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<h2>ORNITHOLOGY ON A COTTON PLANTATION.</h2>
<p>On one of my first jaunts into the suburbs of Tallahassee I
noticed not far from the road a bit of swamp,—shallow pools
with muddy borders and flats. It was a likely spot for "waders,"
and would be worth a visit. To reach it, indeed, I must cross a
planted field surrounded by a lofty barbed-wire fence and placarded
against trespassers; but there was no one in sight, or no one who
looked at all like a land-owner; and, besides, it could hardly be
accounted a trespass—defined by Blackstone as an
"<i>unwarranted</i> entry on another's soil"—to step
carefully over the cotton rows on so legitimate an errand.
Ordinarily I call myself a simple bird-gazer, an amateur, a field
naturalist, if you will; but on occasions like the present I
assume—with myself, that is—all the rights and titles
of an ornithologist proper, a man of science strictly so called. In
the interest of science, then, I climbed the fence and picked my
way across the field. True enough, about the edges of the water
were two or three solitary sandpipers, and at least half a dozen of
the smaller yellowlegs,—two additions to my Florida
list,—not to speak of a little blue heron and a green heron,
the latter in most uncommonly green plumage. It was well I had
interpreted the placard a little generously. "The letter killeth"
is a pretty good text in emergencies of this kind. So I said to
myself. The herons, meanwhile, had taken French leave, but the
smaller birds were less suspicious; I watched them at my leisure,
and left them still feeding.</p>
<p>Two days later I was there again, but it must be acknowledged
that this time I tarried in the road till a man on horseback had
disappeared round the next turn. It would have been manlier,
without doubt, to pay no attention to him; but something told me
that he was the cotton-planter himself, and, for better or worse,
prudence carried the day with me. Finding nothing new, though the
sandpipers and yellowlegs were still present, with a very handsome
little blue heron and plenty of blackbirds, I took the road again
and went further, and an hour or two afterward, on getting back to
the same place, was overtaken again by the horseman. He pulled up
his horse and bade me good-afternoon. Would I lend him my
opera-glass, which happened to be in my hand at the moment? "I
should like to see how my house looks from here," he said; and he
pointed across the field to a house on the hill some distance
beyond. "Ah," said I, glad to set myself right by a piece of
frankness that under the circumstances could hardly work to my
disadvantage; "then it is your land on which I have been
trespassing." "How so?" he asked, with a smile; and I explained
that I had been across his cotton-field a little while before.
"That is no trespass," he answered (so the reader will perceive
that I had been quite correct in my understanding of the law); and
when I went on to explain my object in visiting his cane-swamp (for
such it was, he said, but an unexpected freshet had ruined the crop
when it was barely out of the ground), he assured me that I was
welcome to visit it as often as I wished. He himself was very fond
of natural history, and often regretted that he had not given time
to it in his youth. As it was, he protected the birds on his
plantation, and the place was full of them. I should find his woods
interesting, he felt sure. Florida was extremely rich in birds; he
believed there were some that had never been classified. "We have
orioles here," he added; and so far, at any rate, he was right; I
had seen perhaps twenty that day (orchard orioles, that is), and
one sat in a tree before us at the moment. His whole manner was
most kindly and hospitable,—as was that of every Tallahassean
with whom I had occasion to speak, —and I told him with
sincere gratitude that I should certainly avail myself of his
courtesy and stroll through his woods.</p>
<p>I approached them, two mornings afterward, from the opposite
side, where, finding no other place of entrance, I climbed a
six-barred, tightly locked gate—feeling all the while like "a
thief and a robber"—in front of a deserted cabin. Then I had
only to cross a grassy field, in which meadow larks were singing,
and I was in the woods. I wandered through them without finding
anything more unusual or interesting than summer tanagers and
yellow-throated warblers, which were in song there, as they were in
every such place, and after a while came out into a pleasant glade,
