Showing posts with label the wild. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the wild. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 8, 2024

The wildest sound I ever heard.



October 8, 2020

As I was paddling along the north shore, after having looked in vain over the pond for a loon, suddenly a loon, sailing toward the middle, a few rods in front, set up his wild laugh and betrayed himself. I pursued with a paddle and he dived, but when he came up I was nearer than before. He dived again, but I miscalculated the direction he would take, and we were fifty rods apart when he came up, and again he laughed long and loud. He managed very cunningly, and I could not get within half a dozen rods of him. 

Sometimes he would come up unexpectedly on the opposite side of me, as if he had passed directly under the boat. So long-winded was he, so unweariable, that he would immediately plunge again, and then no wit could divine where in the deep pond, beneath the smooth surface, he might be speeding his way like a fish, perchance passing under the boat. He had time and ability to visit the bottom of the pond in its deepest part. 

A newspaper authority says a fisherman – giving his name – has caught loon in Seneca Lake, N. Y., eighty feet beneath the surface, with hooks set for trout. Miss Cooper has said the same. 

Yet he appeared to know his course as surely under water as on the surface, and swam much faster there than he sailed on the surface. It was surprising how serenely he sailed off with unruffled bosom when he came to the surface. It was as well for me to rest on my oars and await his reappearing as to endeavor to calculate where he would come up. 

When I was straining my eyes over the surface, I would suddenly be startled by his unearthly laugh behind me. But why, after displaying so much cunning, did he betray himself the moment he came to the surface with that loud laugh? His white breast enough betrayed him. He was indeed a silly loon, I thought.

Though he took all this pains to avoid me, he never failed to give notice of his whereabouts the moment he came to the surface. After an hour he seemed as fresh as ever, dived as willingly, and swam yet farther than at first. 

Once or twice I saw a ripple where he approached the surface, just put his head out to reconnoitre, and instantly dived again. I could commonly hear the plash of the water when he came up, and so also detected him. 

It was commonly a demoniac laughter, yet somewhat like a water-bird, but occasionally, when he had balked me most successfully and come up a long way off, he uttered a long-drawn unearthly howl, probably more like a wolf than any other bird. This was his looning.

As when a beast puts his muzzle to the ground and deliberately howls; perhaps the wildest sound I ever heard, making the woods ring; and I concluded that he laughed in derision of my efforts, confident of his own resources. 

Though the sky was overcast, the pond was so smooth that I could see where he broke the surface if I did not hear him. His white breast, the stillness of the air, the smoothness of the water, were all against [him]. At length, having come up fifty rods off, he uttered one of those prolonged unearthly howls, as if calling on the god of loons to aid him, and immediately there came a wind from the east and rippled the surface, and filled the whole air with misty rain. 

I was impressed as if it were the prayer of the loon and his god was angry with me. How surprised must be the fishes to see this ungainly visitant from another sphere speeding his way amid their schools! I have never seen more than one at a time in our pond, and I believe that that is always a male.

 H. D. Thoreau, Journal, October 8, 1852

Today HDT records in his Journal the story of the loon diving and dodging him on Walden that is to be incorporated into "Walden." See also October 3, 1852 ("Hear the loud laughing of a loon on Flint's, apparently alone in the middle. A wild sound, heard far and suited to the wildest lake. "), The Maine Woods (" In the middle of the night, as indeed each time that we lay on the shore of a lake, we heard the voice of the loon, loud and distinct, from far over the lake. It is a very wild sound, quite in keeping with t
he place and the circumstances.") and A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Perfect autumn. Walden

October 8.  See A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, October 8

Maples by the shore
extending their red banners
over the water.


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

https://tinyurl.com/hdt-wild

Friday, November 26, 2021

A Book of the Seasons: November 26 (boat out, winter birds, the wild)

 

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


Got my boat up this
Thanksgiving day afternoon –
one end frozen in.

In this oak wood hear 
the faint note of a nuthatch 
like a creaking limb. 

I detect it much
nearer than I suspected –
its mate not far off.

November 26, 2012

I love to have the river
closed up for a season

and a pause put to my boating
to be obliged to get my boat in.

I shall launch it again in the spring
with so much more pleasure.

