<h2><SPAN name="XXXVIII" id="XXXVIII"></SPAN>XXXVIII</h2>
<p class="caption">THE RUFFED GROUSE</p>
<p>The woods in the older parts of our
country possess scarcely a trait of the
primeval forest. The oldest trees have
a comparatively youthful appearance,
and are pygmies in girth beside the decaying
stumps of their giant ancestors.
They are not so shagged with moss nor
so scaled with lichens. The forest floor
has lost its ancient carpet of ankle-deep
moss and the intricate maze of fallen
trees in every stage of decay, and looks
clean-swept and bare. The tangle of
undergrowth is gone, many of the species
which composed it having quite disappeared,
as have many of the animals
that flourished in the perennial shade of
the old woods.</p>
<p>If in their season one sees and hears
more birds among their lower interlaced
branches, he is not likely to catch sight
or sound of many of the denizens of the<span class="pagenum">[183]</span>
old wilderness. No startled deer bounds
away before him, nor bear shuffles awkwardly
from his feast of mast at one's
approach, nor does one's flesh creep at
the howl of the gathering wolves or the
panther's scream or the rustle of his
stealthy footsteps.</p>
<p>But as you saunter on your devious
way you may hear a rustle of quick feet
in the dry leaves and a sharp, insistent
cry, a succession of short, high-pitched
clucks running into and again out of
a querulous "<i>ker-r-r-r</i>," all expressing
warning as much as alarm. Your ears
guide your eyes to the exact point from
which the sounds apparently come, but
if these are not keen and well trained
they fail to detach any animate form
from the inanimate dun and gray of
dead leaves and underbrush.</p>
<p>With startling suddenness out of the
monotony of lifeless color in an eddying
flurry of dead leaves, fanned to erratic
flight by his wing-beats, the ruffed
grouse bursts into view, in full flight
with the first strokes of his thundering
pinions, and you have a brief vision of
untamed nature as it was in the old days.<span class="pagenum">[184]</span>
On either side of the vanishing brown
nebula the ancient mossed and lichened
trunks rear themselves again, above it
their lofty ramage veils the sky, beneath
it lie the deep, noiseless cushion of moss,
the shrubs and plants that the old wood
rangers knew and the moose browsed on,
and the tangled trunks of fallen trees.
You almost fancy that you hear the long-ago
silenced voices of the woods, so vividly
does this wild spirit for an instant
conjure up a vision of the old wild world
whereof he is a survival.</p>
<p>Acquaintance with civilized man has
not tamed him, but has made him the
wilder. He deigns to feed upon apple-tree
buds and buckwheat and woodside
clover, not as a gift, but a begrudged
compensation for what you have taken
from him, and gives you therefor not
even the thanks of familiarity; and notwithstanding
his acquaintance with generations
of your race he will not suffer
you to come so near to him as he would
your grandfather.</p>
<p>If, when the leaves are falling, you
find him in your barnyard, garden, or
out-house, or on the porch, do not think<span class="pagenum">[185]</span>
he has any intention of associating with
you or your plebeian poultry. You can
only wonder where he found refuge from
the painted shower when all his world
was wooded. If he invites your attendance
at his drum solo, it is only to fool
you with the sight of an empty stage,
for you must be as stealthy and keen-eyed
as a lynx to see his proud display
of distended ruff and wide spread of
barred tail and accelerated beat of wings
that mimic thunder, or see even the
leafy curtain of his stage flutter in the
wind of his swift exit.</p>
<p>How the definite recognition of his
motionless form evades you, so perfectly
are his colors merged into those of his
environment, whether it be in the flush
greenness of summer, the painted hues
of autumn or its later faded dun and
gray, or in the whiteness of winter.
Among one or the other he is but a clot
of dead leaves, a knot upon a branch,
the gray stump of a sapling protruding
from the snow, or, covered deep in the
unmarked whiteness, he bursts from it
like a mine exploded at your feet, leaving
you agape till he has vanished from<span class="pagenum">[186]</span>
your sight and your ears have caught the
last flick of his wings against the dry
branches.</p>
<p>In May, his mate sits on her nest, indistinguishable
among the brown leaves
and gray branches about her. Later,
when surprised with her brood, how conspicuous
she makes herself, fluttering
and staggering along the ground, while
her callow chicks, old in cunning though
so lately their eyes first beheld the world,
scatter in every direction like a shattered
globule of quicksilver and magically disappear
where there is no apparent hiding-place.
Did they con the first lesson
of safety in the dark chamber of the egg,
or absorb it with the warmth of the
brooding breast that gave them life?</p>
<p>Listen, and out of the silence which
follows the noisy dispersion of the family
hear the low sibilant voice of the mother
calling her children to her or cautioning
them to continued hiding. Perhaps you
may see her, alertly skulking among the
underbrush, still uttering that tender,
persuasive cry, so faint that the chirp of
a cricket might overbear it. Scatter her
brood when the members are half grown<span class="pagenum">[187]</span>
and almost as strong of wing as herself,
and you presently hear her softly calling
them and assuring them of her continued
care.</p>
<p>Among many things that mark the
changing season, is the dispersion of
this wildwood family. Each member is
now shifting for itself in matters of seeking
food, safety, pleasure, and comfort.
You will come upon one in the ferny
undergrowth of the lowland woods where
he is consorting with woodcock, frighten
another from his feast on the fence-side
elderberries, scare one in the thick
shadows of the evergreens, another on
the sparsely wooded steep of a rocky
hillside, and later hear the drum-beat of
a young cock that the soft Indian summer
has fooled into springtime love-making,
and each has the alertness that complete
self-dependence has enforced.</p>
<p>Still, you may come upon them gathered
in social groups, yet each going his
own way when flushed. Upon rare occasions
you may surprise a grand convention
of all the grouse of the region
congregated on the sunny lee of a hillside.
It is a sight and sound to remember<span class="pagenum">[188]</span>
long, though for the moment you
forget the gun in your hands, when by
ones, twos, and dozens the dusky forms
burst away up wind, down wind, across
wind, signalling their departure with volleys
of intermittent and continuous thunder.
Not many times in your life will
you see this, yet, if but once, you will be
thankful that you have not outlived all
the old world's wildness.<span class="pagenum">[189]</span></p>
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