of New Orleans. Why should I not second his modest bid for immortality?
A good
name is rather to be chosen than great riches. By all means let Dumphy
of New
Orleans be remembered. As for
Washington’s
“G. W.,” the letters are said to be still decipherable by those who
know
exactly where to look and exactly what to look for; but I can testify
to
nothing of myself. I was told where the initials were; one was much
plainer
than the other, my informant said, — which seemed to imply that one of
them, at
least, was more or less a matter of faith; he would go down with me
some day and
point them out; but the hour convenient to both of us never came, and
so,
although I almost always spent a minute or two in the search as I
passed under
the arch, I never detected them or anything that I could even imagine
to stand
for them. I have had experience enough of such things, however, to be
aware
that my failure proves nothing as against the witness of other men’s
eyesight.
Certainly I know of no ground for doubting that Washington cut his
initials on
the cliff; and if he did, it seems reasonable to believe that tradition
would
have preserved a knowledge of the place, and so have made it possible
to find
then now in all their inevitable indistinctness after so long an
exposure to
the wear of the elements. Neither do I esteem it anything but a natural
and
worthy curiosity for the visitor to wish to see them; and I may add my
hope
that all young men who are destined to achieve Washington’s measure of
distinction will cut their names large and deep in every such wall, for
the
benefit of future generations. As for the rest of us, if we must
scratch our
names in stone or carve them on the bark of trees, let us seek some
sequestered
nook, where the sight of our doings will neither be an offense to
others nor
make of ourselves a laughingstock. I have
said that I
discovered Dumphy of New Orleans while leaning against the cliff to
peer into a
crevice in search of a diminutive fern. This fern was of much interest
to me,
being nothing less than the wall-rue spleen wort (Asplenium Ruta-muraria), for
which I had looked without
success in years past on the limestone cliffs of northern Vermont, at
Willoughby and elsewhere. The fronds, stipe and all, last-year plants
in full
fruit, were less than three inches in length. Another fern, one size
larger,
but equally new and interesting, was the purple-stemmed cliff-brake (Peliæa atropurpurea), which
also had
eluded my search in its New England habitat. Both these rarities
(plants which
will grow only on limestone cannot easily be degraded into commonness)
I could
have gathered here in moderate numbers, but of course collecting is not
permitted; in the nature of the case it cannot be, in a spot so
frequented by
curiosity-seekers. It was pleasure enough for me, at any rate, to see
them. Along the
bottom of
the ravine I had remarked a profusion of a strikingly beautiful larger
fern
(but still “smallish,” as my pencil says), with showy red stems and a
most
graceful curving or drooping habit. This I could not make out for a
time; but
it proved to be, as I soon began to suspect, Cystopteris
bulbifera, to my thinking one of the loveliest of all things
that
grow. I had seen it abundant at Willoughby, Vermont, and at Owl’s Head,
Canada,
ten years before; but either my memory was playing me a trick, or there
was
here a very considerable diminution in the length of the fronds,
accompanied by
a decided heightening in the color of the stalk and rhachis. Before
long,
however, I found a specimen already beginning to show its bulblets, and
these,
with a study of Dr. Eaton’s description, left me in no doubt as to the
plant’s
identity. What other
ferns
may have been growing in the ravine I cannot now pretend to say. I
remember the
Christmas fern, a goodly supply of the dainty little Asplenium trichomanes, and
tufts of what I took with reasonable
certainty for Cystopteris fragilis
in its early spring stage, than which few things can be more graceful.
On the
upper edge of the ravine, when I left the place one day by following a
maze of
zigzag cattle-paths up the steep slope, and found myself, to my
surprise,
directly in the rear of the hotel, I came upon a dense patch of a
smallish,
very narrow, dark-stemmed fern, new to my eyes, — the hairy lip-fern,
so called
(Cheilanthes vestita).
These
fronds, too, like those of the cliff-brake and the wall-rue spleenwort,
were of
last year’s growth, thickly covered on the back with brown
“fruit-dots,” and
altogether having much the appearance of dry herbarium specimens; but
they were
good to look at, nevertheless. Here, as in the case of Pellæa atropurpurea, it was a
question not
only of a new species, but of a new genus. From my
account of
the scarcity of birds in Cedar Creek ravine the reader will have
already
inferred, perhaps, that I did not spend my days there, great as were
its
botanical attractions. My last morning’s experience at Pulaski, the
evidence
there seen that the vernal migration was at full tide, or near it, had
brought
on a pretty acute attack of ornithological fever, — a spring disease
which I am
happy to believe has become almost an epidemic in some parts of the
United
States within recent years, — and not even the sight of new ferns and
new
flowers could allay its symptoms. I had counted upon finding a similar
state of
things here, — all the woods astir with wings. Instead of that, I found
the
fields alive with chipping sparrows, the air full of chimney swifts,
the shade
trees in front of the hotel vocal with goldfinch notes, and,
comparatively
speaking, nothing else. By the end of the second day I was fast
becoming
disconsolate. “No birds here,” I wrote in my journal. “I have tried
woods of
all sorts. A very few parula warblers, two or three red-eyed vireos,
one
yellow-throated vireo, seven Louisiana water thrushes in the glen, one
prairie
warbler, and a few oven-birds! No Bewick wrens. Two purple finches and
one or
two phoebes have been the only additions to my Virginia list.” A
pitiful tale.
Vacations are short and precious, and it goes hard with us to see them
running
to waste. The next
evening
(May 3) it was the same story continued. “It is marvelous, the
difference
between this beautiful place, diversified with fields and woods, — hard
wood,
cedar, pine, — it is marvelous, the difference between this heavenly
spot and
Pulaski in the matter of birds. There I registered six new arrivals in
half an
hour Wednesday morning; here I have made but six additions to my list
in two
full days. There is scarcely a sign of warbler migration. Was it that
in
Pulaski the woods were comparatively small, and the birds had to
congregate in
them? Or does Pulaski lie in a route of migration?” Wild surmises, both
of
them; but wisdom is not to be looked for in a fever patient. “Six
additions in
two full days,” I wrote; but the second day was not yet full. As
evening came
on I went out to stand awhile upon the bridge; and while I listened to
the
brawling of the creek and admired the beautiful scene below me, the
moon
shining straight down upon it, a nighthawk called from the sky, and
afterward —
not from the sky — a whippoorwill. Here, then, were two more names for
my
catalogue; but even so, — six or eight, — it was a beggarly rate of
increase in
such a favored spot and in the very nick of the season. The “six
additions,” it
may ease the reader’s curiosity to know, were the Carolina wren, the
summer
tanager, the purple finch, the indigo bunting, the blue-gray
gnatcatcher, and
the phoebe. One
compensation
there was for the ornithological barrenness of these first few days: I
had the
more leisure for botany. And the hours were not thrown away, although
at the
time I was almost ready to think they were, with so many of them
devoted to
ransacking the Manual; for a man who does not collect specimens to
carry home
with him must, as it were, drive his field work and his closet work
abreast; he
must study out his findings as he goes along. On the evening of the
second day,
for example, I wrote in my journal thus, — the final entry under that
date, as
the reader may guess: “In bed. Strange how we flatter ourselves with a
knowledge of names. I have spent much time to-day looking up the names
of
flowers and ferns, and somehow feel as if I had learned something in so
doing.
Really, however, I have learned only that some one else has seen the
things
before me, and called them so and so. At best that is nearly all I have learned.” But
after
setting down the results of my investigations, especially of those
having to do
with the pretty draba and the bulbiferous fern, I concluded in a less
positive
strain: “Well, the hunt for names does quicken observation and help to
relate
and classify things.” That was a qualification well put in. The whole
truth was
never written on one side of the leaf. If all
our botany were Latin names, as Emerson says, we should have little to
boast
of; yet even that would be one degree better than nothing, as Emerson
himself
felt when he visited a museum and saw the cases of shells. “I was
hungry for
names,” he remarks; and so have all men of intelligence been since the
day of
the first systematic, name-conferring naturalist, the man who dwelt in
Eden.
Let us be thankful for manuals, I say, that offer on easy terms a
speaking
acquaintance, if nothing more, with the world of beauty about us.
Things take
their value from comparison, and my own ignorance was but a little
while ago so
absolute that now I am proud to know so much as a name. Meanwhile, to come back to Natural Bridge, I had found the country of a most engaging sort. In truth, while the bridge itself is the “feature “of the place, as we speak in these days, it is by no means its only, or, as I should say, its principal attraction, so far, at least, as a leisurely visit is concerned. A man may see it and go, — as most tourists do; but if he stays, he will find that the region round about not only has charms of its own, but is one of the prettiest he has ever set eyes on; and that, I should think, though he be neither a botanist, nor an ornithologist, nor any other kind of natural historian. For myself, at all events, I had already come to that conclusion, notwithstanding I had yet to see some of the most beautiful parts of the country, and was, besides, far too much concerned about the birds (the absentees in particular) and the flowers to have quieted down to any adequate appreciation of the general landscape. I have never yet learned to see a prospect on the first day, or while in the eager expectation of new things, although, like every one else, I can exclaim with a measure of shallow sincerity, “Beautiful! beautiful!” even at the first moment. As my mood
now was,
at any rate, fine scenery did not satisfy me; and on the morning of May
4,
after two days and a half of botanical surfeit and ornithological
starvation, I
panted my trunk preparatory to going elsewhere. First, however, I would
try the
woods once more, if perchance something might have happened overnight.
Otherwise, so I informed the landlord, I would return in season for an
early
luncheon, and should expect to be driven to the station for the noon
train
northward. I went to
a
promising-looking hill covered with hard-wood forest, a spot already
visited
more than once, — Buck Hill I heard it called afterward, — and was no
sooner
well in the woods than it became evident that something had happened. The treetops were
swarming
with birds, and I had my hands full with trying to see and name them.
Old trees
are grand creations, — among the noblest works of God, I often think;
but for a
bird-gazer they have one disheartening drawback, especially when, as
now, the
birds not only take to the topmost boughs (even the hummer and the
magnolia
warbler, so my notes say, went with the multitude to do evil), but, to
make
matters worse, are on the move northward or southward, or flitting in
simple
restlessness from hill to hill. However, I did my best with them while
the fun
lasted. Then all in a moment they were gone, though I did not see them
go; and
nothing was left but the wearisome iterations of oven-birds and
red-eyes where
just now were so many singers and talkers, among which, for aught I
could tell,
there might have been some that it would have been worth the price of a
long
vacation to scrape even a treetop acquaintance with. Indeed, it
was
certain that one member of the flock was a rarity, if not an absolute
novelty.
That was the most exciting and by all odds the most deplorable incident
of the
whole affair. I had obtained several glimpses of him, but had been
unable to
determine his identity; a warbler, past all reasonable doubt, with pure
white
under parts (the upper parts quite invisible) except for a black or
blackish
line, barely made out, across the lower throat or the upper breast. He,
of
course, had vanished with the rest, the more was the pity. I had made a
guess
at him, to be sure; it is a poor naturalist who cannot do as much as
that (but
a really good naturalist would “form a hypothesis,” I suppose) under
almost any
circumstances. I had called him a cerulean warbler. Once in my life I
had seen
a bird of that species, but only for a minute. If he wore a black
breast-band,
I did not see it, or else had forgotten it. If I could only have had a
look at
this fellow’s back and wings! As it was, I was not likely ever to know him, though the printed
description
would either demolish or add a degree of plausibility to my offhand
conjecture.
The better
course,
after losing a bevy of wanderers in this way, is perhaps to remain
where one is
and await the arrival of another detachment of the migratory host. This
advice,
or something like it, I seem to remember having read, at all events;
but I have
never schooled myself to such a pitch of quietism. For a time, indeed,
I could
not believe that the birds were lost, and must hunt the hilltop over in
the
hope of another chance at them. An empty hope. So I did what I always
do: the
game having flown, I took my own departure also. I should not find the
same
flock again, but with good luck — which now it was easy to expect — I
might
find another; and except for the single mysterious stranger, that would
be
better still. One thing I was sure of, — Natural Bridge was not to be
left out
of the warbler migration; and one thing I forgot entirely, — that I had
planned
to leave it by the noonday train. My useless
chase
over the broad hilltop had brought me to the side opposite the one by
which I
had ascended, and to save time, as I persuaded myself, I plunged down,
as best
I could, without a trail, — a piece of expensive economy, almost of
course. In
the first place, this haphazardous descent took me longer than it would
have
done to retrace my steps; and in the second place, I was compelled for
much of
the distance to force my way through troublesome underbrush, in doing
which I
made of necessity — being a white man — no little noise, and so was the
less
likely to hear the note of any small bird, or to come close upon him
without
putting him to flight. In general, let the bird-gazer keep to the path,
except
in open woods, or as some specific errand may lead him away from it. In
one way
and another, nevertheless, I got down at last, and after beating over a
piece
of pine wood, with little or no result, I crossed a field and a road,
and
entered a second tract of hardwood forest. The trees
were
comfortably low, with much convenient shrubbery, and after a little,
seeing
myself at the centre of things, as it were, I dropped into a seat and
allowed
the birds to gather about me. At my back was a bunch of white-throated
sparrows. From the same quarter a chat whistled now and then, and
white-breasted nuthatches and a Carolina chickadee did likewise, the
last with
a noticeable variation in his tune, which had dwindled to three notes.
Here, as
on the hill I had just left, wood pewees and Acadian flycatchers
announced
themselves, in tones so dissimilar as to suggest no hint of blood
relationship.
The wood pewee is surely the gentleman of the family, so far as the
voice may
serve as an indication of character. In dress and personal appearance
he is a
flycatcher of the flycatchers; but what a contrast between his soft,
plaintive,
exquisitely modulated whistle, the very expression of refinement, and
the wild,
rasping, over-emphatic vociferations that characterize the family in
general!
