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Dallas Lore Sharp - A Watcher in The Woods

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Dallas Lore Sharp A Watcher in The Woods

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Dallas Lore Sharp
A Watcher in The Woods
Published by Good Press 2021 EAN 4057664577764 Table of Contents - photo 1
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4057664577764
Table of Contents

ILLUSTRATIONS
Table of Contents
PAGE
The feast is finished and the games are on
The cheerful little goldfinches, that bend the dried ragweeds
There she stood in the snow with head high, listening anxiously Anddreamed
I shivered as the icy flakes fell thicker and faster
The meadow-mouse
It was Whitefoot
From his leafless height he looks down into the Hollow
Uncle Jethro limbered his stiffened knees and went chuckling down the bank
The big moon was rising over the meadows
Section of muskrat's house
The snow has drifted over their house till only a tiny mound appears
They rubbed noses
Two little brown creatures washing calamus.
They probe the lawns most diligently for worms
Even he loves a listener
She flew across the pasture
A very ordinary New England "corner"
They are the first to return in the spring
Where the dams are hawking for flies
They cut across the rainbow
The barn-swallows fetch the summer
From the barn to the orchard
Across the road, in an apple-tree, built a pair of redstarts
Gathered half the gray hairs of a dandelion into her beak
In the tree next to the chebec's was a brood of robins. The crude nest was wedged carelessly into the lowest fork of the tree, so that the cats and roving boys could help themselves without trouble
I soon spied him on the wires of a telegraph-pole
He will come if May comes
Within a few feet of me dropped the lonely frightened quail
On they go to a fence-stake
It was a love-song
But the pair kept on together, chatting brightly
In a dead yellow birch
So close I can look directly into it
"Spring! spring! spring!"
A wretched little puddle
Calamity is hot on his track
Bunny, meantime, is watching just inside the next brier-patch
The squat is a cold place
The limp, lifeless one hanging over the neck of that fox
His drop is swift and certain
Seven young ones in the nest
I knew it suited exactly
With tail up, head cocked, very much amazed, and commenting vociferously
In a solemn row upon the wire fence
Young flying-squirrels
The sentinel crows are posted
She turned and fixed her big black eyes hard on me
Wrapped up like little Eskimos
It is no longer a sorry forest of battered, sunken stumps
Even the finger-board is a living pillar of ivy
In October they are building their winter lodges
The glimpse of Reynard in the moonlight

BIRDS WINTER BEDS Table of Contents The owl for all his feathers was - photo 2
BIRDS' WINTER BEDS
Table of Contents
The owl, for all his feathers, was a-cold.
A storm had been raging from the northeast all day. Toward evening the wind strengthened to a gale, and the fine, icy snow swirled and drifted over the frozen fields.
I lay a long time listening to the wild symphony of the winds, thankful for the roof over my head, and wondering how the hungry, homeless creatures out of doors would pass the night. Where do the birds sleep such nights as this? Where in this bitter cold, this darkness and storm, will they make their beds? The lark that broke from the snow at my feet as I crossed the pasture this afternoon
What comes o' thee?
Whar wilt thou cow'r thy chittering wing,
An' close thy e'e?
The storm grew fiercer; the wind roared through the big pines by the side of the house and swept hoarsely on across the fields; the pines shivered and groaned, and their long limbs scraped over the shingles above me as if feeling with frozen fingers for a way in; the windows rattled, the cracks and corners of the old farm-house shrieked, and a long, thin line of snow sifted in from beneath the window across the garret floor. I fancied these sounds of the storm were the voices of freezing birds, crying to be taken in from the cold. Once I thought I heard a thud against the window, a sound heavier than the rattle of the snow. Something seemed to be beating at the glass. It might be a bird. I got out of bed to look; but there was only the ghostly face of the snow pressed against the panes, half-way to the window's top. I imagined that I heard the thud again; but, while listening, fell asleep and dreamed that my window was frozen fast, and that all the birds in the world were knocking at it, trying to get in out of the night and storm.
The fields lay pure and white and flooded with sunshine when I awoke. Jumping out of bed, I ran to the window, and saw a dark object on the sill outside. I raised the sash, and there, close against the glass, were two quailsfrozen stiff in the snow. It was they I heard the night before fluttering at the window. The ground had been covered deep with snow for several days, and at last, driven by hunger and cold from the fields, they saw my light, and sought shelter from the storm and a bed for the night with me.
Four others, evidently of the same covey, spent the night in the wagon-house, and in the morning helped themselves fearlessly to the chickens' breakfast. They roosted with the chickens several nights, but took to the fields again as soon as the snow began to melt.
It is easy to account for our winter birds during the day. Along near noon, when it is warm and bright, you will find the sparrows, chickadees, and goldfinches searching busily among the bushes and weeds for food, and the crows and jays scouring the fields. But what about them during the dark? Where do they pass the long winter nights?
Why, they have nests, you say. Yes, they had nests in the summer, and then, perhaps, one of the parent birds may be said to have slept in the nest during the weeks of incubation and rearing of the young. But nests are cradles, not beds, and are never used by even the young birds from the day they leave them. Muskrats build houses, foxes have holes, and squirrels sleep in true nests; but of the birds it can be said, "they have not where to lay their heads." They sleep upon their feet in the grass, in hollow trees, and among the branches; but, at best, such a bed is no more than a roost. A large part of the year this roost is new every night, so that the question of a sleeping-place during the winter is most serious.
The cheerful little goldfinches, that bend the dried ragweeds and grass-stalks down and scatter their chaff over the snow, sleep in the thick cedars and pines. These warm, close-limbed evergreens I have found to be the lodging-houses of many of the smaller winter birdsthe fox-colored sparrow, snowbird, crossbill, and sometimes of the chickadee, though he usually tucks his little black cap under his wing in a woodpecker's hole.
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