I love best to have each thing
in its season only

and enjoy doing without it
at all other times. 


Boats are drawn up high which will not be launched again till spring. November 26, 1850

Bottom of boat covered with ice. The ice next the shore bears me and my boat. November 26, 1855

Got my boat up this afternoon. (It is Thanksgiving Day.) One end had frozen in. November 26, 1857

Got in boat on account of Reynolds’s new fence going up (earlier than usual). November 26, 1858

Walden is very low, compared with itself for some years. November 26, 1858

And what is remarkable, I find that not only Goose Pond also has fallen correspondingly within a month, but even the smaller pond-holes only four or five rods over, such as Little Goose Pond, shallow as they are. November 26, 1858

In this mud I found two small frogs, one apparently a Rana palustris less than an inch long.  November 26, 1858

Minott's is a small, square, one-storied and unpainted house, with a hipped roof and at least one dormer window, a third the way up the south side of a long hill. November 26, 1857

Not that its form is so incomparable, nor even its weather-stained color, but chiefly, I think, because of its snug and picturesque position on the hillside. November 26, 1857

It is there because somebody was independent or bold enough to carry out the happy thought of placing it high on the hillside. November 26, 1857

The spring comes earlier to that dooryard than to any, and summer lingers longest there. November 26, 1857

It is the locality, not the architecture, that takes us captive. November 26, 1857

In the oak wood counting the rings of a stump, I hear the faint note of a nuthatch like the creak of a limb. I detect it on the trunk of an oak much nearer than I suspected, and its mate or companion not far off November 26, 1860

This is a phenomenon of the late fall or early winter; for we do not hear them in summer that I remember. November 26, 1860

Commonly they are steadily hopping about the trunks in search of insect food. Yet today the nuthatch picks out from a crevice in the bark of an oak trunk, where it was perpendicular, something white and pretty large. November 26, 1860

The chickadee is the bird of the wood the most unfailing. November 26, 1859

When, in a windy, or in any, day, you have penetrated some thick wood like this, you are pretty sure to hear its cheery note therein. November 26, 1859

At this season it is almost their sole inhabitant. November 26, 1859

I see here today one brown creeper busily inspecting the pitch pines. November 26, 1859

It begins at the base, and creeps rapidly upward by starts, adhering close to the bark and shifting a little from side to side often till near the top, then suddenly darts off downward to the base of another tree, where it repeats the same course. November 26, 1859

What that little long-sharp-nosed mouse I found in the Walden road to-day? November 26, 1854

I see in the open field east of Trillium Wood a few pitch pines springing up, from seeds blown from the wood a dozen or fifteen rods off. November 26, 1860

It would be mistaken for a single sprig of moss - that came from the seed this year. It is, as it were, a little green star with many rays, half an inch in diameter.  November 26, 1860

These which are now mistaken for mosses in the grass may become lofty trees which will endure two hundred years, under which no vestige of this grass will be left. November 26, 1860

Thus from pasture this portion of the earth's surface becomes forest. November 26, 1860

No doubt several creatures, like otter and mink and foxes, know where to resort for their food at this season. This is now a perfect otter’s or mink’s preserve. November 26, 1858 

Woods, both the primitive and those which are suffered to spring up in cultivated fields, preserve the mystery of nature. November 26, 1859

It is worth the while to have these thickets on various sides of the town, where the rabbit lurks and the jay builds its nest. November 26, 1859
 
November 26, 2017

*****
*****

November 26, 2017
Walking ("A town is saved by the woods and swamps that surround it.”)

