47 



IX. 



THE SWALLOWS AGALV, 



At last the long-wished-for rain has come in earnest ; 

 the ground has drunk in water enough to give it more 

 than a mere surface wetting ; and the grass and leaves 

 begin to look themselves again after the long spell of 

 dry and warping weather. We had a few slight showers 

 last week, but they barely sufficed to lay the dust for a 

 couple of hours ; and as soon as they had dried up, the 

 cast wind blew it about once more, so that even' the 

 )oung green on the hedges and the horse-chestnuts was 

 smothered in a loose coat of greyish grime. Now, how- 

 ever, nature comes out anew after the downpour in its 

 freshest spring colours. The clouds still lower, and the 

 tops of the downs are still lost in slowly shifting mists ; 

 so to-day the swallows have left the open meadows and 

 are flitting low above the river, gaping open-mouthed at 

 the water-flies and skimming the surface of the stream 

 with their long blue-black wings. Leaning here on the 

 rough parapet of the old stone bridge, I can see the 

 flies at which they are darting just below me ; for swal- 

 lows are always fearless of man when on the w ing, and 

 do not hesitate to approach him flying ; thougir'they 

 seem hardly ever to alight anywhere within an easy 



