<SPAN name="flat-woods"></SPAN>
<h2>IN THE FLAT-WOODS.</h2>
<p>In approaching Jacksonville by rail, the traveler rides hour
after hour through seemingly endless pine barrens, otherwise known
as low pine-woods and flat-woods, till he wearies of the sight. It
would be hard, he thinks, to imagine a region more unwholesome
looking and uninteresting, more poverty-stricken and God-forsaken,
in its entire aspect. Surely, men who would risk life in behalf of
such a country deserved to win their cause.</p>
<p>Monotonous as the flat-woods were, however, and malarious as
they looked,—arid wastes and stretches of stagnant water
flying past the car window in perpetual alternation, I was
impatient to get into them. They were a world the like of which I
had never seen; and wherever I went in eastern Florida, I made it
one of my earliest concerns to seek them out.</p>
<p>My first impression was one of disappointment, or perhaps I
should rather say, of bewilderment. In fact, I returned from my
first visit to the flat-woods under the delusion that I had not
been into them at all. This was at St. Augustine, whither I had
gone after a night only in Jacksonville. I looked about the quaint
little city, of course, and went to the South Beach, on St.
Anastasia Island; then I wished to see the pine lands. They were to
be found, I was told, on the other side of the San Sebastian. The
sun was hot (or so it seemed to a man fresh from the rigors of a
New England winter), and the sand was deep; but I sauntered through
New Augustine, and pushed on up the road toward Moultrie (I believe
it was), till the last houses were passed and I came to the edge of
the pine-woods. Here, presently, the roads began to fork in a very
confusing manner. The first man I met— a kindly
cracker—cautioned me against getting lost; but I had no
thought of taking the slightest risk of that kind. I was not going
to <i>explore</i> the woods, but only to enter them, sit down, look
about me, and listen. The difficulty was to get into them. As I
advanced, they receded. It was still only the beginning of a wood;
the trees far apart and comparatively small, the ground covered
thickly with saw palmetto, interspersed here and there with patches
of brown grass or sedge.</p>
<p>In many places the roads were under water, and as I seemed to be
making little progress, I pretty soon sat down in a pleasantly
shaded spot. Wagons came along at intervals, all going toward the
city, most of them with loads of wood; ridiculously small loads,
such as a Yankee boy would put upon a wheelbarrow. "A fine day,"
said I to the driver of such a cart. "Yes, sir," he answered, "it's
a <i>pretty</i> day." He spoke with an emphasis which seemed to
imply that he accepted my remark as well meant, but hardly adequate
to the occasion. Perhaps, if the day had been a few shades
brighter, he would have called it "handsome," or even "good
looking." Expressions of this kind, however, are matters of local
or individual taste, and as such are not to be disputed about.
Thus, a man stopped me in Tallahassee to inquire what time it was.
I told him, and he said, "Ah, a little sooner than I thought." And
why not "sooner" as well as "earlier"? But when, on the same road,
two white girls in an ox-cart hailed me with the question, "What
time 't is?" I thought the interrogative idiom a little queer;
almost as queer, shall we say, as "How do you do?" may have sounded
to the first man who heard it,—if the reader is able to
imagine such a person.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, let the morning be "fine" or "pretty," it was all one
to the birds. The woods were vocal with the cackling of robins, the
warble of bluebirds, and the trills of pine warblers. Flickers were
shouting—or laughing, if one pleased to hear it so—with
true flickerish prolixity, and a single downy woodpecker called
sharply again and again. A mocking-bird near me (there is
<i>always</i> a mocking-bird near you, in Florida) added his voice
for a time, but soon relapsed into silence. The fact was
characteristic; for, wherever I went, I found it true that the
mocker grew less musical as the place grew wilder. By instinct he
is a public performer, he demands an audience; and it is only in
cities, like St. Augustine and Tallahassee, that he is heard at his
freest and best. A loggerhead shrike—now close at my elbow,
now farther away—was practicing his extensive vocabulary with
perseverance, if not with enthusiasm. Like his relative the "great
northern," though perhaps in a less degree, the loggerhead is
commonly at an extreme, either loquacious or dumb; as if he could
not let his moderation be known unto any man. Sometimes I fancied
him possessed with an insane ambition to match the mocking-bird in
song as well as in personal appearance. If so, it is not surprising
that he should be subject to fits of discouragement and silence.