April 27, 1854 ("That is a very New England landscape. Buttrick's yellow farmhouse nearby is in harmony with it.")
May 1850 ("I still sit on its Cliff in a new spring day, and look over the awakening woods and the river, and hear the new birds sing, with the same delight as ever. It is as sweet a mystery to me as ever, what this world is.")
May 12, 1857 ("It reminded me of many a summer sunset, of many miles of gray rails, of many a rambling pasture, of the farmhouse far in the fields, its milk-pans and well-sweep, and the cows coming home from pasture.”).
May 16, 1860 ("[brown creeper] flies across to another bough, or to the base of another tree, and traces that up, zigzag and prying into the crevices.”)
May 31, 1858 ("I see, running along on the flat side of a railroad rail on the causeway, a wild mouse with an exceedingly long tail. Perhaps it would be called the long-tailed meadow mouse.s ")
June 15, 1859 (“A regular old-fashioned country house, long and low, one story unpainted, with a broad green field, half orchard, for all yard between it and the road, — a part of the hill side, — and much June-grass before it. This is where the men who save the country are born and bred.”)
August 26, 1856 ("What is a New England landscape this sunny August day? A weather-painted house and barn, with an orchard by its side, in midst of a sandy field surrounded by green woods, with a small blue lake on one side.”); 
October 20, 1856 ("Think I hear the very faint gnah of a nuthatch. “)
November 4, 1853 ("Hear a nuthatch.")
November 4, 1855 (“The birds are almost all gone. The note of the dee de de sounds now more distinct, prophetic of winter”)
November 7, 1855 ("See a nuthatch flit with a ricochet flight across the river, and hear his gnah half uttered when he alights.”)
November 7, 1858 ("The nuthatch is another bird of the fall which I hear these days and for a long time, — apparently ever since the young birds grew up.")
November 7, 1858 ("The very earth is like a house shut up for the winter, and I go knocking about it in vain. But just then I heard a chickadee on a hemlock, and was inexpressibly cheered to find that an old acquaintance was yet stirring about the premises, and was, I was assured, to be there all winter.")
November 16, 1860 (“In my two walks I saw only one squirrel and a chickadee. Not a hawk or a jay.”)
November 18,1851 ("Surveying these days the Ministerial Lot . . . I hear the hooting of an owl . . . Here hawks also circle by day, and chickadees are heard, and rabbits and partridges abound.")
November 18, 1855 (I am prepared to hear sharp, screaming notes rending the air, from the winter birds."")
November 19, 1857 ("In Stow's sprout-land west of railroad cut, I see where a mouse which has a hole under a stump has eaten out clean the insides of the little Prinos verticillatus berries.  What pretty fruit for the mice, these bright prinos berries!")
November 22, 1860 ("...and still nature is genial to man. Still he beholds the same inaccessible beauty around him.”)
November 25, 1857 ("Mr. Wesson says that he has seen a striped squirrel eating a white-bellied mouse")


November 28, 1858 ("More small birds —tree sparrows and chickadees — than usual about the house.")
November 29, 1860 (“Get up my boat, 7 a. m. Thin ice of the night is floating down the river.”)
November 30, 1855 (“Got in my boat. River remained iced over all day. ”
December 1, 1853 ("I hear their faint, silvery, lisping notes, like tinkling glass, and occasionally a sprightly day-day-day, as they inquisitively hop nearer and nearer to me. They are our most honest and innocent little bird, drawing yet nearer to us as the winter advances, and deserve best of any of the walker.”)
December 1, 1857 ("I thus always begin to hear [the nuthatch] on the approach of winter, as if it did not breed here, but wintered here * [but] Hear it all the fall (and occasionally through the summer of ’59")
December 2, 1854 (“Got up my boat and housed it, ice having formed about it.”)
December 2, 1856 (“Got in my boat . . . It made me sweat to wheel it home through the snow”)
December 3, 1856 ("Six weeks ago I noticed the advent of chickadees and their winter habits.")
December 5, 1853 ("Got my boat in. The river frozen over thinly in most places and whitened with snow”
December 10, 1859 (“Get in my boat, in the snow. The bottom is coated with a glaze.”)
December 11, 1854 ("The day is short; it seems to be composed of two twilights merely; the morning and the evening twilight make the whole day. . . .I hear rarely a bird except the chickadee, or perchance a jay or crow.")
December 13, 1852 ("I observed a mouse . . . reddish brown above and cream-colored beneath,. . .. I think it must be the Gerbillus Canadensis, or perhaps the Arvicola Emmonsii, or maybe the Arvicola hirsutus, meadow mouse")
December 13, 1852 (“I judge from his account of the rise and fall of Flint's Pond that, allowing for the disturbance occasioned by its inlets and outlet, it sympathizes with Walden")
December 27, 1853 (“ I had not seen a meadow mouse all summer, but no sooner does the snow come and spread its mantle over the earth than it is printed with the tracks of countless mice")
January 22, 1852 ("I see, one mile to two miles distant on all sides from my window, the woods, which still encircle our New England towns. . . Where still wild creatures haunt. How long will these last?”)
January 29, 1853 ("I saw a little grayish mouse frozen into Walden, three or four rods from the shore, its tail sticking out a hole. It had apparently run into this hole when full of water, as if on land, and been drowned and frozen.")
February 9, 1858 (“A distant farmhouse on a hill, French’s or Buttrick's, perhaps.”) 
February 24, 1854 ("Nuthatches are faintly answering each other, — tit for tat, — on different keys, — a faint creak. Now and then one utters a loud distinct gnah.”)

November 26, 2017
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.


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



Sunday, May 23, 2021

All nature is a new impression every instant.



May 23

Sunday. Barn. - The distant woods are but the tassels of my eye.

Books are to be attended to as new sounds merely.

Most would be put to a sore trial if the reader should assume the attitude of a listener.

They are but a new note in the forest.

To our lonely, sober thought the earth is a wild unexplored. Wildness as of the jay and muskrat reigns over the great part of nature. The oven-bird and plover are heard in the horizon.

Here is a new book of heroes, come to me like the note of the chewink from over the fen, only over a deeper and wider fen.

The pines are unrelenting sifters of thought; nothing petty leaks through them.

Let me put my ear close, and hear the sough of this book, that I may know if any inspiration yet haunts it.

There is always a later edition of every book than the printer wots of, no matter how recently it was published.

All nature is a new impression every instant. 

May 23, 2020

The aspects of the most simple object are as various as the aspects of the most compound.

Observe the same sheet of water from different eminences.

When I have travelled a few miles I do not recognize the profile of the hills of my native village.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, May 23, 1841

When I have travelled a few miles I do not recognize the profile of the hills of my native village. See June 4, 1858 ("It is remarkable how, as you are leaving a mountain and looking back at it from time to time, it gradually gathers up its slopes and spurs to itself into a regular whole, and makes a new and total impression.")


All nature is a new impression every instant. See June 6, 1857 (“We are conversant with only one point of contact at a time, from which we receive a prompting and impulse and instantly pass to a new season or point of contact”); August 19, 1851("Nature rests no longer at her culminating point than at any other. If you are not out at the right instant, the summer may go by and you not see it.”); Walden: Where I lived and what I lived for ("God Himself culminates in the present moment,"); April 24, 1859 ("There is a season for everything, and we do not notice a given phenomenon except at that season")


Time is but the stream I go a-fishing in.
I drink at it; but while I drink

I see the sandy bottom and
detect how shallow it is.

Its thin current slides away,
but eternity remains.

I would drink deeper;
fish in the sky, whose bottom

is pebbly with stars.
I cannot count one.

I know not the first 
letter of the alphabet.

I have always been regretting that
I was not as wise as the day I was born.


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 © 2009-2021

Wednesday, January 27, 2021

What are our fields but felds or felled woods?


January 27. 

Trench says a wild man is a willed man. 

Well, then, a man of will who does what he wills or wishes, a man of hope and of the future tense, for not only the obstinate is willed, but far more the constant and persevering. 

The obstinate man, properly speaking, is one who will not. 

The perseverance of the saints is positive willedness, not a mere passive willingness. 

The fates are wild, for they will; and the Almighty is wild above all, as fate is. 

What are our fields but felds or felled woods. They bear a more recent name than the woods, suggesting that previously the earth was covered with woods. Always in the new country a field is a clearing.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, January 27, 1853


January 27. 
 See 
A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau,  January 27


A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, What are our fields but felds or felled woods?

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 21, 2020

I have not this season heard more robins sing than this rainy day.





The storm still continues. 

When I walked in the storm day before yesterday, I felt very cold when my clothes were first wet through, but at last they, being saturated with water, were tight and kept out the air and fresh wet like a thicker and closer garment, and, the water in them being warmed by my person, I felt warmer and even drier. 

The color of the water changes with the sky. It is as dull and sober as the sky to-day. 

The woodchuck has not far to go to his home. In foul weather, if he chooses, he can turn in anywhere. He lives on and in the earth. A little parasite on the skin of the earth, that knows the taste of clover and bean leaves and beetles. 

2 P. M. – Another walk in the rain. 

The river is remarkably high. Nobody remembers when the water came into so many cellars. 

The water is up to the top of the easternmost end of the eastern most iron truss on the south side of the stone bridge. It is over the Union Turnpike that was west of the bridge, so that it is impassable to a foot-traveller, and just over the road west of Wood’s Bridge. Of eight carriage roads leading into Concord, the water to my knowledge is now over six, viz., Lee’s Bridge, the Corner road, Wood’s Bridge, Stone Bridge, Red Bridge (on both sides, full half a mile in all, over the walls), and the Turnpike. All of these are impassable to foot-travellers except Wood’s Bridge, where only a lady would be stopped. I should think that nine inches more would carry it over Flint’s Bridge road. How it is at the East Quarter schoolhouse I don’t know, nor at the further stone bridge and above, nor at Derby’s Bridge. It is probably over the road near Miles’s in the Corner, and in two places on the Turnpike, perhaps between J. P. Brown’s and C. Miles’s. This may suggest how low Concord is situated. 

Most of the cellars on both sides of the main street east of our house have water in them, and some that are on high ground. All this has been occasioned by the repeated storms of snow and rain for a month or six weeks past, especially the melting of the deep snow of April 13th, and, added to this, the steady rain from Sunday morning, April 18th, to this moment, 8 P. M., April 21st. 

The element of water is in the ascendant. 

From the Poplar Hill, the expanse of water looks about as large on the southwest as the northeast. Many new islands are made, -- of grassy and sometimes rocky knolls, and clumps of trees and bushes where there is no dry land. Straight willow hedges rising above the water in some places, marking the boundaries of some man’s improvements, look prettily. 

Some of the bushy islands on the Great Meadows are distinctly red at this distance, even a mile off, from the stems of some bush not red (distinctly) in fair weather, wet now. Is it cornel

In front of Peter’s. — The grass has been springing in spite of the snow and rain, and the earth has an  increased greenish tinge, though it is still decidedly tawny. 

Men are out in boats in the rain for muskrats, ducks, and geese. 

It appears to me, as I stand on this hill, that the white houses of the village, seen through the whitish misty storm and rain, are a very suitable color and harmonize well with the scenery, like concentrations of the mist. It is a cheerful color in stormy weather. 

A few patches of snow are still left. 

The robins sing through the ceaseless rain, and the song sparrows, and I hear a lark’s plaintive strain.

I am glad that men are so dispersed over the earth. The need of fuel causes woods to be left, and the use of cattle and horses requires pastures, and hence men live far apart and the walkers of every town have this wide range over forest and field.

Sitting behind the wall on the height of the road beyond N. Barrett’s (for we have come down the north bank of the river), I love in this weather to look abroad and let my eye fall on some sandy hill clothed with pitch pines on its sides, and covered on its top with the whitish cladonia lichen, usually so dry but now saturated with water. It reminds me of northern regions. 

I am thinking of the hill near Tarbell’s, three quarters of a mile from me. They are agreeable colors to my eye, the green pine and, on the summit, the patches of whitish moss like mildew seen through the mist and rain, for I think, perhaps, how much moisture that soil can bear, how grateful it is to it. 

Proceed toward Hubbard’s black birch hill. The grass is greenest in the hollows where some snow and ice are still left melting, showing by its greenness how much space they recently covered.

On the east side of Ponkawtasset I hear a robin singing cheerily from some perch in the wood, in the midst of the rain, where the scenery is now wild and dreary. His song a singular antagonism and offset to the storm. As if Nature said, “Have faith, these two things I can do.” It sings with power, like a bird of great faith that sees the bright future through the dark present, to reassure the race of man, like one to whom many talents were given and who will improve its talents. They are sounds to make a dying man live. They sing not their despair. It is a pure, immortal melody. 

The side of the hill is covered first with tall birches rising from a reddish ground, just above a small swamp; then comes a white pine wood whose needles, covered with the fine rain-drops, have a light sheen on them. I see one pine that has been snapped off half-way up in the storm, and, seen against the misty background, it is a diştinct yellow mark. 

The sky is not one homogeneous color, but somewhat mottled with darker clouds and white intervals, and anon it rains harder than before. 

(I saw the other day the rootlets which spring from the alder above the ground, so tenacious of the earth is it.) 

Was that a large shad-bush where Father’s mill used to be? There is quite a waterfall beyond, where the old dam was. Where the rapids commence, at the outlet of the pond, the water is singularly creased as it rushes to the fall, like braided hair, as the poet has it. I did not see any inequalities in the rock it rushed over which could make it so plaited. Here is enough of that suds which in warm weather disperses such a sense of coolness through the air. 

Sat under the dark hemlocks, gloomy hemlocks, on the hillside beyond. In a stormy day like this there is the gloom of night beneath them. The ground beneath them almost bare, with wet rocks and fine twigs, without leaves (but hemlock leaves) or grass.

The birds are singing in the rain about the small pond in front, the inquisitive chickadee that has flown at once to the alders to reconnoitre us, the blackbirds, the song sparrow, telling of expanding buds. 

But above all the robin sings here too, I know not at what distance in the wood. “Did he sing thus in Indian days?” I ask myself ; for I have always associated this sound with the village and the clearing, but now I do detect the aboriginal wildness in his strain, and can imagine him a woodland bird, and that he sang thus when there was no civilized ear to hear him, a pure forest melody even like the wood thrush. 

Every genuine thing retains this wild tone, which no true culture displaces. 

I heard him even as he might have sounded to the Indian, singing at evening upon the elm above his wigwam, with which was associated in the red man’s mind the events of an Indian’s life, his childhood. Formerly I had heard in it only those strains which tell of the white man’s village life; now I heard those strains which remembered the red man’s life, such as fell on the ears of Indian children,-as he sang when these arrowheads, which the rain has made shine so on the lean stubble-field, were fastened to their shaft. 

Thus the birds sing round this piece of water, some on the alders which fringe, some farther off and higher up the hills; it is a centre to them. Here stand buttonwoods, an uncommon tree in the woods, naked to look at, and now covered with little tufts of twigs on the sides of the branches in consequence of the disease which has attacked them. The singing of birds implies fair weather. 

I see where some farmer has been at pains to knock to pieces the manure which his cattle have dropped in the pasture, so to spread it over the sward. 

The yellow birch is to me an interesting tree from its remarkable and peculiar color, like a silvery gold. 

In the pasture beyond the brook, where grow the barberries, huckleberries, — creeping juniper, etc., are half a dozen huge boulders, which look grandly now in the storm, covered with greenish-gray lichens, alternating with the slatish-colored rock. Slumbering, silent, like the exuviæ of giants; some of their cattle left. From a height I look down on some of them as on the backs of oxen. A certain personality, or at least brute life, they seem to have. 

C. calls it Boulder Field. There is a good prospect southward over the pond, between the two hills, even to the river meadows now. 

As we stand by the monument on the Battle-Ground, I see a white pine dimly in the horizon just north of Lee’s Hill, at 5. 30 P. M., its upright stem and straight horizontal feathered branches, while at the same time I hear a robin sing. Each enhances the other.

That tree seems the emblem of my life; it stands for the west, the wild. The sight of it is grateful to me as to a bird whose perch it is to be at the end of a weary flight. I [am] not sure whether the music I hear is most in the robin’s song or in its boughs. My wealth should be all in pine-tree shillings. 

The pine tree that stands on the verge of the clearing, whose boughs point westward; which the village does not permit to grow on the common or by the roadside; which is banished from the village; in whose boughs the crow and the hawk have their nests. 

