Thursday, April 24, 2025

A Book of the Seasons: The Blue Butterfly in Spring


 I would make a chart of our life, 
know how its shores trend,
that butterflies reappear and when,
know why just this circle of creatures completes the world.
Henry Thoreau, April 18, 1852

You are always surprised  by the sight
of the first spring bird or insect;
they seem premature,
and there is no such evidence of spring as themselves,
so that they literally fetch the year about

Sping Azure (Mass Audubon)

First blue butterfly
fluttering over dry leaves
in the sunny wood.

April 19. Hear the field sparrow sing on his dry upland, it being a warm day, and see the small blue butterfly hovering over the dry leaves.  April 19, 1860

April 24. That fine slaty-blue butterfly, bigger than the small red, in wood-paths. April 24, 1855

April 28.  As I was measuring along the Marlborough road, a fine little blue-slate butterfly fluttered over the chain. Even its feeble strength was required to fetch the year about. How daring, even rash, Nature appears, who sends out butterflies so early!  April 28, 1856

April 30. That interesting small blue butterfly (size of small red) is apparently just out, fluttering over the warm dry oak leaves within the wood in the sun. Channing also first sees them to-day. The moment it rests and closes its wings, it looks merely whitish-slate, and you think at first that the deeper blue was produced by the motion of its wings, but the fact is you now see only their undersides which thus [sic] whitish spotted with black, with a dark waved line next the edge.  April 30, 1859

May 1This occurred to me yesterday as I sat in the woods admiring the beauty of the blue butterfly *. . . We are not chiefly interested in birds and insects, for example, as they are ornamental to the earth and cheering to man, but we spare the lives of the former only on condition that they eat more grubs than they do cherries, and the only account of the insects which the State encourages is of the "Insects Injurious to Vegetation." We too admit both a good and a bad spirit, but we worship chiefly the bad spirit, whom we fear. We do not think first of the good but of the harm things will do us . . . Children are attracted by the beauty of butterflies, but their parents and legislators deem it an idle pursuit. May 1, 1859

May 4.  I go into Holden Swamp to hear warblers. See a little blue butterfly (or moth) — saw one yesterday — fluttering about over the dry brown leaves in a warm place by the swamp-side, making a pleasant contrast. May 4, 1858
  • See Lewis Hyde, What Thoreau knew about Butterflies ("'[T]he butterfly that set his [May 1, 1859] reflection in motion must have been the Spring Azure, fittingly described by Harris as a “beautiful azure-blue butterfly” whose light blue wings have “the lustre of satin” on top and are “pearl-gray, with little blackish spots.'")
See also:



A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2025

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

A Book of the Seasons: Sedges in Early Spring


For the first time I perceive this spring
that the year is a circle.
I would make a chart of our life,
know why just this circle of creatures completes the world.
Henry Thoreau, April 18, 1852

On the Cliff I find –
after long and careful search–
one sedge flowering.
April 7, 1854

March 2. Two or three tufts of carex have shot up in Hosmer’s cold spring ditch and been frost-bitten. March 2, 1860

March 3. Also, pretty near [John Hosmer's second] spring, I see a tuft of carex (?) whose stiff glaucous points have risen several inches above the surface. March 3, 1859

March 19. A common sedge which already begins to yellow the top of some tussocks. March 19, 1860

March 22.  The phenomena of an average March . . . a Vegetation fairly begins, – conferva and mosses, grass and carex, etc . . . The skunk-cabbage begins to bloom (23d) . . . lake grass; and perchance the gooseberry and lilac begin to show a little green. That is, one indigenous native flower blooms. (Vide if the early sedge does.) March 22, 1860

March 25.  Much of this peculiar yellowish color on the surface of the Clamshell plain is due to a little curled sedge or grass growing at short intervals, loosely covering the ground (with green mosses intermixed) in little tufts  like curled hair.  March 25, 1859

April 2.  Some of the earliest plants are now not started because covered with snow, as the stellaria and shepherd's-purse. Others, like the Carex Pennsylvanica, the crowfoot, saxifrage, callitriche, are either covered or recently uncovered. I think it must be partly owing to the want of rain, and not wholly to the snow, that the first three are so backward.  April 2, 1856

April 7. On the Cliff I find, after long and careful search, one sedge above the rocks, low amid the withered blades of last year, out, its little yellow beard amid the dry blades and few green ones, — the first herbaceous flowering I have detected.  April 7, 1854

April 7. Round the two-mile square. I see where the common great tufted sedge (Carex stricta) has started under the water on the meadows, now fast falling. April 7, 1861 

April 10.   At Lee’s the early sedge; one only sheds pollen . . . As for the early sedge, who would think of looking for a flower of any kind in those dry tufts whose withered blades almost entirely conceal the springing green ones? I patiently examined one tuft after another, higher and higher up the rocky hill, till at last I found one little yellow spike low in the grass which shed its pollen on my finger. April 10, 1855

April 11 My early sedge, which has been out at Cliffs apparently a few days (not yet quite generally), the highest only two inches, is probably Carex umbellata. April 11, 1860

April 17The sedge is shooting up in the meadows, erect, rigid, and sharp, a glaucous green unlike that of the grass on banks. April 17, 1858

April 18Common saxifrage and also early sedge I am surprised to find abundantly out—both—considering their backwardness April 2d. Both must have been out some, i. e. four or five, days half-way down the face of the ledge.  April 18, 1856 

April 22. What is that grass with a yellow blossom which I find now on the Cliff? [Carex marginata, early sedge, the earliest grass that flowers.] . . . The early sedge grows on the side of the Cliffs in little tufts with small yellow blossoms, i. e. with yellow anthers, low in the
grass. April 22, 1852

April 22. Within a few days I pricked my fingers smartly against the sharp, stiff points of some sedge coming up. At Heywood's meadow, by the railroad, this sedge, rising green and dense with yellow tips above the withered clumps, is very striking, suggesting heat, even a blaze, there. April 22, 1859 
 [See June 19, 1859 ("The prevailing sedge of Heywood Meadow by Bartlett Hill-side, that which showed yellow tops in the spring, is the Carex stricta.)]

April 24. Sitting on Lightning Hillside and looking over Heywood's meadow, am struck by the vivid greenness of the tips of the sedge just pushing up out of its dry tussocks in the water. I observed it here on the 22d. It is some six inches high or more. All the lower, or the greater, part of the tussock is brown and sere and prostrate withered blades of last year, while from the top spring up ranks of green life like a fire, from amid the withered blades. This new grass is green beneath, but yellow-tipped, perhaps on account of the recent snow or higher water. It is the renewal of life. The contrast of life with death, spring with winter, is nowhere more striking. April 24, 1859

April 26. The forward-rank sedge of Well Meadow which is so generally eaten (by rabbits, or possibly woodchucks), cropped close, is allied to that at Lee's Cliff, which is also extensively browsed now. I have found it difficult to get whole specimens. Certain tender early greens are thus extensively browsed now, in warm swamp-edges and under cliffs, — the bitter cress, the Carex varia (?) at Lee's, even skunk-cabbage. April 26, 1860

May 2. The sedge apparently Carex Pennsylvanica has now been out on low ground a day or two. May 2, 1860

May 10. That early glaucous, sharp-pointed, erect sedge, grass like, by the riverside is now apparently in prime. Is it the Carex aquatilis? May 10, 1858

May 10. As I stand on Hunt’s Bridge, I notice . . . the glaucous green of Carex stricta tufts, and the light yellowish green of the very coarse sedges of the meadow. May 10, 1860

May 14. The early sedges, even in the meadows, have blossomed before you are aware of it, while their tufts and bases are still mainly brown. May 14, 1860

***
See also:
A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Signs of the Spring, Greening grasses and sedges
A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau,
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2025

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

A Book of the Seasons: April Days

A year is made up of 
a certain series and number 
of sensations and thoughts 
which have their language in nature.

