<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">THE TANAGER PEOPLE</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Magic bird, but rarely seen,<br/></span>
<span class="i3">Phœnix in our forest green,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Plumed with fire, and quick as flame—<br/></span>
<span class="i3">Phœnix, else thou hast no name."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>It is a large tribe, of numerous species in America, but the
scarlet tanager alone may well be termed the Red Man of the
forest. Native of the New World, shy, a gypsy in his way,
harmless to agriculture, a hunter by nature, fascinating to all
eyes that light on him.</p>
<p>It is as if Nature had a surplus of red and black the day
she painted him, and was determined to dip her brush in
nothing else. This contrast of color has made him one of our
most familiar birds. But, as with many another of striking
hue, the scarlet tanager has an indifferent song. Among our
flowers like the scarlet geraniums and hibiscus, we do not
look for the fragrance that distinguishes the pale violet or
wild rose. It is as if the bright tint of bird or blossom is
sufficient of itself, and nature would not bestow all virtues
upon one individual.</p>
<p>Still the musical qualities of this tanager are not to be
despised. His few notes may be almost monotonous, but
they are pensive, even tender when addressed to his dear
companion, for whom his little breast holds warm affection.
She, too, at nesting-time, utters the same pensive note,
and the two may be noticed in the treetops, whispering to one
another in low tones.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[ 102 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It is not for his song, therefore, that we seek the bird,
but hearing the song, we would see the singer. And who
can blame us? We love the deeper tints of sunset and sunrise,
the red and yellow of autumn leaves, the red glow of the
prairie fire, the tint of the Baldwin apple and the sops o' wine.
A tree of dull green apples in the orchard, though of finer
flavor, will be neglected, more especially by the "wandering
boy," for its crimson-cheeked neighbor of indifferent relish.
The red apples of the naked winter bough, left on purpose
for Jack Frost and the birds to bite, are said to allure the
latter before the paler fruit of the next tree is disturbed.</p>
<p>Therefore, when a nature-lover wanders into the woods in
dreamy mood and the scarlet tanager flits above him amid the
green of the foliage, the thrush and the sparrow are forgotten.</p>
<p>The tanager is discreet by nature, for it is as if he knows
that by glimpses only is he best appreciated. Were he less
retiring, as bold in habit as in color, sitting on the roofs and
fence-posts, swinging the nest pendant from boughs, like the
oriole, he would be less fascinating. But the tanager is seldom
more than half seen; he is detected for an instant, like
a flash, and disappears.</p>
<p>It is with the eye as with the hand. We would hold in
the grasp of our fingers what we covet to touch or own.
And the eye would retain in its deep fortress, if only for a moment,
the tint it feasts on. More especially is this the case
if the thing we would hold or see is transitory by nature.</p>
<div class="fig_center" style="width: 506px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/tanager.png" width-obs="506" height-obs="692" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption">SUMMER TANAGER.</div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[ 103 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So when we sit down on a half-decayed log bedecked
with toadstools, and hear the note of a scarlet tanager overhead,
we listen and are moveless. It is repeated, and if we
are unacquainted with the bird we may think him to the
right of us. Actually he is on the left, being endowed with
the gift of ventriloquism. By this gift or attainment the
beautiful creature eludes his human foes. For foes the tanager
surely has, the more's the pity! Not content to adore
the bird as part and parcel of generous nature, there are those
who would pay their homage to the wings only, set among
feathers and plaited straw. Such lose the fine art of tenderness.
The face that would pale at sight of a brown mouse
shines with pride beneath a remnant of red plumage literally
dyed with the life-blood of their original owner.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"Angelina has a hat<br/></span>
<span class="i3">With wings on every side;<br/></span>
<span class="i1">Slaughter o' the innocents<br/></span>
<span class="i3">Those pretty wings supplied.<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Sign of barbarity,<br/></span>
<span class="i8">Sign of vulgarity—<br/></span>
<span class="i6">That winged hat."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Well, let Angelina's hat pass for what it is worth to her.
