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<h2>A MORNING AT THE OLD SUGAR MILL.<SPAN id="footnotetag7" name= "footnotetag7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></SPAN></h2>
<p>On the third or fourth day of my sojourn at the Live Oak Inn,
the lady of the house, noticing my peripatetic habits, I suppose,
asked whether I had been to the old sugar mill. The ruin is
mentioned in the guide-books as one of the historic features of the
ancient settlement of New Smyrna, but I had forgotten the fact, and
was thankful to receive a description of the place, as well as of
the road thither,—a rather blind road, my informant said,
with no houses at which to inquire the way.</p>
<p>Two or three mornings afterward, I set out in the direction
indicated. If the route proved to be half as vague as my good
lady's account of it had sounded, I should probably never find the
mill; but the walk would be pleasant, and that, after all, was the
principal consideration, especially to a man who just then cared
more, or thought he did, for a new bird or a new song than for an
indefinite number of eighteenth-century relics.</p>
<p>For the first half-mile the road follows one of the old Turnbull
canals dug through the coquina stone which underlies the soil
hereabout; then, after crossing the railway, it strikes to the left
through a piece of truly magnificent wood, known as the cotton-shed
hammock, because, during the war, cotton was stored here in
readiness for the blockade runners of Mosquito Inlet. Better than
anything I had yet seen, this wood answered to my idea of a
semi-tropical forest: live-oaks, magnolias, palmettos, sweet gums,
maples, and hickories, with here and there a long-leaved pine
overtopping all the rest. The palmettos, most distinctively
Southern of them all, had been badly used by their hardier
neighbors; they looked stunted, and almost without exception had
been forced out of their normal perpendicular attitude. The
live-oaks, on the other hand, were noble specimens; lofty and
wide-spreading, elm-like in habit, it seemed to me, though not
without the sturdiness which belongs as by right to all oaks, and
seldom or never to the American elm.</p>
<p>What gave its peculiar tropical character to the wood, however,
was not so much the trees as the profusion of plants that covered
them and depended from them: air-plants (<i>Tillandsia</i>), large
and small,—like pineapples, with which they claim a family
relationship, —the exuberant hanging moss, itself another
air-plant, ferns, and vines. The ferns, a species of polypody
("resurrection ferns," I heard them called), completely covered the
upper surface of many of the larger branches, while the huge vines
twisted about the trunks, or, quite as often, dropped straight from
the treetops to the ground.</p>
<p>In the very heart of this dense, dark forest (a forest primeval,
I should have said, but I was assured that the ground had been
under cultivation so recently that, to a practiced eye, the
cotton-rows were still visible) stood a grove of wild orange-trees,
the handsome fruit glowing like lamps amid the deep green foliage.
There was little other brightness. Here and there in the
undergrowth were yellow jessamine vines, but already —March
11—they were past flowering. Almost or quite the only blossom
just now in sight was the faithful round-leaved houstonia, growing
in small flat patches in the sand on the edge of the road, with
budding partridge-berry—a Yankee in Florida—to keep it
company. Warblers and titmice twittered in the leafy treetops, and
butterflies of several kinds, notably one gorgeous creature in
yellow and black, like a larger and more resplendent Turnus, went
fluttering through the underwoods. I could have believed myself in
the heart of a limitless forest; but Florida hammocks, so far as I
have seen, are seldom of great extent, and the road presently
crossed another railway track, and then, in a few rods more, came
out into the sunny pine-woods, as one might emerge from a cathedral
into the open day. Two men were approaching in a wagon (except on
Sunday, I am not certain that I ever met a foot passenger in the
flat-woods), and I improved the opportunity to make sure of my
course. "Go about fifty yards," said one of them, "and turn to the
right; then about fifty yards more, and turn to the left.
<i>That</i> road will take you to the mill." Here was a man who had
traveled in the pine lands,—where, of all places, it is easy
to get lost and hard to find yourself,—and not only
appreciated the value of explicit instructions, but, being a
Southerner, had leisure enough and politeness enough to give them.
I thanked him, and sauntered on. The day was before me, and the
place was lively with birds. Pine-wood sparrows, pine warblers, and
red-winged blackbirds were in song; two red-shouldered hawks were
screaming, a flicker was shouting, a red-bellied woodpecker cried
<i>kur-r-r-r</i>, brown-headed nuthatches were gossiping in the
distance, and suddenly I heard, what I never thought to hear in a
pinery, the croak of a green heron. I turned quickly and saw him.
