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Spring
2003

Spring Song at The Grove
By
Donald Culross Peattie
There may be places in the world where
bird song, of a spring morning, rings out louder, from more
varied voices, than the wild matins at Kennicott's Grove,
but I do not know of it. Not in Florida, California, the
Michigan northwoods, or Provence, have I ever heard, in
one spot, at one time, so many sorts of voices uplifted.
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Photo
by Bill Glass
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Actually the list of birds (carefully
compiled before me as I write) is not especially impressive.
It is a little shorter than in the days of Robert Kennicott,
who grew up here, a century ago, and under these same oaks
taught himself the book of Nature. But it is to the many
habitats that one must ascribe the variety of this choral.
Were this square mile all forest, or all meadow, all watery,
or all suburban, the music would be thinner, more monotonous.
But there are chains of hidden sloughs in the woods, where
bitterns cry at the intruder, and rain-filled hollows in
the open grass where killdeer wheedle and complain. You
slog through swamp woods of ash and linden, where the sultry
song of the cuckoos and the wailing of the tree-frogs follow
you, only to emerge in a sunny thicket of flat-topped hawthorns,
where the yellowthroats and goldfinches pour out their music.
Redwings jingle and scold from the cattails; short-billed
marsh wrens lisp out their little songs in the sedge marsh.
From earliest spring when the meadowlarks whistle across
half melted snow, to the skirling lay of black-throated
blue warblers under June's dense canopy of leaves, The Grove
is a choirstall of spring hymns.
It is hard to remember that most wild
song is not really conscious poetic praise of the lengthening
day, the greening trees, or the tender airs not,
in short, an expression of happiness. And that it is not
even, or at least not wholly, an entreaty to some coy mate.
In great part bird song (as distinguished from alarm cries
and other signals) is a proclamation by the males of territory.
It warns other males, especially of the same species, that
all within earshot is the singer's bailiwick. It promises
to the arriving females that here they will find a protector.
But the end result, of course, is very much the same as
if the males should sing to their mates, and to the human
ear all this outpouring of melody is inseparable from the
emotions of happiness, of reverence for beauty. One may
be pardoned therefore, I hope, for some poetic license in
the notes that follow. These frankly informal passages have
been gleaned from the diaries of several years lived at
Kennicott's Grove, in northern Illinois, years during which
the writer was not absent for a single morning.
March 1. Cardinals calling lustily,
"What-cheer!" The weather balmy with pale watery
sunshine and the snow melting rapidly. Tree sparrows rejoicing.
March 5. A warm, wild March day
sun and flying cloud and a western gale. A single
killdeer alighted with plaintive cries upon the temporary
ponds of the prairie. Made off at my approach, winging sideways
and crying as if wounded.
March 12. Heard today the exquisite
singing of a flock of tree sparrows; they have now left
off their icy, tinkling winter song and gone into the bridal
aria. Though the wind was keen and the snow in flurries
went spinning through the steely bare oaks, the whole flock
sang intensely, as joyfully as if spring had come forever.

March 18. Arising this morning
at about three o'clock, I heard the first notes of Pseudacris,
the swamp tree frogs. In the darkness the effect is shivery,
sad, high, thin yet pleasing. At eight o'clock the first
bluebird winged down, alighting as if the earth could scarcely
hold it, to whistle a few robin-like notes, but in a rich
contralto.
March 22. The piping of Pseudacris
frogs sounds as if the individual frog sang pip, pip, pip
in a rising key. But as there are hundreds of voices the
whole effect is like the rising of bubbles, a continuous
sweet, creaky-cracky effervescence.
March 23. The Pseudacris frogs
show themselves now, and are so preoccupied with singing
as to be unwary. They swim weakly about in shallow water
with marvelously distended throats.
A single frog voice of a wholly different
sort was heard in one of the wood ponds. It sounded like
someone choking just under the surface. Probably a leopard
frog.
March 31. Meadowlarks whistling
for mates as I have never heard them before, and all this
though the day was bleak and sad. Stopped in the woods to
listen to the golden-crowned kinglet's lovely and unappreciated
little song. It rises swiftly in a sweet twitter.
April 4. Snow began to fall five
days ago, and is now about nine inches deep. Winter conditions
restored, and the nuthatch again scraping his winter note.
Juncos plentiful, increasing the impression that this is
January. Driven in by cold, brown creepers, nuthatches,
and golden-crowned kinglets continue numerous about the
house.
April 6. The singing of the frogs
ceases in the snow and is desultory in blustering weather.
But when you walk around the icy pond you hear a faint peeping
of the Pseudacris frogs as though they were very far away.
Discovered that they sing under the ice!
April 11. Now the thawed ponds
ring with redwing calls angry metallic peents when
you pass, rejoicing when you leave.
April 14. Myrtle warblers blowing
through in a crowd, and many yellow-throated vireos. The
song of these last is almost miraculously varied, swift,
and tender, but so pianissimo that you have to steal close
to hear the bird sing at all.
April 17. At dawn I heard the
first thrush. Just a moment of song, the announcement of
a heavenly theme.

April 26. Though the weather
cool and the morning cloudy, the bird chorus was glorious.
Jays tootling their "summer happiness" call, woodpeckers
coming in heavily on the drum, chewinks and phoebes, flickers
and whitethroats, robins and thrashers all a capella. Still
from the fields wells the joy of the meadowlarks. Male pheasants
crow in their scratchy, herony voices, and show themselves
boldly now, their hens scuttling and scratching demurely
about their lord.
April 30. Last night and again
tonight I heard the sweet wailing of the hylas and the deep
rattle of the leopard frog. Besides his "snores"
he usually gives a few chuckles like the croak of a water
bird. Over the housetops in the green long twilight wheel
the barn swallows, peeping and wheedling that they are glad
to be back.
May 2. Croaking, hoarsely screeching,
a Florida gallinule wheels up from the pond and, the color
of a rainy sky, storms into the trees, to sit there morose
and imagining himself, apparently, invisible though he is
big and conspicuous.
May 6. Walked on the prairie
where only sweet vernal grass was as yet in flower. Ventriloquistic,
the cries of the meadowlarks rang about me, and bobolinks,
gathered into little companies of five and ten males together,
sang in rivalry or scolded at me.
At dawn, the first whip-poor-will of
the year, just two "whips," mysterious and southern-sounding.
The bird, connoting Appalachian summer nights, seems to
have nothing to do with The Grove.
May 10. The whip-poor-will again,
just a few notes, and the thrush sings only a little. At
dusk or when rain threatens hylas chant.

May 15. Rosebreasted grosbeaks
at last. They are always an event for the eye, but
it is training to the ear to distinguish the song from the
best of the robin's music. Magnolia warblers aplenty. On
the prairie the grasshopper sparrows are suddenly seen.
You try to follow them where they drop among the grasses
with a sharp insect chirrup, but when you wade right into
the grasses where they disappeared they are gone. If you
will swing around quickly you can see them flying away behind
you.
May 19. Enchanting now are the
songs of the northern yellow-throats, out where prairie
and sedge pond and hawthorn thicket meet.
May 21. In the twilight, the
voice of the whip-poor-will again, coming mysteriously through
the sultry warmth heavy with the odor of wild grape.

May 24. Absurdly call the crack-voiced
starlings. I suppose it is spring again, love again, even
for starlings! The first pewee tuned up, and black-throated
green warblers are here. Midges dance over the sloughs that
at last take on the dark tannic look and the decadent smell
of swamps.
May 27. Silent flycatchers beyond
telling are fluttering at the windows, and from the sunny
oak woods rings out the squawks of the great-crested species.
Three herons trailed majestically over the woods at six
in the evening.
May 29. Nuthatches cry out now
in their thin strangled voices in what I suppose is intended
for bridal song. Vesper sparrows now call at night
as if they wakened sometimes to trill the stroke of the
hour, and sleep again.
June 1. Dense foliage darkens
the rooms, and flycatchers are at the panes. Willow slough
is a green sargasso of algae strewn with pollen and water
bloom, a jade fen smelling stagnant. In the garden at dusk
the swirl of a nighthawk round my shoulder, and,
later, many of them mysteriously winging out of the woods
across the fields, bird after bird, repetitive, ominous.
Then the hour of the bat. Only the vesper sparrow's song,
keeping faith, sleepily in the night. Fireflies joggling,
winking, in the warm darkness, trotting lantern errands.

This account appeared in The Chicago
Naturalist, a publication of the Chicago Academy of
Sciences, in April 1938.
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