<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">THE GROSBEAKS</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">Have you ever heard of the sing-away bird,<br/></span>
<span class="i2">That sings where the run-away river<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Runs down with its rills from the bald-headed hills<br/></span>
<span class="i2">That stand in the sunshine and shiver?<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Oh, sing, sing away, sing away!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">How the pines and the birches are stirred<br/></span>
<span class="i0">By the trill of the sing-away bird!<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">And beneath the glad sun, every glad-hearted one<br/></span>
<span class="i2">Sets the world to the tune of its gladness;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The swift rivers sing it, the wild breezes wing it.<br/></span>
<span class="i2">Till earth loses thought of her sadness.<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Oh, sing, sing away, sing away!<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Oh, sing, happy soul, to joy's giver—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Sing on, by Time's run-away river!<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Lucy Larcom.</span></p>
</div>
<p>You would recognize it anywhere by its beak. And you
may call this feature of the face a beak, or a nose, or a hand,
or a pair of lips. In either case it is thick, heavy, prominent,
the common characteristic of the grosbeaks. Individuals may
differ in plumage, but always there is the thick, conical bill.</p>
<p>"Oh, oh, what a big nose you've got!" and "Oh, oh, what
a red nose it is!" we exclaimed, when we first met the cardinal
face to face in a thicket. In a moment we had forgotten the
shape and tint of the beak in the song that poured out of it.
It was like forgetting the look of the big rocks between which
gushes the waterfall in a mountain gorge.</p>
<p>Not that the mouth of the grosbeak was built to accommodate
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[ 46 ]</SPAN></span>
its song, but, that being formed for other purposes, it
nevertheless is a splendid flute.</p>
<p>Whichever he may be, the cardinal or the black headed, or
the blue or the rose breasted, the grosbeak is a splendid
singer.</p>
<p>On account of its gorgeous coloring, the cardinal is oftenest
caged. But to those who love the wild birds best in their
native freedom, the cardinal grosbeak imprisoned lacks the
charm of manner which marks it in the tangle of wild grape-vines
and blackberry thickets. Seldom still in the wild, unless
it be singing, the red beauty flits and dodges between twigs,
and dips into brush and careens through the thickest undergrowth
of things that combine to hide it, now here, now there,
and everywhere. One would think its bright coat a certain
and quick token of its whereabouts, but so active is the lively
fellow that it eludes even the sharpest eye, a stranger mistaking
its gleam for a rift of sunlight through the treetops.</p>
<p>Legend tells us that the beak of this bird was once ashen
gray and the face white. Once on a time, a whole flock of
them were discovered in the currant rows of a mountaineer,
who called on the gods of the woods to punish them, since he
himself was unable to overtake the thieves. The gods, willing
to appease the old man, yet loving the grosbeaks better, dyed
their beaks crimson from that moment, and set black masks
on their faces. Thus was a favor done to the cardinals, for
ever after the juice of berries left no stain on their red lips,
while the black masks set off their features to the best advantage,
interrupting the tint of the beak and the head. He is
no ecclesiastic, though he wear the red cap of the cardinal,
which he lifts at pleasure, for he gets his living by foraging
the woods and gardens for berries at berry-time.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 654px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/grosbeak.png" width-obs="654" height-obs="492" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">ROSE BREASTED GROSBEAK.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[ 47 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The cardinal's companion is modest of tint, ashy brown
with only traces of red below, deepening on wings, head,
and tail. Bird of the bush is she, and she places her loosely
made nest in the thicket, where she can easily obtain bark
fiber and dry, soft leaves and grass. In it she sees that three
or four chocolate-dotted eggs, like decorated marbles, are
placed. And she repeats the family history two or three
times a season, where the season is long. At first the lips of
the baby birds are dark; but they soon blush into the family
red. In plumage they resemble the mother for a time, but
before cold weather the males put on a coat of red with the
black mask.</p>
<p>In the respect of molting the cardinals differ from their
young cousins, the rose-breasted, the latter requiring two or
three years to complete the tints of adult life.</p>
<p>But born in the thickets are the rose-breasts, just like the
cardinals, the nest being composed of the selfsame fibers and
woodland grasses. Strange craft of Mother Nature is this, to
bring the rose-breast and the cardinal from eggs of the very
same size and markings. But so she does; so that a stranger
coming upon either nest in the absence of the mother bird
might mistake it for that of the other. You can't be certain
until you see the old birds.</p>
<p>The rose-breasted grosbeaks are found east of the Rocky
Mountains and north into Canada. It migrates south early,
and returns to its summer habitat rather late in spring. The
lips of the rose-breast are white, not red, while the feet are
grayish blue, differing from the brown feet of the cardinal.</p>
<p>How did it come by its breast? Why, legend has it that
the breast was white at the start. One day he forgot himself,
not knowing it was night, he was so happy singing the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[ 48 ]</SPAN></span>
funeral hymn of a robin-redbreast that had died of a chill in
molting time, as birds do die when the process is belated.