Aiming at the sun, though a good and virtuous exercise, as we have
all heard, is apt to prove dispiriting to sensible marksmen. Crows
(fish crows, in all probability, but at the time I did not know it)
uttered strange, hoarse, flat-sounding caws. Everv bird of them
must have been born without a palate, it seemed to me. White-eyed
chewinks were at home in the dense palmetto scrub, whence they
announced themselves unmistakably by sharp whistles. Now and then
one of them mounted a leaf, and allowed me to see his pale yellow
iris. Except for this mark, recognizable almost as far as the bird
could be distinguished at all, he looked exactly like our common
New England towhee. Somewhere behind me was a kingfisher's rattle,
and from a savanna in the same direction came the songs of meadow
larks; familiar, but with something unfamiliar about them at the
same time, unless my ears deceived me.</p>
<p>More interesting than any of the birds yet named, because more
strictly characteristic of the place, as well as more strictly new
to me, were the brown-headed nuthatches. I was on the watch for
them: they were one of the three novelties which I knew were to be
found in the pine lands, and nowhere else, —the other two
being the red-cockaded woodpecker and the pine-wood sparrow; and
being thus on the lookout, I did not expect to be taken by
surprise, if such a paradox (it is nothing worse) maybe allowed to
pass. But when I heard them twittering in the distance, as I did
almost immediately, I had no suspicion of what they were. The voice
had nothing of that nasal quality, that Yankee twang, as some
people would call it, which I had always associated with the
nuthatch family. On the contrary, it was decidedly
finchlike,—so much so that some of the notes, taken by
themselves, would have been ascribed without hesitation to the
goldfinch or the pine finch, had I heard them in New England; and
even as things were, I was more than once deceived for the moment.
As for the birds themselves, they were evidently a cheerful and
thrifty race, much more numerous than the red-cockaded woodpeckers,
and much less easily overlooked than the pine-wood sparrows. I
seldom entered the flat-woods anywhere without finding them. They
seek their food largely about the leafy ends of the pine branches,
resembling the Canadian nuthatches in this respect, so that it is
only on rare occasions that one sees them creeping about the trunks
or larger limbs. Unlike their two Northern relatives, they are
eminently social, often traveling in small flocks, even in the
breeding season, and keeping up an almost incessant chorus of
shrill twitters as they flit hither and thither through the woods.
The first one to come near me was full of inquisitiveness; he flew
back and forth past my head, exactly as chickadees do in a similar
mood, and once seemed almost ready to alight on my hat. "Let us
have a look at this stranger," he appeared to be saying. Possibly
his nest was not far off, but I made no search for it. Afterwards I
found two nests, one in a low stump, and one in the trunk of a
pine, fifteen or twenty feet from the ground. Both of them
contained young ones (March 31 and April 2), as I knew by the
continual goings-in-and-out of the fathers and mothers. In dress
the brown-head is dingy, with little or nothing of the neat and
attractive appearance of our New England nuthatches.</p>
<p>In this pine-wood on the road to Moultrie I found no sign of the
new woodpecker or the new sparrow. Nor was I greatly disappointed.
The place itself was a sufficient novelty,—the place and the
summer weather. The pines murmured overhead, and the palmettos
rustled all about. Now a butterfly fluttered past me, and now a
dragonfly. More than one little flock of tree swallows went over
the wood, and once a pair of phoebes amused me by an uncommonly
pretty lover's quarrel. Truly it was a pleasant hour. In the midst
of it there came along a man in a cart, with a load of wood. We
exchanged the time of day, and I remarked upon the smallness of his
load. Yes, he said; but it was a pretty heavy load to drag seven or
eight miles over such roads. Possibly he understood me as implying
that he seemed to be in rather small business, although I had no
such purpose, for he went on to say: "In 1861, when this beautiful
war broke out between our countries, my father owned niggers. We
didn't have to do <i>this</i>. But I don't complain. If I hadn't
got a bullet in me, I should do pretty well."</p>
<p>"Then you were in the war?" I said.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, yes, sir! I was in the Confederate service. Yes, sir,
I'm a Southerner to the backbone. My grandfather was a
——" (I missed the patronymic), "and commanded St.
Augustine."</p>
<p>The name had a foreign sound, and the man's complexion was
swarthy, and in all simplicity I asked if he was a Minorcan. I
might as well have touched a lighted match to powder. His eyes
flashed, and he came round the tail of the cart, gesticulating with
his stick.</p>
<p>"Minorcan!" he broke out. "Spain and the island of Minorca are
two places, ain't they?" I admitted meekly that they were.</p>
<p>"You are English, ain't you?" he went on. "You are
English,—Yankee born,—ain't you?"</p>
<p>I owned it.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm Spanish. That ain't Minorcan. My grandfather was a
——, and commanded St. Augustine. He couldn't have done
that if he had been Minorcan."</p>
<p>By this time he was quieting down a bit. His father remembered
the Indian war. The son had heard him tell about it.</p>
<p>"Those were dangerous times," he remarked. "You couldn't have
been standing out here in the woods then."</p>
<p>"There is no danger here now, is there?" said I.</p>
<p>"No, no, not now." But as he drove along he turned to say that
<i>he</i> wasn't afraid of <i>any</i> thing; he wasn't that kind of
a man. Then, with a final turn, he added, what I could not dispute,
"A man's life is always in danger."</p>
<p>After he was gone, I regretted that I had offered no apology for
my unintentionally offensive question; but I was so taken by
surprise, and so much interested in the man as a specimen, that I
quite forgot my manners till it was too late. One thing I learned:
that it is not prudent, in these days, to judge a Southern man's
blood, in either sense of the word, by his dress or occupation.
This man had brought seven or eight miles a load of wood that might
possibly be worth seventy-five cents (I questioned the owner of
what looked like just such a load afterward, and found his asking
price half a dollar), and for clothing had on a pair of trousers
and a blue cotton shirt, the latter full of holes, through which
the skin was visible; yet his father was a —— and had
"owned niggers."</p>
<p>A still more picturesque figure in this procession of
wood-carters was a boy of perhaps ten or eleven. He rode his horse,
and was barefooted and barelegged; but he had a cigarette in his
mouth, and to each brown heel was fastened an enormous spur. Who
was it that infected the world with the foolish and disastrous
notion that work and play are two different things? And was it
Emerson, or some other wise man, who said that a boy was the true
philosopher?</p>
<p>When it came time to think of returning to St. Augustine, for
dinner, I appreciated my cracker's friendly warning against losing
my way; for though I had hardly so much as entered the woods, and
had taken, as I thought, good heed to my steps, I was almost at
once in a quandary as to my road. There was no occasion for
worry,—with the sun out, and my general course perfectly
plain; but here was a fork in the road, and whether to bear to the
left or to the right was a simple matter of guess-work. I made the
best guess I could, and guessed wrong, as was apparent after a
while, when I found the road under deep water for several rods. I
objected to wading, and there was no ready way of going round,
since the oak and palmetto scrub crowded close up to the roadside,
and just here was all but impenetrable. What was still more
conclusive, the road was the wrong one, as the inundation proved,
and, for aught I could tell, might carry me far out of my course. I
turned back, therefore, under the midday sun, and by good luck a
second attempt brought me out of the woods very near where I had
entered them.</p>
<p>I visited this particular piece of country but once afterward,
having in the mean time discovered a better place of the same sort
along the railroad, in the direction of Palatka. There, on a Sunday
morning, I heard my first pine-wood sparrow. Time and tune could
hardly have been in truer accord. The hour was of the quietest, the
strain was of the simplest, and the bird sang as if he were
dreaming. For a long time I let him go on without attempting to
make certain who he was. He seemed to be rather far off: if I
waited his pleasure, he would perhaps move toward me; if I
disturbed him, he would probably become silent. So I sat on the end
of a sleeper and listened. It was not great music. It made me think
of the swamp sparrow; and the swamp sparrow is far from being a
great singer. A single prolonged, drawling note (in that respect
unlike the swamp sparrow, of course), followed by a succession of
softer and sweeter ones,— that was all, when I came to
analyze it; but that is no fair description of what I heard. The
quality of the song is not there; and it was the quality, the
feeling, the soul of it, if I may say what I mean, that made it, in
the true sense of a much-abused word, charming.</p>
<p>There could be little doubt that the bird was a pine-wood
sparrow; but such things are not to be taken for granted. Once or
twice, indeed, the thought of some unfamiliar warbler had crossed
my mind. At last, therefore, as the singer still kept out of sight,
I leaped the ditch and pushed into the scrub. Happily I had not far
to go; he had been much nearer than I thought. A small bird flew up
before me, and dropped almost immediately into a clump of palmetto.
