<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">THE BLUEBIRD</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">He flits through the orchard, he visits each tree.<br/></span>
<span class="i2">The red-flowering peach, and the apple's sweet blossoms;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">He snaps up destroyers wherever they be.<br/></span>
<span class="i2">And seizes the caitiffs that lurk in their bosoms.<br/></span>
<span class="i0">He drags the vile worm from the corn it devours,<br/></span>
<span class="i2">The worms from their webs where they riot and welter;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">His song and his services freely are ours.<br/></span>
<span class="i2">And all that he asks is, in summer a shelter.<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Wilson.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Yesterday the snow melted from the top of the great rocks
in the woods; the evergreens shading the rocks lost their
white load that had been bearing down the branches for a
month; the fences straggled their lean legs wide apart, as if it
were summer, only the tips of their toes resting on the surface
snow; the north roof of the barn fringed itself with icicles
that tumbled down by noon, sticking up at the base of the
barn in the drifts head foremost; the top dressing of white
powder that for weeks had adorned the woodpiles sifted
down through the sticks in a wet scramble for the bottom.
All around the farm the buntings had picked the snow off,
making the fields look as if brown mats were spread all over
the floor. But yesterday the south wind puckered up its lips
and blew all over everything in sight, and the brown mats
disappeared, or rather, grew into one big one. The cows in
the barn-yard look longingly over the fence toward the pasture,
and the fowls take a longer walk than they have dared
for months, away out in the garden, where lopping brown
vines and nude bush stalks bear witness to what they have
suffered.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 640px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/bluebird.png" width-obs="640" height-obs="494" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">BLUE BIRD.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[ 95 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The sun shines across the dooryard as it hasn't shone for
so long, making a thin coat of mud just at the edge of the
chips and around the doorsteps. But what matters? The
children run in and out, tracking up the clean floors, taking
their scolding with good cheer. Isn't spring here? and don't
they hear the bluebird's note in the orchard?</p>
<p>Run! run! and put up some more little boxes on the shed
and the fence-posts. Clean out the last year's nests in the
hollow trees. Tell the old cat to "keep mum" and "lie
low," or she will be put in a bag and dropped to the bottom
of the very first hole in the ice. Cats are all right in the dead
of winter, when Old Boreas is frantic in his annual mad fit.
She can sit on the rug and purr to her heart's content; but
when the bluebirds come, if she bethinks herself of the fact,
and sharpens her claws against the trunk of a cherry-tree, she
would better look out. When the old cat sharpens her claws
she means business, especially if she turns her head in the
direction of the orchard. From the orchard comes a soft,
agreeable, oft-repeated note, there is a quivering of wings
outspread, and "he" is here. There may be only one or two
or six singers. They have left the lady bluebirds in a safe
place until they are sure of the weather. If the outlook be
bad to-morrow, the birds will retire out of sight and wait for
another warm spell. But spring is really here, and the good
work of the sun goes on. In a day or two the lady birds
appear modestly, of paler hue than the males, quiet, but
quick and glad of motion.</p>
<p>It is the time of sweethearts. A blue beauty, whose
latest coat is none the worse for winter wear, alights near the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[ 96 ]</SPAN></span>
mate of his choice, sitting on a twig. He goes very near her
and whispers in her ear. She listens. He caresses a drooping
feather, torn in her wing as she dodged the brush in the journey.
She thinks it very kind of him to do so.</p>
<p>Suddenly an early fly appears, traveling zigzag, slowly,
somewhere, probably on some family business of its own.
Bluebird spies it and makes for it. Not on his own account!
Oh, no! He snatches it leisurely and presents it to his love,
still sitting on the tree. She thanks him, and wipes her beak
on a smaller twig.</p>
<p>So little by little, and by very winning ways, does this
gentle blue courtier pay his suit of Miss Bluebird. A chance
acquaintance of bluebird sidles up to the same branch on
which the two have been sitting. Bluebird courtier likes
him not; he will have no rival, and so he drives the intruder
away as far as the next tree, returning to his sweet and singing
a low warble about something we do not understand.
Probably he is giving her to understand that he will "do the
right thing" by her all the time, never scolding (as indeed he
never does), and looking to the family supplies, and in all
things that pertain to faithful affection will prove himself
worthy of her. She consents, taking his word for it, and
they set about the business of the season.</p>
<p>Now they must hurry or the wrens will come and drive
them out of house and home. One of the bluebirds remains
in the nesting-place, or very near it; for if the house be empty
of inmates, the wrens make quick work of pulling out such
straws and nesting material as have been gathered.</p>
<p>If the people of the farm or other home be on the watch
they can lend a hand at this time. Offered inducements by
way of many boxes or nesting-places, with handfuls of fine
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[ 97 ]</SPAN></span>
litter, will attract the wrens, and the bluebirds will be untroubled.
It may be that a cold snap will come up in a driving
hurry after the nesting is well under way. In this event
the birds will disappear, probably to the deep, warm woods,
or the shelter of hollow trees, until the storm be past, when
they will come again and take up the work where they left off.</p>
<p>This sudden going and coming on account of the weather
has always been a mystery to those who study the bluebirds.
Some imagine they have a castle somewhere in the thickest
of the woods, where they hide, making meals on insects that
love old, damp trees. Caves and rock chambers have been
explored in search of the winter bluebirds, but not a bird
was found in either place. They keep their own secrets,
whether they fly far off to a warmer spot, or whether they
hide in cell or castle.</p>
<p>If the work is not anticipated by human friends, and the
nesting-places cleaned out in advance of the birds, they will
tidy up the boxes themselves, both birds working at it.
