CHAPTER VI

TO THE TEACHER

Read to the pupils Emerson’s poem “The Titmouse,” dwelling on the lines,—

“Here was this atom in full breath,

Hurling defiance at vast death,” etc.

and the part beginning,—

“’Tis good will makes intelligence,”

letting the students learn by heart the chickadee’s little song,—

“Live out of doors

In the great woods, on prairie floors,” etc.

Poem and chapter ought mutually to help each other. Read the chapter slowly, explaining clearly as you go on, making it finally plain that this mere “atom” of life is greater than all the winter death, no matter how “vast.”

FOR THE PUPIL

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The Lilac”: My lilac bush with its suet has become a kind of hotel, or inn, or boarding-house, for the chickadees.

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Phœ-ee-bee!: more often the spring call than the winter call of Chickadee. It is to be distinguished from the “phœ’be” call of the phœbe, the flycatcher, by its greater softness and purity, and by its very distinct middle syllable, as if Chickadee said “Phœ’—ee—bee.” Phœbe’s note is two-syllabled.

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protective coloration: a favorite term with Darwin and many later naturalists to describe the wonderful harmony in the colors of animals, insects, etc., and their natural surroundings, the animal’s color blending so perfectly into the color of its surroundings as to be a protection to the creature.

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card house: as if made of cards, easily pushed, even blown down.

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the workman’s chips: Look on the ground under a newly excavated woodpecker’s hole, and you will find his “chips.”

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a tiny window: The tough birch-bark would bend readily. I would shut the window in leaving by means of a long, sharp thorn.