AUTUMNAL CHANGES. 
319 
The woods are brilliant in the sunshine. There is still a vein 
of green, however, running through the forest, independently of 
the pines and firs. 
In our stroll this evening we saw several flocks of birds, water' 
fowl and other smaller birds, moving steadily to the southward. 
These flocks give much interest to the autumn sky ; they are often 
seen now, but are not common at other seasons — unless, indeed, 
it be in picture-books, whei’e every landscape is provided with a 
nondescript flock of its own, quite as a mcatter of course. Through 
the spring and summer, the birds live with us, in our own atmo- 
sphere, among our own groves and plants, every-day companions ; 
but at this season they soar above us, and we look up at the little 
creatures with a sort of respect, as we behold the wonderful 
powers with which they are endowed, sailing in the heavens, over 
hill and dale, flood and town, toward lands which we may never 
hope to see. 
Saturday, *Itk . — Charming weather. The woods on the hills 
are glorious in the sunshine, the golden light playing about their 
leafy crests, as though it took pleasure in kindling such rich color- 
ing. The red of the oaks grows deeper, the chestnuts are of a 
brighter gold color. Still a touch of green in the woods ; the 
foliage of the beech struggles a long time to preserve its verdure, 
the brownish yellow creeps over it very slowly ; most trees turn 
more rapidly, as though they took pleasure in the change. 
Butterflies fluttering about in the sunshine ; dragon-flies also, 
“la demoiselle doree,” as the French call them — strange, that 
what is a young lady in France should become a dragon across 
the Channel ! Many grasshoppers by the road-sides. Small gnat- 
like flies abmmd, in flocks. 