And the grosbeak sang on, until a night-owl spied him and
thought to make a supper of a bird so plump. But the owl
mistook his aim and flew away with only a beakful of the
breast feathers, he not taking into account the nearness of the
molt. The grosbeak escaped, but lacking a vest.</p>
<p>The robins gathered pink wild-rose leaves and laid them
on the heart of the singer, not forgetting to line the wings,
and so from that day to this the psalm singer is known as the
rose-breasted grosbeak.</p>
<p>The head and neck of the male and most of the upper
parts are black, the tail white and black combined, wings
black variegated with white, and the middle breast and under
wing-coverts the rich rose that deepens into a carmine. The
beak is white.</p>
<p>The mother bird is streaked with blackish and olive brown
above, below white tinged with dusky, under wing-coverts
the tint of saffron. Her beak is brown.</p>
<p>These beautiful birds may be seen in the haunts of autumn
berries, early spring buds that are yet incased in winter wrappings,
and orchards in the remote tops of whose trees have
been left stray apples. By the time these are frost-bitten they
are "ready cooked" for the belated rose-breasts, whose strong
beaks seem made on purpose to bite into frozen apples. But
frozen apples have a charm of taste for any one who takes the
trouble of climbing to the outer limbs for a tempting recluse.
Better were more of them left in the late harvest for boys and
girls and the rose-breasted grosbeaks.</p>
<p>An invisible thread fastened to a solitary apple on a high
twig, and connected inside of the attic window of a cottage,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[ 49 ]</SPAN></span>
suggests winter fun of a harmless sort. The grosbeaks fish
for the apple, which all of a sudden is given a jerk from a
watchful urchin inside the window; and the bird realizes the
historical "slip 'twixt the cup and the lip." The string
being, to start with, almost invisible, is from necessity very
weak as well, and breaks at about the third jerk. The fun
for the participants inside the window at the other end of the
string is over for a time, and before it is readjusted the apple
has several bites in it. And besides, there are other apples.</p>
<p>On the Pacific coast we have the black-headed grosbeak,
cousin of the others and equally gifted in song.</p>
<p>The sides of the head, back, wings, and tail of this male
are black, though the back and wings are dotted with white
and cinnamon-brown. The neck and under parts are rich
orange-brown, changing to bright, pure yellow on the belly and
under wing-coverts. The bill and feet are dark grayish blue.
The female and her young differ in the under parts, being a
rich sulphur-yellow. Upper parts are olive shaded, varied
with whitish or brownish stripes. The habits of the black-headed
grosbeak are like those of the others described.</p>
<p>From our custom of making the grounds as attractive to
all wild birds as possible, never relenting our vigilance in
regard to the feline race, we have had splendid opportunities
of studying this bird. They have nested with us for three years,
beginning in wary fashion and ending in perfect confidence.</p>
<p>The first of the season we saw only the male, and he kept
high in the blue-gum trees, fifty or sixty feet or more above
ground, singing as soon as everybody was out of sight, but
disappearing if a door opened. We thought him a belated
robin, so do the songs of the two birds impress a stranger.
