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Getting up too
early is a vice habitual in horned owls, stars, geese, and freight
trains. Some hunters acquire it from geese, and some coffee pots from
hunters. It is strange that of all the multitude of creatures who must
rise in the morning at some time, only these few should have discovered
the most pleasant and least useful time for doing it.
Orion must have been the
original mentor of the too-early company, for it is he who signals for
too-early rising. It is time when Orion has passed west of the zenith
about as far as one should lead a teal.
Early risers feel at ease with
each other, perhaps because, unlike those who sleep late, they are given
to understatement of their own achievements. Orion, the most widely
traveled, says literally nothing. The coffee pot, from its first soft
gurgle, underclaims the trisyllabic commentary, plays down the story of
the night's murders. The goose on the bar, rising briefly to a point of
order in some inaudible anserine debate, lets fall no hint that he
speaks with the authority of all the far hills and sea.
The freight, I admit, is hardly
reticent about his own importance, yet even he has a kind of modesty:
his eye is single to his own noisy business, and he never comes roaring
into somebody else's camp. I feel a deep security in this
single-mindedness of freight trains.
To arrive too early in the marsh
is an adventure in pure listening; the ear roams at will among the
noises of the night, without let or hindrance from hand or eye. When
you hear a mallard being audibly enthusiastic about his soup, you are
free to picture a score guzzling among the duckweeds. When one widgeon
squeals, you may postulate a squadron without fear of visual
contradiction. And when a flock of bluebills, pitching pondward, tears
the dark silk of heaven in one long rending nose-dive, you catch your
breath at the sound, but there is nothing to see except stars. This same
performance, in daytime, would have to be looked at, shot at, missed,
and then hurriedly fitted with an alibi. Nor could daylight add anything
to your mind's eye picture of quivering wings, ripping the firmament
neatly into halves.
The hour of listening ends when
the fowl depart on muted wings for wider safer waters, each flock a blur
against the graying east.
Like many another treaty of
restraint, the pre-dawn pact lasts only as long as darkness humbles the
arrogant. It would seem as if the sun were responsible for the daily
retreat of reticence from the world. At any rate, by the time the mists
are white over the lowlands, every rooster is bragging ad lib,
and every corn shock is pretending to be twice as tall as any corn that
ever grew. By sun-up every squirrel is exaggerating some fancied
indignity to his person, and every jaw proclaiming with false emotion
about suppositious dangers to society, at this very moment discovered by
him. Distant crows are berating a hypothetical owl, just to tell the
world how vigilant crows are, and a pheasant cock, musing perhaps on his
philandering of bygone days, beats the air with his wings and tells the
world in raucous warning that he owns this marsh and all the hens in
it.
Nor are all these illusions of
grandeur confined to the birds and beasts. By breakfast time come the
honks, horns, shouts, and whistles of the awakened farmyard, and
finally, at evening, the drone of an untended radio. Then everybody goes
to bed to relearn the lessons of the night.
These excerpts are from “A Sand County Almanac, with essays on
conservation from Round River”,
by Aldo Leopold and published by Oxford University Press
(1966).
For more information about Aldo Leopold, see: http://www.aldoleopold.org
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