THE SINGING GARDEN

The Quiet Hour

I have found in this Australian scene, of  mountain and forest, of shaded creek and fern-filled gully, of cultivated  gardens bordered by the virgin bush, much quiet peace and many joys—on rare  occasions, inexpressible joys, far removed from the dark moods awakened by  those pictures of arid desolation that have engaged too closely and too often  the minds of those who would recreate with words the life and scenes and moods  of this versatile continent.

The “Dead Heart,” the dusty track through waterless deserts, the  hopeless struggles of the outback settler—all these have, I think, been more than  a little over-stressed. There are many pleasant places up and down this land  where nature has been less unkind.

In such a pleasant place I have lived and worked for nearly thirty  years; and, if I have succeeded in conveying to readers something of the joys  and (for the sake of truth) of the rare tragedies of this forest place, then  the whole of my task has been done, for I set out to do no more than that.

As I write these lines, seated upon a green lawn with the scene  before me, the evening of what has been a glorious sunny day begins to steal  about the forest.

The rigours of winter have almost passed; the coming of spring  (which none can appreciate so well as dwellers in this mountain place of deep  forests dank with too abundant rain) is indicated by a thousand hopeful signs.  Daffodil and rhododendron are aglow in the garden, lawns have taken on a yet  more vivid green, and the foliage of golden wattle that rich hue soon to be  intensified by the already bursting bloom. Long since, the birds began their early  mating songs.

To this valley twilight has come; but the sinking sun, casting his  last rays high over it, tinges with an amethyst glow the clustering tree-trunks  of a towering eastern hill.

Two grey thrushes already have called for the customary bedtime  snack and, having supped, neither has failed to pipe a little song in  gratitude—or so it pleases us to think.

An impertinent blue wren, perched on a rose spurt close by my  head, inspects me with an air of comic impudence, then lifts up his head to a  refrain that, in such a mite, seems absurdly vociferous. Then he, too, flutters  off with his brown-clad family to some secret abode in the denser scrubs. From  his perch on a high gable a kookaburra chuckles rather drowsily and cocks a  shrewd eye earthward.

As the gloaming deepens, there descends upon this scene a mantle  of peace so profound that it is past explaining—a feeling of content so deep,  of such calm and unquestioning acceptance of all things, that it seems to hold  some quality of mystery that ’twould be folly to explore. Out of the brooding  forest, the darkening sky, the last goings and comings of birds, the little  whispered calls and secret songs and rustlings, there steals to one a sense of  infinite well-being, definite and real enough while the mind accepts it without  question; yet so impalpable as to vanish utterly the moment it becomes a  problem for curious enquiry.

In his book, The Nature of a  Bird’s World, the English writer, H. Eliot Howard says in the preface,  “There is more joy in finding a problem than in trying to solve one, for to  solve a problem is vain delusion. There is a mystery of song, a mystery of  flight, a mystery of nest; and yet, not three mysteries but one: a bird is the  mystery, for it steals our values of beauty and mingles them strangely in form  no less than in feathers; in colour no less than in song; and in what we value  most, devotion to its home.”

That, I feel, in some vague and general way, defines my attitude  towards our birds—if ever I trouble to conceive an attitude at all—and, indeed,  towards all nature in this Singing Garden green-walled by towering trees that  hold a mystery all their own.

It is darkening rapidly now; the kookaburra is still perched upon  the high gable, though I can discern little more than his silhouette. As I  watch he becomes suddenly alert and, diving straight as an arrow for a spot on  the lawn not three feet from my chair, swiftly, with perfect confidence,  plunges his great bill into the earth and unerringly draws forth a fine fat  worm. He calmly batters it twice against a rung of the chair, gobbles it, turns  about awkwardly on clumsy feet and, before he has flown thirty yards, darkness  conceals him.

Here is yet another mystery. How in that half-darkness, from sixty  feet away or more, did that kookaburra know with such unerring certitude that  the worm was exactly at that spot and so easily accessible? Is he possessed of  vision so unbelievably keen that, from that distance and in such feeble light,  he detected some infinitesimal earth movement that betrayed the worm? Did the  unlucky worm betray itself by a sound-vibration too minutely high in frequency  for human ears? Or again, has the kookaburra some sixth sense that we lords of  earth are unable to discover or to comprehend?

And, last question of all: is it vastly important that I or any  other human should know?