We have heard enough nonsense about the Pyramids. If Congress should vote to rear such structures on the prairies to-day, I should not think it worth the while, nor be interested in the enterprise. It was the foolish undertaking of some tyrant. “ But, ” says my neighbor, “ when they were built, all men believed in them and were inspired to build them. ” Nonsense ! nonsense ! I believe that they were built essentially in the same spirit in which the public works of Egypt, of England, and America are built to-day, — the Mahmoudi Canal, the Tubular Bridge, Thames Tunnel, and the Washington Monument. The inspiring motive in the actual builders of these works is garlic, or beef, or potatoes. For meat and drink and the necessaries of life men can be hired to do many things. “ Ah, ” says my neighbor, “ but the stones are fitted with such nice joints ! ” But the joints were nicer yet before they were disjointed in the quarry. Men are wont to speak as if it were a noble work to build a pyramid, — to set, forsooth, a hundred thousand Irishmen at work at fifty cents a day to piling stone. As if the good joints could ennoble it, if a noble motive was wanting ! To ramble round the world to see that pile of stones which ambitious Mr. Cheops, an Egyptian booby, like some Lord Timothy Dexter, caused a hundred thousand poor devils to pile up for low wages, which contained for all treasure the thigh-bone of a cow. The tower of Babel has been a good deal laughed at. It was just as sensible an undertaking as the Pyramids, which, because they were completed and have stood to this day, are admired. I don’t believe they made a better joint than Mr. Crab, the joiner, can.

I have not this season heard more robins sing than this rainy day.

H. D. Thoreau, Journal, April 21, 1852

When I walked in the storm day before yesterday, I felt very cold when my clothes were first wet through, but at last they, being saturated with water, were tight and kept out the air and fresh wet like a thicker and closer garment, and, the water in them being warmed by my person, I felt warmer and even drier. See April 19, 1852 ("It is a violent northeast storm, in which it is very difficult and almost useless to carry an umbrella. I am soon wet to my skin over half my body. At first, and for a long time, I feel cold and as if I had lost some vital heat by it, but at last the water in my clothes feels warm to me, and I know not but I am dry. ")See also February 28, 1852 (“To get the value of the storm we must be out a long time and travel far in it, so that it may fairly penetrate our skin, . . . and there be no part in us but is wet or weather beaten, - so that we become storm men instead of fair weather men.”) ; December 25, 1856 ("Take long walks in stormy weather or through deep snows in the fields and woods, if you would keep your spirits up. Deal with brute nature. Be cold and hungry and weary."); March 8, 1859 ("If there is a good chance to be cold and wet and uncomfortable, in other words to feel weather-beaten, you may consume the afternoon to advantage.").

Of eight carriage roads leading into Concord, the water to my knowledge is now over six.This may suggest how low Concord is situated. See February 3, 1855 ("I still recur in my mind to that skate of the 3lst. I was thus enabled to get a bird’s-eye view of the river, -— to survey its length and breadth within a few hours, connect one part (one shore) with another in my mind, and realize what was going on upon it from end to end, —to know the whole as I ordinarily knew a few miles of it only. It is all the way of one character, — a meadow river, or dead stream,—Musketicook,—the abode of muskrats, pickerel, etc., crossed within these dozen miles each way, —or thirty in all, —by some twenty low wooden bridges, connected with the mainland by willowy causeways. Thus the long, shallow lakes divided into reaches. These long causeways all under water and ice now, only the bridges peeping out from time to time like a dry eyelid.")

I have not this season heard more robins sing than this rainy day. See  March 8, 1855 ("This sound reminds me of rainy, misty April days in past years."); April 2, 1854  ("Sitting on the rail over the brook, I hear something which reminds me of the song of the robin in rainy days in past springs."); April 13, 1852 ("The robin is the only bird as yet that makes a business of singing, steadily singing, — sings continuously out of pure joy and melody of soul"); April 16, 1856 ("A moist, misty, rain-threatening April day. . . The robin sings throughout it. "); April 26, 1855 ("We see and hear more birds than usual this mizzling and still day, and the robin sings with more vigor and promise than later in the season.") See also  A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Robins in Spring and A Book of the Seasonsby Henry Thoreau, Birds in the Rain   A Book of the Seasons, by Henry Thoreau, Robins in Spring

Walkers have wide range 
over forest and field as 
men live far apart 



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A journal, a book that shall contain a record of all your joy.
"A stone fruit. Each one yields me a thought." ~ H. D. Thoreau, March 28, 1859


I sit on this rock
wrestling with the melody
that possesses me.