from which different parts of the plantation could be seen, and
through which ran a plantation road. Here was a wooden
fence,—a most unusual thing, —and I lost no time in
mounting it, to rest and look about me. It is one of the marks of a
true Yankee, I suspect, to like such a perch. My own weakness in
that direction is a frequent subject of mirth with chance fellow
travelers. The attitude is comfortable and conducive to meditation;
and now that I was seated and at my ease, I felt that this was one
of the New England luxuries which, almost without knowing it, I had
missed ever since I left home.</p>
<p>Of my meditations on this particular occasion I remember
nothing; but that is no sign they were valueless; as it is no sign
that yesterday's dinner did me no good because I have forgotten
what it was. In the latter case, indeed, and perhaps in the former
as well, it would seem more reasonable to draw an exactly opposite
inference. But, quibbles apart, one thing I do remember: I sat for
some time on the fence, in the shade of a tree, with an eye upon
the cane-swamp and an ear open for bird-voices. Yes, and it comes
to me at this moment that here I heard the first and only bull-frog
that I heard anywhere in Florida. It was like a voice from home,
and belonged with the fence. Other frogs I had heard in other
places. One chorus brought me out of bed in Daytona—in the
evening—after a succession of February dog-day showers. "What
is that noise outside?" I inquired of the landlady as I hastened
downstairs. "That?" said she, with a look of amusement; "that's
frogs." "It <i>may</i> be," I thought, but I followed the sounds
till they led me in the darkness to the edge of a swamp. No doubt
the creatures were frogs, but of some kind new to me, with voices
more lugubrious and homesick than I should have supposed could
possibly belong to any batrachian. A week or two later, in the New
Smyrna flat-woods, I heard in the distance a sound which I took for
the grunting of pigs. I made a note of it, mentally, as a cheerful
token, indicative of a probable scarcity of rattlesnakes; but by
and by, as I drew nearer, the truth of the matter began to break
upon me. A man was approaching, and when we met I asked him what
was making that noise yonder. "Frogs," he said. At another time, in
the flat-woods of Port Orange (I hope I am not taxing my reader's
credulity too far, or making myself out a man of too imaginative an
ear), I heard the bleating of sheep. Busy with other things, I did
not stop to reflect that it was impossible there should be sheep in
that quarter, and the occurrence had quite passed out of my mind
when, one day, a cracker, talking about frogs, happened to say,
"Yes, and we have one kind that makes a noise exactly like the
bleating of sheep." That, without question, was what I had heard in
the flat-woods. But this frog in the sugar-cane swamp was the same
fellow that on summer evenings, ever and ever so many years ago, in
sonorous bass that could be heard a quarter of a mile away, used to
call from Reuben Loud's pond, "Pull him in! Pull him in!" or
sometimes (the inconsistent amphibian), "Jug o' rum! Jug o'
rum!"</p>
<p>I dismounted from my perch at last, and was sauntering idly
along the path (idleness like this is often the best of
ornithological industry), when suddenly I had a vision! Before me,
in the leafy top of an oak sapling, sat a blue grosbeak. I knew him
on the instant. But I could see only his head and neck, the rest of
his body being hidden by the leaves. It was a moment of feverish
excitement. Here was a new bird, a bird about which I had felt
fifteen years of curiosity; and, more than that, a bird which here
and now was quite unexpected, since it was not included in either
of the two Florida lists that I had brought with me from home. For
perhaps five seconds I had my opera-glass on the blue head and the
thick-set, dark bill, with its lighter-colored under mandible. Then
I heard the clatter of a horse's hoofs, and lifted my eyes. My
friend the owner of the plantation was coming down the road at a
gallop, straight upon me. If I was to see the grosbeak and make
sure of him, it must be done at once. I moved to bring him fully
into view, and he flew into the thick of a pine-tree out of sight.
But the tree was not far off, and if Mr. —— would pass
me with a nod, the case was still far from hopeless. A bright
thought came to me. I ran from the path with a great show of eager
absorption, leveled my glass upon the pine-tree, and stood fixed.
