I would make a chart of our life,
know why just this circle of creatures completes the world.
Observe all kinds of coincidences,
as what kinds of birds come with what flowers.
Henry Thoreau, April 18, 1852
Surprising red bird –
a tanager against the
darkening green leaves.
It appears as if
he loved to contrast himself
with the green forest.
May 13. Methinks I hear and see the tanager now. May 13, 1853
May 14. C. sees the chestnut-sided warbler and the tanager to-day, and heard a whip-poor-will last night. May 14, 1860
May 15. As I sat by the Riordan crossing, thought it was the tanager I heard? . . . it must have been a tanager, which I hear frequently the 19th. May 15, 1856
May 16. Hear a tanager to-day, and one was seen yesterday. May 16, 1859
May 18. The scarlet tanagers are come. May 18, 1851
May 19. The tanager is now heard plainly and frequently. May 19, 1856
May 20. Saw a tanager in Sleepy Hollow. It most takes the eye of any bird. You here have the red-wing reversed, – the deepest scarlet of the red-wing spread over the whole body, not on the wing-coverts merely, while the wings are black. It flies through the green foliage as if it would ignite the leaves. May 20, 1853
May 20. See tanagers, male and female, in the top of a pine, one red, other yellow, from below. We have got to these high colors among birds. May 20, 1858
May 21. A tanager, – the surprising red bird, – against the darkening green leaves. May 21, 1854
May 22. Hear the hoarse note of the tanager and the sweet pe-a-wai. May 22, 1853
May 23. At Loring's Wood I hear and see a tanager. How he enhances the wildness and wealth of the woods! That contrast of a red bird with the green pines and the blue sky! Even when I have heard his note and look for him and find the fellow sitting on a dead twig of a pine, I am always startled. (They seem to love the darkest and thickest pines.) That incredible red, with the green and blue. I am transported; these are not the woods I ordinarily walk in. May 23, 1853
May 24. As I sit just above the northwest end of the Cliff, I see a tanager perched on one of the topmost twigs of a hickory, evidently come to spy after me, peeping behind a leafet. He is between me and the sun, and his plumage is incredibly brilliant, all aglow. It a deep scarlet (with a yellower reflection when the sun strikes him), in the midst of which his pure-black wings look high-colored also. You can hardly believe that a living creature can wear such colors. A hickory, too, is the fittest perch for him. May 24, 1860
May 28. I see a tanager, the most brilliant and tropical-looking bird we have, bright-scarlet with black wings, the scarlet appearing on the rump again between wing-tips. He brings heat, or heat him. A remarkable contrast with the green pines. At this distance he has the aspect and manners of a parrot, with a fullness about the head and throat and beak, indolently inspecting the limbs and twigs —leaning over to it — and sitting still a long time. The female, too, is a neat and handsome bird, with the same indolent ways, but very differently colored from the male; all yellow below with merely dusky wings, and a sort of clay(?)-color on back. May 28, 1855
May 29. At A. Hosmer's hill on the Union Turnpike I see the tanager hoarsely warbling in the shade; the surprising red bird, a small morsel of Brazil, advanced picket of that Brazilian army. But no more shall we see; it is only an affair of out-posts. It appears as if he loved to contrast himself with the green of the forest. May 29, 1853
A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, The Scarlet Tanager in May
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 © 2009-2026
https://tinyurl.com/hdt-tanager