I edged toward the spot and waited. Then the song began again, this
time directly in front of me, but still far-away-sounding and
dreamy. I find that last word in my hasty note penciled at the
time, and can think of no other that expresses the effect half so
well. I looked and looked, and all at once there sat the bird on a
palmetto leaf. Once again he sang, putting up his head. Then he
dropped out of sight, and I heard nothing more. I had seen only his
head and neck,—enough to show him a sparrow, and almost of
necessity the pine-wood sparrow. No other strange member of the
finch family was to be looked for in such a place.</p>
<p>On further acquaintance, let me say at once, <i>Pucaea
aestivalis</i> proved to be a more versatile singer than the
performances of my first bird would have led me to suppose. He
varies his tune freely, but always within a pretty narrow compass;
as is true, also, of the field sparrow, with whom, as I soon came
to feel, he has not a little in common. It is in musical form only
that he suggests the swamp sparrow. In tone and spirit, in the
qualities of sweetness and expressiveness, he is nearly akin to
<i>Spizella pusilla</i>. One does for the Southern pine barren what
the other does for the Northern berry pasture. And this is high
praise; for though in New England we have many singers more
brilliant than the field sparrow, we have none that are sweeter,
and few that in the long run give more pleasure to sensitive
hearers.</p>
<p>I found the pine-wood sparrow afterward in New Smyrna, Port
Orange, Sanford, and Tallahassee. So far as I could tell, it was
always the same bird; but I shot no specimens, and speak with no
authority.<SPAN id="footnotetag1" name="footnotetag1"></SPAN><SPAN href=
"#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></SPAN> Living always in the pine lands, and
haunting the dense undergrowth, it is heard a hundred times where
it is seen once,—a point greatly in favor of its
effectiveness as a musician. Mr. Brewster speaks of it as singing
always from an elevated perch, while the birds that I saw in the
act of song, a very limited number, were invariably perched low.
One that I watched in New Smyrna (one of a small chorus, the others
being invisible) sang for a quarter of an hour from a stake or
stump which rose perhaps a foot above the dwarf palmetto. It was
the same song that I had heard in St. Augustine; only the birds
here were in a livelier mood, and sang <i>out</i> instead of
<i>sotto voce</i>. The long introductory note sounded sometimes as
if it were indrawn, and often, if not always, had a considerable
burr in it. Once in a while the strain was caught up at the end and
sung over again, after the manner of the field sparrow,—one
of that bird's prettiest tricks. At other times the song was
delivered with full voice, and then repeated almost under the
singer's breath. This was done beautifully in the Port Orange
flat-woods, the bird being almost at my feet. I had seen him a
moment before, and saw him again half a minute later, but at that
instant he was out of sight in the scrub, and seemingly on the
ground. This feature of the song, one of its chief merits and its
most striking peculiarity, is well described by Mr. Brewster.
"Now," he says, "it has a full, bell-like ring that seems to fill
the air around; next it is soft and low and inexpressibly tender;
now it is clear again, but so modulated that the sound seems to
come from a great distance."<SPAN id="footnotetag2" name=
"footnotetag2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>Not many other birds, I think (I cannot recall any), habitually
vary their song in this manner. Other birds sing almost inaudibly
at times, especially in the autumnal season. Even the brown
thrasher, whose ordinary performance, is so full-voiced, not to say
boisterous, will sometimes soliloquize, or seem to soliloquize, in
the faintest of undertones. The formless autumnal warble of the
song sparrow is familiar to every one. And in this connection I
remember, and am not likely ever to forget, a winter wren who
favored me with what I thought the most bewitching bit of vocalism
to which I had ever listened. He was in the bushes close at my
side, in the Franconia Notch, and delivered his whole song, with
all its customary length, intricacy, and speed, in a tone—a
whisper, I may almost say—that ran along the very edge of
silence. The unexpected proximity of a stranger may have had
something to do with his conduct, as it often appears to have with
the thrasher's; but, however that may be, the cases are not
parallel with that of the pine-wood sparrow, inasmuch as the latter
bird not merely sings under his breath on special occasions,
whether on account of the nearness of a listener or for any other
reason, but in his ordinary singing uses louder and softer tones
interchangeably, almost exactly as human singers and players do; as
if, in the practice of his art, he had learned to appreciate,
consciously or unconsciously (and practice naturally goes before
theory), the expressive value of what I believe is called musical
dynamics.</p>
<p>I spent many half-days in the pine lands (how gladly now would I
spend another!), but never got far into them. ("Into their depths,"
my pen was on the point of making me say; but that would have been
a false note. The flat-woods have no "depths.") Whether I followed
the railway,—in many respects a pretty satisfactory
method,—or some roundabout, aimless carriage road, a mile or
two was generally enough. The country offers no temptation to
pedestrian feats, nor does the imagination find its account in
going farther and farther. For the reader is not to think of the
flat-woods as in the least resembling a Northern forest, which at
every turn opens before the visitor and beckons him forward. Beyond
and behind, and on either side, the pine-woods are ever the same.
It is this monotony, by the bye, this utter absence of landmarks,
that makes it so unsafe for the stranger to wander far from the
beaten track. The sand is deep, the sun is hot; one place is as
good as another. What use, then, to tire yourself? And so, unless
the traveler is going somewhere, as I seldom was, he is continually
stopping by the way. Now a shady spot entices him to put down his
umbrella,—for there <i>is</i> a shady spot, here and there,
even in a Florida pine-wood; or blossoms are to be plucked; or a
butterfly, some gorgeous and nameless creature, brightens the wood
as it passes; or a bird is singing; or an eagle is soaring far
overhead, and must be watched out of sight; or a buzzard, with
upturned wings, floats suspiciously near the wanderer, as if with
sinister intent (buzzard shadows are a regular feature of the
flat-wood landscape, just as cloud shadows are in a mountainous
country); or a snake lies stretched out in the sun,—a "whip
snake," perhaps, that frightens the unwary stroller by the amazing
swiftness with which it runs away from him; or some strange
invisible insect is making uncanny noises in the underbrush. One of
my recollections of the railway woods at St. Augustine is of a
cricket, or locust, or something else,—I never saw
it,—that amused me often with a formless rattling or drumming
sound. I could think of nothing but a boy's first lesson upon the
bones, the rhythm of the beats was so comically mistimed and
bungled.</p>
<p>One fine morning,—it was the 18th of February,—I had
gone down the railroad a little farther than usual, attracted by
the encouraging appearance of a swampy patch of rather large
deciduous trees. Some of them, I remember, were red maples, already
full of handsome, high-colored fruit. As I drew near, I heard
indistinctly from among them what might have been the song of a
black-throated green warbler, a bird that would have made a valued
addition to my Florida list, especially at that early date. <SPAN id=
"footnotetag3" name="footnotetag3"></SPAN><SPAN href=
"#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></SPAN> No sooner was the song repeated,
however, than I saw that I had been deceived; it was something I
had never heard before. But it certainly had much of the
black-throated green's quality, and without question was the note
of a warbler of some kind. What a shame if the bird should give me
the slip! Meanwhile, it kept on singing at brief intervals, and was
not so far away but that, with my glass, I should be well able to
make it out, if only I could once get my eyes on it. That was the
difficulty. Something stirred among the branches. Yes, a
yellow-throated warbler (<i>Dendroica dominica</i>), a bird of
which I had seen my first specimens, all of them silent, during the
last eight days. Probably he was the singer. I hoped so, at any
rate. That would be an ideal case of a</p>
<p>beautiful bird with a song to match. I kept him under my glass,
and presently the strain was repeated, but not by him. Then it
ceased, and I was none the wiser. Perhaps I never should be. It was
indeed a shame. Such a <i>taking</i> song; so simple, and yet so
pretty, and so thoroughly distinctive. I wrote it down thus:
<i>tee-koi, tee-koo</i>,—two couplets, the first syllable of
each a little emphasized and dwelt upon, not drawled, and a little
higher in pitch than its fellow. Perhaps it might be expressed
thus:—</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN href="images/031.png"><ANTIMG src= "images/031.png" alt="Musical Notes"></SPAN></div>
<p>I cannot profess to be sure of that, however, nor have I
unqualified confidence in the adequacy of musical notation, no
matter how skillfully employed, to convey a truthful idea of any
bird song.</p>
<p>The affair remained a mystery till, in Daytona, nine days
afterward, the same notes were heard again, this time in lower
trees that did not stand in deep water. Then it transpired that my
mysterious warbler was not a warbler at all, but the Carolina
chickadee. That was an outcome quite unexpected, although I now
remembered that chickadees were in or near the St. Augustine swamp;
and what was more to the purpose, I could now discern some
relationship between the <i>tee-koi, tee-koo</i> (or, as I now
wrote it, <i>see-toi, see-too</i>), and the familiar so-called
phoebe whistle of the black-capped titmouse. The Southern bird, I
am bound to acknowledge, is much the more accomplished singer of
the two. Sometimes he repeats the second dissyllable, making six
notes in all. At other times he breaks out with a characteristic
volley of fine chickadee notes, and runs without a break into the
<i>see-toi, see-too</i>, with a highly pleasing effect. Then if, on
the top of this, he doubles the <i>see-too</i>, we have a really
prolonged and elaborate musical effort, quite putting into the
shade our New England bird's <i>hear, hear me</i>, sweet and
welcome as that always is.</p>
<p>The Southern chickadee, it should be said, is not to be
distinguished from its Northern relative—in the bush, I
mean—except by its notes. It is slightly smaller, like
Southern birds in general, but is practically identical in plumage.
Apart from its song, what most impressed me was its scarcity. It
was found, sooner or later, wherever I went, I believe, but always
in surprisingly small numbers, and I saw only one nest. That was
built in a roadside china-tree in Tallahassee, and contained young
ones (April 17), as was clear from the conduct of its owners.</p>
<p>It must not be supposed that I left St. Augustine without
another search for my unknown "warbler." The very next morning
found me again at the swamp, where for at least an hour I sat and
listened. I heard no <i>tee-koi, tee-koo</i>, but was rewarded
twice over for my walk. In the first place, before reaching the
swamp, I found the third of my flat-wood novelties, the
red-cockaded woodpecker. As had happened with the nuthatch and the
sparrow, I heard him before seeing him: first some notes, which by
themselves would hardly have suggested a woodpecker origin, and
then a noise of hammering. Taken together, the two sounds, left
little doubt as to their author; and presently I saw him,—or
rather them, for there were two birds. I learned nothing about
them, either then or afterwards (I saw perhaps eight individuals
during my ten weeks' visit), but it was worth something barely to
see and hear them. Henceforth <i>Dryobates borealis</i> is a bird,
and not merely a name. This, as I have said, was among the pines,
before reaching the swamp. In the swamp itself, there suddenly
appeared from somewhere, as if by magic (a dramatic entrance is not
without its value, even out-of-doors), a less novel but far more
impressive figure, a pileated woodpecker; a truly splendid fellow,
with the scarlet cheek-patches. When I caught sight of him, he
stood on one of the upper branches of a tall pine, looking
wonderfully alert and wide-awake; now stretching out his scrawny
neck, and now drawing it in again, his long crest all the while
erect and flaming. After a little he dropped into the underbrush,
out of which came at intervals a succession of raps. I would have
given something to have had him under my glass just then, for I had
long felt curious to see him in the act of chiseling out those big,
oblong, clean-cut, sharp-angled "peck-holes" which, close to the
base of the tree, make so common and notable a feature of Vermont
and New Hampshire forests; but, though I did my best, I could not
find him, till all at once he came up again and took to a tall
pine,—the tallest in the wood,—where he pranced about
for a while, striking sundry picturesque but seemingly aimless
attitudes, and then made off for good. All in all, he was a
wild-looking bird, if ever I saw one.</p>
<p>I was no sooner in St. Augustine, of course, than my eyes were
open for wild flowers. Perhaps I felt a little disappointed.
