<h2><SPAN name="II" id="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<p class="caption">MARCH DAYS</p>
<p>Back and forth across the land, in
swift and sudden alternation, the March
winds toss days of bitter cold and days of
genial warmth, now out of the eternal
winter of the north, now from the endless
summer of the tropics.</p>
<p>Repeated thawing and freezing has
given the snow a coarse grain. It is like
a mass of fine hailstones and with no
hint of the soft and feathery flakes that
wavered down like white blossoms shed
from the unseen bloom of some far-off
upper world and that silently transformed
the unseemliness of the black and tawny
earth into the beauty of immaculate purity.</p>
<p>One day, when the wind breathes from
the south a continuous breath of warmth,
your feet sink into this later coarseness
come of its base earthly association, with
a grinding slump, as in loose wet sand, so<span class="pagenum">[6]</span>
deep, perhaps, that your tracks are gray
puddles, marking your toilsome way.</p>
<p>As you wallow on, or perch for a moment's
rest on a naked fence-top among
the smirched drifts, you envy the crows
faring so easily along their aerial paths
above you. How pleasant are the voices
of these returning exiles, not enemies
now, but friendly messengers, bringing
tidings of spring. You do not begrudge
them the meagre feasts they find, the
frozen apple still hanging, brown and
wrinkled, in the bare orchard, or the winter-killed
youngling of flock or herd, cast
forth upon a dunghill, and which discovered,
one generous vagabond calls all his
black comrades to partake of.</p>
<p>Watching them as they lag across the
sky, yet swifter than the white clouds
drift above them, you presently note that
these stand still, as you may verify by
their blue shadows on the snow, lying
motionless, with the palpitating shadows
of the crows plunging into them on this
side, then, lost for an instant in the blue
obscurity, then, emerging on that side
with the same untiring beat of shadowy
wings. A puff of wind comes out of the<span class="pagenum">[7]</span>
north, followed by an angry gust, and
then a howling wintry blast that the
crows stagger against in labored flight as
they make for the shelter of the woods.</p>
<p>You, too, toil to shelter and fireside
warmth, and are thankful to be out of the
biting wind and the treacherous footing.
The change has come so suddenly that
the moist, grainy snow is frozen before it
has time to leach, and in a little while
gives you a surface most delightful to
walk upon, and shortens distances to half
what they were. It has lost its first pure
whiteness wherewith no other whiteness
can compare, but it is yet beyond all
things else, and in the sunlight dazzles
you with a broad glare and innumerable
scintillating points of light, as intense as
the sun itself.</p>
<p>The sunshine, the bracing air, the
swaying boughs of the pines and hemlocks
beckoning at the woodside, and the
firm smooth footing, irresistibly invite
you forth. Your feet devour the way
with crisp bites, and you think that nothing
could be more pleasant to them till
you are offered a few yards of turf, laid
bare by winds and sun, and then you realize<span class="pagenum">[8]</span>
that nothing is quite so good as the
old stand-by, a naked ground, and crave
more of it, even as this is, and hunger
for it with its later garnishing of grass
and flowers. The crows, too, are drawn
to these bare patches and are busy upon
them, and you wonder what they can find;
spiders, perhaps, for these you may see
in thawy days crawling sluggishly over
the snow, where they must have come
from the earth.</p>
<p>The woods are astir with more life than
a month ago. The squirrels are busy and
noisy, the chickadees throng about you,
sometimes singing their sweet brief song
of three notes; the nuthatches pipe their
tiny trumpets in full orchestra, and the
jays are clamoring their ordinary familiar
cries with occasional notes that you do
not often hear. One of these is a soft,
rapidly uttered cluck, the bird all the time
dancing with his body, but not with his
feet, to his own music, which is pleasant
to the ear, especially when you remember
it is a jay's music, which in the main cannot
be recommended. To-day, doubtless,
he is practicing the allurements of the
mating season.<span class="pagenum">[9]</span></p>
<p>You hear the loud cackle of a logcock
making the daily round of his preserves,
but you are not likely to get more than a
glimpse of his black plumage or a gleam
of his blood-red crest.</p>
<p>By rare luck you may hear the little
Acadian owl filing his invisible saw, but
you are likelier to see him and mistake
him for a clot of last year's leaves lodged
midway in their fall to earth.</p>
<p>The forest floor, barred and netted with
blue shadows of trunks and branches, is
strewn with dry twigs, evergreen leaves,
shards of bark, and shreds of tree-moss
and lichen, with heaps of cone scales,—the
squirrel's kitchen middens,—the
sign of a partridge's nightly roosting,
similar traces of the hare's moonlight
wanderings, and perhaps a fluff of his
white fur, showing where his journeys
have ended forever in a fox's maw.</p>
<p>Here and there the top of a cradle
knoll crops out of the snow with its
patches of green moss, sturdy upright
stems and leaves and red berries of wintergreen,
as fresh as when the first snow
covered them, a rusty trail of mayflower
leaves, and the flat-pressed purple lobes<span class="pagenum">[10]</span>
of squirrelcup with a downy heart of
buds full of the promise of spring.</p>
<p>The woods are filled with a certain
subtle scent quite distinct from the very
apparent resinous and balsamic aroma of
the evergreens, that eludes description,
but as a kind of freshness that tickles the
nose with longing for a more generous
waft of it. You can trace it to no source,
as you can the odors of the pine and the
hemlocks or the sweet fragrance of the
boiling sap, coming from the sugar-maker's
camp with a pungent mixture of
wood-smoke. You are also made aware
that the skunk has been abroad, that
reynard is somewhere to windward, and
by an undescribed, generally unrecognized,
pungency in the air that a gray
squirrel lives in your neighborhood. Yet
among all these more potent odors you
still discover this subtle exhalation, perhaps
of the earth filtered upward through
the snow, perhaps the first awakening
breath of all the deciduous trees.</p>
<p>Warmer shines the sun and warmer
blows the wind from southern seas and
southern lands. More and more the<span class="pagenum">[11]</span>
tawny earth comes in sight among puddles
of melted snow, which bring the mirrored
sky and its fleecy flocks of clouds,
with treetops turned topsy-turvy, down
into the bounds of fields. The brooks
are alive again and babbling noisily over
their pebbled beds, and the lake, hearing
them, groans and cries for deliverance
from its prison of ice.</p>
<p>On the marshes you may find the ice
shrunken from the shores and an intervening
strip of water where the muskrat
may see the sun and the stars again.
You hear the trumpets of the wild geese
and see the gray battalion riding northward
on the swift wind.</p>
<p>The sun and the south wind, which
perhaps bears some faint breath of stolen
fragrance from far-off violet banks, tempt
forth the bees, but they find no flowers
yet, not even a squirrelcup or willow catkin,
and can only make the most of the
fresh sawdust by the wood-pile and the
sappy ends of maple logs.</p>
<p>Down from the sky, whose livery he
wears and whose song he sings, comes
the heavenly carol of the bluebird; the<span class="pagenum">[12]</span>
song sparrow trills his cheery melody;
the first robin is announced to-day, and
we cry, "Lo, spring has come." But to-morrow
may come winter and longer
waiting.<span class="pagenum">[13]</span></p>
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