<SPAN name="hillsborough"></SPAN>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<h2>ALONG THE HILLSBOROUGH.</h2>
<p>Wherever a walker lives, he finds sooner or later one favorite
road. So it was with me at New Smyrna, where I lived for three
weeks. I had gone there for the sake of the river, and my first
impulse was to take the road that runs southerly along its bank. At
the time I thought it the most beautiful road I had found in
Florida, nor have I seen any great cause since to alter that
opinion. With many pleasant windings (beautiful roads are never
straight, nor unnecessarily wide, which is perhaps the reason why
our rural authorities devote themselves so madly to the work of
straightening and widening), —with many pleasant windings, I
say,</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"The grace of God made manifest in curves,"</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>it follows the edge of the hammock, having the river on one
side, and the forest on the other. It was afternoon when I first
saw it. Then it is shaded from the sun, while the river and its
opposite bank have on them a light more beautiful than can be
described or imagined; a light—with reverence for the poet of
nature be it spoken—a light that never was <i>except</i> on
sea or land. The poet's dream was never equal to it.</p>
<p>In a flat country stretches of water are doubly welcome. They
take the place of hills, and give the eye what it
craves,—distance; which softens angles, conceals details, and
heightens colors,—in short, transfigures the world with its
romancer's touch, and blesses us with illusion. So, as I loitered
along the south road, I never tired of looking across the river to
the long, wooded island, and over that to the line of sand-hills
that marked the eastern rim of the East Peninsula, beyond which was
the Atlantic. The white crests of the hills made the sharper points
of the horizon line. Elsewhere clumps of nearer pine-trees
intervened, while here and there a tall palmetto stood, or seemed
to stand, on the highest and farthest ridge looking seaward. But
particulars mattered little. The blue water, the pale, changeable
grayish-green of the low island woods, the deeper green of the
pines, the unnamable hues of the sky, the sunshine that flooded it
all, these were beauty enough;—beauty all the more keenly
enjoyed because for much of the way it was seen only by glimpses,
through vistas of palmetto and live-oak. Sometimes the road came
quite out of the woods, as it rounded a turn of the hammock. Then I
stopped to gaze long at the scene. Elsewhere I pushed through the
hedge at favorable points, and sat, or stood, looking up and down
the river. A favorite seat was the prow of an old row-boat, which
lay, falling to pieces, high and dry upon the sand. It had made its
last cruise, but I found it still useful.</p>
<p>The river is shallow. At low tide sandbars and oyster-beds
occupy much of its breadth; and even when it looked full, a great
blue heron would very likely be wading in the middle of it. That
was a sight to which I had grown accustomed in Florida, where this
bird, familiarly known as "the major," is apparently ubiquitous.
Too big to be easily hidden, it is also, as a general thing, too
wary to be approached within gunshot. I am not sure that I ever
came within sight of one, no matter how suddenly or how far away,
that it did not give evidence of having seen me first. Long legs,
long wings, a long bill—and long sight and long patience:
such is the tall bird's dowry. Good and useful qualities, all of
them. Long may they avail to put off the day of their owner's
extermination.</p>
<p>The major is scarcely a bird of which you can make a pet in your
mind, as you may of the chickadee, for instance, or the bluebird,
or the hermit thrush. He does not lend himself naturally to such
imaginary endearments. But it is pleasant to have him on one's
daily beat. I should count it one compensation for having to live
in Florida instead of in Massachusetts (but I might require a good
many others) that I should see him a hundred times as often. In
walking down the river road I seldom saw less than half a dozen;
not together (the major, like fishermen in general, is of an
unsocial turn), but here one and there one,—on a sand-bar far
out in the river, or in some shallow bay, or on the submerged edge
of an oyster-flat. Wherever he was, he always looked as if he might
be going to do something presently; even now, perhaps, the matter
was on his mind; but at this moment—well, there are times
when a heron's strength is to stand still. Certainly he seemed in
no danger of overeating. A cracker told me that the major made an
excellent dish if killed on the full of the moon. I wondered at
that qualification, but my informant explained himself. The bird,
he said, feeds mostly at night, and fares best with the moon to
help him. If the reader would dine off roast blue heron, therefore,
as I hope I never shall, let him mind the lunar phases. But think
of the gastronomic ups and downs of a bird that is fat and lean by
turns twelve times a year! Possibly my informant overstated the
case; but in any event I would trust the major to bear himself like
a philosopher. If there is any one of God's creatures that can wait
for what he wants, it must be the great blue heron.</p>
<p>I have spoken of his caution. If he was patrolling a shallow on
one side of an oyster-bar,—at the rate, let us say, of two
steps a minute,—and took it into his head (an inappropriate
phrase, as conveying an idea of something like suddenness) to try
the water on the other side, he did not spread his wings, as a
matter of course, and fly over. First he put up his head—an
operation that makes another bird of him— and looked in all
directions. How could he tell what enemy might be lying in wait?
