<h2><SPAN name="XX" id="XX"></SPAN>XX</h2>
<p class="caption">A GENTLE SPORTSMAN</p>
<p>All the skill of woodcraft that goes
to the making of the successful hunter
with the gun, must be possessed by him
who hunts his game with the camera.
His must be the stealthy, panther-like
tread that breaks no twig nor rustles the
fallen leaves. His the eye that reads
at a glance the signs that to the ordinary
sight are a blank or at most are an
untranslatable enigma. His a patience
that counts time as nothing when measured
with the object sought. When by
the use and practice of these, he has
drawn within a closer range of his timid
game than his brother of the gun need
attain, he pulls trigger of a weapon that
destroys not, but preserves its unharmed
quarry in the very counterfeit of life and
motion. The wild world is not made
the poorer by one life for his shot, nor<span class="pagenum">[89]</span>
nature's peace disturbed, nor her nicely
adjusted balance jarred.</p>
<p>He bears home his game, wearing
still its pretty ways of life in the midst
of its loved surroundings, the swaying
hemlock bough where the grouse perched,
the bending ferns about the deer's couch,
the dew-beaded sedges where the woodcock
skulks in the shadows of the alders,
the lichened trunks and dim vistas of
primeval woods, the sheen of voiceless
waterfalls, the flash of sunlit waves that
never break.</p>
<p>His trophies the moth may not assail.
His game touches a finer sense
than the palate possesses, satisfies a nobler
appetite than the stomach's craving,
and furnishes forth a feast that, ever
spread, ever invites, and never palls upon
the taste.</p>
<p>Moreover, this gentlest of sportsmen
is hampered by no restrictions of close
time, nor confronted by penalties of
trespass. All seasons are open for his
bloodless forays, all woods and waters
free to his harmless weapon.</p>
<p>Neither is he trammeled by any nice
distinctions as to what may or may not<span class="pagenum">[90]</span>
be considered game. Everything counts
in his score. The eagle on his craggy
perch, the high-hole on his hollow tree,
are as legitimate game for him as the
deer and grouse. All things beautiful
and wild and picturesque are his, yet he
kills them not, but makes them a living
and enduring joy, to himself and all who
behold them.<span class="pagenum">[91]</span></p>
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