The more praise to him. The Acadians seemed to have come northward in a
body.
Nothing had been seen or heard of them before, but from this morning
they
abounded in all directions. In a single night they had taken possession
of the
woods. Here was the first Canadian warbler of the season, singing from
a perch
so uncommonly elevated (he is a lover of bushy thickets rather than of
trees)
that for a time it did not come to me who he was, — so exceedingly
earnest and
voluble. A black-throated blue warbler almost brushed my elbow.
Redstarts were
never so splendid, I thought, the white of the dogwood blossoms, now in
their
prime, setting off the black and orange of the birds in a most
brilliant
manner, as was true also of the deep vermilion of the summer tanager. A
Blackburnian warbler, whose flame-colored throat needs no setting but
its own,
had fallen into a lyrical mood very unusual for him, and sang almost
continuously for at least half an hour, — a poor little song in a thin
little
voice, but full of pleasant suggestions in every note. The first
Swainson
thrush was present, with no companion of his own kind, so far as
appeared. I
prolonged my stay on purpose to hear him sing, but was obliged to
content
myself with the sight of him and the sound of his sweet, quick whistle.
All the
while, as I
watched one favorite another would come between us. Once it was a
humming-bird,
a bit of animate beauty that must always be attended to; and once, when
the
place had of a sudden fallen silent, and I had taken out a book, I was
startled
by a flash of white among the branches, — a red-headed woodpecker, in
superb
color, new for the year, and on all accounts welcome. He remained for a
time in
silence, and then in silence departed (he had been almost too near me
before he
knew it); but having gone, he began a little way off to play the
tree-frog for
my amusement. After him a hairy woodpecker made his appearance, with
sharp,
peremptory signals, highly characteristic; and then, from some point
near by, a
rose-breasted grosbeak’s hic
was
heard. It was high noon before I was done with “receiving” (one of the prettiest “functions” of the year, though none of the newspapers got wind of it), and returned to the hotel, where the landlord smiled when I told him that some friends of mine had arrived, and I should stay a few days longer. II My
enjoyment of the
country about the Bridge may be said to have begun with my settling
down for a
more leisurely stay. Hurry and discontent are poor helps to
appreciation. That
afternoon, the morning having been devoted to ornithological
excitements, I
strolled over to Mount Jefferson, and spent an hour in the observatory,
where a
delicious breeze was blowing. The “mountain” proved to be nothing more
than a
round grassy hilltop, — the highest point in a sheep-pasture, — but it
offered,
nevertheless, a wide and charming prospect: mountains near and far, a
world of
green hills, with here and there a level stretch, most restful to the
eye, of
the James River valley, in the great Valley of Virginia. Up from the
surrounding field came the tinkle of sheep-bells, and down in one
corner of it
young men were slowly gathering, some in wagons, some on horseback, for
a game
of ball. There was to be a match “that evening,” I had been told,
between the
Bridge nine (I am sorry not to remember its name) and the Buena Vistas.
It
turned out, however, so I learned the next day, that a supposed case of
smallpox at Buena Vista had made such an interchange of athletic
courtesies
inexpedient for the time being, and the Bridge men were obliged to be
content
with a trial of skill among themselves, for which they chose up
(“picked off”)
after the usual fashion, the two leaders deciding which should have the
first
choice by the old Yankee test of grasping a bat alternately hand over
hand,
till one of them should be able to cover the end of it with his thumb.
Such
things were pleasant to hear of. I accepted them as of patriotic
significance,
tokens of national unity. My informant, by the way, was the same man, a
young
West Virginian, who had told me where to look for Washington’s initials
on the
wall of the bridge. My specialties appealed to him in a measure, and he
confessed that he wished he were a botanist. He was always very fond of
flowers. His side had been victorious in the ball game, he said, in
answer to
my inquiry. Some of the players must have come from a considerable
distance, it
seemed, as there was no sign of a village or even of a hamlet, so far
as I had
discovered, anywhere in the neighborhood. The Bridge is not in any
township,
but simply in Rockbridge County, after a Virginia custom quite foreign
to a New
Englander’s notions of geographical propriety. The
prospect from
Mount Jefferson was beautiful, as I have said, but on my return I
happened upon
one that pleased me better. I had been down through Cedar Creek ravine,
and had
taken my own way out, up the right-hand slope through the woods, noting
the
flowers as I walked, especially the blue-eyed grass and the scarlet
catchfly
(battlefield pink), a marvelous bit of color, and was following the
edge of the
cliff toward the hotel, when, finding myself still with time to spare,
I sat
down to rest and be quiet. By accident I chose a spot where between
ragged,
homely cedars I looked straight down the glen — over a stretch of the
brook far
below — to the bridge, through which could be seen wooded hills backed
by
Thunder Mountain, long and massive, just now mostly in shadow, like the
rest of
the world, but having its lower slopes touched with an exquisite
half-light,
which produced a kind of prismatic effect upon the freshly green
foliage. It
was an enchanting spectacle and a delightful hour. Now my eye settled
upon the
ravine and the brook, now upon the arch of the bridge, now upon the
hills
beyond. And now, as I continued to look, the particulars fell into
place, —
dropping in a sense out of sight, — and the scene became one. By and by
the
light increased upon the broad precipitous face of the mountain,
softness and
beauty inexpressible, while the remainder of the landscape lay in deep
shadow. I fell to
wondering, at last, what it is that constitutes the peculiar
attractiveness of
a limited view — limited in breadth, not in depth — as compared with a
panorama
of half the horizon. The only answer I gave myself was that, for the
supreme
enjoyment of beauty, the eye must be at rest, satisfied, with no
temptation to
wander. We are finite creatures with infinite desires. The sight must
go far, —
to the rim of the world, or to some grand interposing object so remote
as to be
of itself a natural and satisfying limit of vision; and the eye must be
held to
that point, not by a distracting exercise of the will, but by the
quieting
constraint of circumstances. Let my
theorizing
be true or false, I greatly enjoyed the picture; the deep, dark, wooded
ravine,
with the line of water running through it lengthwise, the magnificent
stone
arch, the low hills in the middle distance, and Thunder Mountain a
background
for the whole. The mountain, as has been said, was a long ridge, not a
peak;
and sharp as it looked from this point of view, it was very likely flat
at the
top. Like Lookout Mountain and Walden’s Ridge, it might, for anything I
knew,
be roomy enough to bold one or two Massachusetts counties upon its
summit.
While I sat gazing at it the sun went down and left it of a deep sombre
blue.
