<h2><SPAN name="XXXV" id="XXXV"></SPAN>XXXV</h2>
<p class="caption">OCTOBER DAYS</p>
<p>Fields as green as when the summer
birds caroled above them, woods more
gorgeous with innumerable hues and
tints of ripening leaves than a blooming
parterre, are spread beneath the azure
sky, whose deepest color is reflected
with intenser blue in lake and stream.
In them against this color are set the
scarlet and gold of every tree upon their
brinks, the painted hills, the clear-cut
mountain peaks, all downward pointing
to the depths of this nether sky.</p>
<p>Overhead, thistledown and the silken
balloon of the milkweed float on their
zephyr-wafted course, silver motes
against the blue; and above them are
the black cohorts of crows in their straggling
retreat to softer climes. Now the
dark column moves steadily onward, now
veers in confusion from some suspected
or discovered danger, or pauses to assail<span class="pagenum">[169]</span>
with a harsh clangor some sworn enemy
of the sable brotherhood. Their gay-clad
smaller cousins, the jays, are for the
most part silently industrious among the
gold and bronze of the beeches, flitting
to and fro with flashes of blue as they
gather mast, but now and then finding
time to scold an intruder with an endless
variety of discordant outcry.</p>
<p>How sharp the dark shadows are cut
against the sunlit fields, and in their
gloom how brightly shine the first fallen
leaves and the starry bloom of the asters.
In cloudy days and even when rain is
falling the depths of the woods are not
dark, for the bright foliage seems to
give forth light and casts no shadows
beneath the lowering sky.</p>
<p>The scarlet maples burn, the golden
leaves of poplar and birch shine through
the misty veil, and the deep purple of
the ash glows as if it held a smouldering
fire that the first breeze might fan
into a flame, and through all this luminous
leafage one may trace branch and
twig as a wick in a candle flame. Only
the evergreens are dark as when they
bear their steadfast green in the desolation<span class="pagenum">[170]</span>
of winter, and only they brood
shadows.</p>
<p>In such weather the woodland air is
laden with the light burden of odor,
the faintly pungent aroma of the ripened
leaves, more subtle than the scent of
pine or fir, yet as apparent to the nostrils,
as delightful and more rare, for in
the round of the year its days are few,
while in summer sunshine and winter
wind, in springtime shower and autumnal
frost, pine, spruce, balsam, hemlock, and
cedar distill their perfume and lavish it
on the breeze or gale of every season.</p>
<p>Out of the marshes, now changing
their universal green to brown and
bronze and gold, floats a finer odor than
their common reek of ooze and sodden
weeds—a spicy tang of frost-ripened
flags and the fainter breath of the landward
border of ferns; and with these
also is mingled the subtle pungency of
the woodlands, where the pepperidge is
burning out in a blaze of scarlet, and the
yellow flame of the poplars flickers in the
lightest breeze.</p>
<p>The air is of a temper neither too hot
nor too cold, and in what is now rather<span class="pagenum">[171]</span>
the good gay wood than green wood,
there are no longer pestering insects to
worry the flesh and trouble the spirit.
The flies bask in half torpid indolence,
the tormenting whine of the mosquito is
heard no more. Of insect life one hears
little but the mellow drone of the bumblebee,
the noontide chirp of the cricket,
and the husky rustle of the dragonfly's
gauzy wing.</p>
<p>Unwise are the tent-dwellers who have
folded their canvas and departed to the
shelter of more stable roof-trees, for these
are days that should be made the most
of, days that have brought the perfected
ripeness of the year and display it in the
fullness of its glory.<span class="pagenum">[172]</span></p>
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