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<h2>ON THE BEACH AT DAYTONA.</h2>
<p>The first eight days of my stay in Daytona were so delightful
that I felt as if I had never before seen fine weather, even in my
dreams. My east window looked across the Halifax River to the
peninsula woods. Beyond them was the ocean. Immediately after
breakfast, therefore, I made toward the north bridge, and in half
an hour or less was on the beach. Beaches are much the same the
world over, and there is no need to describe this one—Silver
Beach, I think I heard it called—except to say that it is
broad, hard, and, for a pleasure-seeker's purpose, endless. It is
backed by low sand-hills covered with impenetrable scrub,—oak
and palmetto,—beyond which is a dense growth of short-leaved
pines. Perfect weather, a perfect beach, and no throng of people:
here were the conditions of happiness; and here for eight days I
found it. The ocean itself was a solitude. Day after day not a sail
was in sight. Looking up and down the beach, I could usually see
somewhere in the distance a carriage or two, and as many foot
passengers; but I often walked a mile, or sat for half an hour,
without being within hail of any one. Never were airs more gentle
or colors more exquisite.</p>
<p>As for birds, they were surprisingly scarce, but never wanting
altogether. If everything else failed, a few fish-hawks were sure
to be in sight. I watched them at first with eager interest. Up and
down the beach they went, each by himself, with heads pointed
downward, scanning the shallow water. Often they stopped in their
course, and by means of laborious flappings held themselves poised
over a certain spot. Then, perhaps, they set their wings and shot
downward clean under water. If the plunge was unsuccessful, they
shook their feathers dry and were ready to begin again. They had
the fisherman's gift. The second, and even the third attempt might
fail, but no matter; it was simply a question of time and patience.
If the fish was caught, their first concern seemed to be to shift
their hold upon it, till its head pointed to the front. That done,
they shook themselves vigorously and started landward, the shining
white victim wriggling vainly in the clutch of the talons. I took
it for granted that they retired with their quarry to some secluded
spot on the peninsula, till one day I happened to be standing upon
a sand-hill as one passed overhead. Then I perceived that he kept
on straight across the peninsula and the river. More than once,
however, I saw one of them in no haste to go inland. On my second
visit, a hawk came circling about my head, carrying a fish. I was
surprised at the action, but gave it no second thought, nor once
imagined that he was making me his protector, till suddenly a large
bird dropped rather awkwardly upon the sand, not far before me. He
stood for an instant on his long, ungainly legs, and then, showing
a white head and a white tail, rose with a fish in his talons, and
swept away landward out of sight. Here was the osprey's parasite,
the bald eagle, for which I had been on the watch. Meantime, the
hawk too had disappeared. Whether it was his fish which the eagle
had picked up (having missed it in the air) I cannot say. I did not
see it fall, and knew nothing of the eagle's presence until he
fluttered to the beach.</p>
<p>Some days later, I saw the big thief— emblem of American
liberty—play his sharp game to the finish. I was crossing the
bridge, and by accident turned and looked upward. (By accident, I
say, but I was always doing it.) High in the air were two birds,
one chasing the other,—a fish-hawk and a young eagle with
dark head and tail. The hawk meant to save his dinner if he could.
Round and round he went, ascending at every turn, his pursuer after
him hotly. For aught I could see, he stood a good chance of escape,
till all at once another pair of wings swept into the field of my
glass.</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"A third is in the race! Who is the third,</p>
<p>Speeding away swift as the eagle bird?"</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>It <i>was</i> an eagle, an adult, with head and tail white. Only
once more the osprey circled. The odds were against him, and he let
go the fish. As it fell, the old eagle swooped after it, missed it,
swooped again, and this time, long before it could reach the water,
had it fast in his claws. Then off he went, the younger one in
pursuit. They passed out of sight behind the trees of an island,
one close upon the other, and I do not know how the controversy
ended; but I would have wagered a trifle on the old white-head, the
bird of Washington.</p>
<p>The scene reminded me of one I had witnessed in Georgia a
fortnight before, on my way south. The train stopped at a backwoods
station; some of the passengers gathered upon the steps of the car,
and the usual bevy of young negroes came alongside. "Stand on my
head for a nickel?" said one. A passenger put his hand into his
pocket; the boy did as he had promised,— in no very
professional style, be it said,— and with a grin stretched
out his hand. The nickel glistened in the sun, and on the instant a
second boy sprang forward, snatched it out of the sand, and made
off in triumph amid the hilarious applause of his fellows. The
acrobat's countenance indicated a sense of injustice, and I had no
doubt that my younger eagle was similarly affected. "Where is our
boasted honor among thieves?" I imagined him asking. The bird of
freedom is a great bird, and the land of the free is a great
country. Here, let us hope, the parallel ends. Whether on the banks
of Newfoundland or elsewhere, it cannot be that the great republic
would ever snatch a fish that did not belong to it.</p>
<p>I admired the address of the fish-hawks until I saw the gannets.