It is no more than the redbirds have had to submit to all
their life history. There isn't a savage tribe but has made
use of bright feathers for dress, either in skins or quills. The
dark-skinned native is "dressed for church" if he wear a
single feather tuft in his scalp-lock, or a frail shoulder-cape of
crimson breasts, stripped from the bird in the bush.</p>
<p>It may be the tanager has a sort of dull instinct to hide
himself on this account in the deep foliage, deeming it the
better part of valor to keep out of harm's way when a nature-lover
sits on the toadstool-bedecked log to watch for him.</p>
<p>His mate, of dull greenish yellow, has less enemies in the
disguise of admirers, and her little heart has no call to flutter
when the so-called nature-lover haunts the woods. She goes
on with her nest-building on the arm of a maple or even lonely
apple-tree, making haste, for well she knows the season is
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[ 104 ]</SPAN></span>
short in which to raise their single brood. By the middle of
August they must be off, have the wings of the young grown
sufficient strength; and yet the old birds only arrived from
their warmer clime in the South when May was half over, or
later.</p>
<p>Like the grosbeak's, the tanager's nest is loosely built of
twigs and stalks, transparent from below, as if ventilation
were more necessary than softness. The dull blue eggs,
spotted with brown or purple, may be distinctly seen from
beneath when the sun is shining overhead. But why worry
the mother bird by long gazing? She is in great distress.
Were the ear of the nature-lover properly tuned he would
understand her to be saying, "They're mine, they're mine.
I beg, I beg. Don't touch, don't take."</p>
<p>But in due time the young are juveniles, not nurslings,
and they leave the nest, too soon the worse for wear on
account of its careless build. At first the thin dress of the
young is greenish yellow, like the mother, and they may pass
unnoticed amid the late summer foliage. The male juveniles,
during their first year, somewhere change to brighter hues in
spots and dashes of red and black, as if their clothes had been
patched with left-overs from their fathers' wardrobes. The
fathers themselves, before they fly to the warm South, drop
their scarlet feathers, like tatters, amid the ferns and blue-berries,
and girls pick them up for the adorning of doll hats.
No merrier sight, and none more innocent of character, than
this of little girls searching for what is left of the beautiful
summer visitor, picking up, as it were, the shreds of his memory.
These scarlet feathers, together with those of the summer
yellowbird, placed in layers or helter-skelter in a case of
gauze, make a fairy pillow for winter times, pretty to look at.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[ 105 ]</SPAN></span>
They come with thistle-down and milkweed tassels, and
sumach droppings and maple leaves, and the first oozing of
spruce gum in the woods. Yes, and beechnuts and belated
goldenrod, and the first frosts that nip the cheek of the cranberry
in the bog.</p>
<p>And the huckleberry patch is littered with the tiny plumes,
for tanagers love the huckleberries that leave no stain on their
greenish yellow lips. These huckleberries are their chief
food in late berry-time, coming, as they do, when the juveniles
need a change in their meat diet before the long flight
ahead of them. Up to this date they made good, square
meals from fat beetles and other insects big enough to "pay
for catching." That bumblebees and wasps are endowed
with sharp points in their character does not forbid the use of
them for tanager food; though it is presumed that the stings
are either squeezed out, or the insect killed, before it is fed
to the nestlings, as we have noticed in the case of the phœbes.</p>
<p>In these late summer days the singer punctuates his song
often and long, for he must recuperate for his autumn journey.
More than this, he must protect his young ones. He therefore
loses the shyness of spring, and follows the juveniles
about, feeding them and teaching them to shift for themselves,
and protecting them with word and sign. His whole
care is for his family, and hard is a cruel world indeed whose
human inhabitants can molest him. His scarlet cloth is forgotten.
He will follow his young even into captivity, and
there feed them through bar or window. But not a fascinating
prisoner is the tanager; one grows accustomed to his
bright coat, and as it is seen against the pane in winter-time,
contrasting with the whiteness of the snow, seems to reproach
the hand that imprisoned it. When one stops to think of it,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[ 106 ]</SPAN></span>
scarcely a bird in captivity, unless it be the canary to the
manner born, gives the satisfaction and amusement anticipated.
It is the going and coming of the wild birds that
make more than half the fun. The sudden surprise of spring;
the reluctant departure of autumn, with the hope of intermediate
days—there is charm in all this keeping of Nature's
order.</p>
<p>Well, good by, sweet scarlet tanager. Sing us back your
farewell note of "Wait, wait." We shall see you again
when the early cherries are ripe, if not sooner. The beetles
and bumbles and the grasshoppers will be watching out for
you, and the terrible hornet shall double his armor-plate to
suit the strength of your strong beak. It will be of no avail
for the big black beetle to hide beneath the iron kettle he
carries on his back, and the bum of the big, yellow bumblebee
will serve only as its call-note, while the broad sword
of the hornet will have no time to unsheath itself at sight of
you. Good by, tanager.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[ 107 ]</SPAN></span></p>
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