It was indeed he. What a friend is ignorance, mother of all those
happy surprises which brighten existence as they pass, like the
butterflies of the wood. The heron was at home, and I was the
stranger. For there was water near, as there is everywhere in
Florida; and subsequently, in this very place, I met not only the
green heron, but three of his relatives,—the great blue, the
little blue, and the dainty Louisiana, more poetically known (and
worthy to wear the name) as the "Lady of the Waters."</p>
<p>On this first occasion, however, the green heron was speedily
forgotten; for just then I heard another note, unlike anything I
had ever heard before,—as if a great Northern shrike had been
struck with preternatural hoarseness, and, like so many other
victims of the Northern winter, had betaken himself to a sunnier
clime. I looked up. In the leafy top of a pine sat a boat-tailed
grackle, splendidly iridescent, engaged in a musical performance
which afterward became almost too familiar to me, but which now, as
a novelty, was as interesting as it was grotesque. This, as well as
I can describe it, is what the bird was doing. He opened his
bill,—<i>set</i> it, as it were, wide apart,—and
holding it thus, emitted four or five rather long and very loud
grating, shrikish notes; then instantly shook his wings with an
extraordinary flapping noise, and followed that with several highly
curious and startling cries, the concluding one of which sometimes
suggested the cackle of a robin. All this he repeated again and
again with the utmost fervor. He could not have been more
enthusiastic if he had been making the sweetest music in the world.
And I confess that I thought he had reason to be proud of his work.
The introduction of wing-made sounds in the middle of a vocal
performance was of itself a stroke of something like genius. It put
me in mind of the firing of cannons as an accompaniment to the
Anvil Chorus. Why should a creature of such gifts be named for his
bodily dimensions, or the shape of his tail? Why not <i>Quiscalus
gilmorius</i>, Gilmore's grackle?</p>
<p>That the sounds <i>were</i> wing-made I had no thought of
questioning. I had seen the thing done,—seen it and heard it;
and what shall a man trust, if not his own eyes and ears,
especially when each confirms the other? Two days afterward,
nevertheless, I began to doubt. I heard a grackle "sing" in the
manner just described, wing-beats and all, while flying from one
tree to another; and later still, in a country where boat-tailed
grackles were an every-day sight near the heart of the village, I
more than once saw them produce the sounds in question without any
perceptible movement of the wings, and furthermore, their mandibles
could be seen moving in time with the beats. So hard is it to be
sure of a thing, even when you see it and hear it.</p>
<p>"Oh yes," some sharp-witted reader will say, "you saw the wings
flapping,—beating time,—and so you imagined that the
sounds were like wing-beats." But for once the sharp-witted reader
is in the wrong. The resemblance is not imaginary. Mr. F.M.
Chapman, in A List of Birds Observed at Gainesville, Florida,<SPAN id=
"footnotetag8" name="footnotetag8"></SPAN><SPAN href=
"#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></SPAN> says of the boat-tailed grackle
(<i>Quiscalus major</i>): "A singular note of this species greatly
resembles the flapping of wings, as of a coot tripping over the
water; this sound was very familiar to me, but so excellent is the
imitation that for a long time I attributed it to one of the
numerous coots which abound in most places favored by <i>Q.
major</i>."</p>
<p>If the sounds are not produced by the wings, the question
returns, of course, why the wings are shaken just at the right
instant. To that I must respond with the time-honored formula, "Not
prepared." The reader may believe, if he will, that the bird is
aware of the imitative quality of the notes, and amuses itself by
heightening the delusion of the looker-on. My own more commonplace
conjecture is that the sounds are produced by snappings and
gratings of the big mandibles ("He is gritting his teeth," said a
shrewd unornithological Yankee, whose opinion I had solicited), and
that the wing movements may be nothing but involuntary
accompaniments of this almost convulsive action of the beak. But
perhaps the sounds <i>are</i> wing-made, after all.</p>
<p>On the day of which I am writing, at any rate, I was troubled by
no misgivings. I had seen something new, and was only desirous to
see more of it. Who does not love an original character? For at
least half an hour the old mill was forgotten, while I chased the
grackle about, as he flew hither and thither, sometimes with a
loggerhead shrike in furious pursuit. Once I had gone a few rods
into the palmetto scrub, partly to be nearer the bird, but still
more to enjoy the shadow of a pine, and was standing under the
tree, motionless, when a man came along the road in a gig.
"Surveying?" he asked, reining in his horse. "No, sir; I am looking
at a bird in the tree yonder." I wished him to go on, and thought
it best to gratify his curiosity at once. He was silent a moment;
then he said, "Looking at the old sugar house from there?" That was
too preposterous, and I answered with more voice, and perhaps with
a touch of impatience, "No, no; I am trying to see a bird in that
pine-tree." He was silent again. Then he gathered up the reins.
"I'm so deaf I can't hear you," he said, and drove on. "Good-by," I
remarked, in a needless undertone; "you're a good man, I've no
doubt, but deaf people should n't be inquisitive at long
range."</p>
<p>The advice was sound enough, in itself considered; properly
understood, it might be held to contain, or at least to suggest,
one of the profoundest, and at the same time one of the most
practical, truths of all devout philosophy; but the testiness of
its tone was little to my credit. He <i>was</i> a good
man,—and the village doctor,—and more than once
afterward put me under obligation. One of his best appreciated
favors was unintended and indirect. I was driving with him through
the hammock, and we passed a bit of swamp. "There are some pretty
flowers," he exclaimed; "I think I must get them." At the word he
jumped out of the gig, bade me do the same, hitched his horse, a
half-broken stallion, to a sapling, and plunged into the thicket. I
strolled elsewhere; and by and by he came back, a bunch of common
blue iris in one hand, and his shoes and stockings in the other.
"They are very pretty," he explained (he spoke of the flowers),
"and it is early for them." After that I had no doubt of his
goodness, and in case of need would certainly have called him
rather than his younger rival at the opposite end of the
village.</p>
<p>When I tired of chasing the grackle, or the shrike had driven
him away (I do not remember now how the matter ended), I started
again toward the old sugar mill. Presently a lone cabin came into
sight. The grass-grown road led straight to it, and stopped at the
gate. Two women and a brood of children stood in the door, and in
answer to my inquiry one of the women (the children had already
scampered out of sight) invited me to enter the yard. "Go round the
house," she said, "and you will find a road that runs right down to
the mill."</p>
<p>The mill, as it stands, is not much to look at: some fragments
of wall built of coquina stone, with two or three arched windows
and an arched door, the whole surrounded by a modern plantation of
orange-trees, now almost as much a ruin as the mill itself. But the
mill was built more than a hundred years ago, and serves well
enough the principal use of abandoned and decaying things,—to
touch the imagination. For myself, I am bound to say, it was a
precious two hours that I passed beside it, seated on a crumbling
stone in the shade of a dying orange-tree.</p>
<p>Behind me a redbird was whistling (cardinal grosbeak, I have
been accustomed to call him, but I like the Southern name better,
in spite of its ambiguity), now in eager, rapid tones, now slowly
and with a dying fall. Now his voice fell almost to a whisper, now
it rang out again; but always it was sweet and golden, and always
the bird was out of sight in the shrubbery. The orange-trees were
in bloom; the air was full of their fragrance, full also of the
murmur of bees. All at once a deeper note struck in, and I turned
to look. A humming-bird was hovering amid the white blossoms and
glossy leaves. I saw his flaming throat, and the next instant he
was gone, like a flash of light,—the first hummer of the
year. I was far from home, and expectant of new things. That, I
dare say, was the reason why I took the sound at first for the boom
of a bumble-bee; some strange Floridian bee, with a deeper and more
melodious bass than any Northern insect is master of.</p>
<p>It is good to be here, I say to myself, and we need no
tabernacle. All things are in harmony. A crow in the distance says
<i>caw, caw</i> in a meditative voice, as if he, too, were thinking
of days past; and not even the scream of a hen-hawk, off in the
pine-woods, breaks the spell that is upon us. A quail
whistles,—a true Yankee Bob White, to judge him by his
voice,—and the white-eyed chewink (he is <i>not</i> a Yankee)
whistles and sings by turns. The bluebird's warble and the pine
warbler's trill could never be disturbing to the quietest mood.
Only one voice seems out of tune: the white-eyed vireo, even
to-day, cannot forget his saucy accent. But he soon falls silent.
Perhaps, after all, he feels himself an intruder.</p>
<p>The morning is cloudless and warm, till suddenly, as if a door
had been opened eastward, the sea breeze strikes me. Henceforth the
temperature is perfect as I sit in the shadow. I think neither of
heat nor of cold. I catch a glimpse of a beautiful leaf-green
lizard on the gray trunk of an orange-tree, but it is gone (I
wonder where) almost before I can say I saw it. Presently a brown
one, with light-colored stripes and a bluish tail, is seen
traveling over the crumbling wall, running into crannies and out
again. Now it stops to look at me with its jewel of an eye. And
there, on the rustic arbor, is a third one, matching the unpainted
wood in hue. Its throat is white, but when it is inflated, as
happens every few seconds, it turns to the loveliest rose color.
This inflated membrane should be a vocal sac, I think, but I hear
no sound. Perhaps the chameleon's voice is too fine for dull human
sense.</p>
<p>On two sides of me, beyond the orange-trees, is a thicket of
small oaks and cabbage palmettos,—hammock, I suppose it is
called. In all other directions are the pine-woods, with their
undergrowth of saw palmetto. The cardinal sings from the hammock,
and so does the Carolina wren. The chewinks, the blackbirds (a
grackle just now flies over, and a fish-hawk, also), with the
bluebirds and the pine warblers, are in the pinery. From the same
place comes the song of a Maryland yellow-throat. There, too, the
hen-hawks are screaming.</p>
<p>At my feet are blue violets and white houstonia. Vines, thinly
covered with fresh leaves, straggle over the walls,—Virginia
creeper, poison ivy, grapevine, and at least one other, the name of
which I do not know. A clump of tall blackberry vines is full of
white blossoms, "bramble roses faint and pale," and in one corner
is a tuft of scarlet blooms,—sage, perhaps, or something akin
to it. For the moment I feel no curiosity. But withal the place is
unkempt, as becomes a ruin. "Winter's ragged hand" has been rather
heavy upon it. Withered palmetto leaves and leaf-stalks litter the
ground, and of course, being in Florida, there is no lack of
orange-peel lying about. Ever since I entered the State a new
Scrip-ture text has been running in my head: In the place where the
orange-peel falleth, there shall it lie.</p>
<p>The mill, as I said, is now the centre of an orange grove. There
must be hundreds of trees. All of them are small, but the greater
part are already dead, and the rest are dying. Those nearest the
walls are fullest of leaves, as if the walls somehow gave them
protection. The forest is creeping into the inclosure. Here and
there the graceful palm-like tassel of a young long-leaved pine
rises above the tall winter-killed grass. It is not the worst thing
about the world that it tends to run wild.</p>
<p>Now the quail sings again, this time in two notes, and now the
hummer is again in the orange-tree. And all the while the redbird
whistles in the shrubbery. He feels the beauty of the day. If I
were a bird, I would sing with him. From far away comes the chant
of a pine-wood sparrow. I can just hear it.</p>
<p>This is a place for dreams and quietness. Nothing else seems
worth the having. Let us feel no more the fever of life. Surely
they are the wise who seek Nirvana; who insist not upon themselves,
but wait absorption —reabsorption—into the infinite.
The dead have the better part. I think of the stirring, adventurous
man who built these walls and dug these canals. His life was full
of action, full of journeyings and fightings. Now he is at peace,
and his works do follow him—into the land of forgetfulness.
Blessed are the dead. Blessed, too, are the bees, the birds, the
butterflies, and the lizards. Next to the dead, perhaps, they are
happy. And I also am happy, for I too am under the spell. To me
also the sun and the air are sweet, and I too, for to-day at least,
am careless of the world and all its doings.</p>
<p>So I sat dreaming, when suddenly there was a stir in the grass
at my feet. A snake was coming straight toward me. Only the evening
before a cracker had filled my ears with stories of "rattlers" and
"moccasins." He seemed to have seen them everywhere, and to have
killed them as one kills mosquitoes. I looked a second time at the
moving thing in the grass. It was clothed in innocent black; but,
being a son of Adam, I rose with involuntary politeness to let it
pass. An instant more, and it slipped into the masonry at my side,
and I sat down again. It had been out taking the sun, and had come
back to its hole in the wall. How like the story of my own
day,—of my whole winter vacation! Nay, if we choose to view
it so, how like the story of human life itself!</p>
<p>As I started homeward, leaving the mill and the cabin behind me,
some cattle were feeding in the grassy road. At sight of my
umbrella (there are few places where a sunshade is more welcome
than in a Florida pine-wood) they scampered away into the scrub.
Poor, wild-eyed, hungry-looking things! I thought of Pharaoh's lean
kine. They were like the country itself, I was ready to say. But
perhaps I misjudged both, seeing both, as I did, in the winter
season. With the mercury at 80°, or thereabout, it is hard for
the Northern tourist to remember that he is looking at a winter
landscape. He compares a Florida winter with a New England summer,
and can hardly find words to tell you how barren and
poverty-stricken the country looks.</p>
<p>After this I went more than once to the sugar mill. Morning and
afternoon I visited it, but somehow I could never renew the joy of
my first visit. Moods are not to be had for the asking, nor earned
by a walk. The place was still interesting, the birds were there,
the sunshine was pleasant, and the sea breeze fanned me. The orange
blossoms were still sweet, and the bees still hummed about them;
but it was another day, or I was another man. In memory, none the
less, all my visits blend in one, and the ruined mill in the dying
orchard remains one of the bright spots in that strange Southern
world which, almost from the moment I left it behind me, began to
fade into indistinctness, like the landscape of a dream.</p>
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