And having alighted on the other side (his manner of alighting is
one of his prettiest characteristics), he did not at once draw in
his neck till his bill protruded on a level with his body, and
resume his labors, but first he looked once more all about him. It
was a good <i>habit</i> to do that, anyhow, and he meant to run no
risks. If "the race of birds was created out of innocent,
light-minded men, whose thoughts were directed toward heaven,"
according to the word of Plato, then <i>Ardea herodias</i> must
long ago have fallen from grace. I imagine his state of mind to be
always like that of our pilgrim fathers in times of Indian
massacres. When they went after the cows or to hoe the corn, they
took their guns with them, and turned no corner without a sharp
lookout against ambush. No doubt such a condition of affairs has
this advantage, that it makes ennui impossible. There is always
something to live for, if it be only to avoid getting killed.</p>
<p>After this manner did the Hillsborough River majors all behave
themselves until my very last walk beside it. Then I found the
exception,—the exception that is as good as inevitable in the
case of any bird, if the observation be carried far enough. He (or
she; there was no telling which it was) stood on the sandy beach, a
splendid creature in full nuptial garb, two black plumes nodding
jauntily from its crown, and masses of soft elongated feathers
draping its back and lower neck. Nearer and nearer I approached,
till I must have been within a hundred feet; but it stood as if on
dress parade, exulting to be looked at. Let us hope it never
carried itself thus gayly when the wrong man came along.</p>
<p>Near the major—not keeping him company, but feeding in the
same shallows and along the same oyster-bars—were constantly
to be seen two smaller relatives of his, the little blue heron and
the Louisiana. The former is what is called a dichromatic species;
some of the birds are blue, and others white. On the Hillsborough,
it seemed to me that white specimens predominated; but possibly
that was because they were so much more conspicuous. Sunlight
favors the white feather; no other color shows so quickly or so
far. If you are on the beach and catch sight of a bird far out at
sea,—a gull or a tern, a gannet or a loon,—it is
invariably the white parts that are seen first. And so the little
white heron might stand never so closely against the grass or the
bushes on the further shore of the river, and the eye could not
miss him. If he had been a blue one, at that distance, ten to one
he would have escaped me. Besides, I was more on the alert for
white ones, because I was always hoping to find one of them with
black legs. In other words, I was looking for the little white
egret, a bird concerning which, thanks to the murderous work of
plume-hunters,—thanks, also, to those good women who pay for
having the work done,—I must confess that I went to Florida
and came home again without certainly seeing it.</p>
<p>The heron with which I found myself especially taken was the
Louisiana; a bird of about the same size as the little blue, but
with an air of daintiness and lightness that is quite its own, and
quite indescribable. When it rose upon the wing, indeed, it seemed
almost <i>too</i> light, almost unsteady, as if it lacked ballast,
like a butterfly. It was the most numerous bird of its tribe along
the river, I think, and, with one exception, the most approachable.
