<h2><SPAN name="VI" id="VI"></SPAN>VI</h2>
<p class="caption">APRIL DAYS</p>
<p>At last there is full and complete assurance
of spring, in spite of the baldness
of the woods, the barrenness of
the fields, bleak with sodden furrows of
last year's ploughing, or pallidly tawny
with bleached grass, and untidy with the
jetsam of winter storms and the wide
strewn litter of farms in months of foddering
and wood-hauling.</p>
<p>There is full assurance of spring in
such incongruities as a phœbe a-perch
on a brown mullein stalk in the midst of
grimy snow banks, and therefrom swooping
in airy loops of flight upon the flies
that buzz across this begrimed remnant
of winter's ermine, and of squirrelcups
flaunting bloom and fragrance in the face
of an ice cascade, which, with all its glitter
gone, hangs in dull whiteness down
the ledges, greening the moss with the
moisture of its wasting sheet of pearl.<span class="pagenum">[28]</span></p>
<p>The woodchuck and chipmunk have
got on top of the world again. You
hear the half querulous, half chuckling
whistle of the one, the full-mouthed persistent
cluck of the other, voicing recognition
of the season.</p>
<p>The song of the brooks has abated
something of its first triumphant swell,
and is often overborne now by the jubilant
chorus of the birds, the jangled,
liquid gurgle and raucous grating of the
blackbirds, the robin's joyous song with
its frequent breaks, as if the thronging
notes outran utterance, the too brief
sweetness of the meadowlark's whistle,
the bluebird's carol, the cheery call of
the phœbe, the trill of the song sparrow,
and above them all the triumph of the
hawk in its regained possessions of northern
sky and earth.</p>
<p>The woods throb with the muffled
beat of the partridge's drum and the
sharp tattoo of the woodpecker, and are
filled again with the sounds of insect
life, the spasmodic hum of flies, the
droning monotone of bees busy among
the catkins and squirrelcups, and you
may see a butterfly, wavering among the<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>
gray trees, soon to come to the end of
his life, brief at its longest, drowned in
the seductive sweets of a sap bucket.</p>
<p>The squirrels are chattering over the
wine of the maple branches they have
broached, in merrier mood than the
hare, who limps over the matted leaves
in the raggedness of shifting raiment,
fitting himself to a new inconspicuousness.</p>
<p>We shall not find it unpleasant nor
unprofitable to take to the woods now,
for we may be sure that they are pleasanter
than the untidy fields. Where
nature has her own way with herself, she
makes her garb seemly even now, after
all the tousling and rents she gave it in
her angry winter moods. The scraps of
moss, bark, and twigs with which the
last surface of the snow was obtrusively
littered lie now unnoticed on the flat-pressed
leaves, an umber carpet dotted
here with flecks of moss, there sprigged
with fronds of evergreen fern, purple
leaves of squirrelcups, with their downy
buds and first blossoms. Between banks
so clad the brook babbles as joyously as
amid all the bloom and leafage of June,<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
and catches a brighter gleam from the
unobstructed sunbeams. So befittingly
are the trees arrayed in graceful tracery
of spray and beads of purpling buds,
that their seemly nakedness is as beautiful
as attire of summer's greenness
or autumn's gorgeousness could make
them.</p>
<p>Never sweeter than now, after the
long silence of winter, do the birds'
songs sound, and never in all the round
of the year is there a better time to see
them than when the gray haze of the
branches is the only hiding for their gay
wedding garments.</p>
<p>If you would try your skill at still-hunting,
follow up that muffled roll that
throbs through the woods, and if you
discover the ruffed grouse strutting upon
his favorite log, and undiscovered by
him can watch his proud performance,
you will have done something better
worth boasting of than bringing him to
earth from his hurtling flight.</p>
<p>Out of the distant fields come, sweet
and faint, the call of the meadowlark
and the gurgle of the blackbirds that
throng the brookside elms. From high<span class="pagenum">[31]</span>
overhead come down the clarion note of
the goose, the sibilant beat of the wild
ducks' wings, the bleat of the snipe and
the plover's cry, each making his way to
northern breeding grounds. Are you not
glad they are going as safely as their uncaught
shadows that sweep swiftly across
the shadowy meshes of the forest floor?
Are you not content to see what you see,
hear what you hear, and kill nothing but
time?</p>
<p>Verily, you shall have a clearer conscience
than if you were disturbing the
voice of nature with the discordant uproar
of your gun, and marring the fresh
odors of spring with the fumes of villainous
saltpetre.</p>
<p>In the open marshes the lodges of the
muskrats have gone adrift in the floods;
but the unhoused inmates count this a
light misfortune, since they may voyage
again with heads above water, and go
mate-seeking and food-gathering in sunshine
and starlight, undimmed by roof
of ice. As you see them cutting the
smooth surface with long, swift, arrowy
wakes, coasting the low shore in quest of
brown sweethearts and wives, whimpering<span class="pagenum">[32]</span>
their plaintive call, you can hardly
imagine the clumsy body between that
grim head and rudder-like tail capable
of such graceful motion.</p>
<p>The painted wood drake swims above
the submerged tree roots; a pair of dusky
ducks splash to flight, with a raucous
clamor, out of a sedgy cove at your approach;
the thronging blackbirds shower
liquid melody and hail of discord from
the purple-budded maples above you.
All around, from the drift of floating and
stranded water weeds, arises the dry,
crackling croak of frogs, and from sunny
pools the vibrant trill of toads.</p>
<p>From afar come the watery boom of a
bittern, the song of a trapper and the
hollow clang of his setting pole dropping
athwart the gunwales of his craft, the
distant roar of a gun and the echoes
rebounding from shore to shore.</p>
<p>The grateful odor of the warming
earth comes to your nostrils; to your
ears, from every side, the sounds of
spring; and yet you listen for fuller confirmation
of its presence in the long-drawn
wail of the plover and the rollicking
melody of the bobolink.<span class="pagenum">[33]</span></p>
<hr class="chapter">
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />