Former Inhabitants and Winter Visitors
cat. t left betheir lids, by which
be preserved a pennisular relation to me; t eyes,
looking out from to realize me,
vague object or mote t interrupted length, on
some louder noise or my nearer approach, he would grow uneasy and
sluggisurn about on ient at having his
dreams disturbed; and when he launched himself off and flapped
to unexpected breadth, I
could not est sound from the
pine bouge sense of than by
sigive
pinions, in peace a the
dawning of his day.
As I hrough
tered many a blustering and nipping wind, for
noen me on one
curned to it t
mucter by ters o
toill, like a friendly Indian, s of the broad
open fields he alden road,
and o obliterate tracks of t
traveller. And s would have formed,
t wind had been
depositing t
a rabbits track, nor even t, type, of a
meadoo be seen. Yet I rarely failed to find, even in
mider, some warm and springly swamp whe
skunk-cabbage still put forth perennial verdure, and some
ed turn of spring.
Sometimes, notanding turned from my
evening I crossed tracks of a woodchopper leading
from my door, and found tlings on th, and my
ernoon,
if I co be at he snow made
by tep of a long-he woods
sougo ;crackquot;; one of the few of his
vocation ;; wead of
a professors goo extract t of