That exception was the green heron, which frequented the flats
along the village front, and might well have been mistaken for a
domesticated bird; letting you walk across a plank directly over
its head while it squatted upon the mud, and when disturbed flying
into a fig-tree before the hotel piazza, just as the dear little
ground doves were in the habit of doing. To me, who had hitherto
seen the green heron in the wildest of places, this tameness was an
astonishing sight. It would be hard to say which surprised me more,
the New Smyrna green herons or the St. Augustine sparrow-hawks,
—which latter treated me very much as I am accustomed to
being treated by village-bred robins in Massachusetts.</p>
<p>The Louisiana heron was my favorite, as I say, but incomparably
the handsomest member of the family (I speak of such as I saw) was
the great white egret. In truth, the epithet "handsome" seems
almost a vulgarism as applied to a creature so superb, so utterly
and transcendently splendid. I saw it—in a way to be sure of
it—only once. Then, on an island in the Hillsborough, two
birds stood in the dead tops of low shrubby trees, fully exposed in
the most favorable of lights, their long dorsal trains drooping
behind them and swaying gently in the wind. I had never seen
anything so magnificent. And when I returned, two or three hours
afterward, from a jaunt up the beach to Mosquito Inlet, there they
still were, as if they had not stirred in all that time. The reader
should understand that this egret is between four and five feet in
length, and measures nearly five feet from wing tip to wing tip,
and that its plumage throughout is of spotless white. It is pitiful
to think how constantly a bird of that size and color must be in
danger of its life.</p>
<p>Happily, the lawmakers of the State have done something of
recent years for the protection of such defenseless beauties.
Happily, too, shooting from the river boats is no longer
permitted,—on the regular lines, that is. I myself saw a
young gentleman stand on the deck of an excursion steamer, with a
rifle, and do his worst to kill or maim every living thing that
came in sight, from a spotted sandpiper to a turkey buzzard! I call
him a "gentleman;" he was in gentle company, and the fact that he
chewed gum industriously would, I fear, hardly invalidate his claim
to that title. The narrow river wound in and out between low,
densely wooded banks, and the beauty of the shifting scene was
enough almost to take one's breath away; but the crack of the rifle
was not the less frequent on that account. Perhaps the sportsman
was a Southerner, to whom river scenery of that enchanting kind was
an old story. More likely he was a Northerner, one of the men who
thank Heaven they are "not sentimental."</p>
<p>In my rambles up and down the river road I saw few water birds
beside the herons. Two or three solitary cormorants would be
shooting back and forth at a furious rate, or swimming in
midstream; and sometimes a few spotted sandpipers and killdeer
plovers were feeding along the shore. Once in a great while a
single gull or tern made its appearance,—just often enough to
keep me wondering why they were not there oftener,—and one
day a water turkey went suddenly over my head and dropped into the
river on the farther side of the island. I was glad to see this
interesting creature for once in salt water; for the Hillsborough,
like the Halifax and the Indian rivers, is a river in name
only,—a river by brevet, —being, in fact, a salt-water
lagoon or sound between the mainland and the eastern peninsula.</p>
<p>Fish-hawks were always in sight, and bald eagles were seldom
absent altogether. Sometimes an eagle stood perched on a dead tree
on an island. Oftener I heard a scream, and looked up to see one
sailing far overhead, or chasing an osprey. On one such occasion,
when the hawk seemed to be making a losing fight, a third bird
suddenly intervened, and the eagle, as I thought, was driven away.
