highway; but it is found--the first
rose of June.
Straight go the white petals to the heart; straight the mind's glance goes
back to how many other pageants of summer in old times! When
perchance the sunny days were even more sunny; when the stilly oaks
were full of mystery, lurking like the Druid's mistletoe in the midst of
their mighty branches. A glamour in the heart came back to it again
from every flower; as the sunshine was reflected from them, so the
feeling in the heart returned tenfold. To the dreamy summer haze, love
gave a deep enchantment, the colours were fairer, the blue more lovely
in the lucid sky. Each leaf finer, and the gross earth enamelled beneath
the feet. A sweet breath on the air, a soft warm hand in the touch of the
sunshine, a glance in the gleam of the rippled waters, a whisper in the
dance of the shadows. The ethereal haze lifted the heavy oaks and they
were buoyant on the mead, the rugged bark was chastened and no
longer rough, each slender flower beneath them again refined. There
was a presence everywhere, though unseen, on the open hills, and not
shut out under the dark pines. Dear were the June roses then because
for another gathered. Yet even dearer now with so many years as it
were upon the petals; all the days that have been before, all the
heart-throbs, all our hopes lie in this opened bud. Let not the eyes grow
dim, look not back but forward; the soul must uphold itself like the sun.
Let us labour to make the heart grow larger as we become older, as the
spreading oak gives more shelter. That we could but take to the soul
some of the greatness and the beauty of the summer!
Still the pageant moves. The song-talk of the finches rises and sinks
like the tinkle of a waterfall. The greenfinches have been by me all the
while. A bullfinch pipes now and then further up the hedge where the
brambles and thorns are thickest. Boldest of birds to look at, he is
always in hiding. The shrill tone of a goldfinch came just now from the
ash branches, but he has gone on. Every four or five minutes a
chaffinch sings close by, and another fills the interval near the gateway.
There are linnets somewhere, but I cannot from the old apple tree fix
their exact place. Thrushes have sung and ceased; they will begin again
in ten minutes. The blackbirds do not cease; the note uttered by a
blackbird in the oak yonder before it can drop is taken up by a second
near the top of the field, and ere it falls is caught by a third on the
left-hand side. From one of the topmost boughs of an elm there fell the
song of a willow warbler for a while; one of the least of birds, he often
seeks the highest branches of the highest tree.
A yellowhammer has just flown from a bare branch in the gateway,
where he has been perched and singing a full hour. Presently he will
commence again, and as the sun declines will sing him to the horizon,
and then again sing till nearly dusk. The yellowhammer is almost the
longest of all the singers; he sits and sits and has no inclination to move.
In the spring he sings, in the summer he sings, and he continues when
the last sheaves are being carried from the wheat field. The redstart
yonder has given forth a few notes, the whitethroat flings himself into
the air at short intervals and chatters, the shrike calls sharp and
determined, faint but shrill calls descend from the swifts in the air.
These descend, but the twittering notes of the swallows do not reach so
far--they are too high to-day. A cuckoo has called by the brook, and
now fainter from a greater distance. That the titlarks are singing I know,
but not within hearing from here; a dove, though, is audible, and a
chiffchaff has twice passed. Afar beyond the oaks at the top of the field
dark specks ascend from time to time, and after moving in wide circles
for a while descend again to the corn. These must be larks; but their
notes are not powerful enough to reach me, though they would were it
not for the song in the hedges, the hum of innumerable insects, and the
ceaseless "crake, crake" of landrails. There are at least two landrails in
the mowing-grass; one of them just now seemed coming straight
towards the apple tree, and I expected in a minute to see the grass move,
when the bird turned aside and entered the tufts and wild parsley by the
hedge.
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