<h2><SPAN name="IV" id="IV"></SPAN>IV</h2>
<p class="caption">THE CROW</p>
<p>The robin's impatient yelp not yet attuned
to happy song, the song sparrow's
trill, the bluebird's serene melody, do
not herald the coming of spring, but attend
its vanguard. These blithe musicians
accompany the soft air that bares
the fields, empurples the buds, and fans
the bloom of the first squirrelcups and
sets the hyla's shrill chime a-ringing.</p>
<p>Preceding these, while the fields are
yet an unbroken whiteness and the coping
of the drifts maintain the fantastic
grace of their storm-built shapes, before
a recognized waft of spring is felt or the
voice of a freed stream is heard, comes
that sable pursuivant, the crow, fighting
his way against the fierce north wind,
tossed alow and aloft, buffeted to this
side and that, yet staggering bravely onward,
and sounding his trumpet in the
face of his raging antagonist, and far in<span class="pagenum">[18]</span>
advance of its banners, proclaiming
spring.</p>
<p>It is the first audible promise of the
longed-for season, and it heartens us,
though there be weary days of waiting
for its fulfillment, while the bold herald
is beset by storm and pinched with hunger
as he holds his outpost and gleans
his scant rations in the winter-desolated
land.</p>
<p>He finds some friendliness in nature
even now. Though her forces assail him
with relentless fury, she gives him here
the shelter of her evergreen tents, in
windless depths of woodland; bares for
him there a rood of sward or stubble
whereon to find some crumb of comfort;
leaves for him ungathered apples on the
naked boughs, and on the unpruned
tangles of vines wild grapes,—poor
raisins of the frost,—the remnants of
autumnal feasts of the robins and partridges.</p>
<p>Thankful now for such meagre fare
and eager for the fullness of disgusting
repasts, in the bounty of other seasons,
he becomes an epicure whom only the
choicest food will satisfy. He has the<span class="pagenum">[19]</span>
pick of the fattest grubs; he makes
stealthy levies on the earliest robins'
nests; and from some lofty lookout or
aerial scout watches the farmer plant
the corn and awaits its sprouting into
the dainty tidbits, a fondness for whose
sweetness is his overmastering weakness.
For this he braves the terrible scarecrow
and the dread mystery of the cornfield's
lined boundary, for this risks life and
forfeits the good name that his better
deeds might give him. If he would not
be tempted from grubs and carrion, what
a worthy bird he might be accounted.
In what good if humble repute might he
live, how lamented, die. O Appetite!
thou base belly-denned demon, for what
sins of birds and men art thou accountable!</p>
<p>In the springtide days, the crow turns
aside from theft and robbery to the
softer game of love, whereunto you hear
the harsh voice attuned in cluttering
notes. After the wooing the pair begin
house building and keeping.</p>
<p>It is the rudest and clumsiest of all
bird architecture that has become the
centre of their cares—such a jumble of<span class="pagenum">[20]</span>
sticks and twigs as chance might pile on
its forked foundations; but woe betide
the hawk who ventures near, or owl who
dares to sound his hollow trumpet in
the sacred precincts. At the first alarm
signal, as suddenly and mysteriously as
Robin Hood's merry men appeared at
the winding of his horn, the black clansmen
rally from every quarter of the
greenwood, to assail the intruder and
force him to ignominious retreat.</p>
<p>When at last the young crows, having
clad their uncouth nakedness with full
sable raiment, are abroad in the world,
they, with unwary foolhardiness and incessant
querulous cries of hunger or
alarm, are still a constant source of anxiety
to parents and kindred. But in
the late summer, when the youngsters
have come to months of discretion and
the elders are freed from the bondage
of their care, a long holiday begins for
all the tribe. The corn has long since
ceased to tempt them, and the persecution
of man has abated. The shorn
meadows and the close-cropped pastures
swarm with grasshoppers, and field and
forest offer their abundant fruits.<span class="pagenum">[21]</span></p>
<p>Careless and uncared for, what happy
lives they lead, sauntering on sagging
wing through the sunshine from chosen
field to chosen wood, and at nightfall
encamping in the fragrant tents of the
pines.</p>
<p>At last the gay banners of autumn
signal departure, and the gathered clans
file away in straggling columns, flecking
the blue sky with pulsating dots of blackness,
the green earth with wavering
shadows. Sadly we watch the retreat of
the sable cohorts, whose desertion leaves
our northern homes to the desolation of
winter.<span class="pagenum">[22]</span></p>
<hr class="chapter">
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />