<h2 class="nobreak">THE FROG RENDEZVOUS</h2></div>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span></p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
<p class="ph1">THE FROG RENDEZVOUS</p>
</div>
<p><span class="xlarge">T</span>HE pasture meets the pond all along
for a mile or so. It lays its lip to it
and drinks only here and there. It
drinks deepest of all in a cove. You
will hardly know where pasture leaves
off and cove begins, the two mingle so
gently. The pasture creatures here slip
down into the cove, and those of the
pond make their way well up into
the pasture. You yourself, approaching
the cove from the pasture side on
foot, will be splashing ankle deep in it
before you know you are coming to it
at all, so well do the pasture bushes,
standing to their knees in the cool
water, screen it from you.</p>
<p>Coming from the pond side you might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
think you saw the margin in this same
screen of bushes, but there are roods of
cove beyond and behind them. The
shrubs of the pasture love to come down
and dabble their feet in the warm pond
water and sun themselves in the sheltered,
fragrant air.</p>
<p>The afternoon sun has more resilience
here than elsewhere. It bounds
with fervent flashes of elasticity from
the glossy leaves of the bushes that
have waded out farthest and made
islands of themselves. The high-bush
blueberries are the most daring of all,
and stand in the largest clumps
farthest out. These, late in May with
an off-shore wind, shower the whole
surface of the water with their fallen
corollas. More than once have I seen
the cove white with them on Memorial
Day, as if the bushes, standing with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
bowed heads, strewed the waves with
memorial flowers for the pasture people
who have died at sea.</p>
<p>Earlier in the year the elms have
made the whole surface of the cove
brown with their round, wing-margined
seeds, and after the memorial
flowers of the blueberry bushes are
gone the maples will send out millions
of two-sailed seed boats, reddening the
whole surface with their argosies as
they go out to sea, wing and wing.
Now all these things have passed and
the surface of the water is clean again
to dimple with the under-water swirl of
a minnow-hunting pickerel or lap lazily
against your canoe with the dying undulations
of the waves from outside.</p>
<p>After the bold blueberry bushes, less
daring but still eager pasture people
have waded in and formed lesser<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
island clumps of their own. These were
led by the sweet-gale, holding her dark-green
silken skirt daintily up, so fragrant-souled
that she fears no evil,
trailed by the saucy wild rose, cheerful
spiræa, gloomy cassandra, and chubby
baby alders. If you watch these you
will note that they shiver in the lazy
breeze as if they feared the pass to
which their temerity may have brought
them. Yet there they stand, and the
miniature tides swirl about their pink
toes and die in the pools behind them, so
closely grow the sedges and little marsh
plants that fill them until the fishes from
the cove nose about their stalks in vain
attempt to enter.</p>
<p>Just outside the bush fringe, where
the maples are mirrored in undulations,
whirl and skip, each according to his
kind, the surface insects of the cove.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
Of these I hail with greatest joy, as any
boy should, the “lucky bug.” You
know the one I mean. He is a third of
an inch long, almost as broad, oval, a
sort of whaleback monitor without any
turret. He is hard shelled and a Baptist,
judged from the pertinacity with
which he sticks to deep water, but a
Baptist gone sadly wrong, for he
waltzes continually with his fellows.
Round and round they go in a mazy
whirl that would make you dizzy if at
the last gasp they did not reverse.</p>
<p>All boys who fish know that these
bugs carry stores of luck within their
hard shells, and for one even to approach
your line in his mad waltz is a
sign of coming success, and should he
actually touch the line and cling, it presages
a big fish. But if you would propitiate
the gods in most definite fashion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
before you cast line you should catch
several lucky bugs, the more the better,
bury them on the bank with their heads
to the shore, and recite over them an
incantation as follows:</p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="first">“Bug, bug, bug,</div>
<div class="verse">I’ve spit on the worms I dug;</div>
<div class="verse">Bug, bug, give me my wish,</div>
<div class="verse">A great big string of great big fish.”</div>
</div></div>
<p>Properly managed this was never known
to fail; if it does it is because you have
buried one or more of your bugs bottom
up.</p>
<p>It is not so easy to catch a lucky bug,
however. He is a very modern type
of monitor, for his engine power is of
the highest, steam is always at the top
notch, and he can dart away in a
straight line with all the concentrated
fury of a torpedo boat. Moreover, he is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
convertible, and I have seen him when
completely surrounded by enemies become
a submarine and dive straight for
the bottom and stay there. He may
have an oxygen tank; anyway, he
doesn’t come up until he gets ready,
when he appears fresh and hearty and
ready for another waltz.</p>
<p>A fellow surface sailor of his, or
rather skipper, is a different type of
bug. This is the water-strider, a veritable
Cassius of the cove, with the lean
and hungry look of an overgrown, underfed
mosquito. There is no merry
waltz with his fellows about this
piratical-looking chap. He spreads his
four long legs like a Maltese cross, and
the tips of them are all that touch the
water. These dent it into minute dimples,
but do not penetrate, and his bug-ship
skips energetically about on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
four dents, hopping at times like a
veritable flea. Sometimes he jumps a
half-inch high and skitters along the
surface as a boy skips a stone; again he
poises, lowers his body till it all but
rests on the water, then raises it till he
is high on four stilts, and all the time
not even his toes are wet.</p>
<p>Entering the cove in mid-afternoon
you might think the swooning heat had
left it no life awake other than the
water insects and the dragon-flies that
race them in airship fashion above.