Then I perceived that the hawks, with all their practice, were no
better than landlubbers. The gannets kept farther out at sea.
Sometimes a scattered flock remained in sight for the greater part
of a forenoon. With their long, sharp wings and their outstretched
necks,—like loons, but with a different flight,—they
were rakish-looking customers. Sometimes from a great height,
sometimes from a lower, sometimes at an incline, and sometimes
vertically, they plunged into the water, and after an absence of
some seconds, as it seemed, came up and rested upon the surface.
They were too far away to be closely observed, and for a time I did
not feel certain what they were. The larger number were in dark
plumage, and it was not till a white one appeared that I said with
assurance, "Gannets!" With the bright sun on him, he was indeed a
splendid bird, snowy white, with the tips of his wings jet black.
If he would have come inshore like the ospreys, I think I should
never have tired of his evolutions.</p>
<p>The gannets showed themselves only now and then, but the brown
pelicans were an every-day sight. I had found them first on the
beach at St. Augustine. Here at Daytona they never alighted on the
sand, and seldom in the water. They were always flying up or down
the beach, and, unless turned from their course by the presence of
some suspicious object, they kept straight on just above the
breakers, rising and falling with the waves; now appearing above
them, and now out of sight in the trough of the sea. Sometimes a
single bird passed, but commonly they were in small flocks. Once I
saw seventeen together,—a pretty long procession; for,
whatever their number, they went always in Indian file. Evidently
some dreadful thing would happen if two pelicans should ever travel
abreast. It was partly this unusual order of march, I suspect,
which gave such an air of preternatural gravity to their movements.
It was impossible to see even two of them go by without feeling
almost as if I were in church. First, both birds flew a rod or two
with slow and stately flappings; then, as if at some preconcerted
signal, both set their wings and scaled for about the same
distance; then they resumed their wing strokes; and so on, till
they passed out of sight. I never heard them utter a sound, or saw
them make a movement of any sort (I speak of what I saw at Daytona)
except to fly straight on, one behind another. If church
ceremonials are still open to amendment, I would suggest, in no
spirit of irreverence, that a study of pelican processionals would
be certain to yield edifying results. Nothing done in any cathedral
could be more solemn. Indeed, their solemnity was so great that I
came at last to find it almost ridiculous; but that, of course, was
only from a want of faith on the part of the beholder. The birds,
as I say, were <i>brown</i> pelicans. Had they been of the other
species, in churchly white and black, the ecclesiastical effect
would perhaps have been heightened, though such a thing is hardly
conceivable.</p>
<p>Some beautiful little gulls, peculiarly dainty in their
appearance ("Bonaparte's gulls," they are called in books, but
"surf gulls" would be a prettier and apter name), were also given
to flying along the breakers, but in a manner very different from
the pelicans'; as different, I may say, as the birds themselves.
They, too, moved steadily onward, north or south as the case might
be, but fed as they went, dropping into the shallow water between
the incoming waves, and rising again to escape the next breaker.
The action was characteristic and graceful, though often somewhat
nervous and hurried. I noticed that the birds commonly went by
twos, but that may have been nothing more than a coincidence.
Beside these small surf gulls, never at all numerous, I usually saw
a few terns, and now and then one or two rather large gulls, which,
as well as I could make out, must have been the ring-billed. It was
a strange beach, I thought, where fish-hawks invariably outnumbered
both gulls and terns.</p>
<p>Of beach birds, properly so called, I saw none but sanderlings.
