DESCRIPTIVE
February comes in like a
sturdy country maiden, with a tinge of the red,
hard winter apple on her healthy cheek, and as she
strives against the wind, wraps her russet-coloured
cloak well about her, while with bent head, she keeps
throwing back the long hair that blows about her face,
and though at times half blinded by the sleet and
snow, still continues her course courageously.
Sometimes she seems to shrink, and while we watch her
progress, half afraid that she will be blown back
again into the dreary waste of Winter, we see that her
course is still forward, that she never takes a
backward step, but keeps journeying along slowly, and
drawing nearer, at every stride, to the Land of
Flowers. Between the uplifted curtaining of clouds,
that lets in a broad burst of golden sunlight, the
skylark hovers like a dark speck, and cheers her with
his brief sweet song, while the mellow-voiced
blackbird and the speckle-breasted thrush make music
among the opening blossoms of the blackthorn, to
gladden her way; and she sees faint flushings of early
buds here and there, which tell her the long miles of
hedgerows will soon be green.
Now there is a stir of life in
the long silent fields, a jingling of horse-gear, and
the low wave-like murmur of the plough-share, as it
cuts through the yielding earth, from the furrows of
which there comes a refreshing smell, while those
dusky foragers, the rooks, follow close upon the
ploughman's heels. Towards the end of the month the
tall elm-trees resound with their loud 'cawing' in the
early morning, and the nests they are busy building
shew darker every day through the leafless branches,
until Spring comes and hides them beneath a covering
of foliage. Even in smoky cities, in the dawn of the
lengthening days, the noisy sparrows come out from
under the blackened eaves, and, as they shake the soot
from off their wings, give utterance to the delight
they feel in notes that sound like the grating jar of
a knife-grinder's dry wheel.
Now and then the pretty
goldfinch breaks out with its short song, then goes
peeping about as if wondering why the young green
groundsel is so long before putting forth its dull
golden flowers. The early warbling of the
yellow-hammer is half drowned by the clamorous
jackdaws that now congregate about the grey church
steeples. Then Winter, who seems to have been asleep,
shews his cloudy form once more above the bare
hilltops, from whence he scatters his snow-flakes;
while the timid birds cease their song, and again
shelter in the still naked hedgerows, seeming to
marvel to themselves why he has returned again, after
the little daisy buds had begun to thrust their round
green heads above the earth, announcing his departure.
But his long delay prevents not the willow from
shooting out its silvery catkins, nor the graceful
hazel from unfurling its pendulous tassels; while the
elder, as if bidding defiance to Winter, covers its
stems with broad buds of green.
The long-tailed field-mouse
begins to blink at intervals, and nibble at the stores
he hoarded up in autumn; then peeping out and seeing
the snow lie among the young violet leaves, at the
foot of the oak amid whose roots he has made his nest,
he coils himself up again after his repast, and enjoys
a little more sleep. Amid the wide-spreading branches
over his head, the raven has begun to build; and as he
returns with the lock of wool he has rent from the
back of some sickly sheep to line his nest, he
disturbs the little slumberer below by his harsh, loud
croaking. That ominous sound sends the affrighted
lambs off with a scamper to their full-uddered dams,
while the raven looks down upon them with hungry eye,
as if hoping that some one will soon cease its pitiful
bleating, and fall a sacrifice to his horny beak. But
the silver-frilled daisies will soon star the ground
where the lambs now race against each other, and the
great band of summer-birds will come from over the
sunny sea, and their sweet piping be heard in place of
the ominous croaking of the raven.
The mild days of February
cause the beautifully-formed squirrel to wake out of
his short winter sleep, and feed on his hoarded nuts;
and he may now be seen balanced by his hind legs and
bushy tail, washing his face, on some bare bough near
his dray or nest, though at the first sound of the
voices of the boys who come to hunt him, he is off,
and springs from tree to tree with the agility of a
bird. It is only when the trees are naked that the
squirrel can be hunted, for it is difficult to catch a
glimpse of him when 'the leaves are green and long;'
and it is an old country saying, when anything
unlikely to be found is lost, that ' you might as well
hunt a squirrel when the leaves are out.'
Country boys may still be seen
hiding at the corner of some out-building, or behind
some low wall or fence, with a string in their hands
attached to the stick that supports the sieve, under
which they have scattered a few crumbs, or a little
corn, to tempt the birds, which become more shy every
day, as insect-food is now more plentiful. With what
eager eyes the boys watch, and what a joyous shout
they raise, as the sieve falls over some feathered
prisoner! But there is still ten chances to one in
favour of the bird escaping when they place their
hands under the half-lifted sieve in the hope of
laying hold of it. The long dark nights are still cold
to the poor shepherds, who are compelled to be out on
the windy hills and clowns, attending to the ewes and
lambs, for thousands would be lost at this season were
it not for their watchful care.
