<h2><SPAN name="XIV" id="XIV"></SPAN>XIV</h2>
<p class="caption">THE GOLDEN-WINGED WOODPECKER</p>
<p>The migrant woodpecker whose cheery
cackle assures us of the certainty of
spring is rich in names that well befit
him. If you take to high-sounding
titles for your humble friends, you will
accept <i>Colaptes auratus</i>, as he flies above
you, borrowing more gold of the sunbeams
that shine through his yellow
pinions, or will be content to call him
simply golden-winged. When he flashes
his wings in straight-away flight before
you, or sounds his sharp, single note of
alarm, or peers down from the door of
his lofty tower, or hangs on its wooden
wall, or clinging to a fence stake displays
his mottled back, you recognize the fitness
of each name the country folk have
given him—flicker, yellow-hammer, yarrup,
highhole or highholder, and what
Thoreau often termed him, partridge-woodpecker.
It is a wonder that the<span class="pagenum">[60]</span>
joyous cackle wherewith he announces
his return from his winter sojourn in the
South has not gained him another, and
that love note, so like the slow whetting
of a knife upon a steel, still another.
Perhaps it is because they are especially
sounds of spring and seldom if ever
heard after the season of joyful arrival
and love-making.</p>
<p>During the same season you frequently
hear him attuning his harsh sharp voice
to its softest note of endearment, a long-drawn
and modulated variation of his
cackle. When household cares begin,
the lord and lady of the wooden tower,
like too many greater and wiser two-legged
folk, give over singing and soft
words. At home and abroad their deportment
is sober and business-like, and
except for an occasional alarm-cry they
are mostly silent.</p>
<p>As you wander through the orchard
of an early midsummer day and pause
beside an old apple-tree to listen to the
cuckoo's flute or admire the airy fabric
of the wood pewee's nest, a larger scale
of lichen on the lichened boughs, you
hear a smothered vibrant murmur close<span class="pagenum">[61]</span>
beside you, as if the heart of the old tree
was pulsating with audible life. It is
startlingly suggestive of disturbed yellow-jackets,
but when you move around
the trunk in cautious reconnoissance, you
discover the round portal of a flicker's
home, and the sound resolves itself into
harmlessness. It is only the callow
young clamoring for food, or complaining
of their circumscribed quarters.</p>
<p>Not many days hence they will be out
in the wide world of air and sunshine of
which they now know as little as when
they chipped the shell. Lusty fellows
they will be then, with much of their
parents' beauty already displayed in their
bright new plumage and capable of an
outcry that will hold a bird-eating cat
at bay. A little later they will be, as
their parents are, helpful allies against
the borers, the insidious enemies of our
apple-tree. It is a warfare which the
groundling habits of the golden-wings
make them more ready to engage in than
any other of the woodpecker clans.</p>
<p>In sultry August weather, when the
shrill cry of the cicada pierces the hot
air like a hotter needle of sound, and the<span class="pagenum">[62]</span>
dry husky beat of his wings emphasizes
the apparent fact of drouth as you walk
on the desiccated slippery herbage of
meadow and pasture, the golden-wings
with all their grown-up family fly up before
you from their feast on the ant hills
and go flashing and flickering away like
rockets shot aslant, into the green tent
of the wild cherry trees to their dessert
of juicy black fruit.</p>
<p>Early in the dreariness of November,
they have vanished with all the horde
of summer residents who have made
the season of leaf, flower, and fruit the
brighter by their presence. The desolate
leafless months go by, till at last
comes the promise of spring, and you are
aware of a half unconscious listening for
the golden-wings. Presently the loud,
long, joyous iteration breaks upon your
ear, and you hail the fulfillment of the
promise and the blithe new comer, a
golden link in the lengthening chain
that is encircling the earth.<span class="pagenum">[63]</span></p>
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