They were no novelty, but I always stopped to look at them; busy as
ants, running in a body down the beach after a receding wave, and
the next moment scampering back again with all speed before an
incoming one. They tolerated no near approach, but were at once on
the wing for a long flight up or down the coast, looking like a
flock of snow-white birds as they turned their under parts to the
sun in rising above the breakers. Their manner of feeding, with the
head pitched forward, and a quick, eager movement, as if they had
eaten nothing for days, and were fearful that their present bit of
good fortune would not last, is strongly characteristic, so that
they can be recognized a long way off. As I have said, they were
the only true beach birds; but I rarely failed to see one or two
great blue herons playing that rôle. The first one filled me
with surprise. I had never thought of finding him in such a place;
but there he stood, and before I was done with Florida beaches I
had come to look upon him as one of their most constant
<i>habitués</i>. In truth, this largest of the herons is
well-nigh omnipresent in Florida. Wherever there is water, fresh or
salt, he is certain to be met with sooner or later; and even in the
driest place, if you stay there long enough, you will be likely to
see him passing overhead, on his way to the water, which is nowhere
far off. On the beach, as everywhere else, he is a model of
patience. To the best of my recollection, I never saw him catch a
fish there; and I really came to think it pathetic, the persistency
with which he would stand, with the water half way to his knees,
leaning forward expectantly toward the breakers, as if he felt that
this great and generous ocean, which had so many fish to spare,
could not fail to send him, at last, the morsel for which he was
waiting.</p>
<p>But indeed I was not long in perceiving that the Southern
climate made patience a comparatively easy virtue, and fishing, by
a natural consequence, a favorite avocation. Day after day, as I
crossed the bridges on my way to and from the beach, the same men
stood against the rail, holding their poles over the river. They
had an air of having been there all winter. I came to recognize
them, though I knew none of their names. One was peculiarly happy
looking, almost radiant, with an educated face, and only one hand.
His disability hindered him, no doubt. I never saw so much as a
sheep-head or a drum lying at his feet. But inwardly, I felt sure,
his luck was good. Another was older, fifty at least, sleek and
well dressed. He spoke pleasantly enough, if I addressed him;
otherwise he attended strictly to business. Every day he was there,
morning and afternoon. He, I think, had better fortune than any of
the others. Once I saw him land a large and handsome "speckled
trout," to the unmistakable envy of his brother anglers. Still a
third was a younger man, with a broad-brimmed straw hat and a
taciturn habit; no less persevering than Number Two, perhaps, but
far less successful. I marveled a little at their enthusiasm (there
were many beside these), and they, in their turn, did not
altogether conceal their amusement at the foibles of a man, still
out of Bedlam, who walked and walked and walked, always with a
field-glass protruding from his side pocket, which now and then he
pulled out suddenly and leveled at nothing. It is one of the
merciful ameliorations of this present evil world that men are thus
mutually entertaining.</p>
<p>These anglers were to be congratulated. Ordered South by their
physicians,—as most of them undoubtedly were,—compelled
to spend the winter away from friends and business, amid all the
discomforts of Southern hotels, they were happy in having at least
one thing which they loved to do. Blessed is the invalid who has an
outdoor hobby. One man, whom I met more than once in my beach
rambles, seemed to devote himself to bathing, running, and walking.
He looked like an athlete; I heard him tell how far he could run
without getting "winded;" and as he sprinted up and down the sand
in his scanty bathing costume, I always found him a pleasing
spectacle. Another runner there gave me a half-hour of amusement
that turned at the last to a feeling of almost painful sympathy. He
was not in bathing costume, nor did he look particularly athletic.
