The shrill cicalas, people of the pine,
Making their summer lives one ceaseless song.
But Italy has no laughing jackass (dacelo gigantea). This faithful bird was our constant amusement; but he really is not so much a jackass as people take him to be, for he seldom laughs more than three times a day, though then it is certainly a good horse laugh, at morning, noon, and sunset. He perches on low trees, looking for snakes, and is a great observer of the heavenly bodies. Some people say that if you ask him civilly, he will tell you what is the clock; I tried him once or twice, but without success; we were not sufficiently acquainted, I suppose, and, like another jackass that I could name, he declined having anything to say to me. I hope the settlers will forbear shooting this interesting bird; his taste for snakes ought to preserve him sacred, like the crane in Holland, and the alligator at Batavin.
X. Y. Z.
‘Ye hills and dales, ye rivers, woods and plains!’
We tethered our horses in the heat of the day; and, after lighting a fire and milking tea for the last time, took a siesta for a couple of hours by the side of the creek, under the shade of a large apple tree, which is the most common tree met with in these parts. It is not the apple tree of Europe, but the Angophora of Linneus, and is a certain indication of a fruitful soil. A brisk ride of twenty miles brought us back to our old starting place, near Jerry’s Plains, and while the cloth was preparing for supper we took a swim in the main river. As we returned in the twilight, we could hardly hear ourselves speak, for the noise of the locusts in the trees — they sing in perfect concert, and, like the leader of the band who gives three taps with his bow, the leader of the locusts sings three notes, when they all start off in chorus ’till the crescendo and diminuendo is finished, when the leader commences again. Lord Byron takes notice of them, near Ravenna —
The shrill cicalas, people of the pine,
Making their summer lives one ceaseless song.
But Italy has no laughing jackass (dacelo gigantea). This faithful bird was our constant amusement; but he really is not so much a jackass as people take him to be, for he seldom laughs more than three times a day, though then it is certainly a good horse laugh, at morning, noon, and sunset. He perches on low trees, looking for snakes, and is a great observer of the heavenly bodies. Some people say that if you ask him civilly, he will tell you what is the clock; I tried him once or twice, but without success; we were not sufficiently acquainted, I suppose, and, like another jackass that I could name, he declined having anything to say to me. I hope the settlers will forbear shooting this interesting bird; his taste for snakes ought to preserve him sacred, like the crane in Holland, and the alligator at Batavin.
X. Y. Z.