Then, of a sudden, a small heron flew past, and a pileated woodpecker
somewhere
behind me set up a prolonged and lusty shout; and a few minutes later I
was
startled to see between me and the sunset sky a flock of six big herons
flying
slowly in single file, like so many pelicans. From their size they
should have
been Ardea herodias,
but in that
light there was no telling of colors. It was a ghostly procession, so
silent
and unexpected, worthy of the place and of the hour. I was beginning to
feel at
home. A wood thrush sang for me as I continued my course to the hotel,
and my
spirit sang with him. I ‘m glad I am alive,” my pencil wrote of its own
accord
at the end of the day’s jottings. I woke the
next
morning to the lively music of a whippoorwill, — the same, I suppose,
that had
sung me to sleep the evening before. He performed that service
faithfully as
long as I remained at the Bridge, and always to my unmixed
satisfaction.
Whippoorwills are among my best birds, and of recent years I have had
too
little of them. Immediately after breakfast I must go again to the
roadside
wood, and then to Buck Hill, as a dog must go again to bark under a
tree up
which he has once driven a cat or a squirrel. But there is no
duplicating of
experiences. The birds — the flocks of travelers — were not there.
Chats were
calling ceow, ceow,
with the true
countryman’s twang; and what was much better, a Swainson thrush was
singing.
Better still, a pair of blue yellow-backed warblers (the most abundant
representatives of the family thus far) had begun the construction of a
nest in
a black-walnut- tree, suspending it from a rather large branch (“as big
as my
thumb”) at a height of perhaps twenty feet. It was little more than a
frame as
yet, the light shining through it everywhere; and the bird, perhaps
because of
my presence, seemed in no haste about its completion. I saw her bring
what
looked like a piece of lichen and adjust it into place (though she
carried it
elsewhere first — with wonderful slyness!), but my patience gave out
before she
came back with a second one. On Buck
Hill, in
the comparative absence of birds, I amused myself with a “dry land
tarrapin,”
as my West Virginia acquaintance had called it (otherwise known as a
box
turtle), a creature which I had seen several times in my wanderings,
and had
asked him about; a new species to me, of a peculiarly humpbacked
appearance,
and curious for its habit of shutting itself up in its case when
disturbed, the
anterior third of the lower shell being jointed for that purpose. A
phlegmatic
customer, it seemed to be; looking at me with dull, unspeculative eyes,
and
sometimes responding to a pretty violent nudge with only a partial
closing of
its lid. It is very fond of may apples (mandrake), I was told, and is
really
one of the “features” of the dry hill woods. I ran upon it continually.
A lazy
afternoon
jaunt over a lonely wood road, untried before, yielded little of
mentionable
interest except the sight of a blue grosbeak budding the upper branches
of a
tree in the manner of a purple finch or a rose-breast. I call him a
blue
grosbeak, as I called him at the time; but he went into my book that
evening
with a damnatory question mark attached to his name. He had been rather
far
away and pretty high; and the possibilities of error magnified
themselves on
second thought, till I said to myself, “Well, he may have been an
indigo-bird,
after all.” Second thought is the mother of uncertainty; and
uncertainties are
poor things for a man’s comfort. The seasons were met here; for even
while I
busied myself with the blue grosbeak (as he pretty surely was, for all
my want
of assurance) a crossbill flew over with loud calls. In the
same place I
heard a tremendous hammering a little on one side of me, so vigorous a
piece of
work that I was persuaded the workman could be nobody but a pileated
woodpecker. A long time I stood with my gaze fastened upon the tree
from which
the noise seemed to come. Would the fellow never show himself? Yes, he
put his
head out from behind a limb at last (what a fiery crest!), saw me on
the
instant, and was gone like a flash. Then from a little distance he set
up a
resounding halloo. This was only the second time that birds of his kind
had
been seen hereabout, but the voice had been heard daily, and more than
once I
had noticed what I could have no doubt were nest-holes of their making.
One of
these, on Buck Hill, — freshly cut, if appearances went for anything, —
I
undertook to play the spy upon; but if the nest was indeed in use the
birds
were too wary for me, or I was very unfortunate in my choice of hours.
Time was
precious, and the secret seemed likely to cost more than it would
bring, with
so many other matters inviting my attention. Nest or no nest, I was
glad to be
within the frequent sound of that wild, ringing, long-drawn shout, a
true voice
of the wilderness; as if the Hebrew prophecy were fulfilled, and the
mountains
and the hills had found a tongue. It was not
until
the sixth day that I went to Lincoln Heights, a place worth all the
rest of the
countryside, I soon came to think, with the single exception of Cedar
Creek ravine.
A winding wood road carried me thither (the distance may be two miles;
but I
have little idea what it is, though I covered it once or twice a day
for the
next four days), and might have been made — half made, just to my
liking — for
my private convenience. I believe I never met any one upon it, going or
coming.
The glory
of the
spot is its trees; but with me, as things fell out, these took in the
order of
time a second place. My first admiration was not for them, admirable as
they
were, but for a few birds in the tops of them. In short, at my first
approach
to the Heights (there is no thought of climbing, but only the most
gradual of
ascents) I began to hear from the branches overhead, now here, now
there, an
occasional weak warbler’s song that set my curiosity on edge. It was
not the
parula’s (blue yellow-back’s), but like it. What should it be, then,
except the
cerulean’s? By and by I caught a glimpse of a bird, clear white below,
with a
dark line across the breast; and yes, I saw what I was looking for, —
though
the bird flew to another branch the next moment, — black streaks along
the
sides of the body. There were at least eight or ten others like him in
the
treetops; and it was a neck-breaking half-hour that I passed in
watching them,
determined as I was to gain a view not only of the under parts, but of
the back
and wings. The labor and difficulty of the search were increased
indefinitely
by the confusing presence of numerous other warblers of various kinds
in the
same lofty branches, making it inevitable that many opera-glass shots
should be
wasted. It is no help to a man’s equanimity at such a time to spend a
priceless
three minutes — any one of which may be the last — in getting the glass
upon a
tiny thing that flits incessantly from one leafy twig to another, only
to find
in the end that it is nothing but a myrtle warbler; a pretty creature,
no
doubt, but of no more consequence just now than an English sparrow.