"Good for the brotherhood of fish-hawks!" I exclaimed. But at that
moment I put my glass on the new-comer; and behold, he was not a
hawk, but another eagle. Meanwhile the hawk had disappeared with
his fish, and I was left to ponder the mystery.</p>
<p>As for the wood, the edge of the hammock, through which the road
passes, there were no birds in it. It was one of those places (I
fancy every bird-gazer must have had experience of such) where it
is a waste of time to seek them. I could walk down the road for two
miles and back again, and then sit in my room at the hotel for
fifteen minutes, and see more wood birds, and more kinds of them,
in one small live-oak before the window than I had seen in the
whole four miles; and that not once and by accident, but again and
again. In affairs of this kind it is useless to contend. The spot
looks favorable, you say, and nobody can deny it; there must be
birds there, plenty of them; your missing them to-day was a matter
of chance; you will try again. And you try again—and
again—and yet again. But in the end you have to acknowledge
that, for some reason unknown to you, the birds have agreed to give
that place the go-by.</p>
<p>One bird, it is true, I found in this hammock, and not
elsewhere: a single oven-bird, which, with one Northern water
thrush and one Louisiana water thrush, completed my set of Florida
<i>Seiuri</i>. Besides him I recall one hermit thrush, a few
cedar-birds, a house wren, chattering at a great rate among the
"bootjacks" (leaf-stalks) of an overturned palmetto-tree, with an
occasional mocking-bird, cardinal grosbeak, prairie warbler, yellow
redpoll, myrtle bird, ruby-crowned kinglet, phoebe, and flicker. In
short, there were no birds at all, except now and then an
accidental straggler of a kind that could be found almost anywhere
else in indefinite numbers.</p>
<p>And as it was not the presence of birds that made the river road
attractive, so neither was it any unwonted display of blossoms.
Beside a similar road along the bank of the Halifax, in Daytona,
grew multitudes of violets, and goodly patches of purple verbena
(garden plants gone wild, perhaps), and a fine profusion of
spiderwort, —a pretty flower, the bluest of the blue, thrice
welcome to me as having been one of the treasures of the very first
garden of which I have any remembrance. "Indigo plant," we called
it then. Here, however, on the way from New Smyrna to Hawks Park, I
recall no violets, nor any verbena or spiderwort. Yellow
wood-sorrel (oxalis) was here, of course, as it was everywhere. It
dotted the grass in Florida very much as five-fingers do in
Massachusetts, I sometimes thought. And the creeping, round-leaved
houstonia was here, with a superfluity of a weedy blue sage
(<i>Salvia lyrata</i>). Here, also, as in Daytona, I found a
strikingly handsome tufted plant, a highly varnished evergreen,
which I persisted in taking for a fern—the sterile
fronds—in spite of repeated failures to find it described by
Dr. Chapman under that head, until at last an excellent woman came
to my help with the information that it was "coontie" (<i>Zamia
integrifolia</i>), famous as a plant out of which the Southern
people made bread in war time. This confession of botanical
amateurishness and incompetency will be taken, I hope, as rather to
my credit than otherwise; but it would be morally worthless if I
did not add the story of another plant, which, in this same New
Smyrna hammock, I frequently noticed hanging in loose bunches, like
blades of flaccid deep green grass, from the trunks of cabbage
palmettos. The tufts were always out of reach, and I gave them no
particular thought; and it was not until I got home to
Massachusetts, and then almost by accident, that I learned what
they were. They, it turned out, <i>were</i> ferns (<i>Vittaria
lineata</i>—grass fern), and my discomfiture was
complete.</p>
<p>This comparative dearth of birds and flowers was not in all
respects a disadvantage. On the contrary, to a naturalist blessed
now and then with a supernaturalistic mood, it made the place, on
occasion, a welcome retreat. Thus, one afternoon, as I remember, I
had been reading Keats, the only book I had brought with
me,—not counting manuals, of course, which come under another
head,—and by and by started once more for the pine lands by
the way of the cotton-shed hammock, "to see what I could see." But
poetry had spoiled me just then for anything like scientific
research, and as I waded through the ankle-deep sand I said to
myself all at once, "No, no! What do I care for another new bird? I
want to see the beauty of the world." With that I faced about, and,
taking a side track, made as directly as possible for the river
road. There I should have a mind at ease, with no unfamiliar,
tantalizing bird note to set my curiosity on edge, nor any sand
through which to be picking my steps.</p>
<p>The river road is paved with oyster-shells. If any reader thinks
that statement prosaic or unimportant, then he has never lived in
southern Florida. In that part of the world all new-comers have to
take walking-lessons; unless, indeed, they have already served an
apprenticeship on Cape Cod, or in some other place equally
arenarious. My own lesson I got at second hand, and on a Sunday. It
was at New Smyrna, in the village. Two women were behind me, on
their way home from church, and one of them was complaining of the
sand, to which she was not yet used. "Yes," said the other, "I
found it pretty hard walking at first, but I learned after a while
that the best way is to set the heel down hard, as hard as you can;
then the sand doesn't give under you so much, and you get along
more comfortably." I wonder whether she noticed, just in front of
her, a man who began forthwith to bury his boot heel at every
step?</p>
<p>In such a country (the soil is said to be good for orange-trees,
but they do not have to walk) roads of powdered shell are veritable
luxuries, and land agents are quite right in laying all stress upon
them as inducements to possible settlers. If the author of the
Apocalypse had been raised in Florida, we should never have had the
streets of the New Jerusalem paved with gold. His idea of heaven,
would have been different from that; more personal and home-felt,
we may be certain.</p>
<p>The river road, then, as I have said, and am glad to say again,
was shell-paved. And well it might be; for the hammock, along the
edge of which it meandered, seemed, in some places at least, to be
little more than a pile of oyster-shells, on which soil had somehow
been deposited, and over which a forest was growing. Florida
Indians have left an evil memory. I heard a philanthropic visitor
lamenting that she had talked with many of the people about them,
and had yet to hear a single word said in their favor. Somebody
might have been good enough to say that, with all their faults,
they had given to eastern Florida a few hills, such as they are,
and at present are supplying it, indirectly, with comfortable
highways. How they must have feasted, to leave such heaps of shells
behind them! They came to the coast on purpose, we may suppose.
Well, the red-men are gone, but the oyster-beds remain; and if
winter refugees continue to pour in this direction, as doubtless
they will, they too will eat a "heap" of oysters (it is easy to see
how the vulgar Southern use of that word may have originated), and
in the course of time, probably, the shores of the Halifax and the
Hillsborough will be a fine mountainous country! And then, if this
ancient, nineteenth-century prediction is remembered, the highest
peak of the range will perhaps be named in a way which the innate
modesty of the prophet restrains him from specifying with greater
particularity.</p>
<p>Meanwhile it is long to wait, and tourists and residents alike
must find what comfort they can in the lesser hills which, thanks
to the good appetite of their predecessors, are already theirs. For
my own part, there is one such eminence of which I cherish the most
grateful recollections. It stands (or stood; the road-makers had
begun carting it away) at a bend in the road just south of one of
the Turnbull canals. I climbed it often (it can hardly be less than
fifteen or twenty feet above the level of the sea), and spent more
than one pleasant hour upon its grassy summit. Northward was New
Smyrna, a village in the woods, and farther away towered the
lighthouse of Mosquito Inlet. Along the eastern sky stretched the
long line of the peninsula sand-hills, between the white crests of
which could be seen the rude cottages of Coronado beach. To the
south and west was the forest, and in front, at my feet, lay the
river with its woody islands. Many times have I climbed a mountain
and felt myself abundantly repaid by an off-look less beautiful.
This was the spot to which I turned when I had been reading Keats,
and wanted to see the beauty of the world. Here were a grassy seat,
the shadow of orange-trees, and a wide prospect. In Florida, I
found no better place in which a man who wished to be both a
naturalist and a nature-lover, who felt himself heir to a double
inheritance,</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"The clear eye's moiety and the dear heart's part,"</p>
