Some Summer Days in Iowa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about Some Summer Days in Iowa.

Some Summer Days in Iowa eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about Some Summer Days in Iowa.

Young birds imitate the spring songs of their parents in a faint, wistful, reminiscent way, some of those hatched early in the year rising almost to full song, as in the case of the meadow larks whose music rings through the meadows and makes the balmy afternoons seem like those of early May.  The wild strawberry blossoms again; the violet and some of the other spring flowers.  But the signs of the passing of the summer are everywhere in evidence.  Dense, white morning mists—­the September mists—­lie in the valleys and yield but slowly to the shafts of the rising sun.  Flocks of feathered voyagers are shaping their course toward the south.  Gold and crimson leaves grow more numerous along the lanes and in the woods.  Antares, Altair and Vega, with the summer constellations, are passing farther towards the west, while before bedtime Fomalhaut may be seen at the mouth of the Southern Fish in the southeast and the creamy white Capella is leading up Auriga in the northeast.  Between them, just over the eastern rim of the world, appear the Pleiades, their “sweet influences” in keeping with the season.  The summer is passing, but not in sadness.  Some of the greatest of its glories are reserved for these last days.

* * * * *

Now the cicada, forgetting to give his winding salute at sundown, has almost dropped out of the insect orchestra and the katydid, too, is heard less often.  The rest of the screeching musicians vary the volume and the speed of their music in approximate ratio to the temperature.  In the warm evening they saw and rub away at presto time as if they were determined to get to the end of the selection before the curtain goes up for the moonlight scene; but they slacken to moderato when the nights grow cooler, slower, always slower, and fainter as the chill air creeps through the woods.  When the north wind filters coldly through the trees their music thins and dims till it sounds pathetic as the tick of a tall clock in a lonely house at night.  But it warms up again with the sunshine next day, keeping time and tune with the varying moods of the final days of the summer.  When a dreamy, hazy day is followed by a mellow night and little patches of white moonlight lie dreaming beneath the trees, the crickets have a lullaby that comes in rhythmic beats, as if they watched the moonlight breathe and rocked the world to sleep.

* * * * *

Comforting and soothing as the touch of a loved hand on a fevered brow come the first cooling breezes of September after the fierce white heat of August.  Sweeter than music is the sound of the wind, as it passes through the woods, welcomed by millions of waving branches and dancing leaves.  It brings the call of the quail, the scream of the jay, the bark of the squirrel, the crack of the hunter’s gun, the first notes of the returning bluebirds, the clean, keen scent of the earth after rain, the courage and joy of life, motion, action.  Seen from the top of a cliff the acres of foliage spread out in the creek valley beneath has a motion suggesting the waves of the sea, now flowing in green billows before the wind, now whipped into spray at the shore of the creek where the willows show the white sides of their leaves.

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Some Summer Days in Iowa from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.