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<h1>THE WOODPECKERS</h1>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>FANNIE HARDY ECKSTORM</h2>
<hr />
<h2>FOREWORD: THE RIDDLERS</h2>
<p>Long ago in Greece, the legend runs, a terrible
monster called the Sphinx used to waylay
travelers to ask them riddles: whoever could not
answer these she killed, but the man who did
answer them killed her and made an end of her
riddling.</p>
<p>To-day there is no Sphinx to fear, yet the
world is full of unguessed riddles. No thoughtful
man can go far afield but some bird or
flower or stone bars his way with a question
demanding an answer; and though many men
have been diligently spelling out the answers
for many years, and we for the most part must
study the answers they have proved, and must
reply in their words, yet those shrewd old riddlers,
the birds and flowers and bees, are always
ready for a new victim, putting their heads together
over some new enigma to bar the road
to knowledge till that, too, shall be answered;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>
so that other men’s learning does not always
suffice. So much of a man’s pleasure in life, so
much of his power, depends on his ability to
silence these persistent questioners, that this little
book was written with the hope of making
clearer the kind of questions Dame Nature asks,
and the way to get correct answers.</p>
<p>This is purposely a <i>little</i> book, dealing only
with a single group of birds, treating particularly
only some of the commoner species of that
group, taking up only a few of the problems
that present themselves to the naturalist for solution,
and aiming rather to make the reader
<i>acquainted with</i> the birds than <i>learned about</i>
them.</p>
<p>The woodpeckers were selected in preference
to any other family because they are patient
under observation, easily identified, resident in
all parts of the country both in summer and in
winter, and because more than any other birds
they leave behind them records of their work
which may be studied after the birds have
flown. The book provides ample means for identifying
every species and subspecies of woodpecker
known in North America, though only
five of the commonest and most interesting
species have been selected for special study.
At least three of these five should be found in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>
almost every part of the country. The Californian
woodpecker is never seen in the East, nor
the red-headed in the far West, but the downy
and the hairy are resident nearly everywhere,
and some species of the flickers and sapsuckers,
if not always the ones chosen for special notice,
are visitors in most localities.</p>
<p>Look for the woodpeckers in orchards and
along the edges of thickets, among tangles of
wild grapes and in patches of low, wild berries,
upon which they often feed, among dead trees
and in the track of forest fires. Wherever there
are boring larvæ, beetles, ants, grasshoppers, the
fruit of poison-ivy, dogwood, june-berry, wild
cherry or wild grapes, woodpeckers may be confidently
looked for if there are any in the neighborhood.
Be patient, persistent, wide-awake, sure
that you see what you think you see, careful to
remember what you have seen, studious to compare
your observations, and keen to hear the
questions propounded you. If you do this seven
years and a day, you will earn the name of Naturalist;
and if you travel the road of the naturalist
with curious patience, you may some day become
as famous a riddle-reader as was that OEdipus, the
king of Thebes, who slew the Sphinx.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span></p>
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