<p>could for the time sit still and be happy.</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The orange-trees yielded other things beside shadow, though
perhaps nothing better than that. They were resplendent with fruit,
and on my earlier visits were also in bloom. One did not need to
climb the hill to learn the fact. For an out-of-door sweetness it
would be hard, I think, to improve upon the scent of orange
blossoms. As for the oranges themselves, they seemed to be in
little demand, large and handsome as they were. Southern people in
general, I fancy, look upon wild fruit of this kind as not exactly
edible. I remember asking two colored men in Tallahassee whether
the oranges still hanging conspicuously from a tree just over the
wall (a sight not so very common in that part of the State) were
sweet or sour. I have forgotten just what they said, but I remember
how they <i>looked</i>. I meant the inquiry as a mild bit of humor,
but to them it was a thousandfold better than that: it was wit
ineffable. What Shakespeare said about the prosperity of a jest was
never more strikingly exemplified. In New Smyrna, with orange
groves on every hand, the wild fruit went begging with natives and
tourists alike; so that I feel a little hesitancy about confessing
my own relish for it, lest I should be accused of affectation. Not
that I devoured wild oranges by the dozen, or in place of sweet
ones; one sour orange goes a good way, as the common saying is; but
I ate them, nevertheless, or rather drank them, and found them, in
a thirsty hour, decidedly refreshing.</p>
<p>The unusual coldness of the past season (Florida winters, from
what I heard about them, must have fallen of late into a queer
habit of being regularly exceptional) had made it difficult to buy
sweet oranges that were not dry and "punky"<SPAN id="footnotetag4"
name="footnotetag4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></SPAN>
toward the stem; but the hardier wild fruit had weathered the
frost, and was so juicy that, as I say, you did not so much eat one
as drink it. As for the taste, it was a wholesome bitter-sour, as
if a lemon had been flavored with quinine; not quite so sour as a
lemon, perhaps, nor <i>quite</i> so bitter as Peruvian bark, but,
as it were, an agreeable compromise between the two. When I drank
one, I not only quenched my thirst, but felt that I had taken an
infallible prophylactic against the malarial fever. Better still, I
had surprised myself. For one who had felt a lifelong distaste,
unsocial and almost unmanly, for the bitter drinks which humanity
in general esteems so essential to its health and comfort, I was
developing new and unexpected capabilities; than which few things
can be more encouraging as years increase upon a man's head, and
the world seems to be closing in about him.</p>
<p>Later in the season, on this same shell mound, I might have
regaled myself with fresh figs. Here, at any rate, was a
thrifty-looking fig-tree, though its crop, if it bore one, would
perhaps not have waited my coming so patiently as the oranges had
done. Here, too, was a red cedar; and to me, who, in my ignorance,
had always thought of this tough little evergreen as especially at
home on my own bleak and stony hillsides, it seemed an incongruous
trio,—fig-tree, orange-tree, and savin. In truth, the cedars
of Florida were one of my liveliest surprises. At first I refused
to believe that they were red cedars, so strangely exuberant were
they, so disdainful of the set, cone-shaped, toy-tree pattern on
which I had been used to seeing red cedars built. And when at last
a study of the flora compelled me to admit their identity,<SPAN id=
"footnotetag5" name="footnotetag5"></SPAN><SPAN href=
"#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></SPAN> I turned about and protested that I
had never seen red cedars before. One, in St. Augustine, near San
Marco Avenue, I had the curiosity to measure. The girth of the
trunk at the smallest place was six feet five inches, and the
spread of the branches was not less than fifty feet.</p>
<p>The stroller in this road suffered few distractions. The houses,
two or three to the mile, stood well back in the woods, with little
or no cleared land about them. Picnic establishments they seemed to
a Northern eye, rather than permanent dwellings. At one point, in
the hammock, a rude camp was occupied by a group of rough-looking
men and several small children, who seemed to be getting on as best
they could—none too well, to judge from
appearances—without feminine ministrations. What they were
there for I never made out. They fished, I think, but whether by
way of amusement or as a serious occupation I did not learn.
