<h2><SPAN name="XXI" id="XXI"></SPAN>XXI</h2>
<p class="caption">JULY DAYS</p>
<p>The woods are dense with full-grown
leafage. Of all the trees, only the basswood
has delayed its blossoming, to
crown the height of summer and fill the
sun-steeped air with a perfume that calls
all the wild bees from hollow tree and
scant woodside gleaning to a wealth of
honey gathering, and all the hive-dwellers
from their board-built homes to a
finer and sweeter pillage than is offered
by the odorous white sea of buckwheat.
Half the flowers of wood and fields are
out of bloom. Herdsgrass, clover and
daisy are falling before the mower. The
early grain fields have already caught
the color of the sun, and the tasseling
corn rustles its broad leaves above the
rich loam that the woodcock delights to
bore.</p>
<p>The dwindling streams have lost their
boisterous clamor of springtide and wimple<span class="pagenum">[92]</span>
with subdued voices over beds too
shallow to hide a minnow or his poised
shadow on the sunlit shallows. The
sharp eye of the angler probes the green
depths of the slowly swirling pools, and
discovers the secrets of the big fish which
congregate therein.</p>
<p>The river has marked the stages of
its decreasing volume with many lines
along its steep banks. It discloses the
muskrat's doorway, to which he once
dived so gracefully, but now must clumsily
climb to. Rafts of driftwood bridge
the shallow current sunk so low that
the lithe willows bend in vain to kiss
its warm bosom. This only the swaying
trails of water-weeds and rustling sedges
toy with now; and swift-winged swallows
coyly touch. There is not depth to
hide the scurrying schools of minnows,
the half of whom fly into the air in a
curving burst of silver shower before the
rush of a pickerel, whose green and mottled
sides gleam like a swift-shot arrow
in the downright sunbeams.</p>
<p>The sandpiper tilts along the shelving
shore. Out of an embowered harbor a
wood duck convoys her fleet of ducklings,<span class="pagenum">[93]</span>
and on the ripples of their wake
the anchored argosies of the water lilies
toss and cast adrift their cargoes of perfume.
Above them the green heron
perches on an overhanging branch, uncouth
but alert, whether sentinel or
scout, flapping his awkward way along
the ambient bends and reaches. With
slow wing-beats he signals the coming
of some more lazily moving boat, that
drifts at the languid will of the current
or indolent pull of oars that grate on
the golden-meshed sand and pebbles.</p>
<p>Lazily, unexpectantly, the angler casts
his line, to be only a convenient perch
for the dragonflies; for the fish, save
the affrighted minnows and the hungry
pickerel, are as lazy as he. To-day he
may enjoy to the full the contemplative
man's recreation, nor have his contemplations
disturbed by any finny folk of
the under-water world, while dreamily he
floats in sunshine and dappled shadow,
so at one with the placid waters and
quiet shores that wood duck, sandpiper,
and heron scarcely note his unobtrusive
presence.</p>
<p>No such easy and meditative pastime<span class="pagenum">[94]</span>
attends his brother of the gun who,
sweating under the burden of lightest apparel
and equipment, beats the swampy
covers where beneath the sprawling alders
and arching fronds of fern the woodcock
hides. Not a breath stirs the murky
atmosphere of these depths of shade,
hotter than sunshine; not a branch nor
leaf moves but with his struggling passage,
or marking with a wake of waving
undergrowth the course of his unseen
dog.</p>
<p>Except this rustling of branches,
sedges and ferns, the thin, continuous
piping of the swarming mosquitoes, the
busy tapping and occasional harsh call
of a woodpecker, scarcely a sound invades
the hot silence, till the wake of
the hidden dog ceases suddenly and the
waving brakes sway with quickening
vibrations into stillness behind him.
Then, his master draws cautiously near,
with gun at a ready and an unheeded
mosquito drilling his nose, the fern leaves
burst apart with a sudden shiver, and
a woodcock, uttering that shrill unexplained
twitter, upsprings in a halo of
rapid wing-beats and flashes out of sight<span class="pagenum">[95]</span>
among leaves and branches. As quick,
the heelplate strikes the alert gunner's
shoulder, and, as if in response to the
shock, the short unechoed report jars
the silence of the woods. As if out of
the cloud of sulphurous smoke, a shower
of leaves flutter down, with a quicker
patter of dry twigs and shards of bark,
and among all these a brown clod drops
lifeless and inert to mother earth.</p>
<p>A woodcock is a woodcock, though
but three-quarters grown; and the shot
one that only a quick eye and ready
hand may accomplish; but would not
the achievement have been more worthy,
the prize richer, the sport keener in the
gaudy leafage and bracing air of October,
rather than in this sweltering heat, befogged
with clouds of pestering insects,
when every step is a toil, every moment
a torture? Yet men deem it sport and
glory if they do not delight in its performance.
The anxious note and behavior
of mother song-birds, whose poor
little hearts are in as great a flutter as
their wings concerning their half-grown
broods, hatched coincidently with the
woodcock, is proof enough to those who<span class="pagenum">[96]</span>
would heed it, that this is not a proper
season for shooting. But in some northerly
parts of our wide country it is woodcock
now or never, for the birds bred
still further northward are rarely tempted
by the cosiest copse or half-sunned hillside
of open woods to linger for more
than a day or two, as they fare southward,
called to warmer days of rest and
frostless moonlit nights of feeding under
kindlier skies.</p>
<p>While the nighthawk's monotonous
cry and intermittent boom and the indistinct
voice of the whippoorwill ring out
in the late twilight of the July evenings,
the alarmed, half-guttural chuckle of the
grass plover is heard, so early migrating
in light marching order, thin in flesh but
strong of wing, a poor prize for the gunner
whose ardor outruns his humanity
and better judgment. Lean or fat, a
plover is a plover, but would that he
might tarry with us till the plump grasshoppers
of August and September had
clothed his breast and ribs with fatness.</p>
<p>Well, let him go, if so soon he will.
So let the woodcock go, to offer his best
to more fortunate sportsmen. What<span class="pagenum">[97]</span>
does it profit us to kill merely for the
sake of killing, and have to show therefor
but a beggarly account of bones and
feathers? Are there not grouse and
quail and woodcock waiting for us, and
while we wait for them can we not content
ourselves with indolent angling by
shaded streams in these melting days
of July rather than contribute the blaze
and smoke of gunpowder to the heat and
murkiness of midsummer? If we must
shed blood let us tap the cool veins of
the fishes, not the hot arteries of brooding
mother birds and their fledgelings.<span class="pagenum">[98]</span></p>
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