WATCHING THE PROCESSION 95 



true, do pass my door, and even tarry for a day 

 or two under my windows, but to see others I 

 have to go into the woods. Some I find only in 

 deep, almost impenetrable swamps, dodging in 

 and out among thick bushes and cat-tails. A 

 good many follow the coast. I watch them run- 

 ning along the sea-beach on the edge of the surf, 

 or walking sedately over muddy flats where I 

 need rubber boots in which to follow them. 

 Some are silent during the day, but as darkness 

 comes on indulge in music and queer aerial 

 dancing. 



Many travel altogether by night, resting and 

 feeding in the daytime. It is pleasant to stand 

 out of doors in the evening, and hear them call- 

 ing to each other overhead as they hasten north- 

 ward ; for at this time of the year, I have forgot- 

 ten to say, they are always traveling in a northerly 

 direction. 



The procession, as such, has no definite tei^ 

 minus. It breaks up gradually by the dropping 

 out of its members here and there. Each of 

 them knows pretty well where he is going. This 

 one, who came perhaps from Cuba, means to stop 

 in Massachusetts ; that one, after a winter in 

 Central America, has in view a certain swamp or 

 meadow, or, it may be, some mountain-top, in 

 New Hampshire ; another will not be at home till 