Certainly the land was not ablaze with color. In the grass about
the old fort fhere was plenty of the yellow oxalis and the creeping
white houstonia; and from a crevice in the wall, out of reach,
leaned a stalk of goldenrod in full bloom. The reader may smile, if
he will, but this last flower was a surprise and a stumbling-block.
A vernal goldenrod! Dr. Chapman's Flora made no mention of such an
anomaly. Sow thistles, too, looked strangely anachronistic. I had
never thought of them as harbingers of springtime. The truth did
not break upon me till a week or so afterward. Then, on the way to
the beach at Daytona, where the pleasant peninsula road traverses a
thick forest of short-leaved pines, every tree of which leans
heavily inland at the same angle ("the leaning pines of Daytona," I
always said to myself, as I passed), I came upon some white
beggar's-ticks, —like daisies; and as I stopped to see what
they were, I noticed the presence of ripe seeds. The plant had been
in flower a long time. And then I laughed at my own dullness. It
fairly deserved a medal. As if, even in Massachusetts, autumnal
flowers —the groundsel, at least—did not sometimes
persist in blossoming far into the winter! A day or two after this,
I saw a mullein stalk still presenting arms, as it were (the
mullein, always looks the soldier to me), with one bright flower.
If I had found <i>that</i> in St. Augustine, I flatter myself I
should have been less easily fooled.</p>
<p>There were no such last-year relics in the flat-woods, so far as
I remember, but spring blossoms were beginning to make their
appearance there by the middle of February, particularly along the
railroad,—violets in abundance (<i>Viola cucullata</i>),
dwarf orange-colored dandelions (<i>Krigia</i>), the Judas-tree, or
redbud, St. Peter's-wort, blackberry, the yellow star-flower
(<i>Hypoxis juncea</i>), and butterworts. I recall, too, in a
swampy spot, a fine fresh tuft of the golden club, with its
gorgeous yellow spadix,—a plant that I had never seen in
bloom before, although I had once admired a Cape Cod "hollow" full
of the rank tropical leaves. St. Peter's-wort, a low shrub, thrives
everywhere in the pine barrens, and, without being especially
attractive, its rather sparse yellow flowers—not unlike the
St. John's-wort—do something to enliven the general waste.
The butterworts are beauties, and true children of the spring. I
picked my first ones, which by chance were of the smaller purple
species (<i>Pinguicula pumila</i>), on my way down from the woods,
on a moist bank. At that moment a white man came up the road. "What
do you call this flower?" said I. "Valentine's flower," he answered
at once. "Ah," said I, "because it is in bloom on St. Valentine's
Day, I suppose?" "No, sir," he said. "Do you speak Spanish?" I had
to shake my head. "Because I could explain it better in Spanish,"
he continued, as if by way of apology; but he went on in perfectly
good English: "If you put one of them under your pillow, and think
of some one you would like very much to see,—some one who has
been dead a long time,—you will be likely to dream of him. It
is a very pretty flower," he added. And so it is; hardly prettier,
however, to my thinking, than the blossoms of the early creeping
blackberry (<i>Rubus trivialis</i>). With them I fairly fell in
love: true white roses, I called them, each with its central ring
of dark purplish stamens; as beautiful as the cloudberry, which
once, ten years before, I had found, on the summit of Mount
Clinton, in New Hampshire, and refused to believe a <i>Rubus</i>,
though Dr. Gray's key led me to that genus again and again. There
<i>is</i> something in a name, say what you will.</p>
<p>Some weeks later, and a little farther south,—in the
flat-woods behind New Smyrna,—I saw other flowers, but never
anything of that tropical exuberance at which the average Northern
tourist expects to find himself staring. Boggy places were full of
blue iris (the common <i>Iris versicolor</i> of New England, but of
ranker growth), and here and there a pool was yellow with
bladderwort. I was taken also with the larger and taller (yellow)
butterwort, which I used never to see as I went through the woods
in the morning, but was sure to find standing in the tall dry grass
along the border of the sandy road, here one and there one, on my
return at noon. In similar places grew a "yellow daisy"
(<i>Leptopoda</i>), a single big head, of a deep color, at the top
of a leafless stem. It seemed to be one of the most abundant of
Florida spring flowers, but I could not learn that it went by any
distinctive vernacular name. Beside the railway track were
blue-eyed grass and pipewort, and a dainty blue lobelia (<i>L.