Yet you have but to ground your canoe
on a sedgy shallow, sit motionless, and
wait. Nor have you to wait long.
There is a breathless pause as if all
things waited to see what this leviathan
of the outer deep meant to do next;
then a voice at your very elbow says
reassuringly, “Tu-g-g-g!” That is as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
near as you can come to it with type.
There are no characters that will express
its guttural vehemence which
strikes you like a blow on the chest, or
its sympathetic resonance. Take your
violin, drop the G string to a tension so
low that it will hardly vibrate musically,
then twang it. That suggests the tone.
But you know it well enough without
description.</p>
<p>Immediately there comes an answering
chorus of “tu-g-gs,” here, there, in
a score of places all along the shore line
and among the island clumps of bushes,
prelude of frog talk galore for a
moment or two, followed by brief
silence. Then, taking advantage of the
oratorical pause, an old-timer sets up a
tremendously hoarse and vibrant bellow.
“A-hr-r-h-h-u-m-mm!” he says,
“A-hr-r-h-h-u-m-mm!” with the accent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
on the rum. You can hear him half a
mile, and immediately there is a
“chug-squeak-splash” from a little
fellow, as if, unable to furnish the
beverage at short notice, he became
affrighted and without delay decided
that a sequestered nook on bottom between
two stones was for him. Then
the cove goes to sleep again; you can
almost hear the silence snore.</p>
<p>Little by little, if you look about you
shall see them, some right within reach
of your paddle. I never know whether
they slip under when the canoe approaches
and bob up again noiselessly
after all is still, or whether they are
there all the time, only so well concealed
by nature that the eye does not note
them at first; but I do know that you
never see them until you have waited a
bit. Their brown backs are just under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
water, their green-brown heads just
enough above the surface so that the
nostrils will get air; and there they
wait, motionless, for hours and hours,
for time and tide to serve luncheon.
Even with only the tops of their heads
visible they make you laugh, for their
pop eyes are popped so high above the
tops of their flat heads that they make
you think of automobile bug lights set
well up above the motor hood.</p>
<p>I note a shipwrecked June beetle
clinging half drowned to a spear of
grass and I toss him over within six
inches of a frog. There is a splash, a
gulp, and the beetle with his frantically
clawing, thorny-toed legs is passed
on to kingdom come without a crunch.
Once or twice after that this frog
stirred as if he had an uneasy conscience,
but he seemed to suffer no internal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>
pangs, indeed he winked the circular
yellow lining of his eye at me
these times as if he enjoyed it. It had
all the effects of smacking the lips.</p>
<p>The afternoon dreams down from its
pinnacle of hazy heat to the soft level
of eventide. Under the pines of the
west side of the cove the level sun slips
in and seems to caress the green trunks,
and the tops above sing a little sighing
song of contentment. Strange you have
not heard this before, for the wind has
been there all the afternoon. But it is
toward nightfall that the cove wakes
up and you hear many lisping elfin
sounds that you have never noticed
during the mid-afternoon heat. You
hear the sedges talking in the undulations
now. You did not hear them before,
yet the undulations have been gliding
dreamily among the sedges all day.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
The pasture birds are waking up their
preludes of evensong, and the sun across
the cove to the west is glorifying all the
quivering canopy of green leaves through
which it shines with a luminous, diaphanous
quality which makes magic all
along that side of the cove.</p>
<p>You are on the borderland between
the clear definition of reality and the
mystic haze of nightfall. To the west,
looking away from the glow, all is
gently but clearly defined; to the east,
looking into the golden rose of the sunset
through the shimmering illusion of
leaves, lies the pathway to the land that
the king’s son saw in the Arabian
Night’s tale.</p>
<p>The nightly entertainment, the evening
minstrel show, is about to begin in
the cove, an entertainment in which the
frogs are the minstrels, an all star performance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
for every one of them is capable
of being an end man or interlocutor
or soloist as the case may require.</p>
<p>Already the audience is beginning to
gather. First comes a gray squirrel
scratching down a maple trunk, his
strong clawed hind feet digging into the
bark and holding him wherever he wishes
them to, as if he were an inverted lineman.