Perhaps Mr. —— would take the hint. Alas! he had too
much courtesy to pass his own guest without speaking. "Still after
the birds?" he said, as he checked his horse. I responded, as I
hope, without any symptom of annoyance. Then, of course, he wished
to know what I was looking at, and I told him that a blue grosbeak
had just flown into that pine-tree, and that I was most
distressingly anxious to see more of him. He looked at the
pine-tree. "I can't see him," he said. No more could I. "It was n't
a blue jay, was it?" he asked. And then we talked of one thing and
another, I have no idea what, till he rode away to another part of
the plantation where a gang of women were at work. By this time the
grosbeak had disappeared utterly. Possibly he had gone to a bit of
wood on the opposite side of the cane-swamp. I scaled a barbed-wire
fence and made in that direction, but to no purpose. The grosbeak
was gone for good. Probably I should never see another. Could the
planter have read my thoughts just then he would perhaps have been
angry with himself, and pretty certainly he would have been angry
with me. That a Yankee should accept his hospitality, and then load
him with curses and call him all manner of names! How should he
know that I was so insane a hobbyist as to care more for the sight
of a new bird than for all the laws and customs of ordinary
politeness? As my feelings cooled, I saw that I was stepping over
hills or rows of some strange-looking plants just out of the
ground. Peanuts, I guessed; but to make sure I called to a colored
woman who was hoeing not far off. "What are these?" "Pinders," she
answered. I knew she meant peanuts,—otherwise "ground-peas"
and "goobers,"—and now that I once more have a dictionary at
my elbow I learn that the word, like "goober," is, or is supposed
to be, of African origin.</p>
<p>I was preparing to surmount the barbed-wire fence again, when
the planter returned and halted for another chat. It was evident
that he took a genuine and amiable interest in my researches. There
were a great many kinds of sparrows in that country, he said, and
also of woodpeckers. He knew the ivory-bill, but, like other
Tallahasseans, he thought I should have to go into Lafayette County
(all Florida people say La<i>fay</i>ette) to find it. "That bird
calling now is a bee-bird," he said, referring to a kingbird; "and
we have a bird that is called the French mocking-bird; he catches
other birds." The last remark was of interest for its bearing upon
a point about which I had felt some curiosity, and, I may say, some
skepticism, as I had seen many loggerhead shrikes, but had observed
no indication that other birds feared them or held any grudge
against them. As he rode off he called my attention to a great blue
heron just then flying over the swamp. "They are very shy," he
said. Then, from further away, he shouted once more to ask if I
heard the mocking-bird singing yonder, pointing with his whip in
the direction of the singer.</p>
<p>For some time longer I hung about the glade, vainly hoping that
the grosbeak would again favor my eyes. Then I crossed more planted
fields,—climbing more barbed-wire fences, and stopping on the
way to enjoy the sweetly quaint music of a little chorus of
white-crowned sparrows,—and skirted once more the muddy shore
of the cane-swamp, where the yellowlegs and sandpipers were still
feeding. That brought me to the road from which I had made my entry
to the place some days before; but, being still unable to forego a
splendid possibility, I recrossed the plantation, tarried again in
the glade, sat again on the wooden fence (if that grosbeak only
<i>would</i> show himself!), and thence went on, picking a few
heads of handsome buffalo clover, the first I had ever seen, and
some sprays of penstemon, till I came again to the six-barred gate
and the Quincy road. At that point, as I now remember, the air was
full of vultures (carrion crows), a hundred or more, soaring over
the fields in some fit of gregariousness. Along the road were
white-crowned and white-throated sparrows (it was the 12th of
April), orchard orioles, thrashers, summer tanagers, myrtle and
paim warblers, cardinal grosbeaks, mocking-birds, kingbirds,
logger-heads, yellow—throated vireos, and sundry others, but
not the blue grosbeak, which would have been worth them all.</p>
<p>Once back at the hotel, I opened my Coues's Key to refresh my
memory as to the exact appearance of that bird. "Feathers around
base of bill black," said the book. I had not noticed that. But no
matter; the bird was a blue grosbeak, for the sufficient reason
that it could not be anything else. A black line between the almost
black beak and the dark-blue head would be inconspicuous at the
best, and quite naturally would escape a glimpse so hasty as mine
had been. And yet, while I reasoned in this way, I foresaw plainly
enough that, as time passed, doubt would get the better of
assurance, as it always does, and I should never be certain that I
had not been the victim of some illusion. At best, the evidence was
worth nothing for others. If only that excellent Mr.
——, for whose kindness I was unfeignedly thankful (and
whose pardon I most sincerely beg if I seem to have been a bit too
free in this rehearsal of the story),—if only Mr.
—— could have left me alone for ten minutes longer!</p>
<p>The worry and the imprecations were wasted, after all, as,
Heaven be thanked, they so often are; for within two or three days
I saw other blue grosbeaks and heard them sing. But that was not on
a cotton plantation, and is part of another story.</p>
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