<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">THE STORY OF THE SUMMER YELLOWBIRD</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">The little bird sits at his door in the sun,<br/></span>
<span class="i2">Atilt like a blossom among the leaves,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And lets his illumined being o'errun<br/></span>
<span class="i2">With the deluge of summer it receives.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">His mate feels the eggs beneath her wings,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And the heart in her dumb breast flutters and sings—<br/></span>
<span class="i0">He sings to the wide world, and she to her nest;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">In the nice ear of Nature, which song is the best?<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><span class="smcap">James Russell Lowell.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Here is a legend of the summer yellowbird. Let who
will believe or disbelieve. They will think of it as often as
they see the yellow beauty.</p>
<p>Once on a time, when Mother Nature was very lavish of
her gold, she forgot to be thrifty and took to spreading it
everywhere. She thought she had enough to make the whole
world yellow, this being her favorite color; but she soon collected
her wits, and reasoned that if everything were yellow
there would be nothing left for contrast. So she quit spreading
it on, and took to tossing it about in great glee, not caring
where it went, so it was in dashes and dots and streaks and
lumps, here and there.</p>
<p>She threw whole handfuls on the flowers, and butterflies,
and little worms, and toadstools, and grass roots, and up in
the sky at sunset, and against mountain peaks. The mountains
laughed at this sudden whim of Mother Nature, opening
their mouths wide, and got whole apronfuls tossed right
down their throats.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[ 84 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>After the ocean bottoms had been peppered with the gold,
the flowers came along for their share; the buttercups and
dandelions, and goldenrod and sunflowers and jonquils, and
hosts of others.</p>
<p>Last came the orioles and finches and bobolinks, and many
others, each in turn getting a spray or a dash or a grain of
the yellow, and went away singing about it.</p>
<p>But certain very plain little birds arrived later, when the
gold was almost gone, and asked Nature to give them "just
a little." Now she had but a handful left. Seeing that there
wasn't enough to go around if each had a little, the lady birds
said, "Give all you have left to our mates. We do not care
for gold. We will follow them about like shadows and look
well to the nesting."</p>
<p>Then Nature smiled on the unselfish lady birds, and tossed
all she had left of the yellow stuff straight at the singers who
stood before her, each behind the other in a straight row,
thinking she would give it to them in bits. But Nature threw
it at them with all her might, laughing.</p>
<p>Of course the bird in front got the biggest splash, and
then it scattered down the line, until the last few had only a
dust or two. But they all began to warble, every one, each
so happy that he had a little gold.</p>
<p>When Nature saw that the bird in the front had more than
his share, she looked very keenly in his face and said: "My
son, you must go everywhere, all over the cities and towns
and country and forests, wherever human hearts are sad and
eyes are dim with tears. And you must warble all about
summer and good times when the clouds are dark, and you
must be fond of houses where people dwell, and fields and
playgrounds and sheep, and keep company with sorrow, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[ 85 ]</SPAN></span>
make the earth glad you had so much gold about you.
And you can stay out in the rain, and make believe the sun
shines when it doesn't, just to make people happier. Shoo!
little summer yellowbird, that is your name."</p>
<p>And the bird has been true to his happy mission ever
since, going about here and there and everywhere in our country,
taking his gold with him, and making buttercups and
dandelions grow on fir-trees and goldenrod quiver in the
glens before even the spring crocuses are out. In the green
of the trees he looks like a single nugget, and when he runs
up and down a branch it seems as if somebody had spilled
liquid gold above, and it was running zigzag in and out of the
bark. When he flies in the blue sky he seems like a visible
laugh, for nobody can see the dash he makes and not smile.
Many a breaking heart has been made less sad by the sight
of him, and though he is not much of a singer, as singing
goes, the few notes he has are cheery. Better to speak a few
glad words than be an orator and scold.</p>
<p>And the yellow summer bird couldn't scold if he tried.
The more he warbles gladness, the more the habit grows. In
those nooks where the yellow warbler does his dress act, or
molts, the children catch the feathers as they fall from his
night perch, or lie in the ferns and toss them about for fun,
to see them glint in the sunshine. Little girls gather them
for doll hats, and make startling fashions for winter head-dresses.</p>
<p>All right, little girls; take the feathers as they are tossed
to you by the merry warbler, without a single twinge of conscience.
They are yours because they are given you. You
didn't steal them nor hire a big boy to bring them to you.
Should the yellow warbler molt a pair of wings by mistake,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[ 86 ]</SPAN></span>
and you found them lying in a bush some bright autumn
morning, you might have them for your doll's hat. You
might even put them on your own little head.</p>
<p>But to rob a bird of its gold, to tear out a wing or a
feather to flaunt on your own pitiless head or the cracked
china head of your doll—that would be a different thing.</p>
<p>There is a story afloat which we are tempted to tell,
though it isn't a very happy one, and is not believed by
everybody. It especially concerns girls and some women.</p>
<p>It has been a well-known fact for centuries that birds do
hold conventions for the supposed purpose of talking over
matters that concern themselves.</p>
<p>Not long ago, some time in the century that has just
passed, there was a general convention of American birds
held in the backwoods of the north. There were representatives
from all the bird families that wear bright feathers.
The purpose of the assembly was for discussion of different
points in fashion, more particularly of the head-dress of
women.</p>
<p>Now, at this point in the story, everybody knows exactly
the drift of the "moral" which is as sure to come at the end
as the yellowbird is sure to come with the daffodils. So it's
of no use to go on with the story, since the moral is what
story-tellers usually aim at from start to finish. Listen to the
summer yellowbird all next season, and when he gives the
word, let everybody, big and little, who loves to wear bird
feathers and wings, make a scramble for the backwoods, and
you may hear the upshot of the convention for yourself.
In the mean time, should crows and magpies and eagles and
vultures, and other birds of strong beak and furious temper,
steal down on homes and peck off the scalps of girls and
women as they lie in their happy beds, let no one be alarmed.
Possibly there has been a bird convention, and the big birds
of sharp claw and strong beak are but doing as they are
directed—and it is "the fashion" for them to do it, so they
are quite excusable.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 507px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/yellow-warbler.png" width-obs="507" height-obs="681" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">SUMMER YELLOW BIRD.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[ 87 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But if we go on with legends and imagined bird conventions,
we shall never get to the bird itself.</p>
<p>The bird itself is the summer yellowbird, the dear, delightful
yellow warbler, whose very picture you see before you;
the restless, much-traveled bird, the bird who may not look
exactly like himself when his coat is worn and tumbled, but
who comes by a new, fresh one when it is most sorely
needed. More dull of color is his mate, who is just behind
himself, somewhere in the tree out of range of the camera.
The two are never far apart in family times; where one flies
there goes the other, happy as clams—if clams ever are very
happy, which we doubt—nesting as they do deep down in the
wet sand, and never seeing a flower or a ripe peach or a raspberry
all their lives. However, it is supposed the clam knows
something akin to happiness, for he is always where he wants
to be, save when he falls into the pot, and here is where we
will leave him.</p>
<p>Well, the yellow warbler is at home all over North
America, migrating from place to place, sometimes in twos
and threes, sometimes in flocks; at times journeying straight
on, and again stopping in every treetop for refreshments sure
to be ready. Sometimes the birds travel by night, coming
in on the morning train like any travelers, hungry for breakfast,
and the first we know of their arrival is a quaint little
plea for something to eat. Not a highly melodious note that,
but curious and pleasing.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[ 88 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>We always know summer is coming straight away when
we see the warbler, just as we know winter is here by the
first snowflake. And as soon as they arrive nesting begins.
For that very purpose they come, of course. As to the nests,
they are very beautiful. The one in the picture must have
been built deep in the woods, where grasses and dried leaf
tatters were plenty.</p>
<p>But there is no set pattern to go by, when nests are made.
That is, there is no particular building material allowed, as
with the swallows and some others. The yellow warbler loves
best to use things that mat together readily, so the nest cup
will be compact and thick, like a piece of felt cloth—so different
from the nest of the grosbeak, transparent and open, like
basketwork.</p>
<p>To get this cloth-like substance, the birds visit the sweet-fern
stalks of the pasture sides, pulling off the woolly furze bit
by bit, until a beakful is gathered. Then they make a trip
to the brooks, especially in early spring, where they wake up
the catkins on the pussy-willows and get loads of the soft fur.
Oh, the secrets the pussy-willows know, about bird and bat
and butterfly cocoon, and other winged people that frolic in
their shadows! They could tell you exactly how many beakfuls
of pussy fur it takes to weave a crib blanket for a yellow
warbler's nest. Whole nests are made of it sometimes; for
the warbler loves to gather one particular kind of material for
a nest if sh& comes across enough of it in one spot. That is
why they build so rapidly, always getting it done in a hurry.
They love big loads of anything, and the male shows his mate
where she can find it with the least trouble. In places where
sheep pasture, rubbing against trees and catching their sides
into thorns and sticks at every turn, the yellowbird gathers
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[ 89 ]</SPAN></span>
the wool. She likes this particularly, as it is light and clings
to itself, and she can carry large quantities at one trip.</p>
<p>The happy boy or girl who has a pasture near by home is
rich. There is nothing like a pasture to study nature in,
especially birds. A wood lot with trees of all sizes in it, a
cranberry bog, a huckleberry patch, a maple grove, a sweet-fern
corner, with snake vines running at random among young
brakes—ah! this is the spot of all the world for nature-lovers
and birds. One can part the bushes and find a warbler's nest
most anywhere. One can peer up into the treetops and find
another. In the treetops the nest is fastened securely, be it
where the winds have a habit of blowing through their fingers
when it isn't necessary. But birds and winds are fair play-fellows
and seldom interfere with one another.</p>
<p>Here, in southern California, we have little wind, if any,
in the days of the summer yellowbird. So nests are often
set in a crotch without a bit of fastening.</p>
<p>Two years ago a pair came to the house grounds, the first
we had seen so near. We wondered what they would nest
with first, knowing their disposition to take the material close
at hand. We knew they strip the down from the backs of
the sycamores in the mountain cañons, and gather bits of
wool fiber from tree trunks, or ravel lint from late weed
stems in the arroyos. So we anticipated and shook loose
cotton-batting in a bush. No sooner did father yellowbird
spy the fluffy, white stuff than he brought madam, and she
was delighted. This cotton could be pulled by beakfuls, and
an afternoon or two would make the entire nest.</p>
<p>And they used it, not getting another thing save some
gray hairs from a lady's head, which in combing had escaped,
and were saved on purpose for the birds.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[ 90 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The nest was placed in the crotch of a pepper-tree, just
out of reach of tiptoe inquirers. Just one pinch of cotton
above another until the cup was deep and true to the shaping
of the mother's breast, she turning round and round after the
manner of nest-builders. Through the layers ran separate
hairs which held the cotton in shape.</p>
<p>It was a beautiful thing, that nest, even after it had served
its purpose, and we took it down when the birds had flown.
That was a mistake of ours. It was before we had come to
know it is better to leave old nests undisturbed. Many birds
love to return the coming season and repair last year's structures.</p>
<p>When the following summer came, and the yellowbirds
returned from their winter in Mexico, they went straight to
the same old tree. They crept up and down the trunk, peering
into all the crotches, and criticising every place where a
nest might have been. Perhaps a single speck of the cotton
had 'remained and served for "a pointer"; anyway, the birds
located the exact spot and went to work without more ado.</p>
<p>Exactly as though they remembered, they went also to
the supply counter where we had placed more cotton in
advance of their coming, and with it they built exactly the
same white nest in the very crotch of last year's happy history.</p>
<p>It was a pretty sight to see the mother take the cotton.