In some of the large
farmhouses, the lambs that are ailing, or have lost
their dams, may be seen lying before the fire in
severe weather; and a strange expression�as it seemed
to us�beamed from their gentle eyes, as they looked
around, bleating for something they had lost; and as
they licked our hands, we felt that we should make but
poor butchers. And there they lie sheltered, while
out-of-doors the wind still roars, and the bare trees
toss about their naked arms like maniacs, shaking down
the last few withered leaves in which some of the
insects have folded up their eggs. Strange power!
which we feel, but see not; which drives the fallen
leaves before it, like routed armies; and ships, whose
thunder shakes cities, it tosses about the deep like
floating sea-weeds, and is guided by Him 'who gathereth the winds in His fists.'
'February fill-dyke' was the
name given to this wet slushy month by our
forefathers, for when the snow melted, the rivers
overflowed, the dykes brimmed over, and long leagues
of land were under water, which have been drained
within the last century; though miles of marshes are
still flooded almost every winter, the deep silt left,
enriching future harvests. It has a strange appearance
to look over a wide stretch of country, where only the
tops of the hedgerows or a tree or two are here and
there visible. All the old familiar roads that led
along pleasant streams to far-away thorpe or grange in
summer, are buried beneath the far-spreading waters.
And in those hedges water-rats, weasels, field-mice,
and many another seldom-seen animal, find harbourage
until the waters subside: we have there found the
little harvest-mouse, that when full grown is no
bigger than a large bee, shivering in the bleak
hedgerow.
And in those reedy fens and
lonesome marshes where the bittern now booms, and the
heron stands alone for hours watching the water, while
the tufted plover wails above its head, the wild-fowl
shooter glides along noiseless as a ghost in his punt,
pulling it on by clutching the over-hanging reeds, for
the sound of a paddle would startle the whole flock,
and he would never come within shot but for this
guarded silence. He bears the beating rain and the
hard blowing winds of February without a murmur, for
he knows the full-fed mallard�feathered like the
richest green velvet�and the luscious teal will be his
reward, if he perseveres and is patient. In the
midnight moonlight, and the grey dawn of morning, he
is out on those silent waters, when the weather almost
freezes his very blood, and he can scarcely feel the
trigger that he draws; while the edges of frosted
water-flags which he clutches, to pull his punt along,
seem to cut like swords. To us there has seemed to be
at such times 'a Spirit brooding on the waters,' a
Presence felt more in those solitudes than ever falls
upon the heart amid the busy hum of crowded cities,
which has caused us to exclaim unawares, 'God is
here!'
Butterflies that have found a
hiding-place some-where during winter again appear,
and begin to lay their eggs on the opening buds, which
when in full leaf will supply food for the future
cater-pillars. Amongst these may now be found the
new-laid eggs of the peacock and painted-lady
butterflies, on the small buds of young nettles,
though the plants are only just above ground.
Everybody who has a garden now begins to make some
little stir in it, when the weather is fine, for the
sweet air that now blows abroad mellows and sweetens
the newly-dug earth, and gives to it quite a
refreshing smell. And all who have had experience,
know that to let the ground lie fallow a few weeks
after it is trenched, is equal to giving it an extra
coating of manure, such virtue is there in the air to
which it lies exposed. Hard clods that were difficult to break with the spade
when first dug up, will, after lying exposed to the sun and frost, crumble at a
touch like a
ball of sand.
It is pleasant, too, to see the little children pottering
about the gardens, unconscious that, while they think they are helping, they are
in the way
of the workmen; to see them poking about with their tiny spades or pointed
sticks, and hear their joyous shouts, when they see the first crocus in flower,
or find beneath the
decaying weeds the upright leaves of the hyacinth. Even the very smallest child,
that has but been able to walk a few weeks, can sit down beside a puddle and
help to make
'dirt-pies,' while its little frock slips off its white shoulders, and as some
helping sister tries to pull it on again, she leaves the marks of her dirty
fingers on the
little one's neck.
But a fire kindled to burn the great heap of weeds which
Winter has withered and dried, is their chief delight. What little bare sturdy
legs come
toddling up, the cold red arms bearing another tiny load which they throw upon
the fire, and what a clapping of hands there is, as the devouring flame leaps up
and licks in
the additional fuel which cracks again as the February wind blows the sparks
about in starry showers!