Feayana</i>), with once in a while an extremely pretty coreopsis,
having a purple centre, and scarcely to be distinguished from one
that is common in gardens. No doubt the advancing season brings an
increasing wealth of such beauty to the flat-woods. No doubt, too,
I missed the larger half of what might have been found even at the
time of my visit; for I made no pretense of doing any real
botanical work, having neither the time nor the equipment. The
birds kept me busy, for the most part, when the country itself did
not absorb my attention.</p>
<p>More interesting, and a thousand times more memorable, than any
flower or bird was the pine barren itself. I have given no true
idea of it, I am perfectly aware: open, parklike, flooded with
sunshine, level as a floor. "What heartache," Lanier breaks out,
poor exile, dying of consumption,—"what heartache! Ne'er a
hill!" A dreary country to ride through, hour after hour; an
impossible country to live in, but most pleasant for a half-day
winter stroll. Notwithstanding I never went far into it, as I have
already said, I had always a profound sensation of remoteness; as
if I might go on forever, and be no farther away.</p>
<p>Yet even here I had more than one reminder that the world is a
small place. I met a burly negro in a cart, and fell into talk with
him about the Florida climate, an endless topic, out of which a
cynical traveler may easily extract almost endless amusement. How
abput the summers here? I inquired. Were they really as
paradisaical (I did not use that word) as some reports would lead
one to suppose? The man smiled, as if he had heard something like
that before. He did not think the Florida summer a dream of
delight, even on the east coast. "I'm tellin' you the truth, sah;
the mosquiters an' sandflies is awful." Was he born here? I asked.
No; he came from B——, Alabama. Everybody in eastern
Florida came from somewhere, as well as I could make out.</p>
<p>"Oh, from B——," said I. "Did you know Mr.
W——, of the —— Iron Works?"</p>
<p>He smiled again. "Yes, sah; I used to work for him. He's a nice
man." He spoke the truth that time beyond a peradventure. He was
healthier here than in the other place, he thought, and wages were
higher; but he liked the other place better "for pleasure." It was
an odd coincidence, was it not, that I should meet in this solitude
a man who knew the only citizen of Alabama with whom I was ever
acquainted.</p>
<p>At another time I fell in with an oldish colored man, who, like
myself, had taken to the woods for a quiet Sunday stroll. <i>He</i>
was from Mississippi, he told me. Oh, yes, he remembered the war;
he was a slave, twenty-one years old, when it broke out. To his
mind, the present generation of "niggers" were a pretty poor lot,
for all their "edication." He had seen them crowding folks off the
sidewalk, and puffing smoke in their faces. All of which was
nothing new; I had found that story more or less common among
negroes of his age. He didn't believe much in "edication;" but when
I asked if he thought the blacks were better off in slavery times,
he answered quickly, "I'd rather be a free man, <i>I</i> had." He
wasn't married; he had plenty to do to take care of himself. We
separated, he going one way and I the other; but he turned to ask,
with much seriousness (the reader must remember that this was only
three months after a national election), "Do you think they'll get
free trade?" "Truly," said I to myself, "'the world is too much
with us.' Even in the flat-woods there is no escaping the tariff
question." But I answered, in what was meant to be a reassuring
tone, "Not yet awhile. Some time." "I hope not," he said,—as
if liberty to buy and sell would be a dreadful blow to a man living
in a shanty in a Florida pine barren! He was taking the matter
rather too much to heart, perhaps; but surely it was encouraging to
see such a man interested in broad economical questions, and I
realized as never before the truth of what the newspapers so
continually tell us, that political campaigns are educational.</p>
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