He was teaching his young lady to ride a bicycle, and his pupil was
at that most interesting stage of a learner's career when the
machine is beginning to steady itself. With a very little
assistance she went bravely, while at the same time the young man
felt it necessary not to let go his hold upon her for more than a
few moments at once. At all events, he must be with her at the
turn. She plied the pedals with vigor, and he ran alongside or
behind, as best he could; she excited, and he out of breath. Back
and forth they went, and it was a relief to me when finally he took
off his coat. I left him still panting in his fair one's wake, and
hoped it would not turn out a case of "love's labor's lost." Let us
hope, too, that he was not an invalid.</p>
<p>While speaking of these my companions in idleness, I may as well
mention an older man,—a rural philosopher, he seemed,—
whom I met again and again, always in search of shells. He was from
Indiana, he told me with agreeable garrulity. His grandchildren
would like the shells. He had perhaps made a mistake in coming so
far south. It was pretty warm, he thought, and he feared the change
would be too great when he went home again. If a man's lungs were
bad, he ought to go to a warm place, of course. <i>He</i> came for
his stomach, which was now pretty well,—a capital proof of
the superior value of fresh air over "proper" food in dyspeptic
troubles; for if there is anywhere in the world a place in which a
delicate stomach would fare worse than in a Southern hotel,
—of the second or third class,—may none but my enemies
ever find it. Seashell collecting is not a panacea. For a disease
like old age, for instance, it might prove to be an alleviation
rather than a cure; but taken long enough, and with a sufficient
mixture of enthusiasm,—a true <i>sine qua non</i>,—it
will be found efficacious, I believe, in all ordinary cases of
dyspepsia.</p>
<p>My Indiana man was far from being alone in his cheerful pursuit.
If strangers, men or women, met me on the beach and wished to say
something more than good-morning, they were sure to ask, "Have you
found any pretty shells?" One woman was a collector of a more
businesslike turn. She had brought a camp-stool, and when I first
saw her in the distance was removing her shoes, and putting on
rubber boots. Then she moved her stool into the surf, sat upon it
with a tin pail beside her, and, leaning forward over the water,
fell to doing something,—I could not tell what. She was so
industrious that I did not venture to disturb her, as I passed; but
an hour or two afterward I overtook her going homeward across the
peninsula with her invalid husband, and she showed me her pail full
of the tiny coquina clams, which she said were very nice for soup,
as indeed I knew. Some days later, I found a man collecting them
for the market, with the help of a horse and a cylindrical wire
roller. With his trousers rolled to his knees, he waded in the
surf, and shoveled the incoming water and sand into the wire roller
through an aperture left for that purpose. Then he closed the
aperture, and drove the horse back and forth through the breakers
till the clams were washed clear of the sand, after which he poured
them out into a shallow tray like a long bread-pan, and transferred
them from that to a big bag. I came up just in time to see them in
the tray, bright with all the colors of the rainbow. "Will you hold
the bag open?" he said. I was glad to help (it was perhaps the only
useful ten minutes that I passed in Florida); and so, counting
quart by quart, he dished them into it. There were thirty odd
quarts, but he wanted a bushel and a quarter, and again took up the
shovel. The clams themselves were not, canned and shipped, he said,
but only the "juice."</p>
<p>Many rudely built cottages stood on the sand-hills just behind
the beach, especially at the points, a mile or so apart, where the
two Daytona bridge roads come out of the scrub; and one day, while
walking up the beach to Ormond, I saw before me a much more
elaborate Queen Anne house. Fancifully but rather neatly painted,
and with a stable to match, it looked like an exotic. As I drew
near, its venerable owner was at work in front of it, shoveling a
path through the sand,—just as, at that moment (February 24),
thousands of Yankee householders were shoveling paths through the
snow, which then was reported by the newspapers to be seventeen
inches deep in the streets of Boston. His reverend air and his long
black coat proclaimed him a clergyman past all possibility of
doubt. He seemed to have got to heaven before death, the place was
so attractive; but being still in a body terrestrial, he may have
found the meat market rather distant, and mosquitoes and sand-flies
sometimes a plague. As I walked up the beach, he drove by me in an
open wagon with a hired man. They kept on till they came to a log
which had been cast up by the sea, and evidently had been sighted
from the house. The hired man lifted it into the wagon, and they
drove back,—quite a stirring adventure, I imagined; an event
to date from, at the very least.</p>
<p>The smaller cottages were nearly all empty at that season. At
different times I made use of many of them, when the sun was hot,
or I had been long afoot. Once I was resting thus on a flight of
front steps, when a three-seated carriage came down the beach and
pulled up opposite. The driver wished to ask me a question, I
thought; no doubt I looked very much at home. From the day I had
entered Florida, every one I met had seemed to know me intuitively
for a New Englander, and most of them—I could not imagine
how—had divined that I came from Boston. It gratified me to
believe that I was losing a little of my provincial manner, under
the influence of more extended travel. But my pride had a sudden
fall. The carriage stopped, as I said; but instead of inquiring the
way, the driver alighted, and all the occupants of the carriage
proceeded to do the same,—eight women, with baskets and
sundries. It was time for me to be starting. I descended the steps,
and pulled off my hat to the first comer, who turned out to be the
proprietor of the establishment. With a gracious smile, she hoped
they were "not frightening me away." She and her friends had come
for a day's picnic at the cottage. Things being as they were (eight
women), she could hardly invite me to share the festivities, and,
with my best apology for the intrusion, I withdrew.</p>
<p>Of one building on the sand-hills I have peculiarly pleasant
recollections. It was not a cottage, but had evidently been put up
as a public resort; especially, as I inferred, for Sunday-school or
parish picnics. It was furnished with a platform for speech-making
(is there any foolishness that men will not commit on sea beaches
and mountain tops?), and, what was more to my purpose, was open on
three sides. I passed a good deal of time there, first and last,
and once it sheltered me from a drenching shower of an hour or two.