Perhaps, like the Indians of old, they had come to the river for
the oyster season. They might have done worse. They never paid the
slightest attention to me, nor once gave me any decent excuse for
engaging them in talk. The best thing I remember about them was a
tableau caught in passing. A "norther" had descended upon us
unexpectedly (Florida is not a whit behind the rest of the world in
sudden changes of temperature), and while hastening homeward,
toward nightfall, hugging myself to keep warm, I saw, in the woods,
this group of campers disposed about a lively blaze.</p>
<p>Let us be thankful, say I, that memory is so little the servant
of the will. Chance impressions of this kind, unforeseen,
involuntary, and inexplicable, make one of the chief delights of
traveling, or rather of having traveled. In the present case,
indeed, the permanence of the impression is perhaps not altogether
beyond the reach of a plausible conjecture. We have not always
lived in houses; and if we love the sight of a fire
out-of-doors,—a camp-fire, that is to say, —as we all
do, so that the, burning of a brush-heap in a neighbor's yard will
draw us to the window, the feeling is but part of an ancestral
inheritance. We have come by it honestly, as the phrase is. And so
I need not scruple to set down another reminiscence of the same
kind,—an early morning street scene, of no importance in
itself, in the village of New Smyrna. It may have been on the
morning next after the "norther" just mentioned. I cannot say. We
had two or three such touches of winter in early March; none of
them at all distressing, be it understood, to persons in ordinary
health. One night water froze,—"as thick as a silver
dollar,"—and orange growers were alarmed for the next
season's crop, the trees being just ready to blossom. Some men kept
fires burning in their orchards overnight; a pretty spectacle, I
should think, especially where the fruit was still ungathered. On
one of these frosty mornings, then, I saw a solitary horseman, not
"wending his way," but warming his hands over a fire that he had
built for that purpose in the village street. One might live and
die in a New England village without seeing such a sight. A Yankee
would have betaken himself to the corner grocery. But here, though
that "adjunct of civilization" was directly across the way, most
likely it had never had a stove in it. The sun would give warmth
enough in an hour,—by nine o'clock one would probably be glad
of a sunshade; but the man was chilly after his ride; it was still
a bit early to go about the business that had brought him into
town: what more natural than to hitch his horse, get together a few
sticks, and kindle a blaze? What an insane idea it would have
seemed to him that a passing stranger might remember him and his
fire three months afterward, and think them worth talking about in
print! But then, as was long ago said, it is the fate of some men
to have greatness thrust upon them.</p>
<p>This main street of the village, by the way, with its hotels and
shops, was no other than my river road itself, in its more
civilized estate, as I now remember with a sense of surprise. In my
mind the two had never any connection. It was in this thoroughfare
that one saw now and then a group of cavaliers strolling about
under broad-brimmed hats, with big spurs at their heels, accosting
passers-by with hearty familiarity, first names and hand-shakes,
while their horses stood hitched to the branches of roadside
trees,—a typical Southern picture. Here, on a Sunday
afternoon, were two young fellows who had brought to town a mother
coon and three young ones, hoping to find a purchaser. The guests
at the hotels manifested no eagerness for such pets, but the
colored bell-boys and waiters gathered about, and after a little
good-humored dickering bought the entire lot, box and all, for a
dollar and a half; first having pulled the little ones out between
the slats —not without some risk to both parties— to
look at them and pass them round. The venders walked off with grins
of ill-concealed triumph. The Fates had been kind to them, and they
had three silver half-dollars in their pockets. I heard one of them
say something about giving part of the money to a third man who had
told them where the nest was; but his companion would listen to no
such folly. "He wouldn't come with us," he said, "and we won't tell
him a damned thing." I fear there was nothing distinctively
Southern about <i>that</i>.</p>
<p>Here, too, in the heart of the town, was a magnificent cluster
of live-oaks, worth coming to Florida to see; far-spreading, full
of ferns and air plants, and heavy with hanging moss. Day after day
I went out to admire them. Under them was a neglected orange grove,
and in one of the orange-trees, amid the glossy foliage, appeared
my first summer tanager. It was a royal setting, and the splendid
vermilion-red bird was worthy of it. Among the oaks I walked in the
evening, listening to the strange low chant of the
chuck-will's-widow, —a name which the owner himself
pronounces with a rest after the first syllable. Once, for two or
three days, the trees were amazingly full of blue yellow-backed
warblers. Numbers of them, a dozen at least, could be heard singing
at once directly over one's head, running up the scale not one
after another, but literally in unison. Here the tufted titmouse,
