Book-bot.com - read famous books online for free

Afoot in England by W. H. (William Henry) Hudson
page 111 of 280 (39%)
pine wood three miles from the town I stood awhile to listen
to the sound as of copious rain of the moisture dropping from
the trees, when a sudden tempest of loud, sharp metallic
notes--a sound dear to the ornithologist's ears--made me jump;
and down into the very tree before which I was standing
dropped a flock of about twenty crossbills. So excited and
noisy when coming down, the instant they touched the tree they
became perfectly silent and motionless. Seven of their number
had settled on the outside shoots, and sat there within forty
feet of me, looking like painted wooden images of small green
and greenish-yellow parrots; for a space of fifteen minutes
not the slightest movement did they make, and at length,
before going, I waved my arms about and shouted to frighten
them, and still they refused to stir.

Next morning that memorable fog lifted, to England's joy, and
quitting my refuge I went out once more into the region of
high sheep-walks, adorned with beechen woods and
traveller's-joy in the hedges, rambling by Highclere,
Burghclere, and Kingsclere. The last--Hampshire's little
Cuzco--is a small and village-like old red brick town,
unapproached by a railroad and unimproved, therefore still
beautiful, as were all places in other, better, less civilized
days. Here in the late afternoon a chilly grey haze crept
over the country and set me wishing for a fireside and the
sound of friendly voices, and I turned my face towards beloved
Silchester. Leaving the hills behind me I got away from the
haze and went my devious way by serpentine roads through a
beautiful, wooded, undulating country. And I wish that for a
hundred, nay, for a thousand years to come, I could on each
DigitalOcean Referral Badge