Henry Thoreau, June 6, 1857







Warm rain on the roof
puddles shining in the road,
April comes in true.
April 1, 1855

The star-studded sky,
water reflecting the stars –
the dark land between.
April 1, 1853


Something reminds me
of the song of the robin,
rainy days, past springs.
April 2, 1854

Southeasterly wind
its sough in the pines sounds warm,
whispering summer.
April 3,  1854

White maple trees stand
in the midst of the old snow,
buds slightly opened.
April 3, 1856

Snow-covered mountains
in the northwest horizon
glisten in the sun.
April 4, 1855

These truly warm days
just so simple every year.
Butterflies and frogs!
April 5, 1854

A sober moist day
with a circle round the sun
seen in reflection.
April 5, 1855

White maples resound
with the hum of honey-bees
like a summer dream.
April 6, 1854

The hazel stigmas
are well out and catkins loose,
but no pollen shed.
April 7, 1854

As always April
is unexpectedly warm
in sheltered places.
April 8, 1859

Two marsh hawks circling
along the water’s edge low
over the meadows.
April 8, 1856

At this still season
before the crickets begin
I hear the bees hum.
April 9, 1853

Earliest flowers
bloom when most have not begun
to think of flowers.

Deciduous tree
reflections at this season 
make wonderful rhyme.
April 11, 1852

Bright-yellow blossoms
on willow catkins today -
color of the sun.
April 12, 1852

Mountains clad with snow,
and the wind being northwest
accounts for this cold.
April 12, 1855

Take off coat, hear toads'
loud, ringing sound fill the air
which yet few notice.
April 13, 1853

Ice goes to the sea.
Now sails the fish hawk overhead,
looking for his prey.
April 14, 1852

A general tinge of green
on the bared meadows and hills
now just peeping forth.
April 14, 1854

The sound of church bells.
Song of the villages heard
with song of the birds.
April 15, 1855

We always expect
warmer weather than we have
at this time of year.
April 15, 1860

Sun not fairly out,
cold disagreeable day,
yet snow melts apace.
April 16, 1854

Eastern horizon
reflected in smooth waters
 just after sunrise.
April 16, 1855

Eastern horizon
pale salmon in skim-milk blue
just after sunrise.

Buff-edged fluttering
over the leaves in wood-paths
this warm afternoon.
April 16, 1855

A striped snake rustles
down a dry open hillside
in long withered grass.
April 16, 1855

Pale blue mountain haze  
ushers in the long summer
our warmest day yet.
April 16, 1855 


The distant white pines
flake into tiers, the whole tree
like an open cone.
April 17, 1855

Quickly and surely
the bee finds the first flower
before the poet.
April 17, 1855

How pleasing the sounds
awakened nature in spring
first humming of bees.
April 17, 1859

By expectation
spring butterflies reappear
to complete the world. 

Nature made warblers
to show every hue and shade.
The warblers now come.
April 19, 1854

Middle of the Pond
smallest duck I ever saw
buoyantly asleep.
April 19, 1855

Yesterday is like
a reflection in water.
Ideal inverted.
April 20, 1854

Up the hill beyond
the brook I sit on a rock
below the old trough.
April 21, 1854

The pine on Lee’s shore
seen against the light water
this cloudy weather.
April 22, 1852

Sitting on the cliffs
drops fall in the woods below
as sun shines above.
April 21, 1855

White-headed eagle
edgewise like a black ripple,
concealed in the sky.
April 23, 1854

Sail before the wind.
You must live in the present,
launch on every wave.
April 24, 1859

The first partridge drums.
Now earth’s pulse beats audibly
with the flow of life.

Bushes ring with song,
evening sky reflected from
the rippled water.
April 25, 1855

How pleasant in spring
a still overcast day like this
when water is smooth.

And the robin sings
with more vigor and promise
this mizzling still day.

The spring of the world
first flowers followed bare rock.
So the spring this year.

Near noon of the year
nature takes a siesta--
Summer in the air.

Spring flowers flash out
like poetry the blossom
preceding the leaf.

Mottled light and shade
seen looking into the woods
is more like summer.

The scream of a hawk
over Holden woods and swamp.
Those two men with guns.
April 30, 1855

I hear from afar 
the scream of a hawk circling
Holden woods and swamp.
April 30, 1855


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A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, April Days

A Book of the Seasons
,  by Henry Thoreau 
"A book, each page written in its own season,
out-of-doors, in its own locality.”
~edited, assembled and rewritten by zphx © 2009-2025

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