Showing posts with label august 18. Show all posts
Showing posts with label august 18. Show all posts

Sunday, August 14, 2022

A Book of the Seasons: The Cricket in August


This sense of lateness –
now is the season of fruits
but where is our fruit?

A sound reminds me.
Past autumns, lapse of time – so
little brought to pass.

The song of the crickets
it fails not in its season
night or day.

*****
August 2. The crickets on the causeway make a steady creak, on the dry pasture-tops an interrupted one. August 2, 1854

August 3.  At the east window. A temperate noon. I hear a cricket creak in the shade; also the sound of a distant piano. August 3, 1852

August 4. It is now the royal month of August. As my eye rests on the blossom of the meadow-sweet in a hedge, I hear the note of a cricket, and am penetrated with the sense of autumn. I am as dry as the rye which is everywhere cut and housed, though I am drunk with the season's wine.  August 4, 1851

August 4. Have had a gentle rain, and now with a lowering sky, but still I hear the cricket. He seems to chirp from a new depth toward autumn, new lieferungs of the fall. August 4, 1852

August 4Have heard the alder cricket some days. The turning-point is reached.  August 4, 1856 

[Spooner says Thoreau's alder cricket is the snowy tree cricket. Thoreau's Vision of Insects & the Origins of American Entomology. Adults of the species can be found from mid-July to mid-November, sometimes be so high in oak trees that its chirp is the only way to identify it. It lives in shrubs, vines, fruit trees, broadleaved trees, and oaks, and can rarely be found in grass. ~ Wikipedia ]

August 6.  It is at length cloudy, and still behind the hills, and very grateful is this anticipation of the fall, — coolness and cloud, and the crickets steadily chirping in mid-afternoon. August 6, 1854

August 6. Hear the autumnal crickets. . . . The mole cricket creaks along the shore. August 6, 1855 

[Mole crickets live almost entirely below ground, digging tunnels of different kinds for feeding, escape from predators, attracting a mate (by singing), mating, and raising of young.~ Wikipedia]

August 7. The cool nocturnal creak of the crickets is heard in the mid-afternoon. August 7, 1854

August 11I have heard since the 1st of this month the steady creaking cricket.  August 11, 1854

August 12.  As I stand on the bank there, I find suddenly that I hear, low and steady, under all other sounds, the creak of the mole cricket by the riverside. It has a peculiarly late sound, suggestive of the progress of the year. It is the voice which comes up steadily at this season from that narrow sandy strip between the meadow and the water’s edge. You might think it issued from that small frog, the only living thing you see, which sits so motionless on the sand. But the singer is wholly out of sight in his gallery under the surface. 

Creak creak, creak creak, creak creak, creak creak

It is a sound associated with the declining year and recalls the moods of that season. It is so unobtrusive yet universal a sound, so underlying the other sounds which fill the air, —the song of birds, rustling of leaves, dry hopping sound of grasshoppers, etc., —that now, in my chamber, I can hardly be sure whether I hear it still, or remember it, it so rings in my ears. August 12, 1858

[Male mole crickets have an exceptionally loud song; they sing from a burrow that opens out into the air in the shape of an exponential horn. The song is an almost pure tone, modulated into chirps.~Wikipedia]

August 14. I sit three-quarters up the hill. The crickets creak strong and loud now after sunset. No word will spell it. It is a short, strong, regular ringing sound, as of a thousand exactly together, — though further off some alternate, — repeated regularly and in rapid time, perhaps twice in a second. Methinks their quire is much fuller and louder than a fortnight ago. August 14, 1854 

[ Crickets chirp at different rates depending on their species and the temperature. According to Dolbear's law, counting the number of chirps produced in 14 seconds by the snowy tree cricket,  and adding 40 will approximate the temperature in degrees Fahrenheit. ~Wikipedia]

August 15. That clear ring like an alder locust (is it a cricket ?) for some time past is a sound which belongs to the season. August 15, 1852 

August 15. But now it is cooler and beautifully clear at last after all these rains, and the crickets chirp with a still more autumnal sound. August 15, 1853

August 17 My life flows with a deeper current, no longer as a shallow and brawling stream, parched and shrunken by the summer heats. This coolness comes to condense the dews and clear the atmosphere. The stillness seems more deep and significant. Each sound seems to come from out a greater thoughtfulness in nature, as if nature had acquired some character and mind. The cricket, the gurgling stream, the rushing wind amid the trees, all speak to me soberly yet encouragingly of the steady onward progress of the universe.  August 17, 1851

August 17.  Dawn . . . The creak of the crickets sounds louder. August 17, 1852

August 18. What means this sense of lateness that so comes over one now, — as if the rest of the year were down-hill, and if we had not performed anything before, we should not now? The season of flowers or of promise may be said to be over, and now is the season of fruits; but where is our fruit? The night of the year is approaching. What have we done with our talent? All nature prompts and reproves us. How early in the year it begins to be late! The sound of the crickets, even in the spring, makes our hearts beat with its awful reproof, while it encourages with its seasonable warning. It matters not by how little we have fallen behind; it seems irretrievably late. The year is full of warnings of its shortness, as is life. The sound of so many insects and the sight of so many flowers affect us so, — the creak of the cricket and the sight of the prunella and autumnal dandelion. They say, "For the night cometh in which no man may work." August 18, 1853

August 18.  As I go along the hillsides in sprout-lands, amid the Solidago stricta, looking for the blackberries left after the rain, the sun warm as ever, but the air cool nevertheless, I hear the steady (not intermittent) shrilling of apparently the alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound. Hear it, but see it not. It reminds me of past autumns and the lapse of time, suggests a pleasing, thoughtful melancholy, like the sound of the flail. Such preparation, such an outfit has our life, and so little brought to pass! August 18, 1856

August 19. The cricket's is a note which does not attract you to itself. It is not easy to find one . . . The cricket's chirp now fills the air in dry fields near pine woods.  August 19, 1851

August 19.  It is cool with a considerable northwesterly wind, so that we can sail to Fair Haven. The dog-day weather is suddenly gone and here is a cool, clear, and elastic air. You may say it is the first day of autumn. You notice the louder and clearer ring of crickets, and the large, handsome red spikes of the Polygonum amphibium are now generally conspicuous along the shore. August 19, 1858

August 20.  In the morning the crickets snore, in the afternoon they chirp, at midnight they dream. August 20, 1841

August 20 I hear a cricket in the Depot Field, walk a rod or two, and find the note proceeds from near a rock. Partly under a rock, between it and the roots of the grass, he lies concealed, — for I pull away the withered grass with my hands, — uttering his night-like creak, with a vibratory motion of his wings, and flattering himself that it is night, because he has shut out the day. He was a black fellow nearly an inch long, with two long, slender feelers. They plainly avoid the light and hide their heads in the grass. At any rate they regard this as the evening of the year. They are remarkably secret and unobserved, considering how much noise they make. Every milkman has heard them all his life; it is the sound that fills his ears as he drives along. But what one has ever got off his cart to go in search of one? I see smaller ones moving stealthily about, whose note I do not know.

Who ever distinguished their various notes, 
which fill the crevices in each other's song? 
It would be a curious ear, indeed, 
that distinguished the species of the crickets which it heard,
and traced even the earth-song home, 
each part to its particular performer.
I am afraid to be so knowing. 

They are shy as birds, these little bodies. Those nearest me continually cease their song as I walk, so that the singers are always a rod distant, and I cannot easily detect one. It is difficult, moreover, to judge correctly whence the sound proceeds. Perhaps this wariness is necessary to save them from insectivorous birds, which would otherwise speedily find out so loud a singer. They are somewhat protected by the universalness of the sound, each one's song being merged and lost in the general concert, as if it were the creaking of earth's axle. They are very numerous in oats and other grain, which conceals them and yet affords a clear passage. I never knew any drought or sickness so to prevail as to quench the song of the crickets; it fails not in its season, night or day. August 20, 1851

August 20It is still cool weather with a northwest wind. This weather is a preface to autumn. There is more shadow in the landscape than a week ago, methinks, and the creak of the cricket sounds cool and steady.  August 20, 1858

August 21There are as few or fewer birds heard than flowers seen. The sound of the crickets gradually prevails more and more. I hear the year falling asleep. August 21, 1852

August 21. Saw one of those light-green locusts about three quarters of an inch long on a currant leaf in the garden. It kept up a steady shrilling (unlike the interrupted creak of the cricket) August 21, 1853

August 22. The creak of the mole cricket is heard along the shore. August 22, 1856

August 23. When I stopped to gather some blueberries by the roadside this afternoon, I heard the shrilling of a cricket or a grasshopper close to me, quite clear, almost like a bell, a stridulous sound, a clear ring, incessant, not intermittent, like the song of the black fellow I caught the other day, and not suggesting the night, but belonging to day. August 23, 1851

August 23. About 8 p.m.- To Cliffs, moon half full.  As I go up the back road, I hear the loud ringing creak of crickets, louder singers on each apple tree by the roadside, with an intermittent pulsing creak . . .I hear a faint metallic titter from a bird, so faint that if uttered at noonday it would not be heard, — not so loud as a cricket. I cannot remember the last moon. August 23, 1852

August 23. Hear the mole cricket nowadays. August 23, 1857

August 24.  Ride to Austin Bacon’s, Natick . . . nearby, a large white ash which though healthy bore a mark or scar where a branch had been broken off and stripped down the trunk.  B. said that one of his ancestors, perhaps his grandfather, before the Revolution, went to climb this tree, and reached up and took hold of this branch, which he stripped down, and this was the scar!  Under the dead bark of this tree saw several large crickets of a rare kind. They had a peculiar naked and tender look, with branched legs and a rounded incurved front.  August 24, 1857

August 25. Yesterday was a hot day, but oh, this dull, cloudy, breezy, thoughtful weather in which the creak of the cricket sounds louder, preparatory to a cheerful storm!  How grateful to our feelings is the approach of autumn! We have had no serious storm since spring.   August 25, 1852

August 26The wind roars amid the pines like the surf. You can hardly hear the crickets for the din, or the cars. Indeed it is difficult to enjoy a quiet thought. Such a blowing, stirring, bustling day, - what does it mean ? 

August 26Tuesday. More wind and quite cold this morning, but very bright and sparkling, autumn-like air, reminding of frosts to be apprehended, also tempting abroad to adventure. The fall cricket — or is it alder locust? — sings the praises of the day. August 26, 1856

August 26The dust is laid, the streets washed, the leaves — the first ripe crop — fallen, owing to yesterday's copious rain. It is clearer weather, and the creak of the crickets is more distinct, just as the air is clearer . . . The creak of the mole cricket has a very afternoon sound . . .The first fall rain is a memorable occasion, when the river is raised and cooled, and the first crop of sere and yellow leaves falls. The air is cleared; the dog-days are over; sun-sparkles are seen on water; crickets sound more distinct. August 26, 1859

August 27. Crickets sound much louder after the rain in this cloudy weather.  August 27, 1852

August 29. Might I not walk a little further, till I hear new crickets, till their creak has acquired some novelty, as if they were a new species whose habitat I had reached? August 29, 1851

August  29.  We walk invested by sound, -— the cricket in the grass and the eagle in the clouds. And so it circled over, and I strained my eyes to follow it, though my ears heard it without effort. August 29, 1858

August 31. Now especially the crickets are seen and heard on dry and sandy banks and fields, near their burrows, and some hanging, back down, to the stems of grass, feeding. I entered a dry grassy hollow where the cricket alone seemed to reign, — open like a bowl to the sky.  August 31, 1859


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 ©  2009-2022

tinyurl.com/HDTAugustCricket            

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

A Book of the Seasons: August 18 (the ripening year, a sense of lateness, the cricket, locust and wood pewee, night approaches)



The year is but a succession of days,
and I see that I could assign some office to each day
which, summed up, would be the history of the year.
Henry Thoreau, August 24, 1852


This sense of lateness –
now is the season of fruits
but where is our fruit?

A sound reminds me.
Past autumns, lapse of time – so
little brought to pass.


August 18, 2016


There is indeed something royal about the month of August.  Though hot it is not so suffocating a blaze, and the evenings generally are cooler. August 18, 1852

The locust is heard. Fruits are ripening. Ripe apples here and there scent the air.  August 18, 1852

It plainly makes men sad to think. Hence pensiveness is akin to sadness.  August 18, 1851 

What means this sense of lateness that so comes over one now, — as if the rest of the year were down-hill, and if we had not performed anything before, we should not now? . . . The year is full of warnings of its shortness, as is life. The sound of so many insects and the sight of so many flowers affect us so. August 18, 1853

The alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound. Hear it, but see it not. It reminds me of past autumns and the lapse of time, suggests a pleasing, thoughtful melancholy, like the sound of the flail. Such preparation, such an outfit has our life, and so little brought to pass! August 18, 1856

The season of flowers or of promise may be said to be over, and now is the season of fruits; but where is our fruit? August 18, 1853

The note of the wood pewee sounds prominent of late. August 18, 1860

Hear two wood pewees singing close by. . . .One appeared to answer the other, and sometimes they both sung together, — even as if the old were teaching her young. It was not the usual spring note of this bird, but a simple, clear pe-e-eet, rising steadily with one impulse to the end. August 18, 1858

In the meanwhile, as it was perched on the twig, it was incessantly turning its head about, looking for insects, and suddenly would dart aside or downward a rod or two, and I could hear its bill snap as it caught one. Then it returned to the same or another perch. August 18, 1858

See large flocks of blackbirds, blackish birds with chattering notes. It is a fine sight when you can look down on them just as they are settling on the ground with outspread wings, — a hovering flock.
August 18, 1858

The bobolinks alight on the wool-grass. August 18, 1854

Almost every bush along this brook is now alive with these birds.
August 18, 1858

Miss Caroline Pratt saw the white bobolink yesterday where Channng saw it the day before, in the midst of a large flock. I go by the place this afternoon and see very large flocks of them, certainly several hundreds in all, and one has a little white on his back, but I do not see the white one. August 18, 1858

Saw yesterday and some days before a monster aphis some five eighths of an inch long on a huckleberry leaf. August 18, 1856

The zizania on the north side of the river near the Holt, or meadow watering-place, is very conspicuous and abundant. August 18, 1854

The solidago nemoralis is now abundantly out on the Great Fields. August 18, 1854

Rudbeckia laciniata, sunflower-like tall cone-flower, behind Joe Clark's. August 18, 1852

Yellow Bethlehem-star yet, and indigo.  August 18, 1856

Many leaves of the cultivated cherry are turned yellow, and a very few leaves of the elm have fallen. August 18, 1853

Half the leaves of some cherries in dry places are quite orange now and ready to fall. August 18, 1859

There are fifteen or twenty haymakers here yet, but almost done. They and their loads loom at a distance. Men in their white shirts look taller and larger than near at hand.  August 18, 1854 

I go along the hillsides in sprout-lands, amid the Solidago stricta,
looking for the blackberries left after the rain, the sun warm as ever, but the air cool nevertheless. August 18, 1856

No mountains can be seen. August 18. 1852

The night of the year is approaching. August 18, 185
3


Walden, "Spring" ("The day is an epitome of the year. The night is the winter, the morning and evening are the spring and fall, and the noon is the summer.")

March 18, 1853 ("This the foreglow of the year, when the walker goes home at eve to dream of summer”)
July 15, 1854 ("We seem to be passing a dividing line between spring and autumn, and begin to descend the long slope toward winter")
July 19, 1851 ("I hear a cricket, too, under the blackberry vines, singing as in the fall. Yesterday it was spring, and to-morrow it will be autumn. Where is the summer then?")
July 26, 1853 ("How apt we are to be reminded of lateness, even before the year is half spent! This the afternoon of the year")
July 27, 1853 ("This the afternoon of the year. How apt we are to be reminded of lateness, even before the year is half spent!")
July 28, 1854 (“After the first intense heats, we postponed the fulfillment of many of our hopes for this year, and, having as it were attained the ridge of the summer, commenced to descend the long slope toward winter, the afternoon and down-hill of the year.")
July 28, 1854 ("Last evening it was much cooler, and I heard a decided fall sound of crickets.")
July 28, 1859 ("The sweet and plaintive note of the pewee is now prominent, since most other birds are more hushed. I hear young families of them answering each other from a considerable distance, especially about the river.")
July 30 1852 (After midsummer we have a belated feeling as if we had all been idlers, and are forward to see in each sight and hear in each sound some presage of the fall,")
July 30, 1856 (“Rudbeckia laciniata, perhaps a week.”)
July 31, 1856 ("I hear the distant sound of a flail, and thoughts of autumn occupy my mind, and the memory of past years.")
August 2, 1860 ("Mikania begun, and now, perhaps, the river's brink is at its height. ");
August 2, 1860 ("We hear from time to time the loud snap of a wood pewee's bill overhead.")
August 4, 1851 ("I hear the note of a cricket, and am penetrated with the sense of autumn.")
August 4, 1856 ( "Have heard the alder cricket some days. The turning-point is reached.");
August 4, 1851("It is now the royal month of August")
August 5, 1854 ("It is one long acclivity from winter to midsummer and another long declivity from midsummer to winter.")
August 6, 1852 ("Has not the year grown old ? . . . It is the signs of the fall that affect us most. It is hard to live in the summer content with it.")
August 6, 1854 (“This anticipation of the fall, — coolness and cloud, and the crickets steadily chirping in mid-afternoon.”) 
August 6, 1855 ("Hear the autumnal crickets.")
August 6, 1858 (“The note of the wood pewee is now more prominent, while birds generally are silent.”)
August 9, 1851 ("Now the earliest apples begin to be ripe, but none are so good to eat as some to smell.”)
August 9, 1856 ("The notes of the wood pewee and warbling vireo are more prominent of late, and of the goldfinch twittering over.”)
August 10, 1853 ("August, royal and rich")
August 10, 1854 ("The woods are comparatively still at this season")
August 11, 1852 ("The autumnal ring of the alder locust.");
August 11, 1853 ("What shall we name this season? — this very late afternoon, or very early evening, this season of the day most favorable for reflection? . . .  The serene hour, the season of reflection! The pensive season . . .Each sound has a broad and deep relief of silence. It is not more dusky and obscure, but clearer than before. The poet arouses himself and collects his thoughts.")
August 11, 1858 ("It reminds me of the lateness of the season.")
August 12, 1854 ("It is the 3 o'clock p. m. of the year . . . when the earth has absorbed most heat, when melons ripen and early apples and peaches. It is already the yellowing year.")
August 12, 1858 ("The note of the wood pewee is a prominent and common one now. You see old and young together.")
August 12, 1851("I hear a wood thrush even now, long before sunrise, as in the heat of the day.");
August 12, 1854 ("Have not heard a wood thrush since last week of July.")
August 13, 1860 ("Hear the steady shrill of the alder locust.");
August 14, 1853 (" I hear no wood thrushes for a week")
August 14, 1853 ("I perceive the scent of the earliest ripe apples in my walk. How it surpasses all their flavors!")
August 14, 1859 ("The zizania now makes quite a show along the river. ")
August 15, 1852 ("That clear ring like an alder locust (is it a cricket ?) for some time past is a sound which belongs to the season.")
August 15, 1853 ("An inky darkness as of night under the edge of the woods, now at noonday heralding the evening of the year.”)
August 15, 1854("It is too late to see the river's brink in its perfection. It must be seen between the blooming of the mikania and the going out of bloom of the button bush, before you feel this sense of lateness in the year, before the meadows are shorn and the grass of hills and pastures is thus withered and russet.")
August 15, 1852 ("I see a dense, compact flock of bobolinks going off in the air over a field. They cover the rails and alders, and go rustling off with a brassy, tinkling note as I approach, revealing their yellow breasts and bellies. This is an autumnal sight, that small flock of grown birds in the afternoon sky.")
August 15, 1854 (" I see large flocks of bobolinks on the Union Turnpike").
August 16, 1852 ("I must look for the rudbeckia which Bradford says he found yesterday behind Joe Clark's")
August 16, 1858 ("I hear these birds on my way thither, between two and three o’clock:goldfinches twitter over; . . .the link of many bobolinks (and see large flocks on the fences and weeds; they are largish-looking birds with yellow throats) . . .Channing tells me that he saw a white bobolink in a large flock of them to-day.")
August 17, 1852 ("The woods are very still. I hear only a faint peep or twitter from one bird, then the never-failing wood thrush, it being about sunrise")


August 19, 1853 ("Flocks of bobolinks go tinkling along about the low willows, and swallows twitter, and a kingbird hovers almost stationary in the air, a foot above the water.")
August 19, 1853 ("In the fall, the evening of the year, the waters are smoothed more perfectly than at any other season. The day is an epitome of the year")
August 20, 1854 ("Saw a wood pewee which had darted after an insect over the water in this position in the air: It often utters a continuous pe-e-e.");
August 21, 1853 ("Methinks I have not heard a robin sing morning or evening of late, but the peawai still.")
August 22, 1858 ("Now that the mikania begins to prevail the button-bush has done.")
August 23, 1853 ("I am again struck by the perfect correspondence of a day — say an August day — and the year. I think that a perfect parallel may be drawn between the seasons of the day and of the year.”)
August 24, 1858 ("I distinguish men busily haying in gangs of four or five, revealed by their white shirts, some two miles below, toward Carlisle Bridge, and others still, further up the stream. They are up to their shoulders in the grassy sea, almost lost in it. I can just discern a few white specks in the shiny grass, where the most distant are at work. ")
August 25, 1852 ("I hear no birds sing these days, only . . . the mew of a catbird, the link link of a bobolink, or the twitter of a goldfinch, all faint and rare")
August 26, 1856 ("Another monster aphis on a huckleberry leaf.")
August 26, 1859 ("Bobolinks fly in flocks more and more.")
August 31, 1852 ("The evening of the year is colored like the sunset.")
August 28, 1858 ("The scarlet leaves of the cultivated cherry are seen to have fallen . . . reminding us of October and November.")
August 28, 1858 ("When. . . I see these bright leaves strewing the moist ground . . .I am reminded that I have crossed the summit ridge of the year and have begun to descend the other slope.")
August 29, 1852 (The first leaves begin to fall; a few yellow ones lie in the road this morning, loosened by the rain and blown off by the wind.")
August 31, 1852 ("Morning is full of promise and vigor. Evening is pensive.")
September 4, 1857 ("Rudbeckia laciniata by Dodge's Brook")

August 18, 2016

If you make the least correct 
observation of nature this year,
 you will have occasion to repeat it
 with illustrations the next, 
and the season and life itself is prolonged.

 August 17  .<<<<<      August 18 >>>>>   August 19


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 © 2009-2022

https://tinyurl.com/HDT18August

Alone
with my soul —
solitude.
zphx 20220818

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Orange leaves.

August 18

Thursday. 

Half the leaves of some cherries in dry places are quite orange now and ready to fall.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 18, 1859

See August 18, 1853 ("Many leaves of the cultivated cherry are turned yellow, and a very few leaves of the elm have fallen.");  August 29, 1852 (The first leaves begin to fall; a few yellow ones lie in the road this morning, loosened by the rain and blown off by the wind.") October 13, 1857 ("Our cherry trees have now turned to mostly a red orange color.")

Saturday, August 18, 2018

The fall note of the eastern wood pewee.

August 18

P. M. — To Fair Haven Hill. 
August 18, 2018

Miss Caroline Pratt saw the white bobolink yesterday where Charming saw it the day before, in the midst of a large flock. [I hear also of a swallow (probably barn swallow), perfectly white, killed by John Flint’s son this year and set up by some one in the North Quarter.]

I go by the place this afternoon and see very large flocks of them, certainly several hundreds in all, and one has a little white on his back, but I do not see the white one. Almost every bush along this brook is now alive with these birds. You wonder where they were all hatched, for you may have failed to find a single nest. I know eight or ten active boys who have been searching for these nests the past season quite busily, and they have found but two at most. Surely but a small fraction of these birds will ever return from the South. Have they so many foes there? Hawks must fare well at present. They go off in a straggling flock, and it is a long time before the last loiterer has left the bushes near you. 

I also see large flocks of blackbirds, blackish birds with chattering notes. It is a fine sight when you can look down on them just as they are settling on the ground with outspread wings, — a hovering flock. 

Having left my note-book at home, I strip off a piece of birch bark for paper. It begins at once to curl up, yellow side out, but I hold that side to the sun, and as soon as it is dry it gives me no more trouble. 

I sit under the oaks at the east end of Hubbard’s Grove, and hear two wood pewees singing close by. They are perched on dead oak twigs four or five rods apart, and their notes are so exactly alike that at first I thought there was but one. One appeared to answer the other, and sometimes they both sung together, — even as if the old were teaching her young. It was not the usual spring note of this bird, but a simple, clear pe-e-eet, rising steadily with one impulse to the end. They were undistinguishable in tone and rhythm, though one which I thought might be the young was feebler. 

In the meanwhile, as it was perched on the twig, it was incessantly turning its head about, looking for insects, and suddenly would dart aside or downward a rod or two, and I could hear its bill snap as it caught one. Then it returned to the same or another perch. 

Heard a nuthatch.[And a week later. Not heard since spring.]

Last evening one of our neighbors, who has just completed a costly house and front yard, the most showy in the village, illuminated in honor of the Atlantic telegraph. I read in great letters before the house the sentence “Glory to God in the highest.” 

But it seemed to me that that was not a sentiment to be illuminated, but to keep dark about. A simple and genuine sentiment of reverence would not emblazon these words as on a signboard in the streets. They were exploding countless crackers beneath it, and gay company, passing in and out, made it a kind of housewarming. I felt a kind of shame for [it], and was inclined to pass quickly by, the ideas of indecent exposure and cant being suggested. 

What is religion? That which is never spoken.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 18, 1858


Miss Caroline Pratt saw the white bobolink yesterday where Charming saw it the day before, in the midst of a large flock. See ("Charming tells me that he saw a white bobolink in a large flock of them to-day. Almost all flowers and animals may be found white") 

I go by the place this afternoon and see very large flocks of them, certainly several hundreds in all . . . . ..Almost every bush along this brook is now alive with these birds. See August 18, 1854 ("The bobolinks alight on the wool-grass.") See also . August 15, 1854 (" I see large flocks of bobolinks on the Union Turnpike");  August 26, 1859  ("Bobolinks fly in flocks more and more.")

You wonder where they were all hatched, for you may have failed to find a single nest.
See July 2, 1855 ("Young bobolinks are now fluttering over the meadow, but I have not been able to find a nest ..”); June 26, 1857 ("I must be near bobolinks' nests many times these days. . . but the birds are so overanxious . . .and so shy about visiting their nests while you are there, that you watch them in vain.”)

It was not the usual spring note of this bird, but a simple, clear pe-e-eet, rising steadily with one impulse to the end. See August 18, 1860 (“The note of the wood pewee sounds prominent of late.”); See also August 12, 1858 ("The note of the wood pewee is a prominent and common one now. You see old and young together."); J.J. Audubon ( "...at this season, their notes are heard at a very late hour, as in early spring. They may be expressed by the syllables pe-wee, pettowee, pe-wee, prolonged like the last sighs of a despondent lover, or rather like what you might imagine such sighs to be, it being, I believe, rare actually to hear them.”) and A Book of the Seasons,  by Henry Thoreau, the Eastern Wood-Pewee

Nuthatch not heard since spring. See July 12, 1860 ("Hear a nuthatch in the street. So they breed here."); August 6, 1856 (“Hear a nuthatch.”); September 15, 1858 (“I hear a nuthatch occasionally, but it reminds me of winter.”); September 21, 1854 ("The nuthatch is common in woods and on street.”);  October 20, 1856 (“Think I hear the very faint gnah of a nuthatch. Thus, of late, when the season is declining, many birds have departed, and our thoughts are turned towards winter . . . the nuthatch is heard again”); November 26, 1860 ("I hear the faint note of a nuthatch . . .a phenomenon of the late fall or early winter; for we do not hear them in summer that I remember. ...”); December 1, 1857 ("I thus always begin to hear this bird on the approach of winter, as if it did not breed here, but wintered here.”)

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Past autumns and the lapse of time

August 18

P. M. — To Beck Stow's.

Now, perhaps, get thoroughwort. The lecheas in the Great Fields are now turning red, especially the fine one. 

August 18, 2016
As I go along the hillsides in sprout-lands, amid the Solidago stricta,

looking for the blackberries left after the rain, 

the sun warm as ever, but the air cool nevertheless, 

I hear the steady (not intermittent) shrilling of apparently the alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound. Hear it, but see it not. 

It reminds me of past autumns and the lapse of time, suggests a pleasing, thoughtful melancholy, like the sound of the flail. Such preparation, such an outfit has our life, and so little brought to pass! 

Hear a faint-warbling bird amid birches and pines. Clear-yellow throat and breast, greenish-yellow head, conspicuous white bar on wings, white beneath, forked tail, bluish legs. Can it be pine warbler? The note, thus faint, is not like it. See black and white creeper. 

Yellow Bethlehem-star yet, and indigo. 

Saw yesterday and some days before a monster aphis some five eighths of an inch long on a huckleberry leaf. I mistook it, as before, for a sort of loose-spun cocoon. It was obovate, indistinctly ribbed, of long, loose, white, streaming down, but being touched it recoiled and, taken off the leaf, rolled itself into a ball. The father of all the aphides.

OEnothera pumila still.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, August 18, 1856

I hear the steady shrilling of . . . the alder cricket, clear, loud, and autumnal, a season sound.
See August 18, 1851 ("How early in the year it begins to be late! The sound of the crickets, even in the spring, makes our hearts beat with its awful reproof, while it encourages with its seasonable warning"); See also 
 August 4, 1856 (" Have heard the alder cricket some days. The turning-point is reached."); August 4, 1851 ("I hear the note of a cricket, and am penetrated with the sense of autumn.") August 15, 1852 ("That clear ring like an alder locust (is it a cricket ?) for some time past is a sound which belongs to the season."); and A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, the Cricket in August

It reminds me of past autumns and the lapse of time . . . so little brought to pass!
  See 
August 18, 1851 ("It plainly makes men sad to think. Hence pensiveness is akin to sadness") August 18, 1853 ("What means this sense of lateness that so comes over one now, — as if the rest of the year were down-hill, and if we had not performed anything before, we should not now? . . .The year is full of warnings of its shortness, as is life. The sound of so many insects and the sight of so many flowers affect us so,. . . They say, 'For the night cometh in which no man may work.'"); .August 18, 1853 (“The season of flowers or of promise may be said to be over, and now is the season of fruits; but where is our fruit ?); See also July 31, 1856 ("I hear the distant sound of a flail, and thoughts of autumn occupy my mind, and the memory of past years."); August 20, 1858 ("This weather is a preface to autumn. There is more shadow in the landscape than a week ago, methinks, and the creak of the cricket sounds cool and steady. The grass and foliage and landscape generally are of a more thought-inspiring color, suggest what some perchance would call a pleasing melancholy. "); August 29, 1854 ("Early for several mornings I have heard the sound of a flail. It leads me to ask if I have spent as industrious a spring and summer as the farmer, and gathered as rich a crop of experience.") and A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Midsummer midlife blues

Yellow Bethlehem-star yet.
[Hypoxis erecta, or Hypoxis hirsuta, commonly known as yellow or  common star-grass] See June 15, 1851 ("The Hypoxis erectayellow Bethlehem-star . . . should be called yellow-eyed grass, methinks."); June 5, 1855 ("Yellow Bethlehem-star in prime.");  August 24, 1853 ("Yellow Bethlehem-star still."); See also A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Yellow Bethlehem-star

Indigo. See July 17, 1852 ("Some fields are covered now with tufts or clumps of indigo- weed, yellow with blossoms."); July 25, 1853 ("Bunches of indigo, still in bloom, more numerously than anywhere that I remember"); August 6, 1858 ("indigo, ' ' 'is still abundantly in bloom. "); August 17, 1851 ("Indigo-weed still in bloom by the dry wood-path-side,")

A monster aphis some five eighths of an inch long on a huckleberry leaf. See August 26, 1856 ("Another monster aphis on a huckleberry leaf.")

August 18. See A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau August 18

A sound reminds me.
Past autumns, lapse of time – so
little brought to pass.

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 © 2009-2024

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