What do they want of last year's litter with its invisible little
mites and things that wait for a genial warmth to hatch out?
House-cleaning is a necessity with the bluebirds. When the
nest is done it is neat and compact, composed of sticks and
straws with a softer lining. The birds accept what is ready
to hand, making no long search for material. Being neighbor
to man and our habitations, it uses stable litter.</p>
<p>The three to six pale blue eggs contrast but slightly with
the mother's breast. The little ones grow in a hurry, for well
it is known that more broods must be attended to before
summer is over. Sometimes the nest is placed at the bottom
of a box or passageway, and the young birds have difficulty
in making their way to freedom. The old birds in such a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[ 98 ]</SPAN></span>
case are said to pile sticks up to the door, and the little ones
walk up and out as if on a ladder!</p>
<p>The mother soon takes to preparing for another brood,
and the father assumes all the care of the young just out,
leading them a short distance from the mother, and teaching
them to hunt insects and berries. The little ones are not blue,
as any one may see, but brown with speckled breasts. These
speckled breasts of young birds are fashionable costumes for
many other than bluebirds. They remind one of infantile
bibs, to be discarded as soon as the young things eat and
behave like their elders.</p>
<p>When the persimmons are ripe in the late fall whole families
of bluebirds collect in the trees for the fruit. They love
apples as well, but apples are hard unless in early spring after
the frost has thawed out of them. So the birds take the persimmons
first. It is at this time, when they are flitting from
tree to tree, that any person who will take the trouble of
hiding underneath and keeping still will catch glimpses of the
yellow soles of the bluebird's feet. The legs are dark above
the soles. There is a legend about this that is pleasing to
know and half-way believed by lovers of legends.</p>
<p>And one need not be ashamed of one's fondness for
legends. Legends are as old as the hills, and folk-lore has
preserved them. Now that the printer has become the
guardian of such things, we expect a legend with every bird and
beast, and a life history of either is hardly complete without.</p>
<p>Nearly all the birds of North America are entitled to a
legend through the nature-loving Indians, the first inhabitants
of our country. They have left little data, but enough has been
gleaned from their folk-lore to put us on the trail of many a
delightful story. Some of our legends may be of recent date.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[ 99 ]</SPAN></span>
but all have a fascination of their own. The ancients loved
myth and weird, fanciful tales. We are descendants of the
ancients, and we love the same things.</p>
<p>Once upon a dreary time a flood of water covered all the
earth. The land birds were all huddled together in a little
boat, twittering to each other of a "bright to-morrow," as
they do to this day. As the storm grew harder the birds
grew cold, not having any clothes up to that date. This was
the first rain that ever came, and caught many things, of
course, unprepared. The birds had been of naked skin, like
the lizards, but their beaks had grown, else how could they
have been twittering to one another of a bright to-morrow?
On this very morrow of song, the boat being far above the
mountain-tops, a single ray of sunshine appeared at a crack
in the cabin-house. The bluebird always, from the very
first, being on the lookout for stray bits of sunshine, sprang
to the spot, which was just big enough for his two feet.
When the sun went back behind the clouds it was found that
the stray bit of it which the bluebird had hopped upon
remained on the soles of his feet. That is the way the bluebird
came by his yellow soles.</p>
<p>And he came by his blue coat in this wise: When the
storm had spent itself the bluebird was the first to go out
of the boat, straight toward heaven, singing as he went.
When he got to the blue sky he stopped not, but pushed his
way straight through, rubbing the tint of the sky right into
his uncolored feathers, that had grown in a flash when he left
the boat. His mate followed straight through the hole her
lord had made, but of course she did not get so much blue
as he, the hole being rubbed quite dry of its paint. Ever
since the first flight of the bluebird somewhere the sun has
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[ 100 ]</SPAN></span>
shone through the rift he made in the sky and he carries hope
of spring in his wake.</p>
<p>The bluebirds are good neighbors, never quarreling nor
troubling other birds. In the late fall his note changes to a
plaintive one, as if he were mourning for the dear, delightful
days of summer-time and nursery joys. It is now that he,
with his large family, may be seen on weed stalks in the open
country, looking for belated insects and searching for beetles
and spiders among the stones.</p>
<p>In darting for winged insects the bluebird does not take
a sudden flight, but sways leisurely, as if he would not frighten
his treasure by quick movements.</p>
<p>Besides this particular bluebird, so well known all over
North America, there are two other members of the family,
differing only slightly in coloring and similar in habits.
These are the Western and the Arctic bluebirds.</p>
<p>The bluebirds are the morning-glories of our country.
They are companions of the violet of spring and the asters in
autumn. They belong to the blue sky and the country home
and the city suburbs. When the English sparrow is weary
of being made into pot-pie and baby-broth, it will go on its
way to the North Pole or the Southern Ocean, and our darling
in blue will have no enemy in all the land.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">When all the gay scenes of the summer are o'er,<br/></span>
<span class="i2">And autumn slow enters, so silent and sallow,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">And millions of warblers that charmed us before<br/></span>
<span class="i2">Have fled in the train of the sun-seeking swallow,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">The bluebird, forsaken, yet true to his home,<br/></span>
<span class="i2">Still lingers and looks for a milder to-morrow;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Till forced by the horrors of winter to roam,<br/></span>
<span class="i2">He sings his adieu in a lone note of sorrow.<br/></span></div>
<p class="tdr"><span class="smcap">Wilson.</span></p>
</div>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[ 101 ]</SPAN></span></p>
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