Suddenly he sights the canoe and
its occupant and—blows up. Nothing
else will express his sudden outpouring
of scolding and denunciation of this
creature that has usurped a front seat.
The sounds burst out of him like the
escaping steam from a great mogul engine
waiting on a siding for its freight,
and he quivers from head to foot, like
the engine, with the intensity of the
ebullition. Suddenly there is a “quawk!”
directly over his head, a single cry shot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
out from the catarrhal throat of a night
heron that is just sailing down. The
gray squirrel shoots three feet into the
air, lands on another maple, flashes up
a birch and goes crashing through the
birch tops off into the woods, where
you faintly hear him jawing still. The
night heron whirls with a great flapping
and puts to sea with more quawks
of alarm. But these two were not especially
wanted at the concert. The
night heron particularly is an unlovely
bird in appearance, voice, and manner.
The skippers and the lucky bugs crowd
in together, each among its kind, close
to the reedy margin, to be as near the
performers as possible, and behold, there
come sailing in from sea tiny argosies
of dainty people, the loveliest free swimmers
of the pond. Golden heads nodding
in gracious recognition, they come,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
slender bodied and graceful, trailing long
robes of filmy lace beneath them in the
water.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i064.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption">Out from among the birches she sails gracefully, a veritable<br/>
queen of the fairies</p>
<p>The botanists, who shall be hung some
day for their literalness, have named
these lovely denizens of the cove bladder-worts,
or <i>Utricularia</i>, if you wish the
Latin form, because they float on their
air-inflated leaves and trail their roots
beneath them, free in the water, scorning
the contaminating touch of earth.
The off-shore wind of noon had sailed
these out well beyond the mouth of the
cove, now the evening breeze is bringing
them in again for the concert.</p>
<p>They should have been named after
some dainty lady of the old Greek mythology,
some fair sailor lass who
crossed the wake of Ulysses, perchance,
and lingers on placid seas waiting his
return to this day, for you will see their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
golden heads nodding along on the little
waves of the cove all summer.</p>
<p>These are the patricians of the concert.
There is a great tuning of instruments
going on already and a trying
out of voices, yet for some reason
there is delay. Then comes the queen
herself. The golden shimmer on the
eastern shore has faded and dusk dances
up from the undergrowth on the west.
It is time, and out from among the
birches she sails gracefully, a veritable
queen of the fairies, clad in ostrich
plumes and softest of white velvet, with
the most beautiful trailing and undulating
opera cloak of softest, delicate green,
trimmed with brown and white. You
may call her a luna moth if you will.
The thing which somewhat resembles
her, stuck on a pin in your collection,
may be that, but this graceful, soaring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
creature, pulsing and quivering with life,
floating through perfumed dusk, is the
queen of the fairies—no less.</p>
<p>Her arrival is a signal for the olio
to begin. Then, indeed, you learn the
astonishing number and variety of the
frog performers within the cove. The
basso profundos sing “Ah-r-h-u-m-m”
with amazing gusto. Surely that waiter
frog has got over his fright and brought
it in quantity. “T-u-g-gs” resound all
about like the rattle of a drum corps.
There are altos whose voices sound like
rasping a stick cheerfully on a picket
fence, others whose strain hath a dying
fall of internal agony outwardly expressed.
A lone belated hyla pipes his
plaintive soprano, but the tenors are the
strongest of all. The tree toad flutes a
fluttering, liquid tremolo, and the toad,
the common toad, sits on the grassy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
margin and swells his throat and sings
“Wha-a-a-a-” in long-drawn, dreamy
cadence.</p>
<p>You may imitate this sound after a
fashion if you wish. Purse your lips and
say the French “Eu” in a long drawl
once or twice, then the next time you
do it whistle at the same time. You
will have a very tolerable imitation of
this dreamy note. It invites to slumber
and it is time to paddle home, for the
dusk has deepened to darkness and there
is little more for you to see in the cove.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span></p>
<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
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