It looked sparklingly white against her breast and dripping
from her beak. And all the time she was arranging it in the
nest to suit her experienced mind, her mate sang, warbling
his sympathy, darting through the leaves, and running up and
down the branches. This running up and down the boughs,
so like their cousins, the creepers, makes this bird look graceful
of form and motion, as indeed he is, anywhere and at
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[ 91 ]</SPAN></span>
anything he does. On this account he is often called the gem-bird,
his brilliant grace suggesting some precious and coveted
stone.</p>
<p>These warblers of ours did not feign lameness, if we came
near the nest, as some of the family are said to do. From
daily companionship they came to know and trust us. Had
the nest been a little lower we should have succeeded in taming
them completely, as we have many of the wild birds at
nesting-time.</p>
<p>We have left the nest where it is this fall, hoping the birds
will return and claim it another year. It being of cotton,
however, and having no threads to bind it in the crotch, we
think the winter storms will wreck it.</p>
<p>It has been claimed by good authority that the cow-bird
loves to deposit her eggs in the yellow warbler's nest. But
this is of little avail to the cow-bird's trick, for Madam
Warbler sees the point and the egg at a glance. She often
builds above the intruder, imprisoning the alien egg, and so
leaves it to its fate. A single bird is said to have built above
the cow-bird's egg three times in succession, as the intruder
persisted, until there were four floors to the nest, on the last
of which the mother succeeded in laying her own eggs. If
she becomes discouraged by the persistency of her guilty
neighbor, she will leave the spot sometimes and search for
another in which to carry on her own affairs in peace.</p>
<p>Of the seventy-five or more species of this warbler family
said to occur in the United States, all resemble each other in
points enough to mark them as warblers. All are insect-eaters.
Some are called worm-eaters, others bug-eaters.
They despise a vegetable diet. On account of their sharp
appetite for grubs and larvæ, the warblers are the friends of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[ 92 ]</SPAN></span>
all who live by the growth of green things and the ripening
of fruits and grains. With few exceptions all the birds are
small and very beautiful. Theirs is the second largest family
among our birds, ranking next to the sparrows.</p>
<p>Some of the warblers live near streams, playing boat on
floating driftwood, hunting for insects in the decaying timbers,
running up and down half-submerged logs atilt on the
shore, after spiders and water-beetles.</p>
<p>If they are missed we may be sure they will return in their
own good time, bringing their warble with them. They may
only stay long enough for breakfast or dinner, taking advantage
of their stop-over tickets, like any travelers of note.
Perhaps the strong, courageous, singing males of the party of
travelers come in advance of the females and young, as if to
see that the country is ready and at peace. Nothing can be
said of them more beautiful and fitting than this quotation
from Elliott Coues:</p>
<p>"With tireless industry do the warblers defend the human
race. They visit the orchard when the apple and pear, the
peach, plum, and cherry, are in bloom, seeming to revel
among the sweet-scented blossoms, but never faltering in
their good work. They peer into crevices of the bark, and
explore the very heart of the buds, to detect, drag forth, and
destroy those tiny creatures which prey upon the hopes of the
fruit-grower, and which, if undisturbed, would bring all his
care to naught. Some warblers flit incessantly in the tops of
the tallest trees, others hug close to the scored trunks and
gnarled boughs of the forest kings; some peep from the
thickets and shrubbery that deck the watercourses, playing
at hide-and-seek; others, more humble still, descend to the
ground, where they glide with pretty mincing steps and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[ 93 ]</SPAN></span>
affected turning of the head this way and that, their delicate
flesh-tinted feet just stirring the layer of withered leaves with
which a past season carpeted the sod. We may see warblers
everywhere in their season and find them a continual surprise."</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Sweet and true are the notes of his song:<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Sweet, and yet always full and strong;<br/></span>
<span class="i1">True, and yet they are never sad.<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Serene with that peace that maketh glad;<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Life! Life! Life!<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Oh, what a blessing is life!<br/></span>
<span class="i16">Life is glad."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[ 94 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />