<h2><SPAN name="XI_A_FELLOW_OF_EXPEDIENTS" id="XI_A_FELLOW_OF_EXPEDIENTS"></SPAN>XI. A FELLOW OF EXPEDIENTS.</h2>
<p><span class="dropcap152"><span class="dropcap">A</span></span>mong the birds there is one whose personal
appearance is rapidly changing.
He illustrates in his present life a
process well known historically to all
naturalists, viz., the modification of form
resulting from changed environment.
I refer to the golden-winged woodpecker, perhaps
the most beautifully marked bird of the North,
whose names are as varied as his habits and accomplishments.</p>
<p>Nature intended him to get his living, as do the
other woodpeckers, by boring into old trees and
stumps for the insects that live on the decaying
wood. For this purpose she gave him the straight,
sharp, wedge-shaped bill, just calculated for cutting
out chips; the very long horn-tipped tongue for
thrusting into the holes he makes; the peculiar
arrangement of toes, two forward and two back; and
the stiff, spiny tail-feathers for supporting himself
against the side of a tree as he works. But getting
his living so means hard work, and he has discovered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</SPAN></span>
for himself a much easier way. One now frequently
surprises him on the ground in old pastures and
orchards, floundering about rather awkwardly (for his
little feet were never intended for walking) after the
crickets and grasshoppers that abound there. Still
he finds the work of catching them much easier than
boring into dry old trees, and the insects themselves
much larger and more satisfactory.</p>
<p>A single glance will show how much this new way
of living has changed him from the other woodpeckers.
The bill is no longer straight, but has a
decided curve, like the thrushes; and instead of the
chisel-shaped edge there is a rounded point. The
red tuft on the head, which marks all the woodpecker
family, would be too conspicuous on the ground. In
its place we find a red crescent well down on the neck,
and partially hidden by the short gray feathers about
it. The point of the tongue is less horny, and from
the stiff points of the tail-feathers lamina are beginning
to grow, making them more like other birds'.
A future generation will undoubtedly wonder where
this peculiar kind of thrush got his unusual tongue
and tail, just as we wonder at the deformed little feet
and strange ways of a cuckoo.</p>
<p>The habits of this bird are a curious compound of
his old life in the woods and his new preference for
the open fields and farms. Sometimes the nest is in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</SPAN></span>
the very heart of the woods, where the bird glides in
and out, silent as a crow in nesting time. His feeding
place meanwhile may be an old pasture half a mile
away, where he calls loudly, and frolics about as if he
had never a care or a fear in the world. But the nest
is now more frequently in a wild orchard, where the
bird finds an old knot-hole and digs down through
the soft wood, making a deep nest with very little
trouble. When the knot-hole is not well situated,
he finds a large decayed limb and drills through the
outer hard shell, then digs down a foot or more
through the soft wood, and makes a nest. In this
nest the rain never troubles him, for he very providently
drills the entrance on the under side of the
limb.</p>
<p>Like many other birds, he has discovered that the
farmer is his friend. Occasionally, therefore, he neglects
to build a deep nest, simply hollowing out an
old knot-hole, and depending on the presence of man
for protection from hawks and owls. At such times
the bird very soon learns to recognize those who
belong in the orchard, and loses the extreme shyness
that characterizes him at all other times.</p>
<p>Once a farmer, knowing my interest in birds, invited
me to come and see a golden-winged woodpecker,
which in her confidence had built so shallow a nest
that she could be seen sitting on the eggs like a robin.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</SPAN></span>
She was so tame, he said, that in going to his work he
sometimes passed under the tree without disturbing
her. The moment we crossed the wall within sight
of the nest, the bird slipped away out of the orchard.
Wishing to test her, we withdrew and waited till she
returned. Then the farmer passed within a few feet
without disturbing her in the least. Ten minutes
later I followed him, and the bird flew away again
as I crossed the wall.</p>
<p>The notes of the golden-wing—much more varied
and musical than those of other woodpeckers—are
probably the results of his new free life, and the modified
tongue and bill. In the woods one seldom hears
from him anything but the rattling <i>rat-a-tat-tat</i>, as he
hammers away on a dry old pine stub. As a rule he
seems to do this more for the noise it makes, and the
exercise of his abilities, than because he expects to
find insects inside; except in winter time, when he
goes back to his old ways. But out in the fields he
has a variety of notes. Sometimes it is a loud <i>kee-uk</i>,
like the scream of a blue jay divided into two syllables,
with the accent on the last. Again it is a loud cheery
whistling call, of very short notes run close together,
with accent on every other one. Again he teeters
up and down on the end of an old fence rail with a
rollicking <i>eekoo, eekoo, eekoo</i>, that sounds more like a
laugh than anything else among the birds. In most<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</SPAN></span>
of his musical efforts the golden-wing, instead of
clinging to the side of a tree, sits across the limb, like
other birds.</p>
<p>A curious habit which the bird has adopted with
advancing civilization is that of providing himself
with a sheltered sleeping place from the storms and
cold of winter. Late in the fall he finds a deserted
building, and after a great deal of shy inspection,
to satisfy himself that no one is within, drills a hole
through the side. He has then a comfortable place to
sleep, and an abundance of decaying wood in which
to hunt insects on stormy days. An ice-house is a
favorite location for him, the warm sawdust furnishing
a good burrowing place for a nest or sleeping
room. When a building is used as a nesting place,
the bird very cunningly drills the entrance close up
under the eaves, where it is sheltered from storms, and
at the same time out of sight of all prying eyes.</p>
<p>During the winter several birds often occupy one
building together. I know of one old deserted barn
where last year five of the birds lived very peaceably;
though what they were doing there in the daytime I
could never quite make out. At almost any hour of the
day, if one approached very cautiously and thumped
the side of the barn, some of the birds would dash out
in great alarm, never stopping to look behind them.