The lightning was vivid, and the rain fell in sheets. In the midst
of the blackness and commotion, a single tern, ghostly white, flew
past, and toward the close a bunch of sanderlings came down the
edge of the breakers, still looking for something to eat. The only
other living things in sight were two young fellows, who had
improved the opportunity to try a dip in the surf. Their color
indicated that they were not yet hardened to open-air bathing, and
from their actions it was evident that they found the ocean cool.
They were wet enough before they were done, but it was mostly with
fresh water. Probably they took no harm; but I am moved to remark,
in passing, that I sometimes wondered how generally physicians who
order patients to Florida for the winter caution them against
imprudent exposure. To me, who am no doctor, it seemed none too
safe for young women with consumptive tendencies to be out sailing
in open boats on winter evenings, no matter how warm the afternoon
had been, while I saw one case where a surf bath taken by such an
invalid was followed by a day of prostration and fever. "We who
live here," said a resident, "don't think the water is warm enough
yet; but for these Northern folks it is a great thing to go into
the surf in February, and you can't keep them out."</p>
<p>The rows of cottages of which I have spoken were in one sense a
detriment to the beach; but on the whole, and in their present
deserted condition, I found them an advantage. It was easy enough
to walk away from them, if a man wanted the feeling of utter
solitude (the beach extends from Matanzas Inlet to Mosquito Inlet,
thirty-five miles, more or less); while at other times they not
only furnished shadow and a seat, but, with the paths and little
clearings behind them, were an attraction to many birds. Here I
found my first Florida jays. They sat on the chimney-tops and
ridgepoles, and I was rejoiced to discover that these unique and
interesting creatures, one of the special objects of my journey
South, were not only common, but to an extraordinary degree
approachable. Their extreme confidence in man is one of their
oddest characteristics. I heard from more than one person how
easily and "in almost no time" they could be tamed, if indeed they
needed taming. A resident of Hawks Park told me that they used to
come into his house and stand upon the corners of the dinner table
waiting for their share of the meal. When he was hoeing in the
garden, they would perch on his hat, and stay there by the hour,
unless he drove them off. He never did anything to tame them except
to treat them kindly. When a brood was old enough to leave the
nest, the parents brought the youngsters up to the doorstep as a
matter of course.</p>
<p>The Florida jay, a bird of the scrub, is not to be confounded
with the Florida <i>blue</i> jay (a smaller and less conspicuously
crested duplicate of our common Northern bird), to which it bears
little resemblance either in personal appearance or in voice. Seen
from behind, its aspect is peculiarly striking; the head, wings,
rump, and tail being dark blue, with an almost rectangular patch of
gray set in the midst. Its beak is very stout, and its tail very
long; and though it would attract attention anywhere, it is hardly
to be called handsome or graceful. Its notes—such of them as
I heard, that is— are mostly guttural, with little or nothing
of the screaming quality which distinguishes the blue jay's voice.
To my ear they were often suggestive of the Northern shrike.</p>
<p>On the 23d of February I was standing on the rear piazza of one
of the cottages, when a jay flew into the oak and palmetto scrub
close by. A second glance, and I saw that she was busy upon a nest.
When she had gone, I moved nearer, and waited. She did not return,
and I descended the steps and went to the edge of the thicket to
inspect her work: a bulky affair,—nearly done, I
thought,—loosely constructed of pretty large twigs. I had
barely returned to the veranda before the bird appeared again. This
time I was in a position to look squarely in upon her. She had some
difficulty in edging her way through the dense bushes with a long,
branching stick in her bill; but she accomplished the feat, fitted
the new material into its place, readjusted the other twigs a bit
here and there, and then, as she rose to depart, she looked me
suddenly in the face and stopped, as much as to say, "Well, well!
here's a pretty go! A man spying upon me!" I wondered whether she
would throw up the work, but in another minute she was back again
with another twig. The nest, I should have said, was about four
feet from the ground, and perhaps twenty feet from the cottage.
Four days later, I found her sitting upon it. She flew off as I
came up, and I pushed into the scrub far enough to thrust my hand
into the nest, which, to my disappointment, was empty. In fact, it
was still far from completed; for on the 3d of March, when I paid
it a farewell visit, its owner was still at work lining it with
fine grass. At that time it was a comfortable-looking and really
elaborate structure. Both the birds came to look at me as I stood
on the piazza. They perched together on the top of a stake so
narrow that there was scarcely room for their feet; and as they
stood thus, side by side, one of them struck its beak several times
against the beak of the other, as if in play. I wished them joy of
their expected progeny, and was the more ready to believe they
would have it for this little display of sportive
sentimentality.</p>
<p>It was a distinguished company that frequented that row of
narrow back yards on the edge of the sand-hills. As a new-comer, I
found the jays (sometimes there were ten under my eye at once) the
most entertaining members of it, but if I had been a dweller there
for the summer, I should perhaps have altered my opinion; for the
group contained four of the finest of Floridian
songsters,—the mocking-bird, the brown thrasher, the cardinal
grosbeak, and the Carolina wren. Rare morning and evening concerts
those cottagers must have. And besides these there were catbirds,
ground doves, red-eyed chewinks, white-eyed chewinks, a song
sparrow (one of the few that I saw in Florida), savanna sparrows,
myrtle birds, redpoll warblers, a phoebe, and two flickers. The
last-named birds, by the way, are never backward about displaying
their tender feelings. A treetop flirtation is their special
delight (I hope my readers have all seen one; few things of the
sort are better worth looking at), and here, in the absence of
trees, they had taken to the ridgepole of a house.</p>
<p>More than once I remarked white-breasted swallows straggling
northward along the line of sand-hills. They were in loose order,
but the movement was plainly concerted, with all the look of a
vernal migration. This swallow, the first of its family to arrive
in New England, remains in Florida throughout the winter, but is
known also to go as far south as Central America. The purple
martins—which, so far as I am aware, do not winter in
Florida—had already begun to make their appearance. While
crossing the bridge, February 22, I was surprised to notice two of
them sitting upon a bird-box over the draw, which just then stood
open for the passage of a tug-boat. The toll-gatherer told me they
had come "from some place" eight or ten days before. His attention
had been called to them by his cat, who was trying to get up to the
box to bid them welcome. He believed that she discovered them
within three minutes of their arrival. It seemed not unlikely. In
its own way a cat is a pretty sharp ornithologist.</p>
<p>One or two cormorants were almost always about the river.
Sometimes they sat upon stakes in a patriotic, spread-eagle
(American eagle) attitude, as if drying their wings,—a
curious sight till one became accustomed to it. Snakebirds and
buzzards resort to the same device, but I cannot recall ever seeing
any Northern bird thus engaged. From the south bridge I one morning
saw, to my great satisfaction, a couple of white pelicans, the only
ones that I found in Florida, though I was assured that within
twenty years they had been common along the Halifax and
Hillsborough rivers. My birds were flying up the river at a good
height. The brown pelicans, on the other hand, made their daily
pilgrimages just above the level of the water, as has been already
described, and were never over the river, but off the beach.</p>
<p>All in all, there are few pleasanter walks in Florida, I
believe, than the beach-round at Daytona, out by one bridge and
back by the other. An old hotel-keeper—a rural Yankee, if one
could tell anything by his look and speech—said to me in a
burst of confidence, "Yes, we've got a climate, and that's about
all we have got,—climate and sand." I could not entirely
agree with him. For myself, I found not only fine days, but fine
prospects. But there was no denying the sand.</p>
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