<h2><SPAN name="LVII" id="LVII"></SPAN>LVII</h2>
<p class="caption">THE CHICKADEE</p>
<p>The way to the woods is blurred with
a mist of driven snow that veils the
portal of the forest with its upblown
curtain, and blots out all paths, and gives
to the familiar landmarks a ghostly unreality.
The quietude of the woods is
disturbed by turbulent voices, the angry
roar and shriek of the wind, the groaning
and clashing of writhing, tormented trees.
Over all, the sunned but unwarmed sky
bends its blue arch, as cold as the snowy
fields and woods beneath it.</p>
<p>In such wild weather you are not
tempted far abroad in quest of old acquaintances
of fields and woods, yet from
the inhospitable woods some of them
come to you. Among them all, none is
more welcome than that feathered atom
of life, the chickadee. With the same
blithe note that welcomed you to his
woodland haunts in spring, in summer,<span class="pagenum">[285]</span>
and in autumn, when he attended you
with such charming familiarity, amusing
you with pretty acrobatic feats, as he
flitted now before, now beside, now
above you, he hails you now, and asks
that hospitality be extended to him.</p>
<p>Set forth a feast of suet on the window-sill,
and he will need no bidding to
come and partake of it. How daintily
he helps himself to the tiniest morsels,
never cramming his bill with gross
mouthfuls as do his comrades at the
board, the nuthatch and the downy woodpecker!
They, like unbidden guests,
doubtful of welcome or of sufferance
even, make the most of time that may
prove all too brief, and gorge themselves
as greedily as hungry tramps; while he,
unscared by your face at the window,
tarries at his repast, pecking his crumbs
with leisurely satisfaction. You half expect
to see him swept from your sight
like a thistledown by the gusty blast, but
he holds bravely to his perch, unruffled
in spirit if not in feathers, and defies
his fierce assailant with his oft-repeated
challenge.</p>
<p>As often as you spread the simple<span class="pagenum">[286]</span>
feast for him he will come and sit at
your board, a confiding guest, well assured
of welcome, and will repay you
with an example of cheerful life in the
midst of dreariness and desolation. In
the still, bright days, his cheery voice
rings through the frosty air, and when
the thick veil of the snow falls in a wavering
slant from the low sky its muffled
cadence still heartens you.</p>
<p>What an intense spark of vitality
must it be that warms such a mite in
such an immensity of cold; that floats
his little life in this deluge of frigid
air, and keeps him in song while we
are dumb with shivering! If our huge
hulks were endowed with proportionate
vitality, how easily we might solve the
mysteries of the frozen north!</p>
<p>On some February day, when the first
promise of spring is drifted to you in the
soft south wind, the tenderness of spring
is voiced in his love-note, brief but full
of melody, and sweet as the evening song
of the wood pewee. When the spring
songsters come, he takes leave of you.
He has seen you safely through the winter,
and departs to the woods on affairs<span class="pagenum">[287]</span>
of his own. He is no longer a vagrant,
but at home in his own greenwood, yet
as unfretted by the cares of housekeeping
as he was by the heavy weariness of
winter.</p>
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