At first there were but three entrances; but after I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</SPAN></span>
had surprised them a few times, two more were added;
whether to get out more quickly when all were inside,
or simply for the sake of drilling the holes, I do not
know. Sometimes a pair of birds will have five or
six holes drilled, generally on the same side of the
building.</p>
<p>Two things about my family in the old barn aroused
my curiosity—what they were doing there by day,
and how they got out so quickly when alarmed. The
only way it seemed possible for them to dash out on
the instant, as they did, was to fly straight through.
But the holes were too small, and no bird but a bank-swallow
would have attempted such a thing.</p>
<p>One day I drove the birds out, then crawled in
under a sill on the opposite side, and hid in a corner
of the loft without disturbing anything inside. It was
a long wait in the stuffy old place before one of the
birds came back. I heard him light first on the roof;
then his little head appeared at one of the holes as he
sat just below, against the side of the barn, looking
and listening before coming in. Quite satisfied after
a minute or two that nobody was inside, he scrambled
in and flew down to a corner in which was a lot of
old hay and rubbish. Here he began a great rustle
and stirring about, like a squirrel in autumn leaves,
probably after insects, though it was too dark to see
just what he was doing. It sounded part of the time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</SPAN></span>
as if he were scratching aside the hay, much as a hen
would have done. If so, his two little front toes must
have made sad work of it, with the two hind ones
always getting doubled up in the way. When I
thumped suddenly against the side of the barn, he
hurled himself like a shot at one of the holes, alighting
just below it, and stuck there in a way that
reminded me of the chewed-paper balls that boys
used to throw against the blackboard in school. I
could hear plainly the thump of his little feet as he
struck. With the same movement, and without pausing
an instant, he dived through headlong, aided by a
spring from his tail, much as a jumping jack goes over
the head of his stick, only much more rapidly. Hardly
had he gone before another appeared, to go through
the same program.</p>
<p>Though much shyer than other birds of the farm,
he often ventures up close to the house and doorway
in the early morning, before any one is stirring. One
spring morning I was awakened by a strange little
pattering sound, and, opening my eyes, was astonished
to see one of these birds on the sash of the open window
within five feet of my hand. Half closing my
eyes, I kept very still and watched. Just in front of
him, on the bureau, was a stuffed golden-wing, with
wings and tail spread to show to best advantage the
beautiful plumage. He had seen it in flying by, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</SPAN></span>
now stood hopping back and forth along the window
sash, uncertain whether to come in or not. Sometimes
he spread his wings as if on the point of flying in;
then he would turn his head to look curiously at me
and at the strange surroundings, and, afraid to venture
in, endeavor to attract the attention of the stuffed bird,
whose head was turned away. In the looking-glass
he saw his own movements repeated. Twice he began
his love call very softly, but cut it short, as if frightened.
The echo of the small room made it seem so different
from the same call in the open fields that I think he
doubted even his own voice.</p>
<p class="figcenter" style="width: 394px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/image159.jpg" width-obs="394" height-obs="600" alt="" title="" /></p>
<p>Almost over his head, on a bracket against the wall,
was another bird, a great hawk, pitched forward on
his perch, with wings wide spread and fierce eyes
glaring downward, in the intense attitude a hawk
takes as he strikes his prey from some lofty watch
tree. The golden-wing by this time was ready to
venture in. He had leaned forward with wings spread,
looking down at me to be quite sure I was harmless,
when, turning his head for a final look round, he
caught sight of the hawk just ready to pounce down
on him. With a startled <i>kee-uk</i> he fairly tumbled
back off the window sash, and I caught one glimpse
of him as he dashed round the corner in full flight.</p>
<p>What were his impressions, I wonder, as he sat on
a limb of the old apple tree and thought it all over?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</SPAN></span>
Do birds have romances? How much greater wonders
had he seen than those of any romance! And
do they have any means of communicating them, as
they sing their love songs? What a wonderful story
he could tell, a real story, of a magic palace full of
strange wonders; of a glittering bit of air that made
him see himself; of a giant, all in white, with only his
head visible; of an enchanted beauty, stretching her
wings in mute supplication for some brave knight to
touch her and break the spell, while on high a fierce
dragon-hawk kept watch, ready to eat up any one who
should dare enter!</p>
<p>And of course none of the birds would believe him.
He would have to spend the rest of his life explaining;
and the others would only whistle, and call him <i>Iagoo</i>,
the lying woodpecker. On the whole, it would be
better for a bird with such a very unusual experience
to keep still about it.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />