<h2><SPAN name="IX" id="IX"></SPAN>IX</h2>
<p class="caption">SPRING SHOOTING</p>
<p>The Ram makes way for the Bull;
March goes out and April comes in with
sunshine and showers, smiles and tears.
The sportsman has his gun in hand
again with deadly purpose, as the angler
his rod and tackle with another intention
than mere overhauling and putting
to rights. The smiles of April are for
them.</p>
<p>The geese come wedging their way
northward; the ducks awaken the silent
marshes with the whistle of their pinions;
the snipe come in pairs and wisps
to the thawing bogs—all on their way
to breeding grounds and summer homes.
The tears of April are for them. Wherever
they stop for a day's or an hour's
rest, and a little food to strengthen and
hearten them for their long journey, the
deadly, frightful gun awaits to kill, maim,
or terrify, more merciless than all the<span class="pagenum">[41]</span>
ills that nature inflicts in her unkindest
moods.</p>
<p>Year after year men go on making
laws and crying for more, to protect
these fowl in summer, but in spring,
when as much as ever they need protection,
the hand of man is ruthlessly
against them.</p>
<p>When you made that splendid shot
last night in the latest gloaming that
would show you the sight of your gun,
and cut down that ancient goose, tougher
than the leather of your gun-case, and
almost as edible, of how many well-grown
young geese of next November did you
cheat yourself, or some one else of the
brotherhood?</p>
<p>When from the puddle, where they
were bathing their tired wings, sipping
the nectar of muddy water, and nibbling
the budding leaves of water weeds, you
started that pair of ducks yesterday, and
were so proud of tumbling them down
right and left, you killed many more
than you saw then; many that you
might have seen next fall.</p>
<p>When the sun was shining down so
warm upon the steaming earth that the<span class="pagenum">[42]</span>
robins and bluebirds sang May songs,
those were very good shots you made,
killing ten snipe straight and clean, and—they
were very bad shots. For in
November the ten might have been four
times ten fat and lusty, lazy fellows,
boring the oozy margins of these same
pools where the frogs are croaking and
the toads are singing to-day.</p>
<p>"Well, it's a long time to wait from
November till the earth ripens and
browns to autumn again. Life is short
and shooting days are few at most. Let
us shoot our goose while we may, though
she would lay a golden egg by and by."</p>
<p>Farmers do not kill their breeding
ewes in March, nor butcher cows that
are to calve in a month; it does not pay.
Why should sportsmen be less provident
of the stock they prize so dearly; stock
that has so few care-takers, so many
enemies? Certainly, it does not pay in
the long run.<span class="pagenum">[43]</span></p>
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