It was no longer the herd of
beautiful white and strawberry cows with golden horns and
large placid eyes.
Nothing in fact was the same, for when I
looked for the swifts there were no more than about twenty
birds instead of over a hundred, and although just on the eve
of departure they were not behaving in the same excited
manner.
Probably I should not have thought so much about that
particular crowd in that tempestuous August, and remembered it
so vividly, but for the presence of three persons in it and
the strange contrast they made to the large white type I have
described. These were a woman and her two little girls, aged
about eight and ten respectively, but very small for their
years. She was a little black haired and black-eyed woman
with a pale sad dark face, on which some great grief or
tragedy had left its shadow; very quiet and subdued in her
manner; she would sit on a chair on the beach when the weather
permitted, a book on her knees, while her two little ones
played about, chasing and flying from the waves, or with the
aid of their long poles vaulting from rock to rock. They were
dressed in black frocks and scarlet blouses, which set off
their beautiful small dark faces; their eyes sparkled like
black diamonds, and their loose hair was a wonder to see, a
black mist or cloud about their heads and necks composed of
threads fine as gossamer, blacker than jet and shining like
spun glass-hair that looked as if no comb or brush could ever
tame its beautiful wildness. And in spirit they were what
they seemed: such a wild, joyous, frolicsome spirit with such
grace and fleetness one does not look for in human beings, but
only in birds or in some small bird-like volatile mammal - a
squirrel or a marmoset of the tropical forest, or the
chinchilla of the desolate mountain slopes, the swiftest,
wildest, loveliest, most airy and most vocal of small
beasties. Occasionally to watch their wonderful motions more
closely and have speech with them, I followed when they raced
over the sands or flew about over the slippery rocks, and felt
like a cochin-china fowl, or muscovy duck, or dodo, trying to
keep pace with a humming-bird. Their voices were well suited
to their small brilliant forms; not loud, though high-pitched
and singularly musical and penetrative, like the high clear
notes of a skylark at a distance. They also reminded me of
certain notes, which have a human quality, in some of our
songsters - the swallow, redstart, pied wagtail, whinchat, and
two or three others. Such pure and beautiful sounds are
sometimes heard in human voices, chiefly in children, when
they are talking and laughing in joyous excitement. But for
any sort of conversation they were too volatile; before I
could get a dozen words from them they would be off again,
flying and flitting along the margin, like sandpipers, and
beating the clear-voiced sandpiper at his own aerial graceful
game.
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