To-day,
however, the birds favored me; no untimely whim hurried them away to
another wood,
and patience had its reward. Little by little my purpose was
accomplished and
my mind cleared of all uncertainty. Then I took out my pencil to
characterize
the song while it was still in my ears, and still new. “Greatly like
one of the
more broken forms of the parula’s,” I wrote, a bird repeating it at
that very
instant by way of confirmation. “I can imagine a fairly sharp ear being
deceived by it, especially in a place like this, where parulas have
been
singing from morning till night, until the listener has tired of them
and
become listless.” This sentence the reader may keep in mind, if he
will, to
glance back upon for his amusement in the light of a subsequent
experience
which it will be my duty to relate before I have done with my story. Between
the
migratory “transients “and the birds already at home, the place was
pretty full
of wings. A Swainson thrush sang, and from a bushy slope came a nasal
thrush
voice that should have been a veery’s. I took chase at once, and caught
a
glimpse of a reddish-brown bird darting out of sight before me. Do my
best, I
could find nothing more of it. If it was a veery, as I suppose, it was
the only
one I saw in Virginia, where the species, from Dr. Rives’s account of
the
matter, seems to be a rather uncommon migrant. Unhappily, I could not
bring my
scientific conscience to list it on so hurried a sight, even with the
note as
corroborative testimony. That, for aught I could positively assert,
might have
been a gray-cheek’s, while the reddish color might with equal
possibility have
belonged to a wood thrush, clear as it had seemed at the moment that
what I was
looking at was the back of the bird itself, and not the back of its
head. Doubt
is credulous. All kinds of negatives are plausible to it, and once it
has
adopted one it will maintain it in the face of the five senses. On the
opposite
side of the path, in the bushy angles of a Virginia fence, a hooded
warbler
showed himself, furtive and silent, — my only Bridge specimen, to my
great
surprise; and near him was a female black-throated blue, a
queer-looking body,
like nothing in particular, yet labeled past mistake, which I can never
see
without a kind of wonder. Among the treetop birds were Blackburnian
warblers,
black-throated greens and blues, chestnut-sides, redstarts,
myrtle-birds,
red-eyed and yellow-throated vireos, and indigo-birds. Many
white-throated
sparrows still lingered; singing flat, as usual, — the only birds I
know of
that find it impossible to hold the pitch. The defect has its favorable
side;
it makes their concerts amusing. I remember seeing a quiet gentleman
thrown
into fits of uncontrollable laughter by the rehearsal of a spring
flock, bird
after bird starting the tune, and not one in ten of them keeping its
whistle
true to the conclusion of the measure. All these things, — though they
may seem
not many, — with the long rests and numerous side excursions that went
with
them, consumed the morning hours before I knew it, so that I was hardly
at the
end of the way before it was time to return for dinner. For the
afternoon
nothing was to be thought of but another visit to the same place, —
“the finest
place I have seen yet, and the finest walk.” So I had put down the
morning’s
discovery. The cerulean warbler I found spoken of by Dr. Rives as
“accidental or
very rare;” in the light of which entry the dozen or so of specimens
seen and
heard during the forenoon acquired a fresh interest. The second
jaunt,
because it was a second one, could be taken more at leisure; and as the
birds
gave me less employment, my eyes were more upon the trees. These, as I
had felt
before, were a wonder and a comfort; it was a benediction to walk under
them,
as if one were within the precincts of a holy place: oaks for the most
part (of
several kinds), with black walnut, shagbark, tulip, chestnut, and other
species, set irregularly, or rather left standing irregularly, two or
three
deep, beside the road on either hand; a royal uphill avenue, which near
the top
became an open grove. Except in Florida, I had never seen a more
magnificent
growth. Some of the trees had grapevines and Virginia creeper clinging
about
them. Up one huge oak, with strange flaky bark, like a shagbark-tree’s
(a white
oak, nevertheless, to judge from its half-grown leaves), a grapevine
had
mounted for a height of forty feet, as I estimated the distance, not
making use
of the bole, but of the limbs, seeming to leap from one to another,
even when
they were ten feet apart. It must have been of the tree’s age, I
suppose, and
had grown with its growth. In the shadow of these giants, yet not
overshadowed
by them, were flowering dogwoods and redbuds. It is a pretty habit
these two
have of growing side by side, as if they knew the value of contrasted
colors. At a point
on the
edge of the grove I turned to enjoy the prospect southward: mountains
everywhere, with the more pointed of the twin Peaks of Otter showing
between
two oaks that barely gave it room; all the mountains radiantly
beautiful, with
cloud shadows flecking their wooded slopes. Not a house was in sight;
but in
one place beyond the middle-distance hills a thin blue smoke was
rising. There,
doubtless, lay the valley of the James. Just before me, on the left of
the open
field, stood a peculiarly graceful dogwood, all in a glory of white,
one
fan-shaped branch above another, — a miracle of loveliness. The eye
that saw it
was satisfied with seeing. Beyond it a chat played the clown (knowing
no
better, even to-day), and a rose-breast began warbling. It seemed a
tender
story, — sweetness beyond words, and happiness without a shadow. From a
second
point, a little farther on, the entire southern horizon came into view,
with
both the Peaks of Otter visible; a truly enchanting picture, the sky
full of
sunlight and floating white clouds. In a
treetop behind
me a cerulean warbler had been singing, but flew away as I turned
about. My
only sight of him was on the wing, a mere speck in the air. Afterward a
parula
gave out his tune, running the notes straight upward and snapping them
off at
the end in whiplash fashion, as much as to say, “Now see if you can
tell the
difference.” And then, just as I was ready to leave the grove, stepping
along a
footpath through a bramble patch, I descried almost at my feet a
warbler, — a
female by her look and demeanor, and a stranger; blue and white, with
dark
streakings along the sides. I lost her soon; but she had seemed to be
looking
for nest materials, and of course I waited for her to return. This she
presently did, and now I saw her strip bits of bark from plant stems
till she
had her bill full of short pieces. Carrying these, she disappeared in a
bramble
and grapevine thicket. I waited, but she did not come back. Then I
stole into
the place after her, and in a moment there she was before me; but
without
complaint or any symptom of perturbation she passed quietly along, and
again I
lost her. I kept my position till I was tired, and then went back to
the wood
and sat down; and in a few minutes — how it happened I could not tell —
there
she stood once more, wearing the same innocent, preoccupied air. This
time I
saw her fly down the slope and disappear in a clump of undergrowth. I
followed,
took a seat, waited, and continued to wait. All was in vain. That was
the last
of her. She had played her cards well, or perhaps I had played mine
poorly; and
finally I turned my steps homeward, where a comparison of my notes with
Dr.
Coues’s description proved the bird to be, as I had believed, a female
cerulean
warbler. Her nest would probably be the first one of its kind ever
found in
Virginia. On the way
a male
sang and showed himself. Now, too, I discovered for the first time that
there
were tupelo-trees among the large oaks and walnuts; much smaller than
they, and
for that reason, it is to be supposed, not noticed in my three previous
passages along the avenue. They are particular favorites of mine, and I
made
them sincere apologies. In another place was a patch of what I knew
must be the
fragrant sumach, something I had wished to see for many years: low,
upright
shrubs, yet resembling poison ivy so closely that for a minute I shrank
from
gathering a specimen, although I was certain beyond a peradventure that
the
plant was not poison ivy and could not be noxious to the touch; just as
people
in general, through force of early instruction and example (miscalled
instinct), shiver at the thought of handling a snake, though it be of
some kind
which they know to be as harmless as a kitten. While in chase of the
cerulean,
also, I had stumbled on several bunches of cancer-root (Conopholis), rising out of the
dead leaves,
a dozen or more of stems in each close bunch; queer,
unwholesome-looking,
yellowish things, reminding me of ears of rice-corn, so called. I had
never
seen the plant till the day before. The next
morning my
course was beyond discussion or argument. I must go again to Lincoln
Heights.