For weeks we could catch not so much as a glimpse of the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[ 50 ]</SPAN></span>
singer, though we hid in the shrubbery. Shrubbery was no
barrier to the sight of the keen little eye and ear above.
Then we took to the attic, and from a little roof corner-pane
beheld the musician.</p>
<p>But his song was short and ended unfinished, so suspicious
was the bird. Gradually he came to understand that no shot-gun
disturbed the garden stillness, even though he sat on an
outer bough, and no cat lurked in the roses. He also appeared
to notice that nobody played ball on the greensward,
nor threw stones at stray chickens. Altogether circumstances
seemed favorable to Sir Grosbeak, and he brought Madam
along down from the mountain cañons.</p>
<p>By midsummer of the second season the two were seen at
sunrise as low as the tallest of the orange-trees, but they flew
higher or disappeared if the door were opened. It was the
year that we first planted the row of Logan berries, a new
cross between the blackberry and raspberry. It was between
the orange and lemon trees, in a quiet corner of the orchard,
and the grosbeaks espied them, reddening a month before
they ripened. By getting up at dawn we made sure that
nesting operations had begun within twenty feet of the Logan
berries. But which way? It was not until the eggs were
laid that we found the site on a low limb of a fig-tree adjoining
the berry row. The nest was made solely of dry dark-leaf
spines, and so transparently laid that we could distinguish
the three eggs from below. There was no lining, plenty of
ventilation in this and other of these grosbeaks' nests observed
in the foothills being the rule. Perhaps the climate induces
the birds to this sanitary measure. Certain it is that this nest
could be no harbor for those insect foes that too often make
life miserable for the birdlings.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[ 51 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The summer passed, and we gave up the row of berries to
the grosbeaks. There were but few anyway, and we wanted
the birds. And there was other fruit they were welcome to.</p>
<p>This season the grosbeaks have brought off three broods
within fifty feet of the house. The male sings in the low
bushes and trees, and does not think of punctuating his notes
with stops and pauses, even though we stand within a few
feet of him. In fact, the birds are now as tame as robins.
Young striped fledglings grope about in the clover, or flutter
in the bushes as fearless as sparrows. If we pick them up
they will support themselves by a grip on the hand and swing
by their strong great beaks, screaming at the top of their
shrill voices to "let go!" when it is themselves that are holding
on with might and main. If they scream long enough,
and their beaks do not weaken in their clutch, the mocker
comes to the rescue and scolds us, while we explain the
situation, extending our hands with the grosbeak clinging to
the palm.</p>
<p>So far as we have known, all the nests in our grounds have
been built in the crotch of a fig-tree. The fig has sparse
foliage and affords little shelter. But then there are figs that
ripen most of the summer—and figs are good for baby grosbeaks.
Once we discovered a nest by accident. The bees at
swarming-time settled in the top of a fig-tree, a place not at
all suitable, in our opinion. We were busily engaged in tossing
dust into the tree to frighten the bees out, when a grosbeak
appeared, scolding so hard in her familiar, motherly tone
that we knew we were "sanding" her nest as well as the bees.
And we found it all right! She went on with her work after
we had attended to the bees.</p>
<p>On account of the fondness of the birds for fruit and buds,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[ 52 ]</SPAN></span>
the grosbeaks might easily become resident in any home
grounds. Low shrubbery they love when once they have
become familiar; unlike the thrushes, not caring particularly
for damp places. Dry, baked-in-the-sun nooks, crisp undergrowth,
and especially untrimmed berry rows fascinate them.
During mating-season the male sings all the time when he is
not eating, singing as he flies from perch to perch, and like
others of the family, has been accused of night serenades.
We are unable to know certainly if it is our grosbeak or the
mocker that wakes us at midnight. It is probably the mocker,
who has stolen notes from all the birds.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[ 53 ]</SPAN></span></p>
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