<h2><SPAN name="XXX" id="XXX"></SPAN>XXX</h2>
<p class="caption">SEPTEMBER DAYS</p>
<p>September days have the warmth of
summer in their briefer hours, but in
their lengthening evenings a prophetic
breath of autumn. The cricket chirps
in the noontide, making the most of
what remains of his brief life; the bumblebee
is busy among the clover blossoms
of the aftermath; and their shrill
cry and dreamy hum hold the outdoor
world above the voices of the song birds,
now silent or departed.</p>
<p>What a little while ago they were our
familiars, noted all about us in their accustomed
haunts—sparrow, robin, and
oriole, each trying now and then, as if
to keep it in memory, a strain of his
springtime love song, and the cuckoo
fluting a farewell prophecy of rain. The
bobolinks, in sober sameness of traveling
gear, still held the meadowside thickets
of weeds; and the swallows sat in sedate<span class="pagenum">[144]</span>
conclave on the barn ridge. Then, looking
and listening for them, we suddenly
become aware they are gone; the adobe
city of the eave-dwellers is silent and
deserted; the whilom choristers of the
sunny summer meadows are departed to
a less hospitable welcome in more genial
climes. How unobtrusive was their exodus.
We awake and miss them, or we
think of them and see them not, and
then we realize that with them summer
too has gone.</p>
<p>This also the wafted thistledown and
the blooming asters tell us, and, though
the woods are dark with their latest
greenness, in the lowlands the gaudy
standard of autumn is already displayed.
In its shadow the muskrat is thatching
his winter home, and on his new-shorn
watery lawn the full-fledged wild duck
broods disport in fullness of feather and
strength of pinion. Evil days are these
of September that now befall them.
Alack, for the callow days of peaceful
summer, when no honest gunner was
abroad, and the law held the murderous
gun in abeyance, and only the keel of
the unarmed angler rippled the still<span class="pagenum">[145]</span>
channel. Continual unrest and abiding
fear are their lot now and henceforth,
till spring brings the truce of close time
to their persecuted race.</p>
<p>More silently than the fisher's craft
the skiff of the sportsman now invades
the rush-paled thoroughfares. Noiseless
as ghosts, paddler and shooter glide
along the even path till, alarmed by
some keener sense than is given us, up
rise wood duck, dusky duck, and teal
from their reedy cover. Then the ready
gun belches its thunder, and suddenly
consternation pervades the marshes.
All the world has burst forth in a burning
of powder. From end to end, from
border to border, the fenny expanse
roars with discharge and echo, and nowhere
within it is there peace or rest for
the sole of a webbed foot. Even the
poor bittern and heron, harmless and
worthless, flap to and fro from one to
another now unsafe retreat, in constant
danger of death from every booby gunner
who can cover their slow flight.</p>
<p>The upland woods, too, are awakened
from the slumber of their late summer
days. How silent they had grown when<span class="pagenum">[146]</span>
their songsters had departed, rarely
stirred but by the woodpecker's busy
hammer, the chatter and bark of squirrels,
and the crows making vociferous
proclamation against some winged or
furred enemy. The grouse have waxed
fat among the border patches of berry
bushes, rarely disturbed in the seclusion
of the thickets but by the soft footfall
of the fox, the fleeting shadow of a cruising
hawk, and the halloo of the cowboy
driving home his herd from the hillside
pasture. Now come enemies more relentless
than beast or bird of prey, a
sound more alarming than the cowboy's
distant call—man and his companion
the dog, and the terrible thunder of the
gun. A new terror is revealed to the
young birds, a half-forgotten one brought
afresh to the old. The crows have found
fresh cause for clamor, and the squirrels
lapse into a silence of fear.</p>
<p>Peace and the quietness of peace have
departed from the realm of the woods,
and henceforth while the green leaves
grow bright as blossoms with the touch
of frost, then brown and sere, and till
long after they lie under the white<span class="pagenum">[147]</span>
shroud of winter, its wild denizens shall
abide in constant fear and unrest.</p>
<p>So fares it with the wood-folk, these
days of September, wherein the sportsman
rejoiceth with exceeding gladness.<span class="pagenum">[148]</span></p>
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