Pleasant is it also to watch
them beside the village brook, after the icy chains of
Winter are unloosened, floating their sticks and bits
of wood which they call boats�all our island children
are fond of water�while their watchful mothers are
sewing and gossiping at the open cottage doors, round
which the twined honeysuckles are now beginning to
make a show of leaves. All along beside the stream the
elder-trees are shewing their emerald buds, while a
silvery light falls on the downy catkins of the
willows, which the country children call palm; while
lower down we see the dark green of the great
marsh-marigolds, which ere long will be in flower, and
make a golden light in the clear brook, in which the
leaves are now mirrored. Happy children! they feel the
increasing warmth, and find enjoyment in the
lengthening of the days, for they can now play
out-of-doors an hour or more longer than they could a
month or two ago, when they were bundled off to bed
soon after dark, 'to keep them,' as their mothers
say, 'out of mischief.'
Sometimes, while digging in
February, the gardener will turn up a ball of earth as
large as a moderate-sized apple; this when broken
open. will be found to contain the grub of the large
stag-beetle in a torpid state. When uncoiled, it is
found to be four inches in length. About July it comes
out a perfect insect�the largest we have in Britain.
Some naturalists assert that it remains underground
in a larva state for five or six years, but this has
not been proved satisfactorily.
Many a meal do the
birds now gather from the winter greens that remain in
the gardens, and unless the first crop of early peas
is protected, all the shoots will sometimes be picked
off in a morning or two, as soon as they have grown a
couple of inches above ground. The wild wood-pigeons
are great gatherers of turnip-tops, and it is nothing
unusual in the country to empty their maws, after the
birds are shot, and wash and dress the tender green
shoots found therein. No finer dish of greens can be
placed on the table, for the birds swallow none but
the young eye-shoots.
Larks will at this season
sometimes unroof a portion of a corn-stack, to get at
the well-filled sheaves. No wonder farmers shoot them; for where they have
pulled the thatch off the stack, the wet gets in, finds its way down to the very
foundation, and
rots every sheaf it falls through.
We can never know wholly, what birds find to feed upon at
this season of the year; when the earth is sometimes frozen so hard, that it
rings under the
spade like iron, or when the snow lies knee-deep on the ground. We startle them
from under the sheltering hedges; they spring up from the lowly moss, which
remains green all
through the winter; we see them pecking about the bark, and decayed hollow of
trees; we make our way through the gorse bushes, and they are there: amid
withered grass, and
weeds, and fallen leaves, where lie millions of seeds, which the autumn winds
scattered, we find them busy foraging; yet what they find to feed upon in many
of these places,
is still to us a mystery. We know that at this season they pass the greater
portion of their time in sleep,�another proof of the great Creator's
providence,�so do not require
so much food as when busy building, and breeding, in spring and summer. They
burrow in the snow through little openings hardly visible to human eyes, beneath
hedges and
bushes, and there they find warmth and food. From the corn-house, stable, or
cart-shed, the blackbird comes rushing out with a sound. that startles us, as we
enter; for there
he finds something to feed upon: while the little robin will even peek at the
window frame if you have been in the habit of feeding him.
On the plum-tree, before the
window at which we are now writing, a robin has taken
his stand every day throughout the winter, eyeing us
at our desk, as he waited for his accustomed crumbs.
When the door was opened and all still, he would hop
into the kitchen, and there we have found him perched
on the dresser, nor did we ever attempt to capture
him. If strangers came down the garden-walk, he never
flew further away than the privet-hedge, until he was
fed. Generally, as the day drew to a close, he mounted
his favourite plum-tree, as if to sing us a parting
song. We generally threw his food under a thorny,
low-growing japonica, which no cat could penetrate,
although we have often seen our own Browney girring
and swearing and switching his tail, while the bird
was safely feeding within a yard of him.
Primroses are now abundant, no
matter how severe the Winter may have been. Amid the
din and jar of the busy streets of London, the
pleasant cry of 'Come buy my pretty primroses' falls
cheerfully on the ear, at the close of February. It
may be on account of its early appearance, that we
fancy there is no yellow flower so delightful to look
upon as the delicately-coloured primrose; for the deep
golden hue of the celandine and buttercup is glaring
when compared with it. There is a beauty, too, in the
form of its heart-shaped petals, also in the foliage.
Examined by an imaginative eye, the leaves when laid
down look like a pleasant green land, full of little
hills and hollows, such as we fancy insects�invisible
to the naked glance�must delight in wandering over.
Such a world Bloom-field pictured as he watched an
insect climb up a plantain leaf, and fancied what an
immense plain the foot or two of short grass it
overlooked must appear in the eye of a little traveller, who had climbed a
summit of six inches.
In the country they speak of
things happening at 'primrose-time:' he died or she
was married 'about primrose-time;' for so do they mark
the season that lies between the white ridge of
Winter, and the pale green border of Spring. Then it
is a flower as old and common as our English daisies,
and long before the time of Alfred must have gladdened
the eyes of Saxon children by its early appearance, as
it does the children of the present day.
