<h2 id="c13">APRIL BIRDS AND FLOWERS OF THE MISSISSIPPI GULF COAST.</h2>
<p>Fickle April, with its sullen showers
and teasing, wayward moods, its alternate
days of warm sunshine and chilling
rain, still leaves us who live north of the
fortieth parallel in doubt whether summer
really intends to come or not. Not
so on the gulf coast; langorous breezes
incline one to take life easy, the sun
high overhead has the true June fervor,
and, if further evidence is needed to convince
us, ripening strawberries and
blooming roses tell us that summer is
here. Gardens filled with huge, flaming
amaryllis, fragrant calycanthus and
a thousand and one shrubs strange to the
northern eye, greet us in every yard. In
front of the houses and along the streets,
their purple fragrance welcoming every
newcomer, stand the China trees, the
haunt of busy bees and their indefatigable
pursuer the kingbird, or bee martin.</p>
<p>In the lowlands a short distance back
from the beach, the azaleas (Azalea nudiflora)
are just dropping the last of their
pink bloom, a bouquet thrown at the feet
of all-conquering summer. Here and
there in these jungles of yupon, bay, buttonwood,
etc., appears a shrub clad in a
filmy white mist. If this be the season
for weddings, it must be that this is the
bride that greets our eyes. A delicately
beautiful bride she is, with arms that
toss in the slightest breeze and now and
then coyly shove aside the cloudy veil to
take a farewell glimpse at the world she
leaves.</p>
<p>The natives do not take this view of
this shrub (Chionanthus virginicus).
They have dubbed it “grand-daddy-gray-beard.”
Usually popular names have
much to justify them, but in the instance
just mentioned, and that of the brilliant
red flower which gazes at us from the
underbrush, they are suggestive of African
superstition rather than Saxon sentiment.
The melancholy local fancy sees
in these flaming orbs only the power of
evil, hence the name “Devil’s eye.” If
I could be assured that the devil’s eye is
really as beautiful and kind in its expression
as its floral representative I
would be willing, like Emerson, to call
its possessor “the dear old devil.”</p>
<p>Let us go back to the beach and stroll
along the shell road, which parallels the
shore all the way from Gulfport to Biloxi.
Perhaps the glare of the white
road is not pleasant to the eyes, but the
deep green of live oak and long leafed
pine is restful, the mingled fragrance of
the salt breeze of the gulf, the resiny
odor of the pine and the blossoming wisteria
charm the senses and lull us into
rapturous content. Only a few of the
trees and shrubs which border the highway
are of the kinds familiar to observers
in Ohio and Illinois. Now and then
a water oak or a sweet gum appears;
but otherwise in the cypress, pine or
live oak of the larger growth, or in the
palmetto, Spanish dagger and rattan
vine of the undergrowth, the eye looks
in vain for old acquaintances.</p>
<p>The live oak certainly has individuality.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
Shorter and more spreading in
its habit of growth than most of its kind,
its limbs are gnarled and knotty, strong
and muscular with its wrestling with
the hurricanes that sweep the bosom of
the gulf. It loves the white sand just a
few feet above high tide, where it stands
as a protector for the weaker growth between
the tossing waters and the great
pine forest. As is the case with human
beings, this vigorous conflict with its
surroundings does it good; for no place
in the South that I have been have I
found the live oaks as plentiful or as
vigorous as on this strip of barren sand.</p>
<p>The birds know a good thing when
they see it; hence they are well represented
here at this season of the year.
Our old acquaintance of the Maumee
Valley, the Maryland yellow throat,
with his cunning black mask and his
cheerful if not wholly musical “Wichety,
wichety, wichety,” greets us from a
perch on a rattan vine, but on our nearer
approach dives down into the palmettos,
where only the noise made by his tiny
feet indicates his whereabouts. Two
other warblers, the hooded and the redstart,
a little belated, perhaps, have
stopped here on their way north to the
old nesting grounds on the Kankakee
and the Hudson. The most numerous as
well as the most conspicuous element of
the bird population is the summer tanager,
whose intensely scarlet coat adds a
touch of vivid color very grateful to the
eye. Nearly every oak contains one of
these redcoats, whistling a solo for our
benefit or discussing the details of housekeeping
with his more sober coated little
wife.</p>
<p>Almost as numerous as the tanagers,
and even more interesting, are the orchard
orioles. Their song has more of
the fire and ring of true music, a compensation
probably for the comparative
dullness of their garb. In nest building
the orchard oriole is an artist. I remember
one day finding in a small water oak
a nest so carefully woven out of excelsior
as to make me think the bird could
knit if he would only turn his talent in
that direction. Where twine and excelsior
are not easily obtained, no doubt
they utilize the long streamers of Spanish
moss which hang from half the trees
in the gulf country.</p>
<p>Flying about in the gardens, as tame
as robins on northern lawns, or sharing
the live oaks with the tanagers and orioles,
are a multitude of mocking birds.
There must be something in Maurice
Thompson’s suggestion in “By Ways
and Bird Notes” that along this coast
the mocking birds find those berries and
seeds best adapted to develop a high degree
of musical ability and artistic expression,
for these birds certainly surpass
their brethren found a few hundred
miles to the north.</p>
<p>Besides these land birds there are a
multitude of sea birds more conspicuous
on account of noise and numbers than
bright coloring or attractive ways. The
herring gull is very plentiful on this
coast, wherever sand flats and shallow
water offer attractive feeding grounds.
It is a pleasant sight to see a dozen of
these pearl gray creatures turning and
wheeling, as free and easy as the wind.
Just in shore from where the gulls are
flying are some fish crows, a thoughtless,
noisy set, contented to feast on the crabs
and stray minnows which have eluded
the watchful gulls. At the edge of the
water, just where the wavelets of the
receding tide curl and swish before turning
back to join their fellows, a couple
of sandpipers are running a race, now
and then stopping to pick up some tidbit
left by the water. A shadow flits along
the sand. We look up. A great fish
hawk or osprey soars seaward. He sails
past the noisy crows, past the graceful
gulls and steers for Ship Island, that
line of darker haze where sky and ocean
meet. Truly, April is the season to visit
this coast.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">James Stephen Compton.</span></span></p>
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