the very soul of monotony, piped and piped and piped, as if his
diapason stop were pulled out and stuck, and could not be pushed in
again. He is an odd genius. With plenty of notes, he wearies you
almost to distraction, harping on one string for half an hour
together. He is the one Southern bird that I should perhaps be
sorry to see common in Massachusetts; but that "perhaps" is a large
word. Many yellow-throated warblers, silent as yet, were commonly
in the live-oaks, and innumerable myrtle birds, also silent, with
prairie warblers, black-and-white creepers, solitary vireos, an
occasional chickadee, and many more. It was a birdy spot; and just
across the way, on the shrubby island, were red-winged blackbirds,
who piqued my curiosity by adding to the familiar <i>conkaree</i> a
final syllable,—the Florida termination, I called
it,—which made me wonder whether, as has been the case with
so many other Florida birds, they might not turn out to be a
distinct race, worthy of a name (<i>Agelaius phoeniceus
something-or-other</i>), as well as of a local habitation. I
suggest the question to those whose business it is to be learned in
such matters.<SPAN id="footnotetag6" name="footnotetag6"></SPAN><SPAN href=
"#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></SPAN></p>
<p>The tall grass about the borders of the island was alive with
clapper rails. Before I rose in the morning I heard them crying in
full chorus; and now and then during the day something would
happen, and all at once they would break out with one sharp volley,
and then instantly all would be silent again. Theirs is an apt
name,— <i>Rallus crepitans.</i> Once I watched two of them in
the act of crepitating, and ever after that, when the sudden uproar
burst forth, I seemed to see the reeds full of birds, each with his
bill pointing skyward, bearing his part in the salvo. So, far as I
could perceive, they had nothing to fear from human enemies. They
ran about the mud on the edge of the grass, especially in the
morning, looking like half-grown pullets. Their specialty was
crab-fishing, at which they were highly expert, plunging into the
water up to the depth of their legs, and handling and swallowing
pretty large specimens with surprising dexterity. I was greatly
pleased with them, as well as with their local name, "everybody's
chickens."</p>
<p>Once I feared we had heard the last of them. On a day following
a sudden fall of the mercury, a gale from the north set in at noon,
with thunder and lightning, hail, and torrents of rain. The river
was quickly lashed into foam, and the gale drove the ocean into it
through the inlet, till the shrubbery of the rails' island barely
showed above the breakers. The street was deep under water, and
fears were entertained for the new bridge and the road to the
beach. All night the gale continued, and all the next day till late
in the afternoon; and when the river should have been at low tide,
the island was still flooded. Gravitation was overmatched for the
time being. And where were the rails, I asked myself. They could
swim, no doubt, when put to it, but it seemed impossible that they
could survive so fierce an inundation. Well, the wind ceased, the
tide went out at last; and behold, the rails were in full cry, not
a voice missing! How they had managed it was beyond my ken.</p>
<p>Another island, farther out than that of the rails (but the
rails, like the long-billed marsh wrens, appeared to be present in
force all up and down the river, in suitable places), was occupied
nightly as a crow-roost. Judged by the morning clamor, which, like
that of the rails, I heard from my bed, its population must have
been enormous. One evening I happened to come up the street just in
time to see the hinder part of the procession—some hundreds
of birds—flying across the river. They came from the
direction of the pine lands in larger and smaller squads, and with
but a moderate amount of noise moved straight to their destination.
All but one of them so moved, that is to say. The performance of
that one exception was a mystery. He rose high in the air, over the
river, and remained soaring all by himself, acting sometimes as if
he were catching insects, till the flight had passed, even to the
last scattering detachments. What could be the meaning of his
eccentric behavior? Some momentary caprice had taken him, perhaps.
Or was he, as I could not help asking, some duly appointed officer
of the day,—grand marshal, if you please,— with a
commission to see all hands in before retiring himself? He waited,
at any rate, till the final stragglers had passed; then he came
down out of the air and followed them. I meant to watch the
ingathering a second time, to see whether this feature of it would
be repeated, but I was never there at the right moment. One cannot
do everything.</p>
<p>Now, alas, Florida seems very far off. I am never likely to walk
again under those New Smyrna live-oaks, nor to see again all that
beauty of the Hillsborough. And yet, in a truer and better sense of
the word, I do see it, and shall. What a heavenly light falls at
this moment on the river and the island woods! Perhaps we must come
back to Wordsworth, after all,—</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"The light that never was, on sea or land."</p>
</div>
</div>
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