British Zoology, Volume 2 |
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Page 357
... head adorn- ed with a loose pendent creft of long black feathers waving with the wind ; the upper part of the neck is of a pure white , and the co- verts of the wings of a light grey ; the back clad only with down , covered with the ...
... head adorn- ed with a loose pendent creft of long black feathers waving with the wind ; the upper part of the neck is of a pure white , and the co- verts of the wings of a light grey ; the back clad only with down , covered with the ...
Page 359
... head is black ; the feathers on the hind part form a fort of fhort pendent creft : at each corner of the mouth is a black fpot : the plumage of this bird is of very pale dull yellow , fpotted , barred , or ftriped with black : the ...
... head is black ; the feathers on the hind part form a fort of fhort pendent creft : at each corner of the mouth is a black fpot : the plumage of this bird is of very pale dull yellow , fpotted , barred , or ftriped with black : the ...
Page 360
... the breadth three feet five inches ; the bill is feven inches long : the head , neck , and coverts of the wings are of a pale brown ; the middle of each feather black ; 1 black ; the breaft and belly white , marked 362 CLASS II . CURLE W.
... the breadth three feet five inches ; the bill is feven inches long : the head , neck , and coverts of the wings are of a pale brown ; the middle of each feather black ; 1 black ; the breaft and belly white , marked 362 CLASS II . CURLE W.
Page 362
... head round , black on the top , divided length - ways by a white line : chin white : cheeks , neck , breast , and upper part of the belly whitish brown , marked with streaks of black pointing down , with narrow ftreaks on the neck ...
... head round , black on the top , divided length - ways by a white line : chin white : cheeks , neck , breast , and upper part of the belly whitish brown , marked with streaks of black pointing down , with narrow ftreaks on the neck ...
Page 369
... head , that they may not be injured when the bird thrufts its bill into the ground : from the bill to the eyes is a black line : the forehead is a reddish ash - color : the crown of the head , the hind part of the neck , the back , the ...
... head , that they may not be injured when the bird thrufts its bill into the ground : from the bill to the eyes is a black line : the forehead is a reddish ash - color : the crown of the head , the hind part of the neck , the back , the ...
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Common terms and phrases
afh color Aldr alfo almoſt alſo baſe becauſe belly white Belon bill bill black bird-catchers breadth breaſt breed Briffon Briffon av brown Brunnich Carniola chaffinch Cimbris cinereous coafts coverts Danis defcription DESCRIP ducks dufky duſky edged eggs fame color Faun fcapulars feems feet feven fhort fide firſt fize flender fmall fome fometimes fong fpecies fpotted with black fpring Frisch ftrong fuch fyft Gannet GARGANEY Gefner Godwit Grebe green grey Guillemot Gull head hift hind horſes ibid inches long irides iſland Kram Lapland leffer legs length Lincolnshire Linnæus linnet mandible marked moſt muſt neck neft nightingale Norvegis numbers obferved olive color orange color Orknies ounces paffages pale plumage quil feathers quil-feathers Raii fyn reafon reft Scopoli ſeaſon ſhort ſhot ſhould ſmall ſpecies ſpotted Suec Thefe birds Theſe birds thofe thoſe Tringa upper uſe wild wings winter yellow Zool
Popular passages
Page 483 - Goose-Herd, attends the flock, and twice a day drives the whole to water ; then brings them back to their habitations, helping those that live in the upper stories to their nests, without ever misplacing a single bird.
Page 570 - Thofe who live in the country, on the other hand, do not hear birds fing in their woods for above two months in the year, when the confufion of notes prevents their attending to the fong of any particular bird ; nor does he continue long enough in a' place, for the hearer to recolleft his notes with, accuracy.
Page 554 - The ascendancy by this call, or invitation, is so great, that the wild bird is stopped in its course of flight, and if not already acquainted with the nets, lights boldly within twenty yards of perhaps three or four bird-catchers, on a spot which...
Page 566 - ... that it is well known, before the bird is heard, what notes you are to expect from him...
Page 586 - ... alfo account for the inferiority in point of plumage. I TRIED once an experiment, which might indeed have poffibly made fome alteration in the tone of a bird, from what it might have been when the animal was at its full growth, by procuring an operator who caponifed a. young blackbird of about fix weeks old ; as it died, however, foon afterwards, * The plough, indeed, may turn up fome few feeds, which may ftill be in an eatable ftate.
Page 562 - Barrington defines a bird's song to be a succession of three or more different notes, which are continued without interruption during the same interval with a musical bar of four crotchets in an adagio movement, or whilst a pendulum swings four seconds.
Page 568 - I ihall now make fome general obfervations on their finging; though perhaps the fubjeft may appear to many a very minute one. Every poet, indeed, fpeaks with raptures of the harmony of the groves ; yet thofe even, who have good mufical ears, feem to pay little attention to it but as a pleating noife.
Page 463 - Kilda, says-—-"No bird is of such use to the islanders as this: the Fulmar supplies them with oil for their lamps, down for their beds, a delicacy for their tables, a balm for their wounds, and a medicine for their distempers.
Page 561 - What the nestling is not thus thoroughly master of, he hurries over, lowering his tone, as if he did not wish to be heard, and could not yet satisfy himself.
Page 568 - I have,, however, fince tried the following experiment, which convinces me, fo much depends upon circumftances, and perhaps caprice in the fcholar, that no general inference, or rule, can be laid down with regard to either of thefe fuppofitions. I educated a neftling robin under...