Page:The clerk of the woods.djvu/58

40 A kingbird, one of two or three hereabout, comes to sit on a branch over my head. He is full of twitters, which sound as if they might be full of meaning; but there is no interpreter. He, too, like the oriole, is on his last month. I have great respect for kingbirds. A phœbe shows herself in the hedge, flirting her tail airily as she alights. "Pretty well, I thank you," she might be saying. Every kind of bird has motions of its own, no doubt, if we look sharply enough. The phœbe's may be seen of all men.

I had meant to go out and sit awhile under the spreading white oak yonder, on the upper side of the pasture, near the huckleberry patches; but why should I? Well enough is well enough, I say to myself; and it sounds like good philosophy, in weather like this. It may never set the millpond on fire; but then, I don't wish to set it on fire.

And although I go on mentioning particulars, a flower, a bird, a bird's note, it is none of these that I am really enjoying. It is the day—the brightness and the quiet,