The common
coltsfoot has been in flower several weeks, and its
leaves are now beginning to appear, for the foliage
rarely shews itself on this singular plant until the
bloom begins to fade. The black hellebore is also in
bloom, and, on account of its resemblance to the queen
of summer, is called the Christmas-rose, as it often
flowers at that season. It is a pretty ornament on the
brow of Winter, whether its deep cup is white or pale
pink, and in sheltered situations remains a long time
in flower.
Every way there are now signs
that the reign of Winter is nearly over: even when he
dozes he can no longer enjoy his long sleep, for the
snow melts from under him almost as fast as it falls,
and he feels the rounded buds breaking out beneath
him. The flush of golden light thrown from the
prim-roses, as they catch the sunshine, causes him to
rub his dazed eyes, and the singing of the unloosened
meadow-runnels falls with a strange sound on his cold,
deadened ear. He knows that Spring is hiding somewhere
near at hand, and that all Nature is waiting to break
out into flower and song, when he has taken his
departure.
A great change has taken place
almost unseen. We cannot recall the day when the buds
first caught our eye�tiny green dots which are now
opening into leaves that are covering the lilac-trees.
We are amazed to see the hawthorn hedge, which a week
or two ago we passed unnoticed, now bursting out into
the pale green flush of Spring�the most beautiful of
all green hues. We feel the increasing power of the
sun; and windows which have been closed, and rendered
air-tight to keep out the cold, are now thrown open to
let in the refreshing breeze, which is shaking out the
sweet buds, and the blessed sunshine�the gold of
heaven�which God in His goodness showers alike upon
the good and the evil.
HISTORICAL
February was one of the two
months (January being the other) introduced into the
Roman Calendar by Numa Pompilius, when he extended the
year to twelve of these periods. Its name arose from
the practice of religious expiation and purification
which took place among the Romans at the beginning of
this month (Februare, to expiate, to purify).
It has
been on the whole an ill-used month, perhaps in
consequence of its noted want (in the northern
hemisphere) of what is pleasant and agreeable to the
human senses. Numa let fall upon it the doom which was
unavoidable for some one of the months, of having,
three out of four times, a day less than even those
which were to consist of thirty days. That is to say,
he arranged that it should have only twenty-nine days,
excepting in leap years; when, by the intercalation of
a day between the 23
rd
and 24th, it was to have
thirty. No great occasion here for complaint. But when
Augustus chose to add a thirty-first day to August,
that the month named from him might not lack in the
dignity enjoyed by six other months of the year, he
took it from February, which. could least spare it,
thus reducing it to twenty-eight in all ordinary
years.
In our own parliamentary arrangement for the
reformation of the calendar, it being necessary to
drop a day out of each century excepting those of
which the ordinal number could be divided by four, it
again fell to the lot of February to be the sufferer.
It was deprived of its 29th day for all such years,
and so it befell in the year 1800, and will in 1900,
2000, 2100, 2200, &c.
Verstegan informs us that,
among our Saxon ancestors, the month got the name of
Sprout-kale, from the fact, rather conspicuous in
gardening, of the sprouting of cabbage at this
ungenial season. The name of Sol-monatt was afterwards
conferred upon it, in consequence of the return of the
luminary of day from the low course in the heavens
which for some time he had been running.
'The common
emblematical representation of February is, a man in a
sky-coloured dress, bearing in his hand the
astronomical sign Pisces.'�Bracly.
CHARACTERISTICS OF FEBRUARY
The average temperature of
January, which is the lowest of the year, is but
slightly advanced in February; say from 40� to 41�
Fahrenheit. Nevertheless, while frosts often take
place during the month, February is certainly more
characterised by rain than by snow, and our unpleasant
sensations during its progress do not so much arise
from a strictly low temperature, as from the harsh
damp feeling which its airs impart. Usually, indeed,
the cold is intermitted by soft vernal periods of
three or four days, during which the snow-drop and
crocus are enabled to present themselves above ground.
Gloomy, chilly, rainy days are a prominent feature of
the month, tending, as has been observed, to a
flooding of the country; and we all feel how
appropriate it is that the two signs of the zodiac
connected with the month�Aquarius and Pisces�should be
of such watery associations.
Here, again, however, we
are liable to a fallacy, in imagining that February is
the most rainy of the months. Its average depth of
fall, 4.21 inches, is, in reality, equaled by three
other months, January, August, and September, and
exceeded by October, November, and December, as shewn
by a rain-gauge kept for thirty years in the Isle of
Bute.
At London, the sun is above
the horizon on the 1st of February from 7h. 42m. to 4h.
47m., in all 9h. 5m. At the last day of the month, the
sun is above the horizon 10h. 45m.
February 1st