The thought of the female cerulean warbler and her nest would not
suffer me to
do anything else. But for that matter, I should probably have taken the
same
path had I never seen her. The trees, the prospects, and the general
birdiness
of the place were of themselves an irresistible attraction. On the way
I
skirted a grove of small pines, standing between the road and the edge
of Cedar
Creek ravine: dull, scrubby trees, like pitch-pines, but less bright in
color;
of the same kind as those amid which, on Cameron Hill and Lookout
Mountain, in
Tennessee, there had been so notable a gathering of warblers the year
before. Pinus pungens,
Table Mountain pine, I
suppose they were, though it must be acknowledged that I was never at
the pains
to settle the point. Here at Natural Bridge I had found all such woods
deserted
day after day, till I had ceased to think them worth looking into. Now,
however, as I idled past, I caught the faint sibilant notes of a
bird-song, and
stopped to listen. Not a blackpoll’s, I said to myself, but wonderfully
near
it. And then it flashed into my mind what a friend had told me a few
years
before. “When you hear a song that is like the blackpoll’s, but
different,” he
had said, “look the bird up. It will most likely be a Cape May.” He was
one of
the lucky men (almost the only one of my acquaintance) who had heard
that rare
warbler’s voice. I turned aside, of course, and made a cautious entry
among the
pines. The bird continued its singing. Yes, it was like the
blackpoll’s, but
with a zip rather than
a zee. Nearer and
nearer I crept, inch by
inch. If the fellow were
a Cape
May, it would be carelessness inexcusable not to make sure of the fact.
And
soon I had my glass upon him, — in high plumage, red cheeks and all. He
had not
been disturbed in the least, and kept up his music till I had had my
fill and
could stay no longer, — all the while in low branches and in clear
view. Few
songs could be less interesting in themselves, but few could have been
more
welcome, — for the better part of twenty years I had been listening for
it:
about five notes, a little louder and more emphatic than the
blackpoll’s, it
seemed to me, but still faint and, as I expressed it to myself, “next
to
nothing.” The handsome creature — olive and bright yellow, boldly
marked with
black and white — remained the whole time in one tree, traveling over
the limbs
in a rather listless fashion, and singing almost incessantly. He was my
hundredth Virginia bird, — as my list then stood, question marks
included, —
and the second one whose song I had heard for the first time on this
vacation
trip. The day had begun prosperously. After such
a
stirring up, a man’s ears are apt to be abnormally sensitive, not to
say
imaginative; then, if ever, he will hear wonders: for which reason, it
may be,
I had turned but a corner or two before I was stopped by another set of
notes,
a strain that I knew, or felt that I ought to know, but could not place
a name
upon at the moment. This bird, too, was run down without difficulty,
and proved
to be a magnolia warbler, — another yellow - rump, like the Cape May
and the
myrtle-bird. The song, unlike its owner, is but slightly marked, and to
make
matters worse, is heard by me only in the season of the bird’s spring
passage; but
I laughed at myself for not recognizing it. I was still in a mood for
discoveries, however, and within half an hour was again in eager chase,
this
time over a crazy zigzag fence into a dense thicket, all for a
black-and -
white creeper (my fiftieth specimen, perhaps, in the last fortnight),
whose
notes, as they came to me from a distance, sounded like a creeper’s, to
be
sure, but with such a measure of difference as kept me on nettles till
the
author of them was in sight. I felt like a fool, as the common
expression is,
but was having “a good time,” notwithstanding. Here were
the first
trailing blackberry blossoms. The season was making haste. “Come,
children, it
is the 7th of May,” I seemed to hear the “bud-crowned spring “saying.
The woods
had burst into almost full leaf within a week. This morning, also, I
found the
first flowers of the Dodecatheon;
three plants, each with only one bloom as yet; white, odd-looking,
pointed, —
like a stylographic pen, my profane clerical fancy suggested. American
cowslip
and shooting star the flower is called in the Manual. American cyclamen
would
hit it pretty well, I thought, its most striking peculiarity being the
reflexed, cyclamenic carriage of the petals. I had been wondering what
those
broad root-leaves were, as I passed them here and there in the woods.
The
present was only my second sight of the blossom in a wild state, the
first one
having been on the battlefield of Chickamauga. It is matter for
thankfulness,
an enrichment of the memory, when a pretty flower is thus associated
with a
famous place. Among the
old trees
on the Heights a cerulean warbler and a blue yellow-back were singing
nearly in
the same breath. If I did not become lastingly familiar with the
distinction
between the two songs, it was not to be the birds’ fault. A second
cerulean (or
possibly the same one; it was impossible to be certain on that point,
nor did
it matter) was near the grapevine tangle, and at the moment of my
approach was
holding a controversy with a creeper. He had reserved the spot, as it
appeared,
and was insisting upon his claim. My spirits rose. It was this clump of
shrubbery that I had come to sit beside, on the chance of seeing again,
and
tracking to her nest, the female whose behavior had so excited my hopes
the
afternoon before. “Nest small and neat, in fork of a bough 20-50 feet
from the
ground:” so I had read in the Key, and henceforth knew what I was to
look for.
For a full hour I remained on guard. Twice the male cerulean chased
some other
bird about in a manner extremely suspicious; but he kept her (or him)
so
constantly on the move that I had no fair sight of her plumage. Beyond
that my
vigil went for nothing. I must try again. If a man cannot waste an hour
once in
a while, he had better not undertake the finding of birds’ nests. For the
walk
homeward I took a course of my own down the open face of the hill,
climbing a
fence or two (I could tell far in advance the safest places at which to
get
over — the soundest spots — by seeing the lumps of dry red clay left on
the rails
by the boots of previous travelers across lots), past prairie warblers
and my
first Natural Bridge bluebird, to the bottom of the valley. Then,
finding
myself ahead of time, I turned aside to see what might be in the woods
of Buck
Hill. There was little to mention: a blossom of the exquisite vernal
fleur-de-lis, not before noticed here, and at the top two cerulean
warblers in
full song. I had begun by this time to believe that this rare Virginia
species
would turn out to be pretty common hereabout in appropriate places. Partly to
test the
truth of this opinion I planned an afternoon trip to a more distant
eminence,
which, like Buck Hill and Lincoln Heights, was covered with a deciduous
forest.
In the valley woods a grouse was drumming — a pretty frequent sound
here — and
Swainson thrushes were singing. These “New Hampshire thrushes,” by the
bye, are
singers of the most generous sort, not only at home, but on their
travels, all
statements to the contrary notwithstanding. From May 5 to May 12 —
including the
latter half of my stay at Natural Bridge, two days at Afton, and one
day in the
cemetery woods at Arlington — I have them marked as singing daily, and
one day
at the Bridge they were heard in four widely separate places. The hill
for which
I had set out lay on the left of the road, and between me and it stood
a row of
negro cabins. As I came opposite them I suddenly caught from the
hillsides the
notes of a Nashville warbler, — or so I believed. This was a bird not
yet
included in my Virginia list. I had puzzled over its absence — the
country
seeming in all respects adapted to it — till I consulted Dr. Rives, by
whom it
is set down as “rare.” Even then, emboldened by more than one happy
experience,
I told myself that I ought to find it. It is common enough in New
England; why
should it skip Virginia? And here it was; only I must go through the
formality
of a visual inspection, especially as just now the song came from
rather far
away. I entered one of the house-yards, — nobody objecting except a
dog, — climbed
the rear fence, and posted up the steep, rocky hill, past a
humming-bird
sipping at a violet, and by and by lifted my glass upon the singer,
which had
been in voice all the while. By this time I was practically sure of its
identity. In imagination I could already see its bright yellow breast.
