Morning by river.
May 21, 2019 |
Also a robin's nest and eggs in the crotch of a maple.
Methinks birds that build amid the small branches of trees wait for the leaves to expand. [?]
The dew hangs on the grass like globules of quicksilver. Can I tell by it if it has rained in the night? I hear that it has.
P. M. — The black oak is just beginning to blossom.
The earlier apple trees are in bloom, and resound with the hum of bees of all sizes and other insects. To sit under the first apple tree in blossom is to take another step into summer. The apple blossoms are so abundant and full, white tinged with red; a rich-scented Pomona fragrance, telling of heaps of apples in the autumn, perfectly innocent, wholesome, and delicious.
On hillsides cut off two years ago, the red oaks now contrast at a little distance with the yellowish-green birches. The latter are covered with green lice, which cover me.
The catbird sings like a robin sometimes, sometimes like a blackbird's sprayey warble. There is more of squeak or mew, and also of clear whistle, than in the thrasher's note.
Nemopanthes in bloom; leaves three quarters of an inch.
Sand cherry also, fully.
Young blueberries every where in bloom, and Viola pedata along the woodland paths, in high land.
Sorrel in bloom, beginning. I am eager to taste a handful.
H. D. Thoreau, Journal, May 21, 1852
A song sparrow's nest and eggs so placed in a bank that none could tread on it; bluish-white, speckled.See May 6, 1860 ("See a song sparrow’s nest with four eggs in the side of a bank, or rather ditch. I commonly find the earliest ones in such sheltered and concealed places"); May 12, 1857 ("I hear of, and also find, a ground-bird's (song sparrow's) nest with five eggs."); May 27, 1856 ("Fringilla melodia’s nest in midst of swamp, with four eggs, made partly of usnea; two stories, i.e. upon an old nest, elevated one foot above the water; eggs with very dark blotches.")
Also a robin's nest and eggs in the crotch of a maple. See May 21, 1856 ("A robin’s nest without mud, on a young white oak in woods, with three eggs.") See also May 6. 1855 (''A robin’s nest with two eggs, betrayed by peeping."); May 13, 1853 ("A robin's nest, with young, on the causeway"); May 19, 1854 ("The robin's nest and eggs are the earliest I see.")
The dew hangs on the grass like globules of quicksilver. May 11, 1852 ("Dews come with the grass. There is, I find on examining, a small, clear drop at the end of each blade, quite at the top on one side."); May 13, 1860: ("Each dewdrop is a delicate crystalline sphere trembling at the tip of a fresh green grass-blade.")
The earlier apple trees are in bloom. See note to May 25 , 1852 ("It is blossom week with the apples.")
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