The name
was as good as down in my book, — Helminthophila
ruficapilla. But the glass, having no imagination, showed me
a white
breast with a dark line across it, — a cerulean warbler! Verily, an ear
is a
vain thing for safety. See your bird, I say, and take a second look;
and then
go back and look again. In another tree a parula warbler was singing.
About
him, by good luck, I made no mistake. As for the other bird, even after
I had
seen his white breast, his tune — with which he was literally spilling
over —
continued to sound amazingly Nashvillian; though there are few warbler
songs
with which I should have supposed myself more thoroughly acquainted
than with
this same clearly characterized Nashville ditty, — a hurried measure
followed
by a still more hurried trill. Perhaps this particular cerulean had a
note
peculiarly his own. I should be glad to think so. Perhaps, on the other
hand,
the fault was all with the man who heard it; in which case the less
said the better.
In either event, my theory as to the cerulean’s commonness was in a
fair way to
be verified. It was well I had that comfort. Before I
could get
down the hill again I must stop to listen to a gnatcatcher’s squeaky
voice, and
the next moment I saw the bird, and another with him. The second one
proceeded
immediately to a nest, — conspicuously displayed on an oak branch, —
while her
mate hovered about, squeaking in the most affectionate manner. Then
away they
flew in company, and after a long absence were back again for another
turn at
building. They were making a joy of their labor, the male especially;
but it is
true he made little else of it. With him I was at once taken captive, —
so
happy, so proud, and so devoted. A paragon of amorous behavior, I
called him;
having the French idea of “assistance,” no doubt, but a lover in every
movement. Never was the good old-fashioned phrase “waiting upon her”
more
prettily illustrated. Birds are imaginative creatures, says Richard
Jefferies,
and I believe it; and this fellow, I am sure, had endowed his spouse
with all
the graces of all the birds that ever were or ever will be. In other
words, he
was truly in love. The nest was already shingled throughout with bits
of gray
lichen, laid on so skillfully that Father Time himself might have done
it. That
is the right way. Let the house look as if it were a growth, a
something native
to the spot, only less old than the ground it rests on. The
gnatcatcher’s nest
is always a work of art. Gnatcatcher eggs could hardly be counted upon
to hatch
in any other. As I
passed up the
road, on my way homeward, a flock of eight nighthawks were swimming
overhead.
Their genius runs, not to architecture, but to grace of aerial motion.
They do
not shoot like the swifts, nor skim and dart like the swallows, nor
circle on
level wings like the hawks, but have an easy, slow-seeming, wavering,
gracefully “limping” flight, which is strictly their own. At the same
time two
buzzards met in midair, one going with the breeze, the other against
it. I
could have told the fact, without other knowledge of the wind’s course,
by the
different carriage of the two pairs of wings. So “the bird trims her to
the
gale.” Having the
cerulean
warbler question still upon my mind, and seeing another hardwood hill
within
easy reach, I turned my steps thither. Yes, I was hardly there before I
heard a
bird singing; but the reader may be sure I did not take my ear’s word
for it.
This was the fourth hilltop I had visited to-day, and on every one the
“rare”
warbler (but it is well known to be abundant in West Virginia) had been
found
without so much as a five-minute search. The next thing, of course, was to find the nest, and so establish the fact of the birds’ breeding. For that I had one day left; and it may be said at once that I spent the greater share of the next forenoon in the vicinity of the grapevine thicket, before mentioned, on Lincoln Heights. A male cerulean was there, — I both heard and saw him, — but no female showed herself; and when at last my patience ran out, I gave up the point for good. She had been seen in the diligent collection of building materials, and that, considered as evidence, was nearly the same as a discovery of the nest itself. With that I must be content. The comfortable way of finding birds’ nests is to happen upon them. A regular hunt — a “dead set,” as we call it — is apt to be a discouraging business. My present
attempt,
it is true, was a quiet, inactive piece of work, little more than an
idle
waiting for the lady of the nest to “give herself away;” and even that
was
relieved by much looking at mountain prospects and frequent turns in
the
surrounding woods. Once a crossbill called and a cardinal whistled
almost in
the same breath, — a kind of northern and southern duet. Then a cuckoo
and a
dove fell to cooing on opposite sides of me; very different sounds,
though in
our poverty we designate them by the same word. The dove’s voice is a
thousand
times more plaintive than the cuckoo’s, and to hear it, no matter how
near,
might come from a mile away; as I have known the little ground dove to
be
“mourning” from a fig-tree at my elbow while I was endeavoring to sight
it far
down the field. The dove’s note is the voice of the future or of the
past, I am
not certain which. A few rods from the spot where I had taken my
station, a
single deerberry bush (Vaccinium
stamineum)
was in profuse bloom, and made a really pretty show; loose sprays of
white
flaring blossoms all hanging downward, each with its cluster of long
protruding
stamens, till the bush, I thought, was like a miniature candelabrum of
electric
lights. As Thoreau might have said, for so homely a plant the deerberry
is very
handsome. Either from association or for some other reason, it wears
always a
certain common look. When we see an azalea shrub or even an apple-tree
in
bloom, we seem to see the very object of its being. The flower calls
for no
ulterior result, though it may have one; its fruit is in itself. But a
blossoming blueberry bush, no matter of what kind, looks like a plant
that was
made to bear something edible, a plant whose end is use rather than
beauty. If the
forenoon had
been indolent, the noonday hour was more so. I descended the hill by a
way
different from any I had yet taken, and found myself at the foot in a
public
road running through a cultivated valley. The day was peculiarly
comfortable,
with a bright sun and a temperate breeze— ideal weather for such
inactivities
as I was engaged in. Coming to an old cherry-tree, I rested awhile in
its
shadow. A farmhouse was not far off, with apple-trees before it, a barn
across
the way, and two or three men at work in the sloping ploughed field
beyond. To
one as lazy as I then was, it is almost a luxury to see other men
hoeing or
ploughing, so they be far enough off to become a part of the landscape.
Near
the barn stood a venerable weeping willow, huge of girth, a very
patriarch, yet
still green as youth itself. Here were good farm-loving birds, a
pleasant
society. A pair of house wrens came at once to look at the stranger,
and one of
them interested me by dusting itself in the road. Two kingbirds were
about the
apple-trees (apple-tree flycatchers would be my name for them, if a
name were
in order), now sitting quiet for a brief space, now scaling the
heavens, as if
to see how nearly perpendicular a bird’s flight could be made, and then
tumbling about ecstatically with rapid vociferations, after the
half-crazy
manner of their kind. The kingbird is plentifully endowed not only with
spirit,
but with spirits. A goldfinch sang and twittered in the softest voice,
and a
catbird mewed. From a quince bush, a little farther off, a wild
bobolinkian
strain was repeated again and again, — an orchard oriole, I thought
most
likely. I went nearer (to the shade of a low cedar), and soon had him
in sight,
— a young male in yellow plumage, with a black throat-patch. The song
was
extremely taking, and the more I heard it, the more it seemed to have
the true
bobolink ring. The quince bushes were in pale pink bloom, and the
branches of a
tall snowball-tree in the unfenced front yard of the house fairly
drooped under
their load of white globular clusters. Just opposite was a sweet-brier
bush,
“the pastoral eglantine,” half dead like others that I had noticed
here, and
like the whole tribe of its New England brothers and sisters. Here as
in
Massachusetts a blight was upon them; they were living with difficulty.
It
would be good, I thought, to see the sweet-brier once where it
flourishes;
where the beauty of the plant matches the beauty and sweetness of the
rose it
bears. Can it be that it is not quite hardy even in Virginia? My seat
under the
snowball-tree (to the coolness of which I had moved from under the
cedar) had
presently to be given up. The women of the house became aware of me,
and out of
a bashful regard for my own comfort I took the road again. Soon I
passed a
double house, with painted doors and two-sash windows! And in one of
the
windows were lace curtains! It was wonderful, — I was obliged to
confess it, in
spite of a deep-seated masculine prejudice against all such
contrivances, — it
was wonderful what an air of elegance they conferred, though the paint
of the
doors was to be considered, of course, in the same connection. By this
time the
road was approaching the slope of Buck Hill, and high noon as it was, I
must
run up for another half-hour among the old trees at the top, — with no
special
result except to disturb a summer tanager, who fired off volley after
volley of
objurgatory expletives, and altogether seemed to be in a terrible state
of
mind. His excitement was all for nothing; unless — what was likely
enough — it
served to give him favor in the eyes of his mate, who may be presumed
to have
been somewhere within hearing. Lovers, I believe, are supposed to
welcome an
opportunity to play the hero. My last
afternoon
at the Bridge was devoted to a longish tramp into a new piece of
country, where
for an hour I had hopes of adding at least a name or two to my Virginia
bird-list, which for twenty-four hours had been at a standstill. I came
unexpectedly upon a mill, and what was of greater account, a millpond,
— “a
long, dirty pond,” as my uncivil pencil describes it. Here were
swallows, as might
have been foreseen, but the most careful scrutiny revealed nothing
beyond the
two species already catalogued, — the barn swallow and the rough-wing.
Here,
too, in an apple orchard, were a Baltimore oriole gathering straws, a
phoebe, a
golden warbler, and several warbling vireos, the only ones so far
noticed with
the exception of a single bird at Pulaski. About the border of the pond
were
spotted sandpipers (no solitaries, to my disappointment) and two male
song
sparrows. This last species I saw but twice in Virginia, — along the
bushy
shore of the creek at Pulaski, and here beside this millpond. Wherever
the song
sparrow is scarce, it is likely to be restricted to the immediate
neighborhood
of water. Even in Massachusetts it is pretty evident that such places
are its
first choice. As I sometimes say, the song sparrow likes a swamp as
well as the
swamp sparrow; but the species being so exceedingly abundant, there are
not
swampy spots enough to go round, and the majority of the birds have to
shift as
they can, along bushy fence-rows and in pastures and scrub-lands. The
building
interested me almost as much as the sandpipers and the sparrows. It was
painted
red, and served not only as a mill, but as a post-office (“Red Mills”)
and a
“department store,” with its sign, “Dry Goods, Groceries, &c.” A
tablet
informed the passer-by that the mill had been “established” in 1798,
destroyed
in 1881, and reopened in 1891; and on the same tablet, or another, was
the
motto, “Laborare est orare.” I regretted not to meet the proprietor,
but he was
nowhere in sight, and I felt a scruple about intruding upon the time of
a man
who was at once postmaster, miller, farmer, storekeeper, and scholar.
With that
motto before me, — “Apologia pro vita sua,” he might have called it, —
such an
intrusion would have seemed a sacrilege. What I
remember
best about the whole establishment is the song of a blue-gray
gnatcatcher, to
which I stopped to listen under a low savin-tree on a bluff above the
mill. He
was directly over my head, singing somewhat in the manner of a catbird,
but I
had almost to hold my breath to hear him. It was amazing that a bird’s
voice
could be spun so fine. A mere shadow of a sound, I was ready to say. It
was
only by the happiest accident that I did not miss it altogether. Then,
when the
fellow had finished his music, he began squeaking in that peculiarly
teasing
manner of his, and kept it up till I was weary. The gnatcatcher is a
creature
by himself, a miniature bird, wonderfully slender, with a strangely
long tail, which
he carries jauntily and makes the most of on all occasions. But if he
only knew
it, his chief claim to distinction is his singing voice. If the
humming-bird’s
is attenuated in the same proportion (and who can assert the
contrary?), he may
be the finest vocalist in the world, and we none the wiser. I was to
start
northward by the next noonday train, and had already laid out my
forenoon’s
work. Before breakfast I took my last look at the famous bridge, and my
last
stroll through Cedar Creek ravine. I had been there every day, I think,
and had
always found something new. This time it was a slippery-elm-tree by the
saltpetre cave. I had brought away a twig, and was sitting in my door
putting a
lens upon it and upon a sedum specimen, when the veranda was suddenly
taken
possession of by a dozen or more of young men. They were just up from
the
railway station, and were deep in a discussion of ways and means, —
tickets,
luncheons, and time-tables. Then, in a momentary lull in the talk, I
heard a
quiet voice say, “Sedum.” They were a company of Johns Hopkins men out
upon a
geological trip. So I learned at noon when we met at the railway
station; and a
pleasant botanical hour I had with one or two of them as we rode
northward.
Now, on the piazza, they did not tarry long; time was precious to them
also;
and as soon as they had gone down to the bridge I set off in the
opposite
direction. My final ramble was to be to Lincoln Heights, to see once
more that
magnificent avenue of trees and that beautiful mountain prospect. The
cerulean
warbler was singing as usual, but there was no sign of his mate, though
I could
not do less than to wait a little while by the grapevine thicket in a
vain hope
of her appearance. Here, as in the ravine, I had not yet seen
everything. Straight
before me stood a locust tree, every branch hung with long, fragrant
white
clusters. I had overlooked it completely till now. If I learned nothing
else in
Virginia, I ought to have learned something about my limitations as an
“observer.” But I need not have traveled so far for such a purpose.
Wisdom so
common as that may be picked up any day in a man’s own door-yard. |